were no whispers in it; it was more like
visions. He saw that girl
hanging round the neck of a low
vagabond - that
vagabond, the
vagabond who had just answered his hail. He saw her stealing bare-
footed across a verandah with great, clear, wide-open, eager eyes
to look at a brig - that brig. If she had shrieked, scolded,
called names! . . . But she had simply triumphed over him. That
was all. Led on (he
firmly believed it), fooled, deceived,
outraged, struck, mocked at. . . . Beak and claws! The two men, so
differently
haunted by Freya of the Seven Isles, were not equally
matched.
In the
intensestillness, as of sleep, which had fallen upon the
two vessels, in a world that itself seemed but a
delicate dream, a
boat pulled by Javanese sailors crossing the dark lane of water
came
alongside the brig. The white
warrant officer in her, perhaps
the
gunner, climbed
aboard. He was a short man, with a rotund
stomach and a wheezy voice. His
immovable fat face looked
lifelessin the
moonlight, and he walked with his thick arms
hanging away
from his body as though he had been stuffed. His
cunning little
eyes glittered like bits of mica. He conveyed to Jasper, in broken
English, a request to come on board the Neptun.
Jasper had not expected anything so
unusual. But after a short
reflection he
decided to show neither
annoyance, nor even surprise.
The river from which he had come had been politically disturbed for
a couple of years, and he was aware that his visits there were
looked upon with some
suspicion. But he did not mind much the
displeasure of the authorities, so terrifying to old Nelson. He
prepared to leave the brig, and Schultz followed him to the rail as
if to say something, but in the end stood by in silence. Jasper
getting over the side, noticed his
ghastly face. The eyes of the
man who had found
salvation in the brig from the effects of his
peculiar
psychology looked at him with a dumb, beseeching
expression.
"What's the matter?" Jasper asked.
"I wonder how this will end?" said he of the beautiful voice, which
had even fascinated the steady Freya herself. But where was its
charming timbre now? These words had sounded like a raven's croak.
"You are ill," said Jasper positively.
"I wish I were dead!" was the
startling statement uttered by
Schultz talking to himself in the
extremity of some mysterious
trouble. Jasper gave him a keen glance, but this was not the time
to
investigate the morbid
outbreak of a
feverish man. He did not
look as though he were
actually delirious, and that for the moment
must
suffice. Schultz made a dart forward.
"That fellow means harm!" he said
desperately. "He means harm to
you, Captain Allen. I feel it, and I - "
He choked with
inexplicable emotion.
"All right, Schultz. I won't give him an opening." Jasper cut him
short and swung himself into the boat.
On board the Neptun Heemskirk,
standing straddle-legs in the flood
of
moonlight, his inky shadow falling right across the quarter-
deck, made no sign at his approach, but
secretly he felt something
like the heave of the sea in his chest at the sight of that man.
Jasper waited before him in silence.
Brought face to face in direct personal
contact, they fell at once
into the manner of their
casual meetings in old Nelson's bungalow.
They ignored each other's
existence - Heemskirk moodily; Jasper,
with a
perfectlycolourless quietness.
"What's going on in that river you've just come out of?" asked the
lieutenant straight away.
"I know nothing of the troubles, if you mean that," Jasper
answered. "I've landed there half a cargo of rice, for which I got
nothing in exchange, and went away. There's no trade there now,
but they would have been starving in another week - if I hadn't
turned up."
"Meddling! English meddling! And suppose the rascals don't
deserve anything better than to
starve, eh?"
"There are women and children there, you know," observed Jasper, in
his even tone.
"Oh, yes! When an Englishman talks of women and children, you may
be sure there's something fishy about the business. Your doings
will have to be
investigated."
They spoke in turn, as though they had been disembodied spirits -
mere voices in empty air; for they looked at each other as if there
had been nothing there, or, at most, with as much
recognition as
one gives to an inanimate object, and no more. But now a silence
fell. Heemskirk had thought, all at once: "She will tell him all
about it. She will tell him while she hangs round his neck
laughing." And the sudden desire to
annihilate Jasper on the spot
almost deprived him of his senses by its
vehemence. He lost the
power of speech, of
vision. For a moment he
absolutely couldn't
see Jasper. But he heard him inquiring, as of the world at large:
"Am I, then, to conclude that the brig is detained?"
Heemskirk made a
recovery in a flush of
malignant satisfaction.
"She is. I am going to take her to Makassar in tow."
"The courts will have to decide on the legality of this," said
Jasper, aware that the matter was becoming serious, but with
assumed indifference.
"Oh, yes, the courts! Certainly. And as to you, I shall keep you
on board here."
Jasper's
dismay at being parted from his ship was betrayed by a
stony immobility. It lasted but an
instant. Then he turned away
and hailed the brig. Mr. Schultz answered:
"Yes, sir."
"Get ready to receive a tow-rope from the gunboat! We are going to
be taken to Makassar."
"Good God! What's that for, sir?" came an
anxious cry faintly.
"Kindness, I suppose," Jasper, ironical, shouted with great
deliberation. "We might have been - becalmed in here - for days.
And
hospitality. I am invited to stay - on board here."
The answer to this information was a loud ejaculation of distress.
Jasper thought
anxiously: "Why, the fellow's nerve's gone to
pieces;" and with an
awkwarduneasiness of a new sort, looked
intently at the brig. The thought that he was parted from her -
for the first time since they came together - shook the
apparentlycareless
fortitude of his
character to its very foundations, which
were deep. All that time neither Heemskirk nor even his inky
shadow had stirred in the least.
"I am going to send a boat's crew and an officer on board your
vessel," he announced to no one in particular. Jasper, tearing
himself away from the absorbed
contemplation of the brig, turned
round, and, without
passion, almost without expression in his
voice, entered his protest against the whole of the proceedings.
What he was thinking of was the delay. He counted the days.
Makassar was
actually on his way; and to be towed there really
saved time. On the other hand, there would be some vexing
formalities to go through. But the thing was too
absurd. "The
beetle's gone mad," he thought. "I'll be released at once. And if
not, Mesman must enter into a bond for me." Mesman was a Dutch
merchant with whom Jasper had had many dealings, a considerable
person in Makassar.
"You protest? H'm!" Heemskirk muttered, and for a little longer
remained
motionless, his legs planted well apart, and his head
lowered as though he were studying his own
comical, deeply-split
shadow. Then he made a sign to the rotund
gunner, who had kept at
hand,
motionless, like a vilely-stuffed
specimen of a fat man, with
a
lifeless face and glittering little eyes. The fellow approached,
and stood at attention.
"You will board the brig with a boat's crew!"
"Ya, mynherr!"
"You will have one of your men to steer her all the time," went on