<h2><SPAN name="chap40"></SPAN>CHAPTER XL.</h2>
<p>Another brutal sea-superstition vindicated. From now on and for always these
imbeciles of ours will believe that Finns are Jonahs. We are west of the Diego
de Ramirez Rocks, and we are running west at a twelve-knot clip with an
easterly gale at our backs. And the carpenter is gone. His passing, and the
coming of the easterly wind, were coincidental.</p>
<p>It was yesterday morning, as he helped me to dress, that I was struck by the
solemnity of Wada’s face. He shook his head lugubriously as he broke the
news. The carpenter was missing. The ship had been searched for him high and
low. There just was no carpenter.</p>
<p>“What does the steward think?” I asked. “What does Louis
think?—and Yatsuda?”</p>
<p>“The sailors, they kill ’m carpenter sure,” was the answer.
“Very bad ship this. Very bad hearts. Just the same pig, just the same
dog. All the time kill. All the time kill. Bime-by everybody kill. You
see.”</p>
<p>The old steward, at work in his pantry, grinned at me when I mentioned the
matter.</p>
<p>“They make fool with me, I fix ’em,” he said vindictively.
“Mebbe they kill me, all right; but I kill some, too.”</p>
<p>He threw back his coat, and I saw, strapped to the left side of his body, in a
canvas sheath, so that the handle was ready to hand, a meat knife of the heavy
sort that butchers hack with. He drew it forth—it was fully two feet
long—and, to demonstrate its razor-edge, sliced a sheet of newspaper into
many ribbons.</p>
<p>“Huh!” he laughed sardonically. “I am Chink, monkey, damn
fool, eh?—no good, eh? all rotten damn to hell. I fix ’em, they
make fool with me.”</p>
<p>And yet there is not the slightest evidence of foul play. Nobody knows what
happened to the carpenter. There are no clues, no traces. The night was calm
and snowy. No seas broke on board. Without doubt the clumsy, big-footed,
over-grown giant of a boy is overside and dead. The question is: did he go over
of his own accord, or was he put over?</p>
<p>At eight o’clock Mr. Pike proceeded to interrogate the watches. He stood
at the break of the poop, in the high place, leaning on the rail and gazing
down at the crew assembled on the main deck beneath him.</p>
<p>Man after man he questioned, and from each man came the one story. They knew no
more about it than did we—or so they averred.</p>
<p>“I suppose you’ll be chargin’ next that I hove that big
lummux overboard with me own hands,” Mulligan Jacobs snarled, when he was
questioned. “An’ mebbe I did, bein’ that husky an’
rampagin’ bull-like.”</p>
<p>The mate’s face grew more forbidding and sour, but without comment he
passed on to John Hackey, the San Francisco hoodlum.</p>
<p>It was an unforgettable scene—the mate in the high place, the men, sullen
and irresponsive, grouped beneath. A gentle snow drifted straight down through
the windless air, while the <i>Elsinore</i>, with hollow thunder from her
sails, rolled down on the quiet swells so that the ocean lapped the mouths of
her scuppers with long-drawn, shuddering sucks and sobs. And all the men swayed
in unison to the rolls, their hands in mittens, their feet in sack-wrapped
sea-boots, their faces worn and sick. And the three dreamers with the topaz
eyes stood and swayed and dreamed together, incurious of setting and situation.</p>
<p>And then it came—the hint of easterly air. The mate noted it first. I saw
him start and turn his cheek to the almost imperceptible draught. Then I felt
it. A minute longer he waited, until assured, when, the dead carpenter
forgotten, he burst out with orders to the wheel and the crew. And the men
jumped, though in their weakness the climb aloft was slow and toilsome; and
when the gaskets were off the topgallant-sails and the men on deck were
hoisting yards and sheeting home, those aloft were loosing the royals.</p>
<p>While this work went on, and while the yards were being braced around, the
<i>Elsinore</i>, her bow pointing to the west, began moving through the water
before the first fair wind in a month and a half.</p>
<p>Slowly that light air fanned to a gentle breeze while all the time the snow
fell steadily. The barometer, down to 28.80, continued to fall, and the breeze
continued to grow upon itself. Tom Spink, passing by me on the poop to lend a
hand at the final finicky trimming of the mizzen-yards, gave me a triumphant
look. Superstition was vindicated. Events had proved him right. Fair wind had
come with the going of the carpenter, which said warlock had incontestably
taken with him overside his bag of wind-tricks.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike strode up and down the poop, rubbing his hands, which he was too
disdainfully happy to mitten, chuckling and grinning to himself, glancing at
the draw of every sail, stealing adoring looks astern into the gray of snow out
of which blew the favouring wind. He even paused beside me to gossip for a
moment about the French restaurants of San Francisco and how, therein, the
delectable California fashion of cooking wild duck obtained.</p>
<p>“Throw ’em through the fire,” he chanted. “That’s
the way—throw ’em through the fire—a hot oven, sixteen
minutes—I take mine fourteen, to the second—an’ squeeze the
carcasses.”</p>
<p>By midday the snow had ceased and we were bowling along before a stiff breeze.
At three in the afternoon we were running before a growing gale. It was across
a mad ocean we tore, for the mounting sea that made from eastward bucked into
the West End Drift and battled and battered down the huge south-westerly swell.
And the big grinning dolt of a Finnish carpenter, already food for fish and
bird, was astern there somewhere in the freezing rack and drive.</p>
<p>Make westing! We ripped it off across these narrowing degrees of longitude at
the southern tip of the planet where one mile counts for two. And Mr. Pike,
staring at his bending topgallant-yards, swore that they could carry away for
all he cared ere he eased an inch of canvas. More he did. He set the huge
crojack, biggest of all sails, and challenged God or Satan to start a seam of
it or all its seams.</p>
<p>He simply could not go below. In such auspicious occasions all watches were
his, and he strode the poop perpetually with all age-lag banished from his
legs. Margaret and I were with him in the chart-room when he hurrahed the
barometer, down to 28.55 and falling. And we were near him, on the poop, when
he drove by an east-bound lime-juicer, hove-to under upper-topsails. We were a
biscuit-toss away, and he sprang upon the rail at the jigger-shrouds and danced
a war-dance and waved his free arm, and yelled his scorn and joy at their
discomfiture to the several oilskinned figures on the stranger vessel’s
poop.</p>
<p>Through the pitch-black night we continued to drive. The crew was sadly
frightened, and I sought in vain, in the two dog-watches, for Tom Spink, to ask
him if he thought the carpenter, astern, had opened wide the bag-mouth and
loosed all his tricks. For the first time I saw the steward apprehensive.</p>
<p>“Too much,” he told me, with ominous rolling head. “Too much
sail, rotten bad damn all to hell. Bime-by, pretty quick, all finish. You
see.”</p>
<p>“They talk about running the easting down,” Mr. Pike chortled to
me, as we clung to the poop-rail to keep from fetching away and breaking ribs
and necks. “Well, this is running your westing down if anybody should
ride up in a go-devil and ask you.”</p>
<p>It was a wretched, glorious night. Sleep was impossible—for me, at any
rate. Nor was there even the comfort of warmth. Something had gone wrong with
the big cabin stove, due to our wild running, I fancy, and the steward was
compelled to let the fire go out. So we are getting a taste of the hardship of
the forecastle, though in our case everything is dry instead of soggy or
afloat. The kerosene stoves burned in our staterooms, but so smelly was mine
that I preferred the cold.</p>
<p>To sail on one’s nerve in an over-canvassed harbour cat-boat is all the
excitement any glutton can desire. But to sail, in the same fashion, in a big
ship off the Horn, is incredible and terrible. The Great West Wind Drift,
setting squarely into the teeth of the easterly gale, kicked up a tideway sea
that was monstrous. Two men toiled at the wheel, relieving in pairs every
half-hour, and in the face of the cold they streamed with sweat long ere their
half-hour shift was up.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike is of the elder race of men. His endurance is prodigious. Watch and
watch, and all watches, he held the poop.</p>
<p>“I never dreamed of it,” he told me, at midnight, as the great
gusts tore by and as we listened for our lighter spars to smash aloft and crash
upon the deck. “I thought my last whirling sailing was past. And here we
are! Here we are!</p>
<p>“Lord! Lord! I sailed third mate in the little <i>Vampire</i> before you
were born. Fifty-six men before the mast, and the last Jack of ’em an
able seaman. And there were eight boys, an’ bosuns that was bosuns,
an’ sail-makers an’ carpenters an’ stewards an’
passengers to jam the decks. An’ three driving mates of us, an’
Captain Brown, the Little Wonder. He didn’t weigh a hundredweight,
an’ he drove us—he drove <i>us</i>, three drivin’ mates that
learned from him what drivin’ was.</p>
<p>“It was knock down and drag out from the start. The first hour of
puttin’ the men to fair perished our knuckles. I’ve got the smashed
joints yet to show. Every sea-chest broke open, every sea-bag turned out, and
whiskey bottles, knuckle-dusters, sling-shots, bowie-knives, an’ guns
chucked overside by the armful. An’ when we chose the watches, each man
of fifty-six of ’em laid his knife on the main-hatch an’ the
carpenter broke the point square off.—Yes, an’ the little
<i>Vampire</i> only eight hundred tons. The <i>Elsinore</i> could carry her on
her deck. But she was ship, all ship, an’ them was men’s
days.”</p>
<p>Margaret, save for inability to sleep, did not mind the driving, although Mr.
Mellaire, on the other hand, admitted apprehension.</p>
<p>“He’s got my goat,” he confided to me. “It isn’t
right to drive a cargo-carrier this way. This isn’t a ballasted yacht.
It’s a coal-hulk. I know what driving was, but it was in ships made to
drive. Our iron-work aloft won’t stand it. Mr. Pathurst, I tell you
frankly that it is criminal, it is sheer murder, to run the <i>Elsinore</i>
with that crojack on her. You can see yourself, sir. It’s an after-sail.
All its tendency is to throw her stern off and her bow up to it. And if it ever
happens, sir, if she ever gets away from the wheel for two seconds and broaches
to . . . ”</p>
<p>“Then what?” I asked, or, rather, shouted; for all conversation had
to be shouted close to ear in that blast of gale.</p>
<p>He shrugged his shoulders, and all of him was eloquent with the unuttered,
unmistakable word—“finish.”</p>
<p>At eight this morning Margaret and I struggled up to the poop. And there was
that indomitable, iron old man. He had never left the deck all night. His eyes
were bright, and he appeared in the pink of well-being. He rubbed his hands and
chuckled greeting to us, and took up his reminiscences.</p>
<p>“In ’51, on this same stretch, Miss West, the <i>Flying Cloud</i>,
in twenty-four hours, logged three hundred and seventy-four miles under her
topgallant-sails. That was sailing. She broke the record, that day, for sail
an’ steam.”</p>
<p>“And what are we averaging, Mr. Pike?” Margaret queried, while her
eyes were fixed on the main deck, where continually one rail and then the other
dipped under the ocean and filled across from rail to rail, only to spill out
and take in on the next roll.</p>
<p>“Thirteen for a fair average since five o’clock yesterday
afternoon,” he exulted. “In the squalls she makes all of sixteen,
which is going some, for the <i>Elsinore</i>.”</p>
<p>“I’d take the crojack off if I had charge,” Margaret
criticised.</p>
<p>“So would I, so would I, Miss West,” he replied; “if we
hadn’t been six weeks already off the Horn.”</p>
<p>She ran her eyes aloft, spar by spar, past the spars of hollow steel to the
wooden royals, which bent in the gusts like bows in some invisible
archer’s hands.</p>
<p>“They’re remarkably good sticks of timber,” was her comment.</p>
<p>“Well may you say it, Miss West,” he agreed. “I’d never
a-believed they’d a-stood it myself. But just look at ’m! Just look
at ’m!”</p>
<p>There was no breakfast for the men. Three times the galley had been washed out,
and the men, in the forecastle awash, contented themselves with hard tack and
cold salt horse. Aft, with us, the steward scalded himself twice ere he
succeeded in making coffee over a kerosene-burner.</p>
<p>At noon we picked up a ship ahead, a lime-juicer, travelling in the same
direction, under lower-topsails and one upper-topsail. The only one of her
courses set was the foresail.</p>
<p>“The way that skipper’s carryin’ on is shocking,” Mr.
Pike sneered. “He should be more cautious, and remember God, the owners,
the underwriters, and the Board of Trade.”</p>
<p>Such was our speed that in almost no time we were up with the stranger vessel
and passing her. Mr. Pike was like a boy just loosed from school. He altered
our course so that we passed her a hundred yards away. She was a gallant sight,
but, such was our speed, she appeared standing still. Mr. Pike jumped upon the
rail and insulted those on her poop by extending a rope’s end in
invitation to take a tow.</p>
<p>Margaret shook her head privily to me as she gazed at our bending royal-yards,
but was caught in the act by Mr. Pike, who cried out:</p>
<p>“What kites she won’t carry she can drag!”</p>
<p>An hour later I caught Tom Spink, just relieved from his shift at the wheel and
weak from exhaustion.</p>
<p>“What do you think now of the carpenter and his bag of tricks?” I
queried.</p>
<p>“Lord lumme, it should a-ben the mate, sir,” was his reply.</p>
<p>By five in the afternoon we had logged 314 miles since five the previous day,
which was two over an average of thirteen knots for twenty-four consecutive
hours.</p>
<p>“Now take Captain Brown of the little <i>Vampire</i>,” Mr. Pike
grinned to me, for our sailing made him good-natured. “He never would
take in until the kites an’ stu’n’sails was about his ears.
An’ when she was blown’ her worst an’ we was half-fairly
shortened down, he’d turn in for a snooze, an’ say to us,
‘Call me if she moderates.’ Yes, and I’ll never forget the
night when I called him an’ told him that everything on top the houses
had gone adrift, an’ that two of the boats had been swept aft and was
kindling-wood against the break of the cabin. ‘Very well, Mr.
Pike,’ he says, battin’ his eyes and turnin’ over to go to
sleep again. ‘Very well, Mr. Pike,’ says he. ‘Watch her.
An’ Mr. Pike . . .’ ‘Yes, sir,’ says I. ‘Give me
a call, Mr. Pike, when the windlass shows signs of comin’ aft.’
That’s what he said, his very words, an’ the next moment, damme, he
was snorin’.”</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>It is now midnight, and, cunningly wedged into my bunk, unable to sleep, I am
writing these lines with flying dabs of pencil at my pad. And no more shall I
write, I swear, until this gale is blown out, or we are blown to Kingdom Come.</p>
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