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CHAPTER XXI
The chagrin
Wolf Larsen felt from being ignored by Maud Brewster and me in the conversation
at table had to express itself in some fashion, and it fell to Thomas Mugridge
to be the victim. He had not mended his ways nor his shirt, though the
latter he contended he had changed. The garment itself did not bear out
the assertion, nor did the accumulations of grease on stove and pot and pan attest
a general cleanliness. “I’ve given
you warning, Cooky,” Wolf Larsen said, “and now you’ve got to take your
medicine.” Mugridge’s
face turned white under its sooty veneer, and when Wolf Larsen called for a
rope and a couple of men, the miserable Cockney fled wildly out of the galley
and dodged and ducked about the deck with the grinning crew in pursuit.
Few things could have been more to their liking than to give him a tow over the
side, for to the forecastle he had sent messes and concoctions of the vilest
order. Conditions favoured the undertaking. The Ghost was slipping through the water at no
more than three miles an hour, and the sea was fairly calm. But Mugridge
had little stomach for a dip in it. Possibly he had seen men towed
before. Besides, the water was frightfully cold, and his was anything but
a rugged constitution. As usual,
the watches below and the hunters turned out for what promised sport.
Mugridge seemed to be in rabid fear of the water, and he exhibited a nimbleness
and speed we did not dream he possessed. Cornered in the right-angle of
the poop and galley, he sprang like a cat to the top of the cabin and ran
aft. But his pursuers forestalling him, he doubled back across the cabin,
passed over the galley, and gained the deck by means of the
steerage-scuttle. Straight forward he raced, the boat-puller Harrison at
his heels and gaining on him. But Mugridge, leaping suddenly, caught the
jib-boom-lift. It happened in an instant. Holding his weight by his
arms, and in mid-air doubling his body at the hips, he let fly with both
feet. The oncoming Harrison caught the kick squarely in the pit of the
stomach, groaned involuntarily, and doubled up and sank backward to the deck. Hand-clapping
and roars of laughter from the hunters greeted the exploit, while Mugridge,
eluding half of his pursuers at the foremast, ran aft and through the remainder
like a runner on the football field. Straight aft he held, to the poop
and along the poop to the stern. So great was his speed that as he curved
past the corner of the cabin he slipped and fell. Nilson was standing at
the wheel, and the Cockney’s hurtling body struck his legs. Both went
down together, but Mugridge alone arose. By some freak of pressures, his
frail body had snapped the strong man’s leg like a pipe-stem. Parsons took
the wheel, and the pursuit continued. Round and round the decks they
went, Mugridge sick with fear, the sailors hallooing and shouting directions to
one another, and the hunters bellowing encouragement and laughter.
Mugridge went down on the fore-hatch under three men; but he emerged from the
mass like an eel, bleeding at the mouth, the offending shirt ripped into
tatters, and sprang for the main-rigging. Up he went, clear up, beyond
the ratlines, to the very masthead. Half-a-dozen
sailors swarmed to the crosstrees after him, where they clustered and waited
while two of their number, Oofty-Oofty and Black (who was Latimer’s
boat-steerer), continued up the thin steel stays, lifting their bodies higher
and higher by means of their arms. It was a
perilous undertaking, for, at a height of over a hundred feet from the deck,
holding on by their hands, they were not in the best of positions to protect
themselves from Mugridge’s feet. And Mugridge kicked savagely, till the
Kanaka, hanging on with one hand, seized the Cockney’s foot with the
other. Black duplicated the performance a moment later with the other
foot. Then the three writhed together in a swaying tangle, struggling,
sliding, and falling into the arms of their mates on the crosstrees. The aërial
battle was over, and Thomas Mugridge, whining and gibbering, his mouth flecked
with bloody foam, was brought down to deck. Wolf Larsen rove a bowline in
a piece of rope and slipped it under his shoulders. Then he was carried
aft and flung into the sea. Forty, — fifty, — sixty feet of line ran out,
when Wolf Larsen cried “Belay!” Oofty-Oofty took a turn on a bitt, the
rope tautened, and the Ghost,
lunging onward, jerked the cook to the surface. It was a
pitiful spectacle. Though he could not drown, and was nine-lived in
addition, he was suffering all the agonies of half-drowning. The Ghost was going very slowly, and when her
stern lifted on a wave and she slipped forward she pulled the wretch to the
surface and gave him a moment in which to breathe; but between each lift the
stern fell, and while the bow lazily climbed the next wave the line slacked and
he sank beneath. I had forgotten the existence of Maud Brewster, and I remembered her with a start as she stepped lightly beside me. It was her first time on deck since she had come aboard. A dead silence greeted her appearance. "…The Kanaka, hanging on with one hand, seized the Cockney's foot with the other." “What is the
cause of the merriment?” she asked. “Ask Captain
Larsen,” I answered composedly and coldly, though inwardly my blood was boiling
at the thought that she should be witness to such brutality. She took my
advice and was turning to put it into execution, when her eyes lighted on
Oofty-Oofty, immediately before her, his body instinct with alertness and grace
as he held the turn of the rope. “Are you
fishing?” she asked him. He made no
reply. His eyes, fixed intently on the sea astern, suddenly flashed. “Shark ho,
sir!” he cried. “Heave
in! Lively! All hands tail on!” Wolf Larsen shouted, springing
himself to the rope in advance of the quickest. Mugridge had
heard the Kanaka’s warning cry and was screaming madly. I could see a
black fin cutting the water and making for him with greater swiftness than he
was being pulled aboard. It was an even toss whether the shark or we
would get him, and it was a matter of moments. When Mugridge was directly
beneath us, the stern descended the slope of a passing wave, thus giving the
advantage to the shark. The fin disappeared. The belly flashed
white in swift upward rush. Almost equally swift, but not quite, was Wolf
Larsen. He threw his strength into one tremendous jerk. The
Cockney’s body left the water; so did part of the shark’s. He drew up his
legs, and the man-eater seemed no more than barely to touch one foot, sinking
back into the water with a splash. But at the moment of contact Thomas
Mugridge cried out. Then he came in like a fresh-caught fish on a line,
clearing the rail generously and striking the deck in a heap, on hands and
knees, and rolling over. But a
fountain of blood was gushing forth. The right foot was missing,
amputated neatly at the ankle. I looked instantly to Maud Brewster.
Her face was white, her eyes dilated with horror. She was gazing, not at
Thomas Mugridge, but at Wolf Larsen. And he was aware of it, for he said,
with one of his short laughs: “Man-play,
Miss Brewster. Somewhat rougher, I warrant, than what you have been used
to, but still-man-play. The shark was not in the reckoning. It — ” But at this
juncture, Mugridge, who had lifted his head and ascertained the extent of his
loss, floundered over on the deck and buried his teeth in Wolf Larsen’s
leg. Wolf Larsen stooped, coolly, to the Cockney, and pressed with thumb
and finger at the rear of the jaws and below the ears. The jaws opened
with reluctance, and Wolf Larsen stepped free. “As I was
saying,” he went on, as though nothing unwonted had happened, “the shark was
not in the reckoning. It was — ahem — shall we say Providence?” She gave no
sign that she had heard, though the expression of her eyes changed to one of
inexpressible loathing as she started to turn away. She no more than
started, for she swayed and tottered, and reached her hand weakly out to
mine. I caught her in time to save her from falling, and helped her to a
seat on the cabin. I thought she might faint outright, but she controlled
herself. “Will you
get a tourniquet, Mr. Van Weyden,” Wolf Larsen called to me. I
hesitated. Her lips moved, and though they formed no words, she commanded
me with her eyes, plainly as speech, to go to the help of the unfortunate
man. “Please,” she managed to whisper, and I could but obey. By now I had
developed such skill at surgery that Wolf Larsen, with a few words of advice,
left me to my task with a couple of sailors for assistants. For his task
he elected a vengeance on the shark. A heavy swivel-hook, baited with fat
salt-pork, was dropped overside; and by the time I had compressed the severed
veins and arteries, the sailors were singing and heaving in the offending
monster. I did not see it myself, but my assistants, first one and then
the other, deserted me for a few moments to run amidships and look at what was
going on. The shark, a sixteen-footer, was hoisted up against the
main-rigging. Its jaws were pried apart to their greatest extension, and
a stout stake, sharpened at both ends, was so inserted that when the pries were
removed the spread jaws were fixed upon it. This accomplished, the hook
was cut out. The shark dropped back into the sea, helpless, yet with its
full strength, doomed — to lingering starvation — a living death less meet for
it than for the man who devised the punishment. |