<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<p>For three days I did my own work and Thomas Mugridge’s too; and I flatter
myself that I did his work well. I know that it won Wolf Larsen’s
approval, while the sailors beamed with satisfaction during the brief time my
<i>régime</i> lasted.</p>
<p>“The first clean bite since I come aboard,” Harrison said to me at
the galley door, as he returned the dinner pots and pans from the forecastle.
“Somehow Tommy’s grub always tastes of grease, stale grease, and I
reckon he ain’t changed his shirt since he left ’Frisco.”</p>
<p>“I know he hasn’t,” I answered.</p>
<p>“And I’ll bet he sleeps in it,” Harrison added.</p>
<p>“And you won’t lose,” I agreed. “The same shirt, and he
hasn’t had it off once in all this time.”</p>
<p>But three days was all Wolf Larsen allowed him in which to recover from the
effects of the beating. On the fourth day, lame and sore, scarcely able to see,
so closed were his eyes, he was haled from his bunk by the nape of the neck and
set to his duty. He sniffled and wept, but Wolf Larsen was pitiless.</p>
<p>“And see that you serve no more slops,” was his parting injunction.
“No more grease and dirt, mind, and a clean shirt occasionally, or
you’ll get a tow over the side. Understand?”</p>
<p>Thomas Mugridge crawled weakly across the galley floor, and a short lurch of
the <i>Ghost</i> sent him staggering. In attempting to recover himself, he
reached for the iron railing which surrounded the stove and kept the pots from
sliding off; but he missed the railing, and his hand, with his weight behind
it, landed squarely on the hot surface. There was a sizzle and odour of burning
flesh, and a sharp cry of pain.</p>
<p>“Oh, Gawd, Gawd, wot ’ave I done?” he wailed; sitting down in
the coal-box and nursing his new hurt by rocking back and forth.
“W’y ’as all this come on me? It mykes me fair sick, it does,
an’ I try so ’ard to go through life ’armless an’
’urtin’ nobody.”</p>
<p>The tears were running down his puffed and discoloured cheeks, and his face was
drawn with pain. A savage expression flitted across it.</p>
<p>“Oh, ’ow I ’ate ’im! ’Ow I ’ate
’im!” he gritted out.</p>
<p>“Whom?” I asked; but the poor wretch was weeping again over his
misfortunes. Less difficult it was to guess whom he hated than whom he did not
hate. For I had come to see a malignant devil in him which impelled him to hate
all the world. I sometimes thought that he hated even himself, so grotesquely
had life dealt with him, and so monstrously. At such moments a great sympathy
welled up within me, and I felt shame that I had ever joyed in his discomfiture
or pain. Life had been unfair to him. It had played him a scurvy trick when it
fashioned him into the thing he was, and it had played him scurvy tricks ever
since. What chance had he to be anything else than he was? And as though
answering my unspoken thought, he wailed:</p>
<p>“I never ’ad no chance, not ’arf a chance! ’Oo was
there to send me to school, or put tommy in my ’ungry belly, or wipe my
bloody nose for me, w’en I was a kiddy? ’Oo ever did anything for
me, heh? ’Oo, I s’y?”</p>
<p>“Never mind, Tommy,” I said, placing a soothing hand on his
shoulder. “Cheer up. It’ll all come right in the end. You’ve
long years before you, and you can make anything you please of yourself.”</p>
<p>“It’s a lie! a bloody lie!” he shouted in my face, flinging
off the hand. “It’s a lie, and you know it. I’m already myde,
an’ myde out of leavin’s an’ scraps. It’s all right for
you, ’Ump. You was born a gentleman. You never knew wot it was to go
’ungry, to cry yerself asleep with yer little belly gnawin’
an’ gnawin’, like a rat inside yer. It carn’t come right. If
I was President of the United Stytes to-morrer, ’ow would it fill my
belly for one time w’en I was a kiddy and it went empty?</p>
<p>“’Ow could it, I s’y? I was born to sufferin’ and
sorrer. I’ve had more cruel sufferin’ than any ten men, I
’ave. I’ve been in orspital arf my bleedin’ life. I’ve
’ad the fever in Aspinwall, in ’Avana, in New Orleans. I near died
of the scurvy and was rotten with it six months in Barbadoes. Smallpox in
’Onolulu, two broken legs in Shanghai, pnuemonia in Unalaska, three
busted ribs an’ my insides all twisted in ’Frisco. An’
’ere I am now. Look at me! Look at me! My ribs kicked loose from my back
again. I’ll be coughin’ blood before eyght bells. ’Ow can it
be myde up to me, I arsk? ’Oo’s goin’ to do it? Gawd?
’Ow Gawd must ’ave ’ated me w’en ’e signed me on
for a voyage in this bloomin’ world of ’is!”</p>
<p>This tirade against destiny went on for an hour or more, and then he buckled to
his work, limping and groaning, and in his eyes a great hatred for all created
things. His diagnosis was correct, however, for he was seized with occasional
sicknesses, during which he vomited blood and suffered great pain. And as he
said, it seemed God hated him too much to let him die, for he ultimately grew
better and waxed more malignant than ever.</p>
<p>Several days more passed before Johnson crawled on deck and went about his work
in a half-hearted way. He was still a sick man, and I more than once observed
him creeping painfully aloft to a topsail, or drooping wearily as he stood at
the wheel. But, still worse, it seemed that his spirit was broken. He was
abject before Wolf Larsen and almost grovelled to Johansen. Not so was the
conduct of Leach. He went about the deck like a tiger cub, glaring his hatred
openly at Wolf Larsen and Johansen.</p>
<p>“I’ll do for you yet, you slab-footed Swede,” I heard him say
to Johansen one night on deck.</p>
<p>The mate cursed him in the darkness, and the next moment some missile struck
the galley a sharp rap. There was more cursing, and a mocking laugh, and when
all was quiet I stole outside and found a heavy knife imbedded over an inch in
the solid wood. A few minutes later the mate came fumbling about in search of
it, but I returned it privily to Leach next day. He grinned when I handed it
over, yet it was a grin that contained more sincere thanks than a multitude of
the verbosities of speech common to the members of my own class.</p>
<p>Unlike any one else in the ship’s company, I now found myself with no
quarrels on my hands and in the good graces of all. The hunters possibly no
more than tolerated me, though none of them disliked me; while Smoke and
Henderson, convalescent under a deck awning and swinging day and night in their
hammocks, assured me that I was better than any hospital nurse, and that they
would not forget me at the end of the voyage when they were paid off. (As
though I stood in need of their money! I, who could have bought them out, bag
and baggage, and the schooner and its equipment, a score of times over!) But
upon me had devolved the task of tending their wounds, and pulling them
through, and I did my best by them.</p>
<p>Wolf Larsen underwent another bad attack of headache which lasted two days. He
must have suffered severely, for he called me in and obeyed my commands like a
sick child. But nothing I could do seemed to relieve him. At my suggestion,
however, he gave up smoking and drinking; though why such a magnificent animal
as he should have headaches at all puzzles me.</p>
<p>“’Tis the hand of God, I’m tellin’ you,” is the
way Louis sees it. “’Tis a visitation for his black-hearted deeds,
and there’s more behind and comin’, or else—”</p>
<p>“Or else,” I prompted.</p>
<p>“God is noddin’ and not doin’ his duty, though it’s me
as shouldn’t say it.”</p>
<p>I was mistaken when I said that I was in the good graces of all. Not only does
Thomas Mugridge continue to hate me, but he has discovered a new reason for
hating me. It took me no little while to puzzle it out, but I finally
discovered that it was because I was more luckily born than
he—“gentleman born,” he put it.</p>
<p>“And still no more dead men,” I twitted Louis, when Smoke and
Henderson, side by side, in friendly conversation, took their first exercise on
deck.</p>
<p>Louis surveyed me with his shrewd grey eyes, and shook his head portentously.
“She’s a-comin’, I tell you, and it’ll be sheets and
halyards, stand by all hands, when she begins to howl. I’ve had the feel
iv it this long time, and I can feel it now as plainly as I feel the rigging iv
a dark night. She’s close, she’s close.”</p>
<p>“Who goes first?” I queried.</p>
<p>“Not fat old Louis, I promise you,” he laughed. “For
’tis in the bones iv me I know that come this time next year I’ll
be gazin’ in the old mother’s eyes, weary with watchin’ iv
the sea for the five sons she gave to it.”</p>
<p>“Wot’s ’e been s’yin’ to yer?” Thomas
Mugridge demanded a moment later.</p>
<p>“That he’s going home some day to see his mother,” I answered
diplomatically.</p>
<p>“I never ’ad none,” was the Cockney’s comment, as he
gazed with lustreless, hopeless eyes into mine.</p>
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