Alexander Grin
THE SHIPS IN LISS
(translated by Barry Scherr)
I
There are people who remind you of an old-fashioned snuffbox. When
you pick up such an object, you ponder it fruitfully. It is an entire
generation, and we are alien to it. The snuffbox is placed among other
appropriate little objects and is shown to
guests, but rarely does its owner use it as an everyday item. Why? Do
the centuries daunt him? Or are the forms of another time, so deceptively
similar to modern forms geometrically, so different in essence that to see them
constantly, to be in constant contact with them, means to live imperceptibly in
the past? Is this perhaps a shallow thought about a complex disparity? Hard to
tell. But, as I began to say, there are people who remind you of an ancient
everyday item, and the spiritual essence of these people is as alien to the
manner of life around them as the above-mentioned
snuffbox to a price gouger from the Hotel Lisbon. Whether in childhood,
or at one of those turning points in life
when the developing character seems to be like a liquid saturated with a mineral solution Ч disturb it just a little and it will all irreversibly congeal into
crystals that form with the speed of
lightningЧmaybe at such a turning point, thanks to a chance impression
or something else, their soul adopts a steadfast form once and for all. Its
needs are naive and poetic: the integrity, completeness, and the charm of the habitual, where daydreams dwell so serenely
and comfortably, free of the moment's cavils. Such a person prefers horses to trains, candles to electric
bulbs, the downy plait of a girl to her artful coiffure with its smell
of burning and musk, roses to chrysanthemums, and the ungainly sailing vessel
with its lofty mass of white sails that reminds you of a jawly face with a
clear brow above blue eyes, to th steamship pretty as a toy. His inner life is
of necessity guarded, while his external life consists of mutual repulsions.
II
Just as there are such people, so are there families houses, and
even cities and harbours that are guided by a spirit all their own.
There is no port more disorderly and marvellous than Liss, except
of course Zurbagan. The international, mulнtilingual city strongly reminds one
of a tramp who has finally decided to bury himself in the fog of a settled
life. The homes straggle helter-skelter along the vague suggesнtions of
streets, but streets in the proper sense of the word could not exist in Liss,
if only because the city emerged on the sides of cliffs and hills, connected by
steps, bridges, and spiral-shaped pathways. All of this is covered by a solid
mass of tropical greenery, in the fan-shaped shadow of which glitter the
childlike, blazing eyes of women. A yellow rock, a blue shadow, and picturesque
cracks in old walls; in some kno.ll-shaped yard a huge boat is being repaired
by a barefoot, unsociable person smoking a pipe; there is distant singing and
its echo in a ravine; a market on piles beneath tents and huge umbrellas; a
weapon's gleam, bright frocks, the fragrance of flowers and greenery that gives
rise to a dull yearning, as in a dream, for love and trysts; the harbour, as
filthy as a young chimney sweep; sails furled in sleep and a winged morning,
green water, coves, and the ocean's expanse; at night, the magnetic
conflagration of stars and boats with laughing voicesЧsuch is Liss. There are
two hotels here: the Prickly Pillow and the Heaven Help Us. The sailors
naturally crowded more thickly in the one that was nearer at hand. It is hard
to say which was nearer in the beginning, but as a result of their competition
these venerable institutions began to skip towards the harнbourЧ in the literal
sense of the word. They moved, rented new quarters, and even built them. The
Heaven Help Us won. A deft move on its part left the Prickly Pillow rooted
amidst some barely negotiable ravines, while the triumphant Heaven
Help Us, after a ten-year struggle and having been the ruin of three eating
houses, settled down to reign right beside the harbour.
Liss's population consists of adventurers, smugglers, and sailors.
The women are divided into angels and shrews; the angels of course are young,
searingly beautiful and tender, while the shrews are oldЧbut one must not
forget that even a shrew can be useful. Take for instance a happy wedding
during which a shrew who had previously concocted infernal machinations repents
and begins a better life.
We will not investigate the reasons why Liss was and is visited
exclusively by sailing vessels. These reasons are of a geographic and
hydrographic nature; altogether, every-' thing in this town produced on us
precisely that impression of independence and poetic rhythm that we tried to
elucidate through the example of a person with pure and clear needs.
Ill
At the time our story begins four people were sitting at a table
on the top floor of the hotel Heaven Help Us before a window with a picturesque
view of Liss's harbour. They were Captain Duke, a quite corpulent and effusive
individuнal; Captain Robert Estamp; Captain Renior; and a captain better known
by the nickname "I know you", because he greeted everybody, even strangers,
with just this phrase if the person evinced an inclination to go on a spree.
His name, though, was Chinchar.
Such a glittering, even aristocratic company could not, naturally
enough, be gathered round an empty table. On it were standing various festive
bottles brought out by the proprietor of the hotel on special occasionsЧnamely
those like the present one, when captains, who generally had no love lost for
each other for reasons of professional swashbuckling, got together to do some
heavy drinking. Estamp was an elderly, very pale, grey-eyed, taciturn man with
reddish eyebrows; Renior, with long black hair and bulging eyes, looked like a
disguised monk; Chinchar, a one-eyed, agile old man with black teeth and a
mournful blue eye, was notable for his scathing tongue.
The inn was full; people were singing at one table and arguing
noisily at another; from time to time some merry-maker, who had reached the
stage of complete oblivion,would head for the exit knocking over the chairs in
his path; the plates and dishes were rattling; a1 i amidst
this noise Duke twice caught the name "Bitt-Boy". Evidently someone
was recalling this glorious person. The name came up apropos, for a difficult
situation was under discusнsion.
"Now with Bitt-Boy," Duke exclaimed, "I wouldn't
be afraid of an entire squadron! But he's not around. My dear captains, I'm loaded
with vile explosives Ч a terrible thing! That is, not I, but the 'Marianne.
However, the Marianne is I and I'm the Marianne, therefore
I'm loaded. It's an irony of fate: IЧwith a cargo of grapeshot
and powder! Let God be my witness, my dear captains," Duke continued in a
gloomily animated voice, "after that knock-out dish they treated me to in
the commissariat I would have even agreed to carry seltzer and soda
water!"
"A privateer showed up again the day before yesterday,"
put in Estamp.
"I don't know what he's looking for in these waters,"
said Chinchar, "but one's afraid to weigh anchor."
"What's burdening you now?" asked Renior.
"Utter rubbish, captain. I'm transporting tinware and
perfume. But I've been promised a bonus!"
Chinchar was lying, however. He was "burdened" not with
tinplate, but with an insurance policy, and was seeking a suitable time and
place to sink his Hermit for a large sum. Such dirty tricks are no
rarity, although they require great circumspection. The privateer was bad news;
Chinchar had received information that his insurance company was on the brink
of ruin, and so he had to hurry.
"I know what that pirate's looking for," declared Duke.
"Did you see the brigantine that cast anchor at the very entrance? The Felicity.
They say it's loaded with gold."
"I don't know that vessel," said Renior. "I saw
her, of course. Who is her captain?"
Nobody knew. Nobody had seen him. He had not made a single call
and had not come to the hotel. Just once three sailors from the Felicity, middle-aged
and decorous people pursued by curious glances, came from the ship into Liss,
bought some tobacco, and did not appear again.
"A pup," grumbled Estamp. "A lout. Stay in your
cabin, lout," he suddenly flushed and turned towards the window,
"maybe you'll grow a moustache."
The captains broke into guffaws. When the laughter had died down,
Renior said:
"There's nothing to be done, we're locked in. I'd give up my
cargo with pleasureЧafter all, what do I care about someone else's lemons? But
to give up the Presiнdent...."
"Or the Marianne," interrupted Duke. "What if she
were blown up?" He grew pale and drank down a double shot. "Don't
speak to me about such terrible and fateful things, Renior!"
"I'm so sick of hearing about your Marianne," shouted
Renior, "that I would even welcome an explosion!"
"And may your President sink!"
"Wha-a-at?"
"Captains, don't quarrel," said Estamp.
"I know you!" cried out Chinchar to a very surprised
visitor. "Come here, treat an old fellow!"
But the visitor turned his back. The captains sank into thought.
Each had his own reasons for wishing to leave Liss as quickly as possible. A
distant fortress was expecting Duke. Chinchar was in a hurry to play out his
little swindle. Renior thirsted for a reunion with his family after a
two-year's absence, while Estamp was afraid that his crew, which was a loose
assemblage, would leave him. Two of them had already run off and were now at
the Prickly Pillow bragging about fantastic adventures in New Guinea.
These vesselsЧthe Marianne, the President, Chinchar's
Hermit, and Estamp's ArameaЧhad taken refuge in Liss from the
pursuit of hostile privateers. The high-speed Marianne had been the
first to fly in, the next day the Hermit had come crawling, and two days
later the Aramea and the President dropped anchor, panting.
Including the mysterious Felicity, there were in all five ships in Liss,
not counting barges and small coastal vessels.
"Therefore I say that I want Bitt-Boy," the tipsy Duke
began to speak again. "I'll tell you a little something about him. Of
course, you all know that milksop, Beppo Malastino. Well, there was Malastino
staying in Zurbagan, drinking 'Good God',* and holding his Butuzka on his lap.
In walks Bitt-Boy. 'Malastino, weigh anchor, I'll pilot your vessel through
Kasset. You'll be in Akhuan Skap before everyone else this season.' What do you
think, captains? Many a time I'd sail through Kasset with a full cargo, and
that idiot Malastino would have done well to heed Bitt-Boy blindly. But Beppo
thought it over for two days. 'Oh a storm belt... oh, blah blah, the buoys've
been torn off....' But the crux of it, lads, wasn't in buoys. Ali the Turk,
Beppo's ex-boatswain, made a hole in his brig directly across from the mizzen
and sealed it with pitch. A wave would have quickly washed it away. Finally the
swooning Beppo sailed through the infernal strait with Bitt-Boy; he was late,
of course, and the money in Akhuan Skap had come to like others more than that
wop, but ... isn't Bitt-Boy a lucky-chap! In Kasset they were hurled against
the reefs.... Now, several barrels of honey that stood near the Turk's hole had
begun to ferment, most likely back in Zurbagan. These barrels burst, and about
four tons of honey battened down the hole with such a collision mat that the
planking never gave way. Beppo turned cold when he discovered it during the
unloading in Akhuan Skap.
"Bitt-Boy.... I would have begged him to come to me,"
remarked Estamp. "Some day, Duke, they'll hang you for the powder anyway,
but I have children."
"I'll tell you another story about Bitt-Boy," Chinchar
began. "This affair...."
A dreadful, jolly racket interrupted the old swindler. Everyone
turned towards the door, many began to wave their hats, and some rushed to
greet the newcomer. A collective roar raced like the wind through the vast
hall,
* Deadlyаа stuff.аа Pureаа
alcoholаа infusedаа withаа
cayenneаа pepper,аа and containing a small amount of honey.Ч Author.
whileаа individualаа shoutsа
burstа throughаа theа
enthusiastic uproar:
"Bitt-Boy! Bitt-Boy! Bitt-Boy, bearer of good fortune!"
IV
The person greeted by such a meaningful and delightful appellation
reddened deeply, stopped at the entrance, laughed, waved a greeting, and went
to the captains' table. He was a well-built person of no more than thirty, not
tall, and with a pleasant, open face that expressed tenderness and strength.
There was a calm liveliness in his eyes, while his facial features, his figure,
and all his movements were notable for their dignity, which was more a
reflection of an inner calm than an habitual assertion of character. His
thoughtful voice was extremely distinct but not loud. Bitt-Boy wore a pilot's
cap, a brown jersey, a blue belt, and heavy-looking shoes; a raincoat was
thrown over his arm.
Bitt-Boy shook dozens and hundreds of hands.... His smiling glance
moved freely about the circle of friendly grins; wreaths of pipe smoke, the
white glitter of teeth in coffee-coloured faces, and a multi-hued fog of eyes
surrounded him for several minutes Ч the vibrant cloud of a cordial meeting. He
finally disentangled himself and fell into Duke's embrace. Even Chinchar's
mournful eye cheered up, as did his caustic jaw. The stolid, ox-like Renior
softened, and the tough, egotistical Estamp gave a slight but childlike smile.
Bitt-Boy was everyone's favourite.
"You, fortune's drummer!" said Duke. "Haven't seen
hide nor hair of you! You weren't perhaps some modern Jonah in the belly of a
nasty whale? Where did you disappear to? What d'you know? Take your pick: the
whole damn fleet's on hand. But we're stuck, like a wedge driven into some
blockhead. Save the Marianne."
"You mean the privateer, do you?" asked Bitt-Boy.
"I saw him. A short tale, lads, is better than long interrogations. Here's
the story; yesterday I took a yawl in Zurbagan and sailed to Liss; it was a
dark night. I'd heard about the privateers; therefore I stole along the shore
behind the rocks, where the cliffs are overgrown with moss. I was protected by
their colour. Twice the search light of an unfriendly cruiser passed by me; the
third time something made me lower the sail. In an instant... the yawl and I
were illuminated like a fly on a plate. Because of the rocks, the shadows, the
moss, and the clefts, I couldn't be distingнuished from the emptiness, but had
I not lowered the sail.... And so Bitt-Boy got here safe and sound. Renior, do
you remember the firm Heaven and Co.? It sells tight shoes with nails driven
right through; I bought a pair yesterday, and now my heels are all
bloody."
"Aye-aye, Bitt-Boy," said Renior, "but you're a
courageнous person. Bitt-Boy, pilot my President, if you were
married...."
"No, the Hermit," declared Chinchar. "I know
you, Bitt-Boy. I'm rich now."
"Why not the Aramea?" asked the stern Estamp.
"I'm prepared to defend my right to leave with a knife. With Bitt-Boy it's
a sure thing."
The young pilot was about to say something else when he suddenly
became grimly serious. With his chin propped on his small hand he looked at the
captains, quietly smiled with his eyes, and, out of consideration for the mood
of others, got control over himself. He took a drink, tossed up the empty
glass, caught it, lit a cigarette, and said:
"I thank you; I thank you for your kind words, for your
confidence in my luck.... I do not seek it. I can't give you my answer now;
that is, a definite one. There is a certain circumstance.
"Although I've already spent all the money I earned in the
spring, nonetheless.... Besides, how can I choose among you? Duke?... Oh, dear
old fellow! One would have to be near-sighted not to see your secret tears for
wide-open space and your desire to tell everyone: 'Watch me do it!' The sea
agrees with you, old fellow, as it does with me; I like you, Duke. And you,
Estamp? Who hid me from the foolish Sepoys in Bombay when I saved the rajah's
pearls? I also like Estamp; he has a warm spot in his heart. Renior lived at my
place for two months, and when I broke a leg his wife fed me for half a year.
And you, 'I know you', Chinchar, you inveterate sinner, how you cried in church
over a meeting
with an old woman.... You had been separated by twenty years and
unintentional bloodshed. I've had a drink and I'm jabbering, captains; I like
all of you. The privateer, to be sure, is no joking matter, but how can I make
a choice? I can't even imagine."
"Lots," said Estamp.
"Lots! Lots!" the table began to shout. Bitt-Boy looked
around. People had long since moved in from the corners and were following the
conversation; many elbows rested on the table, and behind those who were close
others stood and listened. Then Bitt-Boy's glance passed to the window, beyond
which the harbour was shining serenely. The evening, giving off vapours, descended
on the water. With a glance Bitt-Boy asked the mysterious Felicity about
someнthing comprehensible only to himself and said:
"That's quite an imposing brigantine, Estamp. Who's
commanding it?"
"Some lout of an ignoramus. Only nobody's seen him."
"And its cargo?"
"Gold, gold, gold," Chinchar began to mutter,
"sweet gold."
And several people on the side corroborated this:
"That's what they say."
"A vessel with gold was supposed to pass by here. That must
be the one."
"The watch on board is scrupulous."
"They don't let anyone on board."
"It's quiet on it...."
"Captains!" Bitt-Boy began to speak. "I'm
embarrassed by my strange reputation, and the hopes placed in me throw my heart
into confusion, really and truly. Listen: cast lots provisionally. You don't have
to roll scraps of paper into little tubes. In a lively matter something living
will watch over us. I'll go with whoever wins out, if a certain circumstance
doesn't change."
"Let them have it, Bitt-Boy!" cried out someone who had
just woken up in the corner.
Bitt-Boy laughed. He would have liked to have already been far
from Liss by now. The noise and jokes amused him. He started up the
"lots" business in order to drag out the time so that he could imbibe
as much as possible of the strange, bustling influences and diffusions of this
crush of sailors and their affairs. However, he would have religiously kept his
word should a "certain circumstance" have changed. But now, while he
looked at the Felicity, this circumstance was still too vague to himself
and in mentionнing it he was guided only by his amazing instinct. Thus a
sensitive person, expecting a friend, is reading or working, and then suddenly
stands up, goes to the door and opens it: the friend is coming, but the person
who opened the door has already shaken off his absentmindedness and is
surprised at the correctness of his action.
"Blast your circumstance!" said Duke. "All
rightЧwe'll | draw lots! But you didn't finish what you were saying,
L-Bitt-Boy."
"Yes. Evening's falling," Bitt-Boy continued, "the
person who wins me, a paltry pilot, will not have long to wait. At midnight
I'll send a lad with tidings to the boat of the one with whom it falls to my
lot to travel. The fact of the matter is that I might refuse outright. But all
the same, for the time being, go ahead."
Everyone turned towards the window into whose variegнated distance
Bitt-Boy was peering intently, apparently seeking some natural sign,
indication, or chance portent. All the ships were clearly visible, as plain as
on the palm of one's hand: the graceful Marianne; the long President with
its tall bowsprit; the bulldog-like gloomy Hermit with the figure of a
monk on its prow; the tall, light Aramea; and that nobly imposing Felicity
with its powerful, well-proportioned body that had the neatness of a yacht,
an elongated stern, and jute rigging, that Felicity about which they had
argued in the tavern as to whether it had a cargo of gold on board.
How sad are summer evenings! Their regular penumbra that has
embraced the weary sun wanders over the hushed land; their echo is drawn-out
and sadly delayed; their distant vistas wane in silent melancholy. To the eye
everything around is still brisk and full of life and activity, but the rhythm of
an elegy already holds sway over a saddened heart. Whom do you pity? Yourself?
Do you hear a previously inaudible moaning from the earth? Are the
dead clustering around us at that perspicacious hour? Are memories
subconsciously straining in some lonely soul and seeking an expressive song?
... But you are overwhelmed by pity, as for someone who is lost in the
wilderness.... And many moments of decision fall in the untranquil circle of
these evenings.
"Look, a cormorant's flying," said Bitt-Boy, "soon
it will land on the water. Let's see which ship it lands closest to. Is that
all right, captains? Now," he continued after receiving the approval of
all, "that's how we'll decide. This very night I'll pilot whichever one it
lands closest to, if ... as I've said. Well, well, my thick-winged one!"
At this our four captains exchanged glances, and not even the
devil himself, the father of fire and torment, could have sat at the
intersection of those glances without being burned through. One has to know how
superstitious sailors are in order to understand them at that moment. Meanwhile
the cormorant, ignorant of this, described several ponderous figure-eights
among the ships and landed right between the President and the Marianne,
so close to the middle of the distance that Bitt-Boy and everyone else
grinned.
"The bird is taking us both in tow," said Duke. "So
well? We'll weave floormats together, Renior my friend, eh?"
"Wait!" Chinchar shouted. "The cormorant can swim,
can'uit? Where will he swim now? An excellent question!"
"All right, the one to which it swims," agreed Estamp.
Duke covered his face with his hand, as though he were dozing;
however, secretly he watched the cormorant malevolently. The Aramea was
lying ahead of the others, closer to the Felicity. The cormorant headed
that way, diving now and then and staying somewhat closer to the brigan-tine.
Estamp straightened up and his eyes glittered deнfiantly.
"There!" was his concise judgment. "Did everyone
see?"
"Yes, yes, Estamp, everyone!"
"I'm going," said Bitt-Boy, "goodbye for now; I'm
expected. My dear captains! The cormorant is a stupid bird, but I swear to you
that if I could have torn myself into four I would have done so. And so,
farewell! Well then, Estamp, you'll hear from me. We'll sail together or ...
we'll part 'once and for all', lads."
He uttered the last words under his breathЧand was not clearly
heard or understood. Three of the captains were sunk morosely into their
chagrin. Estamp had bent over to pick up his pipe, and thus no one caught the
moment of parting. Bitt-Boy stood up, waved his cap, and walked quickly to the
exit.
"Bitt-Boy!" they began to shout after him.
The pilot did not turn around and hurriedly ran down the steps.
Now it is time to explain why this person served as a living
talisman for people whose profession was, so to speak, "organised
risk".
Contrary to minds that are logical and miserly in their attitude
towards life, to minds that have displayed their tiny, grey flag over the majestic
mass of the world, full of unresolved mysteriesЧin the faint-hearted and absurd
hope that everyone who came, astounded, would direct his steps towards this
flagЧcontrary to that, we say, there are lives that seem to have assumed the
task of making others notice the stirrings and mysterious whispers of the unexнplored.
There are people who move in a black ring of pernicious coincidences. Their
presence is depressing; their speech is filled with foreboding; their proximity
brings on misfortune. On the other hand, there are certain expressions that
are in everyday use among us to indicate a different, bright type of soul. We
hear "a sunny person", or "he brings luck". However, let us
not draw hasty conclusions or discuss the trustworthiness of our own conjectures.
The fact is that in the company of lucky people the mood is lighter and
brighter; they alter the course of our personal events through the slightest
remark, a gesture, or a hint; their initiative in our affair indeed insures
success. Sometimes these people are absentminded and carefree, but more often
they are lively and serious. They bear one sure mark: simple laughterЧlaughter
because something is funny and
for no other reason; laughter that is not directed at those
present.
The pilot Bitt-Boy, with his inexplicable and unerring power, was
such a person. Everything that he undertook for others invariably came out
well, no matter how difficult the circumstances, and sometimes even with an
unexpected bonus. No vessel was wrecked on a voyage when he piloted it out of
the harbour. The incident that Duke related about Beppo was no invention. A
ship given his personal counsel at parting was never subjected to epidemics,
attacks, or other dangers; nobody on it fell overboard or committed any crimes.
Bitt-Boy had a wonderful knowledge of Zurbagan, Liss, and Kasset, and of the
peninsula's entire coastline, but he did not get lost even in little-known
channels. He had occasion to pilot ships through dangerous places in far-off
countries where he had found himself only by chance and under his hand the
rudder always turned in the right direction, as if Bitt-Boy could see the
entire bottom with his own eyes. People trusted him blindly, and he blindly
trusted himself. Let us call it keen instinctЧwhat's the difference?
"Bitt-Boy. bearer of good fortune"Чhe was known by this name
everywhere that he had been and worked.
Bitt-Boy walked across several ravines, skirted the Prickly
'Pillow Hotel and set out along a path that wound among mighty gardens to a
short, stony street. All the while he walked with his head lowered in deep
reverie and at times would suddenly grow pale under the impact of his thoughts.
He stopped beneath the shade of trees, near a small house with windows looking
out into the yard, he sighed, straightened up, and walked through a gate in the
low stone fence.
Apparently he was expected. No sooner had he, rustling through the
grass, crossed the garden and begun to approach the windows, peering at the
light glowing in their shadowy depths, than a young girl appeared at one of the
windows brushing the opened curtain with her shoulder. The sight of the
familiar figure did not deceive her expectations. She was about to run off to
the doorway, but after impatiently measuring the two distances, she returned to
the window, jumped through it, and ran to meet Bitt-Boy. She was about
eighteen; two dark braids under a yellow and violet scarf fell along her
graceful neck and almost her entire body, which was so lithe that in moving and
turning it looked like a restless ray of light. Her irregular, childlike face
with shyly proud eyes held the fascinating charm of budding feminine life.
"Regie, the Queen of Eyelashes," said Bitt-Boy between
kisses. "If you don't smother me, I'll have something to remember our
evening by."
"Ours, ours, my dear, my own dear!" said the girl.
"Tonight I didn't go to bed; after your letter I thought you'd come
rushing yourself a minute later."
"A girl should eat and sleep a lot," Bitt-Boy
absentmindedly objected. But he shook off his depression at once. "Did I
kiss both eyes?"
"You didn't kiss either of them, you miser!"
"No, I think I kissed the left one.... So the right eye must
be offended. Let me have that little eye...."And he was given it along
with its radiance.
But the essence of such conversations is not in our poor words,
and we well know that. Try to listen in on such a conversation Ч you will feel
sorry, envious, and sad: you will see two souls struggling, trying to transmit
their aroma to each other through sounds. Regie and Bitt-Boy, however,
continued this conversation to their heart's content. Now they were sitting on
a small garden settee. It grew dark.
As often happens, silence fell: hearts are full and it is a signal
for decisions, should they be urgent. Bitt-Boy felt it was convenient to begin
speaking about the most important thing, without delay.
The girl unconsciously helped him.
"Arrange our wedding, Bitt-Boy. I'm going to have a
baby."
Bitt-Boy roared with laughter. His awareness of the situation
poisoned it, and he shut it off with a short sigh.
"Now then," he said in a different tone, "don't
interrupt me, Regie." He sensed her growing alarm and began to hurry.
"I asked and went everywhere ... there is no doubt...- I can't be your
husband, dear. Oh, don't start crying right away! Wait, hear me out! Can't we
be friends? Regie ... silly, you're the very best! How could I make you
unhappy? I'll tell you more: I only came to say good-bye! I love you so much
that even a giant's heart would burst! My heart's been killed, it's already
been killed, Regie! And besides, am I the only man on earth? There are lots of
good and honest men! No, no, Regie; listen to me, try to understand everything,
agree ... how could it be otherwise?"
He continued to speak for a long time in the same vein, grinding
with clenched teeth the painful tears that had been driven far away, until his
agitation finally wrought complete confusion in his thoughts.
He fell silent, worn out physically and morallyЧhe fell silent,
and kissed the little hands that he forcibly pulled away from her eyes.
"Bitt-Boy...," the sobbing girl began to speak.
"Bitt-Boy, you're a fool, a silly chatterer! Why, you don't know me at
all. I wouldn't surrender you to either misfortune or fear. You see.," she
continued, becoming more and more impassioned, "you're upset ... but I'll
calm you ... now, now!" She took his head and pressed it to her breast.
"Lie here calmly, my little one. ListenЧif things are bad for you, I want
them to be bad for me too. If things are good for you, let them be good for me.
If you hang yourself, I'll also hang myself. We'll go halves in all that's
bitter, but give me the larger half. To me you will always be like porcelain,
pure.... I don't know how to convince you: perhaps by dying?"
She straightened up and thrust her hand behind her bodice, where,
according to the local custom, girls carried a stiletto or small dagger.
Bitt-Boy restrained her. He was silent, overwhelmed by his new
awareness of a heart close to his own. Now his decision, which was still
inexorable, took another form.
"Bitt-Boy," continued the girl, under the spell of her
own words and deceived by the unhappy man's depression, "it's wise of you
to keep quiet and listen to me." She nestled against his shoulder and
continued: "Everything will be all right, believe me. Here's what I think
sometimes when I daydream or get angry at your absences. We'll have a riding
horse named Bitt-Boy; a dog, Wise; and a cat, Regie. You will have no reason to
leave Liss any more. You will buy me new copper kitchenware. I'll smile at you
absolutely everywhere: in the company of enemies, friends, of all who come; let
everyone see how you are loved. We'll play at being bride and groom Ч how you
wanted to slip away, you bad boyЧbut I won't cry any more. Then, when you have
your own brig we'll sail around the world thirty-three times...."
Her voice sounded sleepy and nervous, while her eyes kept opening
and closing. For several minutes she drew a picture of the imaginary journey in
confused images, then she pulled her legs underneath her to make herself
comfortable and yawned gently. Now they were sailing in a starlit garden above
bright underwater flowers.
"And there are many seals there, Bitt-Boy. People say that
these seals are nice. They have human eyes. Don't move, please, it's more
peaceful that way. You wouldn't drown me, would you, Bitt-Boy, because of some
... I don't know ... Turkish girl perhaps? You said that I'm the Queen of
Eyelashes.... Take them for yourself, dear, take them all, all...."
The even breathing of sleep reached Bitt-Boy's ear. The moon was
shining. Bitt-Boy took a sidelong glance; the eyelashes were resting softly on
her pale cheeks. Bitt-Boy smiled awkwardly, and then, concentrating all his
moveнments in an effort at imperceptible smoothness, he freed himself, stood
up, and lowered the girl's head onto the settee's oilcloth cushion. He felt neither
dead nor alive. However, time was slipping by; the moon had risen higher....
Bitt-Boy silently kissed Regie's feet and went out into the street; in his
heart was a stifled scream.
On his way to the harbour he dropped in at the Prickly Pillow for
several minutes.
VI
It was about 10:00 p. m. when a boat approached the Felicity and
gently bumped against its side. A lone person was rowing it.
"Hey, on the brigantine!" rang out the restrained hallo.
The sailor on watch came to the side. "Whom do you want?"
he asked sleepily, peering into the darkness.
"Judging by the voice I'd say it's you, Reksen. Here's
Bitt-Boy."
"Bitt-Boy! Is it really...." The sailor raised his
lantern to see into the boat. "What an undreamed of surprise! Have you
been in Liss long?"
"We'll talk later, Reksen. Who's the captain?"
"You would hardly know him, Bitt-Boy. It's Exquiros, from
Columbia."
"No, I don't know him." While the sailor hastily unwound
a ladder, Bitt-Boy stood in the middle of the boat deep in reverie. "So,
you're gadding about with gold?"
The sailor laughed.
"Oh, noЧwe're loaded with edibles, our own provisions, and a
little incidental freight for the island of Sandy."
He lowered the ladder.
"But as I understand it ... you must have some gold,"
muttered Bitt-Boy as he came up onto the deck.
"We decided on something else, pilot."
"And you're agreeable?"
"Yes, things will probably be good this way, I think."
"Excellent. Is the captain sleeping?"
"No."
"Well, take me to him."
A light was shining through a chink in the captain's cabin.
Bitt-Boy knocked, opened the door, and strode in rapidly and purposefully.
He was dead drunk and as pale as though he were facing a firing
squad, but he had complete control of himself and held himself amazingly
steadily. Esquiros left his chart, walked up to him, and squinted at the
stranger. The captain was a middle-aged, tired-looking person, with a slight
stoop and a sickly yet open and pleasant face.
"Who are you? What brought you here?" he asked without
raising his voice.
"I'm Bitt-Boy, Captain," began the pilot. "Perhaps
you've heard of me, I'm here...."
Esquiros interrupted him:
"You? Bitt-Boy, 'bearer of good fortune'? People turn around
at these words. I know all about you. Sit down, my friend, here's a cigar and a
glass of wine; and here's' my hand and my gratitude."
Bitt-Boy sat down, having forgotten for a moment what he wanted to
say. He gradually returned to his senses. He took a swallow, lit up, and gave a
forced laugh.
"Where will the Felicity be touching shore?" he
asked. "What is its goal in life? Tell me that, Captain."
Esquiros was not particularly surprised by the direct question.
Goals Ч or more precisely, intentionsЧlike those set by him sometimes induce
frankness. However, before beginning to speak the captain walked back and forth
in order to concentrate.
"Well, all right ... let's talk," he began. "The
sea sometimes nourishes strange dispositions, my dear pilot. My disposition
will, I think, seem strange to you. In the past I experienced misfortunes. They
couldn't break me, but thanks to them new and unfamiliar desires were revealed
to me, my outlook was broadened, and the world became nearer and more
accessible. It lures me to go visiting. I'm a loner. I've done all kinds of
maritime work, my dear pilot, and was an honest labourer. The past is well
known. Moreover I have, and always had, a great need for movement. Thus I have
now conceived my own journey. We will deliver thirty barrels of someone else's
corned beef to Rock Sandy; after that we'll lovingly and attentively sail
around land and sea without any specific plan. To look in on others' lives,
seek important and significant meetings, never hurry, sometimes save a fugitive
or take on board those who've been shipwrecked; to stop in the flowering
gardens of huge rivers, perhaps to put down roots temporarily in a foreign
land, letting the anchor become encrusted with salt, and then, getting bored,
to tear away once again and set your sails to the wind Ч that's quite nice, isn't
it, Bitt-Boy?"
"I'm listening," said the pilot.
"My crew is completely new. I did not rush in assembling it.
After I paid off the old one, I sought out congenial meetings, talked with
people, and one by one I collected the men who suited me. A crew of thoughtful
people! The privateer is keeping us in Liss. I eluded him the other day, but
only because of the port's proximity. Stay with us, Bitt-Boy, and I'll give the
order to raise anchor at once! You said that you knew Reksen...."
"I know him through the Radius," Bitt-Boy said
with surprise, "but I haven't yet said so. I ... was thinking about it."
Esquiros did not insist and explained the little disagreeнment to
himself as resulting from his interlocutor's absentmindedness.
"So you have confidence in Bitt-Boy?"
"Perhaps I was unconsciously expecting you, my friend."
Silence fell.
"On the way then, Captain!" Bitt-Boy said suddenly in a
clear and hearty voice. "Send a boy over to the Arameawith a note
for Estamp."
He got the note ready and gave it to Esquiros.
It said:
"I'm as stupid as the cormorant, my dear Estamp. The
'circumstance' has occurred. Farewell to everyone: you, Duke, Renior, and
Chinchar. From now on this coast will not see me."
When he had sent the note, Esquiros shook hands with Bitt-Boy.
"Let's get under way!" he shouted in a ringing voice,
and his presence had already become businesslike and comнmanding. They went out
onto the deck.
In each of their hearts a different wind was blowing and singing:
the wind of the grave in Bitt-Boy's, the wind of movement in Esquiros! The
captain whistled to the boatswain. Before ten minutes had passed, the deck was
covered with trampling and the silhouettes of shadows cast by the lanterns on the
stays. The vessel awoke in the dark and the sails flapped; fewer and fewer
stars glittered among the yards; the windlass creaked as it turned in circles,
and the anchor hawser, slowly hauling the ship to, freed the anchor from the
silt.
Bitt-Boy took the helm and for the last time turned towards where
the Queen of Eyelashes had fallen asleep.
The Felicity departed with its lights out. Silence and
quiet reigned on the ship. When he had left the port's rocky entrance, Bitt-Boy
turned the helm sharply to the left and steered the vessel that way for about a
mile, then he set course directly for the east by making virtually a
right-angle turn; next he turned to the right, obeying his instincts. At that
point, not seeing the unfriendly vessel nearby, he again headed east.
Then something strange happened: there seemed to be a soundless
cry over his shoulder. He glanced back, as did the captain, who was standing
near the compass. Behind them a huge blue beam from the coal-black towers of
the cruiser fell on the cliffs of Liss.
"You're looking in the wrong place," said Bitt-Boy.
"Better add some sails, though, Esquiros."
That and an increase in the wind quickly took the brigantine,
which was sailing at a speed of twenty knots, about five miles off. Soon they
rounded the cape.
Bitt-Boy handed the helm over to the sailor on watch and went
below to the captain. They uncorked a bottle. On deck the sailors, who had also
had a drink to their "safe dash", were now singing unrestrainedly,
and the sound carried into the cabin. They were singing the song of "John
Dickey".
Don't growl, sea, or try to make us quail.
Dry land frightened us long before this.
We'll set sail
Without fail,
To warm climes' sunny bliss.
Chorus:
Say, old woman, fill the glasses tall!
Bottoms up it will be with a clink.
Strange John Dickey, feigning not at all,
Drinks for those who themselves don't drink!
You, dry land, are a vacuous place:
Growing grey.... Wounded heart... Forgive!
Such the trace
That you place,
NowЧfarewell
and let live!
Chorus:
Say, old woman, fill the glasses tall!
Bottoms up it will be with a clink.
Strange John Dickey, feigning not at all,
Drinks for those who themselves don't drink!
Far off glitters the Southern Cross.
The compass wakes at the first wind squall.
Lord, preserve
Ships from loss,
And have mercy on us all!
When the cabin boy, who had gone to Estamp with the note, came in
for some reason, Bitt-Boy asked him:
"Did he badger you for a long time, lad?"
"I didn't say where you were. He stamped his feet and shouted
that he'd hang me from the yardarm, and I ran away."
Esquiros was lively and cheerful.
"Bitt-Boy!" he said. "I thought of how happy you
must be if someone else's luck means nothing at all to you."
Sometimes a word has a deadly effect. Bitt-Boy slowly turned pale;
his face became pathetically distorted. The shadow of an inner convulsion
passed over it. He put his glass on the table, rolled his jersey up to his
chin, and unbuttoned his shirt.
Esquiros shuddered. An ugly, ulcerous tumour protнruded against the
white skin.
"Cancer..." he said, sobering.
Bitt-Boy nodded and, turning away, began to put his bandage and
clothing in order. His hands shook.
Above they were still singing the same song, but already for the
last time. A gust of wind dispersed the words of the last part; all that they
could catch below was:
"Far off glitters the Southern Cross..." and, after a
vague echo, there came through the door that had been slammed shut from the
rolling:
"...have mercy on us all!"
The pilot Bitt-Boy, "bearer of good fortune", made out
these five words better and more clearly than anyone else.
1918.