The search at Bymouth obtained no
further assistance from Sam. For the remainder
of their stay there he hardly moved from the ship,
preferring to smoke his pipe in peace on board to
meeting certain jocular spirits ashore who wanted
to buy bootlaces. Conversation with Dick and the
boy he declined altogether, and it was not until they
had reached Cocklemouth that he deigned to accept
a pipe of tobacco from the cook’s box.
Cocklemouth is a small lone place
on the Welsh coast. When a large ship gets into
the tiny harbor the inhabitants come down to see it,
and the skippers of small craft pop up from their
cabins and yell out to know where it’s coming
to. Even when they see it bound and guided by
many hawsers they are not satisfied, but dangling
fenders in an obtrusive fashion over the sides of
their ships, prepare for the worst.
“We won’t find ’im
’ere, cookie,” said Sam, as the syndicate
sat on deck on the evening of their arrival gazing
contemplatively at the few scattered lights which
appeared as twilight deepened into night. “Lonesome
little place.”
“I ain’t got much ’ope
of finding ’im anywhere,” assented the
cook.
“If it wasn’t for fear
of Dick finding ’im,” said Sam viciously,
“or the boy, I’d just give it up, cookie.”
“If anybody finds ’im
it’ll be the skipper hisself,” said the
cook, lowering his voice as the person alluded to
passed them on his way ashore. “He goes
to the police station with the portrait and arsts them
there. What chance ’ave we got
after that?”
The seaman shook his head, and after
sitting for some time in silence, went ashore with
the cook and drank himself into a state of hopeless
pessimism. In this condition he forgave everybody,
and feeling very low, made his will by the simple
process of giving his knife to Dick and two and sevenpence
to Henry. The trouble he had in revoking it next
morning furnished a striking illustration of the depths
to which poor humanity can descend.
It was bright and fine next day, and
after breakfast his spirits rose. The persistent
tinkle of a cracked bell from a small brick church
in the town, and the appearance of two girls walking
along the quay with hymn-books, followed by two young
men without, reminded him that it was Sunday.
The skipper, who was endeavoring to
form new habits, obeyed the summons of the bell.
The mate took a healthful walk of three miles, while
the crew sat about the deck watching the cook’s
preparations for dinner, and occasionally lending
him some slight assistance. It was not until the
meal was despatched that they arrayed themselves in
their Sunday clothes and went ashore.
Dick went first, having thoughtfully
provided himself with the photograph which had been
lent for the use of all of them. He walked at
first into the town, but the bare shuttered shops and
deserted streets worked upon his feelings, and with
his hands in his pockets, he walked back in the direction
of the harbor. Here he got into conversation
with an elderly man of sedate aspect, and after a little
general talk, beginning with the weather and ending
with tobacco, he produced the photograph and broached
the subject of Captain Gething.
“Well, I’ve seen a man
very much like it,” said his new friend after
a prolonged study.
“Where?” asked Dick eagerly.
“I won’t say it’s
the same man,” said the other slowly, as he handed
the portrait back, “but if it ain’t him
it’s his brother.”
“Where?” repeated Dick impatiently.
“Well, I don’t know that
I ought to interfere,” said the man; “it
ain’t my business.”
“If a bob would ” began Dick.
“It would,” said the man,
smiling as he pocketed it. “He lives at
Piggott’s Bay,” he said impressively.
“And where might that be?” inquired the
seaman.
The man turned and pointed across
a piece of untidy waste ground to a coastguard’s
path which wound its way along the top of the cliffs.
“Follow that path as straight as you can go,”
said he.
“How far?” said Dick.
“Well, some people make a long
journey of it, and some a short one,” said the
other oracularly. “Shall we say six miles?”
Dick said he would sooner say three.
“An easy six, then,” said
the man smiling indulgently. “Well, good-day
to you.”
“Good-day, mate,” said
Dick, and plunging into the debris before him,
started on his walk.
It was unfortunate for him in the
sequel that Sam and the cook, who had started out
for a quiet stroll, without any intention of looking
for Captain Gething, or any nonsense of that kind,
had witnessed the interview from a distance.
By dint of hurrying they overtook the elderly man
of sedate aspect, and by dint of cross-questioning,
elicited the cause of Dick’s sudden departure.
“Which way is it?” inquired Sam.
“You follow him,” said
the man, indicating the figure in front as it slowly
ascended the cliff, “and you’ll be there
as soon as he will.”
The comfortable stroll was abandoned,
and the couple, keeping at a respectful distance,
followed their unconscious comrade. The day was
hot, and the path, which sometimes ran along the top
of the cliff and sometimes along the side of it, had
apparently escaped the attention of the local County
Council. No other person was in sight, and the
only things that moved were a few sheep nibbling the
short grass, which scampered off at their approach,
and a gull or two poised overhead.
“We want to get there afore
’e does,” said Sam, treading gingerly along
a difficult piece of path.
“He’d see us if we ran along the beach,”
said the cook.
“We can’t run on shingle,”
said Sam; “and it don’t seem much good
just gettin’ there to see ’im find the
cap’n, does it?”
“We must wait for an hoppertunity,” said
the cook.
Sam grunted.
“An’ when it comes, seize
it at once,” continued the cook, who disapproved
of the grunt.
They kept on for some time steadily,
though Sam complained bitterly about the heat as he
mopped his streaming brow.
“He’s going down on to
the beach,” said the cook suddenly. “Make
a spurt for it, Sam, and we’ll pass him.”
The stout seaman responded to the
best of his ability, and arriving at the place where
Dick had disappeared, flung himself down on the grass
and lay there panting. He was startled by a cry
of surprise from the cook.
“Come on, Sam,” he said
eagerly; “he’s going in for a swim.”
His friend moved to the edge of the
cliff and looked over. A little heap of clothing
lay just below him, and Dick was striding over the
sands to the sea.
“Come on,” repeated the
cook impatiently; “we’ve got the start.”
“I should laugh if somebody
was to steal his clothes,” said Sam vindictively
as he gazed at the garments.
“Be all right for us if they
did,” said the cook; “we’d have plenty
o’ time to look around this ’ere Piggott’s
Bay then.” He glanced at Sam as he spoke,
and read his horrible purpose in his eyes. “No,
no!” he said hastily.
“Not steal ’em,
cookie,” said Sam seductively, “only bury
’em under the shingle. I’ll toss
you who does it.”
For sixty seconds the cook struggled
gamely with the tempter.
“It’s just a bit of a
joke, cook,” said Sam jovially. “Dick
’ud be the first to laugh at it hisself if it
was somebody else’s clothes.” He spun
a penny in the air, and covering it deftly, held it
out to the cook.
“Heads!” said the latter softly.
“Tails!” said Sam cheerfully; “hurry
up, cook.”
The cook descended without a word,
and hastily interring the clothes, not without an
uneasy glance seaward, scrambled up the cliff again
and rejoined his exultant accomplice. They set
off in silence, keeping at some distance from the
edge of the cliff.
“Business is business,”
said the cook after a time, “and he wouldn’t
join the syndikit.”
“He was greedy, and wanted it
all,” said Sam with severity.
“P’raps it’ll be
a lesson to ’im,” said the cook unctuously.
“I took the bearings of the place in case ’e
don’t find ’em. Some people wouldn’t
ha’ done that.”
They kept on steadily for another
hour, until at last they came quite suddenly upon
a little fishing village situated on a tiny bay.
Two or three small craft were anchored inside the
stone pier, along which two or three small children,
in all the restriction of Sunday clothes, were soberly
pacing up and down.
“This must be it,” said Sam. “Keep
your eyes open, cook.”
“What’s the name o’
this place, mate?” said Sam expectantly to an
old salt who was passing.
“Stone-pen Quay,” said the old man.
Sam’s face fell. “How far is it to
Piggott’s Bay, then?” he inquired.
“To where?” said the old
man, taking his pipe out of his mouth and staring
hard.
“Piggott’s Bay,” said Sam.
“You don’t tell me you’re looking
for Piggott’s Bay,” said the old man.
“Why not?” said Sam shortly.
Instead of replying the old man slapped
his leg, and with his pipe cocked at one side of his
mouth, laughed a thin senile laugh with the other.
“When you’ve done laughin’,”
said the cook with dignity.
“But I ain’t,” said
the old man, removing his pipe and laughing with greater
freedom. “They’re looking for Piggott’s
Bay, Joe,” he said, turning to a couple of fishermen
who had just come up.
“What a lark!” said Joe, beaming with
pleasure. “Come far?” he inquired.
“Cocklemouth,” said Sam
with a blank look. “When you’ve done
laughin’, what’s the joke?”
“Why, there ain’t no such
place,” said the man. “It’s
just a saying in these parts, that’s all.”
“Just a wot?” said the bewildered
Sam faintly.
“It’s just a saying like,”
said the other, exchanging glances with his friends.
“I don’t take you,”
said the cook. “How can a place be a sayin’?”
“Well, it come through a chap
about here named Captain Piggott,” said the
fisherman, speaking slowly. “He was a wonderful
queer old chap, and he got out of his reckoning once,
and made ah, South Amerikey, warn’t
it, Dan?”
“I believe so,” said the old man.
“He thought he’d found
a new island,” continued the fisherman, “an’
he went ashore an’ hoisted the Union Jack, and
named it arter hisself, Piggott’s Bay.
Leastways that’s the tale his chaps gave out
when they come ‘ome. Now when anybody’s
a bit out o’ their reckoning we say they’re
looking for Piggott’s Bay. It’s just
a joke about here.”
He began to laugh again, and Sam,
noting with regret that he was a big fellow and strong,
turned away and followed in the footsteps of the cook,
who had already commenced the ascent of the cliff.
They paused at the top and looked back; Stone-pen
Quay was still laughing.
Moved by a common idea of their personal
safety, they struck inland, preferring an additional
mile or two to encountering Dick. Conversation
was at a discount, and they plodded on sulkily along
the dusty road, their lips parched and their legs
aching.
They got back to the Seamew
at seven o’clock, and greeting Henry, who was
in sole charge, with fair words and soothing compliments,
persuaded him to make them some tea.
“Where’s Dick?”
inquired Sam casually as he sat drinking it.
“Ain’t seen ’im
since dinner,” said the boy. “I thought
he was with you p’raps.”
Sam shook his head, and finishing
his tea went on deck with the cook, and gave himself
up to all the delights of a quiet sprawl. Fatigued
with their exertions, neither of them moved until
nine o’clock, and then, with a farewell glance
in the direction in which Dick might be expected to
come, went below and turned in.
They left the lamp burning, to the
great satisfaction of Henry, who was reading, and,
as ten o’clock struck somewhere in the town,
exchanged anxious glances across the foc’sle
concerning Dick’s safety. Safe and warm
in their bunks, it struck both of them that they had
been perhaps a little bit selfish. Half an hour
later Henry looked up suddenly as something soft leaped
on to the deck above and came pattering towards the
foc’sle. The next moment his surprise gave
way to indignation, and he raised his voice in tones
of expostulation which Mrs. Grundy herself would have
envied.
“Dick!” he cried shrilly. “Dick!”
“Shut up!” said Dick fiercely
as he flung himself panting on a locker. “O
my Lord, I have had a time!”
“I’m surprised at you,”
said Henry severely, as he dragged some blankets from
the bunks and threw them over the exhausted seaman.
“Where’s your modesty, Dick?”
“If you say another word I’ll
knock yer ugly little head off!” said Dick wrathfully.
“If I hadn’t been modest I should have
come home by daylight. Oh, I have had a time!
I have had a time!”
“Where’s your clothes?” inquired
Henry.
“How the devil should I know?”
snapped the other. “I left ’em on
the beach while I went for a swim, and when I comeback
they’d gone. I’ve been sittin’
on that damned cold shingle since three o’clock
this arternoon, and not a soul come near me!
It’s the first time I’ve been lookin’
for Cap’n Gething, and it’ll be the last.”
“Oh, you’ve been at it,
’ave yer!” said Henry. “I
told you you chaps would get in a mess over that.”
“You know a damned sight too
much for your age!” growled Dick. “There’s
no call to say anything to Sam and the cook about it,
mind.”
“Why not?” said Henry.
“Cos I say you’re not to,” said
Dick ferociously. “That’s why.”
“P’raps they know,”
said Henry quietly. “Seems to me Sam’s
listenin’ in his sleep.”
Dick got up, and going to their bunks
inspected the sleep of both his comrades cautiously.
Then with a repetition of his caution, strengthened
by fearful penalties for disobedience, went to his
own bunk and forgot his troubles in sleep. He
kept his secret all next day, but his bewilderment
when he awoke on Tuesday morning and found the clothes
in an untidy brown paper parcel lying on the deck
led to its divulgence. He told both Sam and the
cook about it, and his opinion of both men went up
when he found that they did not treat the matter in
the light of a joke, as he had feared. Neither
of them even smiled, neither did they extend much
sympathy; they listened apathetically, and so soon
as he had finished, went straight off to sleep where
they sat a performance which they repeated
at every opportunity throughout the whole of the day.