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"I suppose we ought to turn in now. But promise me you'll continue this talk to-morrow, if it's another lovely night like this."
"Surely," a.s.sented Doe, as we arose and folded up the chairs.
"I hope when we wake we shan't be out at sea," suggested I, "for I want to watch old England receding into the distance."
Monty looked at me and smiled.
"Rupert," he said, and it was like him to use my Christian name without as much as a "by your leave" within the first dozen hours of our acquaintance, "you're one of them."
"One of whom?"
"One of those to whom I could forgive everything. You both are. Good night, Rupert. Good night, Edgar."
CHAPTER III
"C. OF E., NOW AND ALWAYS"
--1
Awaking at 5.30 the next morning, I heard a noise as of the anchor's cable being hauled in. The engines, too, were throbbing, and overhead there were rattling and movement. I tumbled Doe out of his top bunk, telling him to get up and see the last of England.
Slipping a British warm over my blue silk pyjamas--mother always made me wear pale blue--I went on deck. Doe covered his pink-striped pyjamas with a grey silk kimono embroidered with flowers--the chance of wearing which garment reconciled him to this cold and early rising--and followed me sleepily. In a minute we were leaning over the deck-rails, and watching the sea, as it raced past the s.h.i.+p's hull.
Our _Rangoon_ was really off now. As we left Devonport, two devilish little destroyers gave us fifty in the hundred, caught us up, and pa.s.sed us, before we were in the open sea. Then they waited for us like dogs who have run ahead of their master, and finally took up positions one on either side of us. We felt it was now a poor look out for all enemy submarines.
"Well, ta-ta, England," said Doe, looking towards a long strip of Devon and Cornwall. "See, there, Rupert? Falmouth's there somewhere.
In a year's time I'll be back, with you as my guest. We'll have the great times over again. We'll go mackerel-fis.h.i.+ng, when the wind is fresh. We'll put a sail on the _Lady Fal_, and blow down the breeze on the estuary. We'll--"
"And when's all this to be?" broke in a languid voice. We turned and saw our exhausted young table companion, Jimmy Doon, who had arrived on deck, yawning, to a.s.sume the duties of Officer on Submarine Watch.
"After the war, sure," answered Doe.
Mr. Doon looked pained at such folly.
"My tedious lad," he said, "do I gather that you are in the cavalry?"
"You do not, Jimmy," said Doe.
"Nor yet in the artillery?"
"No, Jimmy."
"Then I conceive you to be in the infantry."
"You conceive aright, Jimmy."
"Well, then, don't be an unseemly a.s.s. There'll be no 'after the war' for the infantry."
"In that case," laughed Doe, who had been offensively cla.s.sical, ever since he won the Horace Prize, "_Ave, atque vale_, England."
After gazing down the wake of the _Rangoon_ a little longer, we decided that England was finished with, and returned to our cabins to dress in silence. And then, having read through twice the directions provided with Mothersill's Sea-sick Remedy, we went down to breakfast.
At this meal the chief entertainment was the arrival of Major Hardy, limping from injuries sustained the previous night, and with an eye the colour of a Victoria plum. "The old sport!" whispered the subalterns. And that's just what he was; for he was a major, who could run amok like any second lieutenant, and he was forty, if a day.
In the afternoon, when the sea was very lonely, the destroyers left us, which we thought amazingly thin of them. So we searched out Jimmy Doon, and told him that, as Officer on Submarine Watch, he ought to swim alongside in their place.
Jimmy was much aggrieved, it appeared, at being detailed for the tiresome duty of looking for submarines. It was the unseemly limit, he said, to watch all day for a periscope, and it would be the very devil suddenly to see one. Besides, he had hoped that by losing his draft of men he would be freed from all duties, and a pa.s.senger for a fortnight. He would have just sat down, and drawn his pay. As it was, he a.s.sured us, he hadn't the faintest idea what to do if he should sight a submarine--whether to shoot it, or tell the skipper.
He was nervous lest in his excitement he should shoot the skipper.
At any rate, he had a firing-party of twenty in the bows, and was determined to shoot someone, if he spotted a periscope. And, moreover, the whole thing made him tediously homesick, and he wanted his mother.
He was mouching off quite sad and sulky about it all, when the s.h.i.+p's clock pointed to 4 p.m. (and no one ever argues with a s.h.i.+p's clock), eight bells rang out, and all the junior officers were impressed into a lecture on Turkey--even including Jimmy Doon, who thought that his important duties ought to have secured him exemption from such an ordeal. The lecturer was Major Hardy, who, being a man of the wanderl.u.s.t, had planted in a.s.sam, done some shady gun-running in Mexico, fought for one, or both, or all sides in the late Balkan War, and sauntered, with a hammock to hang under the trees, in all parts of Turkey, Anatolia, and the Ottoman world. He limped to the lecturer's table, in the lounge, and, holding his monocle in his hand from the first word to the last, delivered a discourse of which this was the gist:
Before Christmas we should be in Constantinople--_what_. (Laughter, rather at the _what_ than at the substance of the sentence.) He was confident the Dardanelles would be conquered any day now, and wished the s.h.i.+p would go a bit faster, so that we should not be too late to miss all the fun. (Hear, hear.) The only thing that was holding up our army at Cape h.e.l.les was the hill of Achi Baba. Now he had stood on Achi Baba and looked down upon the Straits at that point where they became the silver Narrows: and he knew that old Achi was a wee pimple, which he could capture before breakfast, given a fighting crowd of blaspheming heathens, like those he saw before him. (Loud cheers.) When we penetrated Turkey, we were to understand that the Turk with a beard was a teetotaller, like himself, Major Hardy.
(Cheers.) We were never to kick a dog in Turkey--_what_ (laughter), and, above all, never to raise our eyes to a Turkish woman, whether veiled or not, if we would keep our lives worth the value of a tram ticket. "One thinks," he concluded, "of the crowd of susceptible Tommies reclining on the decks outside, and fears the worst." (Loud laughter, cheers, and Jimmy Doon's weary voice: "Good-bye-ee.")
--2
So the first afternoon at sea declined into evening. I had been looking forward all day to the starlight night, in which we should discuss again with Monty the things that had crept into our conversation the night before. I had gone to bed, happy in the thought that the breastworks had been broken down, and the way made easier for further unburdening. I had fallen asleep, contented in the conviction that Monty had been sent into my life to help me to put things straight. In my simple theology, I was pleased to imagine I saw how G.o.d was working. Somewhere in that old world behind the dockyard lay my shattered ideals, shattered morals, shattered religion. Monty was to rebuild my faith in humanity and in G.o.d. Some where in that rosy year which was past lay the anchor that I had cast away. Monty was to find me drifting to the Dardanelles with no anchor aboard, and to give me one that would hold. Yes, I saw a ruling Hand. Radley had been the great influence of my schooldays; and, now that he was fast fading into the memories of a remote past, Monty, this lean and whimsical priest, had stepped in to fill the stage. The story of our spiritual development must ever be the story of other people's influence over us. I could see it all, and went to sleep lonely but happy.
It is difficult to say why I wanted to set my life aright. The thought of my mother; the peaceful movement of the s.h.i.+p away from England; Monty's stories of his lovable boy officers; and the beauty of the seascape--all had something to do with it. At any rate, I found myself longing for the time when, after dinner, Doe and I, with Monty between us, should recline in deck-chairs under the stars, and speak of intimate things.
When the time came, it was very dark, for deck-lamps were not allowed, and every port-hole was obscured, so that no c.h.i.n.k of light should betray our whereabouts to a prowling submarine. We began by star-gazing. Then we brought eyes and faces downwards, and watched the wide, rippling sea. Monty, having refilled his pipe on his knees, lit it with some difficulty in the gentle wind, before he remembered that, after dark, smoking was forbidden on deck. The match flared up, and illuminated the world alarmingly.... We listened for the torpedo.
Nothing evil coming from the darkness, Monty knocked out the forbidden tobacco, and placed an empty pipe between his teeth.
"I suppose you fellows know," he said, "that we've got a daily Ma.s.s on board."
"What's that?" asked Doe.
Monty removed his pipe and gazed with affected horror at his questioner. Certainly he would hold forth now.
"Bah!" he began, but he changed it with quick generosity to "Ah well, ah well, ah well! I know the sort of religion you've enjoyed--and, for that matter, adorned. It's a wonderful creed! Have a bath every morning, and go to church with your people. It saves you from bad form, but can't save you from vice."
Doe moved slightly in his chair, as one does when a dentist touches a nerve. Monty stopped, and then added:
"'A daily Ma.s.s' is my short way of saying 'A daily celebration of the Holy Communion.'"
"Heavens!" thought I. "He's an R.C."
I felt as though I had lost a friend. Doe, however, was quicker in appraising the terrible facts.
"I s'pose you're a High Churchman," he said; and I've little doubt that he thereupon made up his mind to be a High Churchman too. Monty groaned. He placed in front of Doe his left wrist on which was clasped a bracelet ident.i.ty disc. He switched on to the disc a shaft of light from an electric torch, and we saw engraved on it his name and the letters "C.E."
"That's what I am, Gazelle," said he, as the light went out, "C. of E., now and always."