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<h2> VI </h2>
<p>The sun had set. And when, after drilling a deep hole with his stick, he
moved from that spot the night had massed its army of shadows under the
trees. They filled the eastern ends of the avenues as if only waiting the
signal for a general advance upon the open spaces of the world; they were
gathering low between the deep stone-faced banks of the canal. The Malay
prau, half-concealed under the arch of the bridge, had not altered its
position a quarter of an inch. For a long time Captain Whalley stared down
over the parapet, till at last the floating immobility of that beshrouded
thing seemed to grow upon him into something inexplicable and alarming.
The twilight abandoned the zenith; its reflected gleams left the world
below, and the water of the canal seemed to turn into pitch. Captain
Whalley crossed it.</p>
<p>The turning to the right, which was his way to his hotel, was only a very
few steps farther. He stopped again (all the houses of the sea-front were
shut up, the quayside was deserted, but for one or two figures of natives
walking in the distance) and began to reckon the amount of his bill. So
many days in the hotel at so many dollars a day. To count the days he used
his fingers: plunging one hand into his pocket, he jingled a few silver
coins. All right for three days more; and then, unless something turned
up, he must break into the five hundred—Ivy’s money—invested
in her father. It seemed to him that the first meal coming out of that
reserve would choke him—for certain. Reason was of no use. It was a
matter of feeling. His feelings had never played him false.</p>
<p>He did not turn to the right. He walked on, as if there still had been a
ship in the roadstead to which he could get himself pulled off in the
evening. Far away, beyond the houses, on the slope of an indigo promontory
closing the view of the quays, the slim column of a factory-chimney smoked
quietly straight up into the clear air. A Chinaman, curled down in the
stern of one of the half-dozen sampans floating off the end of the jetty,
caught sight of a beckoning hand. He jumped up, rolled his pigtail round
his head swiftly, tucked in two rapid movements his wide dark trousers
high up his yellow thighs, and by a single, noiseless, finlike stir of the
oars, sheered the sampan alongside the steps with the ease and precision
of a swimming fish.</p>
<p>“Sofala,” articulated Captain Whalley from above; and the Chinaman, a new
emigrant probably, stared upwards with a tense attention as if waiting to
see the queer word fall visibly from the white man’s lips. “Sofala,”
Captain Whalley repeated; and suddenly his heart failed him. He paused.
The shores, the islets, the high ground, the low points, were dark: the
horizon had grown somber; and across the eastern sweep of the shore the
white obelisk, marking the landing-place of the telegraph-cable, stood
like a pale ghost on the beach before the dark spread of uneven roofs,
intermingled with palms, of the native town. Captain Whalley began again.</p>
<p>“Sofala. Savee So-fa-la, John?”</p>
<p>This time the Chinaman made out that bizarre sound, and grunted his assent
uncouthly, low down in his bare throat. With the first yellow twinkle of a
star that appeared like the head of a pin stabbed deep into the smooth,
pale, shimmering fabric of the sky, the edge of a keen chill seemed to
cleave through the warm air of the earth. At the moment of stepping into
the sampan to go and try for the command of the Sofala Captain Whalley
shivered a little.</p>
<p>When on his return he landed on the quay again Venus, like a choice jewel
set low on the hem of the sky, cast a faint gold trail behind him upon the
roadstead, as level as a floor made of one dark and polished stone. The
lofty vaults of the avenues were black—all black overhead—and
the porcelain globes on the lamp-posts resembled egg-shaped pearls,
gigantic and luminous, displayed in a row whose farther end seemed to sink
in the distance, down to the level of his knees. He put his hands behind
his back. He would now consider calmly the discretion of it before saying
the final word to-morrow. His feet scrunched the gravel loudly—the
discretion of it. It would have been easier to appraise had there been a
workable alternative. The honesty of it was indubitable: he meant well by
the fellow; and periodically his shadow leaped up intense by his side on
the trunks of the trees, to lengthen itself, oblique and dim, far over the
grass—repeating his stride.</p>
<p>The discretion of it. Was there a choice? He seemed already to have lost
something of himself; to have given up to a hungry specter something of
his truth and dignity in order to live. But his life was necessary. Let
poverty do its worst in exacting its toll of humiliation. It was certain
that Ned Eliott had rendered him, without knowing it, a service for which
it would have been impossible to ask. He hoped Ned would not think there
had been something underhand in his action. He supposed that now when he
heard of it he would understand—or perhaps he would only think
Whalley an eccentric old fool. What would have been the good of telling
him—any more than of blurting the whole tale to that man Massy? Five
hundred pounds ready to invest. Let him make the best of that. Let him
wonder. You want a captain—I want a ship. That’s enough. B-r-r-r-r.
What a disagreeable impression that empty, dark, echoing steamer had made
upon him. . . .</p>
<p>A laid-up steamer was a dead thing and no mistake; a sailing-ship somehow
seems always ready to spring into life with the breath of the
incorruptible heaven; but a steamer, thought Captain Whalley, with her
fires out, without the warm whiffs from below meeting you on her decks,
without the hiss of steam, the clangs of iron in her breast—lies
there as cold and still and pulseless as a corpse.</p>
<p>In the solitude of the avenue, all black above and lighted below, Captain
Whalley, considering the discretion of his course, met, as it were
incidentally, the thought of death. He pushed it aside with dislike and
contempt. He almost laughed at it; and in the unquenchable vitality of his
age only thought with a kind of exultation how little he needed to keep
body and soul together. Not a bad investment for the poor woman this solid
carcass of her father. And for the rest—in case of anything—the
agreement should be clear: the whole five hundred to be paid back to her
integrally within three months. Integrally. Every penny. He was not to
lose any of her money whatever else had to go—a little dignity—some
of his self-respect. He had never before allowed anybody to remain under
any sort of false impression as to himself. Well, let that go—for
her sake. After all, he had never <i>said</i> anything misleading—and
Captain Whalley felt himself corrupt to the marrow of his bones. He
laughed a little with the intimate scorn of his worldly prudence. Clearly,
with a fellow of that sort, and in the peculiar relation they were to
stand to each other, it would not have done to blurt out everything. He
did not like the fellow. He did not like his spells of fawning loquacity
and bursts of resentfulness. In the end—a poor devil. He would not
have liked to stand in his shoes. Men were not evil, after all. He did not
like his sleek hair, his queer way of standing at right angles, with his
nose in the air, and glancing along his shoulder at you. No. On the whole,
men were not bad—they were only silly or unhappy.</p>
<p>Captain Whalley had finished considering the discretion of that step—and
there was the whole long night before him. In the full light his long
beard would glisten like a silver breastplate covering his heart; in the
spaces between the lamps his burly figure passed less distinct, loomed
very big, wandering, and mysterious. No; there was not much real harm in
men: and all the time a shadow marched with him, slanting on his left hand—which
in the East is a presage of evil.</p>
<p>. . . . . . .</p>
<p>“Can you make out the clump of palms yet, Serang?” asked Captain Whalley
from his chair on the bridge of the Sofala approaching the bar of Batu
Beru.</p>
<p>“No, Tuan. By-and-by see.” The old Malay, in a blue dungaree suit, planted
on his bony dark feet under the bridge awning, put his hands behind his
back and stared ahead out of the innumerable wrinkles at the corners of
his eyes.</p>
<p>Captain Whalley sat still, without lifting his head to look for himself.
Three years—thirty-six times. He had made these palms thirty-six
times from the southward. They would come into view at the proper time.
Thank God, the old ship made her courses and distances trip after trip, as
correct as clockwork. At last he murmured again—</p>
<p>“In sight yet?”</p>
<p>“The sun makes a very great glare, Tuan.”</p>
<p>“Watch well, Serang.”</p>
<p>“Ya, Tuan.”</p>
<p>A white man had ascended the ladder from the deck noiselessly, and had
listened quietly to this short colloquy. Then he stepped out on the bridge
and began to walk from end to end, holding up the long cherrywood stem of
a pipe. His black hair lay plastered in long lanky wisps across the bald
summit of his head; he had a furrowed brow, a yellow complexion, and a
thick shapeless nose. A scanty growth of whisker did not conceal the
contour of his jaw. His aspect was of brooding care; and sucking at a
curved black mouthpiece, he presented such a heavy overhanging profile
that even the Serang could not help reflecting sometimes upon the extreme
unloveliness of some white men.</p>
<p>Captain Whalley seemed to brace himself up in his chair, but gave no
recognition whatever to his presence. The other puffed jets of smoke; then
suddenly—</p>
<p>“I could never understand that new mania of yours of having this Malay
here for your shadow, partner.”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley got up from the chair in all his imposing stature and
walked across to the binnacle, holding such an unswerving course that the
other had to back away hurriedly, and remained as if intimidated, with the
pipe trembling in his hand. “Walk over me now,” he muttered in a sort of
astounded and discomfited whisper. Then slowly and distinctly he said—</p>
<p>“I—am—not—dirt.” And then added defiantly, “As you seem
to think.”</p>
<p>The Serang jerked out—</p>
<p>“See the palms now, Tuan.”</p>
<p>Captain Whalley strode forward to the rail; but his eyes, instead of going
straight to the point, with the assured keen glance of a sailor, wandered
irresolutely in space, as though he, the discoverer of new routes, had
lost his way upon this narrow sea.</p>
<p>Another white man, the mate, came up on the bridge. He was tall, young,
lean, with a mustache like a trooper, and something malicious in the eye.
He took up a position beside the engineer. Captain Whalley, with his back
to them, inquired—</p>
<p>“What’s on the log?”</p>
<p>“Eighty-five,” answered the mate quickly, and nudged the engineer with his
elbow.</p>
<p>Captain Whalley’s muscular hands squeezed the iron rail with an
extraordinary force; his eyes glared with an enormous effort; he knitted
his eyebrows, the perspiration fell from under his hat,—and in a
faint voice he murmured, “Steady her, Serang—when she is on the
proper bearing.”</p>
<p>The silent Malay stepped back, waited a little, and lifted his arm
warningly to the helmsman. The wheel revolved rapidly to meet the swing of
the ship. Again the mate nudged the engineer. But Massy turned upon him.</p>
<p>“Mr. Sterne,” he said violently, “let me tell you—as a shipowner—that
you are no better than a confounded fool.”</p>
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