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Benita
CHAPTER II - THE END OF THE "ZANZIBAR."
H.Rider Haggard
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       CHAPTER II - THE END OF THE "ZANZIBAR."
       "Until half an hour ago? Then why----" and Benita stopped.
       "Have I changed my very modest scheme of life? Miss Clifford, as you
       are so good as to be sufficiently interested, I will tell you. It is
       because a temptation which hitherto I have been able to resist, has
       during the last thirty minutes become too strong for me. You know
       everything has its breaking strain." He puffed nervously at his cigar,
       threw it into the sea, paused, then went on: "Miss Clifford, I have
       dared to fall in love with you. No; hear me out. When I have done it
       will be quite time enough to give me the answer that I expect.
       Meanwhile, for the first time in my life, allow me the luxury of being
       in earnest. To me it is a new sensation, and therefore very priceless.
       May I go on?"
       Benita made no answer. He rose with a certain deliberateness which
       characterized all his movements--for Robert Seymour never seemed to be
       in a hurry--and stood in front of her so that the moonlight shone upon
       her face, while his own remained in shadow.
       "Beyond that £2,000 of which I have spoken, and incidentally its
       owner, I have nothing whatsoever to offer to you. I am an indigent and
       worthless person. Even in my prosperous days, when I could look
       forward to a large estate, although it was often suggested to me, I
       never considered myself justified in asking any lady to share--the
       prospective estate. I think now that the real reason was that I never
       cared sufficiently for any lady, since otherwise my selfishness would
       probably have overcome my scruples, as it does to-night. Benita, for I
       will call you so, if for the first and last time, I--I--love you.
       "Listen now," he went on, dropping his measured manner, and speaking
       hurriedly, like a man with an earnest message and little time in which
       to deliver it, "it is an odd thing, an incomprehensible thing, but
       true, true--I fell in love with you the first time I saw your face.
       You remember, you stood there leaning over the bulwark when I came on
       board at Southampton, and as I walked up the gangway, I looked and my
       eyes met yours. Then I stopped, and that stout old lady who got off at
       Madeira bumped into me, and asked me to be good enough to make up my
       mind if I were going backward or forward. Do you remember?"
       "Yes," she answered in a low voice.
       "Which things are an allegory," he continued. "I felt it so at the
       time. Yes, I had half a mind to answer 'Backward' and give up my berth
       in this ship. Then I looked at you again, and something inside of me
       said 'Forward.' So I came up the rest of the gangway and took off my
       hat to you, a salutation I had no right to make, but which, I recall,
       you acknowledged."
       He paused, then continued: "As it began, so it has gone on. It is
       always like that, is it not? The beginning is everything, the end must
       follow. And now it has come out, as I was fully determined that it
       should not do half an hour ago, when suddenly you developed eyes in
       the back of your head, and--oh! dearest, I love you. No, please be
       quiet; I have not done. I have told you what I am, and really there
       isn't much more to say about me, for I have no particular vices except
       the worst of them all, idleness, and not the slightest trace of any
       virtue that I can discover. But I have a certain knowledge of the
       world acquired in a long course of shooting parties, and as a man of
       the world I will venture to give you a bit of advice. It is possible
       that to you my life and death affair is a mere matter of board-ship
       amusement. Yet it is possible also that you might take another view of
       the matter. In that case, as a friend and a man of the world, I
       entreat you--don't. Have nothing to do with me. Send me about my
       business; you will never regret it."
       "Are you making fun, or is all this meant, Mr. Seymour?" asked Benita,
       still speaking beneath her breath, and looking straight before her.
       "Meant? Of course it is meant. How can you ask?"
       "Because I have always understood that on such occasions people wish
       to make the best of themselves."
       "Quite so, but I never do what I ought, a fact for which I am grateful
       now come to think of it, since otherwise I should not be here
       to-night. I wish to make the worst of myself, the very worst, for
       whatever I am not, at least I am honest. Now having told you that I
       am, or was half an hour ago, an idler, a good-for-nothing,
       prospectless failure, I ask you--if you care to hear any more?"
       She half rose, and, glancing at him for the first time, saw his face
       contract itself and turn pale in the moonlight. It may be that the
       sight of it affected her, even to the extent of removing some adverse
       impression left by the bitter mocking of his self-blame. At any rate,
       Benita seemed to change her mind, and sat down again, saying:
       "Go on, if you wish."
       He bowed slightly, and said:
       "I thank you. I have told you what I /was/ half an hour ago; now,
       hoping that you will believe me, I will tell you what I /am/. I am a
       truly repentant man, one upon whom a new light has risen. I am not
       very old, and I think that underneath it all I have some ability.
       Opportunity may still come my way; if it does not, for your sake I
       will make the opportunity. I do not believe that you can ever find
       anyone who would love you better or care for you more tenderly. I
       desire to live for you in the future, more completely even than in the
       past I have lived for myself. I do not wish to influence you by
       personal appeals, but in fact I stand at the parting of the ways. If
       you will give yourself to me I feel as though I might still become a
       husband of whom you could be proud--if not, I write 'Finis' upon the
       tombstone of the possibilities of Robert Seymour. I adore you. You are
       the one woman with whom I desire to pass my days; it is you who have
       always been lacking to my life. I ask you to be brave, to take the
       risk of marrying me, although I can see nothing but poverty ahead of
       us, for I am an adventurer."
       "Don't speak like that," she said quickly. "We are all of us
       adventurers in this world, and I more than you. We have just to
       consider ourselves, not what we have or have not."
       "So be it, Miss Clifford. Then I have nothing more to say; now it is
       for you to answer."
       Just then the sound of the piano and the fiddle in the saloon ceased.
       One of the waltzes was over, and some of the dancers came upon deck to
       flirt or to cool themselves. One pair, engaged very obviously in the
       former occupation, stationed themselves so near to Robert and Benita
       that further conversation between them was impossible, and there
       proceeded to interchange the remarks common to such occasions.
       For a good ten minutes did they stand thus, carrying on a mock quarrel
       as to a dance of which one of them was supposed to have been
       defrauded, until Robert Seymour, generally a very philosophical
       person, could have slain those innocent lovers. He felt, he knew not
       why, that his chances were slipping away from him; that sensation of
       something bad about to happen, of which Benita had spoken, spread from
       her to him. The suspense grew exasperating, terrible even, nor could
       it be ended. To ask her to come elsewhere was under the circumstances
       not feasible, especially as he would also have been obliged to request
       the other pair to make way for them, and all this time, with a sinking
       of the heart, he felt that probably Benita was beating down any
       tenderness which she might feel towards him; that when her long-
       delayed answer did come the chances were it would be "No."
       The piano began to play again in the saloon, and the young people,
       still squabbling archly, at length prepared to depart. Suddenly there
       was a stir upon the bridge, and against the tender sky Robert saw a
       man dash forward. Next instant the engine-room bell rang fiercely. He
       knew the signal--it was "Stop," followed at once by other ringings
       that meant "Full speed astern."
       "I wonder what is up?" said the young man to the young woman.
       Before the words had left his lips they knew. There was a sensation as
       though all the hull of the great ship had come to a complete
       standstill, while the top part of her continued to travel forward;
       followed by another sensation still more terrible and sickening in its
       nature--that of slipping over something, helplessly, heavily, as a man
       slips upon ice or a polished floor. Spars cracked, ropes flew in two
       with a noise as of pistol shots. Heavy objects rushed about the deck,
       travelling forwards all of them. Benita was hurled from her chair
       against Robert so that the two of them rolled into the scuppers. He
       was unhurt and picked himself up, but she lay still, and he saw that
       something had struck her upon the head, for blood was running down her
       cheek. He lifted her, and, filled with black horror and despair--for
       he thought her gone--pressed his hand upon her heart. Thank God! it
       began to beat again--she still lived.
       The music in the saloon had stopped, and for a little while there was
       silence. Then of an instant there arose the horrible clamour of
       shipwreck; wild-eyed people rushed to and fro aimlessly; here and
       there women and children shrieked; a clergyman fell upon his knees and
       began to pray.
       This went on for a space, till presently the second officer appeared
       and, affecting an unconcerned air, called out that it was all right,
       the captain said no one was to be afraid. He added that they were not
       more than six miles from the shore, and that the ship would be beached
       in half an hour. Indeed, as he spoke the engines, which had been
       stopped, commenced to work again, and her head swung round in a wide
       circle, pointing to the land. Evidently they had passed over the rock
       and were once more in deep water, through which they travelled at a
       good speed but with a heavy list to starboard. The pumps got to work
       also with a monotonous, clanging beat, throwing out great columns of
       foaming water on to the oily sea. Men began to cut the covers off the
       boats, and to swing some of them outboard. Such were the things that
       went on about them.
       With the senseless Benita clasped to his breast, the blood from her
       cut head running down his shoulder, Robert stood still awhile,
       thinking. Then he made up his mind. As it chanced, she had a deck
       cabin, and thither he forced his way, carrying her tenderly and with
       patience through the distracted throng of passengers, for there were
       five hundred souls on board that ship. He reached the place to find
       that it was quite empty, her cabinmate having fled. Laying Benita upon
       the lower bunk, he lit the swinging candle. As soon as it burned up he
       searched for the lifebelts and by good fortune found two of them, one
       of which, not without great difficulty, he succeeded in fastening
       round her. Then he took a sponge and bathed her head with water. There
       was a great bruise upon her temple where the block or whatever it was
       had struck her, and the blood still flowed; but the wound was not very
       deep or extensive, nor, so far as he could discover, did the bone
       appear to be broken or driven in. He had good hope that she was only
       stunned, and would revive presently. Unable to do more for her, a
       thought struck him. On the floor of the cabin, thrown by the shock
       from the rack, lay her writing case. He opened it, and taking a piece
       of paper wrote these words hurriedly in pencil:
       "You gave me no answer, and it is more than probable that I shall
       receive none in this world which one or both of us may be upon
       the verge of leaving. In the latter case we can settle the matter
       elsewhere--perhaps. In the former, should it be my lot to go and
       yours to stay, I hope that you will think kindly of me at times
       as of one who loved you truly. Should it be yours to go, then
       you will never read these words. Yet if to the dead is given
       knowledge, be assured that as you left me so you shall find me,
       yours and yours alone. Or perhaps we both may live; I pray
       so.--S. R. S."
       Folding up the paper, he undid a button of Benita's blouse and thrust
       it away there, knowing that thus she would certainly find it should
       she survive. Then he stepped out on to the deck to see what was
       happening. The vessel still steamed, but made slow progress; moreover,
       the list to starboard was now so pronounced that it was difficult to
       stand upright. On account of it nearly all the passengers were huddled
       together upon the port side, having instinctively taken refuge as far
       as possible above the water. A man with a white, distraught face
       staggered towards him, supporting himself by the bulwarks. It was the
       captain. For a moment he paused as though to think, holding to a
       stanchion. Robert Seymour saw his opportunity and addressed him.
       "Forgive me," he said; "I do not like interfering with other people's
       business, but for reasons unconnected with myself I suggest to you
       that it would be wise to stop this ship and get out the boats. The sea
       is calm; if it is not left till too late there should be no difficulty
       in launching them."
       The man stared at him absently, then said:
       "They won't hold everybody, Mr. Seymour. I hope to beach her."
       "At least they will hold some," he answered, "whereas----" And he
       pointed to the water, which by now was almost level with the deck.
       "Perhaps you are right, Mr. Seymour. It doesn't matter to me, anyway.
       I am a ruined man; but the poor passengers--the poor passengers!" And
       he scrambled away fiercely towards the bridge like a wounded cat along
       the bough of a tree, whence in a few seconds Robert heard him shouting
       orders.
       A minute or so afterwards the steamer stopped. Too late the captain
       had decided to sacrifice his ship and save those she carried. They
       were beginning to get out the boats. Now Robert returned to the cabin
       where Benita was lying senseless, and wrapped her up in a cloak and
       some blankets. Then, seeing the second lifebelt on the floor, by an
       afterthought he put it on, knowing that there was time to spare. Next
       he lifted Benita, and feeling sure that the rush would be for the
       starboard side, on which the boats were quite near the water, carried
       her, with difficulty, for the slope was steep, to the port-cutter,
       which he knew would be in the charge of a good man, the second
       officer, whom he had seen in command there at Sunday boat-drills.
       Here, as he had anticipated, the crowd was small, since most people
       thought that it would not be possible to get this boat down safely to
       the water; or if their powers of reflection were gone, instinct told
       them so. That skilful seaman, the second officer, and his appointed
       crew, were already at work lowering the cutter from the davits.
       "Now," he said, "women and children first."
       A number rushed in, and Robert saw that the boat would soon be full.
       "I am afraid," he said, "that I must count myself a woman as I carry
       one," and by a great effort, holding Benita with one arm, with the
       other he let himself down the falls and, assisted by a quartermaster,
       gained the boat in safety.
       One or two other men scrambled after him.
       "Push her off," said the officer; "she can hold no more," and the
       ropes were let go.
       When they were about twelve feet from the ship's side, from which they
       thrust themselves clear with oars, there came a rush of people,
       disappointed of places in the starboard boats. A few of the boldest of
       these swarmed down the falls, others jumped and fell among them, or
       missed and dropped into the sea, or struck upon the sides of the boat
       and were killed. Still she reached the water upon an even keel, though
       now much overladen. The oars were got out, and they rowed round the
       bow of the great ship wallowing in her death-throes, their first idea
       being to make for the shore, which was not three miles away.
       This brought them to the starboard side, where they saw a hideous
       scene. Hundreds of people seemed to be fighting for room, with the
       result that some of the boats were overturned, precipitating their
       occupants into the water. Others hung by the prow or the stern, the
       ropes having jammed in the davits in the frantic haste and confusion,
       while from them human beings dropped one by one. Round others not yet
       launched a hellish struggle was in progress, the struggle of men,
       women, and children battling for their lives, in which the strong, mad
       with terror, showed no mercy to the weak.
       From that mass of humanity, most of them about to perish, went up a
       babel of sounds which in its sum shaped itself to one prolonged
       scream, such as might proceed from a Titan in his agony. All this
       beneath a brooding, moonlit sky, and on a sea as smooth as glass. Upon
       the ship, which now lay upon her side, the siren still sent up its
       yells for succour, and some brave man continued to fire rockets, which
       rushed heavenwards and burst in showers of stars.
       Robert remembered that the last rocket he had seen was fired at an
       evening /fête/ for the amusement of the audience. The contrast struck
       him as dreadful. He wondered whether there were any power or infernal
       population that could be amused by a tragedy such as enacted itself
       before his eyes; how it came about also that such a tragedy was
       permitted by the merciful Strength in which mankind put their faith.
       The vessel was turning over, compressed air or steam burst up the
       decks with loud reports; fragments of wreckage flew into the air.
       There the poor captain still clung to the rail of the bridge. Seymour
       could see his white face--the moonlight seemed to paint it with a
       ghastly smile. The officer in command of their boat shouted to the
       crew to give way lest they should be sucked down with the steamer.
       Look! Now she wallowed like a dying whale, the moonrays shone white
       upon her bottom, showing the jagged rent made in it by the rock on
       which she had struck, and now she was gone. Only a little cloud of
       smoke and steam remained to mark where the /Zanzibar/ had been.
       Content of CHAPTER II - THE END OF THE "ZANZIBAR." [H. Rider Haggard's novel: Benita]
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