“The last of the coals are gone,” continued the wife with bitterness in her tone, “and there’s scarcely enough of bread in the house for a good supper to Jimmie. You should be ashamed of yourself, Jim.”
A glare of drunken anger shot fiercely from the fisherman’s eyes. No word did he utter. Turning on his heel, he strode out of the house and shut the door after him with cannon-shot violence.
“O Jim—stop Jim!” burst from timid Nellie. “I’ll never—”
She ceased abruptly, for the terrified Jimmie was clinging to her skirts, and her husband was beyond the reach of her voice. Falling on her knees, she prayed to God passionately for pardon. It was their first quarrel. She ended by throwing herself on her bed and bursting into a fit of sobbing that not only horrified but astounded little Jim. To see his mother sobbing wildly while he was quiet and grave was a complete inversion of all his former experiences. As if to carry out the spirit of the situation, he proceeded to act the part of comforter by stroking his mother’s brown hair with his fat little hand until the burst of grief subsided.
“Dare, you’s dood now, muzzer. Tiss me!” he said.
Nellie flung her arms round the child and kissed him fervently.
Meanwhile James Greely’s smack, the Dolphin, was running down the Yare before a stiff breeze, and Jim himself had commenced the most momentous, and, in one sense, disastrous voyage of his life. As he stood at the tiller, guiding his vessel with consummate skill out into the darkening waters, his heart felt like lead. He would have given all he possessed to recall the past hour, to have once again the opportunity of bidding Nellie good-bye as he had been wont to do in the days that were gone. But it was too late. Wishes and repentance, he knew, avail nothing to undo a deed that is done.
Jim toiled with that branch of the North Sea fleets which is named the “Short Blue.” It was trawling at a part of the North Sea called “Botney Gut” at that time, but our fisherman had been told that it was fishing at another part named the “Silverpits.” It blew hard from the nor’west, with much snow, so that Jim took a long time to reach his destination. But no “Short Blue” fleet was to be seen at the Silverpits.
To the eyes of ordinary men the North Sea is a uniform expanse of water, calm or raging as the case may be. Not so to the deep-sea trawler. Jim’s intimate knowledge of localities, his sounding-lead and the nature of the bottom, etcetera, enabled him at any time to make for, and surely find, any of the submarine banks. But fleets, though distinguished by a name, have no “local habitation.” They may be on the “Dogger Bank” to-day, on the “Swarte Bank” or the “Great Silverpits” to-morrow. With hundreds of miles of open sea around, and neither milestone nor finger-post to direct, a lost fleet is not unlike a lost needle in a haystack. Fortunately Jim discovered a brother smacksman looking, like himself, for his own fleet. Being to windward the brother ran down to him.
“What cheer O! Have ’ee seen anything o’ the Red Cross Fleet?” roared the skipper, with the power of a brazen trumpet.