They were within a mile of it before Noll Wing shut his gla.s.s. "Aye, dead whale," he said disgustedly, and began to descend from the rigging.
Brander dropped lightly after him. Noll stumped past the men at their stations by the boats till he came to Dan'l Tobey. "Dead whale," he told Dan'l. "Let it be."
Brander, at Noll's heels, asked: "Do we lower?"
Noll shook his head. "No," he said sharply. The disappointment, coming on the heels of the hope that had been roused, had made him fretful and angry. Brander said:
"I was thinking...."
Noll turned on him querulously. "Some ships have truck with carrion and dog meat," he snarled. "Not the _Sally_. I'll not play buzzard."
Brander smiled. "It's not pleasant, I know.... But, aboard the _Thomas Morgan_, we got a bit of ambergris out of such a whale.... This one was lean, you saw.... It died of a sickness. That's the kind...."
Dan'l Tobey said, with a grin: "A man'd think you like the smell of it, Brander."
"Ambergris is fool's talk," Noll growled. "I've heard tell of it for thirty year, and never saw a lump bigger than a man's thumb. Fool's talk, Mr. Brander. Let be...."
He turned away; and Brander and Dan'l stood together, watching as the _Sally_ drifted nearer and nearer the dead whale. They could see the feasting sea birds hovering; they caught once or twice the flash of a leaping body as sharks tore at the carca.s.s. Here and there the blubber showed white where great chunks had been ripped away. They watched, and drifted nearer; and so there came to them presently the smell of it. An unspeakable smell....
The men caught it first, in the bow; Dan'l and Brander heard their first cries of disgust before the slowly drifting air brought them the odor.
But five minutes later, it had engulfed the ship, penetrated even into the cabin. Noll got it; he stuck his head up out of the companion and bellowed:
"Mr. Tobey, get the _Sally_ out o' range of that."
Dan'l said: "Not a breath of wind, sir." He went toward the companion, as Noll stepped out on deck; and he grinned with malicious inspiration, "Mr. Brander likes the smell of it, sir.... Why not send him off to tow it out of range?"
Noll nodded fretfully. "All right, all right. Send him...."
Dan'l gave the order. Brander a.s.sented briskly. "I'll take a boarding knife with me, if you don't object, sir," he said.
Dan'l chuckled. He was enjoying himself. "I'd suggest a clothespin, Mr.
Brander," he said; and he stood aft and watched Brander and his men drop their boat and put away and row toward the lean carca.s.s of the dead whale, a quarter mile away. The jeers of the seamen forward pursued them.
Dan'l got his gla.s.s to enjoy watching Brander and his crew tow the whale out of the _Sally's_ neighborhood. The men worked hard; and Dan'l said to Cap'n Wing: "They're in haste to be through, you'll see, sir." Once the tow was under way, it moved swiftly. Men on the _Sally_ breathed again....
They saw, after a time, that Brander and his men had stopped rowing and brought their boat alongside the whale; and Dan'l's gla.s.s revealed Brander digging and hacking at the carca.s.s with the boarding knife....
Brander came back alongside in due time; and long before he reached the _Sally_, Dan'l could see the exultation in the fourth mate's eyes. As they slid past the bow, Brander's men taunted those who had jeered at them. They were like men who have turned the tables on their enemies....
Dan'l was uneasy.... The boat slid into position, the men hooked on the tackles, then climbed aboard.... They swung on the falls, the boat rose into its cradle.... And Brander turned to Dan'l and said pleasantly:
"It was worth the smell, Mr. Tobey."
He pointed into the boat; and Dan'l looked and saw three huge chunks of black and waxy stuff--black, with yellowish tints showing through--and he smelled a faint and musky fragrance. And he looked at Brander. "What is it?" he asked. "What do you think you've found?"
"Ambergris," said Brander. "Three big chunks, four little ones. Close to three hundred pounds...."
One-eyed Mauger chuckled at Brander's back. "And worth three hundred a pound," he cackled. "Worth the smell, Mr. Tobey!"
XV
Brander's find, laid tenderly upon the deck, studied by Noll Wing and the officers on their knees, set the _Sally_ buzzing with the clack of tongues.
There was a romance in the stuff itself that caught attention. It came from the rotting carca.s.s of the greatest thing that lives; it came from the heart of a vast stench.... Yet itself smelled faintly and fragrantly of musk, and had the power of multiplying any other perfume a thousand fold. Not a man on the _Sally_ had ever seen a bit larger than a cartridge, before; they studied it, handled it, marveled at it.
Cap'n Wing stood up stiffly from bending over the stuff at last; he looked at Brander. "It's ugly enough," he said. "You're sure it's the stuff you think?"
Brander nodded. "Yes, sir, quite sure."
"What's it worth?" Cap'n Wing asked.
"Hundred and fifty to three hundred dollars a pound--price changes."
Noll looked at the waxy stuff again. "It don't look it," he said. "How much is there of it?"
"Close to three hundred pounds...."
Noll's lips moved with the computation. He said, in a voice that was hushed in spite of himself: "Close to ninety thousand dollars...."
Brander smiled. "That's the maximum, of course."
Dan'l Tobey said: "You've done the rest of us a service, Mr. Brander."
Brander looked at him; and an imp of mischief gleamed in his eye. He said quietly: "The rest of you. I was sent out to remove the carca.s.s, not to dissect it. The digging for this was my private enterprise, Mr.
Tobey."
Old James Tichel gasped under his breath. Dan'l started to speak, then looked to Noll. They all looked toward Cap'n Noll Wing.... It was for him to deal with Brander's claim.... They looked to Noll; and big Noll stared at the precious stuff on the deck, and at Brander.... And he said nothing.
Brander smiled. He called Mauger to come aft and help him, and he proceeded with the utmost care to clean the lumps of ambergris of the filth that clung to them. He paid no further heed to the men about him.
Noll went below; and Faith, who had listened without speaking, followed him. Dan'l and old Tichel got together by the after rail and talked in whispers. Willis c.o.x stood, watching.... The young man's eyes were wide and his cheeks were white. These seven ugly lumps of something like hard, dirty yellow soap were worth more than the whole cruise of the _Sally_ might be expected to pay.... They caught Willis's imagination; he could not take his eyes from them.
Brander had Mauger fetch whale oil; he washed the lumps in this as tenderly as a mother bathes a child. The black washed away, they became an even, dull yellow in his hands.... Here and there, bits of white stuff like bones showed in them.... Bits of the bones of the gigantic squid on which the cachalot feeds. Their faint, persistent odor spread around them....
When the cleaning was done, Mauger fetched steelyards and they weighed the lumps, slinging each with care.... The larger ones were so heavy that they had to make the scales fast to the rigging.... The largest weighed seventy-four pounds and a fraction; the next was sixty-one; the third, forty-eight. The four smaller lumps, weighed together, tipped the beam at nineteen pounds.... The seven totaled two hundred and two pounds....
Mauger was disappointed at that; he complained: "I took 'em to weigh three hundred, anyways...."
Brander looked at Willis. "Two hundred isn't to be laughed at! Eh, Mr.
c.o.x?"
Willis said hoa.r.s.ely: "That must be the biggest find of ambergris ever was."
Brander shook his head. "The _Watchman_, out o' Nantucket, brought back eight hundred pounds, in '58. I've heard so, anyways."
Willis had nothing to say to that; he went aft to join Tichel and Dan'l Tobey and tell them the weight of the stuff.... Brander sent for Eph Hitch, the cooper.... He showed him the ambergris....