""Not Will Turner?"
""The same."
"I pursed up my mouth in a silent whistle. Will Turner in the "Speedwell!" Poor old chap, he must have lost another ship. Hard luck seemed to pursue him, gave him no rest on land or sea. A capable sailor and an honest man, yet life had afforded him nothing but a succession of black eyes and heavy falls. Death and sorrow, too; he had buried a wife and child, swept off by cholera, in the Bay of Bengal. Turner and I had landed together in the China Sea; I knew his heart, his history, some of his secrets, and liked him tremendously for the man he was.
"Watching Lee Fu in silence, I thought of the relationship between Will Turner and this extraordinary Chinaman. I won"t go into the story, but there were overwhelming reasons why they should think well of each other; why Lee Fu should respect and honor Turner, and why Turner should hold Lee Fu as his best friend.
""I did not know of the plan until he had accepted," Lee Fu was saying.
"I did everything in my power to dissuade him."
""Didn"t Wilbur do the right thing?"
""Oh, yes. But it is unthinkable, Captain, that he should command the "Speedwell." The jealous G.o.ds have not yet shown their hand."
""Nonsense, Lee Fu!" I exclaimed, a little irritated. "Since the thing is done, hadn"t we better try to be practical?"
""Exactly," said Lee Fu. "Let us be practical. Captain, is it impossible for the Caucasian to reason from cause to effect? There seems to be no logic in your design; which explains many curious facts of history. I have merely insisted that a man who would do one thing would do another, and that, sooner or later, life would present to him another thing to do."
""But I"ve known too many men to escape what you call destiny," I argued peevishly.
""Have you?" inquired Lee Fu.
"That year I went into the Malay Archipelago for an extended cruise, was gone seven months among the islands, and reached Hong Kong just ahead of a bad blow. Typhoon signals were flying from the Peak as I came in; the sky to the eastward had lowered and darkened like a shutter, and the breeze had begun to whip in vicious gusts across the harbor. I carried important communications for Lee Fu, so went ash.o.r.e at once. The outer office was full of gathering gloom, although it was still early afternoon. Sing Toy immediately took in my name; and soon I was ushered into the familiar room, where my friend sat beside a shaded lamp, facing a teakwood desk inlaid with ivory, and invariably bare, save for a priceless Ming vase and an ornament of old green bronze.
""I am glad to see you, Captain," he said dispa.s.sionately. "Sit down. I have bad news."
""Yes?" I queried, more than a little alarmed.
"Folding his hands across his stomach and slightly bowing his head, he gazed at me with a level upturned glance that, without betraying expression, carried by its very immobility a hint of deep emotion. "It is as I told you," he said at last. "Now, perhaps, you will believe."
""For heaven"s sake, what are you talking about?" I demanded.
""We had another typhoon this season, a very early one. It was this typhoon into whose face our late friend Captain Turner took his ship, the "Speedwell," sailing from Hong Kong for New York some four months ago. Three days after sailing, he met the typhoon and was blown upon a lee sh.o.r.e two hundred miles along the China coast. In this predicament, he cut away his masts and came to anchor. But his ship would not float, and accordingly sunk at the anchors."
""Sunk at her anchors!" I exclaimed. "How could that be? A tight ship never did such a thing."
""Nevertheless, she sunk in the midst of the gale, and all on board perished. Afterwards the news was reported from sh.o.r.e, and the hull was discovered in ten fathoms of water. There has been talk of trying to save the ship; and Captain Wilbur himself, in a diver"s suit, has inspected the wreck. Surely, he should know if it is possible to salve her! He says no, and it is reported that the insurance companies are in agreement with him." Lee Fu"s voice dropped to a rasping tone. "The lives, of course, he cannot save."
"I sat for some moments gazing at the green bronze dragon on the desk, stunned by what I had heard. Turner gone? Even between us, who had seen each other seldom in late years, there had been a bond. Weren"t we known as the two Eastern wanderers?
""That is not all," said Lee Fu suddenly. "What more?" I asked.
""Listen, Captain, and pay close attention. Some weeks after the loss of the "Speedwell," it came to my ears that a man had a tale worth hearing.
He was brought; he proved to be a common coolie who had been employed in the loading of the "Speedwell." This coolie had been gambling during the dinner hour, and had lost the small sum that he should have taken home as the result of several days" labor. Likewise, he feared his wife, and particularly her mother, who was a shrew. In a moment of desperation, as the lighter was preparing to leave for the night, he escaped and secreted himself in the hold of the vessel.
""He had long been asleep that night when he was suddenly awakened by a sound on the ladder leading from the upper deck. It was a sound of careful steps, mingled with a faint metallic rattling. A moment later a foot descended on the floor of the between-decks, and lantern was cautiously lighted. The coolie retreated quickly into the lower hold, and from his post among the bales of merchandise was able to see all that went on."
"Again Lee Fu paused, as if lingering over the scene. "It seems that this late and secret comer into the hold of the "Speedwell" was none other than her owner, Captain Wilbur," he slowly resumed. "The coolie knew him by face, and had seen him come on board that afternoon.
Afterwards, through my inquiries, I learned that Captain Turner had spent that night on sh.o.r.e. It was Captain Wilbur"s custom, it seems, frequently to sleep on board his ship when she lay in port. Have you ever been in the lower hold of the "Speedwell," Captain Nichols?"
""No, I haven"t."
""But you recall her famous ports?"
""Yes, indeed." The incident at once came back to me in detail. The "Speedwell" once had carried a cargo of ironwood from Singapore for a temple up the Yangtse-kiang. In order to load the immense timbers, she had been obliged to cut bow ports of extraordinary size, fifty inches in depth, they were, and nearly seven feet in width, according to my recollection.
""It has been my privilege," said Lee Fu, "to examine carefully the forepeak of this vessel. I had chartered her one time, and felt alarmed for her safety until I had seen the interior fastenings of these great windows that looked out into the deep sea. But my alarm was groundless.
There was a most ingenious device for strengthening the bows where they had been weakened by the cutting of the ports. Four or five timbers had, of course, been severed; but these were reproduced on the port itself, and the whole was fashioned like a ma.s.sive door. It lifted upward on immense wrought-iron hinges; when it was lowered in place gigantic bars of iron, fitted into brackets on the adjoining timbers, stretched across its face to hold it against the impact of the waves. Thus the port, when tightly caulked from without, became again an integral part of the hull; I was told that there had never keen a trace of leakage from her bows.
And, most remarkable of all, I was told, when it became necessary to open these ports for use, the task could easily be accomplished by two or three men and a stout watch-tackle. This I am now prepared to believe.
""But, to resume the account of the coolie," Lee Fu went on with exasperating deliberation. "This is what he saw: Our friend Captain Wilbur descended into the lower hold and forward to the forepeak, where there was little cargo. There he worked with great effort for several hours. He had equipped himself with a short crowbar, and carried a light tackle wrapped beneath his coat. The tackle he loosened and hung to a hook above the middle of the port; it was merely for the purpose of lowering the iron crossbars so that they would make no noise. Had one fallen--"
""Good G.o.d, Lee Fu, what are you trying to tell me?"
""Merely an incident of the night. So, with the crowbar, Captain Wilbur pried loose the iron braces, slinging them in his tackle and dropping them softly one by one into the ship"s bottom. It was a heavy task; the coolie said that sweat poured from the big man like rain. Last of all he covered the bars with dunnage, and rolled against the bow several bulky bales of matting to conceal the work. Captain, when the "Speedwell"
sailed from Hong Kong in command of our honored friend, one of her great bow ports below the water hung on its hinges without internal fastenings, and held in place only by the tightness of the caulking. The first heavy weather--"
""Can this be possible?" I said through clenched teeth.
""Oh, yes, so easily possible that it happened," answered Lee Fu.
""But why should he do such a thing? Had he anything against Turner?"
""Captain, you do not understand. He merely was tired of the vessel; and freights are becoming very poor. He wanted his insurance. He had no thought of disaster so he now a.s.sures himself; what he had in mind was for the ship to sink discreetly in pleasant weather. Yet he was willing enough to run the chance of wholesale murder."
"I got up and began pacing the floor; the d.a.m.nable affair had made me sick at heart, and a little sick at the stomach.
""Thus the G.o.ds have struck," said Lee Fu behind me, in that changeless voice that for a moment seemed to concentrate the echo of the ages.
"There is blood at last, Captain--twenty-seven lives, and among them one dear to us--enough even to convince one of your race that a crime has been committed. But I was mistaken in much that I foresaw. The criminal, it seems, is destined not to suffer. He has escaped the G.o.ds."
"Can"t you bring him to a reckoning? Isn"t there some way--"
"Lee Fu shook his head. "No, Captain, he is amply protected. What could I accomplish in your courts with this fantastic tale, and for witnesses a coolie and a sampan man?"
"I continued to pace the floor, thinking dark thoughts. There was a way, of course, between man and man; but such things are no longer done in the heart of civilization, except in sudden pa.s.sion or jealousy.
"Pacing rapidly, and oblivious to everything but the four walls of the room, I nearly ran into Sing Toy coming in with a message from the outer office. He whispered a word in Lee Fu"s ear.
""Ah!" exclaimed Lee Fu sharply. I started, whirled around. His voice had lost the level, pa.s.sive tone; it had taken on the timbre of action.
""Send him in," he said in Chinese to Sing Toy.
""Who is it?" I asked breathlessly.
""The man we have been speaking of."
""Wilbur? What the devil does he want?"
""Nothing," answered Lee Fu, speaking swiftly. "He merely came to make a call. So he thinks; but I think otherwise. Beware of word or glance.