Read Endangered Species Online
Authors: Richard Woodman
But, despite his exhaustion, it was chiefly reluctance that slowed his final climb to the bridge. He had found Rawlings reeling in the lifelines and met the Mate's eyes. Rawlings already knew; had sent the odious Macgregor to the bridge with the news. Stevenson was the last man back into the
shelter of the starboard alleyway. Words were unnecessary, for both officers felt a measure of guilt, their professional training making them receptive to such a reaction. Failure always carried its burden of responsibility and lodged easily in the souls of men bred to assume it. Macgregor felt no such constraint, hence his excitement in the presence of death. It had brushed him but chosen one of
them
.
Stevenson nodded his head upwards, towards the bridge, and Rawlings had nodded too, dragging the lifelines into the shelter of the accommodation. On his upward trek Stevenson had stopped at the smoke-room door.
The girl was sitting bolt upright, her back to the bulkhead, a look of abstraction upon her face. She did not see him, looking at her, and he was oddly bothered by what was in her mind's eye.
At all costs, Mackinnon had told himself earlier, at all costs he must secure his ship. Now, with Ernie York already gone and another death to pay the old currency for the poet's âadmiralty', he wondered if it was enough. He had tempted providence, too, when he had spoken to Shelagh: âWe'll be in Hong Kong the day after tomorrow.'
But they had cheated the sea of one hundred and forty-six lives. Would he really have rather lost them and preserved Taylor and Ernie York? God alone knew the true secrets of a man's heart, for they were often obscure to the bearer, but he was relieved the engine had restarted, relieved to the point of a muck sweat!
And now Stevenson stood before him with the burden of his detailed report.
âI'm sorry, sir, we couldn't get him out.'
âI understand,' Mackinnon said, though his eyes asked the unspoken question.
An awful sensation of uncertainy swept Stevenson, then he remembered the enigmatic expression on Taylor's face. âHe was quite dead, sir.'
âSafety of the ship, mister,' Mackinnon rasped harshly, giving absolution and extreme unction before turning back to his window. âWe'll be passing through the vortex soon,' he went on, his back to the Second Mate. âYou'd better go
and warn the refugees then let the crowd know. Don't forget the engine-room, or the greasers aft. I want a personal appearance, Mr Stevenson d'you understand?'
âAye, aye, sir.'
Did the Second Mate understand? Mackinnon wondered. He had not needed to see Rawlings hanging back, coiling the lifelines, to know the Mate had already risen as far as he could to the occasion. Taylor had done bloody well, better than Mackinnon would have thought, and been sacrificed. Now there was only Stevenson. . . .
No, that was not true: there was Freddie Thorpe and George Reed, and Able Seaman Pritchard and Braddock and the stalwart Bosun, and Chippy, and Reed's Chinese greasers who they called by numbers at boat drill.
He could feel the soft, warm bundle, see the wrinkled face that looked like no one else, yet was indubitably Shelagh with a touch of his own mother.
The drinking had started the day he had received the news of the child's death. They had been in port; perhaps if they had been at sea it would have been different. He had asked Eastern Steam to relieve him, even telegraphed an offer to pay his own fare home to be with Shelagh; but the company had refused and he had been devastated. The binge had lasted four days before he came to himself and had exhausted the patience of others. They had covered for him, of course, out of pity and sympathy and friendship. A bloke could go on a bender if the cause was great enough and they were mostly absentee fathers, sentimentalists who understood the solace of the bottle.
But it happened again at the next port, and then the next, until they knew the worst was looming and the Master, a tolerant man, carpeted Mackinnon and warned him about alcoholism and dismissal, telling him he was the best Chief Officer in the line and now his reputation hung by a thread.
It straightened him for a bit, but then, with letters from
home that revived his bitterness, he relapsed ashore. They found him in a gutter, half-naked, his face bruised and cut, his wallet missing. He could not remember what had happened. The Master locked him in his cabin and stood his watch. He thought he had lost his job, but the Master proved a true friend and gave him a final chance. Mackinnon pulled back from the abyss. Despite the company's heartlessness, he had subsequently proved unswervingly loyal.
Long afterwards he had asked his commander why he had been so forgiving. âBecause if we had been in an office or a factory,' the Master had said, âyou'd have gone sick. Here you can never leave the job.'
Even now the memory made him shudder.
Stevenson went directly to the smoke-room. His shoulder hurt badly, for he had further strained it in the fight with the cement mixers. He was absurdly glad to be going to find Tam, glad of the excuse Mackinnon had given him, âto find the interpreter and get her to tell them they would be all right soon, that although it was going to be very uncomfortable for a few more hours, the ship was very, very strong. Be confident and reassuring.' Mackinnon had concluded.
She was not in the smoke-room. The old woman said something, her gold teeth flashing in the electric light, and pointed. He went aft and found her in the alleyway, talking to two Vietnamese men. As he approached they caught sight of him and the three fell silent. It was obvious he was intruding.
âYou okay?' he asked her, feeling far from confident and reassuring, remembering the loose ammunition clip.
She tossed her lank hair back. âSure.'
âI come from the Captain,' he began portentously, looking from one to the other, not liking the blank, uncommunicative expression in Tam's face or the outright hostility of the two men. One had his hand in the pocket of
his slacks and the angular outline of a bulky object made Stevenson's mouth run dry. âWe will have very bad time for about four or five hours' â he held up his fingers â âbut soon typhoon pass and everything will be okay.' He smiled, a thin, insincere grimace. âThen we go Hong Kong.'
âHong Kong?' one of the men asked, then fired a question at Tam. She asked: âWe go to Hong Kong?'
âOf course,' Stevenson said, then the second man snapped something and spat on the deck. As Stevenson stood uncomprehending the three of them pushed past him and left him staring after them.
âYou were on the fucking bridge when we broached,' Pritchard, who had been relieved on the wheel, accused Macgregor, his finger stabbing at the Scotsman. Braddock stood beside him and the other men in the mess-room, halfway through an extempore breakfast of cornflakes and tea, grew silent.
âAye, and we've got to stand your bloody trick for you,' one of them added.
âYou're no bleedin' seaman, Rob Roy. You're shit!'
Macgregor smirked. âYou smell like what you're treated like,' he said obscurely, âan it wasna my fault we broached. That daft bastard Mackinnonâ'
âWhat would you know about it?' Pritchard said contemptuously. âYou couldn't piss in a swimming pool.' He exchanged glances with Braddock. Macgregor had hazarded the ship and with it all their lives.
âI'm going to see how that nipper is,' Braddock said.
âI'm coming wid yer.'
But Macgregor refused to rise to the insults. He had bigger things on his mind.
âWhat d'you mean “conspiratorial”?'
âI don't know, sir, it was just a feeling. Up to now the girl was quite friendly.' He paused, then went on, âBut in the
presence of those two men, she seemed suddenly the opposite.'
âAnd one of them had a gun?'
Stevenson shrugged. âAgain, it's only a hunch, sir, but I'm pretty sure. I can't ignore it. We know it's a possibility.'
âWe do indeed.' Mackinnon's voice trailed off, then he thought of something. âYou say they asked about us going to Hong Kong?'
âYes.'
âI wonder why they asked that. You'd already told 'em we were bound there, hadn't you?'
âYes, I think so, sir.'
A nasty suspicion was forming in Mackinnon's mind. He nodded. âRight then, mister, search 'em, search every one of them and disarm them.'
âMe, sir? Or Mr Rawlings?'
âI haven't seen the Mate, Mr Stevenson, so I want you to do it. Get the Bosun and Carpenter to help you, otherwise keep it as low key as you can. Get the girl to interpret. I don't want any misunderstandings.'
âAye, aye, sir.'
âBy the way, Mr Stevenson.' Mackinnon beckoned him into the chart-room and lowered his voice. âFor your ears only, but we've received orders to proceed to Shanghai.'
âShanghai? But that means. . . .'
âExactly.'
âJesus!'
âGo on, get on with it and if you see the Mate, tell him I'd like a word.'
He almost tripped over Tam. She was with Braddock and Pritchard, cradling the baby in her arms. The wrinkled face peered from a swathing of blanket. Her two boyfriends seemed to have disappeared. The contrast with the last time he had seen her not ten minutes earlier was marked. The quartet were sitting on the steps of the main stairway, like a
small social group waiting for a photographer. A thin film of water still trickled about their feet. They were laughing together, though Stevenson noted a shadow pass over Tam's face as she saw who it was stepping down past them.
âCan I speak with you a moment please,' he said. âI have a message from the Captain for your people.'
âI already tell them about everything all right.'
âNo, this is more important.'
Tam stood unsteadily as the ship rolled. âI'll take the baby,' Braddock volunteered.
âNo, it okay. Baby sleep.'
Stevenson put his hand out to steady her, forgetting it was his injured arm. The pain of her sudden weight made him wince, but she drew sharply away from him.
âAsk Chippy and the Bose to come here, please,' he said to Braddock.
âOkay.' The two seamen shuffled reluctantly away and Stevenson turned to the girl. She looked very uneasy, as if frightened to be alone with him.
âListen Tam, you must interpret for me. I am going to take you into the saloon and speak to the men. I think â the Captain thinks â someone . . . one of you people, has a gun; perhaps more than one. D'you understand?'
Her pale face had drained of colour and he saw her long throat undulate as she swallowed.
âD'you understand?' he repeated.
For a moment she stood, eyes downcast, then she looked up at him. âAlex, you tell me ship go Hong Kong, yes?'
He nodded, fearing what was coming. âYes, I told you.'
âIs true?' she asked directly, setting aside any recognition of the subtleties of tense as a preliminary to explanation. Slowly he shook his head. âNo. Ship now go Shanghai.'
She jerked as though he had struck her. Her large eyes widened as she backed away, and then she turned and was running aft bouncing off the bulkhead as the
Matthew Flinders
rolled, and the alleyway was full of the baby's wailing.
âShit!' muttered Stevenson vehemently.
âDid you make her an offer, Sec?' Macgregor grinned from the far end of the alleyway, but vanished when the Bosun and Carpenter appeared. Stevenson was caught up in the necessity of instructing the petty officers.
They started with the saloon. The Bosun and Carpenter closed off each of the two doors and stood impassively while Stevenson strode forward and motioned for all the men to stand. Anger lent a grim purposefulness to his task. After turning over their pathetically few bundles he frisked each man in turn, as he had seen done on the movies. Their limbs were thin as sticks under their cotton trousers, their ribbed chests bare of holsters, their armpits sticky with nothing more sinister than sweat. Once he drew back sharply from a young man woken from sleep, his erection rigid. The ensuing laughter defused what might, in its aftermath, have been unpleasant. He found no guns and, smiling as courteously as he was able, he thanked them. Only as he left did he realise neither of the men he had seen earlier with Tam had been among those searched. Then, as the three white men were leaving, the two missing Vietnamese burst into the saloon.
âWhat for you do this?' one of them demanded in passable pidgin. Struck in the back by the imploding door handle the Bosun had the man spun round and spread-eagled against the bulkhead in a trice. Frisking him he straightened and shook his head. The other man, his hands voluntarily lifted above his head, was equally devoid of arms.
Stevenson went up to the first. âYou savvy English, eh? Okay, we check. Make everything okay.' Then he led the trio from the saloon and left a babel of voices noisily debating the intrusion.
âDo we get to do that with the women?' queried Chippy facetiously.
Stevenson sighed. âI suppose we'd better.'
But it was a half-hearted affair, despite the explanation rendered by Tam to ease the embarrassment of both parties. As he left the smoke-room, Stevenson caught the girl's eyes and held his hands up in an eloquent and hopeless shrug. But as an appeal it was a useless gesture; Tam merely looked away.
Stevenson escaped to the wilderness of the upper deck.
Immediately he noticed the change. Emerging on deck it was lighter, the mastheads no longer seemed to scrape the heavy overcast. He caught sight of a glimpse of the sun, a pale disc, but visible again as the fractus edged away. Against it a shape, ragged, batlike, then another, and another, a hideous nightmare of exhausted birds flopping like filthy rags tossed out of the sky; the grey and white of sea birds, and the brilliant greens, iridescent blue and scarlets of land birds. Unnerved, Stevenson stood for a moment, aware too that the wind had dropped and the ship's motion had become irregular.