It was a little after half-past
nine when the man fell overboard.
The mail steamer was hurrying
through the Red Sea in the hope
of making up the time which
the currents of the Indian Ocean
had stolen.
The night was clear, though
the moon was hidden behind clouds.
The warm air was laden with
moisture. The still surface
of the waters was only broken
by the movement of the great
ship, from whose quarter the
long, slanting undulations struck
out like the feathers from an
arrow shaft, and in whose wake
the froth and air bubbles churned
up by the propeller trailed
in a narrowing line to the darkness
of the horizon.
There was a concert on board.
All the passengers were glad
to break the monotony of the
voyage and gathered around the
piano in the companion-house.
The decks were deserted. The
man had been listening to the
music and joining in the songs,
but the room was hot and he
came out to smoke a cigarette
and enjoy a breath of the wind
which the speedy passage of
the liner created. It was the
only wind in the Red Sea that
night.
The accommodation-ladder had
not been unshipped since leaving
Aden and the man walked out
on to the platform, as on to
a balcony. He leaned his back
against the rail and blew a
puff of smoke into the air reflectively.
The piano struck up a lively
tune and a voice began to sing
the first verse of "The
Rowdy Dowdy Boys." The
measured pulsations of the screw
were a subdued but additional
accompaniment.
The man knew the song, it had
been the rage at all the music
halls when he had started for
India seven years before. It
reminded him of the brilliant
and busy streets he had not
seen for so long, but was soon
to see again. He was just going
to join in the chorus when the
railing, which had been insecurely
fastened, gave way suddenly
with a snap and he fell backwards
into the warm water of the sea
amid a great splash.
For a moment he was physically
too much astonished to think.
Then he realized he must shout.
He began to do this even before
he rose to the surface. He achieved
a hoarse, inarticulate, half-choked
scream. A startled brain suggested
the word, "Help!"
and he bawled this out lustily
and with frantic effort six
or seven times without stopping.
Then he listened.
"Hi! hi! clear the way
For the Rowdy Dowdy Boys."
The chorus floated back to him
across the smooth water for
the ship had already completely
passed by. And as he heard the
music, a long stab of terror
drove through his heart. The
possibility that he would not
be picked up dawned for the
first time on his consciousness.
The chorus started again:
"Then--I--say--boys,
Who's for a jolly spree?
Rum--tum--tiddley--um,
Who'll have a drink with me?"
"Help! Help! Help!"
shrieked the man, now in desperate
fear.
"Fond of a glass now and
then,
Fond of a row or noise;
Hi! hi! clear the way
For the Rowdy Dowdy Boys!"
The last words drawled out
fainter and fainter. The vessel
was steaming fast. The beginning
of the second verse was confused
and broken by the ever-growing
distance. The dark outline of
the great hull was getting blurred.
The stern light dwindled.
Then he set out to swim after
it with furious energy, pausing
every dozen strokes to shout
long wild shouts. The disturbed
waters of the sea began to settle
again to their rest and widening
undulations became ripples.
The aerated confusion of the
screw fizzed itself upwards
and out. The noise of motion
and the sounds of life and music
died away.
The liner was but a single
fading light on the blackness
of the waters and a dark shadow
against the paler sky.
At length full realization
came to the man and he stopped
swimming. He was alone -- abandoned.
With the understanding the brain
reeled. He began again to swim,
only now instead of shouting
he prayed -- mad, incoherent
prayers, the words stumbling
into one another.
Suddenly a distant light seemed
to flicker and brighten.
A surge of joy and hope rushed
through his mind. They were
going to stop -- to turn the
ship and come back. And with
the hope came gratitude. His
prayer was answered. Broken
words of thanksgiving rose to
his lips. He stopped and stared
after the light -- his soul
in his eyes. As he watched it,
it grew gradually but steadily
smaller. Then the man knew that
his fate was certain. Despair
succeeded hope; gratitude gave
place to curses. Beating the
water with his arms, he raved
impotently. Foul oaths burst
from him, as broken as his prayers
-- and as unheeded.
The fit of passion passed,
hurried by increasing fatigue.
He became silent -- silent as
was the sea, for even the ripples
were subsiding into the glassy
smoothness of the surface. He
swam on mechanically along the
track of the ship, sobbing quietly
to himself in the misery of
fear. And the stern light became
a tiny speck, yellower but scarcely
bigger than some of the stars,
which here and there shone between
the clouds.
Nearly twenty minutes passed
and the man's fatigue began
to change to exhaustion. The
overpowering sense of the inevitable
pressed upon him. With the weariness
came a strange comfort -- he
need not swim all the long way
to Suez. There was another course.
He would die. He would resign
his existence since he was thus
abandoned. He threw up his hands
impulsively and sank.
Down, down he went through
the warm water. The physical
death took hold of him and he
began to drown. The pain of
that savage grip recalled his
anger. He fought with it furiously.
Striking out with arms and legs
he sought to get back to the
air. It was a hard struggle,
but he escaped victorious and
gasping to the surface. Despair
awaited him. Feebly splashing
with his hands, he moaned in
bitter misery:
"I can't -- I must. O
God! Let me die."
The moon, then in her third
quarter, pushed out from behind
the concealing clouds and shed
a pale, soft glitter upon the
sea. Upright in the water, fifty
yards away, was a black triangular
object. It was a fin. It approached
him slowly.
His last appeal had been heard.
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