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"I suppose you're a Christian?" asked the boy, suddenly recollecting the object of his expedition.
"I belong Clistian, allasame you," answered Yen, a.s.suming a quasi-devout expression. "Me believe foreign man joss allight."
The boy regarded him thoughtfully.
"Me b'lieve Chinee joss pigeon, too," added Yen cheerfully. "Me mucha b'lieve. B'lieve everyt'ing. Me good fun."
"Yes," said the boy, "how about 'Dooley'?--is he a Christian?"
Yen turned, but at his first liquid syllable the man from Shan-si drew himself up until it seemed that his shoulders would touch the cabin roof, and burst forth into a torrent of speech. Yen translated rapidly, scurrying along behind his sentences like a carriage dog beneath an axletree.
No, he was no Christian. The sword of Hung-hsui-chuen had slain his ancestors. Twenty millions of people had perished by the sword of the Taipings. The murderous cry of "Sha Yao"[1] had laid the land desolate.
He was faithful to the G.o.ds of his ancestors.
[Footnote 1: "Slay the Idolaters."]
"Tell 'Dooley' I lika him. Say I think he's a good sport," said the boy, nodding at the Shan-si man.
"He say mucha tanks," translated Yen.
"Ask him if he knows Lake Tung-ting."
Mr. Dooley conveyed to the boy through Yen that he had been once to Chang-Yuan. The lake was wide in summer and he had been there at that time. He took pleasure in the service of the American Captain. But the Captain must be patient. He was a musk buyer, buying musk in western Szechuan on the Thibetan border. Two years ago he had saved five hundred taels and returned home to bury his family--nine persons counting his wife--all of whom had perished in the famine. The famine was very devastating. Then he married again one whom he had left at home. He allowed her ten taels a year. She could live on one pickle of wheat and she had the rest to spend as she liked. He preferred better the musk buying and returned. He gave the Captain much thanks.
"That is very interesting," said the boy. "You may go."
There was a tremendous rattling of chains along the sides, the steam winch began to click, and the two Chinamen vanished silently up the companionway. The boy leaned back in his wicker chair and gazed contemplatively about him at the shotgun and sporting rifle over the bookcase, the piles of paper-covered novels, the pointer dog coiled up on the transom, the lithographs fastened to the walls, and the photographs of his father and mother. He took another sip of whisky and water and, putting down the gla.s.s, thought of how proud his father would have been to see him in his first command. He had the happy consciousness of having done well, and he was going to make good--the Admiral had said so. He had had a bully time in the East so far, away ahead of what he had dreamed when at the Naval Academy. That winter at Newchw.a.n.g, racing the little Manchurian ponies over the springy turf of the polo ground, shooting the big golden pheasants, wandering on leave through the country, stopping at the Chinese inns and taking chances among the Hanghousers. It had been great. Hong Kong had been great. It had been good fun to play tennis and drink tea with the pink-and-white-faced English girls. Well, he was off! His naval career had really begun. He lit another cheroot and strolled leisurely on deck to superintend the operation of heaving up the anchors.
Slowly the _Dirigo_ floated away from the lights of Shanghai, felt her way cautiously down the Wompoa to Woosung and into the broad expanse of the Yang-tse. Anch.o.r.ed well out lay the _Ohio_ black against the coming dawn. A band of crimson clouds swept the lowlands to the east and between them the tide flowed in an oily purple flood.
III
A heavy jar followed by a motionless silence awoke the boy at ten o'clock the next morning. The electric fans were still going and he had a thick taste in his mouth, but he had hardly time to notice these things before he dashed up the companionway and out upon the deck. To starboard the water extended to the horizon, to port a thin line of brown, a shade deeper in color than the water, marked the bank of the great river. Alongside helplessly floated a junk with a great gash in her starboard beam. She was loaded with crockery, and several bales of blue-and-white rice bowls had tumbled into the water, their contents bobbing about like a flock of clay pigeons. The boy saw instantly that owing to the fact that the junk was built in compartments she was in no danger of sinking, and could easily reach sh.o.r.e. Her captain, a half-naked man in a straw hat the size of a small umbrella, was chattering like a monkey at Charley Yen, and a Chinese woman, with a black-eyed baby of two years or thereabouts, sat idly in the stern evincing no particular interest in the accident. The man at the wheel explained that the junk had suddenly tacked. The boy felt in his pocket and, pulling out a Mexican dollar, tossed it to the junk man, who, having rubbed it on his sleeve and bitten it, began to chatter anew to Charley Yen.
"What does he say?" asked the boy.
"He say Captain belong number one man--he mucha tanks," answered Yen with a grin. What a waste! he added. The fellow had sailed on the feast day of Sai-Kao because on that day the Likin or native customs were closed. The G.o.ds had punished him. He had no complaint to make and had made none. As the _Dirigo_ shot ahead the junk man sprang into the water and began rescuing his rice bowls. They pa.s.sed no other junk that day, and the leaden sky did not change its shade. Save for the driving of the screw they might have been anch.o.r.ed in the midst of a coffee-colored ocean. Not even a bird relieved the eager search of the eye for relief from the immeasurable brown. The heat continued intense, and was even more unbearable than when the sun's rays created a fict.i.tious contrast of shadow. Early in the afternoon Yen called the boy's attention to a couple of dolphins which were following them, racing first with the _Dirigo_ and then with each other. Indeed, they were all three very much alike, and the majestic sweep and rush of the gray-white sides as they rose from the water inspired him with a sense of companions.h.i.+p. How far would they follow, these faithlessly faithful wanderers of the sea? At sunrise the next morning they picked up Nanking and the river gave more evidence of life, but they kept on and soon the city and its walls faded behind them. At noon they pa.s.sed Wu-hu, at the same hour next day Kiukiang, and when the boy rose on the morning of the third day out, the black ma.s.s of crowded up-country junks on the water front of Hankow, swarming like mosquitoes or water flies about a stagnant pool, loomed into view. The river was full of sampans and fis.h.i.+ng boats. The man from Shan-si, who had not spoken since the night in the cabin, raised his arm, and pointing to the paG.o.da repeated majestically to Yen the words of the ancient Chinese proverb:
"Above is Heaven's Hall, Below are the cities of Su and Hang."
During the day they pa.s.sed Kia-yu and Su-ki-kan, and late in the afternoon swept into sight of Yo-chow. The Shan-si man announced that Tung-ting was not so very far away. He even volunteered that this was the greatest country under "Heaven's Hall" for the exportation of bristles, feathers, fungus, musk, nutgalls, opium, and safflower. The place presented a crowded, if not particularly ambitious, appearance.
The sh.o.r.e was jammed, as usual, with thousands of junks, and above the town the muddy banks were lined with Hunan timber and bamboo rafts. From the bridge of the _Dirigo_ the boy caught from time to time swiftly s.h.i.+fting views of vast swampy plains, with a ragged line of scattered distant mountains. Then they pa.s.sed beyond the bend in the river and suddenly entered what seemed another ocean, a northwest pa.s.sage to Cathay. As far as the eye could reach stretched an illimitable void of waters, turbid, motionless. A rocky point, some ten feet higher than the surrounding plain, just gave a foothold for a small temple, a two-story Ting-tse or pavilion, and a lighthouse shaped like a square paper lantern. Ten minutes later it was a black spot in their boiling, brown wake. They were in Tung-ting, that desolate waste of mud, water, and sandhill islands, half swamp, half lake that rises into being by virtue of the expanding spring torrents, and sinks into its spongelike alluvial bed as mysteriously as it comes.
"Whew!" whistled the boy, "I only hope 'Dooley' knows where he's at. I wish we'd taken on a _lao-ta_ at Hankow. This hole must be a hundred miles long and it's just about ten feet deep!"
In fact, the quartermaster had already called the boy's attention to the long gra.s.ses that swung idly upon the top of the water, and to the fact that here and there patches of bottom could be seen.
"Where is Chang-Yuan in all this mess?" he inquired of 'Dooley' who with Yen occupied a place beside him on the bridge.
The Shan-si pointed to a conical-shaped island several miles distant which raised itself steeply out of the water, on which the boy could see through his gla.s.ses clung a Chinese village. Flocks of wild fowl speckled the middle distance with a single lone fisherman on the starboard bow.
"He says," interrupted Yen, "Sim-wu have got on that island. This place belong very good for Chinaman--have got plenty of rice. Plenty water summer time. Winter time water all finish. He says he no think enough water for this boat. Little more far--about thirty li--have got 'nother island--after while catchee Chang-Yuan."
"Ask him how fast his bloomin' lake is drying up," directed the boy.
The Shan-si man shrugged his shoulders.
"He says," announced Yen, "if fish belong thirsty they drink water plenty quick. Fish no thirsty plenty water. Sometime fish drink one foot water in four days."
The sun, which up to this time had been visible only as a dim circle in the gray western sky, suddenly broke through with scorching intensity and at the same moment the _Dirigo_ slid gracefully upon a mudbank, half turned, and slid gracefully off again. The boy bit his lips and stared hopelessly at the yellow plain of water all about him. Then he shook his fist at the Shan-si man.
"Tell him," he roared, "that if we get aground in his infernal lake, I'll hang him up by the thumbs and cut off his head."
Yen conveyed the message.
"Even so," replied the Shan-si, through the interpreter, "the will of the Captain is my will and my head is at the Captain's service, but even the G.o.ds cannot prevent the fish from drinking up the lake."
IV
"Ugh! What a town!" exclaimed the boy as the _Dirigo_ dropped anchor Sunday morning a hundred yards off the embankment of Chang-Yuan. A broiling sun beat pitilessly upon the deck of the gunboat and upon the half mile of mud and ooze which lay along the water edge of the town.
Even in summer Chang-Yuan was well above the water, the sh.o.r.e pitching steeply to the level of the lake. Down this incline was thrown all the waste and garbage of the town, and in the slime grubbed and rooted a horde of Chinese dogs and pigs and a score of human scavengers. Just above the _Dirigo_ hung a house of entertainment, from the rickety balcony of which a throng of curious citizens stared down inquisitively.
To the left stood a guild house and a paG.o.da, and five n.o.ble flights of stone steps crowned with archways led from the water to the roadway, but these last were so covered with slime that climbing up and over the muck seemed preferable to risking a fall on their treacherous surfaces.
"Ugh! What a hole!" repeated the boy. "Hah! Get away there you!" he shouted at the _sampans_ which swarmed around the _Dirigo_. "Here you, Yen, tell the beggars to keep off!"
This Yen did, a.s.suring the occupants of the boats that boiling oil would be distributed upon them if they did not retire.
So this was Chang-Yuan! The boy sniffed the malodorous air and wrinkled his nose.
"What though the spicy breezes blow soft o'er Ceylon's Isle, Where every prospect pleases and only man is vile!
Gee! I wish the old boy that wrote that could have seen this place!
Every prospect pleases! Only _man_ is vile! This town is a sort of human pigsty so far as I can see. And I'll bet there is a fat old _erfu_ hiding in the middle of this rabbit warren who makes a good thing out of it, you bet!"
The crowd on the embankment was growing momentarily larger, a silent, slit-eyed crowd of uncanny yellow faces. Beyond and under the distant line of blue hills thin columns of smoke marked the sites of the towns devastated by the inconsiderate Wu. A friend of Yen's had told the latter all about it. He had come aboard and had breakfasted, and for five hundred cash had been induced to admit that at the present juncture Chang-Yuan was a most unhealthy place for missionaries, that the inhabitants were quite ready to join Wu, and that when he arrived there would be the Chinese devil to pay. He offered for five hundred cash more to act as guide to the _erfu_'s house. On the whole, it seemed desirable to accept his proposition. Half an hour later a boat put off from the _Dirigo_ containing the boy, Yen, the friend, and four bluejackets. The crowd on the embankment almost pushed one another off the edge in their eagerness to watch the white devils climbing up the steps, and hardly allowed room for the boy and his squad to force a way through them.
Chang-Yuan was a typical example of an inland Chinese town, with dirty, narrow streets, swarming with human vermin. A throng followed close at the Americans' heels as they marched to the _erfu_'s house, but quailed before the bodyguard who rushed out threateningly at them. It took half an hour before the _erfu_ could receive them and then they were ushered into a dim room where a flabby old man, with a sly, vacant face sat crosslegged before a curtain. Through Yen, the boy explained that he had called as an act of official courtesy, and that he had come to remove certain American missionaries from danger which he understood existed by virtue of the proximity of the rebel Wu. The _erfu_ listened without expression. Then he spoke into the air.
He was much honored at the visit of the American naval officer. But what could a poor old man like himself do against the great Wu? He had no soldiers. The townsfolk were ready to join the rebels. It was only a question of time. He could do nothing. He regretted extremely his inability to furnish a.s.sistance to the Americans.
The boy asked if it was true that the rioters were on their way and might reach the town that afternoon. The _erfu_ said it was so. Then, after warning him that the United States Government would hold him responsible for the lives of its citizens, the boy retired, convinced that the sooner he got his missionaries away the better it would be for them.