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And, as the days went on, bringing no tidings of Verena, Sir Dace Fontaine grew angry as a raging tiger.
When a s.h.i.+p is going out of dock, she is more coquettish than a beauty in her teens. Not in herself, but in her movements. Advertised to sail to-day, you will be told she'll not start until to-morrow; and when to-morrow comes the departure will be put off until the next day, perhaps to the next week.
Thus it was with the _Rose of Delhi_. From some uncompromising exigencies, whether connected with the cargo, the crew, the brokers, or any other of the unknown mysteries pertaining to s.h.i.+ps, the day that was to have witnessed her departure--Thursday--did not witness it. The brokers, Freeman and Co., let it transpire on board that she would go out of dock the next morning. About mid-day Captain Tanerton presented himself at their office in Eastcheap.
"I shall not sail to-morrow--with your permission," said he to Mr. James Freeman.
"Yes, you will--if she's ready," returned the broker. "Gould says she will be."
"Gould may think so; I do not. But, whether she be ready or not, Mr.
Freeman, I don't intend to take her out to-morrow."
The words might be decisive words, but the captain's tone was genial as he spoke them, and his frank, pleasant smile sat on his face. Mr.
Freeman looked at him. They valued Captain Tanerton as they perhaps valued no other master in their employ, these brothers Freeman; but James had a temper that was especially happy in contradiction.
"I suppose you'd like to say that you won't go out on a Friday!"
"That's just it," said Jack.
"You are superst.i.tious, Captain Tanerton," mocked the broker.
"I am not," answered Jack. "But I sail with those who are. Sailors are more foolish on this point than you can imagine: and I believe--I believe in my conscience--that s.h.i.+ps, sailing on a Friday, have come to grief through their crew losing heart. No matter what impediment is met with--bad weather, accidents, what not--the men say at once it's of no use, we sailed on a Friday. They lose their spirit, and their energy with it; and I say, Mr. Freeman, that vessels have been lost through this, which might have otherwise been saved. I will not go out of dock to-morrow; and I refuse to do it in your interest as much as in my own."
"Oh, bother," was all James Freeman rejoined. "You'll have to go if she's ready."
But the words made an impression. James Freeman knew what sailors were nearly as well as Jack knew: and he could not help recalling to memory that beautiful s.h.i.+p of Freeman Brothers, the _Lily of j.a.pan_. The _Lily_ had been lost only six months ago; and those of her crew, who were saved, religiously stuck to it that the calamity was brought about through having sailed on a Friday.
The present question did not come to an issue. For, on the Friday morning, the _Rose of Delhi_ was not ready for sea; would not be ready that day. On the Sat.u.r.day morning she was not ready either; and it was finally decided that Monday should be the day of departure. On the Sat.u.r.day afternoon Captain Tanerton ran down to Timberdale for four-and-twenty hours; Squire Todhetley, his visit to London over, travelling down by the same train.
Verena Fontaine had not yet turned up, and Sir Dace was nearly crazy.
Not only was he angry at being thwarted, but one absorbing, special fear lay upon him--that she would come back a married woman. Pym was capable of any sin, he told the Squire and Coralie, even of buying the wedding-ring; and Verena was capable of letting it be put on her finger.
"No, papa," dissented Coralie in her equable manner, "Vera is too fond of money and of the good things money buys, to risk the loss of the best part of her fortune. She will not marry Pym until she is of age; be sure of that. When he has sailed she will come home safe and sound, and tell us where she has been."
Captain Tanerton went down, I say, to Timberdale. He stayed at the Rectory with his wife and brother until the Sunday afternoon, and then returned to London. The _Rose of Delhi_ was positively going out on Monday, so he had to be back--and, I may as well say here, that Jack, good-natured Jack, had invited me to go in her as far as Gravesend.
During that brief stay at Timberdale, Jack was not in his usual spirits.
His wife, Alice, noticed it, and asked him whether anything was the matter. Not anything whatever, Jack readily answered. In truth there was not. At least, anything he could talk of. A weight lay on his spirits, and he could not account for it. The strong instinct, which had seemed to warn him against sailing with Pym again, had gradually left him since he knew that Pym was to sail, whether or not. In striving to make the best of it, he had thrown off the feeling: and the unaccountable depression that weighed him down could not arise from that cause. It was a strange thing altogether, this; one that never, in all his life, had he had any experience of; but it was not less strange than true.
_Monday._--The _Rose of Delhi_ lay in her place in the freshness of the sunny morning, making ready to go out of dock with the incoming tide. I went on board betimes: and I thought I had never been in such a bustling scene before. The sailors knew what they were about. I conclude, but to me it seemed all confusion. The captain I could not see anywhere; but his chief officer, Pym, seemed to be more busy than a certain common enemy of ours is said to be in a gale of wind.
"Is the captain not on board?" I asked of Mark Ferrar, as he was whisking past me on deck.
"Oh no, sir; not yet. The captain will not come on board till the last moment--if he does then."
The words took me by surprise. "What do you mean, by saying 'If he does then'?"
"He has so much to do, sir; he is at the office now, signing the bills of lading. If he can't get done in time he will join at Gravesend when we take on some pa.s.sengers. The captain is not wanted on board when we are going out of dock, Mr. Johnny," added Ferrar, seeing my perplexed look. "The river-pilot takes the s.h.i.+p out."
He pointed to the latter personage, just then making his appearance on deck. I wondered whether all river-pilots were like him. He was broad enough to make two ordinarily stout people; and his voice, from long continuous shouting, had become nothing less than a raven's croak.
At the last moment, when the s.h.i.+p was getting away, and I had given the captain up, he came on board. How glad I was to see his handsome, kindly face!
"I've had a squeak for it, Johnny," he laughed, as he shook my hand: "but I meant to go down with you if I could."
Then came all the noise and stir of getting away: the croaking of the pilot alone distinguishable to my uninitiated ears. "Slack away the stern-line"--he called it starn. "Haul in head-rope." "Here, carpenter, bear a hand, get the cork-fender over the quarter-gallery." "What are you doing aft there?--why don't you slack away that stern-line?" Every other moment it seemed to me that we were going to pitch into the craft in the pool, or they into us. However, we got on without mishap.
Captain Tanerton was crossing the s.h.i.+p, after holding a confab with the pilot, when a young man, whom he did not recognize, stepped aside out of his way, and touched his cap. The captain looked surprised, for the badge on the cap was the one worn by his own officers.
"Who are you?" he asked.
"Mr. Saxby, if you please, sir."
"Mr. Saxby! What do you do here?"
"Third mate, if you please, sir," repeated the young man. "Your third mate, Mr. Jones, met with an accident yesterday; he broke his leg; and my friend, Pym, spoke of me to Mr. Gould."
Captain Tanerton was not only surprised, but vexed. First, for the accident to Jones, who was a very decent young fellow; next, at his being superseded by a stranger, and a friend of Pym's. He put a few questions, found the new man's papers were in order, and so made the best of it.
"You will find me a good and considerate master, Mr. Saxby, if you do your duty with a will," he said in a kind tone.
"I hope I shall, sir; I'll try to," answered the young man.
On we went swimmingly, in the wake of the tug-boat; but this desirable tranquillity was ere long destined to be marred.
On coming up from the state-room, as they called it, after regaling ourselves on a cold collation, the captain was pointing out to me something on sh.o.r.e, when one of the crew approached hastily, and touched his cap. I found it was the carpenter: a steady-looking man, who was fresh to the s.h.i.+p, having joined her half-an-hour before starting.
"Beg pardon, sir," he began. "Might I ask you when this s.h.i.+p was pumped out last?"
"Why, she is never pumped out," replied the captain.
"Well, sir," returned the man, "it came into my head just now to sound her, and I find there's two feet of water in the hold."
"Nonsense," said Jack: "you must be mistaken. Why, she has never made a cupful of water since she was built. We have to put water in her to keep her sweet."
"Any way, sir, there's two feet o' water in her now."
The captain looked at the man steadily for a moment, and then thought it might be as well to verify the a.s.sertion--or the contrary--himself, being a practical man. Taking the sounding-rod from the carpenter's hand, he wiped it dry with an old bag lying near, and then proceeded to sound the well. Quite true: there were two feet of water. No time lost he. Ordering the carpenter to rig the pumps, he called all hands to man them.
For a quarter-of-an-hour, or twenty minutes, the pumps were worked without intermission; then the captain sounded, as before, doing it himself. There was no diminution of water--it stood at the same level as before pumping. Upon that, he and the carpenter went down into the hold, to listen along the s.h.i.+p's sides, and discover, if they could, where the water was coming in. Five minutes later, Jack was on deck again, his face grave.
"It is coming in abreast of the main hatchway on the starboard side; we can hear it distinctly," he said to the pilot. "I must order the s.h.i.+p back again: I think it right to do so." And the broad pilot, who seemed a very taciturn pilot, made no demur to this, except a grunt. So the tug-boat was ordered to turn round and tow us back again.
"Where's Mr. Pym?" cried the captain. "Mr. Pym!"
"Mr. Pym's in the cabin, sir," said the steward, who chanced to be pa.s.sing.
"In the cabin!" echoed Jack, in an accent that seemed to imply the cabin was not Mr. Pym's proper place just then. "Send him to me, if you please, steward."