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<h2> CHAPTER FOUR </h2>
<p>Consciously or unconsciously, men are proud of their firmness,
steadfastness of purpose, directness of aim. They go straight towards
their desire, to the accomplishment of virtue—sometimes of crime—in
an uplifting persuasion of their firmness. They walk the road of life, the
road fenced in by their tastes, prejudices, disdains or enthusiasms,
generally honest, invariably stupid, and are proud of never losing their
way. If they do stop, it is to look for a moment over the hedges that make
them safe, to look at the misty valleys, at the distant peaks, at cliffs
and morasses, at the dark forests and the hazy plains where other human
beings grope their days painfully away, stumbling over the bones of the
wise, over the unburied remains of their predecessors who died alone, in
gloom or in sunshine, halfway from anywhere. The man of purpose does not
understand, and goes on, full of contempt. He never loses his way. He
knows where he is going and what he wants. Travelling on, he achieves
great length without any breadth, and battered, besmirched, and weary, he
touches the goal at last; he grasps the reward of his perseverance, of his
virtue, of his healthy optimism: an untruthful tombstone over a dark and
soon forgotten grave.</p>
<p>Lingard had never hesitated in his life. Why should he? He had been a most
successful trader, and a man lucky in his fights, skilful in navigation,
undeniably first in seamanship in those seas. He knew it. Had he not heard
the voice of common consent?</p>
<p>The voice of the world that respected him so much; the whole world to him—for
to us the limits of the universe are strictly defined by those we know.
There is nothing for us outside the babble of praise and blame on familiar
lips, and beyond our last acquaintance there lies only a vast chaos; a
chaos of laughter and tears which concerns us not; laughter and tears
unpleasant, wicked, morbid, contemptible—because heard imperfectly
by ears rebellious to strange sounds. To Lingard—simple himself—all
things were simple. He seldom read. Books were not much in his way, and he
had to work hard navigating, trading, and also, in obedience to his
benevolent instincts, shaping stray lives he found here and there under
his busy hand. He remembered the Sunday-school teachings of his native
village and the discourses of the black-coated gentleman connected with
the Mission to Fishermen and Seamen, whose yawl-rigged boat darting
through rain-squalls amongst the coasters wind-bound in Falmouth Bay, was
part of those precious pictures of his youthful days that lingered in his
memory. "As clever a sky-pilot as you could wish to see," he would say
with conviction, "and the best man to handle a boat in any weather I ever
did meet!" Such were the agencies that had roughly shaped his young soul
before he went away to see the world in a southern-going ship—before
he went, ignorant and happy, heavy of hand, pure in heart, profane in
speech, to give himself up to the great sea that took his life and gave
him his fortune. When thinking of his rise in the world—commander of
ships, then shipowner, then a man of much capital, respected wherever he
went, Lingard in a word, the Rajah Laut—he was amazed and awed by
his fate, that seemed to his ill-informed mind the most wondrous known in
the annals of men. His experience appeared to him immense and conclusive,
teaching him the lesson of the simplicity of life. In life—as in
seamanship—there were only two ways of doing a thing: the right way
and the wrong way. Common sense and experience taught a man the way that
was right. The other was for lubbers and fools, and led, in seamanship, to
loss of spars and sails or shipwreck; in life, to loss of money and
consideration, or to an unlucky knock on the head. He did not consider it
his duty to be angry with rascals. He was only angry with things he could
not understand, but for the weaknesses of humanity he could find a
contemptuous tolerance. It being manifest that he was wise and lucky—otherwise
how could he have been as successful in life as he had been?—he had
an inclination to set right the lives of other people, just as he could
hardly refrain—in defiance of nautical etiquette—from
interfering with his chief officer when the crew was sending up a new
topmast, or generally when busy about, what he called, "a heavy job." He
was meddlesome with perfect modesty; if he knew a thing or two there was
no merit in it. "Hard knocks taught me wisdom, my boy," he used to say,
"and you had better take the advice of a man who has been a fool in his
time. Have another." And "my boy" as a rule took the cool drink, the
advice, and the consequent help which Lingard felt himself bound in honour
to give, so as to back up his opinion like an honest man. Captain Tom went
sailing from island to island, appearing unexpectedly in various
localities, beaming, noisy, anecdotal, commendatory or comminatory, but
always welcome.</p>
<p>It was only since his return to Sambir that the old seaman had for the
first time known doubt and unhappiness, The loss of the Flash—planted
firmly and for ever on a ledge of rock at the north end of Gaspar Straits
in the uncertain light of a cloudy morning—shook him considerably;
and the amazing news which he heard on his arrival in Sambir were not made
to soothe his feelings. A good many years ago—prompted by his love
of adventure—he, with infinite trouble, had found out and surveyed—for
his own benefit only—the entrances to that river, where, he had
heard through native report, a new settlement of Malays was forming. No
doubt he thought at the time mostly of personal gain; but, received with
hearty friendliness by Patalolo, he soon came to like the ruler and the
people, offered his counsel and his help, and—knowing nothing of
Arcadia—he dreamed of Arcadian happiness for that little corner of
the world which he loved to think all his own. His deep-seated and
immovable conviction that only he—he, Lingard—knew what was
good for them was characteristic of him and, after all, not so very far
wrong. He would make them happy whether or no, he said, and he meant it.
His trade brought prosperity to the young state, and the fear of his heavy
hand secured its internal peace for many years.</p>
<p>He looked proudly upon his work. With every passing year he loved more the
land, the people, the muddy river that, if he could help it, would carry
no other craft but the Flash on its unclean and friendly surface. As he
slowly warped his vessel up-stream he would scan with knowing looks the
riverside clearings, and pronounce solemn judgment upon the prospects of
the season's rice-crop. He knew every settler on the banks between the sea
and Sambir; he knew their wives, their children; he knew every individual
of the multi-coloured groups that, standing on the flimsy platforms of
tiny reed dwellings built over the water, waved their hands and shouted
shrilly: "O! Kapal layer! Hai!" while the Flash swept slowly through the
populated reach, to enter the lonely stretches of sparkling brown water
bordered by the dense and silent forest, whose big trees nodded their
outspread boughs gently in the faint, warm breeze—as if in sign of
tender but melancholy welcome. He loved it all: the landscape of brown
golds and brilliant emeralds under the dome of hot sapphire; the
whispering big trees; the loquacious nipa-palms that rattled their leaves
volubly in the night breeze, as if in haste to tell him all the secrets of
the great forest behind them. He loved the heavy scents of blossoms and
black earth, that breath of life and of death which lingered over his brig
in the damp air of tepid and peaceful nights. He loved the narrow and
sombre creeks, strangers to sunshine: black, smooth, tortuous—like
byways of despair. He liked even the troops of sorrowful-faced monkeys
that profaned the quiet spots with capricious gambols and insane gestures
of inhuman madness. He loved everything there, animated or inanimated; the
very mud of the riverside; the very alligators, enormous and stolid,
basking on it with impertinent unconcern. Their size was a source of pride
to him. "Immense fellows! Make two of them Palembang reptiles! I tell you,
old man!" he would shout, poking some crony of his playfully in the ribs:
"I tell you, big as you are, they could swallow you in one gulp, hat,
boots and all! Magnificent beggars! Wouldn't you like to see them?
Wouldn't you! Ha! ha! ha!" His thunderous laughter filled the verandah,
rolled over the hotel garden, overflowed into the street, paralyzing for a
short moment the noiseless traffic of bare brown feet; and its loud
reverberations would even startle the landlord's tame bird—a
shameless mynah—into a momentary propriety of behaviour under the
nearest chair. In the big billiard-room perspiring men in thin cotton
singlets would stop the game, listen, cue in hand, for a while through the
open windows, then nod their moist faces at each other sagaciously and
whisper: "The old fellow is talking about his river."</p>
<p>His river! The whispers of curious men, the mystery of the thing, were to
Lingard a source of never-ending delight. The common talk of ignorance
exaggerated the profits of his queer monopoly, and, although strictly
truthful in general, he liked, on that matter, to mislead speculation
still further by boasts full of cold raillery. His river! By it he was not
only rich—he was interesting. This secret of his which made him
different to the other traders of those seas gave intimate satisfaction to
that desire for singularity which he shared with the rest of mankind,
without being aware of its presence within his breast. It was the greater
part of his happiness, but he only knew it after its loss, so unforeseen,
so sudden and so cruel.</p>
<p>After his conversation with Almayer he went on board the schooner, sent
Joanna on shore, and shut himself up in his cabin, feeling very unwell. He
made the most of his indisposition to Almayer, who came to visit him twice
a day. It was an excuse for doing nothing just yet. He wanted to think. He
was very angry. Angry with himself, with Willems. Angry at what Willems
had done—and also angry at what he had left undone. The scoundrel
was not complete. The conception was perfect, but the execution,
unaccountably, fell short. Why? He ought to have cut Almayer's throat and
burnt the place to ashes—then cleared out. Got out of his way; of
him, Lingard! Yet he didn't. Was it impudence, contempt—or what? He
felt hurt at the implied disrespect of his power, and the incomplete
rascality of the proceeding disturbed him exceedingly. There was something
short, something wanting, something that would have given him a free hand
in the work of retribution. The obvious, the right thing to do, was to
shoot Willems. Yet how could he? Had the fellow resisted, showed fight, or
ran away; had he shown any consciousness of harm done, it would have been
more possible, more natural. But no! The fellow actually had sent him a
message. Wanted to see him. What for? The thing could not be explained. An
unexampled, cold-blooded treachery, awful, incomprehensible. Why did he do
it? Why? Why? The old seaman in the stuffy solitude of his little cabin on
board the schooner groaned out many times that question, striking with an
open palm his perplexed forehead.</p>
<p>During his four days of seclusion he had received two messages from the
outer world; from that world of Sambir which had, so suddenly and so
finally, slipped from his grasp. One, a few words from Willems written on
a torn-out page of a small notebook; the other, a communication from
Abdulla caligraphed carefully on a large sheet of flimsy paper and
delivered to him in a green silk wrapper. The first he could not
understand. It said: "Come and see me. I am not afraid. Are you? W." He
tore it up angrily, but before the small bits of dirty paper had the time
to flutter down and settle on the floor, the anger was gone and was
replaced by a sentiment that induced him to go on his knees, pick up the
fragments of the torn message, piece it together on the top of his
chronometer box, and contemplate it long and thoughtfully, as if he had
hoped to read the answer of the horrible riddle in the very form of the
letters that went to make up that fresh insult. Abdulla's letter he read
carefully and rammed it into his pocket, also with anger, but with anger
that ended in a half-resigned, half-amused smile. He would never give in
as long as there was a chance. "It's generally the safest way to stick to
the ship as long as she will swim," was one of his favourite sayings: "The
safest and the right way. To abandon a craft because it leaks is easy—but
poor work. Poor work!" Yet he was intelligent enough to know when he was
beaten, and to accept the situation like a man, without repining. When
Almayer came on board that afternoon he handed him the letter without
comment.</p>
<p>Almayer read it, returned it in silence, and leaning over the taffrail
(the two men were on deck) looked down for some time at the play of the
eddies round the schooner's rudder. At last he said without looking up—</p>
<p>"That's a decent enough letter. Abdulla gives him up to you. I told you
they were getting sick of him. What are you going to do?"</p>
<p>Lingard cleared his throat, shuffled his feet, opened his mouth with great
determination, but said nothing for a while. At last he murmured—</p>
<p>"I'll be hanged if I know—just yet."</p>
<p>"I wish you would do something soon . . ."</p>
<p>"What's the hurry?" interrupted Lingard. "He can't get away. As it stands
he is at my mercy, as far as I can see."</p>
<p>"Yes," said Almayer, reflectively—"and very little mercy he deserves
too. Abdulla's meaning—as I can make it out amongst all those
compliments—is: 'Get rid for me of that white man—and we shall
live in peace and share the trade."'</p>
<p>"You believe that?" asked Lingard, contemptuously.</p>
<p>"Not altogether," answered Almayer. "No doubt we will share the trade for
a time—till he can grab the lot. Well, what are you going to do?"</p>
<p>He looked up as he spoke and was surprised to see Lingard's discomposed
face.</p>
<p>"You ain't well. Pain anywhere?" he asked, with real solicitude.</p>
<p>"I have been queer—you know—these last few days, but no pain."
He struck his broad chest several times, cleared his throat with a
powerful "Hem!" and repeated: "No. No pain. Good for a few years yet. But
I am bothered with all this, I can tell you!"</p>
<p>"You must take care of yourself," said Almayer. Then after a pause he
added: "You will see Abdulla. Won't you?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Not yet. There's plenty of time," said Lingard,
impatiently.</p>
<p>"I wish you would do something," urged Almayer, moodily. "You know, that
woman is a perfect nuisance to me. She and her brat! Yelps all day. And
the children don't get on together. Yesterday the little devil wanted to
fight with my Nina. Scratched her face, too. A perfect savage! Like his
honourable papa. Yes, really. She worries about her husband, and whimpers
from morning to night. When she isn't weeping she is furious with me.
Yesterday she tormented me to tell her when he would be back and cried
because he was engaged in such dangerous work. I said something about it
being all right—no necessity to make a fool of herself, when she
turned upon me like a wild cat. Called me a brute, selfish, heartless;
raved about her beloved Peter risking his life for my benefit, while I did
not care. Said I took advantage of his generous good-nature to get him to
do dangerous work—my work. That he was worth twenty of the likes of
me. That she would tell you—open your eyes as to the kind of man I
was, and so on. That's what I've got to put up with for your sake. You
really might consider me a little. I haven't robbed anybody," went on
Almayer, with an attempt at bitter irony—"or sold my best friend,
but still you ought to have some pity on me. It's like living in a hot
fever. She is out of her wits. You make my house a refuge for scoundrels
and lunatics. It isn't fair. 'Pon my word it isn't! When she is in her
tantrums she is ridiculously ugly and screeches so—it sets my teeth
on edge. Thank God! my wife got a fit of the sulks and cleared out of the
house. Lives in a riverside hut since that affair—you know. But this
Willems' wife by herself is almost more than I can bear. And I ask myself
why should I? You are exacting and no mistake. This morning I thought she
was going to claw me. Only think! She wanted to go prancing about the
settlement. She might have heard something there, so I told her she
mustn't. It wasn't safe outside our fences, I said. Thereupon she rushes
at me with her ten nails up to my eyes. 'You miserable man,' she yells,
'even this place is not safe, and you've sent him up this awful river
where he may lose his head. If he dies before forgiving me, Heaven will
punish you for your crime . . .' My crime! I ask myself sometimes whether
I am dreaming! It will make me ill, all this. I've lost my appetite
already."</p>
<p>He flung his hat on deck and laid hold of his hair despairingly. Lingard
looked at him with concern.</p>
<p>"What did she mean by it?" he muttered, thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"Mean! She is crazy, I tell you—and I will be, very soon, if this
lasts!"</p>
<p>"Just a little patience, Kaspar," pleaded Lingard. "A day or so more."</p>
<p>Relieved or tired by his violent outburst, Almayer calmed down, picked up
his hat and, leaning against the bulwark, commenced to fan himself with
it.</p>
<p>"Days do pass," he said, resignedly—"but that kind of thing makes a
man old before his time. What is there to think about?—I can't
imagine! Abdulla says plainly that if you undertake to pilot his ship out
and instruct the half-caste, he will drop Willems like a hot potato and be
your friend ever after. I believe him perfectly, as to Willems. It's so
natural. As to being your friend it's a lie of course, but we need not
bother about that just yet. You just say yes to Abdulla, and then whatever
happens to Willems will be nobody's business."</p>
<p>He interrupted himself and remained silent for a while, glaring about with
set teeth and dilated nostrils.</p>
<p>"You leave it to me. I'll see to it that something happens to him," he
said at last, with calm ferocity. Lingard smiled faintly.</p>
<p>"The fellow isn't worth a shot. Not the trouble of it," he whispered, as
if to himself. Almayer fired up suddenly.</p>
<p>"That's what you think," he cried. "You haven't been sewn up in your
hammock to be made a laughing-stock of before a parcel of savages. Why! I
daren't look anybody here in the face while that scoundrel is alive. I
will . . . I will settle him."</p>
<p>"I don't think you will," growled Lingard.</p>
<p>"Do you think I am afraid of him?"</p>
<p>"Bless you! no!" said Lingard with alacrity. "Afraid! Not you. I know you.
I don't doubt your courage. It's your head, my boy, your head that I . .
."</p>
<p>"That's it," said the aggrieved Almayer. "Go on. Why don't you call me a
fool at once?"</p>
<p>"Because I don't want to," burst out Lingard, with nervous irritability.
"If I wanted to call you a fool, I would do so without asking your leave."
He began to walk athwart the narrow quarter-deck, kicking ropes' ends out
of his way and growling to himself: "Delicate gentleman . . . what next? .
. . I've done man's work before you could toddle. Understand . . . say
what I like."</p>
<p>"Well! well!" said Almayer, with affected resignation. "There's no talking
to you these last few days." He put on his hat, strolled to the gangway
and stopped, one foot on the little inside ladder, as if hesitating, came
back and planted himself in Lingard's way, compelling him to stand still
and listen.</p>
<p>"Of course you will do what you like. You never take advice—I know
that; but let me tell you that it wouldn't be honest to let that fellow
get away from here. If you do nothing, that scoundrel will leave in
Abdulla's ship for sure. Abdulla will make use of him to hurt you and
others elsewhere. Willems knows too much about your affairs. He will cause
you lots of trouble. You mark my words. Lots of trouble. To you—and
to others perhaps. Think of that, Captain Lingard. That's all I've got to
say. Now I must go back on shore. There's lots of work. We will begin
loading this schooner to-morrow morning, first thing. All the bundles are
ready. If you should want me for anything, hoist some kind of flag on the
mainmast. At night two shots will fetch me." Then he added, in a friendly
tone, "Won't you come and dine in the house to-night? It can't be good for
you to stew on board like that, day after day."</p>
<p>Lingard did not answer. The image evoked by Almayer; the picture of
Willems ranging over the islands and disturbing the harmony of the
universe by robbery, treachery, and violence, held him silent, entranced—painfully
spellbound. Almayer, after waiting for a little while, moved reluctantly
towards the gangway, lingered there, then sighed and got over the side,
going down step by step. His head disappeared slowly below the rail.
Lingard, who had been staring at him absently, started suddenly, ran to
the side, and looking over, called out—</p>
<p>"Hey! Kaspar! Hold on a bit!"</p>
<p>Almayer signed to his boatmen to cease paddling, and turned his head
towards the schooner. The boat drifted back slowly abreast of Lingard,
nearly alongside.</p>
<p>"Look here," said Lingard, looking down—"I want a good canoe with
four men to-day."</p>
<p>"Do you want it now?" asked Almayer.</p>
<p>"No! Catch this rope. Oh, you clumsy devil! . . . No, Kaspar," went on
Lingard, after the bow-man had got hold of the end of the brace he had
thrown down into the canoe—"No, Kaspar. The sun is too much for me.
And it would be better to keep my affairs quiet, too. Send the canoe—four
good paddlers, mind, and your canvas chair for me to sit in. Send it about
sunset. D'ye hear?"</p>
<p>"All right, father," said Almayer, cheerfully—"I will send Ali for a
steersman, and the best men I've got. Anything else?"</p>
<p>"No, my lad. Only don't let them be late."</p>
<p>"I suppose it's no use asking you where you are going," said Almayer,
tentatively. "Because if it is to see Abdulla, I . . ."</p>
<p>"I am not going to see Abdulla. Not to-day. Now be off with you."</p>
<p>He watched the canoe dart away shorewards, waved his hand in response to
Almayer's nod, and walked to the taffrail smoothing out Abdulla's letter,
which he had pulled out of his pocket. He read it over carefully, crumpled
it up slowly, smiling the while and closing his fingers firmly over the
crackling paper as though he had hold there of Abdulla's throat. Halfway
to his pocket he changed his mind, and flinging the ball overboard looked
at it thoughtfully as it spun round in the eddies for a moment, before the
current bore it away down-stream, towards the sea.</p>
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