THE SCENE CHANGES—RUBY IS VULCANIZED
As Captain Ogilvy had predicted, Ruby
was at once engaged as an assistant blacksmith on
the Bell Rock. In fact, they were only too glad
to get such a powerful, active young fellow into their
service; and he was shipped off with all speed in
the sloop Smeaton, with a few others who were
going to replace some men who had become ill and were
obliged to leave.
A light westerly breeze was blowing
when they cast off the moorings of the sloop.
“Goodbye, Ruby,” said
the captain, as he was about to step on the pier.
“Remember your promise, lad, to keep quiet, and
don’t try to get ashore, or be hold communication
with anyone till you hear from me.”
“All right, uncle, I won’t
forget, and I’ll make my mind easy, for I know
that my case is left in good hands.”
Three hours elapsed ere the Smeaton
drew near to the Bell Rock. During this time,
Ruby kept aloof from his fellow-workmen, feeling disposed
to indulge the sad thoughts which filled his mind.
He sat down on the bulwarks, close to the main shrouds,
and gazed back at the town as it became gradually
less and less visible in the faint light of morning.
Then he began to ponder his unfortunate circumstances,
and tried to imagine how his uncle would set about
clearing up his character and establishing his innocence;
but, do what he would, Ruby could not keep his mind
fixed for any length of time on any subject or line
of thought, because of a vision of sweetness which
it is useless to attempt to describe, and which was
always accompanied by, and surrounded with, a golden
halo.
At last the youth gave up the attempt
to fix his thoughts, and allowed them to wander as
they chose, seeing that they were resolved to do so
whether he would or no. The moment these thoughts
had the reins flung on their necks, and were allowed
to go where they pleased, they refused, owing to some
unaccountable species of perversity, to wander at
all, but at once settled themselves comfortably down
beside the vision with golden hair, and remained there.
This agreeable state of things was
rudely broken in upon by the hoarse voice of the mate
shouting—
“Stand by to let go the anchor.”
Then Ruby sprang on the deck and shook
himself like a great mastiff, and resolved to devote
himself, heart and soul, from that moment, to the
work in which he was about to engage.
The scene that presented itself to
our hero when he woke up from his dreams would have
interested and excited a much less enthusiastic temperament
than his.
The breeze had died away altogether,
just as if, having wafted the Smeaton to her
anchorage, there were no further occasion for its
services. The sea was therefore quite calm, and
as there had only been light westerly winds for some
time past, there was little or none of the swell that
usually undulates the sea. One result of this
was, that, being high water when the Smeaton arrived,
there was no sign whatever of the presence of the
famous Bell Rock. It lay sleeping nearly two
fathoms below the sea, like a grim giant in repose,
and not a ripple was there to tell of the presence
of the mariner’s enemy.
The sun was rising, and its slanting
beams fell on the hulls of the vessels engaged in
the service, which lay at anchor at a short distance
from each other. These vessels, as we have said,
were four in number, including the Smeaton. The
others were the Sir Joseph Banks, a small schooner-rigged
vessel; the Patriot, a little sloop; and the
Pharos lightship, a large clumsy-looking Dutch-built
ship, fitted with three masts, at the top of which
were the lanterns. It was intended that this
vessel should do duty as a lightship until the lighthouse
should be completed.
Besides these there were two large
boats, used for landing stones and building materials
on the rock.
These vessels lay floating almost
motionless on the calm sea, and at first there was
scarcely any noise aboard of them to indicate that
they were tenanted by human beings, but when the sound
of the Smeaton’s cable was heard there
was a bustle aboard of each, and soon faces were seen
looking inquisitively over the sides of the ships.
The Smeaton’s boat was
lowered after the anchor was let go, and the new hands
were transferred to the Pharos, which was destined
to be their home for some time to come.
Just as they reached her the bell
rang for breakfast, and when Ruby stepped upon the
deck he found himself involved in all the bustle that
ensues when men break off from work and make preparation
for the morning meal.
There were upwards of thirty artificers
on board the lightship at this time. Some of
these, as they hurried to and fro, gave the new arrivals
a hearty greeting, and asked, “What news from
the shore?” Others were apparently too much
taken up with their own affairs to take notice of
them.
While Ruby was observing the busy
scene with absorbing interest, and utterly forgetful
of the fact that he was in any way connected with
it, an elderly gentleman, whose kind countenance and
hearty manner gave indication of a genial spirit within,
came up and accosted him:
“You are our assistant blacksmith, I believe?”
“Yes, sir, I am,” replied
Ruby, doffing his cap, as if he felt instinctively
that he was in the presence of someone of note.
“You have had considerable practice,
I suppose, in your trade?”
“A good deal, sir, but not much
latterly, for I have been at sea for some time.”
“At sea? Well, that won’t
be against you here,” returned the gentleman,
with a meaning smile. “It would be well
if some of my men were a little more accustomed to
the sea, for they suffer much from sea-sickness.
You can go below, my man, and get breakfast. You’ll
find your future messmate busy at his, I doubt not.
Here, steward,” (turning to one of the men who
chanced to pass at the moment,) “take Ruby Brand—that
is your name, I think?”
“It is, sir.”
“Take Brand below, and introduce him to James
Dove as his assistant.”
The steward escorted Ruby down the
ladder that conducted to those dark and littered depths
of the ship’s hull that were assigned to the
artificers as their place of abode. But amidst
a good deal of unavoidable confusion, Ruby’s
practised eye discerned order and arrangement everywhere.
“This is your messmate, Jamie
Dove,” said the steward, pointing to a massive
dark man, whose outward appearance was in keeping with
his position as the Vulcan of such an undertaking
as he was then engaged in. “You’ll
find him not a bad feller if you only don’t cross
him.” He added, with a wink, “His
only fault is that he’s given to spoilin’
good victuals, being raither floored by sea-sickness
if it comes on to blow ever so little.”
“Hold your clapper, lad,”
said the smith, who was at the moment busily engaged
with a mess of salt pork, and potatoes to match.
“Who’s your friend?”
“No friend of mine, though I
hope he’ll be one soon,” answered the
steward. “Mr. Stevenson told me to introduce
him to you as your assistant.”
The smith looked up quickly, and scanned
our hero with some interest; then, extending his great
hard hand across the table, he said, “Welcome,
messmate; sit down, I’ve only just begun.”
Ruby grasped the hand with his own,
which, if not so large, was quite as powerful, and
shook the smith’s right arm in a way that called
forth from that rough-looking individual a smile of
approbation.
“You’ve not had breakfast, lad?”
“No, not yet,” said Ruby, sitting down
opposite his comrade.
“An’ the smell here don’t upset
your stummick, I hope?”
The smith said this rather anxiously.
“Not in the least,” said
Ruby with a laugh, and beginning to eat in a way that
proved the truth of his words; “for the matter
o’ that, there’s little smell and no motion
just now.”
“Well, there isn’t much,”
replied the smith, “but, woe’s me! you’ll
get enough of it before long. All the new landsmen
like you suffer horribly from sea-sickness when they
first come off.”
“But I’m not a landsman,” said Ruby.
“Not a landsman!” echoed
the other. “You’re a blacksmith, aren’t
you?”
“Ay, but not a landsman.
I learned the trade as a boy and lad; but I’ve
been at sea for some time past.”
“Then you won’t get sick when it blows?”
“Certainly not; will you?”
The smith groaned and shook his head,
by which answer he evidently meant to assure his friend
that he would, most emphatically.
“But come, it’s of no
use groanin’ over what can’t be helped.
I get as sick as a dog every time the wind rises,
and the worst of it is I don’t never seem to
improve. Howsever, I’m all right when I
get on the rock, and that’s the main thing.”
Ruby and his friend now entered upon
a long and earnest conversation as to their peculiar
duties at the Bell Rock, with which we will not trouble
the reader.
After breakfast they went on deck,
and here Ruby had sufficient to occupy his attention
and to amuse him for some hours.
As the tide that day did not fall
low enough to admit of landing on the rock till noon,
the men were allowed to spend the time as they pleased.
Some therefore took to fishing, others to reading,
while a few employed themselves in drying their clothes,
which had got wet the previous day, and one or two
entertained themselves and their comrades with the
music of the violin and flute. All were busy with
one thing or another, until the rock began to show
its black crest above the smooth sea. Then a
bell was rung to summon the artificers to land.
This being the signal for Ruby to
commence work, he joined his friend Dove, and assisted
him to lower the bellows of the forge into the boat.
The men were soon in their places, with their various
tools, and the boats pushed off—Mr. Stevenson,
the engineer of the building, steering one boat, and
the master of the Pharos, who was also appointed
to the post of landing-master, steering the other.
They landed with ease on this occasion
on the western side of the rock, and then each man
addressed himself to his special duty with energy.
The time during which they could work being short,
they had to make the most of it.
“Now, lad,” said the smith,
“bring along the bellows and follow me.
Mind yer footin’, for it’s slippery walkin’
on them tangle-covered rocks. I’ve seen
some ugly falls here already.”
“Have any bones been broken
yet?” enquired Ruby, as he shouldered the large
pair of bellows, and followed the smith cautiously
over the rocks.
“Not yet; but there’s
been an awful lot o’ pipes smashed. If it
goes on as it has been, we’ll have to take to
metal ones. Here we are, Ruby, this is the forge,
and I’ll be bound you never worked at such a
queer one before. Hallo! Bremner!”
he shouted to one of the men.
“That’s me,” answered Bremner.
“Bring your irons as soon as you like!
I’m about ready for you.”
“Ay, ay, here they are,”
said the man, advancing with an armful of picks, chisels,
and other tools, which required sharpening.
He slipped and fell as he spoke, sending
all the tools into the bottom of a pool of water;
but, being used to such mishaps, he arose, joined
in the laugh raised against him, and soon fished up
the tools.
“What’s wrong!”
asked Ruby, pausing in the work of fixing the bellows,
on observing that the smith’s face grew pale,
and his general expression became one of horror.
“Not sea-sick, I hope?”
“Sea-sick,” gasped the
smith, slapping all his pockets hurriedly, “it’s
worse than that; I’ve forgot the matches!”
Ruby looked perplexed, but had no
consolation to offer.
“That’s like you,”
cried Bremner, who, being one of the principal masons,
had to attend chiefly to the digging out of the foundation-pit
of the building, and knew that his tools could not
be sharpened unless the forge fire could be lighted.
“Suppose you hammer a nail red-hot,”
suggested one of the men, who was disposed to make
game of the smith.
“I’ll hammer your nose
red-hot,” replied Dove, with a most undovelike
scowl, “I could swear that I put them matches
in my pocket before I started.”
“No, you didn’t,”
said George Forsyth, one of the carpenters—a
tall loose-jointed man, who was chiefly noted for
his dislike to getting into and out of boats, and
climbing up the sides of ships, because of his lengthy
and unwieldy figure—“No, you didn’t,
you turtle-dove, you forgot to take them; but I remembered
to do it for you; so there, get up your fire, and
confess yourself indebted to me for life.”
“I’m indebted to ’ee
for fire,” said the smith, grasping the matches
eagerly. “Thank’ee, lad, you’re
a true Briton.”
“A tall ’un, rather,” suggested
Bremner.
“Wot never, never, never will be a slave,”
sang another of the men.
“Come, laddies, git up the fire.
Time an’ tide waits for naebody,” said
John Watt, one of the quarriers. “We’ll
want thae tools before lang.”
The men were proceeding with their
work actively while those remarks were passing, and
ere long the smoke of the forge fire arose in the
still air, and the clang of the anvil was added to
the other noises with which the busy spot resounded.
The foundation of the Bell Rock Lighthouse
had been carefully selected by Mr. Stevenson; the
exact spot being chosen not only with a view to elevation,
but to the serrated ridges of rock, that might afford
some protection to the building, by breaking the force
of the easterly seas before they should reach it;
but as the space available for the purpose of building
was scarcely fifty yards in diameter, there was not
much choice in the matter.
The foundation-pit was forty-two feet
in diameter, and sunk five feet into the solid rock.
At the time when Ruby landed, it was being hewn out
by a large party of the men. Others were boring
holes in the rock near to it, for the purpose of fixing
the great beams of a beacon, while others were cutting
away the seaweed from the rock, and making preparations
for the laying down of temporary rails to facilitate
the conveying of the heavy stones from the boats to
their ultimate destination. All were busy as
bees. Each man appeared to work as if for a wager,
or to find out how much he could do within a given
space of time.
To the men on the rock itself the
aspect of the spot was sufficiently striking and peculiar,
but to those who viewed it from a boat at a short
distance off it was singularly interesting, for the
whole scene of operations appeared like a small black
spot, scarcely above the level of the waves, on which
a crowd of living creatures were moving about with
great and incessant activity, while all around and
beyond lay the mighty sea, sleeping in the grand tranquillity
of a calm summer day, with nothing to bound it but
the blue sky, save to the northward, where the distant
cliffs of Forfar rested like a faint cloud on the
horizon.
The sounds, too, which on the rock
itself were harsh and loud and varied, came over the
water to the distant observer in a united tone, which
sounded almost as sweet as soft music.
The smith’s forge stood on a
ledge of rock close to the foundation-pit, a little
to the north of it. Here Vulcan Dove had fixed
a strong iron framework, which formed the hearth.
The four legs which supported it were let into holes
bored from six to twelve inches into the rock, according
to the inequalities of the site. These were wedged
first with wood and then with iron, for as this part
of the forge and the anvil was doomed to be drowned
every tide, or twice every day, besides being exposed
to the fury of all the storms that might chance to
blow, it behoved them to fix things down with unusual
firmness.
The block of timber for supporting
the anvil was fixed in the same manner, but the anvil
itself was left to depend on its own weight and the
small stud fitted into the bottom of it.
The bellows, however, were too delicate
to be left exposed to such forces as the stormy winds
and waves, they were therefore shipped and unshipped
every tide, and conveyed to and from the rock in the
boats with the men.
Dove and Ruby wrought together like
heroes. They were both so powerful that the heavy
implements they wielded seemed to possess no weight
when in their strong hands, and their bodies were so
lithe and active as to give the impression of men
rejoicing, revelling, in the enjoyment of their work.
“That’s your sort; hit
him hard, he’s got no friends,” said Dove,
turning a mass of red-hot metal from side to side,
while Ruby pounded it with a mighty hammer, as if
it were a piece of putty.
“Fire and steel for ever,”
observed Ruby, as he made the sparks fly right and
left. “Hallo! the tide’s rising.”
“Ho! so it is,” cried
the smith, finishing off the piece of work with a
small hammer, while Ruby rested on the one he had used
and wiped the perspiration from his brow. “It
always serves me in this way, lad,” continued
the smith, without pausing for a moment in his work.
“Blow away, Ruby, the sea is my greatest enemy.
Every day, a’most, it washes me away from my
work. In calm weather, it creeps up my legs,
and the legs o’ the forge too, till it gradually
puts out the fire, and in rough weather it sends up
a wave sometimes that sweeps the whole concern black
out at one shot.
“It will creep you out
to-day, evidently,” said Ruby, as the water
began to come about his toes.
“Never mind, lad, we’ll
have time to finish them picks this tide, if we work
fast.”
Thus they toiled and moiled, with
their heads and shoulders in smoke and fire, and their
feet in water.
Gradually the tide rose.
“Pump away, Ruby! Keep the pot bilin’,
my boy,” said the smith.
“The wind blowin’, you
mean. I say, Dove, do the other men like the
work here?”
“Like it, ay, they like it well.
At first we were somewhat afraid o’ the landin’
in rough weather, but we’ve got used to that
now. The only bad thing about it is in the rolling
o’ that horrible Pharos. She’s
so bad in a gale that I sometimes think she’ll
roll right over like a cask. Most of us get sick
then, but I don’t think any of ’em are
as bad as me. They seem to be gettin’ used
to that too. I wish I could. Another blow,
Ruby.”
“Time’s up,” shouted one of the
men.
“Hold on just for a minute or
two,” pleaded the smith, who, with his assistant,
was by this time standing nearly knee-deep in water.
The sea had filled the pit some time
before, and driven the men out of it. These busied
themselves in collecting the tools and seeing that
nothing was left lying about, while the men who were
engaged on those parts of the rocks that were a few
inches higher, continued their labours until the water
crept up to them. Then they collected their tools,
and went to the boats, which lay awaiting them at the
western landing-place.
“Now, Dove,” cried the
landing-master, “come along; the crabs will be
attacking your toes if you don’t.”
“It’s a shame to gi’e
Ruby the chance o’ a sair throat the very first
day,” cried John Watt.
“Just half a minute more,”
said the smith, examining a pickaxe, which he was
getting up to that delicate point of heat which is
requisite to give it proper temper.
While he gazed earnestly into the
glowing coals a gentle hissing sound was heard below
the frame of the forge, then a gurgle, and the fire
became suddenly dark and went out!
“I knowed it! always the way!”
cried Dove, with a look of disappointment. “Come,
lad, up with the bellows now, and don’t forget
the tongs.”
In a few minutes more the boats pushed
off and returned to the Pharos, three and a half hours
of good work having been accomplished before the tide
drove them away.
Soon afterwards the sea overflowed
the whole of the rock, and obliterated the scene of
those busy operations as completely as though it had
never been!