The Secret Sharer
I
On my right hand there were lines of fishing stakes resembling a
mysterious system of half-submerged bamboo fences, incomprehensible in its
division of the domain of tropical fishes, and crazy of aspect as if abandoned
forever by some nomad tribe of fishermen now gone to the other end of the
ocean; for there was no sign of human habitation as far as the eye could reach.
To the left a group of barren islets, suggesting ruins of stone walls, towers,
and blockhouses, had its foundations set in a blue sea that itself looked
solid, so still and stable did it lie below my feet; even the track of light
from the westering sun shone smoothly, without that animated glitter which
tells of an imperceptible ripple. And when I turned my head to take a parting
glance at the tug which had just left us anchored outside the bar, I saw the
straight line of the flat shore joined to the stable sea, edge to edge, with a
perfect and unmarked closeness, in one leveled floor half brown, half blue
under the enormous dome of the sky. Corresponding in their insignificance to
the islets of the sea, two small clumps of trees, one on each side of the only
fault in the impeccable joint, marked the mouth of the river Meinam we had just
left on the first preparatory stage of our homeward journey; and, far back on
the inland level, a larger and loftier mass, the grove surrounding the great
Paknam pagoda, was the only thing on which the eye could rest from the vain
task of exploring the monotonous sweep of the horizon. Here and there gleams as
of a few scattered pieces of silver marked the windings of the great river; and
on the nearest of them, just within the bar, the tug steaming right into the
land became lost to my sight, hull and funnel and masts, as though the
impassive earth had swallowed her up without an effort, without a tremor. My
eye followed the light cloud of her smoke, now here, now there, above the
plain, according to the devious curves of the stream, but always fainter and
farther away, till I lost it at last behind the miter-shaped hill of the great
pagoda. And then I was left alone with my ship, anchored at the head of the
Gulf of Siam.
She floated at the starting point of a long
journey, very still in an immense stillness, the shadows of her spars flung far
to the eastward by the setting sun. At that moment I was alone on her decks.
There was not a sound in her—and around us nothing moved, nothing lived, not a
canoe on the water, not a bird in the air, not a cloud in the sky. In this breathless
pause at the threshold of a long passage we seemed to be measuring our fitness
for a long and arduous enterprise, the appointed task of both our existences to
be carried out, far from all human eyes, with only sky and sea for spectators
and for judges.
There must have been some glare in the air to
interfere with one’s sight, because it was only just before the sun left us
that my roaming eyes made out beyond the highest ridges of the principal islet
of the group something which did away with the solemnity of perfect solitude.
The tide of darkness flowed on swiftly; and with tropical suddenness a swarm of
stars came out above the shadowy earth, while I lingered yet, my hand resting
lightly on my ship’s rail as if on the shoulder of a trusted friend. But, with
all that multitude of celestial bodies staring down at one, the comfort of
quiet communion with her was gone for good. And there were also disturbing
sounds by this time—voices, footsteps forward; the steward flitted along the
main-deck, a busily ministering spirit; a hand bell tinkled urgently under the
poop deck....
I found my two officers waiting for me near the
supper table, in the lighted cuddy. We sat down at once, and as I helped the
chief mate, I said:
“Are you aware that there is a ship anchored
inside the islands? I saw her mastheads above the ridge as the sun went down.”
He raised sharply his simple face, overcharged
by a terrible growth of whisker, and emitted his usual ejaculations: “Bless my
soul, sir! You don’t say so!”
My second mate was a round-cheeked, silent young
man, grave beyond his years, I thought; but as our eyes happened to meet I
detected a slight quiver on his lips. I looked down at once. It was not my part
to encourage sneering on board my ship. It must be said, too, that I knew very
little of my officers. In consequence of certain events of no particular
significance, except to myself, I had been appointed to the command only a
fortnight before. Neither did I know much of the hands forward. All these
people had been together for eighteen months or so, and my position was that of
the only stranger on board. I mention this because it has some bearing on what
is to follow. But what I felt most was my being a stranger to the ship; and if
all the truth must be told, I was somewhat of a stranger to myself. The
youngest man on board (barring the second mate), and untried as yet by a
position of the fullest responsibility, I was willing to take the adequacy of
the others for granted. They had simply to be equal to their tasks; but I wondered
how far I should turn out faithful to that ideal conception of one’s own
personality every man sets up for himself secretly.
Meantime the chief mate, with an almost visible
effect of collaboration on the part of his round eyes and frightful whiskers,
was trying to evolve a theory of the anchored ship. His dominant trait was to
take all things into earnest consideration. He was of a painstaking turn of
mind. As he used to say, he “liked to account to himself” for practically
everything that came in his way, down to a miserable scorpion he had found in
his cabin a week before. The why and the wherefore of that scorpion—how it got
on board and came to select his room rather than the pantry (which was a dark
place and more what a scorpion would be partial to), and how on earth it
managed to drown itself in the inkwell of his writing desk—had exercised him
infinitely. The ship within the islands was much more easily accounted for; and
just as we were about to rise from table he made his pronouncement. She was, he
doubted not, a ship from home lately arrived. Probably she drew too much water
to cross the bar except at the top of spring tides. Therefore she went into
that natural harbor to wait for a few days in preference to remaining in an
open roadstead.
“That’s so,” confirmed the second mate,
suddenly, in his slightly hoarse voice. “She draws over twenty feet. She’s the
Liverpool ship Sephora with a cargo of coal. Hundred and twenty-three days from
Cardiff.”
We looked at him in surprise.
“The tugboat skipper told me when he came on
board for your letters, sir,” explained the young man. “He expects to take her
up the river the day after tomorrow.”
After thus overwhelming us with the extent of
his information he slipped out of the cabin. The mate observed regretfully that
he “could not account for that young fellow’s whims.” What prevented him
telling us all about it at once, he wanted to know.
I detained him as he was making a move. For the
last two days the crew had had plenty of hard work, and the night before they
had very little sleep. I felt painfully that I—a stranger—was doing something
unusual when I directed him to let all hands turn in without setting an anchor
watch. I proposed to keep on deck myself till one o’clock or thereabouts. I
would get the second mate to relieve me at that hour.
“He will turn out the cook and the steward at
four,” I concluded, “and then give you a call. Of course at the slightest sign
of any sort of wind we’ll have the hands up and make a start at once.”
He concealed his astonishment. “Very well, sir.”
Outside the cuddy he put his head in the second mate’s door to inform him of my
unheard-of caprice to take a five hours’ anchor watch on myself. I heard the
other raise his voice incredulously—“What? The Captain himself?” Then a few
more murmurs, a door closed, then another. A few moments later I went on deck.
My strangeness, which had made me sleepless, had
prompted that unconventional arrangement, as if I had expected in those
solitary hours of the night to get on terms with the ship of which I knew
nothing, manned by men of whom I knew very little more. Fast alongside a wharf,
littered like any ship in port with a tangle of unrelated things, invaded by
unrelated shore people, I had hardly seen her yet properly. Now, as she lay
cleared for sea, the stretch of her main-deck seemed to me very fine under the
stars. Very fine, very roomy for her size, and very inviting. I descended the
poop and paced the waist, my mind picturing to myself the coming passage through
the Malay Archipelago, down the Indian Ocean, and up the Atlantic. All its
phases were familiar enough to me, every characteristic, all the alternatives
which were likely to face me on the high seas—everything!... except the novel
responsibility of command. But I took heart from the reasonable thought that
the ship was like other ships, the men like other men, and that the sea was not
likely to keep any special surprises expressly for my discomfiture.
Arrived at that comforting conclusion, I
bethought myself of a cigar and went below to get it. All was still down there.
Everybody at the after end of the ship was sleeping profoundly. I came out
again on the quarter-deck, agreeably at ease in my sleeping suit on that warm
breathless night, barefooted, a glowing cigar in my teeth, and, going forward,
I was met by the profound silence of the fore end of the ship. Only as I passed
the door of the forecastle, I heard a deep, quiet, trustful sigh of some
sleeper inside. And suddenly I rejoiced in the great security of the sea as
compared with the unrest of the land, in my choice of that untempted life
presenting no disquieting problems, invested with an elementary moral beauty by
the absolute straightforwardness of its appeal and by the singleness of its
purpose.
The riding light in the forerigging burned with
a clear, untroubled, as if symbolic, flame, confident and bright in the
mysterious shades of the night. Passing on my way aft along the other side of
the ship, I observed that the rope side ladder, put over, no doubt, for the
master of the tug when he came to fetch away our letters, had not been hauled
in as it should have been. I became annoyed at this, for exactitude in some
small matters is the very soul of discipline. Then I reflected that I had
myself peremptorily dismissed my officers from duty, and by my own act had
prevented the anchor watch being formally set and things properly attended to.
I asked myself whether it was wise ever to interfere with the established
routine of duties even from the kindest of motives. My action might have made
me appear eccentric. Goodness only knew how that absurdly whiskered mate would
“account” for my conduct, and what the whole ship thought of that informality
of their new captain. I was vexed with myself.
Not from compunction certainly, but, as it were
mechanically, I proceeded to get the ladder in myself. Now a side ladder of
that sort is a light affair and comes in easily, yet my vigorous tug, which
should have brought it flying on board, merely recoiled upon my body in a
totally unexpected jerk. What the devil!... I was so astounded by the
immovableness of that ladder that I remained stock-still, trying to account for
it to myself like that imbecile mate of mine. In the end, of course, I put my
head over the rail.
The side of the ship made an opaque belt of
shadow on the darkling glassy shimmer of the sea. But I saw at once something
elongated and pale floating very close to the ladder. Before I could form a
guess a faint flash of phosphorescent light, which seemed to issue suddenly
from the naked body of a man, flickered in the sleeping water with the elusive,
silent play of summer lightning in a night sky. With a gasp I saw revealed to
my stare a pair of feet, the long legs, a broad livid back immersed right up to
the neck in a greenish cadaverous glow. One hand, awash, clutched the bottom
rung of the ladder. He was complete but for the head. A headless corpse! The
cigar dropped out of my gaping mouth with a tiny plop and a short hiss quite
audible in the absolute stillness of all things under heaven. At that I suppose
he raised up his face, a dimly pale oval in the shadow of the ship’s side. But
even then I could only barely make out down there the shape of his black-haired
head. However, it was enough for the horrid, frost-bound sensation which had
gripped me about the chest to pass off. The moment of vain exclamations was
past, too. I only climbed on the spare spar and leaned over the rail as far as
I could, to bring my eyes nearer to that mystery floating alongside.
As he hung by the ladder, like a resting
swimmer, the sea lightning played about his limbs at every stir; and he
appeared in it ghastly, silvery, fishlike. He remained as mute as a fish, too.
He made no motion to get out of the water, either. It was inconceivable that he
should not attempt to come on board, and strangely troubling to suspect that
perhaps he did not want to. And my first words were prompted by just that
troubled incertitude.
“What’s the matter?” I asked in my ordinary
tone, speaking down to the face upturned exactly under mine.
“Cramp,” it answered, no louder. Then slightly
anxious, “I say, no need to call anyone.”
“I was not going to,” I said.
“Are you alone on deck?”
“Yes.”
I had somehow the impression that he was on the
point of letting go the ladder to swim away beyond my ken—mysterious as he
came. But, for the moment, this being appearing as if he had risen from the
bottom of the sea (it was certainly the nearest land to the ship) wanted only
to know the time. I told him. And he, down there, tentatively:
“I suppose your captain’s turned in?”
“I am sure he isn’t,” I said.
He seemed to struggle with himself, for I heard
something like the low, bitter murmur of doubt. “What’s the good?” His next
words came out with a hesitating effort.
“Look here, my man. Could you call him out
quietly?”
I thought the time had come to declare myself.
“I am the captain.”
I heard a “By Jove!” whispered at the level of
the water. The phosphorescence flashed in the swirl of the water all about his
limbs, his other hand seized the ladder.
“My name’s Leggatt.”
The voice was calm and resolute. A good voice.
The self-possession of that man had somehow induced a corresponding state in
myself. It was very quietly that I remarked:
“You must be a good swimmer.”
“Yes. I’ve been in the water practically since
nine o’clock. The question for me now is whether I am to let go this ladder and
go on swimming till I sink from exhaustion, or—to come on board here.”
I felt this was no mere formula of desperate
speech, but a real alternative in the view of a strong soul. I should have
gathered from this that he was young; indeed, it is only the young who are ever
confronted by such clear issues. But at the time it was pure intuition on my
part. A mysterious communication was established already between us two—in the
face of that silent, darkened tropical sea. I was young, too; young enough to
make no comment. The man in the water began suddenly to climb up the ladder,
and I hastened away from the rail to fetch some clothes.
Before entering the cabin I stood still,
listening in the lobby at the foot of the stairs. A faint snore came through
the closed door of the chief mate’s room. The second mate’s door was on the
hook, but the darkness in there was absolutely soundless. He, too, was young
and could sleep like a stone. Remained the steward, but he was not likely to
wake up before he was called. I got a sleeping suit out of my room and, coming
back on deck, saw the naked man from the sea sitting on the main hatch,
glimmering white in the darkness, his elbows on his knees and his head in his
hands. In a moment he had concealed his damp body in a sleeping suit of the
same gray-stripe pattern as the one I was wearing and followed me like my
double on the poop. Together we moved right aft, barefooted, silent.
“What is it?” I asked in a deadened voice,
taking the lighted lamp out of the binnacle, and raising it to his face.
“An ugly business.”
He had rather regular features; a good mouth;
light eyes under somewhat heavy, dark eyebrows; a smooth, square forehead; no
growth on his cheeks; a small, brown mustache, and a well-shaped, round chin.
His expression was concentrated, meditative, under the inspecting light of the
lamp I held up to his face; such as a man thinking hard in solitude might wear.
My sleeping suit was just right for his size. A well-knit young fellow of
twenty-five at most. He caught his lower lip with the edge of white, even teeth.
“Yes,” I said, replacing the lamp in the
binnacle. The warm, heavy tropical night closed upon his head again.
“There’s a ship over there,” he murmured.
“Yes, I know. The Sephora. Did you know of us?”
“Hadn’t the slightest idea. I am the mate of
her—” He paused and corrected himself. “I should say I was.”
“Aha! Something wrong?”
“Yes. Very wrong indeed. I’ve killed a man.”
“What do you mean? Just now?”
“No, on the passage. Weeks ago. Thirty-nine
south. When I say a man—”
“Fit of temper,” I suggested, confidently.
The shadowy, dark head, like mine, seemed to nod
imperceptibly above the ghostly gray of my sleeping suit. It was, in the night,
as though I had been faced by my own reflection in the depths of a somber and
immense mirror.
“A pretty thing to have to own up to for a
Conway boy,” murmured my double, distinctly.
“You’re a Conway boy?”
“I am,” he said, as if startled. Then, slowly...
“Perhaps you too—”
It was so; but being a couple of years older I
had left before he joined. After a quick interchange of dates a silence fell;
and I thought suddenly of my absurd mate with his terrific whiskers and the
“Bless my soul—you don’t say so” type of intellect. My double gave me an
inkling of his thoughts by saying: “My father’s a parson in Norfolk. Do you see
me before a judge and jury on that charge? For myself I can’t see the
necessity. There are fellows that an angel from heaven—And I am not that. He
was one of those creatures that are just simmering all the time with a silly
sort of wickedness. Miserable devils that have no business to live at all. He
wouldn’t do his duty and wouldn’t let anybody else do theirs. But what’s the
good of talking! You know well enough the sort of ill-conditioned snarling
cur—”
He appealed to me as if our experiences had been
as identical as our clothes. And I knew well enough the pestiferous danger of
such a character where there are no means of legal repression. And I knew well
enough also that my double there was no homicidal ruffian. I did not think of
asking him for details, and he told me the story roughly in brusque,
disconnected sentences. I needed no more. I saw it all going on as though I
were myself inside that other sleeping suit.
“It happened while we were setting a reefed
foresail, at dusk. Reefed foresail! You understand the sort of weather. The
only sail we had left to keep the ship running; so you may guess what it had
been like for days. Anxious sort of job, that. He gave me some of his cursed
insolence at the sheet. I tell you I was overdone with this terrific weather
that seemed to have no end to it. Terrific, I tell you—and a deep ship. I
believe the fellow himself was half crazed with funk. It was no time for
gentlemanly reproof, so I turned round and felled him like an ox. He up and at
me. We closed just as an awful sea made for the ship. All hands saw it coming
and took to the rigging, but I had him by the throat, and went on shaking him
like a rat, the men above us yelling, ‘Look out! look out!’ Then a crash as if
the sky had fallen on my head. They say that for over ten minutes hardly
anything was to be seen of the ship—just the three masts and a bit of the
forecastle head and of the poop all awash driving along in a smother of foam.
It was a miracle that they found us, jammed together behind the forebitts. It’s
clear that I meant business, because I was holding him by the throat still when
they picked us up. He was black in the face. It was too much for them. It seems
they rushed us aft together, gripped as we were, screaming ‘Murder!’ like a lot
of lunatics, and broke into the cuddy. And the ship running for her life, touch
and go all the time, any minute her last in a sea fit to turn your hair gray
only a-looking at it. I understand that the skipper, too, started raving like
the rest of them. The man had been deprived of sleep for more than a week, and
to have this sprung on him at the height of a furious gale nearly drove him out
of his mind. I wonder they didn’t fling me overboard after getting the carcass
of their precious shipmate out of my fingers. They had rather a job to separate
us, I’ve been told. A sufficiently fierce story to make an old judge and a
respectable jury sit up a bit. The first thing I heard when I came to myself
was the maddening howling of that endless gale, and on that the voice of the old
man. He was hanging on to my bunk, staring into my face out of his sou’wester.
“‘Mr. Leggatt, you have killed a man. You can
act no longer as chief mate of this ship.’”
His care to subdue his voice made it sound
monotonous. He rested a hand on the end of the skylight to steady himself with,
and all that time did not stir a limb, so far as I could see. “Nice little tale
for a quiet tea party,” he concluded in the same tone.
One of my hands, too, rested on the end of the
skylight; neither did I stir a limb, so far as I knew. We stood less than a
foot from each other. It occurred to me that if old “Bless my soul—you don’t
say so” were to put his head up the companion and catch sight of us, he would
think he was seeing double, or imagine himself come upon a scene of weird
witchcraft; the strange captain having a quiet confabulation by the wheel with
his own gray ghost. I became very much concerned to prevent anything of the
sort. I heard the other’s soothing undertone.
“My father’s a parson in Norfolk,” it said.
Evidently he had forgotten he had told me this important fact before. Truly a
nice little tale.
“You had better slip down into my stateroom
now,” I said, moving off stealthily. My double followed my movements; our bare
feet made no sound; I let him in, closed the door with care, and, after giving
a call to the second mate, returned on deck for my relief.
“Not much sign of any wind yet,” I remarked when
he approached.
“No, sir. Not much,” he assented, sleepily, in
his hoarse voice, with just enough deference, no more, and barely suppressing a
yawn.
“Well, that’s all you have to look out for. You
have got your orders.”
“Yes, sir.”
I paced a turn or two on the poop and saw him
take up his position face forward with his elbow in the ratlines of the mizzen
rigging before I went below. The mate’s faint snoring was still going on
peacefully. The cuddy lamp was burning over the table on which stood a vase
with flowers, a polite attention from the ship’s provision merchant—the last
flowers we should see for the next three months at the very least. Two bunches
of bananas hung from the beam symmetrically, one on each side of the rudder
casing. Everything was as before in the ship—except that two of her captain’s
sleeping suits were simultaneously in use, one motionless in the cuddy, the
other keeping very still in the captain’s stateroom.
It must be explained here that my cabin had the
form of the capital letter L, the door being within the angle and opening into
the short part of the letter. A couch was to the left, the bed place to the
right; my writing desk and the chronometers’ table faced the door. But anyone
opening it, unless he stepped right inside, had no view of what I call the long
(or vertical) part of the letter. It contained some lockers surmounted by a
bookcase; and a few clothes, a thick jacket or two, caps, oilskin coat, and
such like, hung on hooks. There was at the bottom of that part a door opening
into my bathroom, which could be entered also directly from the saloon. But
that way was never used.
The mysterious arrival had discovered the
advantage of this particular shape. Entering my room, lighted strongly by a big
bulkhead lamp swung on gimbals above my writing desk, I did not see him
anywhere till he stepped out quietly from behind the coats hung in the recessed
part.
“I heard somebody moving about, and went in
there at once,” he whispered.
I, too, spoke under my breath.
“Nobody is likely to come in here without
knocking and getting permission.”
He nodded. His face was thin and the sunburn
faded, as though he had been ill. And no wonder. He had been, I heard
presently, kept under arrest in his cabin for nearly seven weeks. But there was
nothing sickly in his eyes or in his expression. He was not a bit like me,
really; yet, as we stood leaning over my bed place, whispering side by side,
with our dark heads together and our backs to the door, anybody bold enough to
open it stealthily would have been treated to the uncanny sight of a double
captain busy talking in whispers with his other self.
“But all this doesn’t tell me how you came to
hang on to our side ladder,” I inquired, in the hardly audible murmurs we used,
after he had told me something more of the proceedings on board the Sephora
once the bad weather was over.
“When we sighted Java Head I had had time to
think all those matters out several times over. I had six weeks of doing
nothing else, and with only an hour or so every evening for a tramp on the
quarter-deck.”
He whispered, his arms folded on the side of my
bed place, staring through the open port. And I could imagine perfectly the
manner of this thinking out—a stubborn if not a steadfast operation; something
of which I should have been perfectly incapable.
“I reckoned it would be dark before we closed
with the land,” he continued, so low that I had to strain my hearing near as we
were to each other, shoulder touching shoulder almost. “So I asked to speak to
the old man. He always seemed very sick when he came to see me—as if he could
not look me in the face. You know, that foresail saved the ship. She was too
deep to have run long under bare poles. And it was I that managed to set it for
him. Anyway, he came. When I had him in my cabin—he stood by the door looking
at me as if I had the halter round my neck already—I asked him right away to
leave my cabin door unlocked at night while the ship was going through Sunda
Straits. There would be the Java coast within two or three miles, off Angier
Point. I wanted nothing more. I’ve had a prize for swimming my second year in
the Conway.”
“I can believe it,” I breathed out.
“God only knows why they locked me in every
night. To see some of their faces you’d have thought they were afraid I’d go
about at night strangling people. Am I a murdering brute? Do I look it? By
Jove! If I had been he wouldn’t have trusted himself like that into my room.
You’ll say I might have chucked him aside and bolted out, there and then—it was
dark already. Well, no. And for the same reason I wouldn’t think of trying to
smash the door. There would have been a rush to stop me at the noise, and I did
not mean to get into a confounded scrimmage. Somebody else might have got
killed—for I would not have broken out only to get chucked back, and I did not
want any more of that work. He refused, looking more sick than ever. He was
afraid of the men, and also of that old second mate of his who had been sailing
with him for years—a gray-headed old humbug; and his steward, too, had been
with him devil knows how long—seventeen years or more—a dogmatic sort of loafer
who hated me like poison, just because I was the chief mate. No chief mate ever
made more than one voyage in the Sephora, you know. Those two old chaps ran the
ship. Devil only knows what the skipper wasn’t afraid of (all his nerve went to
pieces altogether in that hellish spell of bad weather we had)—of what the law
would do to him—of his wife, perhaps. Oh, yes! she’s on board. Though I don’t
think she would have meddled. She would have been only too glad to have me out
of the ship in any way. The ‘brand of Cain’ business, don’t you see. That’s all
right. I was ready enough to go off wandering on the face of the earth—and that
was price enough to pay for an Abel of that sort. Anyhow, he wouldn’t listen to
me. ‘This thing must take its course. I represent the law here.’ He was shaking
like a leaf. ‘So you won’t?’ ‘No!’ ‘Then I hope you will be able to sleep on
that,’ I said, and turned my back on him. ‘I wonder that you can,’ cries he,
and locks the door.
“Well after that, I couldn’t. Not very well.
That was three weeks ago. We have had a slow passage through the Java Sea;
drifted about Carimata for ten days. When we anchored here they thought, I
suppose, it was all right. The nearest land (and that’s five miles) is the
ship’s destination; the consul would soon set about catching me; and there
would have been no object in holding to these islets there. I don’t suppose
there’s a drop of water on them. I don’t know how it was, but tonight that
steward, after bringing me my supper, went out to let me eat it, and left the
door unlocked. And I ate it—all there was, too. After I had finished I strolled
out on the quarter-deck. I don’t know that I meant to do anything. A breath of
fresh air was all I wanted, I believe. Then a sudden temptation came over me. I
kicked off my slippers and was in the water before I had made up my mind
fairly. Somebody heard the splash and they raised an awful hullabaloo. ‘He’s
gone! Lower the boats! He’s committed suicide! No, he’s swimming.’ Certainly I
was swimming. It’s not so easy for a swimmer like me to commit suicide by
drowning. I landed on the nearest islet before the boat left the ship’s side. I
heard them pulling about in the dark, hailing, and so on, but after a bit they
gave up. Everything quieted down and the anchorage became still as death. I sat
down on a stone and began to think. I felt certain they would start searching
for me at daylight. There was no place to hide on those stony things—and if
there had been, what would have been the good? But now I was clear of that
ship, I was not going back. So after a while I took off all my clothes, tied
them up in a bundle with a stone inside, and dropped them in the deep water on
the outer side of that islet. That was suicide enough for me. Let them think
what they liked, but I didn’t mean to drown myself. I meant to swim till I
sank—but that’s not the same thing. I struck out for another of these little
islands, and it was from that one that I first saw your riding light. Something
to swim for. I went on easily, and on the way I came upon a flat rock a foot or
two above water. In the daytime, I dare say, you might make it out with a glass
from your poop. I scrambled up on it and rested myself for a bit. Then I made
another start. That last spell must have been over a mile.”
His whisper was getting fainter and fainter, and
all the time he stared straight out through the porthole, in which there was
not even a star to be seen. I had not interrupted him. There was something that
made comment impossible in his narrative, or perhaps in himself; a sort of
feeling, a quality, which I can’t find a name for. And when he ceased, all I
found was a futile whisper: “So you swam for our light?”
“Yes—straight for it. It was something to swim
for. I couldn’t see any stars low down because the coast was in the way, and I
couldn’t see the land, either. The water was like glass. One might have been
swimming in a confounded thousand-feet deep cistern with no place for
scrambling out anywhere; but what I didn’t like was the notion of swimming
round and round like a crazed bullock before I gave out; and as I didn’t mean
to go back... No. Do you see me being hauled back, stark naked, off one of
these little islands by the scruff of the neck and fighting like a wild beast?
Somebody would have got killed for certain, and I did not want any of that. So
I went on. Then your ladder—”
“Why didn’t you hail the ship?” I asked, a
little louder.
He touched my shoulder lightly. Lazy footsteps
came right over our heads and stopped. The second mate had crossed from the
other side of the poop and might have been hanging over the rail for all we
knew.
“He couldn’t hear us talking—could he?” My
double breathed into my very ear, anxiously.
His anxiety was in answer, a sufficient answer,
to the question I had put to him. An answer containing all the difficulty of
that situation. I closed the porthole quietly, to make sure. A louder word
might have been overheard.
“Who’s that?” he whispered then.
“My second mate. But I don’t know much more of
the fellow than you do.”
And I told him a little about myself. I had been
appointed to take charge while I least expected anything of the sort, not quite
a fortnight ago. I didn’t know either the ship or the people. Hadn’t had the
time in port to look about me or size anybody up. And as to the crew, all they
knew was that I was appointed to take the ship home. For the rest, I was almost
as much of a stranger on board as himself, I said. And at the moment I felt it
most acutely. I felt that it would take very little to make me a suspect person
in the eyes of the ship’s company.
He had turned about meantime; and we, the two
strangers in the ship, faced each other in identical attitudes.
“Your ladder—” he murmured, after a silence.
“Who’d have thought of finding a ladder hanging over at night in a ship
anchored out here! I felt just then a very unpleasant faintness. After the life
I’ve been leading for nine weeks, anybody would have got out of condition. I
wasn’t capable of swimming round as far as your rudder chains. And, lo and
behold! there was a ladder to get hold of. After I gripped it I said to myself,
‘What’s the good?’ When I saw a man’s head looking over I thought I would swim
away presently and leave him shouting—in whatever language it was. I didn’t
mind being looked at. I—I liked it. And then you speaking to me so quietly—as
if you had expected me—made me hold on a little longer. It had been a
confounded lonely time—I don’t mean while swimming. I was glad to talk a little
to somebody that didn’t belong to the Sephora. As to asking for the captain,
that was a mere impulse. It could have been no use, with all the ship knowing
about me and the other people pretty certain to be round here in the morning. I
don’t know—I wanted to be seen, to talk with somebody, before I went on. I
don’t know what I would have said.... ‘Fine night, isn’t it?’ or something of
the sort.”
“Do you think they will be round here
presently?” I asked with some incredulity.
“Quite likely,” he said, faintly.
“He looked extremely haggard all of a sudden.
His head rolled on his shoulders.
“H’m. We shall see then. Meantime get into that
bed,” I whispered. “Want help? There.”
It was a rather high bed place with a set of
drawers underneath. This amazing swimmer really needed the lift I gave him by
seizing his leg. He tumbled in, rolled over on his back, and flung one arm
across his eyes. And then, with his face nearly hidden, he must have looked
exactly as I used to look in that bed. I gazed upon my other self for a while
before drawing across carefully the two green serge curtains which ran on a
brass rod. I thought for a moment of pinning them together for greater safety,
but I sat down on the couch, and once there I felt unwilling to rise and hunt
for a pin. I would do it in a moment. I was extremely tired, in a peculiarly
intimate way, by the strain of stealthiness, by the effort of whispering and
the general secrecy of this excitement. It was three o’clock by now and I had
been on my feet since nine, but I was not sleepy; I could not have gone to
sleep. I sat there, fagged out, looking at the curtains, trying to clear my
mind of the confused sensation of being in two places at once, and greatly
bothered by an exasperating knocking in my head. It was a relief to discover
suddenly that it was not in my head at all, but on the outside of the door.
Before I could collect myself the words “Come in” were out of my mouth, and the
steward entered with a tray, bringing in my morning coffee. I had slept, after
all, and I was so frightened that I shouted, “This way! I am here, steward,” as
though he had been miles away. He put down the tray on the table next the couch
and only then said, very quietly, “I can see you are here, sir.” I felt him
give me a keen look, but I dared not meet his eyes just then. He must have
wondered why I had drawn the curtains of my bed before going to sleep on the
couch. He went out, hooking the door open as usual.
I heard the crew washing decks above me. I knew
I would have been told at once if there had been any wind. Calm, I thought, and
I was doubly vexed. Indeed, I felt dual more than ever. The steward reappeared
suddenly in the doorway. I jumped up from the couch so quickly that he gave a
start.
“What do you want here?”
“Close your port, sir—they are washing decks.”
“It is closed,” I said, reddening.
“Very well, sir.” But he did not move from the
doorway and returned my stare in an extraordinary, equivocal manner for a time.
Then his eyes wavered, all his expression changed, and in a voice unusually
gentle, almost coaxingly:
“May I come in to take the empty cup away, sir?”
“Of course!” I turned my back on him while he
popped in and out. Then I unhooked and closed the door and even pushed the
bolt. This sort of thing could not go on very long. The cabin was as hot as an
oven, too. I took a peep at my double, and discovered that he had not moved,
his arm was still over his eyes; but his chest heaved; his hair was wet; his
chin glistened with perspiration. I reached over him and opened the port.
“I must show myself on deck,” I reflected.
Of course, theoretically, I could do what I
liked, with no one to say nay to me within the whole circle of the horizon; but
to lock my cabin door and take the key away I did not dare. Directly I put my
head out of the companion I saw the group of my two officers, the second mate
barefooted, the chief mate in long India-rubber boots, near the break of the
poop, and the steward halfway down the poop ladder talking to them eagerly. He
happened to catch sight of me and dived, the second ran down on the main-deck
shouting some order or other, and the chief mate came to meet me, touching his
cap.
There was a sort of curiosity in his eye that I
did not like. I don’t know whether the steward had told them that I was “queer”
only, or downright drunk, but I know the man meant to have a good look at me. I
watched him coming with a smile which, as he got into point-blank range, took
effect and froze his very whiskers. I did not give him time to open his lips.
“Square the yards by lifts and braces before the
hands go to breakfast.”
It was the first particular order I had given on
board that ship; and I stayed on deck to see it executed, too. I had felt the
need of asserting myself without loss of time. That sneering young cub got
taken down a peg or two on that occasion, and I also seized the opportunity of
having a good look at the face of every foremast man as they filed past me to
go to the after braces. At breakfast time, eating nothing myself, I presided
with such frigid dignity that the two mates were only too glad to escape from
the cabin as soon as decency permitted; and all the time the dual working of my
mind distracted me almost to the point of insanity. I was constantly watching
myself, my secret self, as dependent on my actions as my own personality,
sleeping in that bed, behind that door which faced me as I sat at the head of
the table. It was very much like being mad, only it was worse because one was
aware of it.
I had to shake him for a solid minute, but when
at last he opened his eyes it was in the full possession of his senses, with an
inquiring look.
“All’s well so far,” I whispered. “Now you must
vanish into the bathroom.”
He did so, as noiseless as a ghost, and then I
rang for the steward, and facing him boldly, directed him to tidy up my
stateroom while I was having my bath—“and be quick about it.” As my tone
admitted of no excuses, he said, “Yes, sir,” and ran off to fetch his dustpan
and brushes. I took a bath and did most of my dressing, splashing, and
whistling softly for the steward’s edification, while the secret sharer of my
life stood drawn up bolt upright in that little space, his face looking very
sunken in daylight, his eyelids lowered under the stern, dark line of his
eyebrows drawn together by a slight frown.
When I left him there to go back to my room the
steward was finishing dusting. I sent for the mate and engaged him in some
insignificant conversation. It was, as it were, trifling with the terrific
character of his whiskers; but my object was to give him an opportunity for a
good look at my cabin. And then I could at last shut, with a clear conscience,
the door of my stateroom and get my double back into the recessed part. There
was nothing else for it. He had to sit still on a small folding stool, half
smothered by the heavy coats hanging there. We listened to the steward going
into the bathroom out of the saloon, filling the water bottles there, scrubbing
the bath, setting things to rights, whisk, bang, clatter—out again into the
saloon—turn the key—click. Such was my scheme for keeping my second self
invisible. Nothing better could be contrived under the circumstances. And there
we sat; I at my writing desk ready to appear busy with some papers, he behind
me out of sight of the door. It would not have been prudent to talk in daytime;
and I could not have stood the excitement of that queer sense of whispering to
myself. Now and then, glancing over my shoulder, I saw him far back there,
sitting rigidly on the low stool, his bare feet close together, his arms
folded, his head hanging on his breast—and perfectly still. Anybody would have
taken him for me.
I was fascinated by it myself. Every moment I
had to glance over my shoulder. I was looking at him when a voice outside the
door said:
“Beg pardon, sir.”
“Well!...” I kept my eyes on him, and so when
the voice outside the door announced, “There’s a ship’s boat coming our way,
sir,” I saw him give a start—the first movement he had made for hours. But he
did not raise his bowed head.
“All right. Get the ladder over.”
I hesitated. Should I whisper something to him?
But what? His immobility seemed to have been never disturbed. What could I tell
him he did not know already?... Finally I went on deck.
The skipper of the Sephora had a thin red
whisker all round his face, and the sort of complexion that goes with hair of
that color; also the particular, rather smeary shade of blue in the eyes. He
was not exactly a showy figure; his shoulders were high, his stature but
middling—one leg slightly more bandy than the other. He shook hands, looking
vaguely around. A spiritless tenacity was his main characteristic, I judged. I
behaved with a politeness which seemed to disconcert him. Perhaps he was shy.
He mumbled to me as if he were ashamed of what he was saying; gave his name (it
was something like Archbold—but at this distance of years I hardly am sure),
his ship’s name, and a few other particulars of that sort, in the manner of a
criminal making a reluctant and doleful confession. He had had terrible weather
on the passage out—terrible—terrible—wife aboard, too.
By this time we were seated in the cabin and the
steward brought in a tray with a bottle and glasses. “Thanks! No.” Never took
liquor. Would have some water, though. He drank two tumblerfuls. Terrible
thirsty work. Ever since daylight had been exploring the islands round his
ship.
“What was that for—fun?” I asked, with an
appearance of polite interest.
“No!” He sighed. “Painful duty.”
As he persisted in his mumbling and I wanted my
double to hear every word, I hit upon the notion of informing him that I
regretted to say I was hard of hearing.
“Such a young man, too!” he nodded, keeping his
smeary blue, unintelligent eyes fastened upon me. “What was the cause of
it—some disease?” he inquired, without the least sympathy and as if he thought
that, if so, I’d got no more than I deserved.
“Yes; disease,” I admitted in a cheerful tone
which seemed to shock him. But my point was gained, because he had to raise his
voice to give me his tale. It is not worth while to record his version. It was
just over two months since all this had happened, and he had thought so much
about it that he seemed completely muddled as to its bearings, but still
immensely impressed.
“What would you think of such a thing happening
on board your own ship? I’ve had the Sephora for these fifteen years. I am a
well-known shipmaster.”
He was densely distressed—and perhaps I should
have sympathized with him if I had been able to detach my mental vision from
the unsuspected sharer of my cabin as though he were my second self. There he
was on the other side of the bulkhead, four or five feet from us, no more, as
we sat in the saloon. I looked politely at Captain Archbold (if that was his
name), but it was the other I saw, in a gray sleeping suit, seated on a low
stool, his bare feet close together, his arms folded, and every word said
between us falling into the ears of his dark head bowed on his chest.
“I have been at sea now, man and boy, for seven-and-thirty
years, and I’ve never heard of such a thing happening in an English ship. And
that it should be my ship. Wife on board, too.”
I was hardly listening to him.
“Don’t you think,” I said, “that the heavy sea
which, you told me, came aboard just then might have killed the man? I have
seen the sheer weight of a sea kill a man very neatly, by simply breaking his
neck.”
“Good God!” he uttered, impressively, fixing his
smeary blue eyes on me. “The sea! No man killed by the sea ever looked like
that.” He seemed positively scandalized at my suggestion. And as I gazed at him
certainly not prepared for anything original on his part, he advanced his head
close to mine and thrust his tongue out at me so suddenly that I couldn’t help
starting back.
After scoring over my calmness in this graphic
way he nodded wisely. If I had seen the sight, he assured me, I would never
forget it as long as I lived. The weather was too bad to give the corpse a
proper sea burial. So next day at dawn they took it up on the poop, covering
its face with a bit of bunting; he read a short prayer, and then, just as it
was, in its oilskins and long boots, they launched it amongst those mountainous
seas that seemed ready every moment to swallow up the ship herself and the
terrified lives on board of her.
“That reefed foresail saved you,” I threw in.
“Under God—it did,” he exclaimed fervently. “It
was by a special mercy, I firmly believe, that it stood some of those hurricane
squalls.”
“It was the setting of that sail which—” I
began.
“God’s own hand in it,” he interrupted me.
“Nothing less could have done it. I don’t mind telling you that I hardly dared
give the order. It seemed impossible that we could touch anything without
losing it, and then our last hope would have been gone.”
The terror of that gale was on him yet. I let
him go on for a bit, then said, casually—as if returning to a minor subject:
“You were very anxious to give up your mate to
the shore people, I believe?”
He was. To the law. His obscure tenacity on that
point had in it something incomprehensible and a little awful; something, as it
were, mystical, quite apart from his anxiety that he should not be suspected of
“countenancing any doings of that sort.” Seven-and-thirty virtuous years at
sea, of which over twenty of immaculate command, and the last fifteen in the
Sephora, seemed to have laid him under some pitiless obligation.
“And you know,” he went on, groping
shame-facedly amongst his feelings, “I did not engage that young fellow. His
people had some interest with my owners. I was in a way forced to take him on.
He looked very smart, very gentlemanly, and all that. But do you know—I never
liked him, somehow. I am a plain man. You see, he wasn’t exactly the sort for
the chief mate of a ship like the Sephora.”
I had become so connected in thoughts and
impressions with the secret sharer of my cabin that I felt as if I, personally,
were being given to understand that I, too, was not the sort that would have
done for the chief mate of a ship like the Sephora. I had no doubt of it in my
mind.
“Not at all the style of man. You understand,”
he insisted, superfluously, looking hard at me.
I smiled urbanely. He seemed at a loss for a
while.
“I suppose I must report a suicide.”
“Beg pardon?”
“Suicide! That’s what I’ll have to write to my
owners directly I get in.”
“Unless you manage to recover him before
tomorrow,” I assented, dispassionately.... “I mean, alive.”
He mumbled something which I really did not
catch, and I turned my ear to him in a puzzled manner. He fairly bawled:
“The land—I say, the mainland is at least seven
miles off my anchorage.”
“About that.”
My lack of excitement, of curiosity, of
surprise, of any sort of pronounced interest, began to arouse his distrust. But
except for the felicitous pretense of deafness I had not tried to pretend
anything. I had felt utterly incapable of playing the part of ignorance
properly, and therefore was afraid to try. It is also certain that he had
brought some ready-made suspicions with him, and that he viewed my politeness
as a strange and unnatural phenomenon. And yet how else could I have received
him? Not heartily! That was impossible for psychological reasons, which I need
not state here. My only object was to keep off his inquiries. Surlily? Yes, but
surliness might have provoked a point-blank question. From its novelty to him
and from its nature, punctilious courtesy was the manner best calculated to
restrain the man. But there was the danger of his breaking through my defense
bluntly. I could not, I think, have met him by a direct lie, also for
psychological (not moral) reasons. If he had only known how afraid I was of his
putting my feeling of identity with the other to the test! But, strangely
enough—(I thought of it only afterwards)—I believe that he was not a little
disconcerted by the reverse side of that weird situation, by something in me
that reminded him of the man he was seeking—suggested a mysterious similitude
to the young fellow he had distrusted and disliked from the first.
However that might have been, the silence was
not very prolonged. He took another oblique step.
“I reckon I had no more than a two-mile pull to
your ship. Not a bit more.”
“And quite enough, too, in this awful heat,” I
said.
Another pause full of mistrust followed.
Necessity, they say, is mother of invention, but fear, too, is not barren of
ingenious suggestions. And I was afraid he would ask me point-blank for news of
my other self.
“Nice little saloon, isn’t it?” I remarked, as
if noticing for the first time the way his eyes roamed from one closed door to
the other. “And very well fitted out, too. Here, for instance,” I continued,
reaching over the back of my seat negligently and flinging the door open, “is
my bathroom.”
He made an eager movement, but hardly gave it a
glance. I got up, shut the door of the bathroom, and invited him to have a look
round, as if I were very proud of my accommodation. He had to rise and be shown
round, but he went through the business without any raptures whatever.
“And now we’ll have a look at my stateroom,” I
declared, in a voice as loud as I dared to make it, crossing the cabin to the
starboard side with purposely heavy steps.
He followed me in and gazed around. My
intelligent double had vanished. I played my part.
“Very convenient—isn’t it?”
“Very nice. Very comf...” He didn’t finish and
went out brusquely as if to escape from some unrighteous wiles of mine. But it
was not to be. I had been too frightened not to feel vengeful; I felt I had him
on the run, and I meant to keep him on the run. My polite insistence must have
had something menacing in it, because he gave in suddenly. And I did not let
him off a single item; mate’s room, pantry, storerooms, the very sail locker
which was also under the poop—he had to look into them all. When at last I
showed him out on the quarter-deck he drew a long, spiritless sigh, and mumbled
dismally that he must really be going back to his ship now. I desired my mate,
who had joined us, to see to the captain’s boat.
The man of whiskers gave a blast on the whistle
which he used to wear hanging round his neck, and yelled, “Sephora’s away!” My
double down there in my cabin must have heard, and certainly could not feel
more relieved than I. Four fellows came running out from somewhere forward and
went over the side, while my own men, appearing on deck too, lined the rail. I
escorted my visitor to the gangway ceremoniously, and nearly overdid it. He was
a tenacious beast. On the very ladder he lingered, and in that unique, guiltily
conscientious manner of sticking to the point:
“I say... you... you don’t think that—”
I covered his voice loudly:
“Certainly not.... I am delighted. Good-by.”
I had an idea of what he meant to say, and just
saved myself by the privilege of defective hearing. He was too shaken generally
to insist, but my mate, close witness of that parting, looked mystified and his
face took on a thoughtful cast. As I did not want to appear as if I wished to
avoid all communication with my officers, he had the opportunity to address me.
“Seems a very nice man. His boat’s crew told our
chaps a very extraordinary story, if what I am told by the steward is true. I
suppose you had it from the captain, sir?”
“Yes. I had a story from the captain.”
“A very horrible affair—isn’t it, sir?”
“It is.”
“Beats all these tales we hear about murders in
Yankee ships.”
“I don’t think it beats them. I don’t think it
resembles them in the least.”
“Bless my soul—you don’t say so! But of course
I’ve no acquaintance whatever with American ships, not I, so I couldn’t go
against your knowledge. It’s horrible enough for me.... But the queerest part
is that those fellows seemed to have some idea the man was hidden aboard here.
They had really. Did you ever hear of such a thing?”
“Preposterous—isn’t it?”
We were walking to and fro athwart the
quarter-deck. No one of the crew forward could be seen (the day was Sunday),
and the mate pursued:
“There was some little dispute about it. Our
chaps took offense. ‘As if we would harbor a thing like that,’ they said.
‘Wouldn’t you like to look for him in our coal-hole?’ Quite a tiff. But they
made it up in the end. I suppose he did drown himself. Don’t you, sir?”
“I don’t suppose anything.”
“You have no doubt in the matter, sir?”
“None whatever.”
I left him suddenly. I felt I was producing a
bad impression, but with my double down there it was most trying to be on deck.
And it was almost as trying to be below. Altogether a nerve-trying situation.
But on the whole I felt less torn in two when I was with him. There was no one
in the whole ship whom I dared take into my confidence. Since the hands had got
to know his story, it would have been impossible to pass him off for anyone
else, and an accidental discovery was to be dreaded now more than ever....
The steward being engaged in laying the table
for dinner, we could talk only with our eyes when I first went down. Later in
the afternoon we had a cautious try at whispering. The Sunday quietness of the
ship was against us; the stillness of air and water around her was against us;
the elements, the men were against us—everything was against us in our secret
partnership; time itself—for this could not go on forever. The very trust in
Providence was, I suppose, denied to his guilt. Shall I confess that this
thought cast me down very much? And as to the chapter of accidents which counts
for so much in the book of success, I could only hope that it was closed. For
what favorable accident could be expected?
“Did you hear everything?” were my first words
as soon as we took up our position side by side, leaning over my bed place.
He had. And the proof of it was his earnest
whisper, “The man told you he hardly dared to give the order.”
I understood the reference to be to that saving
foresail.
“Yes. He was afraid of it being lost in the
setting.”
“I assure you he never gave the order. He may
think he did, but he never gave it. He stood there with me on the break of the
poop after the main topsail blew away, and whimpered about our last
hope—positively whimpered about it and nothing else—and the night coming on! To
hear one’s skipper go on like that in such weather was enough to drive any
fellow out of his mind. It worked me up into a sort of desperation. I just took
it into my own hands and went away from him, boiling, and—But what’s the use
telling you? You know!... Do you think that if I had not been
pretty fierce with them I should have got the men to do anything? Not I! The
bo’s’n perhaps? Perhaps! It wasn’t a heavy sea—it was a sea gone mad! I suppose
the end of the world will be something like that; and a man may have the heart
to see it coming once and be done with it—but to have to face it day after
day—I don’t blame anybody. I was precious little better than the rest. Only—I
was an officer of that old coal wagon, anyhow—”
“I quite understand,” I conveyed that sincere
assurance into his ear. He was out of breath with whispering; I could hear him
pant slightly. It was all very simple. The same strung-up force which had given
twenty-four men a chance, at least, for their lives, had, in a sort of recoil,
crushed an unworthy mutinous existence.
But I had no leisure to weigh the merits of the
matter—footsteps in the saloon, a heavy knock. “There’s enough wind to get
under way with, sir.” Here was the call of a new claim upon my thoughts and
even upon my feelings.
“Turn the hands up,” I cried through the door.
“I’ll be on deck directly.”
I was going out to make the acquaintance of my
ship. Before I left the cabin our eyes met—the eyes of the only two strangers
on board. I pointed to the recessed part where the little campstool awaited him
and laid my finger on my lips. He made a gesture—somewhat vague—a little
mysterious, accompanied by a faint smile, as if of regret.
This is not the place to enlarge upon the
sensations of a man who feels for the first time a ship move under his feet to
his own independent word. In my case they were not unalloyed. I was not wholly
alone with my command; for there was that stranger in my cabin. Or rather, I
was not completely and wholly with her. Part of me was absent. That mental
feeling of being in two places at once affected me physically as if the mood of
secrecy had penetrated my very soul. Before an hour had elapsed since the ship
had begun to move, having occasion to ask the mate (he stood by my side) to
take a compass bearing of the pagoda, I caught myself reaching up to his ear in
whispers. I say I caught myself, but enough had escaped to startle the man. I
can’t describe it otherwise than by saying that he shied. A grave, preoccupied
manner, as though he were in possession of some perplexing intelligence, did
not leave him henceforth. A little later I moved away from the rail to look at
the compass with such a stealthy gait that the helmsman noticed it—and I could
not help noticing the unusual roundness of his eyes. These are trifling
instances, though it’s to no commander’s advantage to be suspected of ludicrous
eccentricities. But I was also more seriously affected. There are to a seaman
certain words, gestures, that should in given conditions come as naturally, as
instinctively as the winking of a menaced eye. A certain order should spring on
to his lips without thinking; a certain sign should get itself made, so to
speak, without reflection. But all unconscious alertness had abandoned me. I
had to make an effort of will to recall myself back (from the cabin) to the
conditions of the moment. I felt that I was appearing an irresolute commander
to those people who were watching me more or less critically.
And, besides, there were the scares. On the
second day out, for instance, coming off the deck in the afternoon (I had straw
slippers on my bare feet) I stopped at the open pantry door and spoke to the
steward. He was doing something there with his back to me. At the sound of my
voice he nearly jumped out of his skin, as the saying is, and incidentally
broke a cup.
“What on earth’s the matter with you?” I asked,
astonished.
He was extremely confused. “Beg your pardon,
sir. I made sure you were in your cabin.”
“You see I wasn’t.”
“No, sir. I could have sworn I had heard you
moving in there not a moment ago. It’s most extraordinary... very sorry, sir.”
I passed on with an inward shudder. I was so
identified with my secret double that I did not even mention the fact in those
scanty, fearful whispers we exchanged. I suppose he had made some slight noise
of some kind or other. It would have been miraculous if he hadn’t at one time
or another. And yet, haggard as he appeared, he looked always perfectly
self-controlled, more than calm—almost invulnerable. On my suggestion he
remained almost entirely in the bathroom, which, upon the whole, was the safest
place. There could be really no shadow of an excuse for anyone ever wanting to
go in there, once the steward had done with it. It was a very tiny place.
Sometimes he reclined on the floor, his legs bent, his head sustained on one
elbow. At others I would find him on the campstool, sitting in his gray
sleeping suit and with his cropped dark hair like a patient, unmoved convict.
At night I would smuggle him into my bed place, and we would whisper together,
with the regular footfalls of the officer of the watch passing and repassing
over our heads. It was an infinitely miserable time. It was lucky that some
tins of fine preserves were stowed in a locker in my stateroom; hard bread I
could always get hold of; and so he lived on stewed chicken, Pate de
Foie Gras, asparagus, cooked oysters, sardines—on all sorts of abominable
sham delicacies out of tins. My early-morning coffee he always drank; and it
was all I dared do for him in that respect.
Every day there was the horrible maneuvering to
go through so that my room and then the bathroom should be done in the usual
way. I came to hate the sight of the steward, to abhor the voice of that
harmless man. I felt that it was he who would bring on the disaster of
discovery. It hung like a sword over our heads.
The fourth day out, I think (we were then
working down the east side of the Gulf of Siam, tack for tack, in light winds
and smooth water)—the fourth day, I say, of this miserable juggling with the
unavoidable, as we sat at our evening meal, that man, whose slightest movement
I dreaded, after putting down the dishes ran up on deck busily. This could not
be dangerous. Presently he came down again; and then it appeared that he had
remembered a coat of mine which I had thrown over a rail to dry after having been
wetted in a shower which had passed over the ship in the afternoon. Sitting
stolidly at the head of the table I became terrified at the sight of the
garment on his arm. Of course he made for my door. There was no time to lose.
“Steward,” I thundered. My nerves were so shaken
that I could not govern my voice and conceal my agitation. This was the sort of
thing that made my terrifically whiskered mate tap his forehead with his
forefinger. I had detected him using that gesture while talking on deck with a confidential
air to the carpenter. It was too far to hear a word, but I had no doubt that
this pantomime could only refer to the strange new captain.
“Yes, sir,” the pale-faced steward turned
resignedly to me. It was this maddening course of being shouted at, checked
without rhyme or reason, arbitrarily chased out of my cabin, suddenly called
into it, sent flying out of his pantry on incomprehensible errands, that
accounted for the growing wretchedness of his expression.
“Where are you going with that coat?”
“To your room, sir.”
“Is there another shower coming?”
“I’m sure I don’t know, sir. Shall I go up again
and see, sir?”
“No! never mind.”
My object was attained, as of course my other
self in there would have heard everything that passed. During this interlude my
two officers never raised their eyes off their respective plates; but the lip
of that confounded cub, the second mate, quivered visibly.
I expected the steward to hook my coat on and
come out at once. He was very slow about it; but I dominated my nervousness
sufficiently not to shout after him. Suddenly I became aware (it could be heard
plainly enough) that the fellow for some reason or other was opening the door
of the bathroom. It was the end. The place was literally not big enough to
swing a cat in. My voice died in my throat and I went stony all over. I
expected to hear a yell of surprise and terror, and made a movement, but had
not the strength to get on my legs. Everything remained still. Had my second
self taken the poor wretch by the throat? I don’t know what I could have done
next moment if I had not seen the steward come out of my room, close the door,
and then stand quietly by the sideboard.
“Saved,” I thought. “But, no! Lost! Gone! He was
gone!”
I laid my knife and fork down and leaned back in
my chair. My head swam. After a while, when sufficiently recovered to speak in
a steady voice, I instructed my mate to put the ship round at eight o’clock
himself.
“I won’t come on deck,” I went on. “I think I’ll
turn in, and unless the wind shifts I don’t want to be disturbed before
midnight. I feel a bit seedy.”
“You did look middling bad a little while ago,”
the chief mate remarked without showing any great concern.
They both went out, and I stared at the steward
clearing the table. There was nothing to be read on that wretched man’s face.
But why did he avoid my eyes, I asked myself. Then I thought I should like to
hear the sound of his voice.
“Steward!”
“Sir!” Startled as usual.
“Where did you hang up that coat?”
“In the bathroom, sir.” The usual anxious tone.
“It’s not quite dry yet, sir.”
For some time longer I sat in the cuddy. Had my
double vanished as he had come? But of his coming there was an explanation,
whereas his disappearance would be inexplicable.... I went slowly into my dark
room, shut the door, lighted the lamp, and for a time dared not turn round.
When at last I did I saw him standing bolt-upright in the narrow recessed part.
It would not be true to say I had a shock, but an irresistible doubt of his
bodily existence flitted through my mind. Can it be, I asked myself, that he is
not visible to other eyes than mine? It was like being haunted. Motionless,
with a grave face, he raised his hands slightly at me in a gesture which meant
clearly, “Heavens! what a narrow escape!” Narrow indeed. I think I had come
creeping quietly as near insanity as any man who has not actually gone over the
border. That gesture restrained me, so to speak.
The mate with the terrific whiskers was now
putting the ship on the other tack. In the moment of profound silence which
follows upon the hands going to their stations I heard on the poop his raised
voice: “Hard alee!” and the distant shout of the order repeated on the
main-deck. The sails, in that light breeze, made but a faint fluttering noise.
It ceased. The ship was coming round slowly: I held my breath in the renewed
stillness of expectation; one wouldn’t have thought that there was a single
living soul on her decks. A sudden brisk shout, “Mainsail haul!” broke the
spell, and in the noisy cries and rush overhead of the men running away with
the main brace we two, down in my cabin, came together in our usual position by
the bed place.
He did not wait for my question. “I heard him
fumbling here and just managed to squat myself down in the bath,” he whispered
to me. “The fellow only opened the door and put his arm in to hang the coat up.
All the same—”
“I never thought of that,” I whispered back,
even more appalled than before at the closeness of the shave, and marveling at
that something unyielding in his character which was carrying him through so
finely. There was no agitation in his whisper. Whoever was being driven
distracted, it was not he. He was sane. And the proof of his sanity was
continued when he took up the whispering again.
“It would never do for me to come to life
again.”
It was something that a ghost might have said.
But what he was alluding to was his old captain’s reluctant admission of the
theory of suicide. It would obviously serve his turn—if I had understood at all
the view which seemed to govern the unalterable purpose of his action.
“You must maroon me as soon as ever you can get
amongst these islands off the Cambodge shore,” he went on.
“Maroon you! We are not living in a boy’s
adventure tale,” I protested. His scornful whispering took me up.
“We aren’t indeed! There’s nothing of a boy’s
tale in this. But there’s nothing else for it. I want no more. You don’t
suppose I am afraid of what can be done to me? Prison or gallows or whatever
they may please. But you don’t see me coming back to explain such things to an
old fellow in a wig and twelve respectable tradesmen, do you? What can they
know whether I am guilty or not—or of what I am guilty,
either? That’s my affair. What does the Bible say? ‘Driven off the face of the
earth.’ Very well, I am off the face of the earth now. As I came at night so I
shall go.”
“Impossible!” I murmured. “You can’t.”
“Can’t?... Not naked like a soul on the Day of
Judgment. I shall freeze on to this sleeping suit. The Last Day is not
yet—and... you have understood thoroughly. Didn’t you?”
I felt suddenly ashamed of myself. I may say
truly that I understood—and my hesitation in letting that man swim away from my
ship’s side had been a mere sham sentiment, a sort of cowardice.
“It can’t be done now till next night,” I breathed
out. “The ship is on the off-shore tack and the wind may fail us.”
“As long as I know that you understand,” he
whispered. “But of course you do. It’s a great satisfaction to have got
somebody to understand. You seem to have been there on purpose.” And in the
same whisper, as if we two whenever we talked had to say things to each other
which were not fit for the world to hear, he added, “It’s very wonderful.”
We remained side by side talking in our secret
way—but sometimes silent or just exchanging a whispered word or two at long
intervals. And as usual he stared through the port. A breath of wind came now
and again into our faces. The ship might have been moored in dock, so gently
and on an even keel she slipped through the water, that did not murmur even at
our passage, shadowy and silent like a phantom sea.
At midnight I went on deck, and to my mate’s
great surprise put the ship round on the other tack. His terrible whiskers
flitted round me in silent criticism. I certainly should not have done it if it
had been only a question of getting out of that sleepy gulf as quickly as
possible. I believe he told the second mate, who relieved him, that it was a
great want of judgment. The other only yawned. That intolerable cub shuffled
about so sleepily and lolled against the rails in such a slack, improper
fashion that I came down on him sharply.
“Aren’t you properly awake yet?”
“Yes, sir! I am awake.”
“Well, then, be good enough to hold yourself as
if you were. And keep a lookout. If there’s any current we’ll be closing with
some islands before daylight.”
The east side of the gulf is fringed with
islands, some solitary, others in groups. On the blue background of the high
coast they seem to float on silvery patches of calm water, arid and gray, or
dark green and rounded like clumps of evergreen bushes, with the larger ones, a
mile or two long, showing the outlines of ridges, ribs of gray rock under the
dark mantle of matted leafage. Unknown to trade, to travel, almost to
geography, the manner of life they harbor is an unsolved secret. There must be
villages—settlements of fishermen at least—on the largest of them, and some
communication with the world is probably kept up by native craft. But all that
forenoon, as we headed for them, fanned along by the faintest of breezes, I saw
no sign of man or canoe in the field of the telescope I kept on pointing at the
scattered group.
At noon I gave no orders for a change of course,
and the mate’s whiskers became much concerned and seemed to be offering
themselves unduly to my notice. At last I said:
“I am going to stand right in. Quite in—as far
as I can take her.”
The stare of extreme surprise imparted an air of
ferocity also to his eyes, and he looked truly terrific for a moment.
“We’re not doing well in the middle of the gulf,”
I continued, casually. “I am going to look for the land breezes tonight.”
“Bless my soul! Do you mean, sir, in the dark
amongst the lot of all them islands and reefs and shoals?”
“Well—if there are any regular land breezes at
all on this coast one must get close inshore to find them, mustn’t one?”
“Bless my soul!” he exclaimed again under his
breath. All that afternoon he wore a dreamy, contemplative appearance which in
him was a mark of perplexity. After dinner I went into my stateroom as if I
meant to take some rest. There we two bent our dark heads over a half-unrolled
chart lying on my bed.
“There,” I said. “It’s got to be Koh-ring. I’ve
been looking at it ever since sunrise. It has got two hills and a low point. It
must be inhabited. And on the coast opposite there is what looks like the mouth
of a biggish river—with some towns, no doubt, not far up. It’s the best chance
for you that I can see.”
“Anything. Koh-ring let it be.”
He looked thoughtfully at the chart as if
surveying chances and distances from a lofty height—and following with his eyes
his own figure wandering on the blank land of Cochin-China, and then passing
off that piece of paper clean out of sight into uncharted regions. And it was
as if the ship had two captains to plan her course for her. I had been so
worried and restless running up and down that I had not had the patience to
dress that day. I had remained in my sleeping suit, with straw slippers and a
soft floppy hat. The closeness of the heat in the gulf had been most oppressive,
and the crew were used to seeing me wandering in that airy attire.
“She will clear the south point as she heads
now,” I whispered into his ear. “Goodness only knows when, though, but
certainly after dark. I’ll edge her in to half a mile, as far as I may be able
to judge in the dark—”
“Be careful,” he murmured, warningly—and I
realized suddenly that all my future, the only future for which I was fit,
would perhaps go irretrievably to pieces in any mishap to my first command.
I could not stop a moment longer in the room. I
motioned him to get out of sight and made my way on the poop. That unplayful
cub had the watch. I walked up and down for a while thinking things out, then
beckoned him over.
“Send a couple of hands to open the two
quarter-deck ports,” I said, mildly.
He actually had the impudence, or else so forgot
himself in his wonder at such an incomprehensible order, as to repeat:
“Open the quarter-deck ports! What for, sir?”
“The only reason you need concern yourself about
is because I tell you to do so. Have them open wide and fastened properly.”
He reddened and went off, but I believe made
some jeering remark to the carpenter as to the sensible practice of ventilating
a ship’s quarter-deck. I know he popped into the mate’s cabin to impart the
fact to him because the whiskers came on deck, as it were by chance, and stole
glances at me from below—for signs of lunacy or drunkenness, I suppose.
A little before supper, feeling more restless
than ever, I rejoined, for a moment, my second self. And to find him sitting so
quietly was surprising, like something against nature, inhuman.
I developed my plan in a hurried whisper.
“I shall stand in as close as I dare and then
put her round. I will presently find means to smuggle you out of here into the
sail locker, which communicates with the lobby. But there is an opening, a sort
of square for hauling the sails out, which gives straight on the quarter-deck
and which is never closed in fine weather, so as to give air to the sails. When
the ship’s way is deadened in stays and all the hands are aft at the main
braces you will have a clear road to slip out and get overboard through the
open quarter-deck port. I’ve had them both fastened up. Use a rope’s end to
lower yourself into the water so as to avoid a splash—you know. It could be
heard and cause some beastly complication.”
He kept silent for a while, then whispered, “I
understand.”
“I won’t be there to see you go,” I began with
an effort. “The rest ... I only hope I have understood, too.”
“You have. From first to last”—and for the first
time there seemed to be a faltering, something strained in his whisper. He
caught hold of my arm, but the ringing of the supper bell made me start. He
didn’t though; he only released his grip.
After supper I didn’t come below again till well
past eight o’clock. The faint, steady breeze was loaded with dew; and the wet,
darkened sails held all there was of propelling power in it. The night, clear
and starry, sparkled darkly, and the opaque, lightless patches shifting slowly
against the low stars were the drifting islets. On the port bow there was a big
one more distant and shadowily imposing by the great space of sky it eclipsed.
On opening the door I had a back view of my very
own self looking at a chart. He had come out of the recess and was standing
near the table.
“Quite dark enough,” I whispered.
He stepped back and leaned against my bed with a
level, quiet glance. I sat on the couch. We had nothing to say to each other.
Over our heads the officer of the watch moved here and there. Then I heard him
move quickly. I knew what that meant. He was making for the companion; and
presently his voice was outside my door.
“We are drawing in pretty fast, sir. Land looks
rather close.”
“Very well,” I answered. “I am coming on deck
directly.”
I waited till he was gone out of the cuddy, then
rose. My double moved too. The time had come to exchange our last whispers, for
neither of us was ever to hear each other’s natural voice.
“Look here!” I opened a drawer and took out
three sovereigns. “Take this anyhow. I’ve got six and I’d give you the lot,
only I must keep a little money to buy some fruit and vegetables for the crew
from native boats as we go through Sunda Straits.”
He shook his head.
“Take it,” I urged him, whispering desperately.
“No one can tell what—”
He smiled and slapped meaningly the only pocket
of the sleeping jacket. It was not safe, certainly. But I produced a large old
silk handkerchief of mine, and tying the three pieces of gold in a corner,
pressed it on him. He was touched, I supposed, because he took it at last and
tied it quickly round his waist under the jacket, on his bare skin.
Our eyes met; several seconds elapsed, till, our
glances still mingled, I extended my hand and turned the lamp out. Then I
passed through the cuddy, leaving the door of my room wide open.... “Steward!”
He was still lingering in the pantry in the
greatness of his zeal, giving a rub-up to a plated cruet stand the last thing
before going to bed. Being careful not to wake up the mate, whose room was
opposite, I spoke in an undertone.
He looked round anxiously. “Sir!”
“Can you get me a little hot water from the
galley?”
“I am afraid, sir, the galley fire’s been out
for some time now.”
“Go and see.”
He flew up the stairs.
“Now,” I whispered, loudly, into the saloon—too
loudly, perhaps, but I was afraid I couldn’t make a sound. He was by my side in
an instant—the double captain slipped past the stairs—through a tiny dark
passage ... a sliding door. We were in the sail locker, scrambling on our knees
over the sails. A sudden thought struck me. I saw myself wandering barefooted,
bareheaded, the sun beating on my dark poll. I snatched off my floppy hat and
tried hurriedly in the dark to ram it on my other self. He dodged and fended
off silently. I wonder what he thought had come to me before he understood and
suddenly desisted. Our hands met gropingly, lingered united in a steady,
motionless clasp for a second. ... No word was breathed by either of us when
they separated.
I was standing quietly by the pantry door when
the steward returned.
“Sorry, sir. Kettle barely warm. Shall I light
the spirit lamp?”
“Never mind.”
I came out on deck slowly. It was now a matter
of conscience to shave the land as close as possible—for now he must go
overboard whenever the ship was put in stays. Must! There could be no going
back for him. After a moment I walked over to leeward and my heart flew into my
mouth at the nearness of the land on the bow. Under any other circumstances I
would not have held on a minute longer. The second mate had followed me
anxiously.
I looked on till I felt I could command my
voice.
“She will weather,” I said then in a quiet tone.
“Are you going to try that, sir?” he stammered
out incredulously.
I took no notice of him and raised my tone just
enough to be heard by the helmsman.
“Keep her good full.”
“Good full, sir.”
The wind fanned my cheek, the sails slept, the
world was silent. The strain of watching the dark loom of the land grow bigger
and denser was too much for me. I had shut my eyes—because the ship must go
closer. She must! The stillness was intolerable. Were we standing still?
When I opened my eyes the second view started my
heart with a thump. The black southern hill of Koh-ring seemed to hang right
over the ship like a towering fragment of everlasting night. On that enormous
mass of blackness there was not a gleam to be seen, not a sound to be heard. It
was gliding irresistibly towards us and yet seemed already within reach of the
hand. I saw the vague figures of the watch grouped in the waist, gazing in awed
silence.
“Are you going on, sir?” inquired an unsteady
voice at my elbow.
I ignored it. I had to go on.
“Keep her full. Don’t check her way. That won’t
do now,” I said warningly.
“I can’t see the sails very well,” the helmsman
answered me, in strange, quavering tones.
Was she close enough? Already she was, I won’t
say in the shadow of the land, but in the very blackness of it, already
swallowed up as it were, gone too close to be recalled, gone from me altogether.
“Give the mate a call,” I said to the young man
who stood at my elbow as still as death. “And turn all hands up.”
My tone had a borrowed loudness reverberated
from the height of the land. Several voices cried out together: “We are all on
deck, sir.”
Then stillness again, with the great shadow
gliding closer, towering higher, without a light, without a sound. Such a hush
had fallen on the ship that she might have been a bark of the dead floating in
slowly under the very gate of Erebus.
“My God! Where are we?”
It was the mate moaning at my elbow. He was
thunderstruck, and as it were deprived of the moral support of his whiskers. He
clapped his hands and absolutely cried out, “Lost!”
“Be quiet,” I said, sternly.
He lowered his tone, but I saw the shadowy gesture
of his despair. “What are we doing here?”
“Looking for the land wind.”
He made as if to tear his hair, and addressed me
recklessly.
“She will never get out. You have done it, sir.
I knew it’d end in something like this. She will never weather, and you are too
close now to stay. She’ll drift ashore before she’s round. Oh my God!”
I caught his arm as he was raising it to batter
his poor devoted head, and shook it violently.
“She’s ashore already,” he wailed, trying to
tear himself away.
“Is she?... Keep good full there!”
“Good full, sir,” cried the helmsman in a
frightened, thin, childlike voice.
I hadn’t let go the mate’s arm and went on
shaking it. “Ready about, do you hear? You go forward”—shake—“and stop
there”—shake—“and hold your noise”—shake—“and see these head-sheets properly
overhauled”—shake, shake—shake.
And all the time I dared not look towards the
land lest my heart should fail me. I released my grip at last and he ran
forward as if fleeing for dear life.
I wondered what my double there in the sail
locker thought of this commotion. He was able to hear everything—and perhaps he
was able to understand why, on my conscience, it had to be thus close—no less.
My first order “Hard alee!” re-echoed ominously under the towering shadow of
Koh-ring as if I had shouted in a mountain gorge. And then I watched the land
intently. In that smooth water and light wind it was impossible to feel the
ship coming-to. No! I could not feel her. And my second self was making now
ready to ship out and lower himself overboard. Perhaps he was gone already...?
The great black mass brooding over our very
mastheads began to pivot away from the ship’s side silently. And now I forgot
the secret stranger ready to depart, and remembered only that I was a total
stranger to the ship. I did not know her. Would she do it? How was she to be
handled?
I swung the mainyard and waited helplessly. She
was perhaps stopped, and her very fate hung in the balance, with the black mass
of Koh-ring like the gate of the everlasting night towering over her taffrail.
What would she do now? Had she way on her yet? I stepped to the side swiftly,
and on the shadowy water I could see nothing except a faint phosphorescent
flash revealing the glassy smoothness of the sleeping surface. It was
impossible to tell—and I had not learned yet the feel of my ship. Was she
moving? What I needed was something easily seen, a piece of paper, which I could
throw overboard and watch. I had nothing on me. To run down for it I didn’t
dare. There was no time. All at once my strained, yearning stare distinguished
a white object floating within a yard of the ship’s side. White on the black
water. A phosphorescent flash passed under it. What was that thing?... I
recognized my own floppy hat. It must have fallen off his head... and he didn’t
bother. Now I had what I wanted—the saving mark for my eyes. But I hardly
thought of my other self, now gone from the ship, to be hidden forever from all
friendly faces, to be a fugitive and a vagabond on the earth, with no brand of
the curse on his sane forehead to stay a slaying hand... too proud to explain.
And I watched the hat—the expression of my
sudden pity for his mere flesh. It had been meant to save his homeless head
from the dangers of the sun. And now—behold—it was saving the ship, by serving
me for a mark to help out the ignorance of my strangeness. Ha! It was drifting
forward, warning me just in time that the ship had gathered sternaway.
“Shift the helm,” I said in a low voice to the
seaman standing still like a statue.
The man’s eyes glistened wildly in the binnacle
light as he jumped round to the other side and spun round the wheel.
I walked to the break of the poop. On the
over-shadowed deck all hands stood by the forebraces waiting for my order. The
stars ahead seemed to be gliding from right to left. And all was so still in
the world that I heard the quiet remark, “She’s round,” passed in a tone of
intense relief between two seamen.
“Let go and haul.”
The foreyards ran round with a great noise,
amidst cheery cries. And now the frightful whiskers made themselves heard
giving various orders. Already the ship was drawing ahead. And I was alone with
her. Nothing! no one in the world should stand now between us, throwing a
shadow on the way of silent knowledge and mute affection, the perfect communion
of a seaman with his first command.
Walking to the taffrail, I was in time to make
out, on the very edge of a darkness thrown by a towering black mass like the
very gateway of Erebus—yes, I was in time to catch an evanescent glimpse of my
white hat left behind to mark the spot where the secret sharer of my cabin and
of my thoughts, as though he were my second self, had lowered himself into the
water to take his punishment: a free man, a proud swimmer striking out for a
new destiny.
1910
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