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CHAPTER IV
We signed articles in the Swede's house, almost within the hour. A little man with a pimply, bulbous nose appeared in the house; he carried in his person the authority of s.h.i.+pping Commissioner and in his hand the articles of the _Golden Bough_. After the careless fas.h.i.+on of the day and port we signed on without further ado for a voyage to Hong Kong and beyond--sitting at a table in the back room, and cementing the contract with a drink around.
The s.h.i.+pping Commissioner made the usual pretense of reading the articles. Then he squinted up at us.
"What's yer John Henry's?" says he.
My big s.h.i.+pmate mused a moment. He stroked the scar on his forehead--a habit he had when thinking. He smiled.
"My name is Newman," he made answer. "It is a good name."
He took the pen from the s.h.i.+pping Commissioner's hand and wrote the name in the proper place upon the articles. "A. Newman," that is how he wrote it. Not the first time he had clapped eyes upon s.h.i.+p's articles, one could see with half an eye. I wrote my own "John Shreve"
below his name, with an outward flourish, but with a sinking sensation inwardly.
As soon as the ceremony was completed, A. Newman got to his feet, refused my pressing invitation to visit the bar, and went upstairs to his room. Now, this seemed very peculiar to my sailor's way of thinking; it seemed more peculiar than his choice of a name. Here we were, s.h.i.+pmates, together committed to a high adventure, yet the man would not tarry by my side long enough to up-end a schooner to a fair pa.s.sage. I was to have other surprises before the day was out--the mean-faced beggar, and the way in which the Knitting Swede put us on board the _Golden Bough_. Surprising incidents. But this refusal of my new s.h.i.+pmate to drink with me was most surprising. Think of a sailor, a hard case, too, moping alone in his room on the day he s.h.i.+pped, when downstairs he could wa.s.sail away the day. I was surprised and resentful. It is hard for a nineteen-year-old man to stand alone, and I felt that Newman, my s.h.i.+pmate, should give me the moral support of his companions.h.i.+p.
I strutted away the day in lonely glory. I had not the courage to violate the h.o.a.ry traditions of the foc'sle and join my s.h.i.+p sober, so I imbibed as steadily as my youthful stomach permitted. Towards evening I was, as sailors say, "half seas over."
I was mellow, but not befuddled. I saw things clearly, too clearly.
Of a sudden I felt an urgent necessity to get away from the Swede's barroom. I wanted to breathe a bit of fresh air, I wanted to shut out from my mind the sights and sounds and smells of the groggery, the reek and the s.m.u.t and the evil faces. Above all, I wished to escape the importunities of the little Jewess. She had gotten upon my nerves.
Oh, I was her fancy boy to-day, you bet! I was spending my advance money, you see, and this was her last chance at my pocketbook.
So, when opportunity offered, I slipped away from the crowd un.o.bserved, and went rolling along East street as though that thoroughfare belonged to me. And in truth it did. Aye, I was the chesty lad, and my step was high and proud, during that stroll. For men hailed me, and pointed me out. I was the rough, tough king of the beach that hour; I was the lad who had whipped the Knitting Swede's bully, and s.h.i.+pped in the _Golden Bough_.
Upon a corner, some blocks from the Knitting Swede's house, I came upon a fellow who was spitting blood into the gutter. He was the sorriest-looking wretch I had ever seen, the gaunt ruin of a man. He drew his filthy rags about him, and s.h.i.+vered, and prefaced his whine for alms with a fit of coughing that seemed to make his bones rattle.
I can't say that my heart went out to the man. It didn't. He was too unwholesome looking, and his face was mean and sly. His voice was as remarkable as anything about him; instead of speaking words, he whined them, through his nose it sounded like, and though his tone seemed pitched low, his whine cut through the East street uproar like a sharp knife through b.u.t.ter.
Well, he was a pitiful wreck. On the rocks for good, already breaking up and going to pieces. Without thinking much about it, I emptied my pockets of their change. He pounced upon that handful of silver with the avidity of a miser, and s...o...b..red nasal thanks at me. I was the kindest-hearted lad he had met in many a day, he said.
We would have gone our different ways promptly but for a flurry of wind. I suspect that, with the money in his hand, he was as eager to see the last of me as I was to see the last of him. But I felt ashamed of my distaste of him; it seemed heartless. And when the cold wind came swooping across from the docks, setting him s.h.i.+vering and coughing, I thought of the spare pea-coat I had in my bag. It was serviceable and warm, and I had a new one to wear.
So I carried him back to the Swede's house with me. I did not take him into the barroom, though he brazenly hinted he would like to stop in there; but I feared the gibes of the boisterous gang. This b.u.m of mine was such grotesque horror that the drunken wits of the house would not, I knew, fail to seize the chance to ridicule me upon my choice of a chum. Besides it was clothes not whisky I intended giving him.
I took him upstairs by the side entrance, the entrance to the lodging-house section of the Knitting Swede's establishment. The house was a veritable rookery above the first floor. I lodged on the third floor, in a room overlooking the street, a shabby, dirty little cubicle, but one of the choice rooms at the Swede's disposal--for was I not spending money in his house?
My companion's complaining whine filled the halls as we ascended the stairs. He was d.a.m.ning the times and the hard hearts of men. As we walked along the hall towards my room, the door of the room next to mine opened and the big man, who signed himself Newman, looked out at us. I had not known before that he occupied this room, he was so silent and secretive in his comings and goings.
I hailed Newman heartily, but he gave me no response, not even a direct glance. He was regarding the derelict; aye, and there was something in his face as he looked at the man that sent a thrill through me. There was recognition in his look, and something else. It made me s.h.i.+ver.
As for this fellow with me--he stopped short at first sight of Newman.
He said, "Oh, my G.o.d!" and then he seemed to choke. He stumbled against the banisters, and clung to them for support while his knees sagged under him. He'd have run, undoubtedly, if he had had the strength.
"h.e.l.lo, Beasley," said Newman, in a very quiet voice. He came out of his room, and approached us. Then this man of mine threw a fit indeed.
I never saw such fright in a man's face. He opened his mouth as If to scream, but nothing came out except a gurgle; and he lifted his arm as if to ward off an expected blow.
But Newman made no move to strike him. He looked down at him, studying him, with his stern mouth cracked into a little smile (but, G.o.d's truth, there was no mirth in it) and after a moment he said, "Surprised? Eh? But no more surprised than I."
The poor wreck got some sound out of his mouth that sounded like "How--how--" several times repeated.
"And I wanted to meet you more than I can tell," went on Newman. "I want to talk to you--about----"
The other got his tongue to working in a half-coherent fas.h.i.+on, though the disjointed words he forced out of his mouth were just husky whispers. "Oh, my G.o.d--you! Not me--oh, my G.o.d, not me!--him--he made me--it was----"
No more sense than that to his agonized mumbling. And he got no more than that out of him when he choked, and an ugly splotch of crimson appeared upon his pale lips. His knees gave way altogether, and he crouched there on the floor, gibbering silently at the big man, and plainly terrified clean out of his wits.
Well, I felt out of it, so to speak. The feeling made me a little resentful. After all, this b.u.m was my b.u.m.
"Look here, the man's sick," I said to Newman. "Don't look at him like that--he'll die. You've half scared him to death already."
"Oh, no; he'll not die--yet," said Newman. "He's just a little bit surprised at the encounter. But he's glad to see me--aren't you, Beasley? Stop that nonsense, and get up!" This last was barked at the fellow; it was a soft-voiced but imperative command.
The command was instantly obeyed. That was Newman for you--people didn't argue with him, they did what he said. I'd have obeyed too, just as quickly, if he had spoken to me in that tone. There was something in that man, something compelling, and, besides, he had the habit of command in his manner.
So Beasley tottered to his feet, and stood there swaying. He found his tongue, too, in sensible speech. "For G.o.d's sake, get me a drink!" he said.
I was glad to seize the cue. It gave me an excuse to do something.
"I'll get some whisky downstairs," I sang out to Newman, as I moved for the stairs. "Take him into my room; I'll be right back."
But when I returned with the liquor a few moments later, I discovered that Newman had taken his prize into his own room. I heard the murmur of voices through the closed door. But I had rather expected this.
Half seas over I might be, but I was still clear-witted enough to realize that I had accidentally brought two old acquaintances together, and that one was pleased at the meeting and the other terrified, and that whatever was or had been between the two was none of my business.
I had no intention of intruding upon them. But the fellow, Beasley, had looked so much in need of the stimulant that I ventured a knock upon the door.
Newman opened, and I handed him the bottle without comment. I could see my erstwhile tow sitting upon the bed, slumped in an att.i.tude of collapse. He looked so abject; his condition might have touched a harder heart than mine. But there was no softening of Newman's heart, to judge from his face; the little mirthless smile had vanished and his features were hard and set. Aye, and his manner towards me was curt enough.
"Thank you; he needs a pick-me-up," he said, as he took the bottle.
"And now--you'll excuse us, lad."
It wasn't a question, that last; it was a statement. Little he cared if I excused him or not. He shut the door in my face, and I heard the key turn in the lock.
Well, I suppose I should have been incensed by this off-hand dismissal.
Oh, I was no meek and humble specimen; my temper was only too touchy, and besides there was my reputation as a hard case to look to. But strangely enough I did not become incensed; I never thought of kicking down the door, I never thought of harboring a grudge. It wasn't fear of the big man, either. It was--well, that was Newman. He could do a thing like that, and get away with it.
The carousing gang downstairs was more than ever distasteful to me. I went into my own room and lay down upon the bed. The liquor that was in me made me a bit drowsy, and I rather relished the thought of a nap.
But I discovered I was likely to be cheated of even the nap by my next door neighbors. The walls in the Swede's house were poor barriers to sounds, and lying there on the bed I suddenly found myself overhearing a considerable part of the conversation in the next room. Newman's deep voice was a mere rumble, a menacing rumble, with the words undistinguishable, but the beggar's disagreeable whine carried through the part.i.tion so distinctly I could not help overhearing nearly every word he said. I didn't try to eavesdrop; at the time Beasley's words had little interest or meaning for me. But afterwards, on the s.h.i.+p, I had reason to ponder over what he said.
The burden of his speech was to the effect that somebody referred to as "he" was to blame. Aye, trust a rat of that caliber to set up that wail. For some time that was all I got from the words that came through the wall. I wasn't trying to listen; I was drowsing, and paying very little attention.
But gradually Beasley's whine grew louder and more distinct. I suppose the whisky was oiling his tongue. Once he cried out sharply, "For G.o.d's sake, don't look at me like that! I'm telling the truth, I swear I am!" The sc.r.a.pe of a chair followed this outburst, and when the whine began again it was closer to the wall, and more distinct than ever.
"I didn't want to, but he made me. I had to look out for myself, hadn't I? I had to do what he said. He had this paper of mine--he knew they were forgeries--I had to do what he said. But, my G.o.d, I didn't know what he was planning--I swear I didn't!"
Newman's rumble broke in, and then the voluble, reedy voice continued, "But he was wild when he came home and found you and Mary so thick, and everybody just waiting for the announcement that it was a match. Why, he had the whole thing planned, the very day he arrived. I know he had, because he came to me, in the tavern, and told me I was to drop hints here and there through the village that you and Beulah Twigg had been seen together in Boston. I didn't want to, but I had to obey him.
Why, those checks--he could have put me in prison. My father would not have helped me. You remember my father--he was ready to throw me out anyway. He never could make allowances for a young fellow's fun.
"He had others dropping hints around. Trust him to handle a job like that. He was your friend, and Mary's friend--your very best friend, and all the time the tongues were wagging behind your back. Why, it was the talk of the town. You and Beulah Twigg, together in Boston; you and Beulah together at sea; you and Beulah--well, you know what a story they would make of it in a little town like Freeport. Mary must have heard the gossip about you; the women would tell her.