首页 >出版文学> The Wrecker>第30章

第30章

  “Thissickensme。”Isaid。“Let’sgoondeckandbreathe。”
  Thecaptainnodded。“ItISkindoflonely,isn’tit?”hesaid。
  “ButIcan’tgouptillIgetthecodesignals。Iwanttorunup’GotLeft’orsomething,justtobrightenupthisislandhome。
  CaptainTrenthasn’tbeenhereyet,buthe’lldropinbeforelong;
  andit’llcheerhimuptoseeasignalonthebrig。”
  “Isn’ttheresomeofficialexpressionwecoulduse?”Iasked,vastlytakenbythefancy。“’Soldforthebenefitoftheunderwriters:forfurtherparticulars,applytoJ。Pinkerton,MontanaBlock,S。F。’“
  “Well。”returnedNares,“Iwon’tsaybutwhatanoldnavyquartermastermighttelegraphallthat,ifyougavehimadaytodoitinandapoundoftobaccoforhimself。Butit’sabovemyregister。Imusttrysomethingshortandsweet:KB,urgentsignal,’Heaveallaback’;orLM,urgent,’Theberthyou’renowinisnotsafe’;orwhatdoyousaytoPQH?——’Tellmyownerstheshipanswersremarkablywell。’“
  “It’spremature。”Ireplied;“butitseemscalculatedtogivepaintoTrent。PQHforme。”
  TheflagswerefoundinTrent’scabin,neatlystoredbehindaletteredgrating;NareschosewhatherequiredandIfollowing
  returnedondeck,wherethesunhadalreadydipped,andtheduskwascoming。
  “Here!don’ttouchthat,youfool!”shoutedthecaptaintooneofthehands,whowasdrinkingfromthescuttlebut。“Thatwater’srotten!”
  “Begpardon,sir。”repliedtheman。“Tastesquitesweet。”
  “Letmesee。”returnedNares,andhetookthedipperandheldittohislips。“Yes,it’sallright。”hesaid。“Musthaverottedandcomesweetagain。Queer,isn’tit,Mr。Dodd?ThoughI’veknownthesameonaCapeHorner。”
  Therewassomethinginhisintonationthatmademelookhimintheface;hestoodalittleontiptoetolookrightandleftabouttheship,likeamanfilledwithcuriosity,andhiswholeexpressionandbearingtestifiedtosomesuppressedexcitement。
  “Youdon’tbelievewhatyou’resaying!”Ibrokeout。
  “O,Idon’tknowbutwhatIdo!”hereplied,layingahanduponmesoothingly。“Thething’sverypossible。Only,I’mbotheredaboutsomethingelse。”
  Andwiththathecalledahand,gavehimthecodeflags,andsteppedhimselftothemainsignalhalliards,whichvibratedundertheweightoftheensignoverhead。Aminutelater,theAmericancolours,whichwehadbroughtintheboat,replacedtheEnglishred,andPQHwasflutteringatthefore。
  “Now,then。”saidNares,whohadwatchedthebreakingoutofhissignalwiththeold-maidishparticularityofanAmericansailor,“outwiththosehandspikes,andlet’sseewhatwaterthereisinthelagoon。”
  Thebarswereshovedhome;thebarbarouscacophonyoftheclankingpumproseinthewaist;andstreamsofill-smellingwatergushedondeckandmadevalleysintheslabguano。
  Naresleanedontherail,watchingthesteadystreamofbilgeasthoughhefoundsomeinterestinit。
  “Whatisitthatbothersyou?”Iasked。
  “Well,I’lltellyouonethingshortly。”hereplied。“Buthere’sanother。Doyouseethoseboatsthere,oneonthehouseandtwoonthebeds?Well,whereistheboatTrentloweredwhenhelostthehands?”
  “Gotitaboardagain,Isuppose。”saidI。
  “Well,ifyou’lltellmewhy!”returnedthecaptain。
  “Thenitmusthavebeenanother。”Isuggested。
  “Shemighthavecarriedanotheronthemainhatch,Iwon’tdeny。”admittedNares;“butIcan’tseewhatshewantedwithit,unlessitwasfortheoldmantogooutandplaytheaccordionin,onmoonlightnights。”
  “Itcan’tmuchmatter,anyway。”Ireflected。
  “O,Idon’tsupposeitdoes。”saidhe,glancingoverhisshoulderatthespoutingofthescuppers。
  “Andhowlongarewetokeepupthisracket?”Iasked。“We’resimplypumpingupthelagoon。CaptainTrenthimselfsaidshehadsettleddownandwasfullforward。”
  “Didhe?”saidNares,withasignificantdryness。Andalmostashespokethepumpssucked,andsuckedagain,andthementhrewdowntheirbars。“There,whatdoyoumakeofthat?”heasked。“Now,I’lltell,Mr。Dodd。”hewenton,loweringhisvoice,butnotshiftingfromhiseasyattitudeagainsttherail,“thisshipisassoundastheNorahCreina。Ihadaguessofitbeforewecameaboard,andnowIknow。”
  “It’snotpossible!”Icried。“WhatdoyoumakeofTrent?”
  “Idon’tmakeanythingofTrent;Idon’tknowwhetherhe’saliaroronlyanoldwife;Isimplytellyouwhat’sthefact。”saidNares。“AndI’lltellyousomethingmore。”headded:“I’vetakenthegroundmyselfindeep-watervessels;IknowwhatI’msaying;andIsaythat,whenshefirststruckandbeforeshebeddeddown,sevenoreighthours’workwouldhavegotthishookeroff,andthere’snomanthateverwenttwoyearstoseabutmusthaveknownit。”
  Icouldonlyutteranexclamation。
  Naresraisedhisfingerwarningly。“Don’tletTHEMgetholdofit。”saidhe。“Thinkwhatyoulike,butsaynothing。”
  Iglancedround;theduskwasmeltingintoearlynight;thetwinkleofalanternmarkedtheschooner’spositioninthedistance;andourmen,freefromfurtherlabour,stoodgroupedtogetherinthewaist,theirfacesilluminatedbytheirglowingpipes。
  “Whydidn’tTrentgetheroff?”inquiredthecaptain。“Whydidhewanttobuyherbackin’Friscoforthesefabuloussums,whenhemighthavesailedherintothebayhimself?”
  “Perhapsheneverknewhervalueuntilthen。”Isuggested。
  “Iwishweknewhervaluenow。”exclaimedNares。“However,Idon’twanttodepressyou;I’msorryforyou,Mr。Dodd;I
  knowhowbotheringitmustbetoyou;andthebestIcansay’sthis:Ihaven’ttakenmuchtimegettingdown,andnowI’mhereImeantoworkthisthinginproperstyle。Ijustwanttoputyourmindatrest:youshallhavenotroublewithme。”
  Therewassomethingtrustyandfriendlyinhisvoice;andI
  foundmyselfgrippinghandswithhim,inthathard,shortshakethatmeanssomuchwithEnglish-speakingpeople。
  “We’lldo,oldfellow。”saidhe。“We’veshakendownintoprettygoodfriends,youandme;andyouwon’tfindmeworkingthebusinessanythelesshardforthat。Andnowlet’sscootforsupper。”
  Aftersupper,withtheidlecuriosityoftheseafarer,wepulledashoreinafinemoonlight,andlandedonMiddleBrook’sIsland。Aflatbeachsurroundedituponallsides;andthemidstwasoccupiedbyathicketofbushes,thehighestofthemscarcelyfivefeethigh,inwhichthesea-fowllived。Throughthiswetriedatfirsttostrike;butitwereeasiertocrossTrafalgarSquareonadayofdemonstrationthantoinvadethesehauntsofsleepingsea-birds。Thenestssank,andtheeggsburstunderfooting;wingsbeatinourfaces,beaksmenacedoureyes,ourmindswereconfoundedwiththescreeching,andthecoilspreadovertheislandandmountedhighintotheair。
  “Iguesswe’llsaunterroundthebeach。”saidNares,whenwehadmadegoodourretreat。
  Thehandswereallbusyaftersea-birds’eggs,sotherewerenonetofollowus。Ourwaylayonthecrispsandbythemarginofthewater:ononeside,thethicketfromwhichwehadbeendislodged;ontheother,thefaceofthelagoon,barredwithabroadpathofmoonlight,andbeyondthat,theline,alternatelydarkandshining,alternatelyhovehighandfallenprone,oftheexternalbreakers。Thebeachwasstrewnwithbitsofwreckanddrift:someredwoodandsprucelogs,nolessthantwolowermastsofjunks,andthestern-postofaEuropeanship;allofwhichwelookedonwithashadeofseriousconcern,speakingofthedangersoftheseaandthehardcaseofcastaways。Inthissoberveinwemadethegreaterpartofthecircuitoftheisland;hadanearviewofitsneighbourfromthesouthernend;walkedthewholelengthofthewesterlysideintheshadowofthethicket;andcameforthagainintothemoonlightattheoppositeextremity。
  Onourright,atthedistanceofabouthalfamile,theschoonerlayfaintlyheavingatheranchors。Abouthalfamiledownthebeach,ataspotstillhiddenfromusbythethicket,anupboilingofthebirdsshowedwherethemenwerestillwithsailor-likeinsatiabilitycollectingeggs。Andrightbeforeus,inasmallindentationofthesand,wewereawareofaboatlyinghighanddry,andrightsideup。
  Narescrouchedbackintotheshadowofthebushes。
  “Whatthedevil’sthis?”hewhispered。
  “Trent。”Isuggested,withabeatingheart。
  “Weweredamnedfoolstocomeashoreunarmed。”saidhe。
  “ButI’vegottoknowwhereIstand。”Intheshadow,hisfacelookedconspicuouslywhite,andhisvoicebetrayedastrongexcitement。Hetookhisboat’swhistlefromhispocket。“IncaseImightwanttoplayatune。”saidhe,grimly,andthrustingitbetweenhisteeth,advancedintothemoonlitopen;whichwecrossedwithrapidsteps,lookingguiltilyaboutusaswewent。
  Notaleafstirred;andtheboat,whenwecameuptoit,offeredconvincingproofoflongdesertion。Shewasaneighteen-footwhaleboatoftheordinarytype,equippedwithoarsandthole-
  pins。Twoorthreequarter-caskslayonthebilgeamidships,oneofwhichmusthavebeenbroached,andnowstankhorribly;andthese,uponexamination,provedtobearthesameNewZealandbrandasthebeefonboardthewreck。
  “Well,here’stheboat。”saidI;“here’soneofyourdifficultiesclearedaway。”
  “H’m。”saidhe。Therewasalittlewaterinthebilge,andherehestoopedandtastedit。
  “Fresh。”hesaid。“Onlyrain-water。”
  “Youdon’tobjecttothat?”Iasked。
  “No。”saidhe。
  “Well,then,whatailsyou?”Icried。
  “InplainUnitedStates,Mr。Dodd。”hereturned,“awhaleboat,fiveashsweeps,andabarrelofstinkingpork。”
  “Or,inotherwords,thewholething?”Icommented。
  “Well,it’sthisway。”hecondescendedtoexplain。“I’venouseforafourthboatatall;butaboatofthismodeltopsthebusiness。Idon’tsaythetype’snotcommoninthesewaters;it’sascommonasdirt;thetraderscarrythemforsurf-boats。ButtheFlyingScud?adeep-watertramp,whowaslime-juicingaroundbetweenbigports,CalcuttaandRangoonand’FriscoandtheCantonRiver?No,Idon’tseeit。”
  Wewereleaningoverthegunwaleoftheboataswespoke。
  Thecaptainstoodnearestthebow,andhewasidlyplayingwiththetrailingpainter,whenathoughtarrestedhim。Hehauledthelineinhandoverhand,andstared,andremainedstaring,attheend。
  “Anythingwrongwithit?”Iasked。
  “Doyouknow,Mr。Dodd。”saidhe,inaqueervoice,“thispainter’sbeencut?Asailoralwaysseizesarope’send,butthisisslicedshortoffwiththecoldsteel。Thiswon’tdoatallforthemen。”headded。“JuststandbytillIfixitupmorenatural。”
  “Anyguesswhatitallmeans?”Iasked。
  “Well,itmeansonething。”saidhe。“ItmeansTrentwasaliar。
  IguessthestoryoftheFlyingScudwasasightmorepicturesquethanhegaveout。”
  Halfanhourlater,thewhaleboatwaslyingasternoftheNorahCreina;andNaresandIsoughtourbunks,silentandhalf-
  bewilderedbyourlatediscoveries。