The Floating Light of the Goodwin Sands - Robert Michael Ballantyne 5 стр.


Well, good-bye, Jim, said Mr Welton, senior, as his son moved towards the gangway, when the boat came alongside, all Ive got to say to ee, lad, is, that youre on dangerous ground, and you have no right to shove yourself in the way of temptation.

But I dont shove myself, father; I think I am led in that way. I may be wrong, perhaps, but such is my belief.

Youll not forget that message to my mother, whispered a sickly-looking seaman, whose strong-boned frame appeared to be somewhat attenuated by disease.

Ill not forget, Rainer. Its likely that we shall be in Yarmouth in a couple of days, and you may depend upon my looking up the old woman as soon after I get ashore as possible.

Hallo! hi! shouted a voice from below, wots all the hurry? cried Dick Moy, stumbling hastily up on deck while in the act of closing a letter which bore evidence of having been completed under difficulties, for its form was irregular, and its back was blotted. Here you are, putt that in the post at Yarmouth, will ee, like a good fellow?

Why, youve forgotten the address, exclaimed Jim Welton in affected surprise.

No, I avent. There it is hall right on the back.

What, that blot?

Ay, thats wot stands for Mrs Moy, said Dick, with a good-natured smile.

Sure now, observed Jerry MacGowl, looking earnestly at the letter, it do seem to me, for all the world, as if a cat had drawed his tail across it after stumblin over a ink-bottle.

Dont Mrs Moy live in Ramsgate? inquired Jim Welton.

Of course she do, replied Dick.

But Im not going there; Im goin to Yarmouth, said Jim.

Wot then? retorted Dick, dee suppose the clerk o the post-office at Yarmouth aint as well able to read as the one at Ramsgate, even though the writin do be done with a cats tail? Go along with ee.

Thus dismissed, Jim descended the side and was quickly on board the sloop Nora to which he belonged.

On the deck of the little craft he was received gruffly by a man of powerful frame and stern aspect, but whose massive head, covered with shaggy grey curling hair, seemed to indicate superior powers of intellect. This was Morley Jones, the master and owner of the sloop.

A pretty mess youve made of it; I might have been in Yarmouth by this time, he said, testily.

More likely at the bottom of the sea, answered Jim, quietly, as he went aft and looked at the compassmore from habit than from any desire to receive information from that instrument.

Well, if I had been at the bottom o the sea, what then? Whos to say that I maynt risk my life if I see fit? Its not worth much, he said, gloomily.

You seem to forget that in risking your own life you risk the lives of those who sail along with you, replied Jim, with a bold yet good-humoured look at the skipper.

And what if I do risk their lives?they aint worth much, either, Im sure?

Not to you, Morley, but worth a good deal to themselves, not to mention their wives and families and friends. You know well enough that if I had wished ever so much to return aboard last night your boat could not have got alongside the Gull for the sea. Moreover, you also know that if you had attempted to put to sea in such weather, this leaky tub, with rotten sails and running gear, would have been a wreck on the Goodwin sands before now, and you and I, with the two men and the boy, would have been food for the gulls and fishes.

Not at all, retorted Jones, theres not much fear of our lives here. The lifeboat crews are too active for that; and as to the sloop, why, shes insured you know for her full valuefor more than her value, indeed.

Jones said this with a chuckle and a sly expression in his face, as he glanced meaningly at his companion.

I know nothing about your insurance or your cargo, and, whats more, I dont want to know, said Jim, almost angrily. Youve been at Square-Tom again, he added, suddenly laying his hand upon the shoulder of his companion and looking earnestly into his eyes.

It was now Joness turn to be angry, yet it was evident that he made an effort to restrain his feelings, as he replied, Well, what if I have? Its one thing for you to advise me to become a teetotaller, and its quite another thing for me to agree to do it. I tell you again, as Ive often told you before, Jim Welton, that I dont mean to do it, and Im not going to submit to be warned and reasoned with by you, as if you was my grandfather. I know that drink is the curse of my life, and I know that it will kill me, and that I am a fool for giving way to it, but it is the only thing that makes me able to endure this life; and as for the next, I dont care for it, and I dont believe in it.

But your not believing in it does not make it less certain, replied Jim, quietly, but without any approach to solemnity in his tone or look, for he knew that his companion was not in a mood just then to stand such treatment. You remember the story of the ostrich that was run down? Finding that it could not escape, it stuck its head in the sand and thought that nobody saw it. You may shut your eyes, Morley, but facts remain facts for all that.

Shutting my eyes is just what I am not doing, returned Jones, flinging round and striding to the other side of the deck; then, turning quickly, he strode back, and added, with an oath, have I not told you that I see myself, my position, and my prospects, as clearly as you do, and that I intend to face them all, and take the consequences?

Jim Welton flushed slightly, and his eyes dilated, as he replied

Have you not the sense to see, Morley Jones, that my remonstrances with you are at least disinterested? What would you think if I were to say to you, Go, drink your fill till death finds you at last wallowing on the ground like a beast, or worse than a beast; I leave you to your fate?

I would think that Jim Welton had changed his nature, replied Jones, whose anger disappeared as quickly as it came. I have no objection to your storming at me, Jim. You may swear at me as much as you please, but, for any sake, spare me your reasonings and entreaties, because they only rouse the evil spirit within me, without doing an atom of good; and dont talk of leaving me. Besides, let me tell you, you are not so disinterested in this matter as you think. There is some one in Yarmouth who has something to do with your interest in me.

The young man flushed again at the close of this speech, but not from a feeling of anger. He dropt his eyes before the earnest though unsteady gaze of his half-tipsy companion, who burst into a loud laugh as Jim attempted some stammering reply.

Come, he added, again assuming the stern aspect which was natural to him, but giving Jim a friendly slap on the shoulder, dont let us fall out, Jim you and I dont want to part just now. Moreover, if we have a mind to get the benefit of the tide to-night, the sooner we up anchor the better, so we wont waste any more time talking.

Without waiting for a reply, Mr Jones went forward and called the crew. The anchor was weighed, the sails were set, and the sloop Norabending over before the breeze, as if doing homage in passing her friend the Gull-Lightput to sea, and directed her course for the ancient town and port of Yarmouth.

Chapter Five.

More New Characters Introduced

More New Characters Introduced

If it be true that time and tide wait for no man, it is equally true, we rejoice to know, that authors and readers have a corresponding immunity from shackles, and are in nowise bound to wait for time or tide.

We therefore propose to leave the Gull-stream light, and the Goodwin sands, and the sloop Nora, far behind us, and, skipping a little in advance of Time itself proceed at once to Yarmouth.

Here, in a snug parlour, in an easy chair, before a cheerful fire, with a newspaper in his hand, sat a bluff little elderly gentleman, with a bald head and a fat little countenance, in which benignity appeared to hold perpetual though amicable rivalry with fun.

That the fat little elderly gentleman was eccentric could scarcely be doubted, because he not only looked over his spectacles instead of through them, but also, apparently, read his newspaper upside down. A closer inspection, however, would have shown that he was not reading the paper at all, but looking over the top of it at an object which accounted for much of the benignity, and some of the fun of his expression.

At the opposite side of the table sat a very beautiful girl, stooping over a book, and so earnestly intent thereon as to be evidently quite oblivious of all else around her. She was at that interesting age when romance and reality are supposed to be pretty equally balanced in a well-regulated female mindabout seventeen. Although not classically beautifulher nose being slightly turned upwardshe was, nevertheless, uncommonly pretty, and, as one of her hopeless admirers expressed it, desperately love-able. Jet black ringletsthen in vogueclustered round an exceedingly fair face, on which there dwelt the hue of robust health. Poor Bob Queeker, the hopeless admirer above referred to, would have preferred that she had been somewhat paler and thinner, if that had been possible; but this is not to be wondered at, because Queeker was about sixteen years of age at that time, and wrote sonnets to the moon and other celestial bodies, and also indulged in lines to various terrestrial bodies, such as the lily or the snowdrop, or something equally drooping or pale. Queeker never by any chance addressed the sun, or the red-rose, or anything else suggestive of health and vigour. Yet his melancholy soul could not resist Katie,which was this angels name,because, although she was energetic, and vigorous, and matter-of-fact, not to say slightly mischievous, she was intensely sympathetic and tender in her feelings, and romantic too. But her romance puzzled him. There was something too intense about it for his taste. If he had only once come upon her unawares, and caught her sitting with her hands clasped, gazing in speechless adoration at the moon, or even at a street-lamp, in the event of its being thick weather at the time, his love for her would have been without alloy.

As it was, Queeker thought her desperately love-able, and in his perplexity continued to write sonnets without number to the moon, in which efforts, however, he was singularly unsuccessful, owing to the fact that, after he had gazed at it for a considerable length of time, the orb of night invariably adopted black ringlets and a bright sunny complexion.

George Durantwhich was the name of the bald fat little elderly gentlemanwas Katies father. Looking at them, no one would have thought so, for Katie was tall and graceful in form; and her countenance, except when lighted up with varying emotion, was grave and serene.

As Mr Durant looked at it just then, the gravity had deepened into severity; the pretty eyebrows frowned darkly at the book over which they bent, and the rosy lips represented a compound of pursing and pouting as they moved and muttered something inaudibly.

What is it that puzzles you, Katie? asked her father, laying down the paper.

Sh! whispered Katie, without lifting her head; seventeen, twenty-two, twenty-nine, thirty-six,one pound sixteen;no, I cant get it to balance. Did you ever know such a provoking thing?

She flung down her pencil, and looked full in her fathers face, where fun had, for the time, so thoroughly conquered and overthrown benignity, that the frown vanished from her brow, and the rosy lips expanded to join her sire in a hearty fit of laughter.

If you could only see your own face, Katie, when you are puzzling over these accounts, you would devote yourself ever after to drawing it, instead of those chalk-heads of which you are so fond.

No, I wouldnt, papa, said Katie, whose gravity quickly returned. Its all very well for you to joke about it, and laugh at me, but I can tell you that this account wont balance; there is a two-and-sixpence wrong somewhere, and you know it has to be all copied out and sent off by the evening post to-morrow. I really cant understand why we are called upon to make so many copies of all the accounts and papers for that ridiculous Board of Trade; Im sure they have plenty of idle clerks of their own, without requiring us to slave as we dofor such a wretched salary, too!

Katie shook her curls indignantly, as she thought of the unjust demands and inadequate remuneration of Government, and resumed her work, the frowning brows and pursed coral lips giving evidence of her immediate and total absorption in the accounts.

Old Mr Durant, still holding the newspaper upside down, and looking over the top of it and of his spectacles at the fair accountant, thought in his heart that if the assembled Board, of which his daughter spoke in such contemptuous terms, could only behold her labouring at their books, in order to relieve her father of part of the toil, they would incontinently give orders that he should be thenceforth allowed a salary for a competent clerk, and that all the accounts sent up from Yarmouth should be bound in cloth of gold!

Here it is, papa, Ive got it! exclaimed Katie, looking up with enthusiasm similar to that which might be expected in a youthful sportsman on the occasion of hooking his first salmon. It was the two-and-sixpence which you told me to give to

At that moment the outer door bell rang.

Theres cousin Fanny, oh, Im so glad! exclaimed Katie, shutting up her books and clearing away a multitude of papers with which the table was lumbered; she has promised to stay a week, and has come in time to go with me to the singing class this afternoon. Shes a darling girl, as fond of painting and drawing almost as I am, and hates cats. Oh, I do so love a girl that doesnt like cats. Eh, pussy, shall I tread on your tail?

This question was put to a recumbent cat which lay coiled up in earthly bliss in front of the fire, and which Katie had to pass in carrying her armful of books and papers to the sideboard drawer in which they were wont to repose. She put out her foot as if to carry her threat into execution.

Dare! exclaimed Mr Durant, with whom the cat was a favourite.

Well, then, promise that if Mr Queeker comes to-night you wont let him stay to spoil our fun, said Katie, still holding her foot over the cats unconscious tail.

As she spoke, one of the rather heavy account-books (which ought to have been bound in cloth of gold) slipped off the pile, and, as ill luck would have it, fell on the identical tail in question, the cat belonging to which sprang up with a fierce caterwaul in rampant indignation.

Oh, papa, you know I didnt mean it.

Mr Durants eyes twinkled with amusement as he beheld the sudden change of poor Katies expression to intense earnestness, but before he could reply the door was thrown open; cousin Fanny rushed in, the cat rushed out, the two young ladies rushed into each others arms, and went in a species of ecstatic waltz up-stairs to enjoy the delights of a private interview, leaving Mr Durant to sink into the arms of his easy chair and resume his paperthis time with the right side up!

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