"Take this - and this - and this - " till suddenly her arms fell.
She had seen the
ensign dipped in
response, and next moment the
point below hid the hull of the brig from her view. Then she
turned away from the balustrade, and, passing slowly before the
door of her father's room with her eyelids lowered, and an
enigmatic expression on her face, she disappeared behind the
curtain.
But instead of going along the passage, she remained concealed and
very still on the other side to watch what would happen. For some
time the broad, furnished verandah remained empty. Then the door
of old Nelson's room came open suddenly, and Heemskirk staggered
out. His hair was rumpled, his eyes bloodshot, his unshaven face
looked very dark. He gazed wildly about, saw his cap on a table,
snatched it up, and made for the stairs quietly, but with a
strange, tottering gait, like the last effort of waning strength.
Shortly after his head had sunk below the level of the floor, Freya
came out from behind the curtain, with
compressed,
scheming lips,
and no
softness at all in her
luminous eyes. He could not be
allowed to sneak off scot free. Never - never! She was excited,
she tingled all over, she had tasted blood! He must be made to
understand that she had been aware of having been watched; he must
know that he had been seen slinking off shamefully. But to run to
the front rail and shout after him would have been
childish, crude
- undignified. And to shout - what? What word? What
phrase? No;
it was impossible. Then how? . . . She frowned, discovered it,
dashed at the piano, which had stood open all night, and made the
rosewood
monster growl savagery in an irritated bass. She struck
chords as if firing shots after that straddling, broad figure in
ample white
trousers and a dark uniform
jacket with gold shoulder-
straps, and then she pursued him with the same thing she had played
the evening before - a modern,
fierce piece of love music which had
been tried more than once against the thunderstorms of the group.
She accentuated its
rhythm with
triumphantmalice, so absorbed in
her purpose that she did not notice the presence of her father,
who, wearing an old threadbare ulster of a check pattern over his
sleeping suit, had run out from the back verandah to inquire the
reason of this
untimelyperformance. He stared at her.
"What on earth? . . . Freya!" His voice was nearly drowned by the
piano. "What's become of the
lieutenant?" he shouted.
She looked up at him as if her soul were lost in her music, with
un
seeing eyes.
"Gone."
"Wha-a-t? . . . Where?"
She shook her head
lightly" target="_blank" title="ad.轻微地;细长的">
slightly, and went on playing louder than
before. Old Nelson's
innocentlyanxious gaze starting from the
open door of his room, explored the whole place high and low, as if
the
lieutenant were something small which might have been crawling
on the floor or clinging to a wall. But a
shrillwhistle coming
somewhere from below pierced the ample
volume of sound rolling out
of the piano in great, vibrating waves. The
lieutenant was down at
the cove, whistling for the boat to come and take him off to his
ship. And he seemed to be in a
terrific hurry, too, for he
whistled again almost directly, waited for a moment, and then sent
out a long,
interminable,
shrill call as distressful to hear as
though he had shrieked without
drawingbreath. Freya ceased
playing suddenly.
"Going on board," said old Nelson, perturbed by the event. "What
could have made him clear out so early? Queer chap. Devilishly
touchy, too! I shouldn't wonder if it was your conduct last night
that hurt his feelings? I noticed you, Freya. You as well as
laughed in his face, while he was
suffering agonies from neuralgia.
It isn't the way to get yourself liked. He's offended with you."
Freya's hands now reposed
passive on the keys; she bowed her fair
head, feeling a sudden
discontent, a
nervous lassitude, as though
she had passed through some exhausting
crisis. Old Nelson (or
Nielsen), looking aggrieved, was revolving matters of
policy in his
bald head.
"I think it would be right for me to go on board just to inquire,
some time this morning," he declared fussily. "Why don't they
bring me my morning tea? Do you hear, Freya? You have astonished
me, I must say. I didn't think a young girl could be so unfeeling.
And the
lieutenant thinks himself a friend of ours, too! What?
No? Well, he calls himself a friend, and that's something to a
person in my position. Certainly! Oh, yes, I must go on board."
"Must you?" murmured Freya listlessly; then added, in her thought:
"Poor man!"
CHAPTER V
In respect of the next seven weeks, all that is necessary to say
is, first, that old Nelson (or Nielsen) failed in paying his
politic call. The Neptun gunboat of H.M. the King of the
Netherlands, commanded by an outraged and infuriated
lieutenant,
left the cove at an
unexpectedly early hour. When Freya's father
came down to the shore, after
seeing his precious crop of tobacco
spread out
properly in the sun, she was already steaming round the
point. Old Nelson regretted the circumstance for many days.
"Now, I don't know in what
disposition the man went away," he
lamented to his hard daughter. He was amazed at her
hardness. He
was almost frightened by her indifference.
Next, it must be recorded that the same day the gunboat Neptun,
steering east, passed the brig Bonito becalmed in sight of
Carimata, with her head to the
eastward, too. Her captain, Jasper
Allen, giving himself up consciously to a tender, possessive
reverie of his Freya, did not get out of his long chair on the poop
to look at the Neptun which passed so close that the smoke belching
out suddenly from her short black
funnel rolled between the masts
of the Bonito, obscuring for a moment the sunlit whiteness of her
sails, consecrated to the service of love. Jasper did not even
turn his head for a glance. But Heemskirk, on the
bridge, had
gazed long and
earnestly at the brig from the distance, gripping
hard the brass rail in front of him, till, the two ships closing,
he lost all confidence in himself, and
retreating to the chartroom,
pulled the door to with a crash. There, his brows knitted, his
mouth drawn on one side in sardonic
meditation, he sat through many
still hours - a sort of Prometheus in the bonds of unholy desire,
having his very vitals torn by the beak and claws of humiliated
passion.
That
species of fowl is not to be shooed off as easily as a
chicken. Fooled, cheated, deceived, led on, outraged, mocked at -
beak and claws! A
sinister bird! The
lieutenant had no mind to
become the talk of the Archipelago, as the naval officer who had
had his face slapped by a girl. Was it possible that she really
loved that rascally
trader? He tried not to think, but, worse than
thoughts,
definite impressions beset him in his
retreat. He saw
her - a
vision plain, close to, detailed, plastic, coloured,
lighted up - he saw her
hanging round the neck of that fellow. And
he shut his eyes, only to discover that this was no
remedy. Then a
piano began to play near by, very
plainly; and he put his fingers
to his ears with no better effect. It was not to be borne - not in
solitude. He bolted out of the chartroom, and talked of
indifferent things somewhat wildly with the officer of the watch on
the
bridge, to the mocking
accompaniment of a
ghostly piano.
The last thing to be recorded is that Lieutenant Heemskirk instead
of pursuing his course towards Ternate, where he was expected, went
out of his way to call at Makassar, where no one was looking for
his
arrival. Once there, he gave certain explanations and laid a
certain proposal before the
governor, or some other authority, and
obtained
permission to do what he thought fit in these matters.
Thereupon the Neptun, giving up Ternate
altogether, steamed north
in view of the
mountainous coast of Celebes, and then crossing the
broad straits took up her station on the low coast of virgin
forests, inviolate and mute, in waters phosphorescent at night;
deep blue in
daytime with gleaming green patches over the submerged
reefs. For days the Neptun could be seen moving
smoothly up and
down the sombre face of the shore, or
hanging about with a watchful
air near the
silvery breaks of broad estuaries, under the great
luminous sky never softened, never veiled, and flooding the earth
with the
everlastingsunshine of the tropics - that
sunshine which,