Ford of H.M.S. Vigilant: A Tale of the Chusan Archipelago
Part 10
It was jolly good to have got him back safely, but we were all awfully disappointed that we hadn’t found where Sally and her father were. We had thought we had done so, but he told us they weren’t there, and he hadn’t the faintest idea where they were. The Chinaman who’d helped him to escape, and had come along for his reward, didn’t know anything about them either. Ah Chee found this out.
Dicky was a jolly lot better, and could talk, but hadn’t the faintest remembrance of anything after we’d sighted those four junks beating up to wind’ard after us. He remembered the junk running away from us and the masts coming down, but nothing after that.
Dr. Hibbert wouldn’t let him talk to us much. Poor Cooke died before we had got out of sight of land, and we stopped our engines and buried him at sea.
That brought the killed ones in the two junks up to six—two of Jim’s and four of mine—and there were six wounded besides Dicky.
I managed to hide away the ensign before the signalman could claim it, and felt rather a beast; but I meant to keep it and get it home—some day. Jim lent me another monkey jacket. It was quite "sopping" wet, but it was clean, and we soon dried it, so that I looked more respectable, and didn’t feel so horrid as I had felt in my bloodstained one.
*CHAPTER VIII*
*The Vigilant Sails Again*
The Padré Complains—Mr. Hoffman Returns—Under Way Again—Good News—"Good Old Dicky!"—Mr. Rashleigh’s Report—A Unfair Report
_Written by Commander Truscott_
I had had an extremely busy ten days superintending the fitting out of those junks, and getting them and the gunboats away to their cruising grounds. I think that I had offended pretty nearly everyone in the ship, from the Fleet Surgeon, who disliked parting with so many sick bay stores, to the youngest cadet, who thought that he ought to have been given a chance.
The Skipper was positively in a vile temper all the time, and I, myself, and old Bax, the Fleet Paymaster, who came from the same part of the country as he did, were the only ones who dared to approach him. He simply spat fire whenever anyone spoke to him, and the simplest thing used to bring forth a torrent of oaths, and it was best to beat a hasty retreat.
Don’t think that I minded, or anyone else—really. "How’s ’Old Lest’ this morning?" they would ask, after I had reported morning "divisions" to him, and I must say that I generally had to say "Worse than ever". They would all chuckle at that.
For some reason or other everyone, except the Skipper himself, seemed to be proud of his temper, and the more he roared and swore, the more the men liked him.
"He’s the worst-tempered man in the service, I should imagine," the young Padré had remarked one morning, when he and I and Mayhew, the Fleet Surgeon, were walking up and down the quarterdeck, and could hear him storming at "Willum" down below.
"For worst-tempered read best-tempered," Mayhew had replied fierily. "You’ve only been a ’dog watch’ in the service, and when you know something about it, you’ll know that you are wrong. Why, man, he’s the best Skipper to serve under in the whole blessed navy. Call him bad tempered! Why, great snakes! that’s the temper coming out of him instead of being bottled up. It’s only fools and rotters who have tempers that don’t come out."
I fancy that the Padré’s knowledge of human nature was of the slightest, and I also must admit that it was probably very difficult to preach a good sermon to the accompaniment of the Skipper’s snores, but he hadn’t quite shaken down in his new surroundings.
When he first joined the ship his sermons were full of "my dear brothers", or "dear brethren", and it was as good as a play to see the Skipper’s face when he happened to be awake and first heard himself called a "dear brother". I thought he would have had a "fit", and after church he stalked down below without saying a word, Blucher at his heels, and sent for me.
Then out it came. He had bottled it up for nearly twenty minutes, and he pretty well excelled himself. "That little—little—whipper—snapper call ’Old Lest’ his ’dear brother’! Don’t let him come near ’Old Lest’. I’ll ’dear brother’ him if he does it again!" and he glared at me and shook his huge fists in my face absolutely unable to say anything more.
"Very good, sir; I will speak to the Chaplain," I had answered, and fled.
For some reason or other I forgot to do so, but, after lunch that morning, the younger people in the mess spread him out on the sofa, very gently, and sat on him. I happened to go into the ward room at the moment, and found eight of them and Old Bax in a heap, with bits of the young idiot showing out here and there under them, and heard them sing out, "Here’s another dear brother," as they bumped him and he gasped for breath, and implored them to leave off. I slipped back to my cabin, and, as I expected, there was a knock at my door a few minutes afterwards, and in he came, very dishevelled, and complained of the indignity.
"You surprise me, Padré," I told him. "I can only say that I happened to go to the mess, and saw you ’scrapping’ with your brother officers in the most unbecoming manner, and endeavouring, as far as I could make out, to break up the mess furniture. I trust that such conduct will not occur again."
He got very red and confused, and was going away, when I called him back: "Of course, Padré, you must remember that if they do dislike any of your expressions, you often enough complain of some of theirs, and I should advise you to humour them. It’s often a great effort on their part to humour you, and you should be proud that they do try. I will speak to them, but strongly advise you to drop the ’dear brother’ part of the show."
I’m glad to say that he did, and eventually became quite proud of relating the bumping incident as "a stepping-stone in my education for a life so strange, and at one period so apparently uncongenial, ah!"
As a matter of fact, he was always called "dear brother" after that, so never had the chance to forget it. To come back to my yarn, the absence of three watch-keepers and so many petty officers and men, to say nothing of the midshipmen, made it difficult enough to carry on the ordinary work of the ship. This was a constant source of irritation to Lawrence, Whitmore, and myself, and above all, there was the added overwhelming anxiety at the fate of Travers, Sally, and her father. It was now five weeks since they had disappeared, and I assure you that these weeks had only increased our anxiety and the feeling of utter helplessness at our inability to discover their whereabouts and rescue them. Somewhere, but whether north, south, east, or west, we had not the faintest notion, they were waiting for a sign of our coming, and every evening, as the sun set and the dark clouds and grey twilight shut out the islands all round us and wrapped them in darkness, the feeling of depression used to become still more acute, and we used to imagine them beginning another dreary night of waiting, and longing, and praying that the morning would bring them rescue, which we all knew it wouldn’t. These things, and the want of exercise on shore, were excuses sufficient to account for any irritability of temper.
The Skipper used to tramp the quarterdeck from after "evening quarters" till sunset, but then the sight of the long skeins of ducks, geese, and swans flighting across the harbour to the mud flats round some of the smaller islands used to drive him down below. He used to growl: "Umph! That’s what ’Old Lest’ came down here to do, to shoot ’em, and he’s only made a fool of himself so far. Umph!" and he’d send "Willum" round for three of us to go aft to make up a rubber of whist.
But at last the long period of inaction came to an end. One morning, just a week after the _Ringdove_ and her two junks had left, I had turned out with the hands, and was walking up and down till my servant had made my morning cup of tea, the quarterdeck men scrubbing and holystoning round me in the dismal light.
I noticed a little native sailing boat beating up to Tinghai, and I remember that I thought it strange for so small a boat to have been out at night time. As it came towards the harbour, I watched it idly through my telescope, and presently saw that there were three men in it—a Chinaman steering and two people pulling lee oars, one a Chinaman and—I looked again to make sure—the other a tall gaunt fellow with a shaggy black beard. "That’s a rum go," I thought, and was still more surprised when I saw them lower the sail—they were directly to leeward of us—and begin to pull straight towards the _Vigilant_.
"What on earth’s going to happen now?" I thought, as the boat crept alongside, the men pulling very feebly. The gaunt European half crawled up the ladder and advanced towards me, and for a moment I did not recognize him.
"Hoffman!" he said.
Good heavens! I recognized him then, even with that black beard, and with his face sunken and starved looking. "We thought you’d been burnt," I said, holding out my hand, as he tottered on to the quarterdeck.
"Give me some drink and food, and those men too," he gasped; and I led him down below to my cabin—I thought he would have fallen down the hatchway, he was so weak. Fortunately my servant had just brought my tea and some bread and butter, and he drank and ate as if he had not touched food for a week.
I sent for another plate of bread and butter, and when he had finished that, and drunk all my tea and two tumblers full of water, he didn’t wait for me to ask him any questions, but, clutching at the chair, and with a wild look in his eyes, began, "For God’s sake, Commander, get the Captain to start at once! I know where Hobbs and his daughter are, or were, six days ago, and if you are quick you may rescue them before they can be hurried off somewhere else."
"Good heavens, man! and Travers, do you know where he is too?" I shouted, jumping up.
"Yes, I do; but he’s not with them," he answered.
"Is she safe?" I asked eagerly; and he nodded, "Yes; up to the present."
"How the dickens did you escape being burnt? We’ve actually read the funeral service over the ruins of the Mission."
"Wait," he half moaned. "Go and tell your Captain I am here, and give me a cigarette—I haven’t tasted one for a month."
I woke the Skipper. "That German, Hoffman, has come aboard, sir. Says he knows where Sally is and Travers."
"What?" roared the Skipper, opening his eyes.
"That German chap Hoffman has come aboard, sir."
"Well, don’t wake me," he grunted, not hearing me properly.
"He’s that man we thought had been burnt in the Mission House. He knows where Hobbs and Sally and Travers are," I repeated in a louder voice; and he jumped out of his bunk, swearing angrily, "Why didn’t you tell me before?" and roared for "Willum" to help him dress. "Bring him aft in five minutes’ time," he growled.
"For goodness sake, don’t suggest anything to him! Don’t attempt to give him any advice," I implored Hoffman. "Ten to one, if you do, he’ll put obstacles in the way. Just tell him what you know, and nothing more."
"I’ll remember," he said wearily, as I took him aft. He had to steady himself with one hand on my shoulder, he was so weak; his clothes simply hung in loose folds.
I slipped away and turned out Hutton, our Engineer Commander, telling him what I knew, and that the Skipper would be sending for him in a minute or two. In fact, he hardly pulled his trousers over his pyjamas before he was sent for. "How long will it take to get up steam?" I asked him, as I helped him on with his monkey jacket. "An hour; we’re still under banked fires—have been all the time," and then I went round, turning everyone out. It was such a godsend to have at last some news to tell.
"D’they know where Mr. Travers and the pretty little lady be, sir?" the captain of the quarterdeck asked me; and I heard him tell his men, and they left off scrubbing to discuss the situation. "Little lady or no little lady," he sang out, "just you go on with your ’olystoning."
In less than half an hour we had steam on the capstan, and were shortening in the cable, and in another hour were under way. It was glorious to feel the engines moving round again and the beastly steam steering gear rattling under my cabin once more, and to know that at last our long six weeks of inaction were at an end.
There wasn’t a long face or a sour face in the ship that day.
The Skipper had filled his pockets with his beloved Havanas, and pulled one out for me on the fore bridge too—a sure sign that he was in the best of tempers.
"That chap Hoffman couldn’t lift a hundredweight now," he chuckled. "I’ll take him ’on’ when he’s had a bit of sleep—the only chance I’ll get," and he gurgled and croaked with laughter. "He don’t exactly give himself away, does he, Truscott? Couldn’t get him to suggest a single thing."
"I told him not to, sir," I said, smiling.
"Umph! Think ’Old Lest’ an obstinate old fool, do you? Think you know ’Old Lest’ better’n he knows himself, do you? That’s the worst of having a commander who’s been shipmates for seven years. Umph!" And he glared at me, and was in a grand humour.
As a matter of fact, there were several reasons which made it inconvenient to leave so hurriedly. For one thing, we were, as you know, very shorthanded, and for another, we expected the gunboats to return at any moment with their tenders, and it would, at the best, be a tedious business to call them all in. Fortunately we met the old _Huan Min_ pounding back to Tinghai for more coal; judging by the smoke she made she seemed to grind it into dust and then blow it up her funnel. We stopped her, and the Skipper sent on board to tell her Captain where the _Vigilant_ was going, and to ask him to communicate with the other gunboats, and with the _Omaha_, which had gone off by herself.
Ching evidently wrote the letter which came back, promising to do this, and he sent a private one to his chum Lawrence to say that they were all immensely pleased to hear that there was a chance of rescuing the captives, and that the _Huan Min_ would come along after us as soon as possible.
"He says that his shoulder is practically all right again now, sir. He’s made a jolly sight less fuss about it than I should have done." Lawrence smiled when he’d finished reading this letter. "I wonder how much he cares whether we ever see Hobbs or Travers again? He doesn’t hurry the old _Huan Min_ round these islands to find them, I bet you anything you like, sir. He’s hunting for Sally. He’s simply head over heels in love with her."
"More power to his elbow," I said. "We all are, more or less."
We had left orders for the gunboats to follow us—left them with Macpherson the missionary, so felt sure that they would fetch up, sooner or later, even if the _Huan Min_ missed them.
The island for which we were now steering was right away in the SE. corner of the archipelago, one of a group marked on the chart as the Hector Group (it was so named after a transport which was wrecked there in 1851).
It was there that Hobbs and his daughter were reported to be by Hoffman, and it took the Skipper but a very few minutes to determine that he would go there first and leave Travers till later.
As it happened, by great good fortune, there was no necessity to regret his decision, because just after dark we sighted the lights of a steamer, flashed the "demand" from our masthead lamp, and it turned out to be the _Ringdove_ on the way back to Tinghai. I wasn’t on the bridge at the time, and had only just reached the deck after she was reported to me, when I heard men cheering, and a midshipman rushed up, "Mr. Travers is on board, sir, and well, sir! Isn’t that grand?"
It’s extraordinary how good—and bad—news comes in lumps together, and this seemed suddenly to make me feel ten years younger. I was up that bridge in a "brace of shakes". We had stopped our engines, and the _Ringdove_ was flashing across a long signal, and everyone bent eagerly forward to try and take it in, whilst the signalman wrote it down, and clicked the shutter of his hand lamp to show the _Ringdove_ that he had taken it in correctly.
Most of us were so much out of practice that we only got a word or a number here or there, but enough to know that she and her junks had lost a lot of men. At last the _Ringdove_ had finished, and the signalman brought his signal pad to the Captain.
"Read it out, Truscott; your eyes are younger than mine."
Someone held up a lantern, and I read: "Have rescued Lieutenant Travers uninjured from island of Chung-li Tao Group. No news of whereabouts of Hobbs or daughter. Tender _Sally_ sunk by gun fire; tender _Ferret_ wrecked and abandoned, guns saved. Losses—_Ringdove_, one man wounded, since dead, two wounded; _Sally_, four[#] men killed, Mid Morton, two men wounded; _Ferret_, two men killed, five wounded."
[#] Cooke, A.B., had died as a result of his injuries.
"Phew!" whistled the Skipper. "They’ve had a hot time! Read it again."
I did so.
"Do they mean young Morton’s killed or wounded?"
"Ask them."
Click, click went the shutter of the signalman’s lamp.
You could not hear a sound whilst the _Ringdove_ light twinkled the reply, and we all gave a gasp of relief when we read—W-O-U-N-D—O-F—S-C-A-L-P—O-U-T—O-F—D-A-N-G-E-R.
"Get ’em all aboard," the Skipper told me; "best send both cutters," and he sent a midshipman running aft. "Tell the Doctor—ten wounded coming from _Ringdove_."
We signalled across for her to "close", and that we were sending for the wounded and for the rest of the crews of the two junks.
This was a jolly ticklish job, because a rather heavy sea was running; but we ran our searchlights, and I sent Lawrence and Whitmore away in charge of the boats, and we managed to transfer them all without anything happening worse than breaking one or two oars.
We gave Travers a cheer when he came across, and all crowded round and congratulated him; and we cheered Trevelyan, young Rawlings and their men, and Ford and his. They had come over in the first boat, and Rashleigh had come as well—to report personally.
Whilst he was down below I got a list of the names of those killed and wounded from Trevelyan, and had it stuck on the lower deck notice board. Scroggs was a serious loss to me—the captain of the fore top, and a fine reliable man—and the others were all good men; they wouldn’t have been sent there, of course, if they hadn’t been.
Ford and his six men had lost everything except what they stood up in, but every one of them was in the best of spirits. The second cutter came along-side with the wounded, and young Morton was the first to be carried up the ladder, managed a smile from under his bandages, and we gave him a cheer.
The mids who’d been left behind sang out, "Good old Dicky". I knew perfectly well that he had been called "Dear Little Dicky", and that the inoffensive, harmless little chap hated it, and was glad to hear them drop it for once. I knew a good many more of the "ins and outs" of what went on in the gunroom than the Mids used to give me credit for.
The rest of the wounded were carried up, or hobbled up the ladder, and they all went for’ard to the sick bay.
Then Rashleigh went back, simply bubbling over with importance and excitement, the Skipper actually coming up to see him over the side. He didn’t often pay anyone under the rank of post captain that compliment.
"I thought that chap a blooming blockhead—told you so often—but he’s done a jolly sight better than I gave him credit for; that he has, Truscott, that he has. And he’s found a place where they’re as thick as thieves—big guns mounted, and all that. I’ve sent him back to keep his eye on it. Jolly smart chap! Things are just coming along now, eh? They’ll find ’Old Lest’ ain’t such a fool as they think, eh?"
"We’ve made a good start, sir, although we’ve lost rather heavily."
"Put up a subscription list, Truscott; some of those men have left families. Stick me down for twenty-five ’thick ’uns’. It’s more than ’Old Lest’ can afford, but stick ’em down. If the Admiralty don’t pay for those junks, and the others get knocked about or lost as well, ’Old Lest’ ’ll find himself in the Bankruptcy Court, umph!"
"Make a signal: Captain Lester to Captain, officers, and men of the _Ringdove_.
"The Captain, officers, and men of the _Vigilant_ congratulate you on the plucky rescue of Lieutenant Travers and the two junks’ crews."
He sent for’ard to tell the Fleet Surgeon to let him know directly he could come down to see the wounded, and then stalked along the upper deck to the bridge, swinging his great shoulders and striding down an admiring lane of men, who made a gangway and stood to attention as he passed. You could see, even by the little light there was, how they worshipped him.
We hoisted in our boats and steamed off towards our island, the little _Ringdove_ turning back to hers and signalling, "Captain, officers, and men," to ditto. "Thank you very much. We are very proud to have the honour of serving under your orders."
That pleased the Skipper—the last part, I mean—for he was simply a huge simple-minded baby, and he grunted, and puffed at his cigar.
"He’s tickled to death with that," Lawrence whispered to me. "Old Rashleigh knows how to get the soft side of him, doesn’t he?"
Rashleigh had brought over a written report of his proceedings, a copy of which I give you, so that you may draw your own conclusions. He had not had time to finish it properly, and I hardly think that he could have read it over either, after having written it.
H.M.S. _Ringdove_, Off the Chung-li Tao Group, Chusan Archipelago, _May_ 7th.
SIR,—In pursuance of your orders, I have the honour to report that I towed the two tenders, the _Ferret_, Lieutenant Trevelyan, and the _Sally_, Midshipman Ford, to a position five miles to wind’ard (the wind being SSW.) of the Chung-li Tao Islands, arriving there at 8 a.m. on the 2nd May.
At 10 a.m. I despatched the _Sally_ to search to the east’ard, and the _Ferret_ to the west’ard, and repaired to a rendezvous to leeward of them, giving them instructions which should meet any probable eventualities which might arise.
I waited at the rendezvous till the morning of the 4th May, and then sighted the _Sally_, and ordered her to come alongside. She reported that she had three men killed, Mid Morton and two A.B.’s severely wounded, and that she was much damaged by shot above the water line. She had chased a pirate junk and sunk her, but had then most unwisely attacked four others, and only escaped with the above losses. Her Maxim gun had been destroyed, and she had expended practically all her six-pounder ammunition.
Mr. Ford also reported having met the tender _Ferret_ the night before, and that Mr. Trevelyan, contrary to my orders, had at once altered course to the island where the _Sally_ had been attacked. The wind had veered to NW. by N. during the night, and was now blowing a strong breeze. As it was therefore impossible for him to beat back to me under three days, I took the wounded on board my ship, buried two of his men at sea, and steamed towards the island and channel in which Mr. Ford had engaged the four junks. The _Sally_ followed me at all speed.
I arrived off the entrance to the channel at noon of next day, and on entering it was fired at by a two-gun battery at close range. One shot came aboard me and wounded two men—one, Edward Larking, ord. sea. No. 867037, has since died. I silenced these guns, and proceeding up the channel, discovered that Mr. Trevelyan had wrecked his junk at the entrance to a small creek, and was in a desperate position, being attacked by rifle fire from both sides of the creek.