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<h2> V </h2>
<p>As soon as he had come up quite close he said, mouthing in a growl—</p>
<p>“What’s this I hear, Whalley? Is it true you’re selling the Fair Maid?”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley, looking away, said the thing was done—money had
been paid that morning; and the other expressed at once his approbation of
such an extremely sensible proceeding. He had got out of his trap to
stretch his legs, he explained, on his way home to dinner. Sir Frederick
looked well at the end of his time. Didn’t he?</p>
<p>Captain Whalley could not say; had only noticed the carriage going past.</p>
<p>The Master-Attendant, plunging his hands into the pockets of an alpaca
jacket inappropriately short and tight for a man of his age and
appearance, strutted with a slight limp, and with his head reaching only
to the shoulder of Captain Whalley, who walked easily, staring straight
before him. They had been good comrades years ago, almost intimates. At
the time when Whalley commanded the renowned Condor, Eliott had charge of
the nearly as famous Ringdove for the same owners; and when the
appointment of Master-Attendant was created, Whalley would have been the
only other serious candidate. But Captain Whalley, then in the prime of
life, was resolved to serve no one but his own auspicious Fortune. Far
away, tending his hot irons, he was glad to hear the other had been
successful. There was a worldly suppleness in bluff Ned Eliott that would
serve him well in that sort of official appointment. And they were so
dissimilar at bottom that as they came slowly to the end of the avenue
before the Cathedral, it had never come into Whalley’s head that he might
have been in that man’s place—provided for to the end of his days.</p>
<p>The sacred edifice, standing in solemn isolation amongst the converging
avenues of enormous trees, as if to put grave thoughts of heaven into the
hours of ease, presented a closed Gothic portal to the light and glory of
the west. The glass of the rosace above the ogive glowed like fiery coal
in the deep carvings of a wheel of stone. The two men faced about.</p>
<p>“I’ll tell you what they ought to do next, Whalley,” growled Captain
Eliott suddenly.</p>
<p>“Well?”</p>
<p>“They ought to send a real live lord out here when Sir Frederick’s time is
up. Eh?”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley perfunctorily did not see why a lord of the right sort
should not do as well as anyone else. But this was not the other’s point
of view.</p>
<p>“No, no. Place runs itself. Nothing can stop it now. Good enough for a
lord,” he growled in short sentences. “Look at the changes in our time. We
need a lord here now. They have got a lord in Bombay.”</p>
<p>He dined once or twice every year at the Government House—a
many-windowed, arcaded palace upon a hill laid out in roads and gardens.
And lately he had been taking about a duke in his Master-Attendant’s
steam-launch to visit the harbor improvements. Before that he had “most
obligingly” gone out in person to pick out a good berth for the ducal
yacht. Afterwards he had an invitation to lunch on board. The duchess
herself lunched with them. A big woman with a red face. Complexion quite
sunburnt. He should think ruined. Very gracious manners. They were going
on to Japan. . . .</p>
<p>He ejaculated these details for Captain Whalley’s edification, pausing to
blow out his cheeks as if with a pent-up sense of importance, and
repeatedly protruding his thick lips till the blunt crimson end of his
nose seemed to dip into the milk of his mustache. The place ran itself; it
was fit for any lord; it gave no trouble except in its Marine department—in
its Marine department he repeated twice, and after a heavy snort began to
relate how the other day her Majesty’s Consul-General in French
Cochin-China had cabled to him—in his official capacity—asking
for a qualified man to be sent over to take charge of a Glasgow ship whose
master had died in Saigon.</p>
<p>“I sent word of it to the officers’ quarters in the Sailors’ Home,” he
continued, while the limp in his gait seemed to grow more accentuated with
the increasing irritation of his voice. “Place’s full of them. Twice as
many men as there are berths going in the local trade. All hungry for an
easy job. Twice as many—and—What d’you think, Whalley? . . .”</p>
<p>He stopped short; his hands clenched and thrust deeply downwards, seemed
ready to burst the pockets of his jacket. A slight sigh escaped Captain
Whalley.</p>
<p>“Hey? You would think they would be falling over each other. Not a bit of
it. Frightened to go home. Nice and warm out here to lie about a veranda
waiting for a job. I sit and wait in my office. Nobody. What did they
suppose? That I was going to sit there like a dummy with the
Consul-General’s cable before me? Not likely. So I looked up a list of
them I keep by me and sent word for Hamilton—the worst loafer of
them all—and just made him go. Threatened to instruct the steward of
the Sailors’ Home to have him turned out neck and crop. He did not think
the berth was good enough—if—you—please. ‘I’ve your
little records by me,’ said I. ‘You came ashore here eighteen months ago,
and you haven’t done six months’ work since. You are in debt for your
board now at the Home, and I suppose you reckon the Marine Office will pay
in the end. Eh? So it shall; but if you don’t take this chance, away you
go to England, assisted passage, by the first homeward steamer that comes
along. You are no better than a pauper. We don’t want any white paupers
here.’ I scared him. But look at the trouble all this gave me.”</p>
<p>“You would not have had any trouble,” Captain Whalley said almost
involuntarily, “if you had sent for me.”</p>
<p>Captain Eliott was immensely amused; he shook with laughter as he walked.
But suddenly he stopped laughing. A vague recollection had crossed his
mind. Hadn’t he heard it said at the time of the Travancore and Deccan
smash that poor Whalley had been cleaned out completely. “Fellow’s hard
up, by heavens!” he thought; and at once he cast a sidelong upward glance
at his companion. But Captain Whalley was smiling austerely straight
before him, with a carriage of the head inconceivable in a penniless man—and
he became reassured. Impossible. Could not have lost everything. That ship
had been only a hobby of his. And the reflection that a man who had
confessed to receiving that very morning a presumably large sum of money
was not likely to spring upon him a demand for a small loan put him
entirely at his ease again. There had come a long pause in their talk,
however, and not knowing how to begin again, he growled out soberly, “We
old fellows ought to take a rest now.”</p>
<p>“The best thing for some of us would be to die at the oar,” Captain
Whalley said negligently.</p>
<p>“Come, now. Aren’t you a bit tired by this time of the whole show?”
muttered the other sullenly.</p>
<p>“Are you?”</p>
<p>Captain Eliott was. Infernally tired. He only hung on to his berth so long
in order to get his pension on the highest scale before he went home. It
would be no better than poverty, anyhow; still, it was the only thing
between him and the workhouse. And he had a family. Three girls, as
Whalley knew. He gave “Harry, old boy,” to understand that these three
girls were a source of the greatest anxiety and worry to him. Enough to
drive a man distracted.</p>
<p>“Why? What have they been doing now?” asked Captain Whalley with a sort of
amused absent-mindedness.</p>
<p>“Doing! Doing nothing. That’s just it. Lawn-tennis and silly novels from
morning to night. . . .”</p>
<p>If one of them at least had been a boy. But all three! And, as ill-luck
would have it, there did not seem to be any decent young fellows left in
the world. When he looked around in the club he saw only a lot of
conceited popinjays too selfish to think of making a good woman happy.
Extreme indigence stared him in the face with all that crowd to keep at
home. He had cherished the idea of building himself a little house in the
country—in Surrey—to end his days in, but he was afraid it was
out of the question, . . . and his staring eyes rolled upwards with such a
pathetic anxiety that Captain Whalley charitably nodded down at him,
restraining a sort of sickening desire to laugh.</p>
<p>“You must know what it is yourself, Harry. Girls are the very devil for
worry and anxiety.”</p>
<p>“Ay! But mine is doing well,” Captain Whalley pronounced slowly, staring
to the end of the avenue.</p>
<p>The Master-Attendant was glad to hear this. Uncommonly glad. He remembered
her well. A pretty girl she was.</p>
<p>Captain Whalley, stepping out carelessly, assented as if in a dream.</p>
<p>“She was pretty.”</p>
<p>The procession of carriages was breaking up.</p>
<p>One after another they left the file to go off at a trot, animating the
vast avenue with their scattered life and movement; but soon the aspect of
dignified solitude returned and took possession of the straight wide road.
A syce in white stood at the head of a Burmah pony harnessed to a
varnished two-wheel cart; and the whole thing waiting by the curb seemed
no bigger than a child’s toy forgotten under the soaring trees. Captain
Eliott waddled up to it and made as if to clamber in, but refrained; and
keeping one hand resting easily on the shaft, he changed the conversation
from his pension, his daughters, and his poverty back again to the only
other topic in the world—the Marine Office, the men and the ships of
the port.</p>
<p>He proceeded to give instances of what was expected of him; and his thick
voice drowsed in the still air like the obstinate droning of an enormous
bumble-bee. Captain Whalley did not know what was the force or the
weakness that prevented him from saying good-night and walking away. It
was as though he had been too tired to make the effort. How queer. More
queer than any of Ned’s instances. Or was it that overpowering sense of
idleness alone that made him stand there and listen to these stories.
Nothing very real had ever troubled Ned Eliott; and gradually he seemed to
detect deep in, as if wrapped up in the gross wheezy rumble, something of
the clear hearty voice of the young captain of the Ringdove. He wondered
if he too had changed to the same extent; and it seemed to him that the
voice of his old chum had not changed so very much—that the man was
the same. Not a bad fellow the pleasant, jolly Ned Eliott, friendly, well
up to his business—and always a bit of a humbug. He remembered how
he used to amuse his poor wife. She could read him like an open book. When
the Condor and the Ringdove happened to be in port together, she would
frequently ask him to bring Captain Eliott to dinner. They had not met
often since those old days. Not once in five years, perhaps. He regarded
from under his white eyebrows this man he could not bring himself to take
into his confidence at this juncture; and the other went on with his
intimate outpourings, and as remote from his hearer as though he had been
talking on a hill-top a mile away.</p>
<p>He was in a bit of a quandary now as to the steamer Sofala. Ultimately
every hitch in the port came into his hands to undo. They would miss him
when he was gone in another eighteen months, and most likely some retired
naval officer had been pitchforked into the appointment—a man that
would understand nothing and care less. That steamer was a coasting craft
having a steady trade connection as far north as Tenasserim; but the
trouble was she could get no captain to take her on her regular trip.
Nobody would go in her. He really had no power, of course, to order a man
to take a job. It was all very well to stretch a point on the demand of a
consul-general, but . . .</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with the ship?” Captain Whalley interrupted in measured
tones.</p>
<p>“Nothing’s the matter. Sound old steamer. Her owner has been in my office
this afternoon tearing his hair.”</p>
<p>“Is he a white man?” asked Whalley in an interested voice.</p>
<p>“He calls himself a white man,” answered the Master-Attendant scornfully;
“but if so, it’s just skin-deep and no more. I told him that to his face
too.”</p>
<p>“But who is he, then?”</p>
<p>“He’s the chief engineer of her. See <i>that</i>, Harry?”</p>
<p>“I see,” Captain Whalley said thoughtfully. “The engineer. I see.”</p>
<p>How the fellow came to be a shipowner at the same time was quite a tale.
He came out third in a home ship nearly fifteen years ago, Captain Eliott
remembered, and got paid off after a bad sort of row both with his skipper
and his chief. Anyway, they seemed jolly glad to get rid of him at all
costs. Clearly a mutinous sort of chap. Well, he remained out here, a
perfect nuisance, everlastingly shipped and unshipped, unable to keep a
berth very long; pretty nigh went through every engine-room afloat
belonging to the colony. Then suddenly, “What do you think happened,
Harry?”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley, who seemed lost in a mental effort as of doing a sum in
his head, gave a slight start. He really couldn’t imagine. The
Master-Attendant’s voice vibrated dully with hoarse emphasis. The man
actually had the luck to win the second prize in the Manilla lottery. All
these engineers and officers of ships took tickets in that gamble. It
seemed to be a perfect mania with them all.</p>
<p>Everybody expected now that he would take himself off home with his money,
and go to the devil in his own way. Not at all. The Sofala, judged too
small and not quite modern enough for the sort of trade she was in, could
be got for a moderate price from her owners, who had ordered a new steamer
from Europe. He rushed in and bought her. This man had never given any
signs of that sort of mental intoxication the mere fact of getting hold of
a large sum of money may produce—not till he got a ship of his own;
but then he went off his balance all at once: came bouncing into the
Marine Office on some transfer business, with his hat hanging over his
left eye and switching a little cane in his hand, and told each one of the
clerks separately that “Nobody could put him out now. It was his turn.
There was no one over him on earth, and there never would be either.” He
swaggered and strutted between the desks, talking at the top of his voice,
and trembling like a leaf all the while, so that the current business of
the office was suspended for the time he was in there, and everybody in
the big room stood open-mouthed looking at his antics. Afterwards he could
be seen during the hottest hours of the day with his face as red as fire
rushing along up and down the quays to look at his ship from different
points of view: he seemed inclined to stop every stranger he came across
just to let them know “that there would be no longer anyone over him; he
had bought a ship; nobody on earth could put him out of his engine-room
now.”</p>
<p>Good bargain as she was, the price of the Sofala took up pretty near all
the lottery-money. He had left himself no capital to work with. That did
not matter so much, for these were the halcyon days of steam coasting
trade, before some of the home shipping firms had thought of establishing
local fleets to feed their main lines. These, when once organized, took
the biggest slices out of that cake, of course; and by-and-by a squad of
confounded German tramps turned up east of Suez Canal and swept up all the
crumbs. They prowled on the cheap to and fro along the coast and between
the islands, like a lot of sharks in the water ready to snap up anything
you let drop. And then the high old times were over for good; for years
the Sofala had made no more, he judged, than a fair living. Captain Eliott
looked upon it as his duty in every way to assist an English ship to hold
her own; and it stood to reason that if for want of a captain the Sofala
began to miss her trips she would very soon lose her trade. There was the
quandary. The man was too impracticable. “Too much of a beggar on
horseback from the first,” he explained. “Seemed to grow worse as the time
went on. In the last three years he’s run through eleven skippers; he had
tried every single man here, outside of the regular lines. I had warned
him before that this would not do. And now, of course, no one will look at
the Sofala. I had one or two men up at my office and talked to them; but,
as they said to me, what was the good of taking the berth to lead a
regular dog’s life for a month and then get the sack at the end of the
first trip? The fellow, of course, told me it was all nonsense; there has
been a plot hatching for years against him. And now it had come. All the
horrid sailors in the port had conspired to bring him to his knees,
because he was an engineer.”</p>
<p>Captain Eliott emitted a throaty chuckle.</p>
<p>“And the fact is, that if he misses a couple more trips he need never
trouble himself to start again. He won’t find any cargo in his old trade.
There’s too much competition nowadays for people to keep their stuff lying
about for a ship that does not turn up when she’s expected. It’s a bad
lookout for him. He swears he will shut himself on board and starve to
death in his cabin rather than sell her—even if he could find a
buyer. And that’s not likely in the least. Not even the Japs would give
her insured value for her. It isn’t like selling sailing-ships. Steamers
<i>do</i> get out of date, besides getting old.”</p>
<p>“He must have laid by a good bit of money though,” observed Captain
Whalley quietly.</p>
<p>The Harbor-master puffed out his purple cheeks to an amazing size.</p>
<p>“Not a stiver, Harry. Not—a—single—sti-ver.”</p>
<p>He waited; but as Captain Whalley, stroking his beard slowly, looked down
on the ground without a word, he tapped him on the forearm, tiptoed, and
said in a hoarse whisper—</p>
<p>“The Manilla lottery has been eating him up.”</p>
<p>He frowned a little, nodding in tiny affirmative jerks. They all were
going in for it; a third of the wages paid to ships’ officers (“in my
port,” he snorted) went to Manilla. It was a mania. That fellow Massy had
been bitten by it like the rest of them from the first; but after winning
once he seemed to have persuaded himself he had only to try again to get
another big prize. He had taken dozens and scores of tickets for every
drawing since. What with this vice and his ignorance of affairs, ever
since he had improvidently bought that steamer he had been more or less
short of money.</p>
<p>This, in Captain Eliott’s opinion, gave an opening for a sensible
sailor-man with a few pounds to step in and save that fool from the
consequences of his folly. It was his craze to quarrel with his captains.
He had had some really good men too, who would have been too glad to stay
if he would only let them. But no. He seemed to think he was no owner
unless he was kicking somebody out in the morning and having a row with
the new man in the evening. What was wanted for him was a master with a
couple of hundred or so to take an interest in the ship on proper
conditions. You don’t discharge a man for no fault, only because of the
fun of telling him to pack up his traps and go ashore, when you know that
in that case you are bound to buy back his share. On the other hand, a
fellow with an interest in the ship is not likely to throw up his job in a
huff about a trifle. He had told Massy that. He had said: “‘This won’t do,
Mr. Massy. We are getting very sick of you here in the Marine Office. What
you must do now is to try whether you could get a sailor to join you as
partner. That seems to be the only way.’ And that was sound advice,
Harry.”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley, leaning on his stick, was perfectly still all over, and
his hand, arrested in the act of stroking, grasped his whole beard. And
what did the fellow say to that?</p>
<p>The fellow had the audacity to fly out at the Master-Attendant. He had
received the advice in a most impudent manner. “I didn’t come here to be
laughed at,” he had shrieked. “I appeal to you as an Englishman and a
shipowner brought to the verge of ruin by an illegal conspiracy of your
beggarly sailors, and all you condescend to do for me is to tell me to go
and get a partner!” . . . The fellow had presumed to stamp with rage on
the floor of the private office. Where was he going to get a partner? Was
he being taken for a fool? Not a single one of that contemptible lot
ashore at the “Home” had twopence in his pocket to bless himself with. The
very native curs in the bazaar knew that much. . . . “And it’s true
enough, Harry,” rumbled Captain Eliott judicially. “They are much more
likely one and all to owe money to the Chinamen in Denham Road for the
clothes on their backs. ‘Well,’ said I, ‘you make too much noise over it
for my taste, Mr. Massy. Good morning.’ He banged the door after him; he
dared to bang my door, confound his cheek!”</p>
<p>The head of the Marine department was out of breath with indignation; then
recollecting himself as it were, “I’ll end by being late to dinner—yarning
with you here . . . wife doesn’t like it.”</p>
<p>He clambered ponderously into the trap; leaned out sideways, and only then
wondered wheezily what on earth Captain Whalley could have been doing with
himself of late. They had had no sight of each other for years and years
till the other day when he had seen him unexpectedly in the office.</p>
<p>What on earth . . .</p>
<p>Captain Whalley seemed to be smiling to himself in his white beard.</p>
<p>“The earth is big,” he said vaguely.</p>
<p>The other, as if to test the statement, stared all round from his
driving-seat. The Esplanade was very quiet; only from afar, from very far,
a long way from the seashore, across the stretches of grass, through the
long ranges of trees, came faintly the toot—toot—toot of the
cable car beginning to roll before the empty peristyle of the Public
Library on its three-mile journey to the New Harbor Docks.</p>
<p>“Doesn’t seem to be so much room on it,” growled the Master-Attendant,
“since these Germans came along shouldering us at every turn. It was not
so in our time.”</p>
<p>He fell into deep thought, breathing stertorously, as though he had been
taking a nap open-eyed. Perhaps he too, on his side, had detected in the
silent pilgrim-like figure, standing there by the wheel, like an arrested
wayfarer, the buried lineaments of the features belonging to the young
captain of the Condor. Good fellow—Harry Whalley—never very
talkative. You never knew what he was up to—a bit too off-hand with
people of consequence, and apt to take a wrong view of a fellow’s actions.
Fact was he had a too good opinion of himself. He would have liked to tell
him to get in and drive him home to dinner. But one never knew. Wife would
not like it.</p>
<p>“And it’s funny to think, Harry,” he went on in a big, subdued drone,
“that of all the people on it there seems only you and I left to remember
this part of the world as it used to be . . .”</p>
<p>He was ready to indulge in the sweetness of a sentimental mood had it not
struck him suddenly that Captain Whalley, unstirring and without a word,
seemed to be awaiting something—perhaps expecting . . . He gathered
the reins at once and burst out in bluff, hearty growls—</p>
<p>“Ha! My dear boy. The men we have known—the ships we’ve sailed—ay!
and the things we’ve done . . .”</p>
<p>The pony plunged—the syce skipped out of the way. Captain Whalley
raised his arm.</p>
<p>“Good-by.”</p>
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