The wise traveller travels only in
imagination. An old Frenchman (he was really
a Savoyard) once wrote a book called Voyage autour
de ma Chambre. I have not read it and do
not even know what it is about, but the title stimulates
my fancy. In such a journey I could circumnavigate
the globe. An eikon by the chimneypiece can take
me to Russia with its great forests of birch and its
white, domed churches. The Volga is wide, and
at the end of a straggling village, in the wine-shop,
bearded men in rough sheepskin coats sit drinking.
I stand on the little hill from which Napoleon first
saw Moscow and I look upon the vastness of the city.
I will go down and see the people whom I know more
intimately than so many of my friends, Alyosha, and
Vronsky, and a dozen more. But my eyes fall on
a piece of porcelain and I smell the acrid odours of
China. I am borne in a chair along a narrow causeway
between the padi fields, or else I skirt a tree-clad
mountain. My bearers chat gaily as they trudge
along in the bright morning and every now and then,
distant and mysterious, I hear the deep sound of a
monastery bell. In the streets of Peking there
is a motley crowd and it scatters to allow passage
to a string of camels, stepping delicately, that bring
skins and strange drugs from the stony deserts of
Mongolia. In England, in London, there are certain
afternoons in winter when the clouds hang heavy and
low and the light is so bleak that your heart sinks,
but then you can look out of your window, and you
see the coconut trees crowded upon the beach of a
coral island. The sand is silvery and when you
walk along in the sunshine it is so dazzling that
you can hardly bear to look at it. Overhead the
mynah birds are making a great to-do, and the surf
beats ceaselessly against the reef. Those are
the best journeys, the journeys that you take at your
own fireside, for then you lose none of your illusions.
But there are people who take salt
in their coffee. They say it gives it a tang,
a savour, which is peculiar and fascinating. In
the same way there are certain places, surrounded
by a halo of romance, to which the inevitable disillusionment
which you must experience on seeing them gives a singular
spice. You had expected something wholly beautiful
and you get an impression which is infinitely more
complicated than any that beauty can give you.
It is like the weakness in the character of a great
man which may make him less admirable but certainly
makes him more interesting.
Nothing had prepared me for Honolulu.
It is so far away from Europe, it is reached after
so long a journey from San Francisco, so strange and
so charming associations are attached to the name,
that at first I could hardly believe my eyes.
I do not know that I had formed in my mind any very
exact picture of what I expected, but what I found
caused me a great surprise. It is a typical western
city. Shacks are cheek by jowl with stone mansions;
dilapidated frame houses stand next door to smart
stores with plate glass windows; electric cars rumble
noisily along the streets; and motors, Fords, Buicks,
Packards, line the pavement. The shops are filled
with all the necessities of American civilisation.
Every third house is a bank and every fifth the agency
of a steamship company.
Along the streets crowd an unimaginable
assortment of people. The Americans, ignoring
the climate, wear black coats and high, starched collars,
straw hats, soft hats, and bowlers. The Kanakas,
pale brown, with crisp hair, have nothing on but a
shirt and a pair of trousers; but the half-breeds
are very smart with flaring ties and patent-leather
boots. The Japanese, with their obsequious smile,
are neat and trim in white duck, while their women
walk a step or two behind them, in native dress, with
a baby on their backs. The Japanese children,
in bright coloured frocks, their little heads shaven,
look like quaint dolls. Then there are the Chinese.
The men, fat and prosperous, wear their American clothes
oddly, but the women are enchanting with their tightly-dressed
black hair, so neat that you feel it can never be disarranged,
and they are very clean in their tunics and trousers,
white, or powder blue, or black. Lastly there
are the Filipinos, the men in huge straw hats, the
women in bright yellow muslin with great puffed sleeves.
It is the meeting-place of East and
West. The very new rubs shoulders with the immeasurably
old. And if you have not found the romance you
expected you have come upon something singularly intriguing.
All these strange people live close to each other,
with different languages and different thoughts; they
believe in different gods and they have different
values; two passions alone they share, love and hunger.
And somehow as you watch them you have an impression
of extraordinary vitality. Though the air is
so soft and the sky so blue, you have, I know not
why, a feeling of something hotly passionate that beats
like a throbbing pulse through the crowd. Though
the native policeman at the corner, standing on a
platform, with a white club to direct the traffic,
gives the scene an air of respectability, you cannot
but feel that it is a respectability only of the surface;
a little below there is darkness and mystery.
It gives you just that thrill, with a little catch
at the heart, that you have when at night in the forest
the silence trembles on a sudden with the low, insistent
beating of a drum. You are all expectant of I
know not what.
If I have dwelt on the incongruity
of Honolulu, it is because just this, to my mind,
gives its point to the story I want to tell. It
is a story of primitive superstition, and it startles
me that anything of the sort should survive in a civilisation
which, if not very distinguished, is certainly very
elaborate. I cannot get over the fact that such
incredible things should happen, or at least be thought
to happen, right in the middle, so to speak, of telephones,
tram-cars, and daily papers. And the friend who
showed me Honolulu had the same incongruity which I
felt from the beginning was its most striking characteristic.
He was an American named Winter and
I had brought a letter of introduction to him from
an acquaintance in New York. He was a man between
forty and fifty, with scanty black hair, grey at the
temples, and a sharp-featured, thin face. His
eyes had a twinkle in them and his large horn spectacles
gave him a demureness which was not a little diverting.
He was tall rather than otherwise and very spare.
He was born in Honolulu and his father had a large
store which sold hosiery and all such goods, from
tennis racquets to tarpaulins, as a man of fashion
could require. It was a prosperous business and
I could well understand the indignation of Winter
pere when his son, refusing to go into it,
had announced his determination to be an actor.
My friend spent twenty years on the stage, sometimes
in New York, but more often on the road, for his gifts
were small; but at last, being no fool, he came to
the conclusion that it was better to sell sock-suspenders
in Honolulu than to play small parts in Cleveland,
Ohio. He left the stage and went into the business.
I think after the hazardous existence he had lived
so long, he thoroughly enjoyed the luxury of driving
a large car and living in a beautiful house near the
golf-course, and I am quite sure, since he was a man
of parts, he managed the business competently.
But he could not bring himself entirely to break his
connection with the arts and since he might no longer
act he began to paint. He took me to his studio
and showed me his work. It was not at all bad,
but not what I should have expected from him.
He painted nothing but still life, very small pictures,
perhaps eight by ten; and he painted very delicately,
with the utmost finish. He had evidently a passion
for detail. His fruit pieces reminded you of
the fruit in a picture by Ghirlandajo. While you
marvelled a little at his patience, you could not help
being impressed by his dexterity. I imagine that
he failed as an actor because his effects, carefully
studied, were neither bold nor broad enough to get
across the footlights.
I was entertained by the proprietary,
yet ironical air with which he showed me the city.
He thought in his heart that there was none in the
United States to equal it, but he saw quite clearly
that his attitude was comic. He drove me round
to the various buildings and swelled with satisfaction
when I expressed a proper admiration for their architecture.
He showed me the houses of rich men.
“That’s the Stubbs’
house,” he said. “It cost a hundred
thousand dollars to build. The Stubbs are one
of our best families. Old man Stubbs came here
as a missionary more than seventy years ago.”
He hesitated a little and looked at
me with twinkling eyes through his big round spectacles.
“All our best families are missionary
families,” he said. “You’re
not very much in Honolulu unless your father or your
grandfather converted the heathen.”
“Is that so?”
“Do you know your Bible?”
“Fairly,” I answered.
“There is a text which says:
The fathers have eaten sour grapes and the children’s
teeth are set on edge. I guess it runs differently
in Honolulu. The fathers brought Christianity
to the Kanaka and the children jumped his land.”
“Heaven helps those who help themselves,”
I murmured.
“It surely does. By the
time the natives of this island had embraced Christianity
they had nothing else they could afford to embrace.
The kings gave the missionaries land as a mark of
esteem, and the missionaries bought land by way of
laying up treasure in heaven. It surely was a
good investment. One missionary left the business-I
think one may call it a business without offence-and
became a land agent, but that is an exception.
Mostly it was their sons who looked after the commercial
side of the concern. Oh, it’s a fine thing
to have a father who came here fifty years ago to
spread the faith.”
But he looked at his watch.
“Gee, it’s stopped. That means it’s
time to have a cocktail.”
We sped along an excellent road, bordered
with red hibiscus, and came back into the town.
“Have you been to the Union Saloon?”
“Not yet.”
“We’ll go there.”
I knew it was the most famous spot
in Honolulu and I entered it with a lively curiosity.
You get to it by a narrow passage from King Street,
and in the passage are offices, so that thirsty souls
may be supposed bound for one of these just as well
as for the saloon. It is a large square room,
with three entrances, and opposite the bar, which runs
the length of it, two corners have been partitioned
off into little cubicles. Legend states that
they were built so that King Kalakaua might drink
there without being seen by his subjects, and it is
pleasant to think that in one or other of these he
may have sat over his bottle, a coal-black potentate,
with Robert Louis Stevenson. There is a portrait
of him, in oils, in a rich gold frame; but there are
also two prints of Queen Victoria. On the walls,
besides, are old line engravings of the eighteenth
century, one of which, and heaven knows how it got
there, is after a theatrical picture by De Wilde;
and there are oleographs from the Christmas supplements
of the Graphic and the Illustrated London
News of twenty years ago. Then there are advertisements
of whisky, gin, champagne, and beer; and photographs
of baseball teams and of native orchestras.
The place seemed to belong not to
the modern, hustling world that I had left in the
bright street outside, but to one that was dying.
It had the savour of the day before yesterday.
Dingy and dimly lit, it had a vaguely mysterious air
and you could imagine that it would be a fit scene
for shady transactions. It suggested a more lurid
time, when ruthless men carried their lives in their
hands, and violent deeds diapered the monotony of
life.
When I went in the saloon was fairly
full. A group of business men stood together
at the bar, discussing affairs, and in a corner two
Kanakas were drinking. Two or three men who might
have been store-keepers were shaking dice. The
rest of the company plainly followed the sea; they
were captains of tramps, first mates, and engineers.
Behind the bar, busily making the Honolulu cocktail
for which the place was famous, served two large half-castes,
in white, fat, clean-shaven and dark skinned, with
thick, curly hair and large bright eyes.
Winter seemed to know more than half
the company, and when we made our way to the bar a
little fat man in spectacles, who was standing by
himself, offered him a drink.
“No, you have one with me, Captain,” said
Winter.
He turned to me.
“I want you to know Captain Butler.”
The little man shook hands with me.
We began to talk, but, my attention distracted by
my surroundings, I took small notice of him, and after
we had each ordered a cocktail we separated.
When we had got into the motor again and were driving
away, Winter said to me:
“I’m glad we ran up against
Butler. I wanted you to meet him. What did
you think of him?”
“I don’t know that I thought
very much of him at all,” I answered.
“Do you believe in the supernatural?”
“I don’t exactly know that I do,”
I smiled.
“A very queer thing happened
to him a year or two ago. You ought to have him
tell you about it.”
“What sort of thing?”
Winter did not answer my question.
“I have no explanation of it
myself,” he said. “But there’s
no doubt about the facts. Are you interested
in things like that?”
“Things like what?”
“Spells and magic and all that.”
“I’ve never met anyone who wasn’t.”
Winter paused for a moment.
“I guess I won’t tell
you myself. You ought to hear it from his own
lips so that you can judge. How are you fixed
up for to-night?”
“I’ve got nothing on at all.”
“Well, I’ll get hold of
him between now and then and see if we can’t
go down to his ship.”
Winter told me something about him.
Captain Butler had spent all his life on the Pacific.
He had been in much better circumstances than he was
now, for he had been first officer and then captain
of a passenger-boat plying along the coast of California,
but he had lost his ship and a number of passengers
had been drowned.
“Drink, I guess,” said Winter.
Of course there had been an enquiry,
which had cost him his certificate, and then he drifted
further afield. For some years he had knocked
about the South Seas, but he was now in command of
a small schooner which sailed between Honolulu and
the various islands of the group. It belonged
to a Chinese to whom the fact that his skipper had
no certificate meant only that he could be had for
lower wages, and to have a white man in charge was
always an advantage.
And now that I had heard this about
him I took the trouble to remember more exactly what
he was like. I recalled his round spectacles and
the round blue eyes behind them, and so gradually
reconstructed him before my mind. He was a little
man, without angles, plump, with a round face like
the full moon and a little fat round nose. He
had fair short hair, and he was red-faced and clean
shaven. He had plump hands, dimpled on the knuckles,
and short fat legs. He was a jolly soul, and the
tragic experience he had gone through seemed to have
left him unscarred. Though he must have been
thirty-four or thirty-five he looked much younger.
But after all I had given him but a superficial attention,
and now that I knew of this catastrophe, which had
obviously ruined his life, I promised myself that
when I saw him again I would take more careful note
of him. It is very curious to observe the differences
of emotional response that you find in different people.
Some can go through terrific battles, the fear of
imminent death and unimaginable horrors, and preserve
their soul unscathed, while with others the trembling
of the moon on a solitary sea or the song of a bird
in a thicket will cause a convulsion great enough
to transform their entire being. Is it due to
strength or weakness, want of imagination or instability
of character? I do not know. When I called
up in my fancy that scene of shipwreck, with the shrieks
of the drowning and the terror, and then later, the
ordeal of the enquiry, the bitter grief of those who
sorrowed for the lost, and the harsh things he must
have read of himself in the papers, the shame and
the disgrace, it came to me with a shock to remember
that Captain Butler had talked with the frank obscenity
of a schoolboy of the Hawaiian girls and of Ewelei,
the Red Light district, and of his successful adventures.
He laughed readily, and one would have thought he
could never laugh again. I remembered his shining,
white teeth; they were his best feature. He began
to interest me, and thinking of him and of his gay
insouciance I forgot the particular story, to hear
which I was to see him again. I wanted to see
him rather to find out if I could a little more what
sort of man he was.
Winter made the necessary arrangements
and after dinner we went down to the water front.
The ship’s boat was waiting for us and we rowed
out. The schooner was anchored some way across
the harbour, not far from the breakwater. We
came alongside, and I heard the sound of a ukalele.
We clambered up the ladder.
“I guess he’s in the cabin,”
said Winter, leading the way.
It was a small cabin, bedraggled and
dirty, with a table against one side and a broad bench
all round upon which slept, I supposed, such passengers
as were ill-advised enough to travel in such a ship.
A petroleum lamp gave a dim light. The ukalele
was being played by a native girl and Butler was lolling
on the seat, half lying, with his head on her shoulder
and an arm round her waist.
“Don’t let us disturb
you, Captain,” said Winter, facetiously.
“Come right in,” said
Butler, getting up and shaking hands with us.
“What’ll you have?”
It was a warm night, and through the
open door you saw countless stars in a heaven that
was still almost blue. Captain Butler wore a sleeveless
under-shirt, showing his fat white arms, and a pair
of incredibly dirty trousers. His feet were bare,
but on his curly head he wore a very old, a very shapeless
felt hat.
“Let me introduce you to my girl. Ain’t
she a peach?”
We shook hands with a very pretty
person. She was a good deal taller than the captain,
and even the Mother Hubbard, which the missionaries
of a past generation had, in the interests of decency,
forced on the unwilling natives, could not conceal
the beauty of her form. One could not but suspect
that age would burden her with a certain corpulence,
but now she was graceful and alert. Her brown
skin had an exquisite translucency and her eyes were
magnificent. Her black hair, very thick and rich,
was coiled round her head in a massive plait.
When she smiled in a greeting that was charmingly
natural, she showed teeth that were small, even, and
white. She was certainly a most attractive creature.
It was easy to see that the captain was madly in love
with her. He could not take his eyes off her;
he wanted to touch her all the time. That was
very easy to understand; but what seemed to me stranger
was that the girl was apparently in love with him.
There was a light in her eyes that was unmistakable,
and her lips were slightly parted as though in a sigh
of desire. It was thrilling. It was even
a little moving, and I could not help feeling somewhat
in the way. What had a stranger to do with this
love-sick pair? I wished that Winter had not brought
me. And it seemed to me that the dingy cabin
was transfigured and now it seemed a fit and proper
scene for such an extremity of passion. I thought
I should never forget that schooner in the harbour
of Honolulu, crowded with shipping, and yet, under
the immensity of the starry sky, remote from all the
world. I liked to think of those lovers sailing
off together in the night over the empty spaces of
the Pacific from one green, hilly island to another.
A faint breeze of romance softly fanned my cheek.
And yet Butler was the last man in
the world with whom you would have associated romance,
and it was hard to see what there was in him to arouse
love. In the clothes he wore now he looked podgier
than ever, and his round spectacles gave his round
face the look of a prim cherub. He suggested
rather a curate who had gone to the dogs. His
conversation was peppered with the quaintest Americanisms,
and it is because I despair of reproducing these that,
at whatever loss of vividness, I mean to narrate the
story he told me a little later in my own words.
Moreover he was unable to frame a sentence without
an oath, though a good-natured one, and his speech,
albeit offensive only to prudish ears, in print would
seem coarse. He was a mirth-loving man, and perhaps
that accounted not a little for his successful amours;
since women, for the most part frivolous creatures,
are excessively bored by the seriousness with which
men treat them, and they can seldom resist the buffoon
who makes them laugh. Their sense of humour is
crude. Diana of Ephesus is always prepared to
fling prudence to the winds for the red-nosed comedian
who sits on his hat. I realised that Captain
Butler had charm. If I had not known the tragic
story of the shipwreck I should have thought he had
never had a care in his life.
Our host had rung the bell on our
entrance and now a Chinese cook came in with more
glasses and several bottles of soda. The whisky
and the captain’s empty glass stood already
on the table. But when I saw the Chinese I positively
started, for he was certainly the ugliest man I had
ever seen. He was very short, but thick-set, and
he had a bad limp. He wore a singlet and a pair
of trousers that had been white, but were now filthy,
and, perched on a shock of bristly, grey hair, an old
tweed deer-stalker. It would have been grotesque
on any Chinese, but on him it was outrageous.
His broad, square face was very flat as though it had
been bashed in by a mighty fist, and it was deeply
pitted with smallpox; but the most revolting thing
in him was a very pronounced harelip which had never
been operated on, so that his upper lip, cleft, went
up in an angle to his nose, and in the opening was
a huge yellow fang. It was horrible. He
came in with the end of a cigarette at the corner of
his mouth, and this, I do not know why, gave him a
devilish expression.
He poured out the whisky and opened a bottle of soda.
“Don’t drown it, John,” said the
captain.
He said nothing, but handed a glass to each of us.
Then he went out.
“I saw you lookin’ at
my Chink,” said Butler, with a grin on his fat,
shining face.
“I should hate to meet him on a dark night,”
I said.
“He sure is homely,” said
the captain, and for some reason he seemed to say
it with a peculiar satisfaction. “But he’s
fine for one thing, I’ll tell the world; you
just have to have a drink every time you look at him.”
But my eyes fell on a calabash that
hung against the wall over the table, and I got up
to look at it. I had been hunting for an old one
and this was better than any I had seen outside the
museum.
“It was given me by a chief
over on one of the islands,” said the captain,
watching me. “I done him a good turn and
he wanted to give me something good.”
“He certainly did,” I answered.
I was wondering whether I could discreetly
make Captain Butler an offer for it, I could not imagine
that he set any store on such an article, when, as
though he read my thoughts, he said:
“I wouldn’t sell that for ten thousand
dollars.”
“I guess not,” said Winter. “It
would be a crime to sell it.”
“Why?” I asked.
“That comes into the story,” returned
Winter. “Doesn’t it, Captain?”
“It surely does.”
“Let’s hear it then.”
“The night’s young yet,” he answered.
The night distinctly lost its youth
before he satisfied my curiosity, and meanwhile we
drank a great deal too much whisky while Captain Butler
narrated his experiences of San Francisco in the old
days and of the South Seas. At last the girl
fell asleep. She lay curled up on the seat, with
her face on her brown arm, and her bosom rose and fell
gently with her breathing. In sleep she looked
sullen, but darkly beautiful.
He had found her on one of the islands
in the group among which, whenever there was cargo
to be got, he wandered with his crazy old schooner.
The Kanakas have little love for work, and the laborious
Chinese, the cunning Japs, have taken the trade out
of their hands. Her father had a strip of land
on which he grew taro and bananas and he had a boat
in which he went fishing. He was vaguely related
to the mate of the schooner, and it was he who took
Captain Butler up to the shabby little frame house
to spend an idle evening. They took a bottle of
whisky with them and the ukalele. The captain
was not a shy man and when he saw a pretty girl he
made love to her. He could speak the native language
fluently and it was not long before he had overcome
the girl’s timidity. They spent the evening
singing and dancing, and by the end of it she was
sitting by his side and he had his arm round her waist.
It happened that they were delayed on the island for
several days and the captain, at no time a man to
hurry, made no effort to shorten his stay. He
was very comfortable in the snug little harbour and
life was long. He had a swim round his ship in
the morning and another in the evening. There
was a chandler’s shop on the water front where
sailormen could get a drink of whisky, and he spent
the best part of the day there, playing cribbage with
the half-caste who owned it. At night the mate
and he went up to the house where the pretty girl
lived and they sang a song or two and told stories.
It was the girl’s father who suggested that he
should take her away with him. They discussed
the matter in a friendly fashion, while the girl,
nestling against the captain, urged him by the pressure
of her hands and her soft, smiling glances. He
had taken a fancy to her and he was a domestic man.
He was a little dull sometimes at sea and it would
be very pleasant to have a pretty little creature like
that about the old ship. He was of a practical
turn too, and he recognised that it would be useful
to have someone around to darn his socks and look after
his linen. He was tired of having his things washed
by a Chink who tore everything to pieces; the natives
washed much better, and now and then when the captain
went ashore at Honolulu he liked to cut a dash in a
smart duck suit. It was only a matter of arranging
a price. The father wanted two hundred and fifty
dollars, and the captain, never a thrifty man, could
not put his hand on such a sum. But he was a generous
one, and with the girl’s soft face against his,
he was not inclined to haggle. He offered to
give a hundred and fifty dollars there and then and
another hundred in three months. There was a good
deal of argument and the parties could not come to
any agreement that night, but the idea had fired the
captain, and he could not sleep as well as usual.
He kept dreaming of the lovely girl and each time
he awoke it was with the pressure of her soft, sensual
lips on his. He cursed himself in the morning
because a bad night at poker the last time he was at
Honolulu had left him so short of ready money.
And if the night before he had been in love with the
girl, this morning he was crazy about her.
“See here, Bananas,” he
said to the mate, “I’ve got to have that
girl. You go and tell the old man I’ll
bring the dough up to-night and she can get fixed
up. I figure we’ll be ready to sail at dawn.”
I have no idea why the mate was known
by that eccentric name. He was called Wheeler,
but though he had that English surname there was not
a drop of white blood in him. He was a tall man,
and well-made though inclined to stoutness, but much
darker than is usual in Hawaii. He was no longer
young, and his crisply curling, thick hair was grey.
His upper front teeth were cased in gold. He
was very proud of them. He had a marked squint
and this gave him a saturnine expression. The
captain, who was fond of a joke, found in it a constant
source of humour and hesitated the less to rally him
on the defect because he realised that the mate was
sensitive about it. Bananas, unlike most of the
natives, was a taciturn fellow and Captain Butler
would have disliked him if it had been possible for
a man of his good nature to dislike anyone. He
liked to be at sea with someone he could talk to, he
was a chatty, sociable creature, and it was enough
to drive a missionary to drink to live there day after
day with a chap who never opened his mouth. He
did his best to wake the mate up, that is to say,
he chaffed him without mercy, but it was poor fun
to laugh by oneself, and he came to the conclusion
that, drunk or sober, Bananas was no fit companion
for a white man. But he was a good seaman and
the captain was shrewd enough to know the value of
a mate he could trust. It was not rare for him
to come aboard, when they were sailing, fit for nothing
but to fall into his bunk, and it was worth something
to know that he could stay there till he had slept
his liquor off, since Bananas could be relied on.
But he was an unsociable devil, and it would be a
treat to have someone he could talk to. That
girl would be fine. Besides, he wouldn’t
be so likely to get drunk when he went ashore if he
knew there was a little girl waiting for him when
he came on board again.
He went to his friend the chandler
and over a peg of gin asked him for a loan. There
were one or two useful things a ship’s captain
could do for a ship’s chandler, and after a
quarter of an hour’s conversation in low tones
(there is no object in letting all and sundry know
your business), the captain crammed a wad of notes
in his hip-pocket, and that night, when he went back
to his ship, the girl went with him.
What Captain Butler, seeking for reasons
to do what he had already made up his mind to, had
anticipated, actually came to pass. He did not
give up drinking, but he ceased to drink to excess.
An evening with the boys, when he had been away from
town two or three weeks, was pleasant enough, but
it was pleasant too to get back to his little girl;
he thought of her, sleeping so softly, and how, when
he got into his cabin and leaned over her, she would
open her eyes lazily and stretch out her arms for
him: it was as good as a full hand. He found
he was saving money, and since he was a generous man
he did the right thing by the little girl: he
gave her some silver-backed brushes for her long hair,
and a gold chain, and a reconstructed ruby for her
finger. Gee, but it was good to be alive.
A year went by, a whole year, and
he was not tired of her yet. He was not a man
who analysed his feelings, but this was so surprising
that it forced itself upon his attention. There
must be something very wonderful about that girl.
He couldn’t help seeing that he was more wrapped
up in her than ever, and sometimes the thought entered
his mind that it might not be a bad thing if he married
her.
Then, one day the mate did not come
in to dinner or to tea. Butler did not bother
himself about his absence at the first meal, but at
the second he asked the Chinese cook:
“Where’s the mate? He no come tea?”
“No wantchee,” said the Chink.
“He ain’t sick?”
“No savvy.”
Next day Bananas turned up again,
but he was more sullen than ever, and after dinner
the captain asked the girl what was the matter with
him. She smiled and shrugged her pretty shoulders.
She told the captain that Bananas had taken a fancy
to her and he was sore because she had told him off.
The captain was a good-humoured man and he was not
of a jealous nature; it struck him as exceeding funny
that Bananas should be in love. A man who had
a squint like that had a precious poor chance.
When tea came round he chaffed him gaily. He
pretended to speak in the air, so that the mate should
not be certain that he knew anything, but he dealt
him some pretty shrewd blows. The girl did not
think him as funny as he thought himself, and afterwards
she begged him to say nothing more. He was surprised
at her seriousness. She told him he did not know
her people. When their passion was aroused they
were capable of anything. She was a little frightened.
This was so absurd to him that he laughed heartily.
“If he comes bothering round
you, you just threaten to tell me. That’ll
fix him.”
“Better fire him, I think.”
“Not on your sweet life.
I know a good sailor when I see one. But if he
don’t leave you alone I’ll give him the
worst licking he’s ever had.”
Perhaps the girl had a wisdom unusual
in her sex. She knew that it was useless to argue
with a man when his mind was made up, for it only
increased his stubbornness, and she held her peace.
And now on the shabby schooner, threading her way
across the silent sea, among those lovely islands,
was enacted a dark, tense drama of which the fat little
captain remained entirely ignorant. The girl’s
resistance fired Bananas so that he ceased to be a
man, but was simply blind desire. He did not
make love to her gently or gaily, but with a black
and savage ferocity. Her contempt now was changed
to hatred and when he besought her she answered him
with bitter, angry taunts. But the struggle went
on silently, and when the captain asked her after
a little while whether Bananas was bothering her,
she lied.
But one night, when they were in Honolulu,
he came on board only just in time. They were
sailing at dawn. Bananas had been ashore, drinking
some native spirit, and he was drunk. The captain,
rowing up, heard sounds that surprised him. He
scrambled up the ladder. He saw Bananas, beside
himself, trying to wrench open the cabin door.
He was shouting at the girl. He swore he would
kill her if she did not let him in.
“What in hell are you up to?” cried Butler.
The mate let go the handle, gave the
captain a look of savage hate, and without a word
turned away.
“Stop here. What are you doing with that
door?”
The mate still did not answer.
He looked at him with sullen, bootless rage.
“I’ll teach you not to
pull any of your queer stuff with me, you dirty, cross-eyed
nigger,” said the captain.
He was a good foot shorter than the
mate and no match for him, but he was used to dealing
with native crews, and he had his knuckle-duster handy.
Perhaps it was not an instrument that a gentleman would
use, but then Captain Butler was not a gentleman.
Nor was he in the habit of dealing with gentlemen.
Before Bananas knew what the captain was at, his right
arm had shot out and his fist, with its ring of steel,
caught him fair and square on the jaw. He fell
like a bull under the pole-axe.
“That’ll learn him,” said the captain.
Bananas did not stir. The girl unlocked the cabin
door and came out.
“Is he dead?”
“He ain’t.”
He called a couple of men and told
them to carry the mate to his bunk. He rubbed
his hands with satisfaction and his round blue eyes
gleamed behind his spectacles. But the girl was
strangely silent. She put her arms round him
as though to protect him from invisible harm.
It was two or three days before Bananas
was on his feet again, and when he came out of his
cabin his face was torn and swollen. Through the
darkness of his skin you saw the livid bruise.
Butler saw him slinking along the deck and called
him. The mate went to him without a word.
“See here, Bananas,” he
said to him, fixing his spectacles on his slippery
nose, for it was very hot. “I ain’t
going to fire you for this, but you know now that
when I hit, I hit hard. Don’t forget it
and don’t let me have any more funny business.”
Then he held out his hand and gave
the mate that good-humoured, flashing smile of his
which was his greatest charm. The mate took the
outstretched hand and twitched his swollen lips into
a devilish grin. The incident in the captain’s
mind was so completely finished that when the three
of them sat at dinner he chaffed Bananas on his appearance.
He was eating with difficulty and, his swollen face
still more distorted by pain, he looked truly a repulsive
object.
That evening, when he was sitting
on the upper deck, smoking his pipe, a shiver passed
through the captain.
“I don’t know what I should
be shiverin’ for on a night like this,”
he grumbled. “Maybe I’ve gotten a
dose of fever. I’ve been feelin’ a
bit queer all day.”
When he went to bed he took some quinine,
and next morning he felt better, but a little washed
out, as though he were recovering from a debauch.
“I guess my liver’s out
of order,” he said, and he took a pill.
He had not much appetite that day
and towards evening he began to feel very unwell.
He tried the next remedy he knew, which was to drink
two or three hot whiskies, but that did not seem to
help him much, and when in the morning he surveyed
himself in the glass he thought he was not looking
quite the thing.
“If I ain’t right by the
time we get back to Honolulu I’ll just give Dr
Denby a call. He’ll sure fix me up.”
He could not eat. He felt a great
lassitude in all his limbs. He slept soundly
enough, but he awoke with no sense of refreshment;
on the contrary he felt a peculiar exhaustion.
And the energetic little man, who could not bear the
thought of lying in bed, had to make an effort to
force himself out of his bunk. After a few days
he found it impossible to resist the languor that
oppressed him, and he made up his mind not to get
up.
“Bananas can look after the
ship,” he said. “He has before now.”
He laughed a little to himself as
he thought how often he had lain speechless in his
bunk after a night with the boys. That was before
he had his girl. He smiled at her and pressed
her hand. She was puzzled and anxious. He
saw that she was concerned about him and tried to reassure
her. He had never had a day’s illness in
his life and in a week at the outside he would be
as right as rain.
“I wish you’d fired Bananas,”
she said. “I’ve got a feeling that
he’s at the bottom of this.”
“Damned good thing I didn’t,
or there’d be no one to sail the ship. I
know a good sailor when I see one.” His
blue eyes, rather pale now, with the whites all yellow,
twinkled. “You don’t think he’s
trying to poison me, little girl?”
She did not answer, but she had one
or two talks with the Chinese cook, and she took great
care with the captain’s food. But he ate
little enough now, and it was only with the greatest
difficulty that she persuaded him to drink a cup of
soup two or three times a day. It was clear that
he was very ill, he was losing weight quickly, and
his chubby face was pale and drawn. He suffered
no pain, but merely grew every day weaker and more
languid. He was wasting away. The round trip
on this occasion lasted about four weeks and by the
time they came to Honolulu the captain was a little
anxious about himself. He had not been out of
his bed for more than a fortnight and really he felt
too weak to get up and go to the doctor. He sent
a message asking him to come on board. The doctor
examined him, but could find nothing to account for
his condition. His temperature was normal.
“See here, Captain,” he
said, “I’ll be perfectly frank with you.
I don’t know what’s the matter with you,
and just seeing you like this don’t give me
a chance. You come into the hospital so that we
can keep you under observation. There’s
nothing organically wrong with you, I know that, and
my impression is that a few weeks in hospital ought
to put you to rights.”
“I ain’t going to leave my ship.”
Chinese owners were queer customers,
he said; if he left his ship because he was sick,
his owner might fire him, and he couldn’t afford
to lose his job. So long as he stayed where he
was his contract safe-guarded him, and he had a first-rate
mate. Besides, he couldn’t leave his girl.
No man could want a better nurse; if anyone could pull
him through she would. Every man had to die once
and he only wished to be left in peace. He would
not listen to the doctor’s expostulations, and
finally the doctor gave in.
“I’ll write you a prescription,”
he said doubtfully, “and see if it does you
any good. You’d better stay in bed for a
while.”
“There ain’t much fear
of my getting up, doc,” answered the captain.
“I feel as weak as a cat.”
But he believed in the doctor’s
prescription as little as did the doctor himself,
and when he was alone amused himself by lighting his
cigar with it. He had to get amusement out of
something, for his cigar tasted like nothing on earth,
and he smoked only to persuade himself that he was
not too ill to. That evening a couple of friends
of his, masters of tramp steamers, hearing he was
sick came to see him. They discussed his case
over a bottle of whisky and a box of Philippine cigars.
One of them remembered how a mate of his had been
taken queer just like that and not a doctor in the
United States had been able to cure him. He had
seen in the paper an advertisement of a patent medicine,
and thought there’d be no harm in trying it.
That man was as strong as ever he’d been in his
life after two bottles. But his illness had given
Captain Butler a lucidity which was new and strange,
and while they talked he seemed to read their minds.
They thought he was dying. And when they left
him he was afraid.
The girl saw his weakness. This
was her opportunity. She had been urging him
to let a native doctor see him, and he had stoutly
refused; but now she entreated him. He listened
with harassed eyes. He wavered. It was very
funny that the American doctor could not tell what
was the matter with him. But he did not want
her to think that he was scared. If he let a
damned nigger come along and look at him, it was to
comfort her. He told her to do what she
liked.
The native doctor came the next night.
The captain was lying alone, half awake, and the cabin
was dimly lit by an oil lamp. The door was softly
opened and the girl came in on tip-toe. She held
the door open and some one slipped in silently behind
her. The captain smiled at this mystery, but
he was so weak now, the smile was no more than a glimmer
in his eyes. The doctor was a little, old man,
very thin and very wrinkled, with a completely bald
head, and the face of a monkey. He was bowed and
gnarled like an old tree. He looked hardly human,
but his eyes were very bright, and in the half darkness,
they seemed to glow with a reddish light. He
was dressed filthily in a pair of ragged dungarees,
and the upper part of his body was naked. He
sat down on his haunches and for ten minutes looked
at the captain. Then he felt the palms of his
hands and the soles of his feet. The girl watched
him with frightened eyes. No word was spoken.
Then he asked for something that the captain had worn.
The girl gave him the old felt hat which the captain
used constantly and taking it he sat down again on
the floor, clasping it firmly with both hands; and
rocking backwards and forwards slowly he muttered some
gibberish in a very low tone.
At last he gave a little sigh and
dropped the hat. He took an old pipe out of his
trouser pocket and lit it. The girl went over
to him and sat by his side. He whispered something
to her, and she started violently. For a few
minutes they talked in hurried undertones, and then
they stood up. She gave him money and opened
the door for him. He slid out as silently as
he had come in. Then she went over to the captain
and leaned over him so that she could speak into his
ear.
“It’s an enemy praying you to death.”
“Don’t talk fool stuff, girlie,”
he said impatiently.
“It’s truth. It’s
God’s truth. That’s why the American
doctor couldn’t do anything. Our people
can do that. I’ve seen it done. I thought
you were safe because you were a white man.”
“I haven’t an enemy.”
“Bananas.”
“What’s he want to pray me to death for?”
“You ought to have fired him before he had a
chance.”
“I guess if I ain’t got
nothing more the matter with me than Bananas’
hoodoo I shall be sitting up and taking nourishment
in a very few days.”
She was silent for a while and she looked at him intently.
“Don’t you know you’re dying?”
she said to him at last.
That was what the two skippers had
thought, but they hadn’t said it. A shiver
passed across the captain’s wan face.
“The doctor says there ain’t
nothing really the matter with me. I’ve
only to lie quiet for a bit and I shall be all right.”
She put her lips to his ear as if
she were afraid that the air itself might hear.
“You’re dying, dying,
dying. You’ll pass out with the old moon.”
“That’s something to know.”
“You’ll pass out with the old moon unless
Bananas dies before.”
He was not a timid man and he had
recovered already from the shock her words, and still
more her vehement, silent manner, had given him.
Once more a smile flickered in his eyes.
“I guess I’ll take my chance, girlie.”
“There’s twelve days before the new moon.”
There was something in her tone that gave him an idea.
“See here, my girl, this is
all bunk. I don’t believe a word of it.
But I don’t want you to try any of your monkey
tricks with Bananas. He ain’t a beauty,
but he’s a first-rate mate.”
He would have said a good deal more,
but he was tired out. He suddenly felt very weak
and faint. It was always at that hour that he
felt worse. He closed his eyes. The girl
watched him for a minute and then slipped out of the
cabin. The moon, nearly full, made a silver pathway
over the dark sea. It shone from an unclouded
sky. She looked at it with terror, for she knew
that with its death the man she loved would die.
His life was in her hands. She could save him,
she alone could save him, but the enemy was cunning,
and she must be cunning too. She felt that someone
was looking at her, and without turning, by the sudden
fear that seized her, knew that from the shadow the
burning eyes of the mate were fixed upon her.
She did not know what he could do; if he could read
her thoughts she was defeated already, and with a
desperate effort she emptied her mind of all content.
His death alone could save her lover, and she could
bring his death about. She knew that if he could
be brought to look into a calabash in which was water
so that a reflection of him was made, and the reflection
were broken by hurtling the water, he would die as
though he had been struck by lightning; for the reflection
was his soul. But none knew better than he the
danger, and he could be made to look only by a guile
which had lulled his least suspicion. He must
never think that he had an enemy who was on the watch
to cause his destruction. She knew what she had
to do. But the time was short, the time was terribly
short. Presently she realised that the mate had
gone. She breathed more freely.
Two days later they sailed, and there
were ten now before the new moon. Captain Butler
was terrible to see. He was nothing but skin and
bone, and he could not move without help. He
could hardly speak. But she dared do nothing
yet. She knew that she must be patient. The
mate was cunning, cunning. They went to one of
the smaller islands of the group and discharged cargo,
and now there were only seven days more. The moment
had come to start. She brought some things out
of the cabin she shared with the captain and made
them into a bundle. She put the bundle in the
deck cabin where she and Bananas ate their meals, and
at dinner time, when she went in, he turned quickly
and she saw that he had been looking at it. Neither
of them spoke, but she knew what he suspected.
She was making her preparations to leave the ship.
He looked at her mockingly. Gradually, as though
to prevent the captain from knowing what she was about,
she brought everything she owned into the cabin, and
some of the captain’s clothes, and made them
all into bundles. At last Bananas could keep
silence no longer. He pointed to a suit of ducks.
“What are you going to do with that?”
he asked.
She shrugged her shoulders.
“I’m going back to my island.”
He gave a laugh that distorted his
grim face. The captain was dying and she meant
to get away with all she could lay hands on.
“What’ll you do if I say
you can’t take those things? They’re
the captain’s.”
“They’re no use to you,” she said.
There was a calabash hanging on the
wall. It was the very calabash I had seen when
I came into the cabin and which we had talked about.
She took it down. It was all dusty, so she poured
water into it from the water-bottle, and rinsed it
with her fingers.
“What are you doing with that?”
“I can sell it for fifty dollars,” she
said.
“If you want to take it you’ll have to
pay me.”
“What d’you want?”
“You know what I want.”
She allowed a fleeting smile to play
on her lips. She flashed a quick look at him
and quickly turned away. He gave a gasp of desire.
She raised her shoulders in a little shrug. With
a savage bound he sprang upon her and seized her in
his arms. Then she laughed. She put her arms,
her soft, round arms, about his neck, and surrendered
herself to him voluptuously.
When the morning came she roused him
out of a deep sleep. The early rays of the sun
slanted into the cabin. He pressed her to his
heart. Then he told her that the captain could
not last more than a day or two, and the owner wouldn’t
so easily find another white man to command the ship.
If Bananas offered to take less money he would get
the job and the girl could stay with him. He
looked at her with love-sick eyes. She nestled
up against him. She kissed his lips, in the foreign
way, in the way the captain had taught her to kiss.
And she promised to stay. Bananas was drunk with
happiness.
It was now or never.
She got up and went to the table to
arrange her hair. There was no mirror and she
looked into the calabash, seeking for her reflection.
She tidied her beautiful hair. Then she beckoned
to Bananas to come to her. She pointed to the
calabash.
“There’s something in the bottom of it,”
she said.
Instinctively, without suspecting
anything, Bananas looked full into the water.
His face was reflected in it. In a flash she beat
upon it violently, with both her hands, so that they
pounded on the bottom and the water splashed up.
The reflection was broken in pieces. Bananas
started back with a sudden hoarse cry and he looked
at the girl. She was standing there with a look
of triumphant hatred on her face. A horror came
into his eyes. His heavy features were twisted
in agony, and with a thud, as though he had taken
a violent poison, he crumpled up on to the ground.
A great shudder passed through his body and he was
still. She leaned over him callously. She
put her hand on his heart and then she pulled down
his lower eye-lid. He was quite dead.
She went into the cabin in which lay
Captain Butler. There was a faint colour in his
cheeks and he looked at her in a startled way.
“What’s happened?” he whispered.
They were the first words he had spoken for forty-eight
hours.
“Nothing’s happened,” she said.
“I feel all funny.”
Then his eyes closed and he fell asleep.
He slept for a day and a night, and when he awoke
he asked for food. In a fortnight he was well.
It was past midnight when Winter and
I rowed back to shore and we had drunk innumerable
whiskies and sodas.
“What do you think of it all?” asked Winter.
“What a question! If you
mean, have I any explanation to suggest, I haven’t.”
“The captain believes every word of it.”
“That’s obvious; but you
know that’s not the part that interests me most,
whether it’s true or not, and what it all means;
the part that interests me is that such things should
happen to such people. I wonder what there is
in that commonplace little man to arouse such a passion
in that lovely creature. As I watched her, asleep
there, while he was telling the story I had some fantastic
idea about the power of love being able to work miracles.”
“But that’s not the girl,” said
Winter.
“What on earth do you mean?”
“Didn’t you notice the cook?”
“Of course I did. He’s the ugliest
man I ever saw.”
“That’s why Butler took
him. The girl ran away with the Chinese cook
last year. This is a new one. He’s
only had her there about two months.”
“Well, I’m hanged.”
“He thinks this cook is safe.
But I wouldn’t be too sure in his place.
There’s something about a Chink, when he lays
himself out to please a woman she can’t resist
him.”