I took pains to explain to him that having picked up the beacon at the mouth of the river just before dark and the tide serving, Captain C-- was enabled to cross the bar and there was nothing to prevent him going up river at night.
"Captain C-- knows this river like his own pocket," I concluded discursively, trying to get on terms.
"Better," said Almayer.
Leaning over the rail of the bridge I looked at Almayer, who looked down at the wharf in aggrieved thought. He shuffled his feet a little; he wore straw slippers with thick soles. The morning fog had thickened considerably. Everything round us dripped: the derricks, the rails, every single rope in the ship--as if a fit of crying had come upon the universe.
Almayer again raised his head and in the accents of a man accustomed to the buffets of evil fortune asked hardly audibly:
"I suppose you haven"t got such a thing as a pony on board?"
I told him almost in a whisper, for he attuned my communications to his minor key, that we had such a thing as a pony, and I hinted, as gently as I could, that he was confoundedly in the way too. I was very anxious to have him landed before I began to handle the cargo. Almayer remained looking up at me for a long while with incredulous and melancholy eyes as though it were not a safe thing to believe my statement. This pathetic mistrust in the favourable issue of any sort of affair touched me deeply, and I added:
"He doesn"t seem a bit the worse for the pa.s.sage. He"s a nice pony too."
Almayer was not to be cheered up; for all answer he cleared his throat and looked down again at his feet. I tried to close with him on another tack.
"By Jove!" I said. "Aren"t you afraid of catching pneumonia or bronchitis or something, walking about in a singlet in such a wet fog?"
He was not to be propitiated by a show of interest in his health. His answer was a sinister "No fear," as much as to say that even that way of escape from inclement fortune was closed to him.
"I just came down . . ." he mumbled after a while.
"Well then, now you"re here I will land that pony for you at once and you can lead him home. I really don"t want him on deck. He"s in the way."
Almayer seemed doubtful. I insisted:
"Why, I will just swing him out and land him on the wharf right in front of you. I"d much rather do it before the hatches are off. The little devil may jump down the hold or do some other deadly thing."
"There"s a halter?" postulated Almayer.
"Yes, of course there"s a halter." And without waiting any more I leaned over the bridge rail.
"Serang, land Tuan Almayer"s pony."
The cook hastened to shut the door of the galley and a moment later a great scuffle began on deck. The pony kicked with extreme energy, the kalashes skipped out of the way, the serang issued many orders in a cracked voice. Suddenly the pony leaped upon the fore-hatch. His little hoofs thundered tremendously; he plunged and reared. He had tossed his mane and his forelock into a state of amazing wildness, he dilated his nostrils, bits of foam flecked his broad little chest, his eyes blazed.
He was something under eleven hands; he was fierce, terrible, angry, warlike, he said ha! ha! distinctly, he raged and thumped--and sixteen able-bodied kalashes stood round him like disconcerted nurses round a spoilt and pa.s.sionate child. He whisked his tail incessantly; he arched his pretty neck; he was perfectly delightful; he was charmingly naughty.
There was not an atom of vice in that performance; no savage baring of teeth and lying back of ears. On the contrary, he p.r.i.c.ked them forward in a comically aggressive manner. He was totally unmoral and lovable; I would have liked to give him bread, sugar, carrots. But life is a stern thing and the sense of duty the only safe guide. So I steeled my heart and from my elevated position on the bridge I ordered the men to fling themselves upon him in a body.
The elderly serang, emitting a strange inarticulate cry, gave the example. He was an excellent petty officer--very competent indeed, and a moderate opium smoker. The rest of them in one great rush smothered that pony. They hung on to his ears, to his mane, to his tail; they lay in piles across his back, seventeen in all. The carpenter, seizing the hook of the cargo-chain, flung himself on top of them. A very satisfactory petty officer too, but he stuttered. Have you ever heard a light-yellow, lean, sad, earnest Chinaman stutter in pidgin-English? It"s very weird indeed. He made the eighteenth. I could not see the pony at all; but from the swaying and heaving of that heap of men I knew that there was something alive inside.
From the wharf Almayer hailed in quavering tones:
"Oh, I say!"
Where he stood he could not see what was going on on deck unless perhaps the tops of the men"s heads; he could only hear the scuffle, the mighty thuds, as if the ship were being knocked to pieces. I looked over: "What is it?"
"Don"t let them break his legs," he entreated me plaintively.
"Oh, nonsense! He"s all right now. He can"t move."
By that time the cargo-chain had been hooked to the broad canvas belt round the pony"s body, the kalashes sprang off simultaneously in all directions, rolling over each other, and the worthy serang, making a dash behind the winch, turned the steam on.
"Steady!" I yelled, in great apprehension of seeing the animal s.n.a.t.c.hed up to the very head of the derrick.
On the wharf Almayer shuffled his straw slippers uneasily. The rattle of the winch stopped, and in a tense, impressive silence that pony began to swing across the deck.
How limp he was! Directly he felt himself in the air he relaxed every muscle in a most wonderful manner. His four hoofs knocked together in a bunch, his head hung down, and his tail remained pendent in a nerveless and absolute immobility. He reminded me vividly of the pathetic little sheep which hangs on the collar of the Order of the Golden Fleece. I had no idea that anything in the shape of a horse could be so limp as that, either living or dead. His wild mane hung down lumpily, a mere ma.s.s of inanimate horsehair; his aggressive ears had collapsed, but as he went swaying slowly across the front of the bridge I noticed an astute gleam in his dreamy, half-closed eye. A trustworthy quartermaster, his glance anxious and his mouth on the broad grin, was easing over the derrick watchfully. I superintended, greatly interested.
"So! That will do."
The derrick-head stopped. The kalashes lined the rail. The rope of the halter hung perpendicular and motionless like a bell-pull in front of Almayer. Everything was very still. I suggested amicably that he should catch hold of the rope and mind what he was about. He extended a provokingly casual and superior hand.
"Look out then! Lower away!"
Almayer gathered in the rope intelligently enough, but when the pony"s hoofs touched the wharf he gave way all at once to a most foolish optimism. Without pausing, without thinking, almost without looking, he disengaged the hook suddenly from the sling, and the cargo-chain, after hitting the pony"s quarters, swung back against the ship"s side with a noisy, rattling slap. I suppose I must have blinked. I know I missed something, because the next thing I saw was Almayer lying flat on his back on the jetty. He was alone.
Astonishment deprived me of speech long enough to give Almayer time to pick himself up in a leisurely and painful manner. The kalashes lining the rail had all their mouths open. The mist flew in the light breeze, and it had come over quite thick enough to hide the sh.o.r.e completely.
"How on earth did you manage to let him get away?" I asked scandalised.
Almayer looked into the smarting palm of his right hand, but did not answer my inquiry.
"Where do you think he will get to?" I cried. "Are there any fences anywhere in this fog? Can he bolt into the forest? What"s to be done now?"
Almayer shrugged his shoulders.
"Some of my men are sure to be about. They will get hold of him sooner or later."
"Sooner or later! That"s all very fine, but what about my canvas sling--he"s carried it off. I want it now, at once, to land two Celebes cows."
Since Dongola we had on board a pair of the pretty little island cattle in addition to the pony. Tied up on the other side of the fore deck they had been whisking their tails into the other door of the galley. These cows were not for Almayer, however; they were invoiced to Abdullah bin Selim, his enemy. Almayer"s disregard of my requisites was complete.
"If I were you I would try to find out where he"s gone," I insisted.
"Hadn"t you better call your men together or something? He will throw himself down and cut his knees. He may even break a leg, you know."
But Almayer, plunged in abstracted thought, did not seem to want that pony any more. Amazed at this sudden indifference I turned all hands out on sh.o.r.e to hunt for him on my own account, or, at any rate, to hunt for the canvas sling which he had round his body. The whole crew of the steamer, with the exception of firemen and engineers, rushed up the jetty past the thoughtful Almayer and vanished from my sight. The white fog swallowed them up; and again there was a deep silence that seemed to extend for miles up and down the stream. Still taciturn, Almayer started to climb on board, and I went down from the bridge to meet him on the after deck.
"Would you mind telling the captain that I want to see him very particularly?" he asked me in a low tone, letting his eyes stray all over the place.
"Very well. I will go and see."
With the door of his cabin wide open Captain C--, just back from the bathroom, big and broad-chested, was brushing his thick, damp, iron-grey hair with two large brushes.
"Mr. Almayer told me he wanted to see you very particularly, sir."
Saying these words I smiled. I don"t know why I smiled except that it seemed absolutely impossible to mention Almayer"s name without a smile of a sort. It had not to be necessarily a mirthful smile. Turning his head towards me Captain C-- smiled too, rather joylessly.
"The pony got away from him--eh?"