The Lust of Hate by Guy Newell Boothby (digital book reader txt) 📕
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think it would be best to let the subject drop.
“You are too modest by half, Mr. Wrexford,” said Miss Maybourne’s
uncle. “Far too modest.”
For some time the two gentlemen did their best to persuade me to
forego my decision, but, hard as they tried, they did not succeed.
There were so many reasons why I should not take up my residence
among the first saloon passengers aft, and as I reviewed them in my
mind, I became more than ever convinced that it would be madness for
me to forego my resolution.
When they discovered that I was not to be moved they shook hands
again, and then left me. Five minutes later the doctor came in to
help me dress. He carried a bundle of clothes in his arms, and when
he had shut the door behind him he threw them on the locker under the
porthole.
“Your own clothes, I’m sorry to say, Wrexford,” he began, “are
completely spoiled; so if you’ll allow me, I’m going to lend you
these till you can see about some more. We are men of pretty much the
same build, so what fits me should fit you, and vice versa.
Now, if you’re ready, let me give you a hand to dress, for I want to
get you on deck into the fresh air as soon as possible.”
Half an hour later I was ready to leave my cabin. The doctor’s
clothes fitted me admirably, and after I had given a look round to
see that I had not left anything behind me, I followed the medico out
into the saloon. Fortunately, there were very few people about, but,
to my horror, those who were there would insist upon shaking hands
with me, and telling me what they thought of my action before they
would let me escape. To add to my discomfort, when I left the saloon
and passed along the spar deck towards my own quarters I had to run
the gauntlet of the rest of the passengers, who clustered round me,
and overwhelmed me with a chorus of congratulations on my recovery. I
doubt very much if ever there was more fuss made over an act of
common humanity than that made by the passengers of the Fiji
Princess over mine. If I had saved the lives of the whole ship’s
company, captain and stokers included, there could not have been more
said about it.
Beaching my own quarters forward I went down to my berth, in
search of a pipe and a pouch of tobacco, and when I had found them,
sat myself down on the fore-hatch and began to smoke. It was a lovely
morning, a merry breeze hummed in the shrouds, and the great steamer
was ploughing her way along with an exhilarating motion that brought
my strength back quicker than any doctor’s physic. On the bridge my
old friend the second officer was pacing up and down, and when he saw
me he came to the rail, and waved his hand in welcome.
The chief steward also found me out, and embraced the opportunity
for telling me that my conduct reminded him of a cousin’s exploits in
the Hooghly, which said narrative I felt constrained to swallow with
a few grains of salt. When he left me I sat where I was and thought
how pleasant it was, after all, to find that there were still people
in the world with sufficiently generous natures to appreciate a
fellow creature’s actions. One question, however, haunted me
continually: What would the folk aboard this ship say when they knew
my secret? And, above all, what would Miss Agnes Maybourne think when
she should come to hear it?
CHAPTER V. THE WRECK OF THE “FIJI PRINCESS”
That afternoon I was sitting in my usual place on the fore-hatch,
smoking and thinking about our next port of call, and what a
miserable figure I should cut before the ship’s company if by any
chance I should be arrested there, when I became conscious that
someone had come along the hurricane deck and was leaning on the
rails gazing down at me. I looked up, to discover that it was none
other than Miss Maybourne. Directly she saw that I was aware of her
presence she moved towards the ladder on the port side and came down
it towards where I sat. Her dress was of some dark-blue material,
probably serge, and was cut in such a fashion that it showed her
beautiful figure to the very best advantage. A sweeter picture of an
English maiden of gentle birth than she presented as she came down
the steps it would have been difficult to find. Kindness and
sincerity were the chief characteristics of her face, and I felt a
thrill of pride run through me as I reflected that she owed her life
to me.
When she came up to where I stood, for I had risen on seeing her
approaching me, she held out her hand with a frank gesture, and said,
as she looked me in the eyes:
“Mr. Wrexford, you saved my life the night before last, and this
is the first opportunity I have had of expressing my gratitude to
you. I cannot tell you how grateful I am, but I ask you to believe
that so long as I live I shall never cease to bless you for your
heroism.”
To return an answer to such a speech would not seem a difficult
matter at first thought, and yet I found it harder than I would at
any other time have imagined. To let her see that I did not want to
be thanked, and at the same time not to appear churlish, was a very
difficult matter. However, I stumbled out some sort of a reply, and
then asked her how she had managed to fall overboard in that
extraordinary fashion.
“I really cannot tell you,” she answered, without hesitation. “I
was leaning against the rails of the hurricane deck talking to Miss
Dursley and Mr. Spicer, when something behind me gave way, and then
over I went backwards into the water. Oh, you can’t imagine the
feeling of utter helplessness that came over me as I rose to the
surface and saw the great ship steaming away. Then you nobly sprang
in to my assistance, and once more hope came into my heart. But for
you I might now be dead, floating about in the depths of that great
sea. Oh! it is an awful thought.”
She trembled like a leaf at the notion, and swept her pretty hands
across her face as if to brush away the thought of such a thing.
“It was a very narrow escape,” I said. “I must confess myself that
I thought the boat would never reach us. And yet how cool and
collected you were!”
“It would have meant certain death to have been anything else,”
she answered. My father will be indeed grateful to you when he hears
of your bravery. I am his only child, and if anything were to happen
to me I don’t think he would survive the shock.”
“I am very grateful to Providence for Laving given me such an
opportunity of averting so terrible a sorrow,” I said. “But I fear,
like everyone else, you attach too much importance to what I did. I
simply acted as any other decent man would have done had he been
placed in a similar position.”
“You do not do yourself justice,” she said. “But, at any rate, you
have the satisfaction of knowing, if it is any satisfaction to you,
that Agnes Maybourne owes her life to you, and that she will never
forget the service you have rendered her.”
The conversation was growing embarrassing, so I turned it into
another channel as soon as possible. At the same time I wanted to
find out something which had been puzzling me ever since I had first
seen her face, and that was where I had met her before. When I put
the question she looked at me in surprise.
“Do you know, Mr. Wrexford,” she said, “that I was going to ask
you that self-same question? And for rather a strange reason. On the
night before we sailed, you must understand, I was sleeping at the
house of an aunt who lives a few miles outside Southampton. I went to
bed at ten o’clock, after a rather exciting day, feeling very tired.
Almost as soon as my head was upon the pillow I fell asleep, and did
not wake again until about half-past twelve o’clock, when I suddenly
found myself wide awake sitting up in bed, with a man’s pale and
agonised face staring at me from the opposite wall. For a few moments
I thought I must be still asleep and dreaming, or else seeing a
phantom. Almost before I could have counted five it faded away, and I
saw no more of it. From that time forward, like yourself, I was
haunted with the desire to remember if I had ever seen the man’s face
before, and, if so, where. You may imagine my surprise, therefore,
when I found the owner of it sitting before me on the hatch of the
very steamer that was to take me to South Africa. Can you account for
it?”
“Not in the least,” I answered. “Mine was very much the same sort
of experience, only that I was wide awake and driving down a prosaic
London street when it happened. I, too, was endeavouring to puzzle it
out the other day when I looked up and found you standing on the deck
above me. It seems most uncanny.”
“It may have been a warning from Providence to us which we have
not the wit to understand.”
“A warning it certainly was,” I said truthfully, but hardly in the
fashion she meant. “And one of the most extraordinary ever vouchsafed
to mortal man.”
“A fortunate one for me,” she answered with a smile, and then
offering me her dainty little hand, she bade me “good-bye,” and went
up the steps again to the hurricane deck.
From that time forward I saw a good deal of Miss Maybourne; so
much so that we soon found ourselves upon comparatively intimate
terms. Though I believe to others she was inclined to be a little
haughty, to me she was invariably kindness and courtesy itself.
Nothing could have been more pleasant than her manner when we were
together; and you may be very sure, after all that I had lately
passed through, I could properly appreciate her treatment of me. To
be taken out of my miserable state of depression, and, after so many
years of ill fortune, to be treated with consideration and respect,
made me feel towards her as I had never done towards a woman in my
life before. I could have fallen at her feet and kissed her shoes in
gratitude for the luxury of my conversation with her. It was the
luckiest chance for both of us when I went aft that night to see that
photograph in the second officer’s cabin. Had I not been there I
should in all probability never have heard Miss Maybourne’s shriek as
she went over the side, and in that case she would most certainly
have been drowned; for I knew that, unaided and weighed down by her
wet clothes as she was, she could never have kept afloat till the
boat reached her. Strange as it may seem, I could not help deriving a
sort of satisfaction from this thought. It was evident that my
refusal to accept the captain’s kind offer to take possession, for
the rest of the
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