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The Ghost Pirates and Other Revenants of the Sea

Page 61

by William Hope Hodgson


  After a little, I ventured to draw his attention to what Williams had said about getting aboard the yacht before the light had all gone. At that, he gave an absent nod of assent, and walked towards the side, followed by Williams and myself. A minute later we were in the boat and heading out for the open sea.

  During the night, there being no safe anchorage, the yacht was kept off, it being Trenhern’s intention to land upon Middle Islet and search for any trace of the lost crew of the Happy Return. If that produced nothing, he was going to make a thorough exploration of Nightingale Island and the Islet of Stoltenkoff before abandoning all hopes.

  The first portion of this plan he commenced to put into execution as soon as it was dawn; for his impatience was too great to allow of his waiting longer.

  Yet before we landed on the Islet, he bade Williams take the boat into the cove. He had a belief, which affected me somewhat, that he might find the crew and his sweetheart returned to the vessel. He suggested to me—searching my face all the while for mutual hope—that they had been absent on the preceding day, perhaps on an expedition to the Island in search of vegetable food. And I (remembering the date of the calendar) was able to look at him encouragingly; though had it not been for that, I should have been helpless to aid his belief.

  We entered through the passage into that great pit among the cliffs. The ship, as we ranged alongside of her, showed wan and unreal in the grey light of the mist-shrouded dawn; yet this we noticed little then, for Trenhern’s visible excitement and hope was becoming infectious. It was he who now led the way down into the twilight of the saloon. Once there, Williams and I hesitated with a certain natural awe, whilst Trenhern walked across to the door of his sweetheart’s room. He raised his hand and knocked, and in the succeeding stillness, I heard my heart beat loud and fast. There was no reply, and he again rapped with his knuckles on the panels, the sounds echoing hollowly through the empty saloon and cabins. I felt almost sick with the suspense of waiting; then abruptly, he seized the handle, turned it, and threw the door wide. I heard him give a sort of groan. The little cabin was empty. The next instant, he gave out a shout, and reappeared in the saloon holding the same little calendar. He ran to me and pushed it into my hands with an inarticulate cry. I looked at it. When Trenhern had shown it to me the preceding day it had been showing the date 27th.; now it had heen altered to the 28th.

  “What’s it mean, Henshaw? what’s it mean?” he asked helplessly.

  I shook my head. “Sure you didn’t alter it yesterday—by accident?”

  “I’m quite sure!” he said.

  “What are they playing at?” he went on. “There’s no sense in it—” He paused a moment; then again:— “What’s it mean?”

  “God knows.” I muttered. “I’m stumped.”

  “You mean sumone’s been in ’ere since yesterday?” inquired Williams at this point.

  I nodded.

  “Be Gum then, Sir,” he said, “it’s ghostses!”

  “Hold your tongue, Williams!” cried my friend, turning savagely upon him.

  Williams said nothing, but walked toward the door. “Where are you going?” I asked.

  “On deck, Sir,” he replied. “I didn’t sign on for this ’ere trip to ’ave no truck with sperrets!” and he stumbled up the companion stairway.

  Trenhern seemed to have taken to notice of these last remarks; for when next he spoke he appeared to be following out a train of thought.

  “See here,” he said. “They’re not living aboard here at all. That’s plain. They’ve some reason for keeping away. They’re hiding somewhere—perhaps in a cave.”

  “What about the calendar then. You think—?”

  “Yes, I’ve an idea that they may come aboard here at night. There may be something that keeps them away during the daylight. Perhaps some wild beast, or something; and they would be seen in the daytime.”

  I shook my head. It was all so improbable. If there was something that could get at them aboard the ship, lying as it did surrounded by the sea, at the bottom of the great pit among the cliffs, then it seemed to me that they would nowhere be safe; besides, they could stay below decks during the day, and I could conceive of nothing that could reach them there. A multitude of other objections rose in my mind. And then I knew perfectly well that there were no wild beasts of any description on the Islands. No! obviously it could not be explained in that manner. And yet—there was the unaccountable altering of the calendar. I ended my line of reasoning in a fog. It seemed useless to apply any ordinary sense to the problem, and I turned once more to Trenhern.

  “Well,” I said, “there’s nothing here, and there may be something, after all, in what you say; though I’m hanged if I can make head or tail of anything.”

  We left the saloon and went on deck. Here we walked forward and glanced into the fo’cas’le; but, as I had expected, found nothing. After that we bundled down into the boat, and proceeded to search Middle Islet. To do this, we had to pull out of the cove and round the coast a bit to find a suitable landing place.

  As soon as we had landed, we pulled the boat up into a safe place, and arranged the order of the search. Williams and I were to take a couple of the men apiece, and go right round the coast in opposite directions until we met, examining on the way all the caves that we came across. Trenhern was to make a journey to the summit, and survey the Islet from there.

  Williams and I accomplished our part, and met close to where we had hauled up the boat. He reported nothing, and so did I. Of Trenhern we could see no trace, and presently, as he did not appear, I told Williams to stay by the boat while I went up the height to look for him. Soon I reached the top and found that I was standing upon the brink of the great pit in which lay the wreck. I glanced round and there away to the left, I saw my friend lying on his stomach with his head over the edge of the chasm, evidently staring down at the hulk.

  “Trenhern,” I called softly, not wanting to startle him.

  He raised his head and looked in my direction; seeing me, he beckoned, and I hurried to his side.

  “Bend down,” he said in a low voice. “I want you to look at something.”

  As I got down beside him, I gave a quick glance at his face; it was very pale; then I had my face over the brink and was staring into the gloomy depth below.

  “See what I mean?” he asked, still speaking scarcely above a whisper.

  “No,” I said. “Where?”

  “There,” he answered, pointing. “In the water on the starboard side of the Happy Return.”

  Looking in the direction indicated, I now made out in the water close alongside the wreck several pale, oval-shaped objects. “Fish,” I said. “What queer ones!”

  “No!” he replied. “Faces!”

  “What!”

  “Faces!”

  I got up on to my knees and looked at him.

  “My dear Trenhern, you’re letting this matter affect you too deeply— You know you have my deepest sympathy. But—”

  “See,” he interrupted, “they’re moving, they’re watching us!” He spoke quietly, utterly ignoring my protest.

  I bent forward again and looked. As he had said, they were moving, and as I peered, a sudden idea came to me. I stood up abruptly.

  “I have it!” I cried excitedly. “If I’m right it may account for their leaving the ship. I wonder we never thought of it before!”

  “What?” he asked in a weary voice, and without raising his face.

  “Well, in the first place, old man, those are not faces, as you very well know; but I’ll tell you what they very likely are, they’re the tentacles of some sort of sea monster, Kraken, of devil-fish—something of that sort. I can quite imagine a creature of the kind haunting that place down there, and I can equally well understand that if your sweetheart and the crew of the Happy Return are alive, they’ll be inclined to give their old packet a pretty wide berth if I am right—eh?”

  By the time I had finished explaining my solution of the mystery,
Trenhern was upon his feet. The sanity had returned to his eyes, and there was a flush of half-suppressed excitement on his hitherto pale cheeks.

  “But—but—but—the calendar?” he breathed.

  “Well, they may venture aboard at night, or in certain states of the tides, when, perhaps they have found there is little danger. Of course, I can’t say; but it seems probable, and what more natural than that they should keep count of the days, or it may have just been put forward thoughtlessly in passing. It may even be your sweetheart counting the days since she was parted from you.”

  I turned and peered once more over the edge of the cliff; the floating shapes had vanished. Then Trenhern was pulling at my arm.

  “Come along, Henshaw, come along. We’ll go right back to the yacht and get some weapons. I’m going to slaughter that brute if he shows up.”

  An hour later we were back with a couple of the yacht’s boats and their crews, the men being armed with cutlasses, harpoons, pistols and axes. Trenhern and I had each chosen a heavy shellgun.

  The boats were left alongside, and the men ordered aboard the wreck; and there, having brought sufficient food, they picnicked for the rest of the day, keeping a keen watch for signs of anything.

  Yet when the night drew near, they manifested considerable uneasiness; finally sending the old whaler aft to tell Trenhern that they would not stay aboard the Happy Return after dark; they would obey any order he chose to give in the yacht; but they had not signed on to stay aboard of a ghost-ridden craft at night.

  Having heard Williams out, my friend told him to take the men off to the yacht; but to come back in one of the boats with some bedding, as he and I were going to stay the night aboard the hulk. This was the first I had heard on the matter; but when I remonstrated with him, he told me I was at perfect liberty to return to the yacht. For his part he had determined to stay and see if anyone came.

  Of course after that, I had to stay. Presently they returned with the bedding, and having received orders from my friend to come for us at day-break, they left us there alone for the night.

  We carried down our bedding and made it up on the saloon table; then we went on deck and paced the poop, smoking and talking earnestly—anon listening; but nothing came to our ears save the low voice of the sea beyond the kelp-belts. We carried our guns; for we had no knowledge but that they might be needed. Yet the time passed quietly, except once when Trenhern dropped the butt of his weapon upon the deck somewhat heavily. Then indeed, from all the cliffs around us, there came back a low hollow boom that was frightening. It was like the growl of a great beast. At the bottom of that tremendous pit it presently became exceedingly dark. So far as I could judge, a mist had come down upon the Islet and formed a sort of huge lid to the pit. It was about twelve o’clock that we went below. I think by that time even Trenhern had begun to realise that there was a certain rashness in our having stayed; and below, at least, if we were attacked, we would be better able to hold our own. Somehow such vague fear as I had was not induced by the thought of the great monster I believed I had seen close to the vessel during the day; but rather by an unnameable something in the very air, as though the atmosphere of the place were a medium of terror. Yet—calming myself with an effort—I put down this feeling to my nerves being at tension; so that presently, Trenhern offering to take the first watch, I fell asleep on the saloon table, leaving him sitting beside me with his gun across his knees.

  Then as I slept, a dream came to me—so extraordinarily vivid was it that it seemed almost I was awake. I dreamt that all of a sudden Trenhern gave a little gasp and leapt to his feet. In the same moment, I heard a soft voice call “Tren! Tren!” It came from the direction of the saloon doorway, and—in my dream—I turned and saw a most beautiful face, containing great wondrous eyes. “An angel!” I whispered to myself; then I knew that I was mistaken and that it was the face of Trenhern’s sweetheart. I had seen her once just before she sailed. From her, my gaze wandered to Trenhern. He had laid his gun upon the table, and now his arms were extended towards her. I heard her whisper “Come!” and then he was beside her. Her arms went about him, and then, together, they passed out through the doorway. I heard his feet upon the stairs, and after that my sleep became a blank, dreamless rest.

  I was aroused by a terrible scream, so dreadful that I seemed to wake rather to death than life. For perhaps the half of a minute I sat up upon my bedding, motionless in a very frost of fear; but no further sound came to me, and so my blood ran warm once more, and I reached out my hand for my gun. I grasped it, shook the clothes from me and sprang to the floor. The saloon was filled with a faint grey light which filtered in through the skylight overhead. It was just sufficient to show me that Trenhern was not present, and that his gun was upon the table, just where I had seen him place it in my dream. At that, I called his name quickly; but the only answer I received was a hollow, ghostly echo from the surrounding empty cabins. Then I ran for the door, and so up the stairs onto the deck. Here, in the gloomy twilight, I glanced along the bare decks; but he was nowhere visible. I raised my voice and shouted. The grim, circling cliffs caught up the name and echoed it a thousand times, until it seemed that a multitude of demons shouted “Trenhern! Trenhern! Trenhern!” from the surrounding gloom. I ran to the port side and glanced over—Nothing! I flew to starboard; my eyes caught something—many things that floated apparently just below the surface of the water. I stared, and my heart seemed suddenly quiet in my bosom. I was looking at a score of pale, unearthly faces that stared back at me with sad eyes. They appeared to sway and quiver in the water; but otherwise there was no movement. I must have stood thus for many minutes; for, abruptly, I heard the sound of oars, and then round the quarter of the vessel swept the boat from the yacht.

  “In bow, there,” I heard Williams shout. “ ’ere we are, Sir!” The boat grated against the side.

  “ ’ow ’ave” Williams began; but it seemed to me that I had seen something coming to me along the deck, and I gave out one scream and leapt for the boat. I landed on a thwart.

  “Push off! Push off!” I yelled, and seized an oar to help.

  “Mr. Tren’ern, Sir?” interjected Williams.

  “He’s dead!” I shouted. “Push her off! Push her off!” and the men, infected by my fear, pushed and rowed until, in a few moments we were a score of yards distant from her. Here there was an instant’s pause.

  “Take her out, Williams!” I called, crazy with the thing upon which I had stumbled. “Take her out!” And at that, he steered for the passage into the open sea. This took us close past the stern of the wreck, and as we passed beneath, I looked up at the overhanging mass. As I did so, a dim, beauteous face came over the taffrail, and looked at me with great sorrowful eyes. She stretched out her arms to me, and I screamed aloud; for her hands were like unto the talons of a wild beast.

  As I fell fainting, Williams’s voice came to me in a hoarse bellow of sheer terror. He was shouting to the men:—

  “Pull! Pull! Pull!”

  The Riven Night

  Captain Ronaldson had lost his wife. This much we knew, and when the stern-visaged man came aboard to take command, it was I, the eldest apprentice, who stood at the gangway and passed his “things” aboard. One quick glance I have in his face as he passed me, and the world of sorrow that lurked in those sombre eyes touched me with a feeling of intense pity; though I knew little, save that he had lost his wife after a brief space of married life. Afterwards I learnt something of their story. How he had fought and saved to make sufficient to marry the woman he loved. How for her sake he had lived straightly and honourably, working at his profession until at last he had obtained a Master’s certificate. Then they had married, and for six brief weeks’ joy had been theirs; and now—this!

  During our outward voyage the Captain was grimly silent. He acted like one who had lost all interest in life. As a result, the two Mates after a few attempts to draw him into conversation left him pretty much to himself, which indeed was what
he apparently desired.

  We reached Melbourne after an uneventful voyage and, having discharged and reloaded, commenced the homeward passage: the strangest and weirdest, surely, that ever man took. Even now, I scarce know what was real and what not. Sometimes I’m almost persuaded that the whole dread incident was a fearsome dream, were it not that the things which happened (things I cannot explain away) have left all too real and lasting traces.

  We had a tedious passage with continual headwinds, heavy gales, and long calms, and it was during one of these that the strange thing I have to tell of befell.

  We had been out a hundred and forty-three days. The heat had been stifling, and thankful I was when night came, bringing its shade from the oppression.

  It was my “timekeeping,” and I walked the lee side of the poop sleepily.

  Suddenly the Second Mate called me up to wind’ard. “Just have a squint over there, Hodgson; I seemed to see something just now,” and he pointed out into the gloom about four points on the port bow.

  I looked steadily for some minutes but could see nothing. Then there grew out of the darkness a faint, nebulous light of a distinctly violet hue. “There’s something over there, Sir,” I said. “It looks like one of those corpse-candles.”

  The Second had another long look, and then went for his nightglasses. For some time after, he watched the thing at intervals, taking short hurried strides up and down the poop between whiles. Evidently he was puzzled; so was I for that matter. The light was not that of another vessel; it appeared to be, as I have just said, more of the nature of a corposant, or “corpse-candle.”

  Presently the hail of the “lookout” came hollowly aft. “Light on the port bow, Sir.”

  “Thanks for nothing,” I heard the Second Mate mutter: then louder, “Aye, Aye.”

  There was not a breath of wind. The “courses” had been hauled up to prevent chafing, and we were lying silently in the night.

  A little later, after a prolonged gaze, the Second again called me to him and asked if I thought the light any plainer. “Yes, Sir,” I replied. “It’s much plainer and larger too, Sir.”

 

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