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<h2> Fifth Scene—The Boat-House. </h2>
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<h2> Chapter 16. </h2>
<p>Once more the open sea—the sea whose waters break on the shores of
Newfoundland! An English steamship lies at anchor in the offing. The
vessel is plainly visible through the open doorway of a large boat-house
on the shore—one of the buildings attached to a fishing-station on
the coast of the island.</p>
<p>The only person in the boat-house at this moment is a man in the dress of
a sailor. He is seated on a chest, with a piece of cord in his hand,
looking out idly at the sea. On the rough carpenter's table near him lies
a strange object to be left in such a place—a woman's veil.</p>
<p>What is the vessel lying at anchor in the offing?</p>
<p>The vessel is the <i>Amazon</i>—dispatched from England to receive
the surviving officers and men of the Arctic Expedition. The meeting has
been successfully effected, on the shores of North America, three days
since. But the homeward voyage has been delayed by a storm which has
driven the ship out of her course. Taking advantage, on the third day, of
the first returning calm, the commander of the <i>Amazon</i> has anchored
off the coast of Newfoundland, and has sent ashore to increase his
supplies of water before he sails for England. The weary passengers have
landed for a few hours, to refresh themselves after the discomforts of the
tempest. Among them are the two ladies. The veil left on the table in the
boat-house is Clara's veil.</p>
<p>And who is the man sitting on the chest, with the cord in his hand,
looking out idly at the sea? The man is the only cheerful person in the
ship's company. In other words—John Want.</p>
<p>Still reposing on the chest, our friend, who never grumbles, is surprised
by the sudden appearance of a sailor at the boat-house door.</p>
<p>"Look sharp with your work there, John Want!" says the sailor. "Lieutenant
Crayford is just coming in to look after you."</p>
<p>With this warning the messenger disappears again. John Want rises with a
groan, turns the chest up on one end, and begins to fasten the cord round
it. The ship's cook is not a man to look back on his rescue with the
feeling of unmitigated satisfaction which animates his companions in
trouble. On the contrary, he is ungratefully disposed to regret the North
Pole.</p>
<p>"If I had only known"—thus runs the train of thought in the mind of
John Want—"if I had only known, before I was rescued, that I was to
be brought to this place, I believe I should have preferred staying at the
North Pole. I was very happy keeping up everybody's spirits at the North
Pole. Taking one thing with another, I think I must have been very
comfortable at the North Pole—if I had only known it. Another man in
my place might be inclined to say that this Newfoundland boat-house was
rather a sloppy, slimy, draughty, fishy sort of a habitation to take
shelter in. Another man might object to perpetual Newfoundland fogs,
perpetual Newfoundland cod-fish, and perpetual Newfoundland dogs. We had
some very nice bears at the North Pole. Never mind! it's all one to me—<i>I</i>
don't grumble."</p>
<p>"Have you done cording that box?"</p>
<p>This time the voice is a voice of authority—the man at the doorway
is Lieutenant Crayford himself. John Want answers his officer in his own
cheerful way.</p>
<p>"I've done it as well as I can, sir—but the damp of this place is
beginning to tell upon our very ropes. I say nothing about our lungs—I
only say our ropes."</p>
<p>Crayford answers sharply. He seems to have lost his former relish for the
humor of John Want.</p>
<p>"Pooh! To look at your wry face, one would think that our rescue from the
Arctic regions was a downright misfortune. You deserve to be sent back
again."</p>
<p>"I could be just as cheerful as ever, sir, if I <i>was</i> sent back
again; I hope I'm thankful; but I don't like to hear the North Pole run
down in such a fishy place as this. It was very clean and snowy at the
North Pole—and it's very damp and sandy here. Do you never miss your
bone-soup, sir? <i>I</i> do. It mightn't have been strong; but it was very
hot; and the cold seemed to give it a kind of a meaty flavor as it went
down. Was it you that was a-coughing so long last night, sir? I don't
presume to say anything against the air of these latitudes; but I should
be glad to know it wasn't you that was a-coughing so hollow. Would you be
so obliging as just to feel the state of these ropes with the ends of your
fingers, sir? You can dry them afterward on the back of my jacket."</p>
<p>"You ought to have a stick laid on the back of your jacket. Take that box
down to the boat directly. You croaking vagabond! You would have grumbled
in the Garden of Eden."</p>
<p>The philosopher of the Expedition was not a man to be silenced by
referring him to the Garden of Eden. Paradise itself was not perfect to
John Want.</p>
<p>"I hope I could be cheerful anywhere, sir," said the ship's cook. "But you
mark my words—there must have been a deal of troublesome work with
the flower-beds in the Garden of Eden."</p>
<p>Having entered that unanswerable protest, John Want shouldered the box,
and drifted drearily out of the boat-house.</p>
<p>Left by himself, Crayford looked at his watch, and called to a sailor
outside.</p>
<p>"Where are the ladies?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Crayford is coming this way, sir. She was just behind you when you
came in."</p>
<p>"Is Miss Burnham with her?"</p>
<p>"No, sir; Miss Burnham is down on the beach with the passengers. I heard
the young lady asking after you, sir."</p>
<p>"Asking after me?" Crayford considered with himself as he repeated the
words. He added, in lower and graver tones, "You had better tell Miss
Burnham you have seen me here."</p>
<p>The man made his salute and went out. Crayford took a turn in the
boat-house.</p>
<p>Rescued from death in the Arctic wastes, and reunited to a beautiful wife,
the lieutenant looked, nevertheless, unaccountably anxious and depressed.
What could he be thinking of? He was thinking of Clara.</p>
<p>On the first day when the rescued men were received on board the <i>Amazon</i>,
Clara had embarrassed and distressed, not Crayford only, but the other
officers of the Expedition as well, by the manner in which she questioned
them on the subject of Francis Aldersley and Richard Wardour. She had
shown no signs of dismay or despair when she heard that no news had been
received of the two missing men. She had even smiled sadly to herself,
when Crayford (out of compassionate regard for her) declared that he and
his comrades had not given up the hope of seeing Frank and Wardour yet. It
was only when the lieutenant had expressed himself in those terms and when
it was hoped that the painful subject had been dismissed—that Clara
had startled every one present by announcing that she had something still
to say in relation to Frank and Wardour, which had not been said yet.
Though she spoke guardedly, her next words revealed suspicions of foul
play lurking in her mind—exactly reflecting similar suspicions
lurking in Crayford's mind—which so distressed the lieutenant, and
so surprised his comrades, as to render them quite incapable of answering
her. The warnings of the storm which shortly afterward broke over the
vessel were then visible in sea and sky. Crayford made them his excuse for
abruptly leaving the cabin in which the conversation had taken place. His
brother officers, profiting by his example, pleaded their duties on deck,
and followed him out.</p>
<p>On the next day, and the next, the tempest still raged—and the
passengers were not able to leave their state-rooms. But now, when the
weather had moderated and the ship had anchored—now, when officers
and passengers alike were on shore, with leisure time at their disposal—Clara
had opportunities of returning to the subject of the lost men, and of
asking questions in relation to them which would make it impossible for
Crayford to plead an excuse for not answering her. How was he to meet
those questions? How could he still keep her in ignorance of the truth?</p>
<p>These were the reflections which now troubled Crayford, and which
presented him, after his rescue, in the strangely inappropriate character
of a depressed and anxious man. His brother officers, as he well knew,
looked to him to take the chief responsibility. If he declined to accept
it, he would instantly confirm the horrible suspicion in Clara's mind. The
emergency must be met; but how to meet it—at once honorably and
mercifully—was more than Crayford could tell. He was still lost in
his own gloomy thoughts when his wife entered the boat-house. Turning to
look at her, he saw his own perturbations and anxieties plainly reflected
in Mrs. Crayford's face.</p>
<p>"Have you seen anything of Clara?" he asked. "Is she still on the beach?"</p>
<p>"She is following me to this place," Mrs. Crayford replied. "I have been
speaking to her this morning. She is just as resolute as ever to insist on
your telling her of the circumstances under which Frank is missing. As
things are, you have no alternative but to answer her."</p>
<p>"Help me to answer her, Lucy. Tell me, before she comes in, how this
dreadful suspicion first took possession of her. All she could possibly
have known when we left England was that the two men were appointed to
separate ships. What could have led her to suspect that they had come
together?"</p>
<p>"She was firmly persuaded, William, that they <i>would</i> come together
when the Expedition left England. And she had read in books of Arctic
travel, of men left behind by their comrades on the march, and of men
adrift on ice-bergs. With her mind full of these images and forebodings,
she saw Frank and Wardour (or dreamed of them) in one of her attacks of
trance. I was by her side; I heard what she said at the time. She warned
Frank that Wardour had discovered the truth. She called out to him, 'While
you can stand, keep with the other men, Frank!'"</p>
<p>"Good God!" cried Crayford; "I warned him myself, almost in those very
words, the last time I saw him!"</p>
<p>"Don't acknowledge it, William! Keep her in ignorance of what you have
just told me. She will not take it for what it is—a startling
coincidence, and nothing more. She will accept it as positive confirmation
of the faith, the miserable superstitious faith, that is in her. So long
as you don't actually know that Frank is dead, and that he has died by
Wardour's hand, deny what she says—mislead her for her own sake—dispute
all her conclusions as I dispute them. Help me to raise her to the better
and nobler belief in the mercy of God!" She stopped, and looked round
nervously at the doorway. "Hush!" she whispered. "Do as I have told you.
Clara is here."</p>
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