At Sunwich Port, Complete. W. W. Jacobs

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At Sunwich Port, Complete - W. W. Jacobs


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have accorded a boyish teetotaler remained unanswered.

      In the sitting-room Mrs. Kingdom, the captain's widowed sister, put down her crochet-work as her brother entered, and turned to him expectantly. There was an expression of loving sympathy on her mild and rather foolish face, and the captain stiffened at once.

      “I was in the wrong,” he said, harshly, as he dropped into a chair; “my certificate has been suspended for six months, and my first officer has been commended.”

      “Suspended?” gasped Mrs. Kingdom, pushing back the white streamer to the cap which she wore in memory of the late Mr. Kingdom, and sitting upright. “You?”

      “I think that's what I said,” replied her brother.

      Mrs. Kingdom gazed at him mournfully, and, putting her hand behind her, began a wriggling search in her pocket for a handkerchief, with the idea of paying a wholesome tribute of tears. She was a past-master in the art of grief, and, pending its extraction, a docile tear hung on her eyelid and waited. The captain eyed her preparations with silent anger.

      “I am not surprised,” said Mrs. Kingdom, dabbing her eyes; “I expected it somehow. I seemed to have a warning of it. Something seemed to tell me; I couldn't explain, but I seemed to know.”

      She sniffed gently, and, wiping one eye at a time, kept the disengaged one charged with sisterly solicitude upon her brother. The captain, with steadily rising anger, endured this game of one-eyed bo-peep for five minutes; then he rose and, muttering strange things in his beard, stalked upstairs to his room.

      Mrs. Kingdom, thus forsaken, dried her eyes and resumed her work. The remainder of the family were in the kitchen ministering to the wants of a misunderstood steward, and, in return, extracting information which should render them independent of the captain's version.

      “Was it very solemn, Sam?” inquired Miss Nugent, aged nine, who was sitting on the kitchen table.

      Mr. Wilks used his hands and eyebrows to indicate the solemnity of the occasion.

      “They even made the cap'n leave off speaking,” he said, in an awed voice.

      “I should have liked to have been there,” said Master Nugent, dutifully.

      “Ann,” said Miss Nugent, “go and draw Sam a jug of beer.”

      “Beer, Miss?” said Ann.

      “A jug of beer,” repeated Miss Nugent, peremptorily.

      Ann took a jug from the dresser, and Mr. Wilks, who was watching her, coughed helplessly. His perturbation attracted the attention of his hostess, and, looking round for the cause, she was just in time to see Ann disappearing into the larder with a cream jug.

      

      “The big jug, Ann,” she said, impatiently; “you ought to know Sam would like a big one.”

      Ann changed the jugs, and, ignoring a mild triumph in Mr. Wilks's eye, returned to the larder, whence ensued a musical trickling. Then Miss Nugent, raising the jug with some difficulty, poured out a tumbler for the steward with her own fair hands.

      “Sam likes beer,” she said, speaking generally.

      “I knew that the first time I see him, Miss,” remarked the vindictive Ann.

      Mr. Wilks drained his glass and set it down on the table again, making a feeble gesture of repulse as Miss Nugent refilled it.

      “Go on, Sam,” she said, with kindly encouragement; “how much does this jug hold, Jack?”

      “Quart,” replied her brother.

      “How many quarts are there in a gallon?”

      “Four.”

      Miss Nugent looked troubled. “I heard father say he drinks gallons a day,” she remarked; “you'd better fill all the jugs, Ann.”

      “It was only 'is way o' speaking,” said Mr. Wilks, hurriedly; “the cap'n is like that sometimes.”

      “I knew a man once, Miss,” said Ann, “as used to prefer to 'ave it in a wash-hand basin. Odd, ugly-looking man 'e was; like Mr. Wilks in the face, only better-looking.”

      Mr. Wilks sat upright and, in the mental struggle involved in taking in this insult in all its ramifications, did not notice until too late that Miss Nugent had filled his glass again.

      “It must ha' been nice for the captain to 'ave you with 'im to-day,” remarked Ann, carelessly.

      “It was,” said Mr. Wilks, pausing with the glass at his lips and eyeing her sternly. “Eighteen years I've bin with 'im—ever since 'e 'ad a ship. 'E took a fancy to me the fust time 'e set eyes on me.”

      “Were you better-looking then, Sam?” inquired Miss Nugent, shuffling closer to him on the table and regarding him affectionately.

      “Much as I am now, Miss,” replied Mr. Wilks, setting down his glass and regarding Ann's giggles with a cold eye.

      Miss Nugent sighed. “I love you, Sam,” she said, simply. “Will you have some more beer?”

      Mr. Wilks declined gracefully. “Eighteen years I've bin with the cap'n,” he remarked, softly; “through calms and storms, fair weather and foul, Samson Wilks 'as been by 'is side, always ready in a quiet and 'umble way to do 'is best for 'im, and now—now that 'e is on his beam-ends and lost 'is ship, Samson Wilks'll sit down and starve ashore till he gets another.”

      At these touching words Miss Nugent was undisguisedly affected, and wiping her bright eyes with her pinafore, gave her small, well-shaped nose a slight touch en passant with the same useful garment, and squeezed his arm affectionately.

      “It's a lively look-out for me if father is going to be at home for long,” remarked Master Nugent. “Who'll get his ship, Sam?”

      “Shouldn't wonder if the fust officer, Mr. Hardy, got it,” replied the steward. “He was going dead-slow in the fog afore he sent down to rouse your father, and as soon as your father came on deck 'e went at 'arfspeed. Mr. Hardy was commended, and your father's certifikit was suspended for six months.”

      Master Nugent whistled thoughtfully, and quitting the kitchen proceeded upstairs to his room, and first washing himself with unusual care for a boy of thirteen, put on a clean collar and brushed his hair. He was not going to provide a suspended master-mariner with any obvious reasons for fault-finding. While he was thus occupied the sitting-room bell rang, and Ann, answering it, left Mr. Wilks in the kitchen listening with some trepidation to the conversation.

      “Is that steward of mine still in the kitchen?” demanded the captain, gruffly.

      “Yessir,” said Ann.

      “What's he doing?”

      Mr. Wilks's ears quivered anxiously, and he eyed with unwonted disfavour the evidences of his late debauch.

      “Sitting down, sir,” replied Ann.

      “Give him a glass of ale and send him off,” commanded the captain; “and if that was Miss Kate I heard talking, send her in to me.”

      Ann took the message back to the kitchen and, with the air of a martyr engaged upon an unpleasant task, drew Mr. Wilks another glass of ale and stood over him with well-affected wonder while he drank it. Miss Nugent walked into the sitting-room, and listening in a perfunctory fashion to a shipmaster's platitude on kitchen-company, took a seat on his knee and kissed his ear.


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