Read A High Wind in Jamaica Online
Authors: Richard Hughes
“Here, you can't take all that junk!” dissuaded Otto.
“Oh but my darlings, I can't leave you behind!” cried Rachel piteously. Out rushed the cook, just in time to retrieve his ladleâand a battle-royal began.
Naturally, Jonsen was on tenterhooks to be gone. But it was essential they should part on good terms.
José was lifting Laura over the side.
“
Darling
José!” she burst out suddenly, and twined her arms tightly round his neck.
At that Harry and Edward, who were already in the boat, scrambled back on deck. They had forgotten to say good-bye. And so each child said good-bye to each pirate, kissing him and lavishing endearments on him.
“Go on! Go on!” muttered Jonsen impatiently.
Emily ï¬ung herself in his arms, sobbing as if her heart would break.
“Don't make me go!” she begged. “Let me stay with you always, always!” She clung tight to the lapels of his coat, hiding her face in his chest: “Oh, I
don't
want to go!”
Jonsen was strangely moved: for a moment, almost toyed with the idea.
But the others were already in the boat.
“Come on!” said Otto, “or they'll go without you!”
“Wait! Wait!” shrieked Emily, and was over the side and in the boat in a ï¬ash.
Jonsen shook his head confusedly. For this last time, she had him puzzled.
But now, as they rowed across to the steamer, all the children stood up in the boat, in danger of tumbling out, and cried:
“Good-bye! Good-bye!”
“Adios!” cried the pirates, waving sentimental hands, and guffawing secretly to each other.
“C-c-come and see us in England!” came Edward's clear treble.
“Yes!” cried Emily. “Come and stay with us! All of you!â
Promise
you'll come and stay with us!”
“All right!” shouted Otto. “We'll come!”
“Come
soon
!”
“My babies!” wailed Rachel. “I've lost 'most all my babies!”
But now they were alongside the steamer: and soon they were mounting a rope ladder to her deck.
What a long way up it was! But at last they were all on board.
The little boat returned to the schooner.
The children never once looked after it.
And well might they forget it. For exciting as it had been to go onto a ship of any kind for the ï¬rst time, to ï¬nd themselves on this steamer was inï¬nitely more so. The luxury of it! The white paint! The doors! The windows! The stairs! The brass!âA fairy palace, no: but a mundane wonder of a quite unimagined kind.
But they had little time now to take in the details. All the passengers, wild with curiosity, were gathered round them in a ring. As the dirty, disheveled little mites were handed one by one on board, a gasp went up. The story of the capture of the
Clorinda
by as ï¬endish a set of buccaneers as any in the past that roamed the same Caribbean was well known: and how the little innocents on board her had been taken and tortured to death before the eyes of the impotent captain. To see now face to face the victims of so foul a murder was for them too a thrill of the ï¬rst water.
The tension was ï¬rst broken by a beautiful young lady in a muslin dress. She sank on her knees beside little Harry, and folded him in her delicate arms.
“The little angel!” she murmured. “You poor little man, what horrors you have been through! How will you ever forget them?”
As if that were the signal, all the lady passengers fell on the astonished children and pitied them: while the men, less demonstrative, stood around with lumps in their throats.
Bewildered at ï¬rst, it was not long before they rose to the occasionâas children generally will, when they ï¬nd themselves the butt of indiscriminate adoration. Bless you, they were kings and queens! They were so sleepy they could hardly keep their eyes open: but they were not going to bed, not they! They had never been treated like this before. Heaven alone knew how long it would last. Best not waste a minute of it.
It was not long before they ceased even to be surprised, became convinced that it was all their right and due. They were very important peopleâquite unique.
Only Emily stood apart, shy, answering questions uncomfortably. She did not seem to be able to throw herself into her importance with the same zest as the others.
Even the passengers' children joined in the fuss and admiration: perhaps realizing the opportunity which the excitement gave of avoiding their own bed-time. They began to bring (probably not without suggestion) their toys, as offerings to these new gods: and vied with each other in their generosity.
A shy little boy of about her own age, with brown eyes and a nice smile, his long hair brushed smooth as silk, his clothes neat and sweet-smelling, sidled up to Rachel.
“What's your name?” she asked him.
“Harold.”
She told him hers.
“How much do you weigh?” he asked her.
“I don't know.”
“You look rather heavy. May I see if I can lift you?”
“Yes.”
He clasped his arms round her stomach from behind, leant back, and staggered a few paces with her. Then he set her down, the friendship cemented.
Emily stood apart; and for some reason every one unconsciously respected her reserve. But suddenly something seemed to snap in her heart. She ï¬ung herself face-downwards on the deckânot crying, but kicking convulsively. It was a huge great stewardess who picked her up and carried her, still quivering from head to foot, down to a neat, clean cabin. There, soothing and talking to her without ceasing, she undressed her, and washed her with warm water, and put her to bed.
Emily's head felt different to any way it had ever felt before: hardly as if it were her own. It sang, and went round like a wheel, without so much as with your leave or by your leave. But her body, on the other hand, was more than usually sensitive, absorbing the tender, smooth coolness of the sheets, the softness of the mattress, as a thirsty horse sucks up water. Her limbs drank in comfort at every pore: it seemed as if she could never be sated with it. She felt physical peace soaking slowly through to her marrow: and when at last it got there, her head became more quiet and orderly too.
All this while she had hardly heard what was said to her: only a refrain that ran through it all made any impression, “
Those wicked men...men...nothing but
men...those cruel men...
”
Men! It was perfectly true that for months and months she had seen nothing but men. To be at last back among other women was heavenly. When the kind stewardess bent over her to kiss her, she caught tight hold of her, and buried her face in the warm, soft, yielding ï¬esh, as if to sink herself in it. Lord! How unlike the ï¬rm, muscular bodies of Jonsen and Otto!
When the stewardess stood up again, Emily feasted her eyes on her, eyes grown large and warm and mysterious. The woman's enormous, swelling bosom fascinated her. Forlornly, she began to pinch her own thin little chest. Was it conceivable she would herself ever grow breasts like thatâbeautiful, mountainous breasts, that had to be cased in a sort of cornucopia? Or even ï¬rm little apples, like Margaret's?
Thank God she had not been born a boy! She was overtaken with a sudden revulsion against the whole sex of them. From the tips of her ï¬ngers to the tips of her toes she felt female: one with that exasperating, idiotic secret communion: initiate of the γÏ
γαικειογ.
Suddenly Emily reached up and caught the stewardess by the head, pulling it down to her close: began whispering earnestly in her ear.
On the woman's face the ï¬rst look of incredulity changed to utter stupefaction, from stupefaction to determination.
“My eye!” she said at last. “The cheek of the rascals! The impudence!”
Without another word she slipped out of the cabin. And you may imagine that the steamer captain, when he heard the trick that had been played upon him, was as astonished as she.
For a few moments after she had gone Emily lay staring at nothing, a very curious expression on her face indeed. Then, all of a sudden, she dropped asleep, breathing sweetly and easily.
But she only slept for about ten minutes: and when she woke the cabin door was open, and in it stood Rachel and her little boy friend.
“What do you want?” said Emily forbiddingly.
“Harold has brought his alligator,” said Rachel.
Harold stepped forward, and laid the little creature on Emily's coverlet. It was very small: only about six inches long: a yearling: but an exact miniature of its adult self, with the snub nose and round Socratic forehead that distinguish it from the crocodile. It moved jerkily, like a clockwork toy. Harold picked it up by the tail: it spread its paws in the air, and jerked from side to side, more like clockwork than ever. Then he set it down again, and it stood there, its tongueless mouth wide open and its harmless teeth looking like grains of sand-paper, alternately barking and hissing. Harold let it snap at his ï¬ngerâit was plainly hungry in the warmth down there. It darted its head so fast you could hardly see it move: but its bite was still so weak as to be painless, even to a child.
Emily drew a deep breath, fascinated.
“May I have him for the night?” she asked.
“All right,” said Harold: and he and Rachel were summoned away by some one without.
Emily was translated into Heaven. So this was an alligator! She was actually going to sleep with an alligator! She had thought that to any one who had once been in an earthquake nothing really exciting could happen again: but then, she had not thought of this.
There was once a girl called Emily, who slept with an
alligator
...
In search of greater warmth, the creature high-stepped warily up the bed towards her face. About six inches away it paused, and they looked each other in the eye, those two children.
The eye of an alligator is large, protruding, and of a brilliant yellow, with a slit pupil like a cat's. A cat's eye, to the casual observer, is expressionless: though with attention one can distinguish in it many changes of emotion. But the eye of an alligator is inï¬nitely more stony and brilliantâreptilian.
What possible meaning could Emily ï¬nd in such an eye? Yet she lay there, and stared, and stared: and the alligator stared too. If there had been an observer it might have given him a shiver to see them soâwell, eye to eye like that.
Presently the beast opened his mouth and hissed again gently. Emily lifted a ï¬nger and began to rub the corner of his jaw. The hiss changed to a sound almost like a purr. A thin, ï¬lmy lid ï¬rst covered his eye from the front backwards, then the outer lid closed up from below.
Suddenly he opened his eyes again, and snapped on her ï¬nger: then turned and wormed his way into the neck of her night-gown, and crawled down inside, cool and rough against her skin, till he found a place to rest. It is surprising that she could stand it as she did, without ï¬inching.
Alligators are utterly untamable.
IV
From the deck of the schooner, Jonsen and Otto watched the children climb onto the steamer: watched their boat return, and the steamer get under way.
So: it had all gone without a hitch. No one had suspected his storyâa story so simple as to be very nearly the truth.
They were gone.
Jonsen could feel the difference at once: and it seemed almost as if the schooner could. A schooner, after all, is a place for
men
. He stretched himself, and took a deep breath, feeling that a cloying, enervating inï¬uence was lifted. José was industriously sweeping up some of Rachel's abandoned babies. He swept them into the leescuppers. He drew a bucket of water, and dashed it at them over the deck. The trap swung openâwhew, it was gone, all that truck!
“Batten down that fore-hatch!” ordered Jonsen.
The men all seemed lighter of heart than they had been for many months: as if the weight they were relieved of had been enormous. They sang as they worked, and two friends playfully pummeled each other in passingâhard. The lean, masculine schooner shivered and plunged in the freshening evening breeze. A shower of spray for no particular reason suddenly burst over the bows, swept aft and dashed full in Jonsen's face. He shook his head like a wet dog, and grinned.
Rum appeared: and for the ï¬rst time since the encounter with the Dutch steamer all the sailors got bestially drunk, and lay about the deck, and were sick in the scuppers. José was belching like a bassoon.
It was dark by then. The breeze dropped away again. The gaffs clanked aimlessly in the calm, with the motion of the sea: the empty sails ï¬apped with reports like cannon, a hearty applause. Jonsen and Otto themselves remained sober, but they had not the heart to discipline the crew.
The steamer had long since disappeared into the dark. The foreboding which had oppressed Jonsen all the night before was gone. No intuition told him of Emily's whispering to the stewardess: of the steamer, shortly after, meeting with a British gunboat: of the long series of lights ï¬ickering between them. The gunboat, even now, was fast overhauling him: but no premonition disturbed his peace.
He was tiredâas tired as a sailor ever lets himself be. The last twenty-four hours had been hard. He went below as soon as his watch was over, and climbed into his bunk.
But he did not, at once, sleep. He lay for a while conning over the step he had taken. It was really very astute. He had returned the children, undoubtedly safe and sound: Marpole would be altogether discredited. Even to have landed them at Santa Lucia, his ï¬rst intention, could never have closed the
Clorinda
episode so completely, since the world at large would not have heard of it: and it would have been difficult to produce them, should need arise.
Indeed, it had seemed to be a choice of evils: either he must carry them about always, as a proof that they were alive, or he must land them and lose control of them. In the ï¬rst case, their presence would certainly connect him with the
Clorinda
piracy of which he might otherwise go unsuspected: in the second, he might be convicted of their murder if he could not produce them.