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The mainmast of the seine boat had toppled over to port. No sooner was it re-stepped, and the sail hoisted, than over it went again. "Step o'
the mast gone, I'll be bound," said Uncle Jake. "They'm going to capsize, going on like that, if they bain't careful. Poor job! when mastises goes over like that. Better to row.... There's thic Li'l Roosian shoving off!"
In fact, the _Shooting Star_ was shoved off, but a wave threw her back upon the sh.o.r.e. She was again shoved off. Again she grounded on the sand, and there she stuck. A roar of laughter broke forth all along the beach. The Little Russian and his crew stood up in the heeled-over boat, and by using their oars like punt poles, they tried to prevent the seas from slewing them round broadside on. Very helpless they looked, very comic, very futile.
A swarm of small boys buzzed around and jeered. The Little Russian jumped up and down with vexation. Augustus Theodore, rowing frantically in a foot or so of water, splashed and 'caught crabs.' Joe Barker, tall, patriarchal, thin and thinly clad, stood up to his oar, looked savage curses from his sunken old eyes and muttered them into his beard.
[Sidenote: _AND GETS OFF_]
"That _be_ a purty crew!" repeated Uncle Jake. "I 'ouldn' go to say wi'
'em, not if.... A purty fellow, thic 'Gustus Theodore! They calls chil'ern by names nowadays, but they called he 'Gustus Theodore, an' us can't get over thic, so us al'ays calls 'en 'Gustus Theodore in long.
Bain't no gude tu hisself nor n.o.body else. I've a-took 'en to say....
Never again! 'Er ain't no fisherman nuther. An' thic Joe Barker's past it. He've had his day. Been in the Army an' been in the Navy, an' an't brought no pension out o' the one n'eet out o' t'other. Helped throw a 'Merican midshipman overboard once, so they say, drough a porthole.
Thought they was going to be hanged for it, but they wasn't. He've a-lived wildish in his time, I can tell 'ee; an' now he's the man for sleep. Take 'en out shrimping or lifting crab-pots, stop rowing a minute an' he's fast asleep. The Li'l Roosian hisself an't been to say thees dozen years. 'Tis a crew o'it! Luke! _they_ can't shove off. I can see they wants Uncle Jake there."
The _Shooting Star_ was still being shoved. The Little Russian was still jumping up and down in the stern-sheets; Augustus Theodore was still rowing fast and fruitlessly; and Joe Barker stood impa.s.sively tall--a mummy of a man, wrapped up in aged clothes and a great dirty white beard. Life was contracted within him. No more than his eyes seemed alive, and hardly those until you looked closely; for the yellow rims and whites appeared to be dead, and the old cursing flame of life burnt only in the pupils.
"Do 'ee really mean to go?" asked Uncle Jake, taking up a long oar to shove with. "'Tisn't nowise fit for a crazy craft like thees yer."
"When a man," said the Little Russian solemnly, "when a man has a chance to catch herring and pay his way, and pay a debt or two maybe, 'tis on'y right to try."
"For sure 'tis. But why an't 'ee been to say thees twelve year then?"
"An't been fit...."
"Fit! Tis the price o' herring fetches the likes o' yu. Have 'ee got yer lead-line and compa.s.s aboard?"
"I've broke mine."
"'Tis tempting Providence to go away wi'out 'em Be yu off? Off yu goes then. Luke out!"
A yell went up as a wave broke in over the stern and soaked Joe Barker's back.
"They'm off!" cried Uncle Jave with ironic merriment. "Wet drough to the skin they be!"
The Little Russian rowed steadily on the same side as 'Gustus Theodore.
Both of them just balanced Joe Barker, who rowed on the other side in strong jerks, as if his aged strength revived for a part only of each stroke.
Darkness, drawing in over the sea, hid the drifters from sight. Along the beach we asked one another in jest, "I wonder what the _Shuteing Star_ is doing now?"
The commonest answer was a laugh. But we did want to know.
Between eleven o'clock and midnight sail after sail appeared silently on the black darkness, as if some invisible hand had suddenly painted them there. The boats were coming in. Creaks and groans of winches sounded along the beach.
[Sidenote: _AND RETURNS_]
"Who be yu?" was the greeting from a rabble of youths who scuttled up and down the waters' edge to guide boats to their berths and gain first news of the catches. "Have 'ee see'd ort o' the _Shuteing Star_?" they shouted.
"No-o-o-o!"
"_I_ shan't go to bed till they comes in," said Uncle Jake. "Cuden'
sleep if I did. '_Tis_ a craft! Her's so leaky as a sieve, lying dry all these years. Not but what her was a gude 'nuff li'l craft in her time--tu small for winter work. But I wishes 'em luck, I du."
At last, the _Shooting Star_ did row in. They had not dared to sail her. She touched the beach before we glimpsed her, for all our watching. A crowd ran down to haul her up and to crack jokes on her.
"Have 'ee catched ort, Harry?"
"Tu or dree dizzen, an' half a ton o' coral an' some wild-crabs."
"Did 'er sail well--keep up to the wind? Eh?"
"Us rowed. 'Tis blowin' a gale out there."
"What yu done to your nets?"
"Broke 'em."
"On to the bottom?"
"Iss."
"Why didn't 'ee go crab-fishing proper? Be 'ee going again?"
The little Russan saw no joke. He bustled about the boat and replied: "A-course we be, if 'tis fit."
"Well, I wishes 'ee luck then."
We all wished luck to the _Shooting Star_--to that cranky old boatload of pluck, ill-luck, and ancient desperation.
Said Uncle Jake: "I'd rather see they come in wi' a boatload o' herring than any boat along the beach. 'Tis a purty craft an' a purty crew, but they du desarve it."
So said we all. 'Twas the least payment we could make for our entertainment.
As soon as they were hauled up, Joe Barker lit his pipe, and, instead of going to bed, he went west along the sh.o.r.e, and carried up and sifted sand till dawn.
"Jest what he be fit for now," Uncle Jake remarked. "That'll get 'en his bread an' baccy far sooner'n drifting for herring in thic _Shuteing Star_."
But if we only could have looked into the _Shooting Star_ at sea. The _Shooting Star of Seacombe_!
6
"Us got 'em at last then!" so we tell one another. We have caught the catch of the season.
For three or four days the hauls had been fairly good. Elsewhere on the coast, the snow, sleet, wind and wrecks continued. Here alone, in Seacombe Bay, it got colder and colder, and the sea became calmer and sunnier. "Tis like old days," Uncle Jake said while he spliced a new cut-rope to the drifter. "The herring be come again, in bodies, and the price be up. Us'll hae 'em."
[Sidenote: _PAYING CALLS AT SEA_]
An hour before sunset on Sat.u.r.day afternoon we were shoved off the beach--Tony, John, and myself. Every article of underclothing in duplicate, a couple of guernseys and a coat or two were next to nakedness. We were bloated with clothes, but that northerly air, it seemed to be fingering our very skins. Yet there was hardly wind enough to fill the sail. Ricketty-rock, ricketty-rock, went the sweeps between the thole-pins, as we rowed to the fishing ground six miles or so away.
Not one of us wished to shirk the heavy work. 'Twas indeed our only source of warmth. The sun was setting. The moon began to rise. The sea was all of a glimmer and glitter.