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Hunting the Skipper: The Cruise of the «Seafowl» Sloop
Fenn George Manville
Hunting the Skipper: The Cruise of the «Seafowl» Sloop
Chapter One.
H.M.S. “Seafowl.”
“Dicky, dear boy, it’s my impression that we shall see no blackbird’s cage to-day.”
“And it’s my impression, Frank Murray, that if you call me Dicky again I shall punch your head.”
“Poor fellow! Liver, decidedly,” said the first speaker, in a mock sympathetic tone. “Look here, old chap, if I were you, I’d go and ask Jones to give me a blue pill, to be followed eight hours later by one of his delicious liqueurs, all syrup of senna.”
“Ugh!” came in a grunt of disgust, followed by a shudder. “Look here, Frank, if you can’t speak sense, have the goodness to hold your tongue.”
The speakers were two manly looking lads in the uniform of midshipmen of the Royal Navy, each furnished with a telescope, through which he had been trying to pierce the hot thick haze which pretty well shut them in, while as they leaned over the side of Her Majesty’s ship Seafowl, her sails seemed to be as sleepy as the generally smart-looking crew, the light wind which filled them one minute gliding off the next, and leaving them to flap idly as they apparently dozed off into a heavy sleep.
“There, don’t be rusty, old fellow,” said the first speaker.
“Then don’t call me by that absurd name —Dicky– as if I were a bird!”
“Ha, ha! Why not?” said Frank merrily. “You wouldn’t have minded if I had said ‘old cock.’”
“Humph! Perhaps not,” said the young man sourly.
“There, I don’t wonder at your being upset; this heat somehow seems to soak into a fellow and melt all the go out of one. I’m as soft as one of those medusae – jellyfish – what do you call them? – that float by opening and shutting themselves, all of a wet gasp, as one might say.”
“It’s horrible,” said the other, speaking now more sociably.
“Horrible it is, sir, as our fellows say. Well, live and learn, and I’ve learned one thing, and that is if I retire from the service as Captain – no, I’ll be modest – Commander Murray, R.N., I shall not come and settle on the West Coast of Africa.”
“Settle on the West Coast of Africa, with its fevers and horrors? I should think not!” said the other. “Phew! How hot it is! Bah!” he half snorted angrily.
“What’s the matter now?”
“That brass rail. I placed my hand upon it – regularly burned me.”
“Mem for you, old chap – don’t do it again. But, I say, what is the good of our hanging about here? We shall do no good, and it’s completely spoiling the skipper’s temper.”
“Nonsense! Can’t be done.”
“Oh, can’t it, Ricardo!”
“There you go again.”
“Pardon, mon ami! Forgot myself. Plain Richard – there. But that’s wrong. One can’t call you plain Richard, because you’re such a good-looking chap.”
“Bah!” in a deep angry growl.
“What’s that wrong too? Oh, what an unlucky beggar I am! But I say, didn’t you see the skipper?”
“I saw him, of course. But what about him? I saw nothing particular.”
“Old Anderson went up to him as politely as a first lieutenant could – ”
“I say, Frank, look here,” cried the other; “can’t you say downright what you have to say, without prosing about like the jolly old preface to an uninteresting book?”
“No, dear boy,” replied the young fellow addressed; “I can’t really. It’s the weather.”
“Hang the weather!” cried the other petulantly.
“Not to be done, dear boy. To hang calls for a rope and the yard-arm, and there’s nothing tangible about the weather. You should say – that is, if you wish to be ungentlemanly and use language unbecoming to an officer in His Majesty’s service – Blow the weather!”
“Oh, bosh, bosh, bosh! You will not be satisfied till I’ve kicked you, Frank.”
“Oh, don’t – pray don’t, my dear fellow, because you will force me to kick you again, and it would make me so hot. But I say, wasn’t I going to tell you something about old Anderson and the skipper?”
“No – yes! – There, I don’t know. Well, what was it?”
“Nothing,” said Frank Murray, yawning. “Oh, dear me, how sleepy I am!”
“Well, of all the aggravating – ”
“That’s right: go on. Say it,” said Murray. “I don’t know what you were going to call me, dear boy, but I’m sure it would be correct. That’s just what I am. Pray go on. I’m too hot to hit back.”
“You’re not too hot to talk back, Franky.”
“Eh? Hullo! Why, I ought to fly at you now for calling me by that ridiculous name Franky.”
“Bah! Here, do talk sense. What were you going to tell me about old Anderson and the skipper?”
“I don’t know, dear boy. You’ve bullied it all out of me, or else the weather has taken it out. Oh, I know now: old Anderson went up to him and said something – what it was I don’t know – unless it was about changing our course – and he snarled, turned his back and went below to cool himself, I think. I say, though, it is hot, Dick.”
“Well, do you think I hadn’t found that out?”
“No, it is all plain to see. You are all in a state of trickle, old chap. I say, though, isn’t it a sort of midsummer madness to expect to catch one of these brutal craft on a day like this?”
There was an angry grunt.
“Quite right, old fellow. Bother the slavers! They’re all shut up snugly in the horrible muddy creeks waiting for night, I believe. Then they’ll steal out and we shall go on sailing away north or south as it pleases the skipper. Here, Dicky – I mean, Dick – what will you give me for my share of the prize money?”
“Bah!” ejaculated the youth addressed. “Can’t you be quiet, Frank? Buss, buss, buss! It’s just for the sake of talking. Can’t you realise the fact?”
“No, dear boy; it’s too hot to realise anything?”
“Well, then, let me tell you a home truth.”
“Ah, do! Anything about home and the truth would be delicious here. Wish I could have an ice!”
“There you go! I say, can’t you get tired of talking?”
“No, dear boy. I suppose it is my nature to. What is a fellow to do? You won’t.”
“No, I’m too hot. I wish every slaver that sails these muddy seas was hung at the yard-arm of his own nasty rakish schooner.”
“Hee-ah, hee-ah, hee-ah! as we say in Parliament.”
“Parliament! Parler, to talk!” grunted the other. “That’s where you ought to be, Frank, and then you’d be in your element.”
“Oh, I say! I was only politely agreeing with you. That was a splendid wish. The beasts! The wretches! But somehow they don’t get their deserts. Here have we been two months on this station, and I haven’t had so much as a squint of a slaver. I don’t believe there are any. All myths or fancies – bits of imagination.”
“Oh, there are plenty of them, lad, but they know every in and out of these mangrove-infested shores, and I’ll be bound to say they are watching us day by day, and as soon as we are lost in one of these foggy hazes it’s up with their lug sails, and they glide away like – like – like – here, what do they glide away like? I’m not as clever as you. I’m at a loss for words. Give me one – something poetic, Frank.”
“Steam out of a copper.”
“Bah!”
“What, won’t that do?”
“Do? No! There – like a dream.”
“Brayvo! Werry pretty, as Sam Weller said. Oh, here’s Tommy May – Here, Tom, what do you think of the weather?” said the lad, addressing a bluff-looking seaman.
“Weather, sir?” said the man, screwing up his face till it was one maze of wrinkles. “Beg pardon, sir, but did you mean that as one of your jokes, sir, or was it a conundydrum?”
“Oh, don’t ask questions, Tom, but just tell us plainly what you think of the weather.”
“Nothing, sir; it’s too hot to think,” replied the man.
“Quite right, May,” said the other midshipman. “Don’t bother the poor fellow, Murray. Here, May, what do you fellows before the mast think about the slavers?”
“Slippery as the mud of the river banks, sir.”
“Good,” said Murray. “Well spoken, Tom. But do you think there are any about here?”
“Oh yes, sir,” said the man; “no doubt about it. They on’y want catching.”
“No, no,” cried Murray. “That’s just what they don’t want.”
“Right you are, sir; but you know what I mean.”
“I suppose so,” said Murray; “but do you chaps, when you are chewing it all over along with your quids, believe that we shall come upon any of them?”
“Oh yes, sir; but do you see, they sail in those long, low, swift schooners that can come and go where they like, while we in the Seafowl seem to be thinking about it.”
“Poor sluggish sloop of war!” said Roberts.
“Nay, nay, sir,” said the man, “begging your pardon, she’s as smart a vessel as ever I sailed in, with as fine a captain and officers, ’specially the young gentlemen.”
“Now, none of your flattering gammon, Tom.”
“Begging your pardon, gentlemen,” said the man sturdily, “that it arn’t. I says what I says, and I sticks to it, and if we only get these here blackbird catchers on the hop we’ll let ’em see what the Seafowl can do.”
“If!” said Roberts bitterly.
“Yes, sir, if. That’s it, sir, and one of these days we shall drop upon them and make them stare. We shall do it, gentlemen, you see if we shan’t.”
“That’s what we want to see, Tom,” said Murray.
“Course you do, gentlemen, and all we lads forrard are itching for it, that we are – just about half mad.”
“For prize money?” said Roberts sourly.
“Prize money, sir?” replied the man. “Why, of course, sir. It’s a Bri’sh sailor’s nature to like a bit of prize money at the end of a v’y’ge; but, begging your pardon, sir, don’t you make no mistake. There arn’t a messmate o’ mine as wouldn’t give up his prize money for the sake of overhauling a slaver and reskying a load o’ them poor black beggars. It’s horrid; that’s what it just is.”
“Quite right, May,” said Roberts.
“Thankye, sir,” said the man; “and as we was a-saying on’y last night – talking together we was as we lay out on the deck because it was too stuffycatin’ to sleep.”
“So it was, May,” said Roberts.
“Yes, sir; reg’lar stifler. Well, what we all agreed was that what we should like to do was to set the tables upside down.”
“What for?” said Murray, giving his comrade a peculiar glance from the corner of his eye.
“Why, to give the poor niggers a chance to have a pop at some of the slavers’ crews, sir, to drive ’em with the whip and make ’em work in the plantations, sir, like dumb beasts. I should like to see it, sir.”
“Well said, Tom!” cried Murray.
“Thankye, sir. But it’s slow work ketching, sir, for you see it’s their swift craft.”
“Which makes them so crafty, eh, Tom?” cried Murray.
“Yes, sir. I don’t quite understand what you mean, sir, but I suppose it’s all right, and – ”
“Sail on the lee bow!” sang out a voice from the main-top.
Chapter Two.
Bother the Fog
A minute before those words were shouted from the main-top, the low-toned conversation carried on by the two young officers, with an occasional creak or rattle from a swinging sail was all that broke the silence of the drowsy vessel; now from everywhere came the buzz of voices and the hurrying trample of feet.
“It’s just as if some one had thrust a stick into a wasp’s nest,” whispered Frank Murray to his companion, as they saw that the captain and officers had hurried up on deck to follow the two lads’ example of bringing their spy-glasses to bear upon a faintly seen sail upon the horizon, where it was plainly marked for a few minutes – long enough to be made out as a low schooner with raking masts, carrying a heavy spread of canvas, which gradually grew fainter and fainter before it died away in the silvery haze. The time was short, but quite long enough for orders to be sharply given, men to spring up aloft, and the sloop’s course to be altered, when shuddering sails began to fill out, making the Seafowl careen over lightly, and a slight foam formed on either side of the cut-water.
“That’s woke us up, Richard, my son,” said Murray.
“Yes, and it means a chance at last.”
“If.”
“Only this; we just managed to sight that schooner before she died away again in the haze.”
“Well, that gave us long enough to notice her and send the Seafowl gliding along upon her course. Isn’t that enough?”
“Not quite, old fellow.”
“Bah! What a fellow you are, Frank! You’re never satisfied,” cried Roberts. “What have you got in your head now?”
“Only this; we had long enough before the haze closed in to sight the schooner well.”
“Of course. We agreed to that.”
“Well, suppose it gave them time enough to see us?”
“Doubtful. A vessel like that is not likely to have a man aloft on the lookout.”
“There I don’t agree with you, Dick. It strikes me that they must keep a very sharp lookout on board these schooners, or else we must have overhauled one of them before now.”
“Humph!” said Roberts shortly. “Well, we shall see. According to my ideas it won’t be very long before we shall be sending a shot across that schooner’s bows, and then a boat aboard. Hurrah! Our bad luck is broken at last.”
“Doesn’t look like it,” said Murray, who had dropped all light flippancy and banter, to speak now as the eager young officer deeply interested in everything connected with his profession.
“Oh, get out!” cried Roberts. “What do you mean by your croaking? Look at the way in which our duck has spread her wings and is following in the schooner’s wake. It’s glorious, and the very air seems in our favour, for it isn’t half so hot.”
“I mean,” said Murray quietly, “that the mist is growing more dense.”
“So much in our favour.”
“Yes,” said Murray, “if the schooner’s skipper did not sight us first.”
“Oh, bother! I don’t believe he would.”
“What’s that?” said a gruff voice.
“Only this, sir,” said Roberts to the first lieutenant, who had drawn near unobserved; “only Murray croaking, sir.”
“What about, Murray?” asked the elderly officer.
“I was only saying, sir, that we shall not overhaul the schooner if her people sighted us first.”
“That’s what I’m afraid of, my lads,” said the old officer. “This haze may be very good for us, but it may be very good for them and give their skipper a chance to double and run for one or other of the wretched muddy creeks or rivers which they know by heart. There must be one somewhere near, or she would not have ventured out by daylight, and when we get within striking distance we may find her gone.”
The lieutenant passed the two lads and went forward, where he was heard to give an order or two which resulted in a man being stationed in the fore chains ready to take soundings; and soon after he was in eager conversation with the captain.
“Feeling our way,” said Murray, almost in a whisper, as he and his companion stood together where the man in the chains heaved the lead, singing out the soundings cheerily till he was checked by an order which resulted in his marking off the number of fathoms in a speaking voice, and later on in quite a subdued tone, for the haze had thickened into a sea fog, and the distance sailed ought to have brought the Seafowl pretty near to the schooner, whose commander might possibly take alarm at the announcement of a strange vessel’s approach.
“I’m afraid they must have heard us before now,” said Roberts softly. “Ah, hark at that!”
For as the man in the chains gave out the soundings it was evident that the depth was rapidly shoaling, when, in obedience to an order to the helmsman a turn or two was given to the wheel, the sloop of war was thrown up into the wind, the sails began to shiver, and the Seafowl lay rocking gently upon the swell.
“Bother the fog!” said Murray fretfully. “It’s growing worse.”
“No, sir,” said the seaman who was close at hand. “Seems to me that it’s on the move, and afore long we shall be in the clear, sir, and see where we are.”
The man’s words proved to be correct sooner than could have been expected, for before many minutes had passed, and just when the mist which shut them in was at its worst, the solid-looking bank of cloud began to open, and passed away aft; the sun shot out torrid rays, and those on board the Seafowl were seeing the need there had been for care, for they were gazing across the clear sea at the wide-spreading mangrove-covered shore, which, monotonous and of a dingy green, stretched away to north and south as far as eye could reach.
“Where’s the schooner?” exclaimed Murray excitedly, for the Seafowl seemed to be alone upon the dazzling waters.
“In the fog behind us,” said Roberts, in a disappointed tone. “We’ve overdone it. I expected we should; the skipper was in such a jolly hurry.”
Frank Murray took his companion’s words as being the correct explanation of the state of affairs; but they soon proved to be wrong, for the soft breeze that had sprung up from the shore rapidly swept the fog away seaward, and though all on board the sloop watched eagerly for the moment when the smart schooner should emerge, it at last became plain that she had eluded them – how, no one on board could say.
“It’s plain enough that she can’t have gone seaward,” said Roberts thoughtfully. “She must have sailed right away to the east.”
“Yes,” said Murray thoughtfully.
“Of course! Right over the tops of the mangroves,” said Roberts mockingly. “They hang very close, and there’s a heavy dew lying upon them, I’ll be bound.”
“Oh, yes, of course,” said Murray. “She couldn’t have passed in through some opening, I suppose?”
“Where is the opening, then?” cried Roberts shortly.
“I don’t know,” replied his companion coolly; “but there must be one, and the captain of the schooner must be quite at home here and know his way.”
“I wish my young officers would learn to know their way about this horrible shore instead of spending their time in talking,” cried an angry voice, and the two midshipmen started apart as they awoke to the fact that the captain had approached them unheard while they were intently sweeping the shore.
“Higher, my lad – higher up,” cried the captain. “The cross-trees, and be smart about it. – Yes, Mr Murray, you’re right; there’s a narrow river somewhere about, or perhaps it’s a wide one. Take your glass, sir – the opening is waiting to be found. What do you think of it, Mr Anderson?”
“I don’t think, sir. I feel sure the schooner has come out of some river along here, caught sight of us, and taken advantage of the mist to make her way back, and for aught we know she is lying snugly enough, waiting till we are gone.”
“Thank you, Mr Anderson,” said the captain, with studied politeness, “but unfortunately I knew all this before you spoke. What I want to know is where our friend is lying so snugly. What do you say to that?”
“Only this, sir – that we must run in as far as we can and sail along close inshore till we come to the opening of the river.”
“And while we sail south we shall be leaving the mouth behind, Mr Anderson, eh?”
“If it proves to be so, sir,” replied the first lieutenant gravely, “we must sail north again and again too, until we find the entrance.”
“Humph! Yes, sir; but hang it all, are my officers asleep, that we are sailing up and down here month after month without doing anything? Here, Mr Murray, what are you thinking about, sir?”
The lad started, for his chief had suddenly fired his question at him like a shot.
“Well, sir, why don’t you answer my question?”
“I beg your pardon, sir,” replied Murray now. “I was thinking.”
“Yes, sir, you were thinking,” cried the captain passionately. “I know you were thinking, and saying to yourself that you had a most unreasonable captain.”
Murray was silent, and the first lieutenant and the other midshipman, after exchanging a glance, fixed their eyes upon the monotonous shore.
“Do you hear me, sir?” thundered the captain, as if he were speaking to the lookout at the mast-head instead of the lad close to him. “That was what you were thinking, was it not? Come: the truth.”
He bent forward to gaze straight into the boy’s eyes as if determined to get an answer.
“Yes, sir,” said the lad desperately, “something of that sort;” and then to himself, “Oh, murder! I’m in for it now!”
“Yes, I knew you were, Mr Murray,” cried the captain. “Thank you. I like my junior officers to speak out truthfully and well. Makes us place confidence in them, Mr Anderson, eh?”
“Yes, sir,” growled the chief officer, “but it isn’t always pleasant.”
“Quite right, Mr Anderson, and it sounds like confounded impudence, too. But we’re wasting time, and it is valuable. I’m going to have that schooner found. The sea’s as smooth as an inland lake, so man and lower down the cutters. You take the first cutter, Mr Anderson, Munday the second. Row or sail to north and south as the wind serves, and I’ll stand out a bit to see that you don’t start the game so that it escapes. You young gentlemen had better go with the boats.”
Murray glanced at the old officer, and to the question in his eyes there came a nod by way of answer.
“You always have the luck, Franky,” grumbled Roberts, as soon as they were alone.
“Nonsense! You have as good a chance as I have of finding the schooner.”
“What, with prosy old Munday! Why, he’ll most likely go to sleep.”
“So much the better for you. You can take command of the boat and discover the schooner’s hiding-place.”
“Of course. Board her, capture the Spanish – ”
“Or Yankee,” said Murray.
“Captain!” snapped out Roberts. “Oh yes, I know. Bother! I do get so tired of all this.”
Tired or no, the young man seemed well on the alert as he stepped into the second cutter, and soon after each of the boats had run up their little sail, for a light breeze was blowing, and, leaving the sloop behind, all the men full of excitement as every eye was fixed upon the long stretches of mangrove north and south in search of the hidden opening which might mean the way into some creek, or perhaps the half-choked-up entrance into one of the muddy rivers of the vast African shore.
Chapter Three.
The Cute Visitor
The first cutter had the wind in her favour and glided northward mile after mile along a shore thickly covered with the peculiar growth of the mangrove, those dense bird-affecting, reptile-haunted coverts, whose sole use seems to be that of keeping the muddy soil of the West Afric shores from being washed away.
The heat was terrible, and the men were congratulating themselves on the fact that the wind held out and saved them from the painful task of rowing hard in the blistering sunshine.
Murray’s duty was to handle the tiller lines as he sat in the stern sheets beside the first lieutenant, and after being out close upon three hours he began to feel that he could keep awake no longer – for his companion sat silent and stern, his gaze bent upon the dark green shore, searching vainly for the hidden opening – and in a half torpid state the midshipman was about to turn to his silent companion and ask to be relieved of the lines, when he uttered a gasp of thankfulness, and, forgetting discipline, gripped the officer by the knee.
“What the something, Mr Murray, do you mean by that?” cried the lieutenant angrily.
“Look!” was the reply, accompanied by a hand stretched out with pointing index finger.
“Stand by, my lads, ready to pull for all you know,” cried the lieutenant. “The wind may drop at any moment. You, Tom May, take a pull at that sheet; Mr Murray, tighten that port line. That’s better; we must cut that lugger off. Did you see where she came out?”
“Not quite, sir,” said Murray, as he altered the boat’s course a trifle, “but it must have been close hereabouts. What are you going to do, sir?”
“Do, my lad? Why, take her and make the master or whatever he is, act as guide.”
“I see, sir. Then you think he must have come out of the river where the schooner has taken refuge?”
“That’s what I think,” said the lieutenant grimly; “and if I am right I fancy the captain will not be quite so hard upon us as he has been of late.”
“It will be a glorious triumph for us – I mean for you, sir,” said Murray hurriedly.
“Quite right, Mr Murray,” said his companion, smiling. “I can well afford to share the honours with you, for I shall have owed it to your sharp eyes. But there, don’t let’s talk. We must act and strain every nerve, for I’m doubtful about that lugger; she sails well and may escape us after all.”