THE SECOND-CLASS PASSENGER
Up to a certain point the voyage was
like all other voyages. During the first two
days there were passengers who did not appear on deck,
but as the weather was fair for the season of the
year, there were fewer absentees than is usual.
Indeed, on the third day the deck chairs were all
filled, people who were given to tramping during their
voyages had begun to walk their customary quota of
carefully-measured miles the day. There were
a few pale faces dozing here and there, but the general
aspect of things had begun to be sprightly. Shuffleboard
players and quoit enthusiasts began to bestir themselves,
the deck steward appeared regularly with light repasts
of beef tea and biscuits, and the brilliant hues of
red, blue, or yellow novels made frequent spots of
colour upon the promenade. Persons of some initiative
went to the length of making tentative observations
to their next-chair neighbours. The second-cabin
passengers were cheerful, and the steerage passengers,
having tumbled up, formed friendly groups and began
to joke with each other.
The Worthingtons had plainly the good
fortune to be respectable sailors. They reappeared
on the second day and established regular habits, after
the manner of accustomed travellers. Miss Vanderpoel’s
habits were regular from the first, and when Salter
saw her he was impressed even more at the outset with
her air of being at home instead of on board ship.
Her practically well-chosen corner was an agreeable
place to look at. Her chair was built for ease
of angle and width, her cushions were of dark rich
colours, her travelling rugs were of black fox fur,
and she owned an adjustable table for books and accompaniments.
She appeared early in the morning and walked until
the sea air crimsoned her cheeks, she sat and read
with evident enjoyment, she talked to her companions
and plainly entertained them.
Salter, being bored and in bad spirits,
found himself watching her rather often, but he knew
that but for the small, comic episode of Tommy, he
would have definitely disliked her. The dislike
would not have been fair, but it would have existed
in spite of himself. It would not have been fair
because it would have been founded simply upon the
ignoble resentment of envy, upon the poor truth that
he was not in the state of mind to avoid resenting
the injustice of fate in bestowing multi-millions
upon one person and his offspring. He resented
his own resentment, but was obliged to acknowledge
its existence in his humour. He himself, especially
and peculiarly, had always known the bitterness of
poverty, the humiliation of seeing where money could
be well used, indeed, ought to be used, and at the
same time having ground into him the fact that there
was no money to lay one’s hand on. He had
hated it even as a boy, because in his case, and that
of his people, the whole thing was undignified and
unbecoming. It was humiliating to him now to
bring home to himself the fact that the thing for which
he was inclined to dislike this tall, up-standing
girl was her unconscious (he realised the unconsciousness
of it) air of having always lived in the atmosphere
of millions, of never having known a reason why she
should not have anything she had a desire for.
Perhaps, upon the whole, he said to himself, it was
his own ill luck and sense of defeat which made her
corner, with its cushions and comforts, her properly
attentive maid, and her cold weather sables expressive
of a fortune too colossal to be decent.
The episode of the plump, despairing
Tommy he had liked, however. There had been a
fine naturalness about it and a fine practicalness
in her prompt order to the elderly nurse that the
richly-caparisoned donkey should be sent to her.
This had at once made it clear to the donor that his
gift was too valuable to be left behind.
“She did not care twopence for
the lot of us,” was his summing up. “She
might have been nothing but the nicest possible warm-hearted
nursemaid or a cottage woman who loved the child.”
He was quite aware that though he
had found himself more than once observing her, she
herself had probably not recognised the trivial fact
of his existing upon that other side of the barrier
which separated the higher grade of passenger from
the lower. There was, indeed, no reason why she
should have singled him out for observation, and she
was, in fact, too frequently absorbed in her own reflections
to be in the frame of mind to remark her fellow passengers
to the extent which was generally customary with her.
During her crossings of the Atlantic she usually made
mental observation of the people on board. This
time, when she was not talking to the Worthingtons,
or reading, she was thinking of the possibilities
of her visit to Stornham. She used to walk about
the deck thinking of them and, sitting in her chair,
sum them up as her eyes rested on the rolling and
breaking waves.
There were many things to be considered,
and one of the first was the perfectly sane suggestion
her father had made.
“Suppose she does not want to
be rescued? Suppose you find her a comfortable
fine lady who adores her husband.”
Such a thing was possible, though
Bettina did not think it probable. She intended,
however, to prepare herself even for this. If
she found Lady Anstruthers plump and roseate, pleased
with herself and her position, she was quite equal
to making her visit appear a casual and conventional
affair.
“I ought to wish it to be so,”
she thought, “and, yet, how disappointingly
I should feel she had changed. Still, even ethical
reasons would not excuse one for wishing her to be
miserable.” She was a creature with a number
of passionate ideals which warred frequently with
the practical side of her mentality. Often she
used to walk up and down the deck or lean upon the
ship’s side, her eyes stormy with emotions.
“I do not want to find Rosy
a heartless woman, and I do not want to find her wretched.
What do I want? Only the usual thing—that
what cannot be undone had never been done. People
are always wishing that.”
She was standing near the second-cabin
barrier thinking this, the first time she saw the
passenger with the red hair. She had paused by
mere chance, and while her eyes were stormy with her
thought, she suddenly became conscious that she was
looking directly into other eyes as darkling as her
own. They were those of a man on the wrong side
of the barrier. He had a troubled, brooding face,
and, as their gaze met, each of them started slightly
and turned away with the sense of having unconsciously
intruded and having been intruded upon.
“That rough-looking man,”
she commented to herself, “is as anxious and
disturbed as I am.”
Salter did look rough, it was true.
His well-worn clothes had suffered somewhat from the
restrictions of a second-class cabin shared with two
other men. But the aspect which had presented
itself to her brief glance had been not so much roughness
of clothing as of mood expressing itself in his countenance.
He was thinking harshly and angrily of the life ahead
of him.
These looks of theirs which had so
inadvertently encountered each other were of that
order which sometimes startles one when in passing
a stranger one finds one’s eyes entangled for
a second in his or hers, as the case may be.
At such times it seems for that instant difficult to
disentangle one’s gaze. But neither of these
two thought of the other much, after hurrying away.
Each was too fully mastered by personal mood.
There would, indeed, have been no
reason for their encountering each other further but
for “the accident,” as it was called when
spoken of afterwards, the accident which might so
easily have been a catastrophe. It occurred that
night. This was two nights before they were to
land.
Everybody had begun to come under
the influence of that cheerfulness of humour, the
sense of relief bordering on gaiety, which generally
elates people when a voyage is drawing to a close.
If one has been dull, one begins to gather one’s
self together, rejoiced that the boredom is over.
In any case, there are plans to be made, thought of,
or discussed.
“You wish to go to Stornham
at once?” Mrs. Worthington said to Bettina.
“How pleased Lady Anstruthers and Sir Nigel must
be at the idea of seeing you with them after so long.”
“I can scarcely tell you how
I am looking forward to it,” Betty answered.
She sat in her corner among her cushions
looking at the dark water which seemed to sweep past
the ship, and listening to the throb of the engines.
She was not gay. She was wondering how far the
plans she had made would prove feasible. Mrs.
Worthington was not aware that her visit to Stornham
Court was to be unannounced. It had not been necessary
to explain the matter. The whole affair was simple
and decorous enough. Miss Vanderpoel was to bid
good-bye to her friends and go at once to her sister,
Lady Anstruthers, whose husband’s country seat
was but a short journey from London. Bettina
and her father had arranged that the fact should be
kept from the society paragraphist. This had required
some adroit management, but had actually been accomplished.
As the waves swished past her, Bettina
was saying to herself, “What will Rosy say when
she sees me! What shall I say when I see Rosy?
We are drawing nearer to each other with every wave
that passes.”
A fog which swept up suddenly sent
them all below rather early. The Worthingtons
laughed and talked a little in their staterooms, but
presently became quiet and had evidently gone to bed.
Bettina was restless and moved about her room alone
after she had sent away her maid. She at last
sat down and finished a letter she had been writing
to her father.
“As I near the land,”
she wrote, “I feel a sort of excitement.
Several times to-day I have recalled so distinctly
the picture of Rosy as I saw her last, when we all
stood crowded upon the wharf at New York to see her
off. She and Nigel were leaning upon the rail
of the upper deck. She looked such a delicate,
airy little creature, quite like a pretty schoolgirl
with tears in her eyes. She was laughing and crying
at the same time, and kissing both her hands to us
again and again. I was crying passionately myself,
though I tried to conceal the fact, and I remember
that each time I looked from Rosy to Nigel’s
heavy face the poignancy of my anguish made me break
forth again. I wonder if it was because I was
a child, that he looked such a contemptuous brute,
even when he pretended to smile. It is twelve
years since then. I wonder—how I wonder,
what I shall find.”
She stopped writing and sat a few
moments, her chin upon her hand, thinking. Suddenly
she sprang to her feet in alarm. The stillness
of the night was broken by wild shouts, a running
of feet outside, a tumult of mingled sounds and motion,
a dash and rush of surging water, a strange thumping
and straining of engines, and a moment later she was
hurled from one side of her stateroom to the other
by a crashing shock which seemed to heave the ship
out of the sea, shuddering as if the end of all things
had come.
It was so sudden and horrible a thing
that, though she had only been flung upon a pile of
rugs and cushions and was unhurt, she felt as if she
had been struck on the head and plunged into wild delirium.
Above the sound of the dashing and rocking waves,
the straining and roaring of hacking engines and the
pandemonium of voices rose from one end of the ship
to the other, one wild, despairing, long-drawn shriek
of women and children. Bettina turned sick at
the mad terror in it—the insensate, awful
horror.
“Something has run into us!”
she gasped, getting up with her heart leaping in her
throat.
She could hear the Worthingtons’
tempest of terrified confusion through the partitions
between them, and she remembered afterwards that in
the space of two or three seconds, and in the midst
of their clamour, a hundred incongruous thoughts leaped
through her brain. Perhaps they were this moment
going down. Now she knew what it was like!
This thing she had read of in newspapers! Now
she was going down in mid-ocean, she, Betty Vanderpoel!
And, as she sprang to clutch her fur coat, there flashed
before her mental vision a gruesome picture of the
headlines in the newspapers and the inevitable reference
to the millions she represented.
“I must keep calm,” she
heard herself say, as she fastened the long coat,
clenching her teeth to keep them from chattering.
“Poor Daddy—poor Daddy!”
Maddening new sounds were all about
her, sounds of water dashing and churning, sounds
of voices bellowing out commands, straining and leaping
sounds of the engines. What was it—what
was it? She must at least find out. Everybody
was going mad in the staterooms, the stewards were
rushing about, trying to quiet people, their own voices
shaking and breaking into cracked notes. If the
worst had happened, everyone would be fighting for
life in a few minutes. Out on deck she must get
and find out for herself what the worst was.
She was the first woman outside, though
the wails and shrieks swelled below, and half-dressed,
ghastly creatures tumbled gasping up the companion-way.
“What is it?” she heard.
“My God! what’s happened? Where’s
the Captain! Are we going down! The boats!
The boats!”
It was useless to speak to the seamen
rushing by. They did not see, much less hear!
She caught sight of a man who could not be a sailor,
since he was standing still. She made her way
to him, thankful that she had managed to stop her
teeth chattering.
“What has happened to us?” she said.
He turned and looked at her straitly.
He was the second-cabin passenger with the red hair.
“A tramp steamer has run into
us in the fog,” he answered.
“How much harm is done?”
“They are trying to find out.
I am standing here on the chance of hearing something.
It is madness to ask any man questions.”
They spoke to each other in short,
sharp sentences, knowing there was no time to lose.
“Are you horribly frightened?” he asked.
She stamped her foot.
“I hate it—I hate
it!” she said, flinging out her hand towards
the black, heaving water. “The plunge—the
choking! No one could hate it more. But
I want to do something!”
She was turning away when he caught her hand and held
her.
“Wait a second,” he said.
“I hate it as much as you do, but I believe we
two can keep our heads. Those who can do that
may help, perhaps. Let us try to quiet the people.
As soon as I find out anything I will come to your
friends’ stateroom. You are near the boats
there. Then I shall go back to the second cabin.
You work on your side and I’ll work on mine.
That’s all.”
“Thank you. Tell the Worthingtons.
I’m going to the saloon deck.” She
was off as she spoke.
Upon the stairway she found herself
in the midst of a struggling panic-stricken mob, tripping
over each other on the steps, and clutching at any
garment nearest, to drag themselves up as they fell,
or were on the point of falling. Everyone was
crying out in question and appeal.
Bettina stood still, a firm, tall
obstacle, and clutched at the hysteric woman who was
hurled against her.
“I’ve been on deck,”
she said. “A tramp steamer has run into
us. No one has time to answer questions.
The first thing to do is to put on warm clothes and
secure the life belts in case you need them.”
At once everyone turned upon her as
if she was an authority. She replied with almost
fierce determination to the torrent of words poured
forth.
“I know nothing further—only
that if one is not a fool one must make sure of clothes
and belts.”
“Quite right, Miss Vanderpoel,”
said one young man, touching his cap in nervous propitiation.
“Stop screaming,” Betty
said mercilessly to the woman. “It’s
idiotic—the more noise you make the less
chance you have. How can men keep their wits
among a mob of shrieking, mad women?”
That the remote Miss Vanderpoel should
have emerged from her luxurious corner to frankly
bully the lot of them was an excellent shock for the
crowd. Men, who had been in danger of losing their
heads and becoming as uncontrolled as the women, suddenly
realised the fact and pulled themselves together.
Bettina made her way at once to the Worthingtons’
staterooms.
There she found frenzy reigning.
Blanche and Marie Worthington were darting to and
fro, dragging about first one thing and then another.
They were silly with fright, and dashed at, and dropped
alternately, life belts, shoes, jewel cases, and wraps,
while they sobbed and cried out hysterically.
“Oh, what shall we do with mother! What
shall we do!”
The manners of Betty Vanderpoel’s
sharp schoolgirl days returned to her in full force.
She seized Blanche by the shoulder and shook her.
“What a donkey you are!”
she said. “Put on your clothes. There
they are,” pushing her to the place where they
hung. “Marie—dress yourself
this moment. We may be in no real danger at all.”
“Do you think not! Oh,
Betty!” they wailed in concert. “Oh,
what shall we do with mother!”
“Where is your mother?”
“She fainted—Louise——”
Betty was in Mrs. Worthington’s
cabin before they had finished speaking. The
poor woman had fainted, and struck her cheek against
a chair. She lay on the floor in her nightgown,
with blood trickling from a cut on her face.
Her maid, Louise, was wringing her hands, and doing
nothing whatever.
“If you don’t bring the
brandy this minute,” said the beautiful Miss
Vanderpoel, “I’ll box your ears. Believe
me, my girl.” She looked so capable of
doing it that the woman was startled and actually offended
into a return of her senses. Miss Vanderpoel had
usually the best possible manners in dealing with
her inferiors.
Betty poured brandy down Mrs. Worthington’s
throat and applied strong smelling salts until she
gasped back to consciousness. She had just burst
into frightened sobs, when Betty heard confusion and
exclamations in the adjoining room. Blanche and
Marie had cried out, and a man’s voice was speaking.
Betty went to them. They were in various stages
of undress, and the red-haired second-cabin passenger
was standing at the door.
“I promised Miss Vanderpoel——”
he was saying, when Betty came forward. He turned
to her promptly.
“I come to tell you that it
seems absolutely to be relied on that there is no
immediate danger. The tramp is more injured than
we are.”
“Oh, are you sure? Are
you sure?” panted Blanche, catching at his sleeve.
“Yes,” he answered.
“Can I do anything for you?” he said to
Bettina, who was on the point of speaking.
“Will you be good enough to
help me to assist Mrs. Worthington into her berth,
and then try to find the doctor.”
He went into the next room without
speaking. To Mrs. Worthington he spoke briefly
a few words of reassurance. He was a powerful
man, and laid her on her berth without dragging her
about uncomfortably, or making her feel that her weight
was greater than even in her most desponding moments
she had suspected. Even her helplessly hysteric
mood was illuminated by a ray of grateful appreciation.
“Oh, thank you—thank
you,” she murmured. “And you are quite
sure there is no actual danger, Mr.——?”
“Salter,” he terminated
for her. “You may feel safe. The damage
is really only slight, after all.”
“It is so good of you to come
and tell us,” said the poor lady, still tremulous.
“The shock was awful. Our introduction has
been an alarming one. I—I don’t
think we have met during the voyage.”
“No,” replied Salter. “I am
in the second cabin.”
“Oh! thank you. It’s
so good of you,” she faltered amiably, for want
of inspiration. As he went out of the stateroom,
Salter spoke to Bettina.
“I will send the doctor, if
I can find him,” he said. “I think,
perhaps, you had better take some brandy yourself.
I shall.”
“It’s queer how little
one seems to realise even that there are second-cabin
passengers,” commented Mrs. Worthington feebly.
“That was a nice man, and perfectly respectable.
He even had a kind of—of manner.”