Mr. MacDonald was not only sensitive about his machines: he was highly sensitive about his men. He knew at once that the loyalty of his men was gone from him, that he could not trust them. That did not do him any good. He took to swivelling round suddenly, with a glare of his hot red eyes, to see if there was a Chinaman behind him. Soutar, also, was on edge about it. He could see that MacDonald was nervy about the men; and he resented it. If the Chinks gave trouble, couldn’t he bash them? And my God, how he would like the chance! What was the good of the Chief getting all worked up about it? Being afraid of them?
Two Chinamen, their faces wooden and angry, were in Soutar’s way as he trundled a drum. With an unexpectedly falsetto oath he kicked out at them—and missed. They vanished. But MacDonald saw and turned on Soutar.
“Gin ye distrust the men, Mr. Soutar,” he said, “can ye nae hau’d yoursel’ in, an’ nae shaw it?”
He, distrust them! When the Chief was in dithering terror of them!
Bitter anger burst up between the two men, who glared in each other’s faces: MacDonald, half his grey moustache burnt off in the donkey-room, his eyes red-rimmed and bloodshot: Soutar, his pasty white face screwed up, and wearing a blackish hue as if diluted ink ran in his veins: his meagre eyelashes almost entirely hidden between the puffed lids.
It was at that moment Gaston spoke quietly to the Chief.
“I’ve got water, Sir,” he said: “not much, but enough for a wet.”
Water! The first for a day and a half! At the very word the glands in their gums twinged with pain.
“I thought of unscrewing the valves off the winches,” Gaston explained. “There is water condensed there: a cupful or two.”
(There would be, of course, from the cooling of the steam which once had turned them.)
So that was the next thing. They won the water from the winches with the scrupulous care of men winning gold from the gravel. Each man was able to wet his lips. Each man, except Watchett pouring oil in the forward latrine, and Bennett in the after one. No one remembered them.
Night was falling: the obscurity turned once more from white to black. The sea was still madly broken: oiling must without doubt continue all night.
Edwardes, with a little electric torch, examined the sheaf of notes which one day would be the ship’s official log. They were scribbled on the backs of wireless forms, and stuffed into the rack for signal flags on the Bridge. Where was he? It seemed impossible to tell, except by instinct. No stars or sun for a sight, nor any hope of them. They were being carried along by the storm: but where was it taking them? Its path was anyhow so erratic, no one could tell where it might now be heading. That bank must have been Serrana or Serranilla, though ... but where would they end up? Hurricanes are bound to hit the land sometime. When this one struck Cuba, or Yucatan, or Florida, would they still be in it?
Chapter VIII
(Friday)
The night which followed was one which no one would ever forget: yet one which no one could ever clearly remember.
Dick had an easier job than Bennett to keep awake: for he had not slept at all, the crust of his wakefulness was still unbroken. But in some ways he was worse off. The fo’c’sle was more battered than the poop. Bigger seas swept up through the vent. Moreover, it was a latrine that until the storm had been in use. Still, he was not imprisoned, like Bennett: the door had broken clean off.
His head ached; and his tongue, instead of being flat and moist in his mouth, was round and dry. Consequently it kept trying to push its way out between his lips, like the thin end of a wedge. Only it could not, it stuck to his lips each time, as if they were smeared with the best glue; and it had to be loosened carefully, so as not to tear the skin.
“You see,” he said to Sukie, “You have to be very careful. Once it gets a chance really to stick to the skin it will rip it off. Very gently, back and fore—that frees it, and I can put it back in my mouth.”
But Sukie did not answer: though surely she ought to have been interested. She was looking past him, and humming a tune. She did not care. So with an effort of mind he shifted her out of his way; shifted her up about four feet, and a bit to the left. There was nothing for her to sit on up there: but all the same there she was, sitting in just the same position as before. Presently she did have somewhere to sit, however, for he saw she was now in the mouth of a ferny cave. So with a spasm of pleasure he picked up his oil-drum and stepped through her, into the cave, pouring oil as he went (so as to be able to find his way back, he told himself).
“You see,” he said when he met her again, about a hundred yards further down the cave, “pouring oil out of this drum is my job.”
“Sure,” said Sukie: and leaning forward she stared close into his eyes, laying her beautiful cool eyes almost to touch his briny, swollen lids.
“Oh, sure!” she said again: and turning, hopped away on her unnaturally elongated feet, nervously folding and unfolding her ears. So he took hold of the tow plug at the end of the cave and lifted it; and this time quite a lot of oil ran out.
“I must be more careful,” he thought: “I’ll be using it up too soon at this rate.”
But only half the drum was gone: and just then the Mate and Phillips arrived with two new drums.
“Keep one drum in reserve,” said the Mate.
“That’s the Captain’s orders.”
“Very good sir,” Dick tried to say, but it hurt his tongue too much. Talking to Sukie had not hurt his tongue at all.
II
The road from Fakenham Station to the town runs past a meadow, with willows.
In Dick’s day an old horse-bus still traversed it, back and forth, to meet every train. The horse never did more than walk: you never saw anyone getting in, or getting out; the bus was painted black, but on the glass of the back window transparent lilies were painted.
After the willows comes a printing-works: and then the town.
In the market-place there is a chemist’s shop: and the chemist is a long-established sort of chap, who knows the old-fashioned names for things. He knows that Sal Prunella is only salt-petre with the water expelled, for instance. That was useful; because Dick’s mother had come across an old cookery-book, written in different hands but all at least two hundred years old, and she wanted to try a recipe for curing Westphalia Hams Mrs. Estrigge. So she copied out the queer names of the things on a piece of paper and sent Dick down to the chemist for them on his bicycle.
He was only too glad of any excuse to take out his bicycle, in those days: for it was his first one, and still new. Gran’dad had said from the beginning that he might not have one till his eleventh birthday, for fear of spoiling his heart; but ever since he was five years old he had wanted one, with a burning want.
But Gran’dad was unbendable. So, going to infant-school, he would trot along, knees coming up like haute école, arms bent at the elbows, and his hands in front holding imaginary handle-bars, thumbing an imaginary bell at the corners. Indeed this pretended bike was so real to him that anyone who could not see it must be very dense. He never got over his contempt for the old Rector of Bensham, who had met him one day like that bicycling along in front of his mother:
“I have just seen your young man,” the Rector called out genially to her as he passed, “riding by on his horse!”
Once he had got his real machine, Dick used to go for rides with his Gran’dad. The old man, at seventy, was still a keen biker. He used to say that he could still ride now as far as ever he could. That was probably true; for as he decayed, bikes improved. In the days of his vigorous youth he had juggled along on a Penny-farthing. Then came the “safety” bicycle: but it had a fixed wheel, going down hill you still had to take your feet off the pedals if you wanted to “coast”: and prudent people were chary of taking their feet off the pedals, seeing their pedals were what they chiefly relied on for braking.
Then came the free-wheel: then came the three-speed gear, in time for Gran’dad’s last machine: and Dick’s firs
t bicycle, or course, had all these things.
One day, years after Gran’dad’s death, Dick had found the old Penny-farthing at the back of a shed. The green paint on it was still first-class. But the bolt which held the saddle to the primitive spring was rusted, and he had a job to fix the saddle in place. And the tyres were quite perished. They were just long narrow rubber strips, like pram-tyres: they had grown too long for the wheels and fell off as soon as he moved the machine: so he bound them over and over with wire to hold them on.
When he tried to ride the thing, however, he found it almost impossibly difficult: he came hurtling off in the second yard. Good lord! Was this the thing Gran’dad used to ride all over the country as a matter of course? As he rubbed his shins he reflected, for the first time, that after all Gran’dad was not born old: must once have been even nimble, like himself.
He had seen photos of him, in black whiskers and tight knickerbockers, perched easily on this very machine. But he had always taken for granted that the machine must be easy to ride, if Gran’dad could do it (like the tricycle which old Archdeacon Bubble used to trundle to Church every Sunday, at a walking pace). So it was very upsetting to find this machine, which Grandfather had once ridden with such sangfroid, pitching him head over heels again and again: and he determined to master it.
That meant long, secret practice: and in the end of course he succeeded.
There came the day of a cricket-match, when everyone was very excited, and inclined to think up impromptu Comic Acts. So Dick slipped home, and dressed in some very old-fashioned clothes of his dead grandfather’s. Then he got out the Penny-farthing, and presently did a very comic Act indeed on it, riding round the Marketplace in an exaggerated manner while both teams cheered and jeered. He felt a pretty bright chap to be able to make them laugh like that: but he felt a bit less bright when presently he saw his Mother standing there; watching him make a fool of her old dead father, who had always been very fond of him. It was not a comfortable moment.
It was almost as bad as that other time, when he thought she had heard him boasting about what he did at Holy Communion. He was telling some other boys he had drunk up all the wine that Sunday, with the Rector pulling at the Cup but him hanging on. It was untrue: in point of fact, he always behaved in Church with strict decency, and indeed was very devout and believing —especially about the Holy Spirit being present at Communion. Yet he had boasted it, in a wild fit, to outshine the bad boys who were listening —and then, turning, saw his Mother standing just behind him. What was he to do? She might never have heard at all; so he could not just take her aside and assure her it was not true. He had to wait for her to make the first move. But she made no move, she never mentioned it. Did that mean she had not heard? Or was she too deeply shocked to be able to speak of it? The uncertainty made him avoid her; and for the first time he took to locking the bathroom door against her while he had a bath.
Most boys are inclined to be decently devout the year of their Confirmation: Dick was perhaps actually more devout than the average. It sprang from the experiences of his childhood. For he had found, when very young, that if he prayed for something he wanted badly, he nearly always got it. Or, if he was not to have it, he was never left in doubt: God let him know at once, even while he was praying—but as a rule God gave him whatever he asked. And he, for his part, moved by a decent compunction, never made too unreasonable requests (he never asked for a premature bicycle, for instance, for God and Gran’dad had too much in common). Again, he found God a most ready companion, always at hand when called on in dark passages and up dark stairs.
I do not mean that this child lived always in close communion with his God; never felt doubts, times when God was faint to him. Children only feel implicit belief in something they have called out of their own imaginations, such as an imaginary playfellow, or a lion in the shrubbery. Any existence, such as God’s, which comes to their experience from outside, is bound to be more shadowy than that. He had his Mother’s word for it, that there is a God: and her word was backed by the evidence of all his answered prayers, of that felt company in the dark. But evidence is not the same as direct experience: God could never be so certain a fact as his imagined bike. He could never visualise God; beyond a fleeting vision of black whiskers and tight knickerbockers.
But in time these beliefs, these doubts, came to a climax. It was over the business of his watch.
He was ten years old then, and going to a boys’ day-school. He walked there alone. Part of his way lay down a private road; the end of which, to prevent through-traffic, was barred by a scaffold-pole lashed to trestles. He was in the habit of doing gymnastics on this bar for a few minutes, as he passed, going and coming. While he turned his somersaults, he used to lay his watch carefully on the ground.
One night, when he went to bed, he found his watch was not in his pocket. In a flash he remembered that he had never picked it up again after his spell of gymnastics on the way home that day. That was hours ago. Any number of people passed down that road: it was inconceivable that the watch had not already been found and pinched. And yet ... might it be worth trying? He got out of his bed, and knelt down beside it.
Before mentioning the watch, he told God frankly that there had been many times, lately, when he had doubted the whole fact of God’s existence. He wanted to get the matter settled. Let this be a test case. I have told you that a compunction had always prevented him from asking anything too difficult, anything with a touch of the miraculous in it. So all those answered prayers might be only coincidence. But this prayer would be different: there was plenty of the miraculous in this one, since it would have to act backwards. He was asking God to guard his watch during all those hours which were already past! As a test case it was perfect: and he for his part was ready to make a promise. If God would, against all likelihood, guard his watch, hide it both from the eyes which had passed and the eyes which would pass, so that he found it still lying in the same place in the road on his way to school in the morning—why, he would then give an irrevocable promise never, so long as he lived, to doubt God’s existence again. That is what he prayed.
In the morning he found the watch, lying just where he had put it, in the road. So thenceforth he was pledged, for the rest of his life, to believe in God.
It is curious that having done one miraculous thing by prayer, he did not go on to others. But his compunction still held him. That had been a special occasion, necessary to settle his faith. No further miracles—however convinced he was that by prayer he could do them—might be justified. I pass over such temptations as one which came to him, on a day when the whole school were cooped in by a wet afternoon, to fly slowly across the classroom. That was obviously reprehensible: and so, easily resisted. But there came another that was not so easy.
Coming out of the post-office one day ahead of his Mother, he found himself close up against a sort of flat trolley, as flat as a table, on which a little girl lay under bed-clothes as if in bed. He had seen her before, at a distance, wheeled through the streets like this: and his Mother had told him she had a disease of the spine, and would never again walk, or even sit up: but he had never before been confronted with her close. Her face was pale, and moist; and rather proud.
Suddenly his whole being was possessed by a single thought. He had only to stretch out his hand and touch her, and she would rise up whole. He lifted his hand, in act to stretch it out upon her. And then, compunction spoke. He could do it: but he had no right to do it. And something other than compunction spoke. If he did this, what would be the sequel? A little boy who has once done a miracle in a crowded street cannot turn back, and live again the life of other boys. No more sweets and chucking ink-bombs. He would be someone apart, from then on: pledged to the utmost holiness of living, given over to saving mankind from its sins. It is not only the Devil who buys souls: if God did this for him, his soul would be sold to God for that price, every instant of his future dedicated to burn in the intensity of God’s service.
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Could he drink of that cup?
He lowered his hand, and passed on with leaden heart; for he knew he was leaving the little girl to more years of pain, and presently to death. That he might be doing right: but that he was being a kind of murderer.
Suppose she knew that he had this power: knew that he was deliberately refusing to save her!
—But by now his Mother had joined him. Her next call was the newspaper shop, where she bought him half an ounce of that kind of liquorice all-sorts he most loved.
III
The promise he had given seemed simple enough to keep, to a child of ten. But the trouble was that Dick did not remain always a child of ten: he grew. It seems that as you grow, God must grow too. Of this of course he was not forewarned: that the God he had promised to believe in for ever was a child’s God.
When he was fifteen, and being prepared for Confirmation, the idea of God which was presented to him for belief was very different: a sort of impersonal Omnipotence Who never interfered with Science (not that He could not, but simply because He was above that sort of thing, and meant us to learn Boyle’s Law and so on): a vague, limitless Holiness, Who really preferred the Church of England to anything else but Who failing that was also the Best Elements in all religions (especially Buddhism and Islam). In short, not at all the sort of God you asked for small material benefits, like looking after your watch for you, or helping you to win a football match. In fact, surely a different sort of God altogether. And—here was the difficulty—not the God he was pledged to believe in, because not the God which the evidence, still vividly remembered, had once so clearly affirmed.