He laughed as he said it, but, in the silence, his laugh seemed to be an intrusion.
"You"re mistaken, Syd," he replied; and, as he took off his hat and surveyed it, he continued, "In all weathers, there"s no head gear so durable, and therefore so economical, as a good silk chimney-pot; and certainly there"s nothing in the way of a _chapeau_ so comfortable and becoming."
"Tastes differ," said I.
"They do," answered John, "and I speak about my own. I"ve tried others.
Oh, yes, I have," said he, as we looked at him incredulously, "and I speak from experience. I tell you, they"re cheap, if you will only give enough for them. Why, I know an old fellow who has worn the very same tile, in all weathers, for fifteen years; it has been in the height of fashion twice in that time, and it will soon come in again; and it is a very decent thing yet when it has been newly pressed and ironed."
"I prefer my deerstalker," said Syd.
"And I my golfer," said I.
"Which shows very plainly that your sartorial education has been neglected," returned John, "and I pity you. You are not living up to your privileges, and, worse still, you are unaware of the privileges you might live up to. But, I say, this is a sneezer!" and he looked about him into the fog, which was becoming denser every minute. "They"re lessening the pace. I suppose it wouldn"t do to drive along through this thick stuff. We might reach an unexpected terminus. What say you? Shall we go on the bridge?"
"The captain may not allow us," said I.
"Pooh! I know the cap. He"s a forty-second cousin of mine. Come along.
I"ll introduce you now that we are out of the narrows and in the open sea."
"It seems to me as if the sea were shut," whispered Syd, as we followed the Honourable John to the bridge.
"Closed, at any rate," said I, "and with very moist curtains, through which we must push our way unpleasantly enough into the harbour."
We reached the upper deck, which was dotted with bulgy figures in cloaks and capes, damp, and silent, and melancholy. The bridge formed the forward part of the upper deck, where it terminated amidships; the helmsman, with his hands upon the spokes, shifted his eyes alternately between the binnacle and the bows, and gave the wheel a turn now this way and now that, while the captain paced cross-wise between the paddle-boxes, and searched the mirk above and ahead to see whether there was any likelihood that the weather would clear.
Abaft the funnel the deck was free to those of the pa.s.sengers who held saloon tickets, but afore the funnel--that is, on the bridge itself--no one was allowed without the captain"s special permission. This s.p.a.ce was railed off, with a hinged lift in the mahogany on either side, both of which were now down and barred. We were not quite sure whether the captain were really the Honourable John"s relative, or whether our comrade"s proposal to join the captain was only one of those erratic notions which visited his aristocratic brain, and were often carried through with a confidence so complete as to be rarely unsuccessful. He was unmercifully snubbed sometimes, and he richly deserved it; but the curious thing about him was that the snubs were wasted. Where others would have retired crestfallen, the Honourable John held his head high and heeded not.
We were prepared to find that the forty-second cousinship was a fiction, and that the captain would quietly ignore him; but we were in the background, and it mattered very little to us; the deck would be as welcome as the bridge.
"Well, cousin cap.," said John familiarly, placing his hand upon the wet mahogany rail, "and how are you?"
"Hallo!" exclaimed the captain, facing round. "Where have you tumbled from?"
"Hughtown, St. Mary"s, was the last bit of mother earth I touched before I sprang aboard the _Queen of Paddlers_. May we venture within your private domain?"
"Why, certainly, John," and he lifted the rail and beckoned us forward.
"Two chums of mine," said John, naming us, and then he named the captain as his respected cousin forty-two times removed. The captain smiled at him, shook his head, and observed that the relationship was a little closer than that, but a puzzle, nevertheless, to work out exactly.
"I must have missed you when you came aboard," said he, "and yet in your usual get-up I don"t see how I could very well. You look as if you had just stepped out of a band-box, except for the dampness, of course."
"Oh, you were busy when I joined you," said John, evidently pleased with the captain"s remarks about his appearance. "I had to jump for it. But you haven"t answered my question. How are you?"
"Tol"able, thank"e. And your folks--how are they? I need not ask how _you_ are," and, while John answered him, he placed camp-stools for us, and said to Syd and me, "Sit down, gentlemen; and excuse me if I address myself mainly to this eccentric cousin of mine, and, I am sure, your very good friend. I do not see him often, and he never will let me know when he is coming my way"--a statement which Syd and I could easily believe. For, with all John"s faults, and he had many of them, he was one of the least obtrusive of men where hospitality came in, and one of the most reticent about himself and his own affairs; and we, who worked with him, knew him almost exclusively as a good fellow in the department, and a capital companion for a holiday.
The captain placed John"s camp-stool on the starboard side of the binnacle. Their conversation was broken into s.n.a.t.c.hes by the captain"s movements. As he paced the bridge, backwards and forwards, he halted each time just for a moment when he came to where John had propped his back against the binnacle and tilted his stool at an angle that threatened collapse. Syd and I sat quite apart, and left them alone to their semi-private conversation. We noticed, however, that the captain appeared to be uneasy about the vessel"s course and progress; he glanced more than once at the compa.s.s-card, and several times, in his perambulations, he lingered over the paddle-boxes, and intently watched the water as it slipped by. So that his conversation with the Honourable John became more fragmentary, and was more frequently interrupted the nearer we approached the land.
After some time the captain came to a sudden stand over the port paddle-box, and curved his left hand round his ear. For a minute or more he stood like a statue, perfectly motionless, and with his whole being absorbed in an effort to catch a faint and expected sound across the water. Satisfied with the effort, he stepped briskly to the indicator, and signalled to the engineer to increase the speed of the steamer.
"What is it, cap.?" asked John.
"The bell on the Runnel Stone," he replied. "Cannot you hear it?"
The captain"s statuesque figure, intently listening, had been observed by the pa.s.sengers, and there was a dead silence aboard, broken only by the thumping of the engines and the splash of the paddle-blades as they pounded the still waters. Presently the dreary clang of the bell, struck by the clapper as the sea rocked it, came to us in uncertain and fitful tones. It was a melancholy sound, but its effect was cheering, because it gave the people some idea of our whereabouts, and was an indication that we had crossed the intervening s.p.a.ce between the islands and the mainland. We were making fair progress despite the fog, and should soon be ash.o.r.e again.
A babble of talk began and ran the round of the pa.s.sengers, breaking out among a group of younger people into a ripple of laughter. For a quarter of an hour this went on, then, to the amazement of all on board, the captain, after glancing anxiously at the compa.s.s-card, sternly called out "Silence!" Meanwhile the sound of the bell had become clearer, but was now growing less distinct; and, as the captain"s order was instantly obeyed, we became aware of another sound--the breaking of the waves upon the sh.o.r.e.
For a moment the captain listened, straining his eyes at the same time to pierce the dense mist ahead; the man on the look-out, perched in the bows, who had been leaning forward with his hand shading his eyes, turned about with a startled gesture, throwing his arms aloft, and shouted to the captain that we were close in sh.o.r.e, and heading for it directly; the captain sprang to the indicator, and signalled for the reversal of the engines; but it was too late. With a thud that threw us all forward the steamer grounded.
Instantly all was confusion. Some lost their heads, and began to rush about wildly. A few screamed. Nearly every one became visibly paler. Syd and I started from our seats, and gazed bewilderedly at an expanse of yellow sand softly revealed beneath the mist, and stretching ahead and on either hand into the white moisture by which we were encompa.s.sed.
John walked over to us apparently unmoved.
"Well, this is a go," said he.
Before we could reply, the captain bawled out his orders that all the pa.s.sengers must retire to the after-part of the ship, and help, so far as their collected weight might do so, to raise the bows now sunk in the soft sand. He a.s.sured them that there was not the slightest danger; the vessel was uninjured; we were ash.o.r.e on a yielding and shelving beach; and that, if they would remain perfectly quiet, and obey orders, he had some hope that he might get the vessel afloat again.
There was a general move aft, and although signs of distress, and even of terror, were not wanting on some faces, the people gathered quietly enough into one solid ma.s.s. We three stood on the outer edge of the company. Syd and I were considerably excited, but John was as calm as a man could be. With tremendous uproar the reversed paddles began to churn the shallow water, but not an inch did we move.
The captain stepped to the binnacle, and read the compa.s.s-card. A swift change pa.s.sed over his face; in mingled surprise and anger he pointed within the binnacle, and began to question the man at the wheel; but he was more surprised than the captain--so utterly amazed, in fact, that he could not be angry, and only protested that he had kept the vessel true to the course which had been given him, and could not explain why the card had veered three to four points farther westward since the vessel had touched the ground. It was no use contending about the matter then.
The paddles began to throw up the sand as well as the water, and the captain saw that the vessel would have to remain where she was until the next tide.
"We are fast, sure "nough," sang out the captain. "You had better gather your traps together, and prepare to leave the vessel. There will be conveyances in the villages to take you to Penzance."
The company dispersed and scattered about the boat, merrily collecting their belongings now that they knew the worst, and that the worst was not very bad after all. We rejoined the captain.
"What"s the name of this new port of discharge?" asked John.
"Not port, but Porth," answered the captain grimly, for it was no laughing matter to him. "Porth Curnow. And you may thank your stars that we have run clear in upon the sand, and not a few furlongs south or north, for then we should have been laid up either under Tol-Pedn or beneath the Logan Rock."
"I can follow your location admirably, cap.," said John. "We are eight or nine miles from Penzance--is not that so? Yes!" as the captain nodded gloomily; "and Porth Curnow is the place where the submarine telegraph chaps live. But, I say, why did you bring us here? We booked for Penzance."
"Goodness knows--I don"t. Something"s gone wrong with the compa.s.s. We were on the right course, and the compa.s.s was true until we grounded; then it swerved most unaccountably nearly four points to the westward, and there it remains."
"That"s a curious freak, cap. You"ll be interviewed by all the scientific folk in the kingdom, and I shouldn"t wonder if you are not summoned to appear, and give evidence, before a select committee of the Royal Society. Four points out! Why, man, you"re immortalised. I call it a most lucky deflection."
"Do you? I don"t," growled the captain. "Others are welcome to the immortality. I prefer to do without, and steer by a compa.s.s that"s true.
And it _has_ been true up to now."
"That"s where it comes in," exclaimed John. "That"s what makes it remarkable. If the compa.s.s _hadn"t_ been true, you would have gained nothing by this little adventure; but, as you say, it _has_ been true, therefore---- Oh! dear, it takes a lot to satisfy some people. And you cannot account for it? Do you think the telegraph station has had anything to do with it--electricity, you know? Electricity is a queer thing, and plays pranks sometimes. No! Well, perhaps the hills are magnetic."
"Come, John, you"re losing your head; and I have these people to see to," remarked the captain somewhat tartly.
"I believe I am," said John. "It"s a habit I have, but I generally find it again. Well, cap., if you require any a.s.sistance in the unloading of the cargo, say the word, and here I am, your cousin to command"; and the captain was obliged to smile, notwithstanding the disaster--an effect which John had been trying for all the while.
"Your suggestion about the telegraph station has put a practical idea into my brain, and I am thankful for that, John. I"ll sound the syren, and bring the fellows down. They"ll be willing to help in a mess like this, anyhow; and, if there are not enough conveyances to run the people down to Penzance, they can wire for a few to fetch them"; and, pulling the cord, he sent the shriek of the syren through the mist in resounding and ear-splitting tones.
By this time, the pa.s.sengers had all pressed forward into the bows, with the easily transferable part of their luggage about them. The water had receded, and left the bows clear; but it was too long a drop into the wet sand for any one to venture down without a.s.sistance. The ladies especially were looking wistfully over the bulwarks. We three went forward also, but we left our portmanteaux to take care of themselves.
Soon two young fellows dashed down the sands, halloing in answer to the syren, and stood with wondering eyes beneath the bows.