A handsome barque lay at the quay
of a South Wales port, ready to sail, and waiting
only for the flood tide. Her name was the Pacific,
and she was commanded by a person of laborious dignity.
His officers were selected to meet the tastes and
ambitions of their captain, whose name was John Kickem.
I have said before it was customary in those days
for crowds of people to congregate on the quays or
dock sides to watch the departure of vessels.
Some came out of curiosity, but many were the relatives
and friends of different members of the crew who wished
to say their adieux, and to listen to the sombre
singing of the chanties as the men mastheaded the
topsail yards, or catted and fished the anchors.
These vessels were known as copper-ore-men. They
were usually manned with picked able seamen and three
apprentices. In this instance they were all fine
specimens of English manhood. It was no ordinary
sight to witness the display of bunting as it stretched
from royal truck to rail, and the grotesque love-making
of the seafarers as they hugged and kissed their wives
and sweethearts over and over again with amazing rapidity.
One of the favourite songs which they delighted to
sing on such auspicious occasions was rendered with
touching pathos-
“Sing good-bye to Sal,
and good-bye to Sue;
Away Rio!
And you that are list’ning,
good-bye to you;
For we’re bound to Rio
Grande!
And away Rio,
aye Rio!
Sing fare ye well, my bonny
young girl,
We’re bound to Rio Grande.”
It didn’t matter, of course,
where they were bound to, this ditty was the farewell
song; and it always had the desired effect of melting
the bystanders, especially the females, though Jack
himself showed no really soft emotion. Not that
they were not sentimental, but theirs seemed always
to be a frolicsome sentimentality.
The eldest apprentice of the Pacific
was in his eighteenth year. He was a fine, broad-shouldered,
fair-haired, medium-sized youth. He had been
dividing his attentions amongst a number of girl admirers,
and was told to come aboard to unmoor and give the
tug the tow-rope. While these orders were being
carried out the lad caught sight of a young girl who
had just arrived in a great state of excitement.
She was dressed in dazzling finery, and carrying something
in a basket. The boy sprang on to the dock wall,
and created much merriment with his elephantine caresses.
They shouted to him from the vessel to jump aboard
or he would lose his passage. He made a running
spring for the main rigging as she was being towed
from her berth. A wild cheer went up from the
crowd when they saw the smart thing that had been done,
and that he was safe. The devoted female who had
caused him to dare so much, in the luxuriance of grief,
shouted to him-
“Good-bye, Jim! You’ve
always been a rare good pal to a girl. Take care
of yourself; and mind, no sweethearts at every port!”
The latter communication was made almost inarticulate
with sobbing. Her last words were, “Don’t
forget, Jim!” To which he replied, “You
bet, I won’t!”
Soon the attractive craft, and her
equally attractive crew were lost sight of amidst
the haze of the gathering night. A quiet, easterly
air was fitfully blowing in the Channel, and when
full sail was set, the pilot and tug left. All
night she trailed sinuously over the peaceful sea,
and as the cold dawn was breaking she slid past the
south end of Lundy Island with a freshening breeze
at her stern. In a few days the north-east trade
winds which blow gently over the bosom of the ocean
were reached, and every stitch of canvas was hung up.
The sailors had got over their monotony, and began
to entertain themselves during the dog-watches from
six to eight. The imperious commander was never
happy himself, and was angry at the sight of mirth
in anybody. He forthwith commenced a system that
was well calculated to breed revolt, and which did
ultimately do so. Orders were given that there
were to be no afternoon watches below, and all hands
were to be kept at work until 6 p.m. In addition
to this petty tyranny, the crew were put on their
bare whack of everything, including water; and so the
dreary days and nights passed on until Cape Horn was
reached. They had long realized that the burden
of their song should be “Good-day, bad day, God
send Sunday.” The weather was stormy off
the Horn, and nearly a month was spent in fruitless
attempts to get round. The spirit had been knocked
out of the officers and crew by senseless bullying
and wicked persecution. They had no heart left
to put into their work, otherwise the vessel would
have got past this boisterous region in half the time.
At last she arrived at Iquique, and, like all ill-conditioned
creatures who have been born wrong and have polecat
natures, the captain blamed the hapless officers and
crew for the long passage, and in order to punish
the poor innocent fellows, he refused to them both
money and liberty to go ashore. Treatment of such
a character could only have one ending-and
that was mutiny, if not murder; and yet this senseless
fellow, in defiance of all human law, kept on goading
them to it. He was warned by a catspaw (whom
even despised bullies can have in their pay) that
the forecastle was a hotbed of murderous intent, and
that for his own safety he should give the men liberty
to go ashore, and advance them what money they required.
“Let them revolt!” said
he. “I will soon have them where they deserve
to be, the rascals. Let them, if they dare, disturb
me in my cabin, and I’ll riddle them with lead.
If they want to go ashore, let them go without liberty;
but if they do, their wages will be forfeited, and
I will have them put in prison.”
A policy of this kind was the more
remarkable, as even if the men were driven to desertion
it was impossible to fill their places at anything
like the same wages, or with the same material.
The available hands were either not sailors at all,
or if they were, they belonged to the criminal class
that feared neither God nor man, and knew no law or
pity except that which was unto themselves. On
the other hand, this vessel was manned with the cream
of British seamen, who would have dared anything for
their captain and owners had they been treated as
was their right. He had run the length of human
forbearance. The crew struck. They demanded
to see the British Consul, and submit their grievances
to him. Sometimes this authority is but a poor
tribunal to appeal to when real discrimination is
to be determined. On this occasion the seamen
were fortunate in getting a sympathetic verdict, and
the captain got what he deserved-a good
trouncing for his treatment of them. They were
willing to sign off the articles, and he was plainly
told that they must either be paid their wages in full,
or he undertake to carry out the conditions of engagement
in a proper manner. “And I must warn you,”
said the irate official of the British Government,
“if you drive these men out of your ship, you
may expect no assistance from me in collecting another
crew. The men are right, and you are wrong.”
The captain was in a state of sullen
passion at the turn things had taken against him.
He said that he would decide the following day whether
the proper course for him to take, now that his authority
had been broken, was to pay the men off or not.
On the morrow he intimated his decision to pay them
off. Poor creature, it would have been well for
him and all connected with this doomed vessel had he
swallowed his pride and resolved to behave in a rational
way to his crew. The places of respectable men
were filled with human reptiles of various nationalities-criminals,
every one of them. He must have persuaded himself
that his despotism would have fuller play with these
foreigners, whose savage vengeance was destined to
shock the whole civilized world with their awful butchery.
The apprentices and officers did not take kindly to
the changed condition of things. They instinctively
felt that they were to become associated with a gang
of -, and hoped that something would transpire to
prevent this happening. An opportunity was given
the oldest apprentice in an unexpected way. The
captain had ordered his gig to be ashore to take him
aboard at a certain time at night. The boat was
there before the captain, and as he was so long in
coming the boat’s crew went for a walk ashore.
The great man came down and had to wait a few minutes
for his men. This caused him to become abusive,
which the oldest apprentice, James Leigh, resented
by using some longshore adjectives. The master
seized the foothold of the stroke oar and threw it
at the lad, and when they got aboard the captain again
attempted to strike him, but the lad let fly, and
did considerable damage in a rough and tumble way
to the bully, who was now like a wild beast. James
was ultimately overpowered and got a bad beating.
He thereupon determined to run away, and he laid his
plans accordingly. In a few days he was far away
from the sea in a safe, hospitable hiding-place, with
some friends who knew his family at home, and the
Pacific had sailed long before he reached the
coast again.
After a few months’ travelling
about, picking up jobs here and there, he was brought
in contact with a rich old Spaniard who owned a leaky
old barque which was employed in the coasting trade.
The captain of her was a Dutchman who spoke English
very imperfectly, and what he did know was spoken
with a nasal Yankee twang. It was a habit, as
well as being thought an accomplishment in those days,
as it is in these, to affect American dialect and
adopt their slang and mannerisms in order to convey
an impression of importance. Even a brief visit
to the country, or a single passage in a Yankee ship
was sufficient to turn a hitherto humble fellow into
an insufferable imitator. It was obvious the
skipper had been a good deal on the Spanish Main, as
he spoke their language with a fluency that left no
doubt as to what he had been doing for many years.
He was discovered at a time when the owner was in
much need of some one to take charge of his vessel,
as she did not attract the highest order of captain.
The Dutchman had no Board of Trade master or mate
certificate; he was merely a sailor. James Leigh
was discovered in pretty much the same way as the captain,
and the owner took a strong liking to him at the outset.
He was good to look at, and gifted with a bright intelligence
which made him attractive, besides having the advantage
of knowing something about navigation. The chief
mate’s berth was offered to him and accepted.
Furthermore, it was suggested that he should visit
and stay at the owner’s house, whenever the
vessel was in port and his services were not required
aboard, and seeing that he was not yet eighteen, he
felt flattered at the distinction that had been thrust
upon him. Perhaps he accepted the invitation
all the more readily as he was informed by his employer
that he had two daughters that would like to make his
acquaintance.
The first voyage was to Coronel and
back with coal to Iquique. Mr. Leigh, as he was
now addressed by everybody, on the ship or ashore,
had intimated to his commander that he liked his berth
for the prospects that might open up to him, but he
didn’t relish the thought of having to pump
so continuously; whereupon Captain Vandertallen winked
hard at him, and strongly urged that it should be put
up with, and to keep his eye on the girls who were
to inherit their father’s fortune.
“I tink,” said he, “I
vill marry de one and you vill have de other.”
“I don’t know about that,”
retorted James Leigh. “You see I’ve
a girl at home, and somehow I thinks a lot about her.
But a bit of money makes a difference; I must think
it over.”
Quarterdeck etiquette was not observed
between the two men. The captain addressed his
first officer as Jim, and Jim addressed his captain
as “Dutchy.” This familiarity was
arrived at soon after they came together, owing to
a strong difference of opinion on some point of seamanship
which had to do with the way a topgallant sail ought
to be taken in without running any risk of splitting
it. The quarrel was furious. Jim had called
his commander “a blithering, fat-headed Dutchman,
not fit to have charge of a dung barge, much less a
square-rigged ship. Captain Kickem of the Pacific
would not have carried you as ballast.”
Vandertallen was almost inarticulate. He frothed
out-
“Yes, an’ you he vould
not carry at all; you too much chick. Remember
I the captain, and I vill discharge you at first port.”
“Oh, you go to h !”
“No, I vill not go to h .
I’ll just stay here, and you can go to .
You jist a boy.”
“All right, Dutchy,” replied
the refractory mate; “you’ll want me before
I want you.”
And this was a correct prediction,
as, a few days later, Dutchy lost himself, and was
obliged to come to his mate and ask the true position
of the vessel.
“I am not captain,” said
he. “Do it yourself; you are a very clever
fellow.”
“No, no,” said Vandertallen;
“you know better dan me. Let us be
friends, Jim. I call you Jim; you call me Dutchy,
or vat you like.”
“All right, then,” said
James Leigh. “If that is to be the way,
I’ll tell you where you are, and if you had
run in the same direction other four hours you would
have been ashore on the Island of Mocha.”
“Vair is dat?” said Vandertallen, nervously.
“For Heaven’s sake don’t
ask such silly questions,” said the mate.
“You are miles out of your reckoning.”
“Vell, I’m d !”
said the amazed skipper. “Den you must do
de reckonin’ now, Jim.”
“That’s all very well,
Dutchy, but if I have to do the navigation I am entitled
to share the pay.”
“Vary vell,” replied his captain, “dat
agree.”
So henceforth they were co-partners
in everything-wages, perquisites, and position;
and they never again got out of their reckoning.
It was obvious James was first favourite with the crew,
and after the first voyage the veteran owner showed
his marked approval. Jim was allowed to do just
as he pleased. The daughters were charmed with
him, and frequently visited the vessel with their father
when the officers could not get conveniently to their
home. A strong and growing attachment was quite
apparent so far as the girls were concerned.
There seemed to be a preference with both of them for
the first mate, who, in turn, fixed his affections
on the youngest. His comrade was not quite satisfied
with being so frequently ignored, so remonstrated
with Jim to stick to one, and he would stick to the
other; but the ladies having to be taken into account,
it did not work at all smoothly, as each desired to
have Mr. Leigh, and before it was settled the sisters
had a violent tiff, which brought about the climax
and made it possible for negotiations to be carried
on in favour of a settlement. The father selected
the elder girl for Vandertallen, and the younger was
fixed on Leigh, who threw himself into the vortex of
flirtation with youthful ardour. He thought at
one time of marrying and settling down in Chili, and
undoubtedly the owner and daughter gave encouragement
to this idea.
But letters began to arrive from home,
which had an unsettling effect on him. He was
afraid to give his confidence to the captain lest he
might break faith with him, but in truth his mind and
heart were centred on a picturesque spot on the side
of a Welsh hill, and in that little home there was
one who longed to have him back. Indeed, she had
written to say that if he did not come soon to her
she would come to him. These communications revived
all the old feelings of affection in his breast, and
he resolved to tear himself away from the environment
which had gripped him like a vice. The old Spaniard
kept hinting marriage to him each time he paid a visit
to the superb villa, but he refused to be drawn into
anything definite. As he said-
“The place is getting too hot
for me. I must face it sooner or later if I am
not to permanently settle in Chili. Once married
it is all over with me. I will have loads of
money, but am I sure it will bring happiness?
I think I must say that I lean towards a daughter of
my native land, who may not have wealth, but who has
all the attributes that appeal to me. In a few
days I must decide.”
These were some of the thoughts occupying
Jim’s mind as the leaky old ark lounged her
way along the coast. The captain, on the other
hand, talked freely to his mate as to his own thoughts,
prompted no doubt by close companionship and the idea
of becoming brothers-in-law. He told Leigh that
both of them would be very wealthy some day, but Jim
kept his counsel. He had resolved that if the
subject was mentioned by the Spaniard again he would
make himself scarce.
On their arrival at Iquique, Leigh
received more letters from home. He went to the
owner’s house, and in the course of the evening
the old gentleman asked him right out to marry his
daughter. Mr. Leigh was confused, and said he
would like to save a little more money.
“Never mind the money.
You will have plenty of that,” said the father.
It was duly arranged that the wedding
should take place at the end of the next trip, and
on the strength of that there was much rejoicing at
the villa, in which James Leigh heartily joined.
He was pressed to stay all night with the happy family,
but he said that he could not do so, owing to pressing
official duties; so he bade his usual adieux,
and slipped out into the balmy night and made his way
aboard the vessel. He packed his belongings in
a bag, woke the captain, who was asleep in his berth,
shook hands with him, and said-
“Good-bye, Dutchy. You
can do what you blessed well like, but I am off.”
And before the captain had recovered
from his sleepy amazement his mate had slipped over
the side into a boat. That was the last Dutchy
ever saw of his prospective brother-in-law.
James Leigh stowed himself away aboard
a Yankee full-rigged packet-ship which had to sail
the following morning, and when the coast was clear
he made his appearance. He was subjected for a
time to that brutal treatment which at one time disgraced
the American mercantile marine, but being a smart
young fellow who could do the work of a competent
seaman, and handle his “dukes” with aptitude,
the officers began to show partiality towards him,
and before many days he became quite a favourite with
them and with the captain. To his surprise, when
the vessel had been at Philadelphia a few days, he
was asked to qualify for the second officer’s
berth. He received the compliment with modest
reserve, but his inward pride gave him trouble to
control. This was a position of no mean order
even to men far beyond his years, but the thought
of serving as an officer under the magic Stars and
Stripes was more fascinating than any pride he had
in the size of the vessel. A life of slash and
dash was just the kind of experience that appealed
to a full-blooded rip like Jim Leigh, so that he needed
no persuading to take the offer, and adapt himself
with fervour to the new conditions, which invested
him with the knuckle-duster, the belaying pin, and
the six-shooter. The Betty Sharp was chartered
for London instead of the Far East, as was expected,
and twenty days after passing Cape Henry she entered
the Thames; but even in that short time the sprightly
officer had made quite a name for himself, by his
methods of training and taming a heterogeneous team
of packet rats.
As the vessel was being hauled into
the Millwall Docks, spectators were attracted by the
disfigured condition of many of the crew. A gentleman
came aboard to solicit business, and after a few preliminary
remarks he said-
“Pardon me, captain, but I cannot
help noticing that some of your sailors look as though
there had been fighting. Did they mutiny?”
“Well, no; it was not exactly
mutiny, but it was getting near to it.”
“It must have been an anxious
time for you, sir,” continued the visitor.
“Well, no; I guess I was not
anxious at all, for my officers went about their rough
work with some muscular vigour. The war-paint
was soon put on and the rebellion squashed out of
them. The chief officer, understand, is an old
hand at the game; and that there young fellow, the
second officer, takes to the business kindly.
So we’ll get along right away.”
When the vessel was moored and the
decks cleared up, the second officer and the boatswain
asked the captain’s permission to go ashore
for the evening. This was granted, with a strong
admonition to keep straight and return aboard sober.
The boatswain was a short, thick-set man, with no
education, but a sailor all over in his habits, manner,
and conversation, and was just the kind of person to
have as a companion if there was any trouble about.
The two sailors were like schoolboys on a holiday.
They were well received by their friends, male and
female. In the West of London both were objects
of interest, and told their tales with unfailing exaggeration.
The boatswain was especially attractive, owing to
his rugged personality and his unaffected manner.
His sanguinary tales of American packet-ship life
were much canvassed for, and being a good story-teller,
he embellished them with incidents that gave them
a fine finishing touch. He was asked by some
young ladies if he had ever done any courting.
“Oh yes,” said he; “I
have mixed a lot of that up with other things.
The very last time I was stranded in Chili I got on
courting a girl whose mother kept a bit of an hotel,
and I was getting on famously, when one day the old
lady told me I wasn’t to come about her house
after her daughter; but I kept on going in a sort of
secret way, and one night I was sitting in what you
would call the kitchen, and the old girl sneaked in
with a great big stick. I saw the fury in her
eye. She made a go for me. I couldn’t
get out, so I bobbed under a four-legged wooden table,
picked it up on my shoulders, and tried to protect
my legs as much as I could. The girl screamed,
and rushed to open the door, and then called out for
me to run. I didn’t need any telling.
I rushed out, the old witch laying on the table with
all her might until I got out of her reach. And
that is the way I am here, because I shipped at once
aboard the Betty Sharp, for fear I might be
copped and put in choky by the old fiend.”
“Have you heard from your sweetheart
since?” asked one of the ladies.
“No,” said Jack the boatswain;
“nor I don’t want to. I’ll soon
get another where they knows how to treat genuine
sweetheartin’.”
Jim Leigh at this point said-
“Now then ‘Shortlegs,’
we must be going. I’ve heard that yarn fifty
times.”
“Yes, you have; but these here ladies
haven’t.”
“Quite right,” said the
ladies. “And we would like you to continue
telling some more of your love experiences on the Spanish
Main.”
Jack, however, said-
“Well, not to-night. Jim
wants to get away. I’ll come some other
time.”
The two sailors then left and made
their way back to the docks, and as they approached
the East End a fog which had been hanging over became
so dense that they could not see where they were, and
after groping about for a couple of hours they ran
against a house which had a light in the window.
Jim rapped at the door, and a man presented himself.
He was only partially clad. His voice and dialect
left no doubt as to the locality they were in.
“Wot yer doin’ of ‘ere
this time o’ night? ’Ave yer come
to rob some o’ these yere ’ouses, or wot’s
yer gime?”
Mr. Leigh was a talkative person,
and hastened to explain where they were going, and
that they could not find their way. The man asked
the two officers in, and presented them to a woman
who sat by the fire with a shawl over her shoulders.
She was young, and seemed to be of the gipsy type;
tall, handsome features, jet black hair, sparkling
eyes and eyebrows; and when she asked them to be seated,
her voice and accent gave the impression of a lady.
She chatted quite freely to the sailors about their
profession and the countries they had visited, which
led them to suppose that the lady was a great traveller.
She, however, told them that her knowledge was derived
from books. Shortlegs was mute. While the
others talked he was closely scrutinizing the surroundings.
Their host was a tall, well-set man, with shifty,
evil-looking eyes that were kept busy, as was his tongue.
After they had been in the house some time, he asked
them if they wished to stay all night.
“We don’t want ter press
yer, but if yer like we’ve got a comfortable
room. But ye’ll both ’ave to
sleep in one bed.”
“We don’t mind that,”
said James Leigh. “Show us where it is.”
They bade the lady good morning, as
it was 2 a.m., and they were escorted upstairs to
a moderately-furnished room with an iron bed, wooden
washstand, wardrobe, two chairs, and canvased floor.
“Well, do you think it’ll do?” asked
the host.
“Yes,” replied James,
in a jaunty way. “We’ve slept in many
a worse place than this, Shorty, haven’t we?
See that we’re called at six in the morning,
gov’nor.”
“That’s all right,”
said the shifty-eyed host; “we’re early
birds, we are, in this ’ere ’ouse.
We goes to bed early too. Wot’ll ye ’ave
for breakfast?”
“Never mind breakfast; we’ll
get that when we get aboard,” replied Leigh.
“Good-night; it’s very good of you to put
us up.”
The host remarked that he was pleased
to do a kindness to anybody, but especially to sailors,
and then he slid out of the room. Shortlegs watched
him downstairs, then closed the door. When he
looked round his second officer was half undressed.
He whispered to him not to undress, and that if he
knew as much about bugs as he did he would need no
telling.
“Oh! d - the
bugs and everything else. I’m in for a good
nap.”
“Well,” said Shortlegs,
“you may do as you like, but I’m a-going
to keep my clothes on.”
Jim, however, did not heed his companion’s
advice; he undressed, jumped into bed, and was soon
asleep. Shortlegs sat smoking his pipe for a
while, then rose and commenced a survey of the room.
He looked under the bed, into a cupboard, behind the
curtains, and then sat down and pondered over their
strange experience. At last he pulled his boots
and coat off, and was preparing to get into bed, when
it occurred to him that he had not examined the wardrobe;
so he jumped up, opened the door, stood gazing at
the inside, closed the door, went to the bed, shook
his mate into consciousness, and speaking in a loud
whisper, he said-
“Jim, for God’s sake get up!”
“What for?” said Jim.
“Because there’s a dead ’un in the
wardrobe,” replied Shortlegs.
“A what?” asked Mr. Leigh.
“A corpse,” responded his companion.
“Go on, don’t talk such rot!”
“Very well, look for yourself,”
said the boatswain, who again opened the door, and
exposed the dead body to view. James Leigh turned
pallid and almost inarticulate. He could only
touch his friend on the shoulder, and utter-
“My God, where are we? What shall we do
with the corpse?”
Visions of being had up for murder
had seized him. But he was quickly pulled up
by his more discreet shipmate, who told him to cease
speaking, allow the dead ’un to remain where
he was, keep their boots off, open the window quietly,
see how far it was to drop or to lower themselves
down with the bedclothes. This being done, they
found the plan of escape impracticable without being
“nabbed,” so they took the bold resolve
of going out as they had come in, with their boots
on. Before they had got half-way down the stairs
they heard suppressed conversation. It was evident
they were detected.
“Use your knuckle-duster, Jim,
if necessary, and charge them with murder,”
whispered Shortlegs.
“You leave that to me, Shorty; I’m going
to get out of this.”
When they reached the bottom of the
stairs, the room door, which was ajar, opened, and
the man who showed them upstairs stood before them.
He was in his sleeping clothes. They requested
him to open the outer door and let them out, as they
did not desire to remain any longer in the house.
He asked why they were leaving comfortable lodgings
on such a night. Jim being the spokesman, said
they didn’t like sleeping with corpses, and
raising his voice with nervous courage, declared that
if the door was not immediately opened he would stand
a good chance of being put in the wardrobe where the
other poor devil was. The wretched bully, shivering
with passion and sudden fear, made a grab at Jim,
and in an instant he was lying on the floor, and the
two sailors opened the door and stepped out into the
cold fog.
“My God, what an experience!”
said Shorty. “What a lucky thing I looked
in the wardrobe. We might have been given up to
the police as the murderers; and that lady, as we
thought, what a demon she must be to be connected
with such.”
“My dear fellow,” said
the second mate, “don’t say anything wrong
against the lady. How do we know but she is a
prisoner, or in some way beholden to the rascal.
What a strange thing she never appeared. I wonder
if she was there. She must have been, as we heard
voices.”
“That’s right enough,”
said the boatswain; “but was it her voice?”
“I never thought of that, Shorty.
What d’ye say if we go back and try and learn
more about this mysterious affair?”
“Not me,” said Shorty;
“I’ve had enough of this kind of experience.”
“But,” remonstrated the
officer, “suppose the lady is in captivity?”
“Never mind that, boss.
I don’t care if there were twenty blessed women
in captivity. I’m not going back, because
I thinks the lady is in the swim.”
“Nonsense, Shorts. She is an educated woman!”
“Yes; and I’ve heard,
boss, of educated women doin’ funny things.
How d’ye know but it’s her husband that’s
in the wardrobe, gov’nor? No, no; I knows
some of these ’ere ladies, and I’m not
a-going to mix myself up with them. And if you
takes my advice you’ll stick to me and get aboard
as soon as we can. And keep this ’ere affair
mum, or we may have a visit from some of her Majesty’s
detectives.”
“Well,” ejaculated James
Leigh, “it is a mystery, and must remain such
so far as we are concerned. But I am tempted to
tell the police, as I feel certain that woman cannot
be there of her own free will.”
“Woman be d -d,
boss! How do you know, as I said before, that
she’s not at the bottom of it? You never
knew an affair like this that a woman had not her
hand in it; and if you are going to give information,
don’t introduce your humble servant, who has
his own ideas of this ’ere person.”
The young fellows had talked on ever
since they left the tomb of the dead, unheeding the
direction in which they were going. When the fog
cleared they found themselves amidst the East End slums,
environed by all that was villainous. They were
not long in winding their way aboard the Betty
Sharp. The night’s exploits made a deep
impression on James Leigh; it caused him to review
the Bohemian career he had lived ever since he ran
away from the Pacific in Chili. He resolved
to pay a visit to his home in Wales, as he was so near,
and in spite of strong protestations on the part of
the captain he resigned his post. There was great
rejoicing in the little village when he unexpectedly
made his appearance. The news of the mutiny aboard
the Pacific, and the tragic end of the captain,
officers, and part of the crew preceded him.
His family had blamed him for leaving at Iquique.
They now said he had been guided by a strange but merciful
Providence to his old home. He told the eager
listeners of the family circle many tales of daring
adventure as they sat in the cosy room by the fire,
but whenever the gruesome figure of the dead man in
the wardrobe crossed his mind he became reticent and
pensive. These lapses did not go unnoticed, and
he was often pressed for the cause of so sudden a
change from mirth to sullen silence.
“I will tell you what it is,”
said he; “a corpse is the cause.”
And then he told them all about it.
James Leigh’s change of life, manner, and habits
dated from the dreaded night when he saw with his
own eyes the ghastly figure of what he believed to
be a murdered man. From being a roving, reckless,
devil-may-care sailor, he settled into a steady, ambitious,
capable man. He married a Welsh girl after his
own heart, and forgot all about the daughter of the
old Spaniard, who, if subsequent accounts were correct,
pined for his return to Chili. Mrs. Leigh resented
any allusion to the Spanish maiden. She always
reminded her husband that people should marry their
own countrywomen, and that instead of thinking of
her he should be using his mind in attaining that
knowledge that would enable him to reach the height
of his profession. He was not long in satisfying
the lady’s ambition and his own. In less
than five years from leaving the Yankee ship he was
in command of a smart, up-to-date English steamer,
trading between Mozambique and Zanzibar, trafficking
in slaves and other merchandise. He made heaps
of money for his owners, and was gifted with an aptitude
for never neglecting himself in matters of finance.
In due course the trade collapsed, and he was ordered
to bring his vessel home. By this time his savings
from several sources had accumulated to a decent little
fortune, and with it he resolved to start business
on his own account. He sought the aid of a few
friends, and was enabled to purchase a small steamer.
It was while he was on a visit to this much-boasted-of
craft that he came across Shorty at a fair outside
Cardiff. The rugged ex-boatswain had a machine
for trying strength, and asked him to have a go.
Captain Leigh recognized his old shipmate by a defect
in his speech, and made himself known. Shorty
was filled with delight, and would have given him
the whole show. He rushed off, called out to
a lady who was attending to the machine, and brought
her to be introduced.
“This is my bit o’ cracklen,
Jim. She’s a good ’un, she is.
Now, don’t ye be a-fallin’ in love with
her, James, as you used to with the other girls out
in Chili, ancetera, ancetera. Don’t ye reckonize
her? Don’t ye remember that fine hotel
we landed in, and the wardrobe and one or two other
incidents?”
“I do,” said Captain James
Leigh; “but surely this is not?”
“Yes, it is,” said the
proud husband. “It’s she, isn’t
it, chubby?”
The lady merely nodded her head and smiled.
“Then what have you been doing, Shorty, all
these years?”
“This,” said he, pointing
to the show. “I never got over the ’orror
of that night, so I made my mind up not to go a rovin’
agen; and this ’ere girl, that I thought so
badly of, ‘as helped me to make a livin’
ever since I came across her. Very queer, you
was right; she was sort o’ confined to the ‘ouse,
but had nothin’ to do with the corpse. She
didn’t know of it until I told her.”
“My God! don’t talk of
it, Shorts. I cannot bear to think of it even
now. But how did you pick her up?”
“At the docks,” said John
Shorts. “She came to look for us, and I
took on with her and got married.”
“You must have had a strong belief in her.”
“Yes; and so would you if you
knew her as I do. I’d trust my money, and
my life, and everything with her. D’ye see
that waggon of mats and baskets? That’s
her department; started on her own ’ook.
My word, she’s a daisy.”
“Well, Shorty, I’m delighted
to see you. And now I must be going. You
seem quite happy.”
“Happy,” said the boatswain,
“that’s not a name for it. It’s
’eaven on earth this ’ere thing,”
looking and pointing at his wife. Breaking off
quickly, he said, “’Ave ye ever heard from
Chili, Jim?”
“Oh yes,” said he; “I
had a letter only the other day from Dutchy. The
old owner died, and left all his money to his two daughters
and Dutchy, who married the eldest.”
“That’s a bit thick, isn’t
it, Jim-for that fat Dutchman to go wandering
about the Spanish Main doin’ all sorts of things,
and then fall on his feet like this?”
“Well,” said Jim, “you
have fallen on your feet, so you say; and I’m
sure I have.”
“That’s right,”
said Shorts. “I wasn’t thinken’
that the wife was standin’ by.”
The lady quietly smiled, shook hands
with her husband’s late chum, and walked off
towards her caravan. Captain Leigh endeavoured
to draw Shorty to tell him about his wife, but the
old sailor evaded all his questions.
“Well,” said Leigh, “this
has been a joyful meeting to me, and if we never met
again, God bless you!”
“The same to you, Jim,”
said Shorts. “Good-bye, old chap.”
The two men never did meet again.
James Leigh is now a prosperous merchant, and may
be seen any day in a smart-cut “frocker”
and silk hat, having his lunch at a bar, surrounded
with kindred spirits, telling his wonderful tales-some
truthful, others well padded, but all interesting.