Chance - Page 170/275

The morning was clear, colourless, grey overhead; the dock like a sheet

of darkling glass crowded with upside-down reflections of warehouses, of

hulls and masts of silent ships. Rare figures moved here and there on

the distant quays. A knot of men stood alongside with clothes-bags and

wooden chests at their feet. Others were coming down the lane between

tall, blind walls, surrounding a hand-cart loaded with more bags and

boxes. It was the crew of the Ferndale. They began to come on board.

He scanned their faces as they passed forward filling the roomy deck with

the shuffle of their footsteps and the murmur of voices, like the

awakening to life of a world about to be launched into space.

Far away down the clear glassy stretch in the middle of the long dock Mr.

Powell watched the tugs coming in quietly through the open gates. A

subdued firm voice behind him interrupted this contemplation. It was

Franklin, the thick chief mate, who was addressing him with a watchful

appraising stare of his prominent black eyes: "You'd better take a couple

of these chaps with you and look out for her aft. We are going to cast

off."

"Yes, sir," Powell said with proper alacrity; but for a moment they

remained looking at each other fixedly. Something like a faint smile

altered the set of the chief mate's lips just before he moved off forward

with his brisk step.

Mr. Powell, getting up on the poop, touched his cap to Captain Anthony,

who was there alone. He tells me that it was only then that he saw his

captain for the first time. The day before, in the shipping office, what

with the bad light and his excitement at this berth obtained as if by a

brusque and unscrupulous miracle, did not count. He had then seemed to

him much older and heavier. He was surprised at the lithe figure, broad

of shoulder, narrow at the hips, the fire of the deep-set eyes, the

springiness of the walk. The captain gave him a steady stare, nodded

slightly, and went on pacing the poop with an air of not being aware of

what was going on, his head rigid, his movements rapid.

Powell stole several glances at him with a curiosity very natural under

the circumstances. He wore a short grey jacket and a grey cap. In the

light of the dawn, growing more limpid rather than brighter, Powell

noticed the slightly sunken cheeks under the trimmed beard, the

perpendicular fold on the forehead, something hard and set about the

mouth.

It was too early yet for the work to have begun in the dock. The water

gleamed placidly, no movement anywhere on the long straight lines of the

quays, no one about to be seen except the few dock hands busy alongside

the Ferndale, knowing their work, mostly silent or exchanging a few

words in low tones as if they, too, had been aware of that lady 'who

mustn't be disturbed.' The Ferndale was the only ship to leave that

tide. The others seemed still asleep, without a sound, and only here and

there a figure, coming up on the forecastle, leaned on the rail to watch

the proceedings idly. Without trouble and fuss and almost without a

sound was the Ferndale leaving the land, as if stealing away. Even the

tugs, now with their engines stopped, were approaching her without a

ripple, the burly-looking paddle-boat sheering forward, while the other,

a screw, smaller and of slender shape, made for her quarter so gently

that she did not divide the smooth water, but seemed to glide on its

surface as if on a sheet of plate-glass, a man in her bow, the master at

the wheel visible only from the waist upwards above the white screen of

the bridge, both of them so still-eyed as to fascinate young Powell into

curious self-forgetfulness and immobility. He was steeped, sunk in the

general quietness, remembering the statement 'she's a lady that mustn't

be disturbed,' and repeating to himself idly: 'No. She won't be

disturbed. She won't be disturbed.' Then the first loud words of that

morning breaking that strange hush of departure with a sharp hail: 'Look

out for that line there,' made him start. The line whizzed past his

head, one of the sailors aft caught it, and there was an end to the

fascination, to the quietness of spirit which had stolen on him at the

very moment of departure. From that moment till two hours afterwards,

when the ship was brought up in one of the lower reaches of the Thames

off an apparently uninhabited shore, near some sort of inlet where

nothing but two anchored barges flying a red flag could be seen, Powell

was too busy to think of the lady 'that mustn't be disturbed,' or of his

captain--or of anything else unconnected with his immediate duties. In

fact, he had no occasion to go on the poop, or even look that way much;

but while the ship was about to anchor, casting his eyes in that

direction, he received an absurd impression that his captain (he was up

there, of course) was sitting on both sides of the aftermost skylight at

once. He was too occupied to reflect on this curious delusion, this

phenomenon of seeing double as though he had had a drop too much. He

only smiled at himself.