<p>He didn't say anything more about asking for his discharge, but I
knew well enough that if he got ashore at the next port we should
never see him again, if he had to leave his kit behind him, and
his money, too. He was scared all through, for good and all; and
he wouldn't be right again till he got another ship. It's no use
to talk to a man when he gets<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span> like that, any more than it
is to send a boy to the main truck when he has lost his nerve.</p>
<p>Jack Benton never spoke of what happened that evening. I don't
know whether he knew about the two forks, or not; or whether he
understood what the trouble was. Whatever he knew from the other
men, he was evidently living under a hard strain. He was quiet
enough, and too quiet; but his face was set, and sometimes it
twitched oddly when he was at the wheel, and he would turn his
head round sharp to look behind him. A man doesn't do that
naturally, unless there's a vessel that he thinks is creeping up
on the quarter. When that happens, if the man at the wheel takes
a pride in his ship, he will almost always keep glancing over his
shoulder to see whether the other fellow is gaining. But Jack
Benton used to look round when there was nothing there; and what
is curious, the other men seemed to catch the trick when they
were steering. One<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span> day the old man turned out just as the
man at the wheel looked behind him.</p>
<p>"What are you looking at?" asked the captain.</p>
<p>"Nothing, sir," answered the man.</p>
<p>"Then keep your eye on the mizzen-royal," said the old man, as if
he were forgetting that we weren't a square-rigger.</p>
<p>"Ay, ay, sir," said the man.</p>
<p>The captain told me to go below and work up the latitude from the
dead-reckoning, and he went forward of the deck-house and sat
down to read, as he often did. When I came up, the man at the
wheel was looking round again, and I stood beside him and just
asked him quietly what everybody was looking at, for it was
getting to be a general habit. He wouldn't say anything at first,
but just answered that it was nothing. But when he saw that I
didn't seem to care, and just stood there as if there were
nothing more to be said, he naturally began to talk.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span>He said that it wasn't that
he saw anything, because there wasn't anything to see except the
spanker sheet just straining a little, and working in the sheaves
of the blocks as the schooner rose to the short seas. There
wasn't anything to be seen, but it seemed to him that the sheet
made a queer noise in the blocks. It was a new manilla sheet; and
in dry weather it did make a little noise, something between a
creak and a wheeze. I looked at it and looked at the man, and
said nothing; and presently he went on. He asked me if I didn't
notice anything peculiar about the noise. I listened awhile, and
said I didn't notice anything. Then he looked rather sheepish,
but said he didn't think it could be his own ears, because every
man who steered his trick heard the same thing now and
then,—sometimes once in a day, sometimes once in a night,
sometimes it would go on a whole hour.</p>
<p>"It sounds like sawing wood," I said, just like that.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"To us it sounds a good deal more like a man whistling 'Nancy
Lee.'" He started nervously as he spoke the last words. "There,
sir, don't you hear it?" he asked suddenly.</p>
<p>I heard nothing but the creaking of the manilla sheet. It was
getting near noon, and fine, clear weather in southern
waters,—just the sort of day and the time when you would
least expect to feel creepy. But I remembered how I had heard
that same tune overhead at night in a gale of wind a fortnight
earlier, and I am not ashamed to say that the same sensation came
over me now, and I wished myself well out of the <i>Helen B.</i>, and
aboard of any old cargo-dragger, with a windmill on deck, and an
eighty-nine-forty-eighter for captain, and a fresh leak whenever
it breezed up.</p>
<p>Little by little during the next few days life on board that
vessel came to be about as unbearable as you can imagine. It
wasn't that there was much talk, for I think the men were shy
even<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span> of speaking to each other freely about what they
thought. The whole ship's company grew silent, until one hardly
ever heard a voice, except giving an order and the answer. The
men didn't sit over their meals when their watch was below, but
either turned in at once or sat about on the forecastle smoking
their pipes without saying a word. We were all thinking of the
same thing. We all felt as if there were a hand on board,
sometimes below, sometimes about decks, sometimes aloft,
sometimes on the boom end; taking his full share of what the
others got, but doing no work for it. We didn't only feel it, we
knew it. He took up no room, he cast no shadow, and we never
heard his footfall on deck; but he took his whack with the rest
as regular as the bells, and—he whistled "Nancy Lee." It
was like the worst sort of dream you can imagine; and I dare say
a good many of us tried to believe it was nothing else sometimes,
when we stood looking over the weather rail in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span> fine
weather with the breeze in our faces; but if we happened to turn
round and look into each other's eyes, we knew it was something
worse than any dream could be; and we would turn away from each
other with a queer, sick feeling, wishing that we could just for
once see somebody who didn't know what we knew.</p>
<p>There's not much more to tell about the <i>Helen B. Jackson</i> so far
as I am concerned. We were more like a shipload of lunatics than
anything else when we ran in under Morro Castle, and anchored in
Havana. The cook had brain fever, and was raving mad in his
delirium; and the rest of the men weren't far from the same
state. The last three or four days had been awful, and we had
been as near to having a mutiny on board as I ever want to be.
The men didn't want to hurt anybody; but they wanted to get away
out of that ship, if they had to swim for it; to get away from
that whistling,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span> from that dead shipmate who had come
back, and who filled the ship with his unseen self. I know that
if the old man and I hadn't kept a sharp lookout the men would
have put a boat over quietly on one of those calm nights, and
pulled away, leaving the captain and me and the mad cook to work
the schooner into harbour. We should have done it somehow, of
course, for we hadn't far to run if we could get a breeze; and
once or twice I found myself wishing that the crew were really
gone, for the awful state of fright in which they lived was
beginning to work on me too. You see I partly believed and partly
didn't; but anyhow I didn't mean to let the thing get the better
of me, whatever it was. I turned crusty, too, and kept the men at
work on all sorts of jobs, and drove them to it until they wished
I was overboard, too. It wasn't that the old man and I were
trying to drive them to desert without their pay, as<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span> I am sorry to say a good many
skippers and mates do, even now. Captain Hackstaff was as
straight as a string, and I didn't mean those poor fellows should
be cheated out of a single cent; and I didn't blame them for
wanting to leave the ship, but it seemed to me that the only
chance to keep everybody sane through those last days was to work
the men till they dropped. When they were dead tired they slept a
little, and forgot the thing until they had to tumble up on deck
and face it again. That was a good many years ago. Do you believe
that I can't hear "Nancy Lee" now, without feeling cold down my
back? For I heard it too, now and then, after the man had
explained why he was always looking over his shoulder. Perhaps it
was imagination. I don't know. When I look back it seems to me
that I only remember a long fight against something I couldn't
see, against an appalling presence, against something worse than
cholera or Yellow Jack or the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN></span> plague—and goodness
knows the mildest of them is bad enough when it breaks out at
sea. The men got as white as chalk, and wouldn't go about decks
alone at night, no matter what I said to them. With the cook
raving in his bunk the forecastle would have been a perfect hell,
and there wasn't a spare cabin on board. There never is on a
fore-and-after. So I put him into mine, and he was more quiet
there, and at last fell into a sort of stupor as if he were going
to die. I don't know what became of him, for we put him ashore
alive and left him in the hospital.</p>
<p>The men came aft in a body, quiet enough, and asked the captain
if he wouldn't pay them off, and let them go ashore. Some men
wouldn't have done it, for they had shipped for the voyage, and
had signed articles. But the captain knew that when sailors get
an idea into their heads they're no better than children; and if
he forced them to stay aboard he wouldn't get much work out<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span> of them, and couldn't rely on
them in a difficulty. So he paid them off, and let them go. When
they had gone forward to get their kits, he asked me whether I
wanted to go too, and for a minute I had a sort of weak feeling
that I might just as well. But I didn't, and he was a good friend
to me afterwards. Perhaps he was grateful to me for sticking to
him.</p>
<p>When the men went off he didn't come on deck; but it was my duty
to stand by while they left the ship. They owed me a grudge for
making them work during the last few days, and most of them
dropped into the boat without so much as a word or a look, as
sailors will. Jack Benton was the last to go over the side, and
he stood still a minute and looked at me, and his white face
twitched. I thought he wanted to say something.</p>
<p>"Take care of yourself, Jack," said I. "So long!"</p>
<p>It seemed as if he couldn't speak for two or three seconds; then
his words came thick.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"It wasn't my fault, Mr. Torkeldsen. I swear it wasn't my fault!"</p>
<p>That was all; and he dropped over the side, leaving me to wonder
what he meant.</p>
<p>The captain and I stayed on board, and the ship-chandler got a
West India boy to cook for us.</p>
<p>That evening, before turning in, we were standing by the rail
having a quiet smoke, watching the lights of the city, a quarter
of a mile off, reflected in the still water. There was music of
some sort ashore, in a sailors' dance-house, I dare say; and I
had no doubt that most of the men who had left the ship were
there, and already full of jiggy-jiggy. The music played a lot of
sailors' tunes that ran into each other, and we could hear the
men's voices in the chorus now and then. One followed another,
and then it was "Nancy Lee," loud and clear, and the men singing
"Yo-ho, heave-ho!"</p>
<p>"I have no ear for music," said Captain<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69"></SPAN></span> Hackstaff, "but
it appears to me that's the tune that man was whistling the night
we lost the man overboard. I don't know why it has stuck in my
head, and of course it's all nonsense; but it seems to me that I
have heard it all the rest of the trip."</p>
<p>I didn't say anything to that, but I wondered just how much the
old man had understood. Then we turned in, and I slept ten hours
without opening my eyes.</p>
<p>I stuck to the <i>Helen B. Jackson</i> after that as long as I could
stand a fore-and-after; but that night when we lay in Havana was
the last time I ever heard "Nancy Lee" on board of her. The spare
hand had gone ashore with the rest, and he never came back, and
he took his tune with him; but all those things are just as clear
in my memory as if they had happened yesterday.</p>
<p>After that I was in deep water for a year or more, and after I
came home I got my certificate, and what with having<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70"></SPAN></span> friends and having saved a
little money, and having had a small legacy from an uncle in
Norway, I got the command of a coastwise vessel, with a small
share in her. I was at home three weeks before going to sea, and
Jack Benton saw my name in the local papers, and wrote to me.</p>
<p>He said that he had left the sea, and was trying farming, and he
was going to be married, and he asked if I wouldn't come over for
that, for it wasn't more than forty minutes by train; and he and
Mamie would be proud to have me at the wedding. I remembered how
I had heard one brother ask the other whether Mamie knew. That
meant, whether she knew he wanted to marry her, I suppose. She
had taken her time about it, for it was pretty nearly three years
then since we had lost Jim Benton overboard.</p>
<p>I had nothing particular to do while we were getting ready for
sea; nothing to prevent me from going over for a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71"></SPAN></span> day, I mean; and I thought
I'd like to see Jack Benton, and have a look at the girl he was
going to marry. I wondered whether he had grown cheerful again,
and had got rid of that drawn look he had when he told me it
wasn't his fault. How could it have been his fault, anyhow? So I
wrote to Jack that I would come down and see him married; and
when the day came I took the train, and got there about ten
o'clock in the morning. I wish I hadn't. Jack met me at the
station, and he told me that the wedding was to be late in the
afternoon, and that they weren't going off on any silly wedding
trip, he and Mamie, but were just going to walk home from her
mother's house to his cottage. That was good enough for him, he
said. I looked at him hard for a minute after we met. When we had
parted I had a sort of idea that he might take to drink, but he
hadn't. He looked very respectable and well-to-do in his black
coat and high city collar; but he was thinner and bonier
than<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72"></SPAN></span> when I had known him, and there were lines in his
face, and I thought his eyes had a queer look in them, half
shifty, half scared. He needn't have been afraid of me, for I
didn't mean to talk to his bride about the <i>Helen B. Jackson</i>.</p>
<p>He took me to his cottage first, and I could see that he was
proud of it. It wasn't above a cable's-length from high-water
mark, but the tide was running out, and there was already a broad
stretch of hard wet sand on the other side of the beach road.
Jack's bit of land ran back behind the cottage about a quarter of
a mile, and he said that some of the trees we saw were his. The
fences were neat and well kept, and there was a fair-sized barn a
little way from the cottage, and I saw some nice-looking cattle
in the meadows; but it didn't look to me to be much of a farm,
and I thought that before long Jack would have to leave his wife
to take care of it, and go to sea again. But I said it was a nice
farm, so as to seem pleasant, and as I don't<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73"></SPAN></span> know much
about these things I dare say it was, all the same. I never saw
it but that once. Jack told me that he and his brother had been
born in the cottage, and that when their father and mother died
they leased the land to Mamie's father, but had kept the cottage
to live in when they came home from sea for a spell. It was as
neat a little place as you would care to see: the floors as clean
as the decks of a yacht, and the paint as fresh as a man-o'-war.
Jack always was a good painter. There was a nice parlour on the
ground floor, and Jack had papered it and had hung the walls with
photographs of ships and foreign ports, and with things he had
brought home from his voyages: a boomerang, a South Sea club,
Japanese straw hats and a Gibraltar fan with a bull-fight on it,
and all that sort of gear. It looked to me as if Miss Mamie had
taken a hand in arranging it. There was a bran-new polished iron
Franklin stove set into the old fireplace,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74"></SPAN></span> and a red
table-cloth from Alexandria, embroidered with those outlandish
Egyptian letters. It was all as bright and homelike as possible,
and he showed me everything, and was proud of everything, and I
liked him the better for it. But I wished that his voice would
sound more cheerful, as it did when we first sailed in the <i>Helen
B.</i>, and that the drawn look would go out of his face for a
minute. Jack showed me everything, and took me upstairs, and it
was all the same: bright and fresh and ready for the bride. But
on the upper landing there was a door that Jack didn't open. When
we came out of the bedroom I noticed that it was ajar, and Jack
shut it quickly and turned the key.</p>
<p>"That lock's no good," he said, half to himself. "The door is
always open."</p>
<p>I didn't pay much attention to what he said, but as we went down
the short stairs, freshly painted and varnished so that I was
almost afraid to step on them, he spoke again.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"That was his room, sir. I have made a sort of store-room of it."</p>
<p>"You may be wanting it in a year or so," I said, wishing to be
pleasant.</p>
<p>"I guess we won't use his room for that," Jack answered in a low
voice.</p>
<p>Then he offered me a cigar from a fresh box in the parlour, and
he took one, and we lit them, and went out; and as we opened the
front door there was Mamie Brewster standing in the path as if
she were waiting for us. She was a fine-looking girl, and I
didn't wonder that Jack had been willing to wait three years for
her. I could see that she hadn't been brought up on steam-heat
and cold storage, but had grown into a woman by the sea-shore.
She had brown eyes, and fine brown hair, and a good figure.</p>
<p>"This is Captain Torkeldsen," said Jack. "This is Miss Brewster,
captain; and she is glad to see you."</p>
<p>"Well, I am," said Miss Mamie, "for<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span> Jack has often talked
to us about you, captain."</p>
<p>She put out her hand, and took mine and shook it heartily, and I
suppose I said something, but I know I didn't say much.</p>
<p>The front door of the cottage looked toward the sea, and there
was a straight path leading to the gate on the beach road. There
was another path from the steps of the cottage that turned to the
right, broad enough for two people to walk easily, and it led
straight across the fields through gates to a larger house about
a quarter of a mile away. That was where Mamie's mother lived,
and the wedding was to be there. Jack asked me whether I would
like to look round the farm before dinner, but I told him I
didn't know much about farms. Then he said he just wanted to look
round himself a bit, as he mightn't have much more chance that
day; and he smiled, and Mamie laughed.</p>
<p>"Show the captain the way to the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span> house, Mamie," he said.
"I'll be along in a minute."</p>
<p>So Mamie and I began to walk along the path, and Jack went up
toward the barn.</p>
<p>"It was sweet of you to come, captain," Miss Mamie began, "for I
have always wanted to see you."</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, expecting something more.</p>
<p>"You see, I always knew them both," she went on. "They used to
take me out in a dory to catch codfish when I was a little girl,
and I liked them both," she added thoughtfully. "Jack doesn't
care to talk about his brother now. That's natural. But you won't
mind telling me how it happened, will you? I should so much like
to know."</p>
<p>Well, I told her about the voyage and what happened that night
when we fell in with a gale of wind, and that it hadn't been
anybody's fault, for I wasn't going to admit that it was my old
captain's, if it was. But I didn't tell her<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span> anything
about what happened afterwards. As she didn't speak, I just went
on talking about the two brothers, and how like they had been,
and how when poor Jim was drowned and Jack was left, I took Jack
for him. I told her that none of us had ever been sure which was
which.</p>
<p>"I wasn't always sure myself," she said, "unless they were
together. Leastways, not for a day or two after they came home
from sea. And now it seems to me that Jack is more like poor Jim,
as I remember him, than he ever was, for Jim was always more
quiet, as if he were thinking."</p>
<p>I told her I thought so, too. We passed the gate and went into
the next field, walking side by side. Then she turned her head to
look for Jack, but he wasn't in sight. I sha'n't forget what she
said next.</p>
<p>"Are you sure now?" she asked.</p>
<p>I stood stock-still, and she went on a step, and then turned and
looked at me.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span> We must have looked at each other while you
could count five or six.</p>
<p>"I know it's silly," she went on, "it's silly, and it's awful,
too, and I have got no right to think it, but sometimes I can't
help it. You see it was always Jack I meant to marry."</p>
<p>"Yes," I said stupidly, "I suppose so."</p>
<p>She waited a minute, and began walking on slowly before she went
on again.</p>
<p>"I am talking to you as if you were an old friend, captain, and I
have only known you five minutes. It was Jack I meant to marry,
but now he is so like the other one."</p>
<p>When a woman gets a wrong idea into her head, there is only one
way to make her tired of it, and that is to agree with her.
That's what I did, and she went on talking the same way for a
little while, and I kept on agreeing and agreeing until she
turned round on me.</p>
<p>"You know you don't believe what<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span> you say," she said, and
laughed. "You know that Jack is Jack, right enough; and it's Jack
I am going to marry."</p>
<p>Of course I said so, for I didn't care whether she thought me a
weak creature or not. I wasn't going to say a word that could
interfere with her happiness, and I didn't intend to go back on
Jack Benton; but I remembered what he had said when he left the
ship in Havana: that it wasn't his fault.</p>
<p>"All the same," Miss Mamie went on, as a woman will, without
realising what she was saying, "all the same, I wish I had seen
it happen. Then I should know."</p>
<p>Next minute she knew that she didn't mean that, and was afraid
that I would think her heartless, and began to explain that she
would really rather have died herself than have seen poor Jim go
overboard. Women haven't got much sense, anyhow. All the same, I
wondered how she could marry Jack if she had a doubt that he
might be Jim after<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span> all. I suppose she had really got used
to him since he had given up the sea and had stayed ashore, and
she cared for him.</p>
<p>Before long we heard Jack coming up behind us, for we had walked
very slowly to wait for him.</p>
<p>"Promise not to tell anybody what I said, captain," said Mamie,
as girls do as soon as they have told their secrets.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />