The skipper of the Sephora had a thin red whisker all round his face, and the sort of complexion that goes with hair of that color;also the particular, rather smeary shade of blue in the eyes.
He was not exactly a showy figure; his shoulders were high, his stature but middling--one leg slightly more bandy than the other.He shook hands, looking vaguely around.
A spiritless tenacity was his main characteristic, I judged.
I behaved with a politeness which seemed to disconcert him.
Perhaps he was shy.He mumbled to me as if he were ashamed of what he was saying; gave his name (it was something like Archbold--but at this distance of years I hardly am sure), his ship's name, and a few other particulars of that sort, in the manner of a criminal making a reluctant and doleful confession.
He had had terrible weather on the passage out--terrible--terrible--wife aboard, too.
By this time we were seated in the cabin and the steward brought in a tray with a bottle and glasses."Thanks! No." Never took liquor.
Would have some water, though.He drank two tumblerfuls.
Terrible thirsty work.Ever since daylight had been exploring the islands round his ship.
"What was that for--fun?" I asked, with an appearance of polite interest.
"No!" He sighed."Painful duty."
As he persisted in his mumbling and I wanted my double to hear every word, I hit upon the notion of informing him that I regretted to say I was hard of hearing.
"Such a young man, too!" he nodded, keeping his smeary blue, unintelligent eyes fastened upon me."What was the cause of it--some disease?" he inquired, without the least sympathy and as if he thought that, if so, I'd got no more than I deserved.
"Yes; disease," I admitted in a cheerful tone which seemed to shock him.
But my point was gained, because he had to raise his voice to give me his tale.It is not worth while to record his version.
It was just over two months since all this had happened, and he had thought so much about it that he seemed completely muddled as to its bearings, but still immensely impressed.
"What would you think of such a thing happening on board your own ship?
I've had the Sephora for these fifteen years.I am a well-known shipmaster."He was densely distressed--and perhaps I should have sympathized with him if I had been able to detach my mental vision from the unsuspected sharer of my cabin as though he were my second self.There he was on the other side of the bulkhead, four or five feet from us, no more, as we sat in the saloon.
I looked politely at Captain Archbold (if that was his name), but it was the other I saw, in a gray sleeping suit, seated on a low stool, his bare feet close together, his arms folded, and every word said between us falling into the ears of his dark head bowed on his chest.
"I have been at sea now, man and boy, for seven-and-thirty years, and I've never heard of such a thing happening in an English ship.
And that it should be my ship.Wife on board, too."I was hardly listening to him.
"Don't you think," I said, "that the heavy sea which, you told me, came aboard just then might have killed the man?
I have seen the sheer weight of a sea kill a man very neatly, by simply breaking his neck.""Good God!" he uttered, impressively, fixing his smeary blue eyes on me.
"The sea! No man killed by the sea ever looked like that."He seemed positively scandalized at my suggestion.And as I gazed at him certainly not prepared for anything original on his part, he advanced his head close to mine and thrust his tongue out at me so suddenly that I couldn't help starting back.
After scoring over my calmness in this graphic way he nodded wisely.
If I had seen the sight, he assured me, I would never forget it as long as I lived.The weather was too bad to give the corpse a proper sea burial.
So next day at dawn they took it up on the poop, covering its face with a bit of bunting; he read a short prayer, and then, just as it was, in its oilskins and long boots, they launched it amongst those mountainous seas that seemed ready every moment to swallow up the ship herself and the terrified lives on board of her.
"That reefed foresail saved you," I threw in.
"Under God--it did," he exclaimed fervently."It was by a special mercy, I firmly believe, that it stood some of those hurricane squalls.""It was the setting of that sail which--" I began.
"God's own hand in it," he interrupted me."Nothing less could have done it.
I don't mind telling you that I hardly dared give the order.
It seemed impossible that we could touch anything without losing it, and then our last hope would have been gone."The terror of that gale was on him yet.I let him go on for a bit, then said, casually--as if returning to a minor subject:
"You were very anxious to give up your mate to the shore people, I believe?"He was.To the law.His obscure tenacity on that point had in it something incomprehensible and a little awful; something, as it were, mystical, quite apart from his anxiety that he should not be suspected of "countenancing any doings of that sort."Seven-and-thirty virtuous years at sea, of which over twenty of immaculate command, and the last fifteen in the Sephora, seemed to have laid him under some pitiless obligation.
"And you know," he went on, groping shame-facedly amongst his feelings, "I did not engage that young fellow.His people had some interest with my owners.I was in a way forced to take him on.
He looked very smart, very gentlemanly, and all that.
But do you know--I never liked him, somehow.I am a plain man.
You see, he wasn't exactly the sort for the chief mate of a ship like the Sephora."I had become so connected in thoughts and impressions with the secret sharer of my cabin that I felt as if I, personally, were being given to understand that I, too, was not the sort that would have done for the chief mate of a ship like the Sephora.
I had no doubt of it in my mind.
"Not at all the style of man.You understand," he insisted, superfluously, looking hard at me.
I smiled urbanely.He seemed at a loss for a while.
"I suppose I must report a suicide."
"Beg pardon?"