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<h2> IX </h2>
<p>On turning to descend Massy perceived the head of Sterne the mate
loitering, with his sly confident smile, his red mustaches and blinking
eyes, at the foot of the ladder.</p>
<p>Sterne had been a junior in one of the larger shipping concerns before
joining the Sofala. He had thrown up his berth, he said, “on general
principles.” The promotion in the employ was very slow, he complained, and
he thought it was time for him to try and get on a bit in the world. It
seemed as though nobody would ever die or leave the firm; they all stuck
fast in their berths till they got mildewed; he was tired of waiting; and
he feared that when a vacancy did occur the best servants were by no means
sure of being treated fairly. Besides, the captain he had to serve under—Captain
Provost—was an unaccountable sort of man, and, he fancied, had taken
a dislike to him for some reason or other. For doing rather more than his
bare duty as likely as not. When he had done anything wrong he could take
a talking to, like a man; but he expected to be treated like a man too,
and not to be addressed invariably as though he were a dog. He had asked
Captain Provost plump and plain to tell him where he was at fault, and
Captain Provost, in a most scornful way, had told him that he was a
perfect officer, and that if he disliked the way he was being spoken to
there was the gangway—he could take himself off ashore at once. But
everybody knew what sort of man Captain Provost was. It was no use
appealing to the office. Captain Provost had too much influence in the
employ. All the same, they had to give him a good character. He made bold
to say there was nothing in the world against him, and, as he had happened
to hear that the mate of the Sofala had been taken to the hospital that
morning with a sunstroke, he thought there would be no harm in seeing
whether he would not do. . . .</p>
<p>He had come to Captain Whalley freshly shaved, red-faced, thin-flanked,
throwing out his lean chest; and had recited his little tale with an open
and manly assurance. Now and then his eyelids quivered slightly, his hand
would steal up to the end of the flaming mustache; his eyebrows were
straight, furry, of a chestnut color, and the directness of his frank gaze
seemed to tremble on the verge of impudence. Captain Whalley had engaged
him temporarily; then, the other man having been ordered home by the
doctors, he had remained for the next trip, and then the next. He had now
attained permanency, and the performance of his duties was marked by an
air of serious, single-minded application. Directly he was spoken to, he
began to smile attentively, with a great deference expressed in his whole
attitude; but there was in the rapid winking which went on all the time
something quizzical, as though he had possessed the secret of some
universal joke cheating all creation and impenetrable to other mortals.</p>
<p>Grave and smiling he watched Massy come down step by step; when the chief
engineer had reached the deck he swung about, and they found themselves
face to face. Matched as to height and utterly dissimilar, they confronted
each other as if there had been something between them—something
else than the bright strip of sunlight that, falling through the wide
lacing of two awnings, cut crosswise the narrow planking of the deck and
separated their feet as it were a stream; something profound and subtle
and incalculable, like an unexpressed understanding, a secret mistrust, or
some sort of fear.</p>
<p>At last Sterne, blinking his deep-set eyes and sticking forward his
scraped, clean-cut chin, as crimson as the rest of his face, murmured—</p>
<p>“You’ve seen? He grazed! You’ve seen?”</p>
<p>Massy, contemptuous, and without raising his yellow, fleshy countenance,
replied in the same pitch—</p>
<p>“Maybe. But if it had been you we would have been stuck fast in the mud.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, Mr. Massy. I beg to deny it. Of course a shipowner may say
what he jolly well pleases on his own deck. That’s all right; but I beg to
. . .”</p>
<p>“Get out of my way!”</p>
<p>The other had a slight start, the impulse of suppressed indignation
perhaps, but held his ground. Massy’s downward glance wandered right and
left, as though the deck all round Sterne had been bestrewn with eggs that
must not be broken, and he had looked irritably for places where he could
set his feet in flight. In the end he too did not move, though there was
plenty of room to pass on.</p>
<p>“I heard you say up there,” went on the mate—“and a very just remark
it was too—that there’s always something wrong. . . .”</p>
<p>“Eavesdropping is what’s wrong with <i>you</i>, Mr. Sterne.”</p>
<p>“Now, if you would only listen to me for a moment, Mr. Massy, sir, I could
. . .”</p>
<p>“You are a sneak,” interrupted Massy in a great hurry, and even managed to
get so far as to repeat, “a common sneak,” before the mate had broken in
argumentatively—</p>
<p>“Now, sir, what is it you want? You want . . .”</p>
<p>“I want—I want,” stammered Massy, infuriated and astonished—“I
want. How do you know that I want anything? How dare you? . . . What do
you mean? . . . What are you after—you . . .”</p>
<p>“Promotion.” Sterne silenced him with a sort of candid bravado. The
engineer’s round soft cheeks quivered still, but he said quietly enough—</p>
<p>“You are only worrying my head off,” and Sterne met him with a confident
little smile.</p>
<p>“A chap in business I know (well up in the world he is now) used to tell
me that this was the proper way. ‘Always push on to the front,’ he would
say. ‘Keep yourself well before your boss. Interfere whenever you get a
chance. Show him what you know. Worry him into seeing you.’ That was his
advice. Now I know no other boss than you here. You are the owner, and no
one else counts for <i>that</i> much in my eyes. See, Mr. Massy? I want to
get on. I make no secret of it that I am one of the sort that means to get
on. These are the men to make use of, sir. You haven’t arrived at the top
of the tree, sir, without finding that out—I dare say.”</p>
<p>“Worry your boss in order to get on,” mumbled Massy, as if awestruck by
the irreverent originality of the idea. “I shouldn’t wonder if this was
just what the Blue Anchor people kicked you out of the employ for. Is that
what you call getting on? You shall get on in the same way here if you
aren’t careful—I can promise you.”</p>
<p>At this Sterne hung his head, thoughtful, perplexed, winking hard at the
deck. All his attempts to enter into confidential relations with his owner
had led of late to nothing better than these dark threats of dismissal;
and a threat of dismissal would check him at once into a hesitating
silence as though he were not sure that the proper time for defying it had
come. On this occasion he seemed to have lost his tongue for a moment, and
Massy, getting in motion, heavily passed him by with an abortive attempt
at shouldering. Sterne defeated it by stepping aside. He turned then
swiftly, opening his mouth very wide as if to shout something after the
engineer, but seemed to think better of it.</p>
<p>Always—as he was ready to confess—on the lookout for an
opening to get on, it had become an instinct with him to watch the conduct
of his immediate superiors for something “that one could lay hold of.” It
was his belief that no skipper in the world would keep his command for a
day if only the owners could be “made to know.” This romantic and naive
theory had led him into trouble more than once, but he remained
incorrigible; and his character was so instinctively disloyal that
whenever he joined a ship the intention of ousting his commander out of
the berth and taking his place was always present at the back of his head,
as a matter of course. It filled the leisure of his waking hours with the
reveries of careful plans and compromising discoveries—the dreams of
his sleep with images of lucky turns and favorable accidents. Skippers had
been known to sicken and die at sea, than which nothing could be better to
give a smart mate a chance of showing what he’s made of. They also would
tumble overboard sometimes: he had heard of one or two such cases. Others
again . . . But, as it were constitutionally, he was faithful to the
belief that the conduct of no single one of them would stand the test of
careful watching by a man who “knew what’s what” and who kept his eyes
“skinned pretty well” all the time.</p>
<p>After he had gained a permanent footing on board the Sofala he allowed his
perennial hope to rise high. To begin with, it was a great advantage to
have an old man for captain: the sort of man besides who in the nature of
things was likely to give up the job before long from one cause or
another. Sterne was greatly chagrined, however, to notice that he did not
seem anyway near being past his work yet. Still, these old men go to
pieces all at once sometimes. Then there was the owner-engineer close at
hand to be impressed by his zeal and steadiness. Sterne never for a moment
doubted the obvious nature of his own merits (he was really an excellent
officer); only, nowadays, professional merit alone does not take a man
along fast enough. A chap must have some push in him, and must keep his
wits at work too to help him forward. He made up his mind to inherit the
charge of this steamer if it was to be done at all; not indeed estimating
the command of the Sofala as a very great catch, but for the reason that,
out East especially, to make a start is everything, and one command leads
to another.</p>
<p>He began by promising himself to behave with great circumspection; Massy’s
somber and fantastic humors intimidated him as being outside one’s usual
sea experience; but he was quite intelligent enough to realize almost from
the first that he was there in the presence of an exceptional situation.
His peculiar prying imagination penetrated it quickly; the feeling that
there was in it an element which eluded his grasp exasperated his
impatience to get on. And so one trip came to an end, then another, and he
had begun his third before he saw an opening by which he could step in
with any sort of effect. It had all been very queer and very obscure;
something had been going on near him, as if separated by a chasm from the
common life and the working routine of the ship, which was exactly like
the life and the routine of any other coasting steamer of that class.</p>
<p>Then one day he made his discovery.</p>
<p>It came to him after all these weeks of watchful observation and puzzled
surmises, suddenly, like the long-sought solution of a riddle that
suggests itself to the mind in a flash. Not with the same authority,
however. Great heavens! Could it be that? And after remaining
thunderstruck for a few seconds he tried to shake it off with
self-contumely, as though it had been the product of an unhealthy bias
towards the Incredible, the Inexplicable, the Unheard-of—the Mad!</p>
<p>This—the illuminating moment—had occurred the trip before, on
the return passage. They had just left a place of call on the mainland
called Pangu; they were steaming straight out of a bay. To the east a
massive headland closed the view, with the tilted edges of the rocky
strata showing through its ragged clothing of rank bushes and thorny
creepers. The wind had begun to sing in the rigging; the sea along the
coast, green and as if swollen a little above the line of the horizon,
seemed to pour itself over, time after time, with a slow and thundering
fall, into the shadow of the leeward cape; and across the wide opening the
nearest of a group of small islands stood enveloped in the hazy yellow
light of a breezy sunrise; still farther out the hummocky tops of other
islets peeped out motionless above the water of the channels between,
scoured tumultuously by the breeze.</p>
<p>The usual track of the Sofala both going and returning on every trip led
her for a few miles along this reefinfested region. She followed a broad
lane of water, dropping astern, one after another, these crumbs of the
earth’s crust resembling a squadron of dismasted hulks run in disorder
upon a foul ground of rocks and shoals. Some of these fragments of land
appeared, indeed, no bigger than a stranded ship; others, quite flat, lay
awash like anchored rafts, like ponderous, black rafts of stone; several,
heavily timbered and round at the base, emerged in squat domes of deep
green foliage that shuddered darkly all over to the flying touch of cloud
shadows driven by the sudden gusts of the squally season. The
thunderstorms of the coast broke frequently over that cluster; it turned
then shadowy in its whole extent; it turned more dark, and as if more
still in the play of fire; as if more impenetrably silent in the peals of
thunder; its blurred shapes vanished—dissolving utterly at times in
the thick rain—to reappear clear-cut and black in the stormy light
against the gray sheet of the cloud—scattered on the slaty round
table of the sea. Unscathed by storms, resisting the work of years,
unfretted by the strife of the world, there it lay unchanged as on that
day, four hundred years ago, when first beheld by Western eyes from the
deck of a high-pooped caravel.</p>
<p>It was one of these secluded spots that may be found on the busy sea, as
on land you come sometimes upon the clustered houses of a hamlet untouched
by men’s restlessness, untouched by their need, by their thought, and as
if forgotten by time itself. The lives of uncounted generations had passed
it by, and the multitudes of seafowl, urging their way from all the points
of the horizon to sleep on the outer rocks of the group, unrolled the
converging evolutions of their flight in long somber streamers upon the
glow of the sky. The palpitating cloud of their wings soared and stooped
over the pinnacles of the rocks, over the rocks slender like spires, squat
like martello towers; over the pyramidal heaps like fallen ruins, over the
lines of bald bowlders showing like a wall of stones battered to pieces
and scorched by lightning—with the sleepy, clear glimmer of water in
every breach. The noise of their continuous and violent screaming filled
the air.</p>
<p>This great noise would meet the Sofala coming up from Batu Beru; it would
meet her on quiet evenings, a pitiless and savage clamor enfeebled by
distance, the clamor of seabirds settling to rest, and struggling for a
footing at the end of the day. No one noticed it especially on board; it
was the voice of their ship’s unerring landfall, ending the steady stretch
of a hundred miles. She had made good her course, she had run her distance
till the punctual islets began to emerge one by one, the points of rocks,
the hummocks of earth . . . and the cloud of birds hovered—the
restless cloud emitting a strident and cruel uproar, the sound of the
familiar scene, the living part of the broken land beneath, of the
outspread sea, and of the high sky without a flaw.</p>
<p>But when the Sofala happened to close with the land after sunset she would
find everything very still there under the mantle of the night. All would
be still, dumb, almost invisible—but for the blotting out of the low
constellations occulted in turns behind the vague masses of the islets
whose true outlines eluded the eye amongst the dark spaces of the heaven:
and the ship’s three lights, resembling three stars—the red and the
green with the white above—her three lights, like three companion
stars wandering on the earth, held their unswerving course for the passage
at the southern end of the group. Sometimes there were human eyes open to
watch them come nearer, traveling smoothly in the somber void; the eyes of
a naked fisherman in his canoe floating over a reef. He thought drowsily:
“Ha! The fire-ship that once in every moon goes in and comes out of Pangu
bay.” More he did not know of her. And just as he had detected the faint
rhythm of the propeller beating the calm water a mile and a half away, the
time would come for the Sofala to alter her course, the lights would swing
off him their triple beam—and disappear.</p>
<p>A few miserable, half-naked families, a sort of outcast tribe of
long-haired, lean, and wild-eyed people, strove for their living in this
lonely wilderness of islets, lying like an abandoned outwork of the land
at the gates of the bay. Within the knots and loops of the rocks the water
rested more transparent than crystal under their crooked and leaky canoes,
scooped out of the trunk of a tree: the forms of the bottom undulated
slightly to the dip of a paddle; and the men seemed to hang in the air,
they seemed to hang inclosed within the fibers of a dark, sodden log,
fishing patiently in a strange, unsteady, pellucid, green air above the
shoals.</p>
<p>Their bodies stalked brown and emaciated as if dried up in the sunshine;
their lives ran out silently; the homes where they were born, went to
rest, and died—flimsy sheds of rushes and coarse grass eked out with
a few ragged mats—were hidden out of sight from the open sea. No
glow of their household fires ever kindled for a seaman a red spark upon
the blind night of the group: and the calms of the coast, the flaming long
calms of the equator, the unbreathing, concentrated calms like the deep
introspection of a passionate nature, brooded awfully for days and weeks
together over the unchangeable inheritance of their children; till at last
the stones, hot like live embers, scorched the naked sole, till the water
clung warm, and sickly, and as if thickened, about the legs of lean men
with girded loins, wading thigh-deep in the pale blaze of the shallows.
And it would happen now and then that the Sofala, through some delay in
one of the ports of call, would heave in sight making for Pangu bay as
late as noonday.</p>
<p>Only a blurring cloud at first, the thin mist of her smoke would arise
mysteriously from an empty point on the clear line of sea and sky. The
taciturn fishermen within the reefs would extend their lean arms towards
the offing; and the brown figures stooping on the tiny beaches, the brown
figures of men, women, and children grubbing in the sand in search of
turtles’ eggs, would rise up, crooked elbow aloft and hand over the eyes,
to watch this monthly apparition glide straight on, swerve off—and
go by. Their ears caught the panting of that ship; their eyes followed her
till she passed between the two capes of the mainland going at full speed
as though she hoped to make her way unchecked into the very bosom of the
earth.</p>
<p>On such days the luminous sea would give no sign of the dangers lurking on
both sides of her path. Everything remained still, crushed by the
overwhelming power of the light; and the whole group, opaque in the
sunshine,—the rocks resembling pinnacles, the rocks resembling
spires, the rocks resembling ruins; the forms of islets resembling
beehives, resembling mole-hills, the islets recalling the shapes of
haystacks, the contours of ivy-clad towers,—would stand reflected
together upside down in the unwrinkled water, like carved toys of ebony
disposed on the silvered plate-glass of a mirror.</p>
<p>The first touch of blowing weather would envelop the whole at once in the
spume of the windward breakers, as if in a sudden cloudlike burst of
steam; and the clear water seemed fairly to boil in all the passages. The
provoked sea outlined exactly in a design of angry foam the wide base of
the group; the submerged level of broken waste and refuse left over from
the building of the coast near by, projecting its dangerous spurs, all
awash, far into the channel, and bristling with wicked long spits often a
mile long: with deadly spits made of froth and stones.</p>
<p>And even nothing more than a brisk breeze—as on that morning, the
voyage before, when the Sofala left Pangu bay early, and Mr. Sterne’s
discovery was to blossom out like a flower of incredible and evil aspect
from the tiny seed of instinctive suspicion,—even such a breeze had
enough strength to tear the placid mask from the face of the sea. To
Sterne, gazing with indifference, it had been like a revelation to behold
for the first time the dangers marked by the hissing livid patches on the
water as distinctly as on the engraved paper of a chart. It came into his
mind that this was the sort of day most favorable for a stranger
attempting the passage: a clear day, just windy enough for the sea to
break on every ledge, buoying, as it were, the channel plainly to the
sight; whereas during a calm you had nothing to depend on but the compass
and the practiced judgment of your eye. And yet the successive captains of
the Sofala had had to take her through at night more than once. Nowadays
you could not afford to throw away six or seven hours of a steamer’s time.
That you couldn’t. But then use is everything, and with proper care . . .
The channel was broad and safe enough; the main point was to hit upon the
entrance correctly in the dark—for if a man got himself involved in
that stretch of broken water over yonder he would never get out with a
whole ship—if he ever got out at all.</p>
<p>This was Sterne’s last train of thought independent of the great
discovery. He had just seen to the securing of the anchor, and had
remained forward idling away a moment or two. The captain was in charge on
the bridge. With a slight yawn he had turned away from his survey of the
sea and had leaned his shoulders against the fish davit.</p>
<p>These, properly speaking, were the very last moments of ease he was to
know on board the Sofala. All the instants that came after were to be
pregnant with purpose and intolerable with perplexity. No more idle,
random thoughts; the discovery would put them on the rack, till sometimes
he wished to goodness he had been fool enough not to make it at all. And
yet, if his chance to get on rested on the discovery of “something wrong,”
he could not have hoped for a greater stroke of luck.</p>
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