Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Watchman Warder (1899), 10 Jan 1907, p. 2

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“WI" _ v , ,7 v- - _- w . W 1?; a private question I’d like to ask ; - It was not 8‘. 1'1! ’ou'about running the boat." ousting anpthpr 1 “Want Miss Payne to go out?” hood, and 2le = "if I might trouble her so far." .ed a. weary numbe ' Guise Jerked his hea'dftqfiard' the '; ‘ ought he imp? low; “Type out what you’ve gdt,” he 5 ins: orth an. The shorthand writer went out ; replace.~ H111; xece: cal dqxszgflthe glass door after her. ; £81182: $1.an 1', 6.» ~. . ‘ >7 :‘ . a”. (fitdKottle hedggi. It was an £20399“ .. , m‘ :uhjectgo upon," ” 11W .. , 10' then, captain.’ out "via: iffhd’vfi mt. am u our lived, he had all a shipmaster’s fluidity at tackling a shlpowner in his his. and this, or course, handicapped In this mood then he was ushered “on Gedge in his ofllce, and saw him fining letters and casting occasional amtences to a. young woman who ficked them down in shorthand. The shlpowner frowned. He was Ry busy. “Well, captain, " he said, Wtisltr'ralk’aead‘ Imusteé smut I sign these letters." ,A bust of it. a very delicate subject. Mr. Godge had hired him as captain of the sum of Imbuan, had said no word shout losing her, and how was he to fire. the man's confidence? It looked it. most unpromising enterprise in the "1d. Moreover, although in the outer world. he (as as brave a fellow as Capt. Kettle thought out many things Is he journeyed from South Shield to the grimy once of his employer in Newcastle. but his data. were insuffi- cient, and he was unable to get hold of any scheme by which he could safely gunmen what was,‘ to sayythe very ‘My dear,” he called down to Mrs. Ietfie. who was engaged on the family fish in the kitchen below, “I’ve got ran up to the office to see Mr. Gedge. don‘t think I quite understand his fishes about running the boat. Get tea when It’s ready. I don’t want keep you and the youngsters wait- He got up, crammed the blue letter Cidjntp his_s_ gockefl and took his cap. He hit the unfinished poems on the labia a blow with his fist. “By James!" hja muttered, “a catspaw? I didn't think at it in that light before. Well, we'd flatter have a clear understanding “out the matter.” Up till then he would have said: “By Driving the Sultan of Labuan over the was as fast as could be done on a Elven coal consumption, by ruthlessly gaping down expense; and. in fact, by making the steamer earn the largest possible dividend in the ordinary way 0! commerce." But this typewritten let- ur-mrd hinted at other purposes, which he knew were quite within the bounds of possibility, and if he was be In; made a. catSpawâ€" His own code of morality on this sub- 9 be: was peculiar. Ashore in South 1 Shields he was as honest as a bishop;§ he was a strict chapel member; he did , not even steal matches from the cap- was room at Hallett's, his house of all, which has always been a recog- nised peculation. At sea he conceived himself to be bought, body and soul, by ‘ his. owner for the time being, and was ectly ready to risk body and soul earning his pay. But the question was, how was this to be earned? I Capt. Kettle was torn. as he read. by my conflicting sentiments. Loyalty to Mr. Gedge, his owner, was one of mm. Gedge had sold him before, but film! was in a. way condoned by this meat appointment to the Sultan of nan. And he wanted very much to how what were Mr. Gedge's wishes “r the matter. ”nan safely out and back, and mayâ€" “ you']! get something more solid than I. think. From Your Wen-wisher.” And the writer wound up by saying: f! can‘t give you any hint of how it’s [sing to be done. Only I know the gun's fixed. So keep your weather «a skinned and take the Sultan of It is an excellent academic rule to may disregard anonymous letters. Int it is by no means always an easy [lie to follow. And there are times Chen a. friendly warning must be con- tent! anonymoumy or not at all. But hale did not worry his head about file ethics of anonymous letter writing a a. profession: his attention was taken up by this type-written card tom “Well-winner,” which 'he held in $5: hand: “Your ship goes to sea. never to tuck port. There is an insurance rob- cleverly rigged. You think your- II to smart, I know, but this time ”are eing made a common gull of.” The letter-card was anonymous. and mm! to present no clew to its au- Mrship. It was typewritten; it was gated. as the stamp showed, in New- mfle; it committed its writer in no ee whatever. But it made state- ”ts which, it true. ought to have t nomebo’drto penal servitude; and threw out hints which, true or un- he. made Capt. Kettle heir to a whole florid of anxiety” and trouble. an”. Kom. won a man who made up the mind over most mutton with the .oickmm or o. pin-to} not: and once not- uod. rightly or wrongly, he alwoyl stuck to bio decision. But here. on tho loner-card. we: o. mattor he could not I the bounce at at all; it refused to dismissed. oven tompororiiy. from mind; it involved interest: for too so to be bearded by o‘huty verdict other one way or the other; and the duality in coming to any satisfactory conclusion irritated him ‘hoovily. pn ’ao yoihnfher hawk:- r then, captain.’ out with It I'm in the dickens at : hurry.“ , mwgou'gi let 123g know a little : ’01; mt me toâ€"I mean-1‘ He was : come up the Usk and gone into Rock" 51“”: ' he said, 6 barely an hour before, and so Kettlefl step can listen gobedient to his orders; went'dowr film)! i once to take” Olen ‘ _ vymw‘g'“ .‘-1» T] ’Iike to ask 3 . It was not a; lé’aszfit'op'erifldhi this“ @311 * ousting anpthgr manjmmahis ,H‘elt-E- bkne at?” {110011.836 “Ream been W “F“ ) far." ed a. weary number or times 131959111” . W m"? f“. '. Ohm?" ‘- .hn'“ “95. 'oâ€"Aflr“; A, imimfi , A. Capt. Kettle, however, went his ways humming a cheerful air, and as the 12 io’clock mail roared out that night § across the high-level bridge, he settled ! himself to sleep in his corner of a ; third-class carriage and to dream the 2 dreams of a man who, after many ‘vicissitudes, has at last found right-‘ eous employment. It was a new ex- iperience for him, and he permitted § himself the luxury at enjoying it to ; the full. ' A train clattered him into Mon- ; mouthshire some 12 hours later, and he stepped out. on Newport platform into a fog raw and fresh from the Bristol channel. His small, worn port: manteau he could easily have carried ' in his hand, but there is an etiquette about these matters which even‘hard- up shipmasters, to whom a shilling is; : a financial rarity, must observe; and; 3 so he took a four-wheeler down to the i ‘ agent's once, and made himself known. '1 3 The Sultan of Labuan, it seemed, had; i I , come up the Us]: and gone into' deck .1 barely an hour before, and so Kettle; Mtg: his orders; went-down on“ to 7 *9!” 4 "fl; 5* -. 'd": “rte”- E . It was not :' Monet-fighting 7 ~--â€". 'v-uuu‘wuvu. U'Tâ€"V " J'Yon 10¢.me up.” 83:1de mffss the tide. and tilt}, Hams. “I ngen'ghgd a blessed wink of . “9"], i .n Wm milkb‘ef' metal-mama“ ,no hood, and as" Kettle?!“ been want. ed a. weary number 01 times himseltfio; thought he knew pretty yell‘thq, reg} ings 01- the man whom he had come to replace. His reception», ihowever, sur- rprlseq hfmngpliamq,‘ the“ lomiér‘mas- i “Well, to be accurate, I did it by dep- uty. You hae yer doots, eh? Hang it man; what an unbelieving Jew you are.” He pressed one of the electric pushes by the side of his desk, and the I shorthand writer came in and stood at I the doorway. ' z Kettle started. He was obviously in. i crgduloug. w- .- - _ _ ,A But busy though he might be, Mr. Gedge did not immediately return to signing his letters after Capt. Kettle’s departure. Instead, he took out a. hand- kerchief and wiped his forehead and wiped his hands, which for some rea- son seemed to have grown unaccount- abiy clammy; and for awhile he lay. back in his writing chair like a man who feels physically sick. “At sea," said the little sailor with a sigh, “I am what I have to be. But I couldn't do that. I’m a poor man sir; I’m pretty nearly a desperate man, but there are some kinds of things that are beyond me. I know it’s done often enough, butâ€"you'll have to excuse me. I can’t lose her for you." “Who’s asking you?” said Gedge cheerily. “I’m not. Don’t Jump at conclusions, man. I don’t want the Sultan o: Labuan lost. She's not my best ship, I’ll grant; but I can run her at a profit for all that; and even it I couldn't I am not the sort of man to .try and make my dividends out of ? Lloyd’s. No. not by any means, cap-‘ tain; I’ve got my name to keep up.” . Capt. Kettle brought up a sigh of re- ‘ lief. “Glad to hear it, sir; I'm glad to hear it. But I tho'ht it best to have it out with you. That beastly letter . upset me.” “Thank you. That’ll do. Well, Kettle, I hope you’re satisfied now? I sent this blessed card because I wanted to see how deep this shore-going honesty of yours went, which I’ve heard so much about and now I know, and you may take it from me that you’ll profit by it financially in the very near future. The shipmasters I’ve had to do with have been mostly rogues, and when I get hold of a straight man I know how to appreciate him. Now, good-by, captain, and a prosperous voyage to you. If you catch the midnight mail from here, you'll just get down to Newport to- morrow in time to see her come into dock. Take her over at once, you know; we can’t have any time wasted. Here, good-by. I’m frantically busy." "Miss Paine, you typed this letter- card, didn’t you?” he asked, and Miss Payne dutifully answered, “Yes. ‘ 'Gedge laughed smy. “Well, it you want to know who wrote the letter, I did it myself. ” “I see. You appear to know a lot about the ship, captainâ€"more than I do myself, in fact. I know you're a small tin saint when you’re within hail of that Ebenezer. or Bethel, or whatever you call it here ashore, but at sea you’ve got the name for not being over particular." “I'm very grateful to you for giving me the berth. sir. and I shall be a faithful servant to you as long as I’m in your employ. But if there's. any- thing on, I'd like to be in your confi- dence. I know she.isn't an old ship, but-J" “But what?" “She's uneconomical. Her engines are old-fashioned. It wouldn’t pay to tit her with triple expansions and new boilers.” i f Bristol channel tides are his? the current or the Usk‘is swift. Esome to be‘qmck mm th‘éy d i “’3.“ “9? 31%- ml. the; pawn "‘l"- tank-loco and a train of wagons inat- tendance, and then the Sultan of. Law buan was being loaded through the. latter hatch also. It was a triumph .uowever, though at the beginning of her, even if {haâ€"E {11.00213}: 3 vcyage It may be easy to make a re- self. 80 they'd better hear wh solve like this, it is not so easy to ear- the wind and have 3 chance it: ry it into practical enact. If the ma- theu own skin You magnum chinery was on board, htnnan or other. 1 mean?" wise, for making the Sultan of Labuan “Aye," mm the mm. fail to reach port, it was not at all “Well, unsung mot“. probable that Kettlewould find it be- â€"4n “1. 3th: “y. you and” tore he Saw it in working order. When ‘A e. g, a. may: we better arrangements for 8 bit Of Wratry Of hatchyes a: and battened down: this kind are gone about nowadays, 3mm in, 99.. pm otten of machinery and organization, and [tired men in a. dozen departments cur- sed Kettle for keeping them at such a remorseiess pressure over their tasks. Down to her fresh-water plimsol the steamer was sunk, and‘then' the loading Iceased. Even Kettle did not dare to loverloadélHe knew quite well that there '5‘”? ”‘ ”mm? “"1 ““39“” m°“gmgwg 13:36:53 $0:Â¥?mgaf mix: if: Your ingenious gentlemen. who makes , low. and the say it’s the from somewhere. on the quays, and it" she was trimmed an inch" above her marks the Sultan of Labuan ‘would‘ never be let go through the outer dock , gate. So the burden was limited to its.. legal bounds, and Kettle got his .elearm ance papers with the same fierce; bu’sii‘ nesslike Ibustle, and game back and. stepped lightly up on to' the tramp’s upper bridge. - '9 ' ~» The pilot was there waiting (or him; .. ., half-admiring, halt-repelled; r the old "j , bluesfacedmate ind the carpenter were ‘ on theforéoastle head: 'the.=‘fleoal" mate wa‘s‘hft; » 'e chietflsi‘sen ‘ open thteo bilgeoocialis dexterous or '. ‘ ” enough cover-up vulva-yeah». em Mex-swim“ pletely, having a wholesome 'awe of g ‘03:; on um" bridge." ' 3 theiswotthelaulnd L t ‘2“ ‘ ”w ‘ With the chietengineer “mf“1'_ The Oh! we suggestion abq Fray glow of the fog so long as day- ight lasted, and then under the glare of raw electric arc lamps. The air was full of gritty dust and the roar of tall- ing coal. A wagon was shunted up, dangled .aloft in hydraulic arms, is- nominiously emptied end first, and then put-to ground again and petulant- ly sent away to find a tresh load, whilst its successor was being nursed and re- lieved. Two hundred tons to the hour was what that hydraulic ataith could handle, but for all that it did not break the coal unduly. In the fbrehold the trimmers gasped and choked as they steered the black avalanches into place; and presently another of the huge staiths crawled up along the_dock wall,_with a gaming A-_1_ In- , The men grumbled of course: be- hind their driver's back they swore; two deck hands and three of the stoke- hold crew deserted, leaving their wages, and were replaced by others from the shipping office; and still the work went remprselessly 9n under the Mr. Gedge’s pay: and every minute wasted on a steamer means money lost. He went briskly across to the south dock and set the machinery of business to work without delay. There was grumbling from mates, engineers and crew that they had been given leisure for scarcely a breath of shore air, but Kettle was not a man who courted popularity from his underlings by offering them indulgences. He stated that their duty was to get the water ballast out and the coal under batches in the shortest time on record, and mentioned that he was the man who would see it done. But Kettleâ€"did not lolter by this tac- tturn bedside. He had signed on as master of the Sultan of Labuan; he gas Ln Mr._Gedge's employ and earning “By Jamés," he muttered, “if I could make you speak, captain, I believe you cogld tell a queeri'sh tale.” man worn out with watching and la- bor. and for a minute or so Kettle stood beside the bed and gazed upon- him thoughtfully. Capt. Williams was clearly worn out with weariness; responsibility had kept him going till then, .but now that re- sponsibility had ended he was like a man in a trance. His eyes drooped. his knees failed drunkenly; he was past speech. and if Kettle had not by main force dragged him on to a bed at a temperance hotel, he would have toppled down incontinently and slept in the gutter like one dead. As it was he lay on the counterpane in the heav- [est of sleep, the picture_of a strong They plunged straightway into the arldltles of business, and kept at it till the captaincy had been formally laid down and handed over, and then the opportunity for further revelatlons was gone. . “By Jumel.” aid Kettle. “do speak alum}: oeptnin: don't to on hinting like I. “I on laundering on too much, cap tulu. and that's a fact. Result 0! be- ing about tired-out. I suppose. But you must excuse me speaking further; there’s that confounded libel low to think about. New, captain. here’s the key of the charthouae door, end it you'll let me. I'll go out ant and you can lock it behind you. You'll find one of the tumblers beside the waterobottle broken; it fell out of my hand this morning just after I’d docked her: but ‘ Ill the rent is according to the inven« tory; and I'll knock oi! threepence for thi tumbler when we square up.” ‘ . V «:0 “WI“. ”In“! a compact with one of. her crew to 1 enammd. “ire you me: open the bilgecocks. is dexterous ' blamed ship. or sin I? Y: e‘noughto cover up his tron very com- {he my order: when I pletely, having a. wholesome awe of get down on this bridge , the law of thevlend‘lnd p. Inge ,mu “Aygma'mted -the m for penal servitnhe. ‘ ; , died my Gm bola With the chief» engineer alone, :1. The old man’s suggeei , though he doesi‘pot sit; Shine“ FRI! ,hatches had touched um himy‘may a mmeupum-mbena. vxet 1191!..qu 15911 a; and with the ochiet‘ 0:; gm ct gero ‘s‘to‘Teave‘the grea Lehman Ketfle'hhd Influence decklrinefeldeQby [In over a commluiom-onwbnkeflng not mum. ‘1‘ Wm m 10 minutes after he had nut MM the heavy Sew}!!! _,, had the undoubted deep Ind sudden. Ahead However, though at the beginning of a vcyage it may be easy to make a re- solve like this, it is not so easy to ear- ry it into practical enact. It the ma- chinery was on board, human or other- wise, for making the Sultan of Labuan fail to reach port, it was not at all probabieâ€" that Kettlexwould and it be- fore he saw it in working order. When arrangements for a bit of barratry or this kind are gone about nowadays, 1 they are" performed with abrewdneea. a devil. o: clockwork and mcotton to blow out a steamers bottom, or make. ‘ ”mm “W M6‘ at w' m 10: P181313. having ., “th0 Ito 'd the law of the la: a star MN’WW The little captain's rice grew grim as he read it. “By James!" no matter- ed, “11 that’s the game he's trying to play, I’ll make him me it.” ---I think there is very little doubt but what Capt. Kettle mid have under- taken to carry out this piece of ne- farious business himself. The average mariner thinks no more of “making the insurance pay” than the average traveler does of robbing his fellow- countrymen by the importation of Bel- gian cigars and Tauchnitz novels from a channel packet. And. with Kettle, too, loyalty to an employer, so long as that employer treated him squarely, ranked high. But for a second time “Well- wisher” had repeated the word “cats. paw ” and for his purpose he could not hav_ used a better spur. . Now, propefly approachedâ€"say with seglgd. ordgrs to‘be opened only at sea He had had his doubts about Mr. Gedge’s real wishes before, and even the episode of Miss Payne. the type- writer. had not altogether deceived him: but the second letter from “Weil- wisher,” which the pilot brought on board, cleared the matter up beyond a doubt~ There was not the faintest chance that Gedge' had written that: there was not the faintest reason to disbelieve now that Gedge wished his uneconomieai steamboat oi! his hands, and had arranged for her never again to come into port. But if Capt. Kettle did not spare his crew he was equally hard on him- self. He was at sea now and wearing his sea-going conscience, which was an entirely difl'erent piece of mental me- chanism to that which regulated his actions ashore. He had received Mr. Gedge’s precise instructions to run the coal boat in the ordinary method, and he intended to do it relentlessly and to the letter. , The old mate’s face grew pnrpler. “If you want a. driver,” he said. “you shun have one”; and with that he went his ways and roused the tired deckhands to work after the time-honored meth- “Then it‘s your place to drive them. 1 should have thought you’d been long enough at sea to know that. But if you aren't up to your business, just say. and I'll swop you over with the second mate right now.” :r , e “Aye, aye; but. the hands are tired." ‘ "You’ll have fresh orders from me before then. Get hoses to work now angsluice dowp. The ship's a ‘pigstye." “Aye, aye? rumbled the mate; “but how about when heavy weather comes and the decks are full of water?” With Murgatroyd. the old blue-taco mate,‘ Kettle had been shipmatea be- fore, and there existed between the tvo men a strong dislike and a certain mu- tual esteem. They interviewed over duty matters when the pilot left. “Mr. Murgatroyd,” said the little skipper, “you'll keep hatches off. and do every- thing for ventilation. This Welsh ooal’I as gassy as petroleum." From the very outset the voyage of the seam of Labuan was unpropitlous. Before she was clear of the Us! tt was found that three more of her crew had managed to slip away ashore. and so were gone beyond replacement. Whilst she was still in the brown, muddy waters of the Bristol channel. there were too several breakdowns in the engine room. which necessitated atop- pa§ee7and anxious repairs. IOWK my: they say w: an the bug. 11mm do to haul: under.” . “141-. new. -Hll;pt1'oyl.' Romy named. “(in ‘you master of. this blamed ship. or in I? You In" In; to. - emy ordmihenlm a: down oflthhi bridge." ‘ â€"_ â€"-. 3545“ m}: an «in {7: meet Mr. "I . ‘po en 1713 es bran accl- M of w tort: ‘ However. it began to be plain that mthu'drewmurer to the bay the weather worsened madam and at last 1t «and to be a crime between batten- later-re her next landfall. The glass was sinking steadily; the seascape was i made up of blacks and whites and 1 lurid guys: but though the air was cold and raw. the weather was not any worse than need have been expected i for the time of year. The hatches were ; Oii'.an(is.soo¢istrongsmellotcoalgas1 billowed up from below and mingled ‘ with the sea scents. [ With all a northern sailor’s distrust : for a “Dago,” Kettle had spotted his 3 spruce young Italian second mate as F Gedge's probable tool. and watched ‘ him like the apple of his eye. No man’s actions could have been more innocent and. normal, and this. of course, made things all the more suspicious. The en- gineer stair, who had access to the bilge cocks, and could arrange disas- ters to machinery, were likewise, ex- oiiicio, suspicious persons. but as it- was quite impossible to overlook them at all hours and on all occasions, he had regretfully to take them very largely on trust. from his ear. But as Kettle replied to the first of these compliments by three prompt revolver shots almost before the thrower had time to think. and rushed out and caught the second as- aailant by the neck-scruff and forced him to eat up every scrap of coal that had been thrown, the ail-nation crew decided that he was too ugly to tackle usefully. and tacitly agreed to let him alone for the future. and to do their lawful work. The which, of course. was exactly what Kettle desired. By this time the Sultan of Moan had run down the Cornish coast, had rounded Lands End. and was standing oiion acourse which would make Fia- spruce one uses. Ind ield team into the whole grimy an: at then with n deck-scrubber. They were new to their little shippers virtues. and thonghtntiirstthsttheywouldtreet himnstheyhndelreedytreetedthetnt old mete end es n consequence bleed- ing feces end erected heads were plentiful; and curse. went up, bitter and deep, in hit the tongues ct Europe. But Kettle still remained spruce and clean and aggressive and untouched. It takes some nrt to thoroughly thrush n dozen sense. full-grown men with a. light broom without Meeting the stick or knocking oi! the heed. end the crew of the Sultan of Lebunn were not slow to recognize their captain's ‘ ability. But at the same time they were not inspired with any overpowering love for him. In the course of that night on iron belsying pin whisked up out of the darkness, nnd knocked oi! his cup us he stood on the upper bridge, and just before the dawn e chunk of coal whis- sed up and smashed itself into splint- ers on the wheelhouse well. not an inch JOSEPH MEEHAN ' LUO'I'IOREEB for tha County of Victor“. 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