<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER 5 </h2>
<p>'Oh yes. I attended the inquiry,' he would say, 'and to this day I haven't
left off wondering why I went. I am willing to believe each of us has a
guardian angel, if you fellows will concede to me that each of us has a
familiar devil as well. I want you to own up, because I don't like to feel
exceptional in any way, and I know I have him—the devil, I mean. I
haven't seen him, of course, but I go upon circumstantial evidence. He is
there right enough, and, being malicious, he lets me in for that kind of
thing. What kind of thing, you ask? Why, the inquiry thing, the yellow-dog
thing—you wouldn't think a mangy, native tyke would be allowed to
trip up people in the verandah of a magistrate's court, would you?—the
kind of thing that by devious, unexpected, truly diabolical ways causes me
to run up against men with soft spots, with hard spots, with hidden plague
spots, by Jove! and loosens their tongues at the sight of me for their
infernal confidences; as though, forsooth, I had no confidences to make to
myself, as though—God help me!—I didn't have enough
confidential information about myself to harrow my own soul till the end
of my appointed time. And what I have done to be thus favoured I want to
know. I declare I am as full of my own concerns as the next man, and I
have as much memory as the average pilgrim in this valley, so you see I am
not particularly fit to be a receptacle of confessions. Then why? Can't
tell—unless it be to make time pass away after dinner. Charley, my
dear chap, your dinner was extremely good, and in consequence these men
here look upon a quiet rubber as a tumultuous occupation. They wallow in
your good chairs and think to themselves, "Hang exertion. Let that Marlow
talk."</p>
<p>'Talk? So be it. And it's easy enough to talk of Master Jim, after a good
spread, two hundred feet above the sea-level, with a box of decent cigars
handy, on a blessed evening of freshness and starlight that would make the
best of us forget we are only on sufferance here and got to pick our way
in cross lights, watching every precious minute and every irremediable
step, trusting we shall manage yet to go out decently in the end—but
not so sure of it after all—and with dashed little help to expect
from those we touch elbows with right and left. Of course there are men
here and there to whom the whole of life is like an after-dinner hour with
a cigar; easy, pleasant, empty, perhaps enlivened by some fable of strife
to be forgotten before the end is told—before the end is told—even
if there happens to be any end to it.</p>
<p>'My eyes met his for the first time at that inquiry. You must know that
everybody connected in any way with the sea was there, because the affair
had been notorious for days, ever since that mysterious cable message came
from Aden to start us all cackling. I say mysterious, because it was so in
a sense though it contained a naked fact, about as naked and ugly as a
fact can well be. The whole waterside talked of nothing else. First thing
in the morning as I was dressing in my state-room, I would hear through
the bulkhead my Parsee Dubash jabbering about the Patna with the steward,
while he drank a cup of tea, by favour, in the pantry. No sooner on shore
I would meet some acquaintance, and the first remark would be, "Did you
ever hear of anything to beat this?" and according to his kind the man
would smile cynically, or look sad, or let out a swear or two. Complete
strangers would accost each other familiarly, just for the sake of easing
their minds on the subject: every confounded loafer in the town came in
for a harvest of drinks over this affair: you heard of it in the harbour
office, at every ship-broker's, at your agent's, from whites, from
natives, from half-castes, from the very boatmen squatting half naked on
the stone steps as you went up—by Jove! There was some indignation,
not a few jokes, and no end of discussions as to what had become of them,
you know. This went on for a couple of weeks or more, and the opinion that
whatever was mysterious in this affair would turn out to be tragic as
well, began to prevail, when one fine morning, as I was standing in the
shade by the steps of the harbour office, I perceived four men walking
towards me along the quay. I wondered for a while where that queer lot had
sprung from, and suddenly, I may say, I shouted to myself, "Here they
are!"</p>
<p>'There they were, sure enough, three of them as large as life, and one
much larger of girth than any living man has a right to be, just landed
with a good breakfast inside of them from an outward-bound Dale Line
steamer that had come in about an hour after sunrise. There could be no
mistake; I spotted the jolly skipper of the Patna at the first glance: the
fattest man in the whole blessed tropical belt clear round that good old
earth of ours. Moreover, nine months or so before, I had come across him
in Samarang. His steamer was loading in the Roads, and he was abusing the
tyrannical institutions of the German empire, and soaking himself in beer
all day long and day after day in De Jongh's back-shop, till De Jongh, who
charged a guilder for every bottle without as much as the quiver of an
eyelid, would beckon me aside, and, with his little leathery face all
puckered up, declare confidentially, "Business is business, but this man,
captain, he make me very sick. Tfui!"</p>
<p>'I was looking at him from the shade. He was hurrying on a little in
advance, and the sunlight beating on him brought out his bulk in a
startling way. He made me think of a trained baby elephant walking on
hind-legs. He was extravagantly gorgeous too—got up in a soiled
sleeping-suit, bright green and deep orange vertical stripes, with a pair
of ragged straw slippers on his bare feet, and somebody's cast-off pith
hat, very dirty and two sizes too small for him, tied up with a manilla
rope-yarn on the top of his big head. You understand a man like that
hasn't the ghost of a chance when it comes to borrowing clothes. Very
well. On he came in hot haste, without a look right or left, passed within
three feet of me, and in the innocence of his heart went on pelting
upstairs into the harbour office to make his deposition, or report, or
whatever you like to call it.</p>
<p>'It appears he addressed himself in the first instance to the principal
shipping-master. Archie Ruthvel had just come in, and, as his story goes,
was about to begin his arduous day by giving a dressing-down to his chief
clerk. Some of you might have known him—an obliging little
Portuguese half-caste with a miserably skinny neck, and always on the hop
to get something from the shipmasters in the way of eatables—a piece
of salt pork, a bag of biscuits, a few potatoes, or what not. One voyage,
I recollect, I tipped him a live sheep out of the remnant of my sea-stock:
not that I wanted him to do anything for me—he couldn't, you know—but
because his childlike belief in the sacred right to perquisites quite
touched my heart. It was so strong as to be almost beautiful. The race—the
two races rather—and the climate . . . However, never mind. I know
where I have a friend for life.</p>
<p>'Well, Ruthvel says he was giving him a severe lecture—on official
morality, I suppose—when he heard a kind of subdued commotion at his
back, and turning his head he saw, in his own words, something round and
enormous, resembling a sixteen-hundred-weight sugar-hogshead wrapped in
striped flannelette, up-ended in the middle of the large floor space in
the office. He declares he was so taken aback that for quite an
appreciable time he did not realise the thing was alive, and sat still
wondering for what purpose and by what means that object had been
transported in front of his desk. The archway from the ante-room was
crowded with punkah-pullers, sweepers, police peons, the coxswain and crew
of the harbour steam-launch, all craning their necks and almost climbing
on each other's backs. Quite a riot. By that time the fellow had managed
to tug and jerk his hat clear of his head, and advanced with slight bows
at Ruthvel, who told me the sight was so discomposing that for some time
he listened, quite unable to make out what that apparition wanted. It
spoke in a voice harsh and lugubrious but intrepid, and little by little
it dawned upon Archie that this was a development of the Patna case. He
says that as soon as he understood who it was before him he felt quite
unwell—Archie is so sympathetic and easily upset—but pulled
himself together and shouted "Stop! I can't listen to you. You must go to
the Master Attendant. I can't possibly listen to you. Captain Elliot is
the man you want to see. This way, this way." He jumped up, ran round that
long counter, pulled, shoved: the other let him, surprised but obedient at
first, and only at the door of the private office some sort of animal
instinct made him hang back and snort like a frightened bullock. "Look
here! what's up? Let go! Look here!" Archie flung open the door without
knocking. "The master of the Patna, sir," he shouts. "Go in, captain." He
saw the old man lift his head from some writing so sharp that his
nose-nippers fell off, banged the door to, and fled to his desk, where he
had some papers waiting for his signature: but he says the row that burst
out in there was so awful that he couldn't collect his senses sufficiently
to remember the spelling of his own name. Archie's the most sensitive
shipping-master in the two hemispheres. He declares he felt as though he
had thrown a man to a hungry lion. No doubt the noise was great. I heard
it down below, and I have every reason to believe it was heard clear
across the Esplanade as far as the band-stand. Old father Elliot had a
great stock of words and could shout—and didn't mind who he shouted
at either. He would have shouted at the Viceroy himself. As he used to
tell me: "I am as high as I can get; my pension is safe. I've a few pounds
laid by, and if they don't like my notions of duty I would just as soon go
home as not. I am an old man, and I have always spoken my mind. All I care
for now is to see my girls married before I die." He was a little crazy on
that point. His three daughters were awfully nice, though they resembled
him amazingly, and on the mornings he woke up with a gloomy view of their
matrimonial prospects the office would read it in his eye and tremble,
because, they said, he was sure to have somebody for breakfast. However,
that morning he did not eat the renegade, but, if I may be allowed to
carry on the metaphor, chewed him up very small, so to speak, and—ah!
ejected him again.</p>
<p>'Thus in a very few moments I saw his monstrous bulk descend in haste and
stand still on the outer steps. He had stopped close to me for the purpose
of profound meditation: his large purple cheeks quivered. He was biting
his thumb, and after a while noticed me with a sidelong vexed look. The
other three chaps that had landed with him made a little group waiting at
some distance. There was a sallow-faced, mean little chap with his arm in
a sling, and a long individual in a blue flannel coat, as dry as a chip
and no stouter than a broomstick, with drooping grey moustaches, who
looked about him with an air of jaunty imbecility. The third was an
upstanding, broad-shouldered youth, with his hands in his pockets, turning
his back on the other two who appeared to be talking together earnestly.
He stared across the empty Esplanade. A ramshackle gharry, all dust and
venetian blinds, pulled up short opposite the group, and the driver,
throwing up his right foot over his knee, gave himself up to the critical
examination of his toes. The young chap, making no movement, not even
stirring his head, just stared into the sunshine. This was my first view
of Jim. He looked as unconcerned and unapproachable as only the young can
look. There he stood, clean-limbed, clean-faced, firm on his feet, as
promising a boy as the sun ever shone on; and, looking at him, knowing all
he knew and a little more too, I was as angry as though I had detected him
trying to get something out of me by false pretences. He had no business
to look so sound. I thought to myself—well, if this sort can go
wrong like that . . . and I felt as though I could fling down my hat and
dance on it from sheer mortification, as I once saw the skipper of an
Italian barque do because his duffer of a mate got into a mess with his
anchors when making a flying moor in a roadstead full of ships. I asked
myself, seeing him there apparently so much at ease—is he silly? is
he callous? He seemed ready to start whistling a tune. And note, I did not
care a rap about the behaviour of the other two. Their persons somehow
fitted the tale that was public property, and was going to be the subject
of an official inquiry. "That old mad rogue upstairs called me a hound,"
said the captain of the Patna. I can't tell whether he recognised me—I
rather think he did; but at any rate our glances met. He glared—I
smiled; hound was the very mildest epithet that had reached me through the
open window. "Did he?" I said from some strange inability to hold my
tongue. He nodded, bit his thumb again, swore under his breath: then
lifting his head and looking at me with sullen and passionate impudence—"Bah!
the Pacific is big, my friendt. You damned Englishmen can do your worst; I
know where there's plenty room for a man like me: I am well aguaindt in
Apia, in Honolulu, in . . ." He paused reflectively, while without effort
I could depict to myself the sort of people he was "aguaindt" with in
those places. I won't make a secret of it that I had been "aguaindt" with
not a few of that sort myself. There are times when a man must act as
though life were equally sweet in any company. I've known such a time,
and, what's more, I shan't now pretend to pull a long face over my
necessity, because a good many of that bad company from want of moral—moral—what
shall I say?—posture, or from some other equally profound cause,
were twice as instructive and twenty times more amusing than the usual
respectable thief of commerce you fellows ask to sit at your table without
any real necessity—from habit, from cowardice, from good-nature,
from a hundred sneaking and inadequate reasons.</p>
<p>'"You Englishmen are all rogues," went on my patriotic Flensborg or
Stettin Australian. I really don't recollect now what decent little port
on the shores of the Baltic was defiled by being the nest of that precious
bird. "What are you to shout? Eh? You tell me? You no better than other
people, and that old rogue he make Gottam fuss with me." His thick carcass
trembled on its legs that were like a pair of pillars; it trembled from
head to foot. "That's what you English always make—make a tam' fuss—for
any little thing, because I was not born in your tam' country. Take away
my certificate. Take it. I don't want the certificate. A man like me don't
want your verfluchte certificate. I shpit on it." He spat. "I vill an
Amerigan citizen begome," he cried, fretting and fuming and shuffling his
feet as if to free his ankles from some invisible and mysterious grasp
that would not let him get away from that spot. He made himself so warm
that the top of his bullet head positively smoked. Nothing mysterious
prevented me from going away: curiosity is the most obvious of sentiments,
and it held me there to see the effect of a full information upon that
young fellow who, hands in pockets, and turning his back upon the
sidewalk, gazed across the grass-plots of the Esplanade at the yellow
portico of the Malabar Hotel with the air of a man about to go for a walk
as soon as his friend is ready. That's how he looked, and it was odious. I
waited to see him overwhelmed, confounded, pierced through and through,
squirming like an impaled beetle—and I was half afraid to see it too—if
you understand what I mean. Nothing more awful than to watch a man who has
been found out, not in a crime but in a more than criminal weakness. The
commonest sort of fortitude prevents us from becoming criminals in a legal
sense; it is from weakness unknown, but perhaps suspected, as in some
parts of the world you suspect a deadly snake in every bush—from
weakness that may lie hidden, watched or unwatched, prayed against or
manfully scorned, repressed or maybe ignored more than half a lifetime,
not one of us is safe. We are snared into doing things for which we get
called names, and things for which we get hanged, and yet the spirit may
well survive—survive the condemnation, survive the halter, by Jove!
And there are things—they look small enough sometimes too—by
which some of us are totally and completely undone. I watched the
youngster there. I liked his appearance; I knew his appearance; he came
from the right place; he was one of us. He stood there for all the
parentage of his kind, for men and women by no means clever or amusing,
but whose very existence is based upon honest faith, and upon the instinct
of courage. I don't mean military courage, or civil courage, or any
special kind of courage. I mean just that inborn ability to look
temptations straight in the face—a readiness unintellectual enough,
goodness knows, but without pose—a power of resistance, don't you
see, ungracious if you like, but priceless—an unthinking and blessed
stiffness before the outward and inward terrors, before the might of
nature and the seductive corruption of men—backed by a faith
invulnerable to the strength of facts, to the contagion of example, to the
solicitation of ideas. Hang ideas! They are tramps, vagabonds, knocking at
the back-door of your mind, each taking a little of your substance, each
carrying away some crumb of that belief in a few simple notions you must
cling to if you want to live decently and would like to die easy!</p>
<p>'This has nothing to do with Jim, directly; only he was outwardly so
typical of that good, stupid kind we like to feel marching right and left
of us in life, of the kind that is not disturbed by the vagaries of
intelligence and the perversions of—of nerves, let us say. He was
the kind of fellow you would, on the strength of his looks, leave in
charge of the deck—figuratively and professionally speaking. I say I
would, and I ought to know. Haven't I turned out youngsters enough in my
time, for the service of the Red Rag, to the craft of the sea, to the
craft whose whole secret could be expressed in one short sentence, and yet
must be driven afresh every day into young heads till it becomes the
component part of every waking thought—till it is present in every
dream of their young sleep! The sea has been good to me, but when I
remember all these boys that passed through my hands, some grown up now
and some drowned by this time, but all good stuff for the sea, I don't
think I have done badly by it either. Were I to go home to-morrow, I bet
that before two days passed over my head some sunburnt young chief mate
would overtake me at some dock gateway or other, and a fresh deep voice
speaking above my hat would ask: "Don't you remember me, sir? Why! little
So-and-so. Such and such a ship. It was my first voyage." And I would
remember a bewildered little shaver, no higher than the back of this
chair, with a mother and perhaps a big sister on the quay, very quiet but
too upset to wave their handkerchiefs at the ship that glides out gently
between the pier-heads; or perhaps some decent middle-aged father who had
come early with his boy to see him off, and stays all the morning, because
he is interested in the windlass apparently, and stays too long, and has
got to scramble ashore at last with no time at all to say good-bye. The
mud pilot on the poop sings out to me in a drawl, "Hold her with the check
line for a moment, Mister Mate. There's a gentleman wants to get ashore. .
. . Up with you, sir. Nearly got carried off to Talcahuano, didn't you?
Now's your time; easy does it. . . . All right. Slack away again forward
there." The tugs, smoking like the pit of perdition, get hold and churn
the old river into fury; the gentleman ashore is dusting his knees—the
benevolent steward has shied his umbrella after him. All very proper. He
has offered his bit of sacrifice to the sea, and now he may go home
pretending he thinks nothing of it; and the little willing victim shall be
very sea-sick before next morning. By-and-by, when he has learned all the
little mysteries and the one great secret of the craft, he shall be fit to
live or die as the sea may decree; and the man who had taken a hand in
this fool game, in which the sea wins every toss, will be pleased to have
his back slapped by a heavy young hand, and to hear a cheery sea-puppy
voice: "Do you remember me, sir? The little So-and-so."</p>
<p>'I tell you this is good; it tells you that once in your life at least you
had gone the right way to work. I have been thus slapped, and I have
winced, for the slap was heavy, and I have glowed all day long and gone to
bed feeling less lonely in the world by virtue of that hearty thump. Don't
I remember the little So-and-so's! I tell you I ought to know the right
kind of looks. I would have trusted the deck to that youngster on the
strength of a single glance, and gone to sleep with both eyes—and,
by Jove! it wouldn't have been safe. There are depths of horror in that
thought. He looked as genuine as a new sovereign, but there was some
infernal alloy in his metal. How much? The least thing—the least
drop of something rare and accursed; the least drop!—but he made you—standing
there with his don't-care-hang air—he made you wonder whether
perchance he were nothing more rare than brass.</p>
<p>'I couldn't believe it. I tell you I wanted to see him squirm for the
honour of the craft. The other two no-account chaps spotted their captain,
and began to move slowly towards us. They chatted together as they
strolled, and I did not care any more than if they had not been visible to
the naked eye. They grinned at each other—might have been exchanging
jokes, for all I know. I saw that with one of them it was a case of a
broken arm; and as to the long individual with grey moustaches he was the
chief engineer, and in various ways a pretty notorious personality. They
were nobodies. They approached. The skipper gazed in an inanimate way
between his feet: he seemed to be swollen to an unnatural size by some
awful disease, by the mysterious action of an unknown poison. He lifted
his head, saw the two before him waiting, opened his mouth with an
extraordinary, sneering contortion of his puffed face—to speak to
them, I suppose—and then a thought seemed to strike him. His thick,
purplish lips came together without a sound, he went off in a resolute
waddle to the gharry and began to jerk at the door-handle with such a
blind brutality of impatience that I expected to see the whole concern
overturned on its side, pony and all. The driver, shaken out of his
meditation over the sole of his foot, displayed at once all the signs of
intense terror, and held with both hands, looking round from his box at
this vast carcass forcing its way into his conveyance. The little machine
shook and rocked tumultuously, and the crimson nape of that lowered neck,
the size of those straining thighs, the immense heaving of that dingy,
striped green-and-orange back, the whole burrowing effort of that gaudy
and sordid mass, troubled one's sense of probability with a droll and
fearsome effect, like one of those grotesque and distinct visions that
scare and fascinate one in a fever. He disappeared. I half expected the
roof to split in two, the little box on wheels to burst open in the manner
of a ripe cotton-pod—but it only sank with a click of flattened
springs, and suddenly one venetian blind rattled down. His shoulders
reappeared, jammed in the small opening; his head hung out, distended and
tossing like a captive balloon, perspiring, furious, spluttering. He
reached for the gharry-wallah with vicious flourishes of a fist as dumpy
and red as a lump of raw meat. He roared at him to be off, to go on.
Where? Into the Pacific, perhaps. The driver lashed; the pony snorted,
reared once, and darted off at a gallop. Where? To Apia? To Honolulu? He
had 6000 miles of tropical belt to disport himself in, and I did not hear
the precise address. A snorting pony snatched him into "Ewigkeit" in the
twinkling of an eye, and I never saw him again; and, what's more, I don't
know of anybody that ever had a glimpse of him after he departed from my
knowledge sitting inside a ramshackle little gharry that fled round the
corner in a white smother of dust. He departed, disappeared, vanished,
absconded; and absurdly enough it looked as though he had taken that
gharry with him, for never again did I come across a sorrel pony with a
slit ear and a lackadaisical Tamil driver afflicted by a sore foot. The
Pacific is indeed big; but whether he found a place for a display of his
talents in it or not, the fact remains he had flown into space like a
witch on a broomstick. The little chap with his arm in a sling started to
run after the carriage, bleating, "Captain! I say, Captain! I sa-a-ay!"—but
after a few steps stopped short, hung his head, and walked back slowly. At
the sharp rattle of the wheels the young fellow spun round where he stood.
He made no other movement, no gesture, no sign, and remained facing in the
new direction after the gharry had swung out of sight.</p>
<p>'All this happened in much less time than it takes to tell, since I am
trying to interpret for you into slow speech the instantaneous effect of
visual impressions. Next moment the half-caste clerk, sent by Archie to
look a little after the poor castaways of the Patna, came upon the scene.
He ran out eager and bareheaded, looking right and left, and very full of
his mission. It was doomed to be a failure as far as the principal person
was concerned, but he approached the others with fussy importance, and,
almost immediately, found himself involved in a violent altercation with
the chap that carried his arm in a sling, and who turned out to be
extremely anxious for a row. He wasn't going to be ordered about—"not
he, b'gosh." He wouldn't be terrified with a pack of lies by a cocky
half-bred little quill-driver. He was not going to be bullied by "no
object of that sort," if the story were true "ever so"! He bawled his
wish, his desire, his determination to go to bed. "If you weren't a
God-forsaken Portuguee," I heard him yell, "you would know that the
hospital is the right place for me." He pushed the fist of his sound arm
under the other's nose; a crowd began to collect; the half-caste,
flustered, but doing his best to appear dignified, tried to explain his
intentions. I went away without waiting to see the end.</p>
<p>'But it so happened that I had a man in the hospital at the time, and
going there to see about him the day before the opening of the Inquiry, I
saw in the white men's ward that little chap tossing on his back, with his
arm in splints, and quite light-headed. To my great surprise the other
one, the long individual with drooping white moustache, had also found his
way there. I remembered I had seen him slinking away during the quarrel,
in a half prance, half shuffle, and trying very hard not to look scared.
He was no stranger to the port, it seems, and in his distress was able to
make tracks straight for Mariani's billiard-room and grog-shop near the
bazaar. That unspeakable vagabond, Mariani, who had known the man and had
ministered to his vices in one or two other places, kissed the ground, in
a manner of speaking, before him, and shut him up with a supply of bottles
in an upstairs room of his infamous hovel. It appears he was under some
hazy apprehension as to his personal safety, and wished to be concealed.
However, Mariani told me a long time after (when he came on board one day
to dun my steward for the price of some cigars) that he would have done
more for him without asking any questions, from gratitude for some unholy
favour received very many years ago—as far as I could make out. He
thumped twice his brawny chest, rolled enormous black-and-white eyes
glistening with tears: "Antonio never forget—Antonio never forget!"
What was the precise nature of the immoral obligation I never learned, but
be it what it may, he had every facility given him to remain under lock
and key, with a chair, a table, a mattress in a corner, and a litter of
fallen plaster on the floor, in an irrational state of funk, and keeping
up his pecker with such tonics as Mariani dispensed. This lasted till the
evening of the third day, when, after letting out a few horrible screams,
he found himself compelled to seek safety in flight from a legion of
centipedes. He burst the door open, made one leap for dear life down the
crazy little stairway, landed bodily on Mariani's stomach, picked himself
up, and bolted like a rabbit into the streets. The police plucked him off
a garbage-heap in the early morning. At first he had a notion they were
carrying him off to be hanged, and fought for liberty like a hero, but
when I sat down by his bed he had been very quiet for two days. His lean
bronzed head, with white moustaches, looked fine and calm on the pillow,
like the head of a war-worn soldier with a child-like soul, had it not
been for a hint of spectral alarm that lurked in the blank glitter of his
glance, resembling a nondescript form of a terror crouching silently
behind a pane of glass. He was so extremely calm, that I began to indulge
in the eccentric hope of hearing something explanatory of the famous
affair from his point of view. Why I longed to go grubbing into the
deplorable details of an occurrence which, after all, concerned me no more
than as a member of an obscure body of men held together by a community of
inglorious toil and by fidelity to a certain standard of conduct, I can't
explain. You may call it an unhealthy curiosity if you like; but I have a
distinct notion I wished to find something. Perhaps, unconsciously, I
hoped I would find that something, some profound and redeeming cause, some
merciful explanation, some convincing shadow of an excuse. I see well
enough now that I hoped for the impossible—for the laying of what is
the most obstinate ghost of man's creation, of the uneasy doubt uprising
like a mist, secret and gnawing like a worm, and more chilling than the
certitude of death—the doubt of the sovereign power enthroned in a
fixed standard of conduct. It is the hardest thing to stumble against; it
is the thing that breeds yelling panics and good little quiet villainies;
it's the true shadow of calamity. Did I believe in a miracle? and why did
I desire it so ardently? Was it for my own sake that I wished to find some
shadow of an excuse for that young fellow whom I had never seen before,
but whose appearance alone added a touch of personal concern to the
thoughts suggested by the knowledge of his weakness—made it a thing
of mystery and terror—like a hint of a destructive fate ready for us
all whose youth—in its day—had resembled his youth? I fear
that such was the secret motive of my prying. I was, and no mistake,
looking for a miracle. The only thing that at this distance of time
strikes me as miraculous is the extent of my imbecility. I positively
hoped to obtain from that battered and shady invalid some exorcism against
the ghost of doubt. I must have been pretty desperate too, for, without
loss of time, after a few indifferent and friendly sentences which he
answered with languid readiness, just as any decent sick man would do, I
produced the word Patna wrapped up in a delicate question as in a wisp of
floss silk. I was delicate selfishly; I did not want to startle him; I had
no solicitude for him; I was not furious with him and sorry for him: his
experience was of no importance, his redemption would have had no point
for me. He had grown old in minor iniquities, and could no longer inspire
aversion or pity. He repeated Patna? interrogatively, seemed to make a
short effort of memory, and said: "Quite right. I am an old stager out
here. I saw her go down." I made ready to vent my indignation at such a
stupid lie, when he added smoothly, "She was full of reptiles."</p>
<p>'This made me pause. What did he mean? The unsteady phantom of terror
behind his glassy eyes seemed to stand still and look into mine wistfully.
"They turned me out of my bunk in the middle watch to look at her
sinking," he pursued in a reflective tone. His voice sounded alarmingly
strong all at once. I was sorry for my folly. There was no snowy-winged
coif of a nursing sister to be seen flitting in the perspective of the
ward; but away in the middle of a long row of empty iron bedsteads an
accident case from some ship in the Roads sat up brown and gaunt with a
white bandage set rakishly on the forehead. Suddenly my interesting
invalid shot out an arm thin like a tentacle and clawed my shoulder. "Only
my eyes were good enough to see. I am famous for my eyesight. That's why
they called me, I expect. None of them was quick enough to see her go, but
they saw that she was gone right enough, and sang out together—like
this." . . . A wolfish howl searched the very recesses of my soul. "Oh!
make 'im dry up," whined the accident case irritably. "You don't believe
me, I suppose," went on the other, with an air of ineffable conceit. "I
tell you there are no such eyes as mine this side of the Persian Gulf.
Look under the bed."</p>
<p>'Of course I stooped instantly. I defy anybody not to have done so. "What
can you see?" he asked. "Nothing," I said, feeling awfully ashamed of
myself. He scrutinised my face with wild and withering contempt. "Just
so," he said, "but if I were to look I could see—there's no eyes
like mine, I tell you." Again he clawed, pulling at me downwards in his
eagerness to relieve himself by a confidential communication. "Millions of
pink toads. There's no eyes like mine. Millions of pink toads. It's worse
than seeing a ship sink. I could look at sinking ships and smoke my pipe
all day long. Why don't they give me back my pipe? I would get a smoke
while I watched these toads. The ship was full of them. They've got to be
watched, you know." He winked facetiously. The perspiration dripped on him
off my head, my drill coat clung to my wet back: the afternoon breeze
swept impetuously over the row of bedsteads, the stiff folds of curtains
stirred perpendicularly, rattling on brass rods, the covers of empty beds
blew about noiselessly near the bare floor all along the line, and I
shivered to the very marrow. The soft wind of the tropics played in that
naked ward as bleak as a winter's gale in an old barn at home. "Don't you
let him start his hollering, mister," hailed from afar the accident case
in a distressed angry shout that came ringing between the walls like a
quavering call down a tunnel. The clawing hand hauled at my shoulder; he
leered at me knowingly. "The ship was full of them, you know, and we had
to clear out on the strict Q.T.," he whispered with extreme rapidity. "All
pink. All pink—as big as mastiffs, with an eye on the top of the
head and claws all round their ugly mouths. Ough! Ough!" Quick jerks as of
galvanic shocks disclosed under the flat coverlet the outlines of meagre
and agitated legs; he let go my shoulder and reached after something in
the air; his body trembled tensely like a released harp-string; and while
I looked down, the spectral horror in him broke through his glassy gaze.
Instantly his face of an old soldier, with its noble and calm outlines,
became decomposed before my eyes by the corruption of stealthy cunning, of
an abominable caution and of desperate fear. He restrained a cry—"Ssh!
what are they doing now down there?" he asked, pointing to the floor with
fantastic precautions of voice and gesture, whose meaning, borne upon my
mind in a lurid flash, made me very sick of my cleverness. "They are all
asleep," I answered, watching him narrowly. That was it. That's what he
wanted to hear; these were the exact words that could calm him. He drew a
long breath. "Ssh! Quiet, steady. I am an old stager out here. I know them
brutes. Bash in the head of the first that stirs. There's too many of
them, and she won't swim more than ten minutes." He panted again. "Hurry
up," he yelled suddenly, and went on in a steady scream: "They are all
awake—millions of them. They are trampling on me! Wait! Oh, wait!
I'll smash them in heaps like flies. Wait for me! Help! H-e-elp!" An
interminable and sustained howl completed my discomfiture. I saw in the
distance the accident case raise deplorably both his hands to his bandaged
head; a dresser, aproned to the chin showed himself in the vista of the
ward, as if seen in the small end of a telescope. I confessed myself
fairly routed, and without more ado, stepping out through one of the long
windows, escaped into the outside gallery. The howl pursued me like a
vengeance. I turned into a deserted landing, and suddenly all became very
still and quiet around me, and I descended the bare and shiny staircase in
a silence that enabled me to compose my distracted thoughts. Down below I
met one of the resident surgeons who was crossing the courtyard and
stopped me. "Been to see your man, Captain? I think we may let him go
to-morrow. These fools have no notion of taking care of themselves,
though. I say, we've got the chief engineer of that pilgrim ship here. A
curious case. D.T.'s of the worst kind. He has been drinking hard in that
Greek's or Italian's grog-shop for three days. What can you expect? Four
bottles of that kind of brandy a day, I am told. Wonderful, if true.
Sheeted with boiler-iron inside I should think. The head, ah! the head, of
course, gone, but the curious part is there's some sort of method in his
raving. I am trying to find out. Most unusual—that thread of logic
in such a delirium. Traditionally he ought to see snakes, but he doesn't.
Good old tradition's at a discount nowadays. Eh! His—er—visions
are batrachian. Ha! ha! No, seriously, I never remember being so
interested in a case of jim-jams before. He ought to be dead, don't you
know, after such a festive experiment. Oh! he is a tough object.
Four-and-twenty years of the tropics too. You ought really to take a peep
at him. Noble-looking old boozer. Most extraordinary man I ever met—medically,
of course. Won't you?"</p>
<p>'I have been all along exhibiting the usual polite signs of interest, but
now assuming an air of regret I murmured of want of time, and shook hands
in a hurry. "I say," he cried after me; "he can't attend that inquiry. Is
his evidence material, you think?"</p>
<p>'"Not in the least," I called back from the gateway.'</p>
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