Somebody asked for the cigars. We had talked long,
and the conversation as beginning to languish; the tobacco smoke had got into
the heavy curtains, he wine had got into those brains which were liable to
become heavy, and it was already perfectly evident that, unless somebody did
something to rouse our oppressed spirits, the meeting would soon come to its
natural conclusion, and we, the guests, would speedily go home to bed, and most
certainly to sleep. No one had said anything very remarkable; it may be that no
one had anything very remarkable to say. Jones had given us every particular of
his last hunting adventure in Yorkshire. Mr. Tompkins, of Boston, had explained
at elaborate length those working principles, by the due and careful
maintenance of which the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad not only
extended its territory, increased its departmental influence, and transported
live stock without starving them to death before the day of actual delivery,
but, also, had for years succeeded in deceiving those passengers who bought its
tickets into the fallacious belief that the corporation aforesaid was really
able to transport human life without destroying it. Signor Tombola had
endeavoured to persuade us, by arguments which we took no trouble to oppose,
that the unity of his country in no way resembled the average modern torpedo,
carefully planned, constructed with all the skill of the greatest European
arsenals, but, when constructed, destined to be directed by feeble hands into a
region where it must undoubtedly explode, unseen, unfeared, and unheard, into
the illimitable wastes of political chaos.
It is unnecessary to go into further details. The
conversation had assumed proportions which would have bored Prometheus on his
rock, which would have driven Tantalus to distraction, and which would have
impelled Ixion to seek relaxation in the simple but instructive dialogues of
Herr Ollendorff, rather than submit to the greater evil of listening to our
talk. We had sat at table for hours; we were bored, we were tired, and nobody
showed signs of moving.
Somebody called for cigars. We all instinctively
looked towards the speaker. Brisbane was a man of five-and-thirty years of age,
and remarkable for those gifts which chiefly attract the attention of men. He was
a strong man. The external proportions of his figure presented nothing
extraordinary to the common eye, though his size was above the average. He was
a little over six feet in height, and moderately broad in the shoulder; he did
not appear to be stout, but, on the other hand, he was certainly not thin; his
small head was supported by a strong and sinewy neck; his broad, muscular hands
appeared to possess a peculiar skill in breaking walnuts without the assistance
of the ordinary cracker, and, seeing him in profile, one could not help
remarking the extraordinary breadth of his sleeves, and the unusual thickness
of his chest. He was one of those men who are commonly spoken of among men as
deceptive; that is to say, that though he looked exceedingly strong he was in
reality very much stronger than he looked. Of his features I need say little.
His head was small, his hair is thin, his eyes are blue, his nose is large, he
has a small moustache, and a square jaw. Everybody knows Brisbane, and when he
asked for a cigar everybody looked at him.
"It is a very singular thing," said
Brisbane.
Everybody stopped talking. Brisbane's voice was
not loud, but possessed a peculiar quality of penetrating general conversation,
and cutting it like a knife. Everybody listened. Brisbane, perceiving that he
had attracted their general attention, lit his cigar with great equanimity.
"It is very singular," he continued,
"that thing about ghosts. People are always asking whether anybody has
seen a ghost. I have."
"Bosh! What, you? You don't mean to say so,
Brisbane? Well, for a man of his intelligence!"
A chorus of exclamations greeted Brisbane's
remarkable statement. Everybody called for cigars, and Stubbs, the butler,
suddenly appeared from the depths of nowhere with a fresh bottle of dry
champagne. The situation was saved; Brisbane was going to tell a story.
I am an old sailor, said Brisbane, and as I have
to cross the Atlantic pretty often, I have my favourites. Most men have their
favourites. I have seen a man wait in a Broadway bar for three-quarters of an
hour for a particular car which he liked. I believe the bar-keeper made at
least one-third of his living by that man's preference. I have a habit of
waiting for certain ships when I am obliged to cross that duck-pond. It may be
a prejudice, but I was never cheated out of a good passage but once in my life.
I remember it very well; it was a warm morning in June, and the Custom House
officials, who were hanging about waiting for a steamer already on her way up
from the Quarantine, presented a peculiarly hazy and thoughtful appearance. I
had not much luggage -- I never have. I mingled with the crowd of passengers,
porters, and officious individuals in blue coats and brass buttons, who seemed
to spring up like mushrooms from the deck of a moored steamer to obtrude their
unnecessary services upon the independent passenger. I have often noticed with
a certain interest the spontaneous evolution of these fellows. They are not
there when you arrive; five minutes after the pilot has called 'Go ahead!'
they, or at least their blue coats and brass buttons, have disappeared from
deck and gangway as completely as though they had been consigned to that locker
which tradition ascribes to Davy Jones. But, at the moment of starting, they
are there, clean shaved, blue coated, and ravenous for fees. I hastened on
board. The Kamtschatka was one of my favourite ships. I saw was, because she
emphatically no longer is. I cannot conceive of any inducement which could
entice me to make another voyage in her. Yes, I know what you are going to say.
She is uncommonly clean in the run aft, she has enough bluffing off in the bows
to keep her dry, and the lower berths are most of them double. She has a lot of
advantages, but I won't cross in her again. Excuse the digression. I got on
board. I hailed a steward, whose red nose and redder whiskers were equally
familiar to me.
"One hundred and five, lower berth,"
said I, in the businesslike tone peculiar to men who think no more of crossing
the Atlantic than taking a whisky cocktail at down-town Delmonico's.
The steward took my portmanteau, greatcoat, and
rug. I shall never forget the expression on his face. Not that he turned pale.
It is maintained by the most eminent divines that even miracles cannot change
the course of nature. I have no hesitation in saying that he did not turn pale;
but, from his expression, I judged that he was either about to shed tears, to
sneeze, or to drop my portmanteau. As the latter contained two bottles of
particularly fine old sherry presented to me for my voyage by my old friend
Snigginson van Pickyns, I felt extremely nervous. But the steward did none of
these things.
"Well, I'm d----d!" said he in a low
voice, and led the way.
I supposed my Hermes, as he led me to the lower
regions, had had a little grog, but I said nothing, and followed him. One
hundred and five was on the port side, well aft. There was nothing remarkable
about the state-room. The lower berth, like most of those upon the Kamtschatka,
was double. There was plenty of room; there was the usual washing apparatus,
calculated to convey an idea of luxury to the mind of a North American Indian;
there were the usual inefficient racks of brown wood, in which it is more easy
to hand a large-sized umbrella than the common tooth-brush of commerce. Upon
the uninviting mattresses were carefully bolded together those blankets which a
great modern humorist has aptly compared to cold buckwheat cakes. The question
of towels was left entirely to the imagination. The glass decanters were filled
with a transparent liquid faintly tinged with brown, but from which an odour
less faint, but not more pleasing, ascended to the nostrils, like a far-off
sea-sick reminiscence of oily machinery. Sad-coloured curtains half-closed the
upper berth. The hazy June daylight shed a faint illumination upon the desolate
little scene. Ugh! how I hate that state-room!
The steward deposited my traps and looked at me,
as though he wanted to get away -- probably in search of more passengers and
more fees. It is always a good plan to start in favour with those
functionaries, and I accordingly gave him certain coins there and then.
"I'll try and make yer comfortable all I
can," he remarked, as he put the coins in his pocket. Nevertheless, there
was a doubtful intonation in his voice which surprised me. Possibly his scale
of fees had gone up, and he was not satisfied; but on the whole I was inclined
to think that, as he himself would have expressed it, he was "the better
for a glass". I was wrong, however, and did the man injustice.
II
Nothing especially worthy of mention occurred
during that day. We left the pier punctually, and it was very pleasant to be
fairly under way, for the weather was warm and sultry, and the motion of the
steamer produced a refreshing breeze. Everybody knows what the first day at sea
is like. People pace the decks and stare at each other, and occasionally meet
acquaintances whom they did not know to be on board. There is the usual
uncertainty as to whether the food will be good, bad, or indifferent, until the
first two meals have put the matter beyond a doubt; there is the usual
uncertainty about the weather, until the ship is fairly off Fire Island. The
tables are crowded at first, and then suddenly thinned. Pale-faced people
spring from their seats and precipitate themselves towards the door, and each
old sailor breathes more freely as his sea-sick neighbour rushes from his side,
leaving him plenty of elbow-room and an unlimited command over the mustard.
One passage across the Atlantic is very much like
another, and we who cross very often do not make the voyage for the sake of
novelty. Whales and icebergs are indeed always objects of interest, but, after
all, one whale is very much like another whale, and one rarely sees an iceberg
at close quarters. To the majority of us the most delightful moment of the day
on board an ocean steamer is when we have taken our last turn on deck, have
smoked our last cigar, and having succeeded in tiring ourselves, feel at
liberty to turn in with a clear conscience. On that first night of the voyage I
felt particularly lazy, and went to bed in one hundred and five rather earlier
than I usually do. As I turned in, I was amazed to see that I was to have a
companion. A portmanteau, very like my own, lay in the opposite corner, and in
the upper berth had been deposited a neatly-folded rug, with a stick and
umbrella. I had hoped to be alone, and I was disappointed; but I wondered who
my room-mate was to be, and I determined to have a look at him.
Before I had been long in bed he entered. He was,
as far as I could see, a very tall man, very thin, very pale, with sandy hair
and whiskers and colourless grey eyes. He had about him, I thought, an air of
rather dubious fashion; the short of man you might see in Wall Street, without
being able precisely to say what he was doing there -- the sort of man who
frequents the Café Anglais, who always seems to be alone and who drinks
champagne; you might meet him on a racecourse, but he would never appear to be
doing anything there either. A little over-dressed -- a little odd. There are
three or four of his kind on every ocean steamer. I made up my mind that I did
not care to make his acquaintance, and I went to sleep saying to myself that I
would study his habits in order to avoid him. If he rose early, I would rise
late; if he went to bed late, I would go to bed early. I did not care to know
him. If you once know people of that kind they are always turning up. Poor
fellow! I need not have taken the trouble to come to so many decisions about
him, for I never saw him again after that first night in one hundred and five.
I was sleeping soundly when I was suddenly waked
by a loud noise. To judge from the sound, my room-mate must have sprung with a
single leap from the upper berth to the floor. I heard him fumbling with the
latch and bolt of the door, which opened almost immediately, and then I heard his
footsteps as he ran at full speed down the passage, leaving the door open
behind him. The ship was rolling a little, and I expected to hear him stumble
or fall, but he ran as though he were running for his life. The door swung on
its hinges with the motion of the vessel, and the sound annoyed me. I got up
and shut it, and groped my way back to my berth in the darkness. I went to
sleep again; but I have no idea how long I slept.
When I awoke it was still quite dark, but I felt a
disagreeable sensation of cold, and it seemed to me that the air was damp. You
know the peculiar smell of a cabin which has been wet with sea-water. I covered
myself up as well as I could and dozed off again, framing complaints to be made
the next day, and selecting the most powerful epithets in the language. I could
hear my room-mate turn over in the upper berth. He had probably returned while
I was asleep. Once I thought I heard him groan, and I argued that he was
sea-sick. That is particularly unpleasant when one is below. Nevertheless I
dozed off and slept till early daylight.
The ship was rolling heavily, much more than on
the previous evening, and the grey light which came in through the porthole
changed in tint with every movement according as the angle of the vessel's side
turned the glass seawards or skywards. It was very cold -- unaccountably so for
the month of June. I turned my head and looked at the porthole, and saw to my
surprise that it was wide open and hooked back. I believe I swore audibly. Then
I got up and shut it. As I turned back I glanced at the upper berth. The
curtains were drawn close together; my companion had probably felt cold as well
as I. It struck me that I had slept enough. The state-room was uncomfortable,
though, strange to say, I could not smell the dampness which had annoyed me in
the night. My room-mate was still asleep -- excellent opportunity for avoiding
him, so I dressed at once and went on deck. The day was warm and cloudy, with
an oily smell on the water. It was seven o'clock as I came out -- much later
than I had imagined. I came across the doctor, who was taking his first sniff
of the morning air. He was a young man from the West of Ireland -- a tremendous
fellow, with black hair and blue eyes, already inclined to be stout; he had a
happy-go-lucky, healthy look about him which was rather attractive.
"Fine morning," I remarked, by way of
introduction.
"Well," said he, eyeing me with an air
of ready interest, "it's a fine morning and it's not a fine morning. I
don't think it's much of a morning."
"Well, no -- it is not so very fine,"
said I.
"It's just what I call fuggly weather,"
replied the doctor.
"It was very cold last night, I
thought," I remarked. "However, when I looked about, I found that the
porthole was wide open. I had not noticed it when I went to bed. And the
state-room was damp, too."
"Damp!" said he. "Whereabouts are
you?"
"One hundred and five------"
To my surprise the doctor started visibly, and
stared at me.
"What is the matter?" I asked.
"Oh -- nothing," he answered; "only
everybody has complained of that state-room for the last three trips."
"I shall complain too," I said. "It
has certainly not been properly aired. It is a shame!"
"I don't believe it can be helped,"
answered the doctor. "I believe there is something -- well, it is not my
business to frighten passengers."
"You need not be afraid of frightening
me," I replied. "I can stand any amount of damp. If I should get a
bad cold I will come to you."
I offered the doctor a cigar, which he took and
examined very critically.
"It is not so much the damp," he
remarked. "However, I dare say you will get on very well. Have you a
room-mate?"
"Yes; a deuce of a fellow, who bolts out in
the middle of the night, and leaves the door open."
Again the doctor glanced curiously at me. Then he
lit the cigar and looked grave.
"Did he come back?" he asked presently.
"Yes. I was asleep, but I waked up, and heard
him moving. Then I felt cold and went to sleep again. This morning I found the
porthole open."
"Look here," said the doctor quietly,
"I don't care much for this ship. I don't care a rap for her reputation. I
tell you what I will do. I have a good-sized place up here. I will share it
with you, though I don't know you from Adam."
I was very much surprised at the proposition. I
could not imagine why he should take such a sudden interest in my welfare.
However, his manner as he spoke of the ship was peculiar.
"You are very good, doctor," I said.
"But, really, I believe even now the cabin could be aired, or cleaned out,
or something. Why do you not care for the ship?"
"We are not superstitious in our profession,
sir," replied the doctor, "but the sea makes people so. I don't want
to prejudice you, and I don't want to frighten you, but if you will take my
advice you will move in here. I would as soon see you overboard," he added
earnestly, "as know that you or any other man was to sleep in one hundred
and five."
"Good gracious! Why?" I asked.
"Just because on the last three trips the
people who have slept there actually have gone overboard," he answered
gravely.
The intelligence was startling and exceedingly
unpleasant, I confess. I looked hard at the doctor to see whether he was making
game of me, but he looked perfectly serious. I thanked him warmly for his
offer, but told him I intended to be the exception to the rule by which every
one who slept in that particular state-room went overboard. He did not say much,
but looked as grave as ever, and hinted that, before we got across, I should
probably reconsider his proposal. In the course of time we went to breakfast,
at which only an inconsiderable number of passengers assembled. I noticed that
one or two of the officers who breakfasted with us looked grave. After
breakfast I went into my state-room in order to get a book. The curtains of the
upper berth were still closely drawn. Not a word was to be heard. My room-mate
was probably still asleep.
As I came out I met the steward whose business it
was to look after me. He whispered that the captain wanted to see me, and then
scuttled away down the passage as if very anxious to avoid any questions. I
went toward the captain's cabin, and found him waiting for me.
"Sir," said he, "I want to ask a
favour of you."
I answered that I would do anything to oblige him.
"Your room-mate had disappeared," he
said. "He is known to have turned in early last night. Did you notice
anything extraordinary in his manner?"
The question coming, as it did, in exact
confirmation of the fears the doctor had expressed half an hour earlier,
staggered me.
"You don't mean to say he has gone
overboard?" I asked.
"I fear he has," answered the captain.
"This is the most extraordinary thing----"
I began.
"Why?" he asked.
"He is the fourth, then?" I exclaimed.
In answer to another question from the captain, I explained, without mentioning
the doctor, that I had heard the story concerning one hundred and five. He
seemed very much annoyed at hearing that I knew of it. I told him what had
occurred in the night.
"What you say," he replied,
"coincides almost exactly with what was told me by the room-mates of two
of the other three. They bolt out of bed and run down the passage. Two of them
were seen to go overboard by the watch; we stopped and lowered boats, but they
were not found. Nobody, however, saw or heard the man who was lost last night
-- if he is really lost. The steward, who is a superstitious fellow, perhaps,
and expected something to go wrong, went to look for him, this morning, and
found his berth empty, but his clothes lying about, just as he had left them.
The steward was the only man on board who knew him by sight, and he has been
searching everywhere for him. He has disappeared! Now, sir, I want to beg you
not to mention the circumstance to any of the passengers; I don't want the ship
to get a bad name, and nothing hangs about an ocean-goer like stories of
suicides. You shall have your choice of any one of the officers' cabins you
like, including my own, for the rest of the passage. Is that a fair bargain?"
"Very," said I; "and I am much
obliged to you. But since I am alone, and have the state-room to myself, I
would rather not move. If the steward will take out that unfortunate man's
things, I would as leave stay where I am. I will not say anything about the
matter, and I think I can promise you that I will not follow my
room-mate."
The captain tried to dissuade me from my
intention, but I preferred having a state-room alone to being the chum of any
officer on board. I do not know whether I aced foolishly, but if I had taken
his advice I should have had nothing more to tell. There would have remained
the disagreeable coincidence of several suicides occurring among men who had
slept in the same cabin, but that would have been all.
That was not the end of the matter, however, by
any means. I obstinately made up my mind that I would not be disturbed by such
tales, and I even went so far as to argue the question with the captain. There
was something wrong about the state-room, I said. It was rather damp. The
porthole had been left open last night. My room-mate might have been ill when
he came on board, and he might have become delirious after he went to bed. He
might even now be hiding somewhere on board, and might be found later. The
place ought to be aired and the fastening on the port looked to. If the captain
would give me leave, I would see that what I thought necessary were done
immediately.
"Of course you have a right to stay where you
are if you please," he replied, rather petulantly; "but I wish you
would turn out and let me lock the place up, and be done with it."
I did not see it in the same light, and left the
captain, after promising to be silent concerning the disappearance of my
companion. The latter had had no acquaintances on board, and was not missed in
the course of the day. Towards evening I met the doctor again, and he asked me
whether I had changed my mind. I told him I had not.
"Then you will before long," he said,
very gravely.
III
We played whist in the evening, and I went to bed
late. I will confess now that I felt a disagreeable sensation when I entered my
state-room. I could not help thinking of the tall man I had seen on the
previous night, who was now dead, drowned, tossing about in the long swell, two
or three hundred miles astern. His face rose very distinctly before me as I
undressed, and I even went so far as to draw back the curtains of the upper
berth, as though to persuade myself that he was actually gone. I also bolted
the door of the state-room. Suddenly I became aware that the porthole was open,
and fastened back. This was more than I could stand. I hastily threw on my
dressing-gown and went in search of Robert, the steward of my passage. I was
very angry, I remember, and when I found him I dragged him roughly to the door
of one hundred and five, and pushed him towards the open porthole.
"What the deuce do you mean, you scoundrel,
by leaving that port open every night? Don't you know it is against the
regulations? Don't you know that if the ship heeled and the water began to come
in, ten men could not shut it? I will report you to the captain, you
blackguard, for endangering the ship!"
I was exceedingly wroth. The man trembled and
turned pale, and then began to shut the round glass plate with the heavy brass
fittings.
"Why don't you answer me?" I said
roughly.
"If you please, sir," faltered Robert,
"there's nobody on board as can keep this 'ere port shut at night. You can
try it yourself, sir. I ain't a-going to stop hany longer on board o' this
vessel, sir; I ain't, indeed. But if I was you, sir, I'd just clear out and go
and sleep with the surgeon, or something, I would. Look 'ere, sir, is that
fastened what you may call securely, or not, sir? Try it, sir, see if it will
move a hinch."
I tried the port, and found it perfectly tight.
"Well, sir," continued Robert
triumphantly, "I wager my reputation as a A1 steward that in 'arf an hour
it will be open again; fasteneed back, too, sir, that's the horful thing --
fastened back!"
I examined the great screw and the looped nut that
ran on it.
"If I find it open in the night, Robert, I
will give you a sovereign. It is not possible. You may go."
"Soverin' did you say, sir? Very good, sir.
Thank ye, sir. Good-night, sir. Pleasant reepose, sir, and all manner of
hinchantin' dreams, sir."
Robert scuttled away, delighted at being released.
Of course, I thought he was trying to account for his negligence by a silly
story, intended to frighten me, and I disbelieved him. The consequence was that
he got his sovereign, and I spent a very peculiarly unpleasant night.
I went to bed, and five minutes after I had rolled
myself up in my blankets the inexorable Robert extinguished the light that
burned steadily behind the ground-glass pane near the door. I lay quite still
in the dark trying to go to sleep, but I soon found that impossible. It had
been some satisfaction to be angry with the steward, and the diversion had
banished that unpleasant sensation I had at first experienced when I thought of
the drowned man who had been my chum; but I was no longer sleepy, and I lay
awake for some time, occasionally glancing at the porthole, which I could just
see from where I lay, and which, in the darkness, looked like a
faintly-luminous soup-plate suspended in blackness. I believe I must have lain
there for an hour, and, as I remember, I was just dozing into sleep when I was
roused by a draught of cold air, and by distinctly feeling the spray of the sea
blown upon my face. I started to my feet, and not having allowed in the dark
for the motion of the ship, I was instantly thrown violently across the
state-room upon the couch which was placed beneath the port-hole. I recovered
myself immediately, however, and climbed upon my knees. The port-hole was again
wide open and fastened back!
Now these things are facts. I was wide awake when
I got up, and I should certainly have been waked by the fall had I still been
dozing. Moreover, I bruised my elbows and knees badly, and the bruises were
there on the following morning to testify to the fact, if I myself had doubted
it. The porthole was wide open and fastened back -- a thing so unaccountable
that I remember very well feeling astonishment rather that fear when I
discovered it. I at once closed the plate again, and screwed down the loop nut
with all my strength. It was very dark in the state-room. I reflected that the
port had certainly been opened within an hour after Robert had at first shut it
in my presence, and I determined to watch it, and see whether it would open
again. Those brass fittings are very heavy and by no means easy to move; I
could not believe that the clamp had been turned by the shaking of the screw. I
stood peering out through the thick glass at the alternate white and grey
streaks of the sea that foamed beneath the ship's side. I must have remained
there a quarter of an hour.
Suddenly, as I stood, I distinctly heard something
moving behind me in one of the berths, and a moment afterwards, just as I
turned instinctively to look -- though I could, of course, see nothing in the
darkness -- I heard a very faint groan. I sprang across the state-room, and
tore the curtains of the upper berth aside, thrusting in my hands to discover
if there were any one there. There was some one.
I remember that the sensation as I put my hands
forward was as though I were plunging them into the air of a damp cellar, and
from behind the curtains came a gust of wind that smelled horribly of stagnant
sea-water. I laid hold of something that had the shape of a man's arm, but was
smooth, and wet, and icy cold. But suddenly, as I pulled, the creature sprang
violently forward against me, a clammy oozy mass, as it seemed to me, heavy and
wet, yet endowed with a sort of supernatural strength. I reeled across the
state-room, and in an instant the door opened and the thing rushed out. I had
not had time to be frightened, and quickly recovering myself, I sprang through
the door and gave chase at the top of my speed, but I was too late. Ten yards
before me I could see -- I am sure I saw it -- a dark shadow moving in the
dimly lighted passage, quickly as the shadow of a fast horse thrown before a
dog-cart by the lamp on a dark night. But in a moment it had disappeared, and I
found myself holding on to the polished rail that ran along the bulkhead where
the passage turned towards the companion. My hair stood on end, and the cold
perspiration rolled down my face. I am not ashamed of it in the least: I was
very badly frightened.
Still I doubted my senses, and pulled myself
together. It was absurd, I thought. The Welsh rare-bit I had eaten had
disagreed with me. I had been in a nightmare. I made my way back to my
state-room, and entered it with an effort. The whole place smelled of stagnant
sea-water, as it had when I had waked on the previous evening. It required my
utmost strength to go in, and grope among my things for a box of wax lights. As
I lighted a railway reading lantern which I always carry in case I want to read
after the lamps are out, I perceived that the porthole was again open, and a
sort of creeping horror began to take possession of me which I never felt
before, nor wish to feel again. But I got a light and proceeded to examine the
upper berth, expecting to find it drenched with sea-water.
But I was disappointed. The bed had been slept in,
and the smell of the sea was strong; but the bedding was as dry as a bone. I
fancied that Robert had not had the courage to make the bed after the accident
of the previous night -- it had all been a hedeous dream. I drew the curtains
back as far as I could and examined the place very carefully. It was perfectly
dry. But the porthole was open again. With a sort of dull bewilderment of
horror I closed it and screwed it down, and thrusting my heavy stick through
the brass loop, wrenched it with all my might, till the thick metal began to
bend under the pressure. Then I hooked my reading lantern into the red velvet
at the head of the couch, and sat down to recover my senses if I could. I sat
there all night, unable to think of rest -- hardly able to think at all. But
the porthole remained closed, and I did not believe it would now open again
without the application of a considerable force.
The morning dawned at last, and I dressed myself
slowly, thinking over all that had happened in the night. It was a beautiful
day and I went on deck, glad to get out into the early, pure sunshine, and to
smell the breeze from the blue water, so different from the noisome, stagnant
odour of my state-room. Instinctively I turned aft, towards the surgeon's
cabin. There he stood, with a pipe inhis mouth, taking his morning airing
precisely as on the preceding day.
"Good-morning," said he quietly, but
looking at me with evident curiosity.
"Doctor, you were quite right," said I.
"There is something wrong about that place."
"I thought you would change your mind,"
he answered, rather triumphantly. "You have had a bad night, eh? Shall I
make you a pick-me-up? I have a capital recipe."
"No, thanks," I cried. "But I would
like to tell you what happened."
I then tried to explain as clearly as possible
precisely what had occurred, not omitting to state that I had been scared as I
had never been scared in my whole life before. I dwelt particularly on the
phenomenon of the porthole, which was a fact to which I could testify, even if
the rest had been an illusion. I had closed it twice in the night, and the
second time I had actually bent the brass in wrenching it with my stick. I
believe I insisted a good deal on this point.
"You seem to think I am likely to doubt the
story," said the doctor, smiling at my detailed account of the state of
the porthole. "I do not doubt in the least. I renew my invitation to you.
Bring your traps here, and take half my cabin."
"Come and take half of mine for one
night," I said. "Help me to get at the bottom of this thing."
"You will get to the bottom of something else
if you try," answered the doctor.
"What?" I asked.
"The bottom of the sea. I am going to leave
this ship. It is not canny."
"Then you will not help me to find out----"
"Not I," said the doctor quickly.
"It is my business to keep my wits aobut me -- not to go fiddling about
with ghosts and things."
"Do you really believe it is a ghost?" I
enquired, rather contemptuously. But as I spoke I remembered very well the
horrible sensation of the supernatural which had got possession of me during
the night. The doctor turned sharply on me----
"Have you any reasonable explanation of these
things to offer?" he asked. "No; you have not. Well, you say you will
find an explanation. I say that you won't, sir, simply because there is not
any."
"But, my dear sir," I retorted, "do
you, a man of science, mean to tell me that such things cannot be
explained?"
I do," he answered stoutly. "And, if
they could, I would not be concerned in the explanation."
I did not care to spend another night alone in the
state-room, and yet I was obstinately determined to get at the root of the
disturbances. I do not believe there are many men who would have slept there
alone, after passing two such nights. But I made up my mind to try it, if I
could not get any one to share a watch with me. The doctor was evidently not
inclined for such an experiment. He said he was a surgeon, and that in case any
accident occurred on board he must be always in readiness. He could not afford
to have his nerves unsettled. Perhaps he was quite right, but I am inclined to
think that his precaution was prompted by his inclination. On enquiry, he
informed me that there was no one on board who would be likely to join me in my
investigations, and after a little more conversation I left him. A little later
I met the captain, and told him my story. I said that, if no one would spend
the night with me, I would ask leave to have the light burning all night, and
would try it alone.
"Look here," said he, "I will tell
you what I will do. I will share your watch myself, and we will see what
happens. It is my belief that we can find out between us. There may be some
fellow skulking on board, who steals a passage by frightening the passengers.
It is just possible that there may be something queer in the carpentering of
that berth."
I suggested taking the ship's carpenter below and
examining the place; but I was overjoyed at the captain's offer to spend the
night with me. He accordingly sent for the workman and ordered him to do
anything I required. We went below at once. I had all the bedding cleared out
of the upper berth, and we examined the place thoroughly to see if there was a
board loose anywhere, or a panel which could be opened or pushed aside. We
tried the planks everywhere, tapped the flooring, unscrewed the fittings of the
lower berth and took it to pieces -- in short, there was not a square inch of
the state-room which was not searched and tested. Everything was in perfect order,
and we put everything back in its place. As we were finishing our work, Robert
came to the door and looked in.
"Well, sir -- find anything, sir?" he
asked, with a ghastly grin.
"You were right about the porthole,
Robert," I said, and I gave him the promised sovereign. The carpenter did
his work silently and skilfully, following my directions. When he had done he
spoke.
"I'm a plain man, sir," he said.
"But it's my belief you had better just turn out your things, and let me
run half a dozen four-inch screws through the door of this cabin. There's no
good never came o' this cabin yet, sir, and that's all about it. There's been
four lives lost out o' here to my own remembrance, and that is four trips.
Better give it up, sir -- better give it up!"
"I will try it for one night more," I
said.
"Better give it up, sir -- better give it up!
It's a precious bad job," repeated the workman, putting his tools in his
bag and leaving the cabin.
But my spirits had risen considerably at the
prospect of having the captain's company, and I made up my mind not to be
prevented from going to the end of this strange business. I abstained from
Welsh rare-bits and grog that evening, and did not even join in the customary
game of whist. I wanted to be quite sure of my nerves, and my vanity made me
anxious to make a good figure in the captain's eyes.
IV
The captain was one of those splendidly tough and
cheerful specimens of seafaring humanity whose combined courage, hardihood, and
calmness in difficulty leads them naturally into high posiitons of trust. He
was not the man to be led away by an idle tale, and the mere fact that he was
willing to join me in the investigation was proof that he thought there was
something seriously wrong, which could not be accounted for on ordinary theories,
nor laughed down as a common superstition. To some extent, too, his reputation
was at stake, as well as the reputation of the ship. It is no light thing to
lose passengers overboard, and he knew it.
About ten o'clock that evening, as I was smoking a
last cigar, he came up to me, and drew me aside from the beat of the other
passengers who were patrolling the deck in the warm darkness.
"This is a serious matter, Mr.
Brisbane," he said. "We must make up our minds either way -- to be
disappointed or to have a pretty rough time of it. You see I cannot afford to
laugh at the affair, and I will ask you to sign your name to a statement of
whatever occurs. If nothing happens tonight we will try it again tomorrow and
next day. Are you ready?"
So we went below, and entered the state-room. As
we went in I could see Robert the steward, who stood a little further down the
passage, watching us, with his usual grin, as though certain that something
dreadful was about to happen. The captain closed the door behind us and bolted
it.
"Supposing we put your portmanteau before the
door," he suggested. "One of us can sit on it. Nothing can get out
then. Is the port screwed down?"
I found it as I had left it in the morning.
Indeed, without using a lever, as I had done, no one could have opened it. I
drew back the curtains of the upper berth so that I could see well into it. By
the captain's advice I lighted my reading lantern, and placed it so that it
shone upon the white sheets above. He insisted upon sitting on the portmanteau,
declaring that he wished to be able to swear that he had sat before the door.
Then he requested me to search the state-room
thoroughly, an operation very soon accomplished, as it consisted merely in
looking beneath the lower berth and under the couch below the porthole. The
spaces were quite empty.
"It is impossible for any human being to get
in," I said, "or for any human being to open the port."
"Very good," said the captain calmly.
"If we see anything now, it must be either imagination or something
supernatural."
I sat down on the edge of the lower berth.
"The first time it happened," said the
captain, crossing his legs and leaning back against the door, "was in
March. The passenger who slept here, in the upper berth, turned out have been a
lunatic -- at all events, he was known to have been a little touched, and he
had taken his passage without the knowledge of his friends. He rushed out in
the middle of the night, and threw himself overboard, before the officer who
had the watch could stop him. We stopped and lowered a boat; it was a quiet
night, just before that heavy weather came on; but we could not find him. Of
course his suicide was afterwards accounted for on the ground of his
insanity."
"I suppose that often happens?" I
remarked, rather absently.
"Not often -- no," said the captain;
"never before in my experience, though I have heard of it happening on
board of other ships. Well, as I was saying, that occurred in March. On the
very next trip ---- What are you looking at?" he asked, stopping suddenly
in his narration.
I believe I gave no answer. My eyes were riveted
upon the porthole. It seemed to me that the brass loop-nut was beginning to
turn very slowly upon the screw -- so slowly, however, that I was not sure it
moved at all. I watched it intently, fixing its position in my mind, and trying
to ascertain whether it changed. Seeing where I was looking, the captain looked
too.
"It moves!" he exclaimed, in a tone of
conviction. "No, it does not," he added, after a minute.
"If it were the jarring of the screw,"
said I, "it would have opened during the day; but I found it this evening
jammed tight as I left it this morning."
I rose and tried the nut. It was certainly
loosened, for by an effort I could move it with my hands.
"The queer thing," said the captain,
"is that the second man who was lost is supposed to have got through that
very port. We had a terrible time over it. It was in the middle of the night,
and the weather was very heavy; there was an alarm that one of the ports was
open and the sea running in. I came below and found everything flooded, the
water pouring in every time she rolled, and the whole port swinging from the
top bolts -- not the porthole in the middle. Well, we managed to shut it, but
the water did some damage. Ever since that the place smells of sea-water from
time to time. We supposed the passenger had thrown himself out, though the Lord
only knows how he did it. The steward kept telling me that he cannot keep
anything shut here. Upon my word -- I can smell it now, cannot you?" he
enquired, sniffing the air suspiciously.
"Yes -- distinctly," I said, and I
shuddered as that same odour of stagnant sea-water grew stronger in the cabin.
"Now, to smell like this, the place must be damp," I continued,
"and yet when I examined it with the carpenter this morning everything was
perfectly dry. It is most extraordinary -- hallo!"
My reading lantern, which had been placed in the
upper berth, was suddenly extinguished. There was still a good deal of light
from the pane of ground glass near the door, behind which loomed the regulation
lamp. The ship rolled heavily, and the curtain of the upper berth swung far out
into the state-room and back again. I rose quickly from my seat on the edge of
the bed, and the captain at the same moment started to his feet with a loud cry
of surprise. I had turned with the intention of taking down the lantern to
examine it, when I heard his exclamation, and immediately afterwards his call
for help. I sprang towards him. He was wrestling with all his might with the
brass loop of the port. It seemed to turn against his hands in spite of all his
efforts. I caught up my cane, a heavy oak stick I always used to carry, and
thrust it through the ring and bore on it with all my strength. But the strong
wood snapped suddenly and I fell upon the couch. When I rose again the port was
wide open, and the captain was standing with his back against the door, pale to
the lips.
"There is something in that berth!" he
cried, in a strange voice, his eyes almost starting from his head. "Hold
the door, while I look -- it shall not escape us, whatever it is!"
But instead of taking his place, I sprang upon the
lower bed, and seized something which lay in the upper berth.
It was something ghostly, horrible beyond words,
and it moved in my grip. It was like the body of a man long droned, and yet it
moved, and had the strength of ten men living; but I gripped it with all my
might -- the slippery, oozy, horrible thing -- the dead white eyes seemed to
stare at me out of the dusk; the putrid odour of rank sea-water was about it,
and its shiny hair hung in foul wet curls over its dead face. I wrestled with
the dead thing; it thrust itself upon me and forced me back and nearly broke my
arms; it wound its corpse's arms about my neck, the living death, and
overpowered me, so that I, at last, cried aloud and fell, and left my hold.
As I fell the thing sprang across me, and seemed
to throw itself upon the captain. When I last saw him on his feet his face was
white and his lips set. It seemed to me that he struck a violent blow at the
dead being, and then he, too, fell forward upon his face, with an inarticulate
cry of horror.
The thing paused an instant, seeming to hover over
his prostrate body, and I could have screamed again for very fright, but I had
no voice left. The thing vanished sudddenly, and it seemed to my disturbed
senses that it made its exit through the open port, though how that was possible,
considering the smallness of the aperture, is more than any one can tell. I lay
a long time on the floor, and the captain lay beside me. At last I partially
recovered my senses and moved, and instantly I knew that my arm was broken --
the small bone of my left forearm near the wrist.
I got upon my feet somehow, and with my remaining
hand I tried to raise the captain. He groaned and moved, and at last came to
himself. He was not hurt, but he seemed badly stunned.
Well, do you want to hear any more? There is
nothing more. That is the end of my story. The carpenter carried out his scheme
of running half a dozen four-inch screws through the door of one hundred and
five; and if ever you take a passage in the Kamtschatka, you may ask for a
berth in that state-room. You will be told that it is engaged -- yes -- it is
engaged by that dead thing.
I finished the trip in the surgeon's cabin. He
doctored my broken arm, and advised me not to "fiddle about with ghosts
and things" any more. The captain was very silent, and never sailed again
in that ship, though it is still running. And I will not sail in her either. It
was a very disagreeable experience, and I was very badly frightened, which is a
thing I do not like. That is all. That is how I saw a ghost -- if it was a
ghost. It was dead, anyhow.
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