Don’t risk your life trying
to fish out anything that may go downstream.”
“Oh, I’ll be as prudent as you are! ’Night. Heavens, how she’s filling!
Here’s the rain in earnest.”
Findlayson picked his way back to his bank, sweeping the last of
Mc‘Cartney’s riveters before him. The gangs had spread themselves along
the embankments, regardless of the cold rain of the dawn, and there they
waited for the flood. Only Peroo kept his men together behind the swell of
the guard-tower, where the stone-boats lay tied fore and aft with hawsers,
wire-rope, and chains.
A shrill wail ran along the line, growing to a yell, half fear and half
wonder: the face of the river whitened from bank to hank between the stone
facings, and the far-away spurs went out in spouts of foam. Mother Gunga
had come bank-high in haste, and a wall of chocolate-coloured water was
her messenger. There was a shriek above the roar of the water, the
complaint of the spans coming down on their blocks as the cribs were
whirled out from under their bellies. The stone-boats groaned and ground
each other in the eddy that swung round the abutment, and their clumsy
masts rose higher and higher against the dim sky-line.
“Before she was shut between these walls we knew what she would do. Now
she is thus cramped God only knows what she will do!” said Peroo, watching
the furious turmoil round the guard~tower. “Ohé! Fight, then! Fight hard,
for it is thus that a woman wears herself out.”
But Mother Gunga would not fight as Peroo desired. After the first
down-stream plunge there came no more walls of water, but the river lifted
herself bodily, as a snake when she drinks in midsummer, plucking and
fingering along the revetments, and banking up behind the piers till even
Findlayson began to recalculate the strength of his work.
When day came the village gasped. “Only last night,” men said, turning
to each other, “it was as a town in the river-bed! Look now!”
And they looked and wondered afresh at the deep water, the racing water
that licked the throat of the piers. The farther bank was veiled by rain,
into which the bridge ran out and vanished; the spurs up-stream were
marked by no more than eddies and spoutings, and down-stream the pent
river, once freed of her guide-lines, had spread like a sea to the
horizon. Then hurried by, rolling in the water, dead men and oxen
together, with here and there a patch of thatched roof that melted when it
touched a pier.
“Big flood,” said Peroo, and Findlayson nodded. It was as big a flood
as he had any wish to watch. His bridge would stand what was upon her now,
but not very much more, and if by any of a thousand chances there happened
to be a weakness in the embankments, Mother Gunga would carry his honour
to the sea with the other raffle. Worst of all, there was nothing to do
except to sit still; and Findlayson sat still under his macintosh till his
helmet became pulp on his head, and his boots were over-ankle in mire. He
took no count of time, for the river was marking the hours, inch by inch
and foot by foot, along the embankment, and he listened, numb and hungry,
to the straining of the stone-boats, the hollow thunder under the piers,
and the hundred noises that make the full note of a flood. Once a dripping
servant brought him food, but he could not eat; and once he thought that
he heard a faint toot from a locomotive across the river, and then he
smiled. The bridge’s failure would hurt his assistant not a little, hut
Hitchcock was a young man with his big work yet to do. For himself the
crash meant everything—everything that made a hard life worth the living.
They would say, the men of his own profession—— he remembered the
half-pitying things that he himself had said when Lockhart’s new
waterworks burst and broke down in brick-heaps and sludge, and Lockhart’s
spirit broke in him and he died. He remembered what he himself had said
when the Sumao Bridge went out in the big cyclone by the sea; and most he
remembered poor Hartopp’s face three weeks later, when the shame had
marked it. His bridge was twice the size of Hartopp’s, and it carried the
Findlayson truss as well as the new pier-shoe—the Findlayson bolted shoe.
There were no excuses in his service. Government might listen, perhaps,
but his own kind would judge him by his bridge, as that stood or fell. He
went over it in his head, plate by plate, span by span, brick by brick,
pier by pier, remembering, comparing, estimating, and recalculating, lest
there should be any mistake; and through the long hours and through the
flights of formulae that danced and wheeled before him a cold fear would
come to pinch his heart. His side of the sum was beyond question; but what
man knew Mother Gunga’s arithmetic? Even as he was making all sure by the
multiplication table, the river might be scooping a pot-hole to the very
bottom of any one of those eighty-foot piers that carried his reputation.
Again a servant came to him with food, but his mouth was dry, and he could
only drink and return to the decimals in his brain. And the river was
still rising. Peroo, in a mat shelter coat, crouched at his feet, watching
now his face and now the face of the river, but saying nothing.
At last the Lascar rose and floundered through the mud towards the
village, but he was careful to leave an ally to watch the boats.
Presently he returned, most irreverently driving before him the priest
of his creed—a fat old man, with a grey beard that whipped the wind with
the wet cloth that blew over his shoulder. Never was seen so lamentable a
guru.
“What good are offerings and little kerosene lamps and dry grain,”
shouted Peroo, “if squatting in the mud is all that thou canst do? Thou
hast dealt long with the Gods when they were contented and well-wishing.
Now they are angry. Speak to them!”
“What is a man against the wrath of Gods?” whined the priest, cowering
as the wind took him. “Let me go to the temple, and I will pray
there.”
“Son of a pig, pray here! Is there no return for salt fish and
curry powder and dried onions? Call aloud! Tell Mother Gunga we have had
enough.
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