Chance - Page 171/275

As often happens after a grey daybreak the sun had risen in a warm and

glorious splendour above the smooth immense gleam of the enlarged

estuary. Wisps of mist floated like trails of luminous dust, and in the

dazzling reflections of water and vapour, the shores had the murky semi-

transparent darkness of shadows cast mysteriously from below. Powell,

who had sailed out of London all his young seaman's life, told me that it

was then, in a moment of entranced vision an hour or so after sunrise,

that the river was revealed to him for all time, like a fair face often

seen before, which is suddenly perceived to be the expression of an inner

and unsuspected beauty, of that something unique and only its own which

rouses a passion of wonder and fidelity and an unappeasable memory of its

charm. The hull of the Ferndale, swung head to the eastward, caught

the light, her tall spars and rigging steeped in a bath of red-gold, from

the water-line full of glitter to the trucks slight and gleaming against

the delicate expanse of the blue.

"Time we had a mouthful to eat," said a voice at his side. It was Mr.

Franklin, the chief mate, with his head sunk between his shoulders, and

melancholy eyes. "Let the men have their breakfast, bo'sun," he went on,

"and have the fire out in the galley in half an hour at the latest, so

that we can call these barges of explosives alongside. Come along, young

man. I don't know your name. Haven't seen the captain, to speak to,

since yesterday afternoon when he rushed off to pick up a second mate

somewhere. How did he get you?"

Young Powell, a little shy notwithstanding the friendly disposition of

the other, answered him smilingly, aware somehow that there was something

marked in this inquisitiveness, natural, after all--something anxious.

His name was Powell, and he was put in the way of this berth by Mr.

Powell, the shipping master. He blushed.

"Ah, I see. Well, you have been smart in getting ready. The

ship-keeper, before he went away, told me you joined at one o'clock. I

didn't sleep on board last night. Not I. There was a time when I never

cared to leave this ship for more than a couple of hours in the evening,

even while in London, but now, since--"

He checked himself with a roll of his prominent eyes towards that

youngster, that stranger. Meantime, he was leading the way across the

quarter-deck under the poop into the long passage with the door of the

saloon at the far end. It was shut. But Mr. Franklin did not go so far.

After passing the pantry he opened suddenly a door on the left of the

passage, to Powell's great surprise.