THE CASTAWAYS
“This ship,” growled Carter,
the second officer, to Dr. Trendon, as they stood
watching the growing smoke-column, “is a worse
hot-bed of rumours than a down-east village.
That’s the third sea-gull we’ve had officially
reported since breakfast.”
As he said, three distinct times the
Wolverine had thrilled to an imminent discovery,
which, upon nearer investigation, had dwindled to
nothing more than a floating fowl. Upon the heels
of Carter’s complaint came another hail.
“Boat ahoy. Three points on the starboard
bow.”
“If that’s another gull,”
muttered Carter, “I’ll have something to
say to you, my festive lookout.”
The news ran electrically through
the cruiser, and all eyes were strained for a glimpse
of the boat. The ship swung away to starboard.
“Let me know as soon as you
can make her out,” ordered Carter.
“Aye, aye, sir.”
“There’s certainly something
there,” said Forsythe, presently. “I
can make out a speck rising on the waves.”
“Bit o’ wreckage from
Barnett’s derelict,” muttered Trendon,
scowling through his glasses.
“Rides too high for a spar or
anything of that sort,” said the junior lieutenant.
“She’s a small boat,”
came in the clear tones of the lookout, “driftin’
down.”
“Anyone in her?” asked Carter.
“Can’t make out yet, sir. No one’s
in charge though, sir.”
Captain Parkinson appeared and Carter pointed out
the speck to him.
“Yes. Give her full speed,”
said the captain, replying to a question from the
officer of the deck.
Forward leapt the swift cruiser, all
too slow for the anxious hearts of those aboard.
For there was not one of the Wolverines who
did not expect from this aimless traveller of desert
seas at the least a leading clue to the riddle that
oppressed them.
“Aloft there!”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
“Can you make out her build?”
“Rides high, like a dory, sir.”
“Wasn’t there a dory on the Laughing
Lass?” cried Forsythe.
“On her stern davits,” answered Trendon.
“It is hardly probable that
unattached small boats should be drifting about these
seas,” said Captain Parkinson, thoughtfully.
“If she’s a dory, she’s the Laughing
Lass’s boat.”
“That’s what she is,”
said Barnett. “You can see her build plain
enough now.”
“Mr. Barnett, will you go aloft and keep me
posted?” said the captain.
The executive officer climbed to join
the lookout. As he ascended, those below saw
the little craft rise high and slow on a broad swell.
“Same dory,” said Trendon. “I’d
swear to her in Constantinople.”
“What else could she be?” muttered Forsythe.
“Somethin’ that looks
like a man in the bottom of her,” sang out the
crow’s-nest. “Two of ’em, I
think.”
For five minutes there was stillness
aboard, broken only by an occasional low-voiced conjecture.
Then from aloft:
“Two men rolling in the bottom.”
“Are they alive?”
“No, sir; not that I can see.”
The wind, which had been extremely
variable since dawn, now whipped around a couple of
points, swinging the boat’s stern to them.
Barnet, putting aside his glass for a moment, called
down:
“That’s the one, sir. I can make
out the name.”
“Good,” said the captain quietly.
“We should have news, at least.”
“Ives or McGuire,” suggested Forsythe,
in low tones.
“Or Billy Edwards,” amended Carter.
“Not Edwards,” said Trendon.
“How do you know?” demanded Forsythe.
“Dory was aboard when we found
her the second time, after Edwards had left.”
“Can you make out which of the men are in her?”
hailed the captain.
“Don’t think it’s
any of our people,” came the astonishing reply
from Barnett.
“Are you sure?”
“I can see only one man’s
face, sir. It isn’t Ives or McGuire.
He’s a stranger to me.”
“It must be one of the crew, then.”
“No, sir, beg your parding,”
called the lookout. “Nothin’ like
that in our crew, sir.”
The boat came down upon them swiftly.
Soon the quarter-deck was looking into her. She
was of a type common enough on the high seas, except
that a step for a mast showed that she had presumably
been used for skimming about open shores. Of
her passengers, one lay forward, prone and quiet.
A length of sail cloth spread over him made it impossible
to see his garb. At his breast an ugly protuberance,
outlined vaguely, hinted a deformity.
The other sprawled aft, and at a nearer
sight of him some of the men broke out into nervous
titters. There was some excuse, for surely such
a scarecrow had never before been the sport of wind
and wave. A thing of shreds he was, elaborately
ragged, a face overrun with a scrub of beard, and
preternaturally drawn, surmounted by a stiff-dried,
dirty, cloth semi-turban, with a wide, forbidding
stain along the side, worked out the likeness to a
make-up.
“My God!” cackled Forsythe
with an hysterical explosion; and again, “My
God!”
A long-drawn, irrepressible aspiration
of expectancy rose from the warship’s decks
as the stranger raised his haggard face, turned eyes
unseeingly upon them, and fell back. The forward
occupant stirred not, save as the boat rolled.
From between decks someone called
out, sharply, an order. In the grim silence it
seemed strangely incongruous that the measured business
of a ship’s life should be going forward as
usual. Something within the newcomer’s
consciousness stirred to that voice of authority.
Mechanically, like some huge, hideous toy, he raised
first one arm, then the other, and hitched himself
halfway up on the stern seat. His mouth opened.
His face wrinkled. He seemed groping for the meaning
of a joke at which he knew he ought to laugh.
Suddenly from his lips in surprising volume, raucous,
rasping, yet with a certain rollicking deviltry fit
to set the head a-tilt, burst a chanty:
“Oh, their coffin was their ship,
and their grave it was the sea:
Blow high, blow low, what
care we!
And the quarter that we gave them was
to sink them in the sea:
Down on the coast of the
high Barbaree-ee.”
Long-drawn, like the mockery of a
wail, the minor cadence wavered through the stillness,
and died away.
“The High Barbaree!” cried Trendon.
“You know it?” asked the captain, expectant
of a clue.
“One of those cursed tunes you
can’t forget,” said the surgeon. “Heard
a scoundrel of a beach-comber sing it years ago.
Down in New Zealand, that was. When the fever
rose on him he’d pipe up. Used to beat time
with a steel hook he wore in place of a hand.
The thing haunted me till I was sorry I hadn’t
let the rascal die. This creature might have learned
it from him. Howls it out exactly like.”
“I don’t see that that
helps us any,” said Forsythe, looking down on
the preparations that were making to receive the unexpected
guests.
With a deftness which had made the
Wolverine famous in the navy for the niceties
of seamanship, the great cruiser let down her tackle
as she drew skilfully alongside, and made fast, preparatory
to lifting the dory gently to her broad deck.
But before the order came to hoist away, one of the
jackies who had gone down drew the covering back from
the still figure forward, and turned it over.
With a half-stifled cry he shrank back. And at
that the tension of soul and mind on the Wolverine
snapped, breaking into outcries and sudden, sharp
imprecations. The face revealed was that of Timmins,
the bo’s’n’s mate, who had sailed
with the first vanished crew. A life preserver
was fastened under his arms. He was dead.
“I’m out,” said
the surgeon briefly, and stood with mouth agape.
Never had the disciplined Wolverines performed
a sea duty with so ragged a routine as the getting
in of the boat containing the live man and the dead
body. The dead seaman was reverently disposed
and covered. As to the survivor there was some
hesitancy on the part of the captain, who was inclined
to send him forward until Dr. Trendon, after a swift
scrutiny, suggested that for the present, at least,
he be berthed aft. They took the stranger to
Edwards’s vacant room, where Trendon was closeted
with him for half an hour. When he emerged he
was beset with questions.
“Can’t give any account
of himself yet,” said the surgeon. “Weak
and not rightly conscious.”
“What ails him?”
“Enough. Gash in his scalp.
Fever. Thirst and exhaustion. Nervous shock,
too, I think.”
“How came he aboard the Laughing
Lass?” “Does he know anything of Billy?”
“Was he a stow-away?” “Did you ask
him about Ives and McGuire?” “How came
he in the small boat?” “Where are the rest?”
“Now, now,” said the veteran
chidingly. “How can I tell? Would you
have me kill the man with questions?”
He left them to look at the body of
the bo’s’n’s mate. Not a word
had he to say when he returned. Only the captain
got anything out of him but growling and unintelligible
expressions, which seemed to be objurgatory and to
express bewildered cogitation.
“How long had poor Timmins been
drowned?” the captain had asked him, and Trendon
replied:
“Captain Parkinson, the man
wasn’t drowned. No water in his lungs.”
“Not drowned! Then how came he by his death?”
“If I were to diagnose it under
any other conditions I should say that he had inhaled
flames.”
Then the two men stared at each other
in blank impotency. Meantime the scarecrow was
showing signs of returning consciousness and a message
was dispatched for the physician. On his way
he met Barnett, who asked and received permission
to accompany him. The stranger was tossing restlessly
in his bunk, opening and shutting his parched mouth
in silent, piteous appeal for the water that must
still be doled to him parsimoniously.
“I think I’ll try him
with a little brandy,” said Trendon, and sent
for the liquor.
Barnett raised the patient while the
surgeon held the glass to his lips. The man’s
hand rose, wavered, and clasped the glass.
“All right, my friend.
Take it yourself, if you like,” said Trendon.
The fingers closed. Tremulously
held, the little glass tilted and rattled against
the teeth. There was one deep, eager spasm of
swallowing. Then the fevered eyes opened upon
the face of the Wolverine’s first officer.
“Prosit, Barnett,” said
the man, in a voice like the rasp of rusty metal.
The navy man straightened up as from
a blow under the jaw.
“Be careful what you are about,”
warned Trendon, addressing his superior officer sharply,
for Barnett had all but let his charge drop. His
face was a puckered mask of amaze and incredulity.
“Did you hear him speak my name—or
am I dreaming?” he half whispered.
“Heard him plain enough. Who is he?”
The man’s eyes closed, but he
smiled a little—a singular, wry-mouthed,
winning smile. With that there sprung from behind
the brush of beard, filling out the deep lines of
emaciation, a memory to the recognition of Barnett;
a keen and gay countenance that whisked him back across
seven years time to the days of Dewey and the Philippines.
“Ralph Slade, by the Lord!” he exclaimed.
“Of the Laughing Lass?” cried Trendon.
“Of the Laughing Lass.”
Such a fury of eagerness burned in
the face of Barnett that Trendon cautioned him.
“See here, Mr. Barnett, you’re not going
to fire a broadside of disturbing questions at my
patient yet a while. He’s in no condition.”
But it was from the other that the
questions came. Opening his eyes he whispered,
“The sailor? Where?”
“Dead,” said Trendon bluntly.
Then, breaking his own rule of repression, he asked:
“Did he come off the schooner with you?”
“Picked him up,” was the straining answer.
“Drifting.”
The survivor looked around him, then
into Barnett’s face, and his mind too, traversed
the years.
“North Dakota?” he queried.
“No; I’ve changed my ship,” said
Barnett. “This is the Wolverine.”
“Where’s the Laughing Lass?”
Barnett shook his head.
“Tell me,” begged Slade.
“Wait till you’re stronger,” admonished
Trendon.
“Can’t wait,” said the weak voice.
The eyes grew wild.
“Mr. Barnett, tell him the bare
outline and make it short,” said the surgeon.
“We sighted the Laughing
Lass two days ago. She was in good shape,
but deserted. That is, we thought she was deserted.”
The man nodded eagerly.
“I suppose you were aboard,”
said Barnett, and Trendon made a quick gesture of
impatience and rebuke.
“No,” said Slade. “Left three—four—don’t
know how many nights ago.”
The officers looked at each other.
“Go on,” said Trendon to his companion.
“We put a crew aboard in command
of an ensign,” continued Barnett, “and
picked up the schooner the next night, deserted.
You must know about it. Where is Billy Edwards?”
“Never heard of him,” whispered the other.
“Ives and McGuire, then.
They were there after—Great God, man!”
he cried, his agitation breaking out, “Pull
yourself together! Give us something to go on.”
“Mr. Barnett!” said the surgeon peremptorily.
But the suggestion was working in
the sick man’s brain. He turned to the
officers a face of horror.
“Your man, Edwards—the
crew—they left her? In the night?”
“What does he mean?” cried Barnett.
“The light! You saw it?”
“Yes; we saw a strange light,”
answered Trendon soothingly. Slade half rose.
“Lost; all lost!” he cried, and fell back
unconscious. Trendon exploded into curses.
“See what you’ve done to my patient,”
he fumed. Barnett looked at him with contrite
eyes.
“Better get out before he comes
to,” growled the surgeon. “Nice way
to treat a man half dead of exhaustion.”
It was nearly an hour before Slade
came back to the world again. The doctor forbade
him to attempt speech. But of one thing he would
not be denied. There was a struggle for utterance,
then:
“The volcano?” he rasped out.
“Dead ahead,” was the reply.
“Stand by!” grasped Slade.
He strove to rise, to say something further, but endurance
had reached its limit. The man was utterly done.
Dr. Trendon went on deck, his head
sunk between his shoulders. For a minute he was
in earnest talk with the captain. Presently the
Wolverine’s engines slowed down, and she
lay head to the waves, with just enough turn of the
screw to hold her against the sea-way.