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The Mutiny of the Elsinore

by Jack London

December, 2000 [Etext #2415]


Project Gutenberg's The Mutiny of the "Elsinore", by Jack London
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This etext was scanned by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
from the 1915 Mills and Boon edition.  It was proofed by Rab Hughes.





THE MUTINY OF THE ELSINORE

by Jack London




CHAPTER I



From the first the voyage was going wrong.  Routed out of my hotel on
a bitter March morning, I had crossed Baltimore and reached the pier-
end precisely on time.  At nine o'clock the tug was to have taken me
down the bay and put me on board the Elsinore, and with growing
irritation I sat frozen inside my taxicab and waited.  On the seat,
outside, the driver and Wada sat hunched in a temperature perhaps
half a degree colder than mine.  And there was no tug.

Possum, the fox-terrier puppy Galbraith had so inconsiderately
foisted upon me, whimpered and shivered on my lap inside my greatcoat
and under the fur robe.  But he would not settle down.  Continually
he whimpered and clawed and struggled to get out.  And, once out and
bitten by the cold, with equal insistence he whimpered and clawed to
get back.

His unceasing plaint and movement was anything but sedative to my
jangled nerves.  In the first place I was uninterested in the brute.
He meant nothing to me.  I did not know him.  Time and again, as I
drearily waited, I was on the verge of giving him to the driver.
Once, when two little girls--evidently the wharfinger's daughters--
went by, my hand reached out to the door to open it so that I might
call to them and present them with the puling little wretch.

A farewell surprise package from Galbraith, he had arrived at the
hotel the night before, by express from New York.  It was Galbraith's
way.  Yet he might so easily have been decently like other folk and
sent fruit . . . or flowers, even.  But no; his affectionate
inspiration had to take the form of a yelping, yapping two months'
old puppy.  And with the advent of the terrier the trouble had begun.
The hotel clerk judged me a criminal before the act I had not even
had time to meditate.  And then Wada, on his own initiative and out
of his own foolish stupidity, had attempted to smuggle the puppy into
his room and been caught by a house detective.  Promptly Wada had
forgotten all his English and lapsed into hysterical Japanese, and
the house detective remembered only his Irish; while the hotel clerk
had given me to understand in no uncertain terms that it was only
what he had expected of me.

Damn the dog, anyway!  And damn Galbraith too!  And as I froze on in
the cab on that bleak pier-end, I damned myself as well, and the mad
freak that had started me voyaging on a sailing-ship around the Horn.

By ten o'clock a nondescript youth arrived on foot, carrying a suit-
case, which was turned over to me a few minutes later by the
wharfinger.  It belonged to the pilot, he said, and gave instructions
to the chauffeur how to find some other pier from which, at some
indeterminate time, I should be taken aboard the Elsinore by some
other tug.  This served to increase my irritation.  Why should I not
have been informed as well as the pilot?

An hour later, still in my cab and stationed at the shore end of the
new pier, the pilot arrived.  Anything more unlike a pilot I could
not have imagined.  Here was no blue-jacketed, weather-beaten son of
the sea, but a soft-spoken gentleman, for all the world the type of
successful business man one meets in all the clubs.  He introduced
himself immediately, and I invited him to share my freezing cab with
Possum and the baggage.  That some change had been made in the
arrangements by Captain West was all he knew, though he fancied the
tug would come along any time.

And it did, at one in the afternoon, after I had been compelled to
wait and freeze for four mortal hours.  During this time I fully made
up my mind that I was not going to like this Captain West.  Although
I had never met him, his treatment of me from the outset had been, to
say the least, cavalier.  When the Elsinore lay in Erie Basin, just
arrived from California with a cargo of barley, I had crossed over
from New York to inspect what was to be my home for many months.  I
had been delighted with the ship and the cabin accommodation.  Even
the stateroom selected for me was satisfactory and far more spacious
than I had expected.  But when I peeped into the captain's room I was
amazed at its comfort.  When I say that it opened directly into a
bath-room, and that, among other things, it was furnished with a big
brass bed such as one would never suspect to find at sea, I have said
enough.

Naturally, I had resolved that the bath-room and the big brass bed
should be mine.  When I asked the agents to arrange with the captain
they seemed non-committal and uncomfortable.  "I don't know in the
least what it is worth," I said.  "And I don't care.  Whether it
costs one hundred and fifty dollars or five hundred, I must have
those quarters."

Harrison and Gray, the agents, debated silently with each other and
scarcely thought Captain West would see his way to the arrangement.
"Then he is the first sea captain I ever heard of that wouldn't," I
asserted confidently.  "Why, the captains of all the Atlantic liners
regularly sell their quarters."

"But Captain West is not the captain of an Atlantic liner," Mr.
Harrison observed gently.

"Remember, I am to be on that ship many a month," I retorted.  "Why,
heavens, bid him up to a thousand if necessary."

"We'll try," said Mr. Gray, "but we warn you not to place too much
dependence on our efforts.  Captain West is in Searsport at the
present time, and we will write him to-day.

To my astonishment Mr. Gray called me up several days later to inform
me that Captain West had declined my offer.  "Did you offer him up to
a thousand?" I demanded.  "What did he say?"

"He regretted that he was unable to concede what you asked," Mr. Gray
replied.

A day later I received a letter from Captain West.  The writing and
the wording were old-fashioned and formal.  He regretted not having
yet met me, and assured me that he would see personally that my
quarters were made comfortable.  For that matter he had already
dispatched orders to Mr. Pike, the first mate of the Elsinore, to
knock out the partition between my state-room and the spare state-
room adjoining.  Further--and here is where my dislike for Captain
West began--he informed me that if, when once well at sea, I should
find myself dissatisfied, he would gladly, in that case, exchange
quarters with me.

Of course, after such a rebuff, I knew that no circumstance could
ever persuade me to occupy Captain West's brass bed.  And it was this
Captain Nathaniel West, whom I had not yet met, who had now kept me
freezing on pier-ends through four miserable hours.  The less I saw
of him on the voyage the better, was my decision; and it was with a
little tickle of pleasure that I thought of the many boxes of books I
had dispatched on board from New York.  Thank the Lord, I did not
depend on sea captains for entertainment.

I turned Possum over to Wada, who was settling with the cabman, and
while the tug's sailors were carrying my luggage on board I was led
by the pilot to an introduction with Captain West.  At the first
glimpse I knew that he was no more a sea captain than the pilot was a
pilot.  I had seen the best of the breed, the captains of the liners,
and he no more resembled them than did he resemble the bluff-faced,
gruff-voiced skippers I had read about in books.  By his side stood a
woman, of whom little was to be seen and who made a warm and gorgeous
blob of colour in the huge muff and boa of red fox in which she was
well-nigh buried.

"My God!--his wife!" I darted in a whisper at the pilot.  "Going
along with him? . . . "

I had expressly stipulated with Mr. Harrison, when engaging passage,
that the one thing I could not possibly consider was the skipper of
the Elsinore taking his wife on the voyage.  And Mr. Harrison had
smiled and assured me that Captain West would sail unaccompanied by a
wife.

"It's his daughter," the pilot replied under his breath.  "Come to
see him off, I fancy.  His wife died over a year ago.  They say that
is what sent him back to sea.  He'd retired, you know."

Captain West advanced to meet me, and before our outstretched hands
touched, before his face broke from repose to greeting and the lips
moved to speech, I got the first astonishing impact of his
personality.  Long, lean, in his face a touch of race I as yet could
only sense, he was as cool as the day was cold, as poised as a king
or emperor, as remote as the farthest fixed star, as neutral as a
proposition of Euclid.  And then, just ere our hands met, a twinkle
of--oh--such distant and controlled geniality quickened the many tiny
wrinkles in the corner of the eyes; the clear blue of the eyes was
suffused by an almost colourful warmth; the face, too, seemed
similarly to suffuse; the thin lips, harsh-set the instant before,
were as gracious as Bernhardt's when she moulds sound into speech.

So curiously was I affected by this first glimpse of Captain West
that I was aware of expecting to fall from his lips I knew not what
words of untold beneficence and wisdom.  Yet he uttered most
commonplace regrets at the delay in a voice provocative of fresh
surprise to me.  It was low and gentle, almost too low, yet clear as
a bell and touched with a faint reminiscent twang of old New England.

"And this is the young woman who is guilty of the delay," he
concluded my introduction to his daughter.  "Margaret, this is Mr.
Pathurst."

Her gloved hand promptly emerged from the fox-skins to meet mine, and
I found myself looking into a pair of gray eyes bent steadily and
gravely upon me.  It was discomfiting, that cool, penetrating,
searching gaze.  It was not that it was challenging, but that it was
so insolently business-like.  It was much in the very way one would
look at a new coachman he was about to engage.  I did not know then
that she was to go on the voyage, and that her curiosity about the
man who was to be a fellow-passenger for half a year was therefore
only natural.  Immediately she realized what she was doing, and her
lips and eyes smiled as she spoke.

As we moved on to enter the tug's cabin I heard Possum's shivering
whimper rising to a screech, and went forward to tell Wada to take
the creature in out of the cold.  I found him hovering about my
luggage, wedging my dressing-case securely upright by means of my
little automatic rifle.  I was startled by the mountain of luggage
around which mine was no more than a fringe.  Ship's stores, was my
first thought, until I noted the number of trunks, boxes, suit-cases,
and parcels and bundles of all sorts.  The initials on what looked
suspiciously like a woman's hat trunk caught my eye--"M.W."  Yet
Captain West's first name was Nathaniel.  On closer investigation I
did find several "N.W's." but everywhere I could see "M.W's."  Then I
remembered that he had called her Margaret.

I was too angry to return to the cabin, and paced up and down the
cold deck biting my lips with vexation.  I had so expressly
stipulated with the agents that no captain's wife was to come along.
The last thing under the sun I desired in the pet quarters of a ship
was a woman.  But I had never thought about a captain's daughter.
For two cents I was ready to throw the voyage over and return on the
tug to Baltimore.

By the time the wind caused by our speed had chilled me bitterly, I
noticed Miss West coming along the narrow deck, and could not avoid
being struck by the spring and vitality of her walk.  Her face,
despite its firm moulding, had a suggestion of fragility that was
belied by the robustness of her body.  At least, one would argue that
her body must be robust from her fashion of movement of it, though
little could one divine the lines of it under the shapelessness of
the furs.

I turned away on my heel and fell moodily to contemplating the
mountain of luggage.  A huge packing-case attracted my attention, and
I was staring at it when she spoke at my shoulder.

"That's what really caused the delay," she said.

"What is it?" I asked incuriously.

"Why, the Elsinore's piano, all renovated.  When I made up my mind to
come, I telegraphed Mr. Pike--he's the mate, you know.  He did his
best.  It was the fault of the piano house.  And while we waited to-
day I gave them a piece of my mind they'll not forget in a hurry."

She laughed at the recollection, and commenced to peep and peer into
the luggage as if in search of some particular piece.  Having
satisfied herself, she was starting back, when she paused and said:

"Won't you come into the cabin where it's warm?  We won't be there
for half an hour."

"When did you decide to make this voyage?" I demanded abruptly.

So quick was the look she gave me that I knew she had in that moment
caught all my disgruntlement and disgust.

"Two days ago," she answered.  "Why?"

Her readiness for give and take took me aback, and before I could
speak she went on:

"Now you're not to be at all silly about my coming, Mr. Pathurst.  I
probably know more about long-voyaging than you do, and we're all
going to be comfortable and happy.  You can't bother me, and I
promise you I won't bother you.  I've sailed with passengers before,
and I've learned to put up with more than they ever proved they were
able to put up with.  So there.  Let us start right, and it won't be
any trouble to keep on going right.  I know what is the matter with
you.  You think you'll be called upon to entertain me.  Please know
that I do not need entertainment.  I never saw the longest voyage
that was too long, and I always arrive at the end with too many
things not done for the passage ever to have been tedious, and . . .
I don't play Chopsticks."



CHAPTER II



The Elsinore, fresh-loaded with coal, lay very deep in the water when
we came alongside.  I knew too little about ships to be capable of
admiring her lines, and, besides, I was in no mood for admiration.  I
was still debating with myself whether or not to chuck the whole
thing and return on the tug.  From all of which it must not be taken
that I am a vacillating type of man.  On the contrary.

The trouble was that at no time, from the first thought of it, had I
been keen for the voyage.  Practically the reason I was taking it was
because there was nothing else I was keen on.  For some time now life
had lost its savour.  I was not jaded, nor was I exactly bored.  But
the zest had gone out of things.  I had lost taste for my fellow-men
and all their foolish, little, serious endeavours.  For a far longer
period I had been dissatisfied with women.  I had endured them, but I
had been too analytic of the faults of their primitiveness, of their
almost ferocious devotion to the destiny of sex, to be enchanted with
them.  And I had come to be oppressed by what seemed to me the
futility of art--a pompous legerdemain, a consummate charlatanry that
deceived not only its devotees but its practitioners.

In short, I was embarking on the Elsinore because it was easier to
than not; yet everything else was as equally and perilously easy.
That was the curse of the condition into which I had fallen.  That
was why, as I stepped upon the deck of the Elsinore, I was half of a
mind to tell them to keep my luggage where it was and bid Captain
West and his daughter good-day.

I almost think what decided me was the welcoming, hospitable smile
Miss West gave me as she started directly across the deck for the
cabin, and the knowledge that it must be quite warm in the cabin.

Mr. Pike, the mate, I had already met, when I visited the ship in
Erie Basin.  He smiled a stiff, crack-faced smile that I knew must be
painful, but did not offer to shake hands, turning immediately to
call orders to half-a-dozen frozen-looking youths and aged men who
shambled up from somewhere in the waist of the ship.  Mr. Pike had
been drinking.  That was patent.  His face was puffed and
discoloured, and his large gray eyes were bitter and bloodshot.

I lingered, with a sinking heart watching my belongings come aboard
and chiding my weakness of will which prevented me from uttering the
few words that would put a stop to it.  As for the half-dozen men who
were now carrying the luggage aft into the cabin, they were unlike
any concept I had ever entertained of sailors.  Certainly, on the
liners, I had observed nothing that resembled them.

One, a most vivid-faced youth of eighteen, smiled at me from a pair
of remarkable Italian eyes.  But he was a dwarf.  So short was he
that he was all sea-boots and sou'wester.  And yet he was not
entirely Italian.  So certain was I that I asked the mate, who
answered morosely:

"Him?  Shorty?  He's a dago half-breed.  The other half's Jap or
Malay."

One old man, who I learned was a bosun, was so decrepit that I
thought he had been recently injured.  His face was stolid and ox-
like, and as he shuffled and dragged his brogans over the deck he
paused every several steps to place both hands on his abdomen and
execute a queer, pressing, lifting movement.  Months were to pass, in
which I saw him do this thousands of times, ere I learned that there
was nothing the matter with him and that his action was purely a
habit.  His face reminded me of the Man with the Hoe, save that it
was unthinkably and abysmally stupider.  And his name, as I was to
learn, of all names was Sundry Buyers.  And he was bosun of the fine
American sailing-ship Elsinore--rated one of the finest sailing-ships
afloat!

Of this group of aged men and boys that moved the luggage along I saw
only one, called Henry, a youth of sixteen, who approximated in the
slightest what I had conceived all sailors to be like.  He had come
off a training ship, the mate told me, and this was his first voyage
to sea.  His face was keen-cut, alert, as were his bodily movements,
and he wore sailor-appearing clothes with sailor-seeming grace.  In
fact, as I was to learn, he was to be the only sailor-seeming
creature fore and aft.

The main crew had not yet come aboard, but was expected at any
moment, the mate vouchsafed with a snarl of ominous expectancy.
Those already on board were the miscellaneous ones who had shipped
themselves in New York without the mediation of boarding-house
masters.  And what the crew itself would be like God alone could
tell--so said the mate.  Shorty, the Japanese (or Malay) and Italian
half-caste, the mate told me, was an able seaman, though he had come
out of steam and this was his first sailing voyage.

"Ordinary seamen!" Mr. Pike snorted, in reply to a question.  "We
don't carry Landsmen!--forget it!  Every clodhopper an' cow-walloper
these days is an able seaman.  That's the way they rank and are paid.
The merchant service is all shot to hell.  There ain't no more
sailors.  They all died years ago, before you were born even."

I could smell the raw whiskey on the mate's breath.  Yet he did not
stagger nor show any signs of intoxication.  Not until afterward was
I to know that his willingness to talk was most unwonted and was
where the liquor gave him away.

"It'd a-ben a grace had I died years ago," he said, "rather than to
a-lived to see sailors an' ships pass away from the sea."

"But I understand the Elsinore is considered one of the finest," I
urged.

"So she is . . . to-day.  But what is she?--a damned cargo-carrier.
She ain't built for sailin', an' if she was there ain't no sailors
left to sail her.  Lord!  Lord!  The old clippers!  When I think of
'em!--The Gamecock, Shootin' Star, Flyin' Fish, Witch o' the Wave,
Staghound, Harvey Birch, Canvas-back, Fleetwing, Sea Serpent,
Northern Light!  An' when I think of the fleets of the tea-clippers
that used to load at Hong Kong an' race the Eastern Passages.  A fine
sight!  A fine sight!"

I was interested.  Here was a man, a live man.  I was in no hurry to
go into the cabin, where I knew Wada was unpacking my things, so I
paced up and down the deck with the huge Mr. Pike.  Huge he was in
all conscience, broad-shouldered, heavy-boned, and, despite the
profound stoop of his shoulders, fully six feet in height.

"You are a splendid figure of a man," I complimented.

"I was, I was," he muttered sadly, and I caught the whiff of whiskey
strong on the air.

I stole a look at his gnarled hands.  Any finger would have made
three of mine.  His wrist would have made three of my wrist.

"How much do you weigh?" I asked.

"Two hundred an' ten.  But in my day, at my best, I tipped the scales
close to two-forty."

"And the Elsinore can't sail," I said, returning to the subject which
had roused him.

"I'll take you even, anything from a pound of tobacco to a month's
wages, she won't make it around in a hundred an' fifty days," he
answered.  "Yet I've come round in the old Flyin' Cloud in eighty-
nine days--eighty-nine days, sir, from Sandy Hook to 'Frisco.  Sixty
men for'ard that WAS men, an' eight boys, an' drive! drive! drive!
Three hundred an' seventy-four miles for a day's run under
t'gallantsails, an' in the squalls eighteen knots o' line not enough
to time her.  Eighty-nine days--never beat, an' tied once by the old
Andrew Jackson nine years afterwards.  Them was the days!"

"When did the Andrew Jackson tie her?" I asked, because of the
growing suspicion that he was "having" me.

"In 1860," was his prompt reply.

"And you sailed in the Flying Cloud nine years before that, and this
is 1913--why, that was sixty-two years ago," I charged.

"And I was seven years old," he chuckled.  "My mother was stewardess
on the Flyin' Cloud.  I was born at sea.  I was boy when I was
twelve, on the Herald o' the Morn, when she made around in ninety-
nine days--half the crew in irons most o' the time, five men lost
from aloft off the Horn, the points of our sheath-knives broken
square off, knuckle-dusters an' belayin'-pins flyin', three men shot
by the officers in one day, the second mate killed dead an' no one to
know who done it, an' drive! drive! drive! ninety-nine days from land
to land, a run of seventeen thousand miles, an' east to west around
Cape Stiff!"

"But that would make you sixty-nine years old," I insisted.

"Which I am," he retorted proudly, "an' a better man at that than the
scrubby younglings of these days.  A generation of 'em would die
under the things I've been through.  Did you ever hear of the Sunny
South?--she that was sold in Havana to run slaves an' changed her
name to Emanuela?"

"And you've sailed the Middle Passage!" I cried, recollecting the old
phrase.

"I was on the Emanuela that day in Mozambique Channel when the Brisk
caught us with nine hundred slaves between-decks.  Only she wouldn't
a-caught us except for her having steam."

I continued to stroll up and down beside this massive relic of the
past, and to listen to his hints and muttered reminiscences of old
man-killing and man-driving days.  He was too real to be true, and
yet, as I studied his shoulder-stoop and the age-drag of his huge
feet, I was convinced that his years were as he asserted.  He spoke
of a Captain Sonurs.

"He was a great captain," he was saying.  "An' in the two years I
sailed mate with him there was never a port I didn't jump the ship
goin' in an' stay in hiding until I sneaked aboard when she sailed
again."

"But why?"

"The men, on account of the men swearin' blood an' vengeance and
warrants against me because of my ways of teachin' them to be
sailors.  Why, the times I was caught, and the fines the skipper paid
for me--and yet it was my work that made the ship make money.''

He held up his huge paws, and as I stared at the battered, malformed
knuckles I understood the nature of his work.

"But all that's stopped now," he lamented.  "A sailor's a gentleman
these days.  You can't raise your voice or your hand to them."

At this moment he was addressed from the poop-rail above by the
second mate, a medium-sized, heavily built, clean-shaven, blond man.

"The tug's in sight with the crew, sir," he announced.

The mate grunted an acknowledgment, then added, "Come on down, Mr.
Mellaire, and meet our passenger."

I could not help noting the air and carriage with which Mr. Mellaire
came down the poop-ladder and took his part in the introduction.  He
was courteous in an old-world way, soft-spoken, suave, and
unmistakably from south of Mason and Dixon.

"A Southerner," I said.

"Georgia, sir."  He bowed and smiled, as only a Southerner can bow
and smile.

His features and expression were genial and gentle, and yet his mouth
was the cruellest gash I had ever seen in a man's face.  It was a
gash.  There is no other way of describing that harsh, thin-lipped,
shapeless mouth that uttered gracious things so graciously.
Involuntarily I glanced at his hands.  Like the mate's, they were
thick-boned, broken-knuckled, and malformed.  Back into his blue eyes
I looked.  On the surface of them was a film of light, a gloss of
gentle kindness and cordiality, but behind that gloss I knew resided
neither sincerity nor mercy.  Behind that gloss was something cold
and terrible, that lurked and waited and watched--something catlike,
something inimical and deadly.  Behind that gloss of soft light and
of social sparkle was the live, fearful thing that had shaped that
mouth into the gash it was.  What I sensed behind in those eyes
chilled me with its repulsiveness and strangeness.

As I faced Mr. Mellaire, and talked with him, and smiled, and
exchanged amenities, I was aware of the feeling that comes to one in
the forest or jungle when he knows unseen wild eyes of hunting
animals are spying upon him.  Frankly I was afraid of the thing
ambushed behind there in the skull of Mr. Mellaire.  One so as a
matter of course identifies form and feature with the spirit within.
But I could not do this with the second mate.  His face and form and
manner and suave ease were one thing, inside which he, an entirely
different thing, lay hid.

I noticed Wada standing in the cabin door, evidently waiting to ask
for instructions.  I nodded, and prepared to follow him inside.  Mr.
Pike looked at me quickly and said:

"Just a moment, Mr. Pathurst."

He gave some orders to the second mate, who turned on his heel and
started for'ard.  I stood and waited for Mr. Pike's communication,
which he did not choose to make until he saw the second mate well out
of ear-shot.  Then he leaned closely to me and said:

"Don't mention that little matter of my age to anybody.  Each year I
sign on I sign my age one year younger.  I am fifty-four, now, on the
articles."

"And you don't look a day older," I answered lightly, though I meant
it in all sincerity.

"And I don't feel it.  I can outwork and outgame the huskiest of the
younglings.  And don't let my age get to anybody's ears, Mr.
Pathurst.  Skippers are not particular for mates getting around the
seventy mark.  And owners neither.  I've had my hopes for this ship,
and I'd a-got her, I think, except for the old man decidin' to go to
sea again.  As if he needed the money!  The old skinflint!"

"Is he well off?" I inquired.

"Well off!  If I had a tenth of his money I could retire on a chicken
ranch in California and live like a fighting cock--yes, if I had a
fiftieth of what he's got salted away.  Why, he owns more stock in
all the Blackwood ships . . . and they've always been lucky and
always earned money.  I'm getting old, and it's about time I got a
command.  But no; the old cuss has to take it into his head to go to
sea again just as the berth's ripe for me to fall into."

Again I started to enter the cabin, but was stopped by the mate.

"Mr. Pathurst?  You won't mention about my age?"

"No, certainly not, Mr. Pike," I said.



CHAPTER III



Quite chilled through, I was immediately struck by the warm comfort
of the cabin.  All the connecting doors were open, making what I
might call a large suite of rooms or a whale house.  The main-deck
entrance, on the port side, was into a wide, well-carpeted hallway.
Into this hallway, from the port side, opened five rooms:  first, on
entering, the mate's; next, the two state-rooms which had been
knocked into one for me; then the steward's room; and, adjoining his,
completing the row, a state-room which was used for the slop-chest.

Across the hall was a region with which I was not yet acquainted,
though I knew it contained the dining-room, the bath-rooms, the cabin
proper, which was in truth a spacious living-room, the captain's
quarters, and, undoubtedly, Miss West's quarters.  I could hear her
humming some air as she bustled about with her unpacking.  The
steward's pantry, separated by crosshalls and by the stairway leading
into the chart-room above on the poop, was placed strategically in
the centre of all its operations.  Thus, on the starboard side of it
were the state-rooms of the captain and Miss West, for'ard of it were
the dining-room and main cabin; while on the port side of it was the
row of rooms I have described, two of which were mine.

I ventured down the hall toward the stern, and found it opened into
the stern of the Elsinore, forming a single large apartment at least
thirty-five feet from side to side and fifteen to eighteen feet in
depth, curved, of course, to the lines of the ship's stern.  This
seemed a store-room.  I noted wash-tubs, bolts of canvas, many
lockers, hams and bacon hanging, a step-ladder that led up through a
small hatch to the poop, and, in the floor, another hatch.

I spoke to the steward, an old Chinese, smooth-faced and brisk of
movement, whose name I never learned, but whose age on the articles
was fifty-six.

"What is down there?" I asked, pointing to the hatch in the floor.

"Him lazarette," he answered.

"And who eats there?" I indicated a table with two stationary sea-
chairs.

"Him second table.  Second mate and carpenter him eat that table."

When I had finished giving instructions to Wada for the arranging of
my things I looked at my watch.  It was early yet, only several
minutes after three so I went on deck again to witness the arrival of
the crew.

The actual coming on board from the tug I had missed, but for'ard of
the amidship house I encountered a few laggards who had not yet gone
into the forecastle.  These were the worse for liquor, and a more
wretched, miserable, disgusting group of men I had never seen in any
slum.  Their clothes were rags.  Their faces were bloated, bloody,
and dirty.  I won't say they were villainous.  They were merely
filthy and vile.  They were vile of appearance, of speech, and
action.

"Come!  Come!  Get your dunnage into the fo'c's'le!"

Mr. Pike uttered these words sharply from the bridge above.  A light
and graceful bridge of steel rods and planking ran the full length of
the Elsinore, starting from the poop, crossing the amidship house and
the forecastle, and connecting with the forecastle-head at the very
bow of the ship.

At the mate's command the men reeled about and glowered up at him,
one or two starting clumsily to obey.  The others ceased their
drunken yammerings and regarded the mate sullenly.  One of them, with
a face mashed by some mad god in the making, and who was afterwards
to be known by me as Larry, burst into a guffaw, and spat insolently
on the deck.  Then, with utmost deliberation, he turned to his
fellows and demanded loudly and huskily:

"Who in hell's the old stiff, anyways?"

I saw Mr. Pike's huge form tense convulsively and involuntarily, and
I noted the way his huge hands strained in their clutch on the
bridge-railing.  Beyond that he controlled himself.

"Go on, you," he said.  "I'll have nothing out of you.  Get into the
fo'c's'le."

And then, to my surprise, he turned and walked aft along the bridge
to where the tug was casting off its lines.  So this was all his high
and mighty talk of kill and drive, I thought.  Not until afterwards
did I recollect, as I turned aft down the deck, that I saw Captain
West leaning on the rail at the break of the poop and gazing for'ard.

The tug's lines were being cast off, and I was interested in watching
the manoeuvre until she had backed clear of the ship, at which
moment, from for'ard, arose a queer babel of howling and yelping, as
numbers of drunken voices cried out that a man was overboard.  The
second mate sprang down the poop-ladder and darted past me along the
deck.  The mate, still on the slender, white-painted bridge, that
seemed no more than a spider thread, surprised me by the activity
with which he dashed along the bridge to the 'midship house, leaped
upon the canvas-covered long-boat, and swung outboard where he might
see.  Before the men could clamber upon the rail the second mate was
among them, and it was he who flung a coil of line overboard.

What impressed me particularly was the mental and muscular
superiority of these two officers.  Despite their age--the mate
sixty-nine and the second mate at least fifty--their minds and their
bodies had acted with the swiftness and accuracy of steel springs.
They were potent.  They were iron.  They were perceivers, willers,
and doers.  They were as of another species compared with the sailors
under them.  While the latter, witnesses of the happening and
directly on the spot, had been crying out in befuddled helplessness,
and with slow wits and slower bodies been climbing upon the rail, the
second mate had descended the steep ladder from the poop, covered two
hundred feet of deck, sprung upon the rail, grasped the instant need
of the situation, and cast the coil of line into the water.

And of the same nature and quality had been the actions of Mr. Pike.
He and Mr. Mellaire were masters over the wretched creatures of
sailors by virtue of this remarkable difference of efficiency and
will.  Truly, they were more widely differentiated from the men under
them than were the men under them differentiated from Hottentots--ay,
and from monkeys.

I, too, by this time, was standing on the big hawser-bitts in a
position to see a man in the water who seemed deliberately swimming
away from the ship.  He was a dark-skinned Mediterranean of some
sort, and his face, in a clear glimpse I caught of it, was distorted
by frenzy.  His black eyes were maniacal.  The line was so accurately
flung by the second mate that it fell across the man's shoulders, and
for several strokes his arms tangled in it ere he could swim clear.
This accomplished, he proceeded to scream some wild harangue and
once, as he uptossed his arms for emphasis, I saw in his hand the
blade of a long knife.

Bells were jangling on the tug as it started to the rescue.  I stole
a look up at Captain West.  He had walked to the port side of the
poop, where, hands in pockets, he was glancing, now for'ard at the
struggling man, now aft at the tug.  He gave no orders, betrayed no
excitement, and appeared, I may well say, the most casual of
spectators.

The creature in the water seemed now engaged in taking off his
clothes.  I saw one bare arm, and then the other, appear.  In his
struggles he sometimes sank beneath the surface, but always he
emerged, flourishing the knife and screaming his addled harangue.  He
even tried to escape the tug by diving and swimming underneath.

I strolled for'ard, and arrived in time to see him hoisted in over
the rail of the Elsinore.  He was stark naked, covered with blood,
and raving.  He had cut and slashed himself in a score of places.
From one wound in the wrist the blood spurted with each beat of the
pulse.  He was a loathsome, non-human thing.  I have seen a scared
orang in a zoo, and for all the world this bestial-faced, mowing,
gibbering thing reminded me of the orang.  The sailors surrounded
him, laying hands on him, withstraining him, the while they guffawed
and cheered.  Right and left the two mates shoved them away, and
dragged the lunatic down the deck and into a room in the 'midship
house.  I could not help marking the strength of Mr. Pike and Mr.
Mellaire.  I had heard of the superhuman strength of madmen, but this
particular madman was as a wisp of straw in their hands.  Once into
the bunk, Mr. Pike held down the struggling fool easily with one hand
while he dispatched the second mate for marlin with which to tie the
fellow's arms.

"Bughouse," Mr. Pike grinned at me.  "I've seen some bughouse crews
in my time, but this one's the limit."

"What are you going to do?" I asked.  "The man will bleed to death."

"And good riddance," he answered promptly.  "We'll have our hands
full of him until we can lose him somehow.  When he gets easy I'll
sew him up, that's all, if I have to ease him with a clout of the
jaw."

I glanced at the mate's huge paw and appreciated its anaesthetic
qualities.  Out on deck again, I saw Captain West on the poop, hands
still in pockets, quite uninterested, gazing at a blue break in the
sky to the north-east.  More than the mates and the maniac, more than
the drunken callousness of the men, did this quiet figure, hands in
pockets, impress upon me that I was in a different world from any I
had known.

Wada broke in upon my thoughts by telling me he had been sent to say
that Miss West was serving tea in the cabin.



CHAPTER IV



The contrast, as I entered the cabin, was startling.  All contrasts
aboard the Elsinore promised to be startling.  Instead of the cold,
hard deck my feet sank into soft carpet.  In place of the mean and
narrow room, built of naked iron, where I had left the lunatic, I was
in a spacious and beautiful apartment.  With the bawling of the men's
voices still in my ears, and with the pictures of their drink-puffed
and filthy faces still vivid under my eyelids, I found myself greeted
by a delicate-faced, prettily-gowned woman who sat beside a lacquered
oriental table on which rested an exquisite tea-service of Canton
china.  All was repose and calm.  The steward, noiseless-footed,
expressionless, was a shadow, scarcely noticed, that drifted into the
room on some service and drifted out again.

Not at once could I relax, and Miss West, serving my tea, laughed and
said:

"You look as if you had been seeing things.  The steward tells me a
man has been overboard.  I fancy the cold water must have sobered
him."

I resented her unconcern.

"The man is a lunatic," I said.  "This ship is no place for him.  He
should be sent ashore to some hospital."

"I am afraid, if we begin that, we'd have to send two-thirds of our
complement ashore--one lump?

"Yes, please," I answered.  "But the man has terribly wounded
himself.  He is liable to bleed to death."

She looked at me for a moment, her gray eyes serious and
scrutinizing, as she passed me my cup; then laughter welled up in her
eyes, and she shook her head reprovingly.

"Now please don't begin the voyage by being shocked, Mr. Pathurst.
Such things are very ordinary occurrences.  You'll get used to them.
You must remember some queer creatures go down to the sea in ships.
The man is safe.  Trust Mr. Pike to attend to his wounds.  I've never
sailed with Mr. Pike, but I've heard enough about him.  Mr. Pike is
quite a surgeon.  Last voyage, they say, he performed a successful
amputation, and so elated was he that he turned his attention on the
carpenter, who happened to be suffering from some sort of
indigestion.  Mr. Pike was so convinced of the correctness of his
diagnosis that he tried to bribe the carpenter into having his
appendix removed."  She broke off to laugh heartily, then added:
"They say he offered the poor man just pounds and pounds of tobacco
to consent to the operation."

"But is it safe . . . for the . . . the working of the ship," I
urged, "to take such a lunatic along?"

She shrugged her shoulders, as if not intending to reply, then said:

"This incident is nothing.  There are always several lunatics or
idiots in every ship's company.  And they always come aboard filled
with whiskey and raving.  I remember, once, when we sailed from
Seattle, a long time ago, one such madman.  He showed no signs of
madness at all; just calmly seized two boarding-house runners and
sprang overboard with them.  We sailed the same day, before the
bodies were recovered."

Again she shrugged her shoulders.

"What would you?  The sea is hard, Mr. Pathurst.  And for our sailors
we get the worst type of men.  I sometimes wonder where they find
them.  And we do our best with them, and somehow manage to make them
help us carry on our work in the world.  But they are low . . . low."

As I listened, and studied her face, contrasting her woman's
sensitivity and her soft pretty dress with the brute faces and rags
of the men I had noticed, I could not help being convinced
intellectually of the rightness of her position.  Nevertheless, I was
hurt sentimentally,--chiefly, I do believe, because of the very
hardness and unconcern with which she enunciated her view.  It was
because she was a woman, and so different from the sea-creatures,
that I resented her having received such harsh education in the
school of the sea.

"I could not help remarking your father's--er, er sang froid during
the occurrence."  I ventured.

"He never took his hands from his pockets!" she cried.

Her eyes sparkled as I nodded confirmation.

"I knew it!  It's his way.  I've seen it so often.  I remember when I
was twelve years old--mother was alone--we were running into San
Francisco.  It was in the Dixie, a ship almost as big as this.  There
was a strong fair wind blowing, and father did not take a tug.  We
sailed right through the Golden Gate and up the San Francisco water-
front.  There was a swift flood tide, too; and the men, both watches,
were taking in sail as fast as they could.

"Now the fault was the steamboat captain's.  He miscalculated our
speed and tried to cross our bow.  Then came the collision, and the
Dixie's bow cut through that steamboat, cabin and hull.  There were
hundreds of passengers, men, women, and children.  Father never took
his hands from his pockets.  He sent the mate for'ard to superintend
rescuing the passengers, who were already climbing on to our bowsprit
and forecastle-head, and in a voice no different from what he'd use
to ask some one to pass the butter he told the second mate to set all
sail.  And he told him which sails to begin with."

"But why set more sails?" I interrupted.

"Because he could see the situation.  Don't you see, the steamboat
was cut wide open.  All that kept her from sinking instantly was the
bow of the Dixie jammed into her side.  By setting more sail and
keeping before the wind, he continued to keep the bow of the Dixie
jammed.

"I was terribly frightened.  People who had sprung or fallen
overboard were drowning on each side of us, right in my sight, as we
sailed along up the water-front.  But when I looked at father, there
he was, just as I had always known him, hands in pockets, walking
slowly up and down, now giving an order to the wheel--you see, he had
to direct the Dixie's course through all the shipping--now watching
the passengers swarming over our bow and along our deck, now looking
ahead to see his way through the ships at anchor.  Sometimes he did
glance at the poor, drowning ones, but he was not concerned with
them.

"Of course, there were numbers drowned, but by keeping his hands in
his pockets and his head cool he saved hundreds of lives.  Not until
the last person was off the steamboat--he sent men aboard to make
sure--did he take off the press of sail.  And the steamboat sank at
once."

She ceased, and looked at me with shining eyes for approbation.

"It was splendid," I acknowledged.  "I admire the quiet man of power,
though I confess that such quietness under stress seems to me almost
unearthly and beyond human.  I can't conceive of myself acting that
way, and I am confident that I was suffering more while that poor
devil was in the water than all the rest of the onlookers put
together."

"Father suffers!" she defended loyally.  "Only he does not show it."

I bowed, for I felt she had missed my point.



CHAPTER V



I came out from tea in the cabin to find the tug Britannia in sight.
She was the craft that was to tow us down Chesapeake Bay to sea.
Strolling for'ard I noted the sailors being routed out of the
forecastle by Sundry Buyers, for ever tenderly pressing his abdomen
with his hands.  Another man was helping Sundry Buyers at routing out
the sailors.  I asked Mr. Pike who the man was.

"Nancy--my bosun; ain't he a peach?" was the answer I got, and from
the mate's manner of enunciation I was quite aware that "Nancy" had
been used derisively.

Nancy could not have been more than thirty, though he looked as if he
had lived a very long time.  He was toothless and sad and weary of
movement.  His eyes were slate-coloured and muddy, his shaven face
was sickly yellow.  Narrow-shouldered, sunken-chested, with cheeks
cavernously hollow, he looked like a man in the last stages of
consumption.  Little life as Sundry Buyers showed, Nancy showed even
less life.  And these were bosuns!--bosuns of the fine American
sailing-ship Elsinore!  Never had any illusion of mine taken a more
distressing cropper.

It was plain to me that the pair of them, spineless and spunkless,
were afraid of the men they were supposed to boss.  And the men!
Dore could never have conjured a more delectable hell's broth.  For
the first time I saw them all, and I could not blame the two bosuns
for being afraid of them.  They did not walk.  They slouched and
shambled, some even tottered, as from weakness or drink.

But it was their faces.  I could not help remembering what Miss West
had just told me--that ships always sailed with several lunatics or
idiots in their crews.  But these looked as if they were all lunatic
or feeble-minded.  And I, too, wondered where such a mass of human
wreckage could have been obtained.  There was something wrong with
all of them.  Their bodies were twisted, their faces distorted, and
almost without exception they were under-sized.  The several quite
fairly large men I marked were vacant-faced.  One man, however, large
and unmistakably Irish, was also unmistakably mad.  He was talking
and muttering to himself as he came out.  A little, curved, lop-sided
man, with his head on one side and with the shrewdest and wickedest
of faces and pale blue eyes, addressed an obscene remark to the mad
Irishman, calling him O'Sullivan.  But O'Sullivan took no notice and
muttered on.  On the heels of the little lop-sided man appeared an
overgrown dolt of a fat youth, followed by another youth so tall and
emaciated of body that it seemed a marvel his flesh could hold his
frame together.

Next, after this perambulating skeleton, came the weirdest creature I
have ever beheld.  He was a twisted oaf of a man.  Face and body were
twisted as with the pain of a thousand years of torture.  His was the
face of an ill-treated and feeble-minded faun.  His large black eyes
were bright, eager, and filled with pain; and they flashed
questioningly from face to face and to everything about.  They were
so pitifully alert, those eyes, as if for ever astrain to catch the
clue to some perplexing and threatening enigma.  Not until afterwards
did I learn the cause of this.  He was stone deaf, having had his
ear-drums destroyed in the boiler explosion which had wrecked the
rest of him.

I noticed the steward, standing at the galley door and watching the
men from a distance.  His keen, Asiatic face, quick with
intelligence, was a relief to the eye, as was the vivid face of
Shorty, who came out of the forecastle with a leap and a gurgle of
laughter.  But there was something wrong with him, too.  He was a
dwarf, and, as I was to come to know, his high spirits and low
mentality united to make him a clown.

Mr. Pike stopped beside me a moment and while he watched the men I
watched him.  The expression on his face was that of a cattle-buyer,
and it was plain that he was disgusted with the quality of cattle
delivered.

"Something the matter with the last mother's son of them," he
growled.

And still they came:  one, pallid, furtive-eyed, that I instantly
adjudged a drug fiend; another, a tiny, wizened old man, pinch-faced
and wrinkled, with beady, malevolent blue eyes; a third, a small,
well-fleshed man, who seemed to my eye the most normal and least
unintelligent specimen that had yet appeared.  But Mr. Pike's eye was
better trained than mine.

"What's the matter with YOU?" he snarled at the man.

"Nothing, sir," the fellow answered, stopping immediately.

"What's your name?"

Mr. Pike never spoke to a sailor save with a snarl.

"Charles Davis, sir."

"What are you limping about?"

"I ain't limpin', sir," the man answered respectfully, and, at a nod
of dismissal from the mate, marched off jauntily along the deck with
a heodlum swing to the shoulders.

"He's a sailor all right," the mate grumbled; "but I'll bet you a
pound of tobacco or a month's wages there's something wrong with
him."

The forecastle now seemed empty, but the mate turned on the bosuns
with his customary snarl.

"What in hell are you doing?  Sleeping?  Think this is a rest cure?
Get in there an' rustle 'em out!"

Sundry Buyers pressed his abdomen gingerly and hesitated, while
Nancy, his face one dogged, long-suffering bleakness, reluctantly
entered the forecastle.  Then, from inside, we heard oaths, vile and
filthy, urgings and expostulations on the part of Nancy, meekly and
pleadingly uttered.

I noted the grim and savage look that came on Mr. Pike's face, and
was prepared for I knew not what awful monstrosities to emerge from
the forecastle.  Instead, to my surprise, came three fellows who were
strikingly superior to the ruck that had preceded them.  I looked to
see the mate's face soften to some sort of approval.  On the
contrary, his blue eyes contracted to narrow slits, the snarl of his
voice was communicated to his lips, so that he seemed like a dog
about to bite.

But the three fellows.  They were small men, all; and young men,
anywhere between twenty-five and thirty.  Though roughly dressed,
they were well dressed, and under their clothes their bodily
movements showed physical well-being.  Their faces were keen cut,
intelligent.  And though I felt there was something queer about them,
I could not divine what it was.

Here were no ill-fed, whiskey-poisoned men, such as the rest of the
sailors, who, having drunk up their last pay-days, had starved ashore
until they had received and drunk up their advance money for the
present voyage.  These three, on the other hand were supple and
vigorous.  Their movements were spontaneously quick and accurate.
Perhaps it was the way they looked at me, with incurious yet
calculating eyes that nothing escaped.  They seemed so worldly wise,
so indifferent, so sure of themselves.  I was confident they were not
sailors.  Yet, as shore-dwellers, I could not place them.  They were
a type I had never encountered.  Possibly I can give a better idea of
them by describing what occurred.

As they passed before us they favoured Mr. Pike with the same
indifferent, keen glances they gave me.

"What's your name--you?" Mr. Pike barked at the first of the trio,
evidently a hybrid Irish-Jew.  Jewish his nose unmistakably was.
Equally unmistakable was the Irish of his eyes, and jaw, and upper
lip.

The three had immediately stopped, and, though they did not look
directly at one another, they seemed to be holding a silent
conference.  Another of the trio, in whose veins ran God alone knows
what Semitic, Babylonish and Latin strains, gave a warning signal.
Oh, nothing so crass as a wink or a nod.  I almost doubted that I had
intercepted it, and yet I knew he had communicated a warning to his
fellows.  More a shade of expression that had crossed his eyes, or a
glint in them of sudden light--or whatever it was, it carried the
message.

"Murphy," the other answered the mate.

"Sir!" Mr. Pike snarled at him.

Murphy shrugged his shoulders in token that he did not understand.
It was the poise of the man, of the three of them, the cool poise
that impressed me.

"When you address any officer on this ship you'll say 'sir,'" Mr.
Pike explained, his voice as harsh as his face was forbidding.  "Did
you get THAT?"

"Yes .  . sir,'' Murphy drawled with deliberate slowness.  "I
gotcha."

"Sir!" Mr. Pike roared.

"Sir," Murphy answered, so softly and carelessly that it irritated
the mate to further bullyragging.

"Well, Murphy's too long," he announced.  "Nosey'll do you aboard
this craft.  Got THAT?"

"I gotcha . . . sir," came the reply, insolent in its very softness
and unconcern.  "Nosey Murphy goes . . . sir."

And then he laughed--the three of them laughed, if laughter it might
be called that was laughter without sound or facial movement.  The
eyes alone laughed, mirthlessly and cold-bloodedly.

Certainly Mr. Pike was not enjoying himself with these baffling
personalities.  He turned upon the leader, the one who had given the
warning and who looked the admixture of all that was Mediterranean
and Semitic.

"What's YOUR name?"

"Bert Rhine . . . sir," was the reply, in tones as soft and careless
and silkily irritating as the other's.

"And YOU?"--this to the remaining one, the youngest of the trio, a
dark-eyed, olive-skinned fellow with a face most striking in its
cameo-like beauty.  American-born, I placed him, of immigrants from
Southern Italy--from Naples, or even Sicily.

"Twist . . . sir," he answered, precisely in the same manner as the
others.

"Too long," the mate sneered.  "The Kid'll do you.  Got THAT?"

"I gotcha . . . sir.  Kid Twist'll do me . . . sir."

"Kid'll do!"

"Kid . . . sir."

And the three laughed their silent, mirthless laugh.  By this time
Mr. Pike was beside himself with a rage that could find no excuse for
action.

"Now I'm going to tell you something, the bunch of you, for the good
of your health."  The mate's voice grated with the rage he was
suppressing.  "I know your kind.  You're dirt.  D'ye get THAT?
You're dirt.  And on this ship you'll be treated as dirt.  You'll do
your work like men, or I'll know the reason why.  The first time one
of you bats an eye, or even looks like batting an eye, he gets his.
D'ye get that?  Now get out.  Get along for'ard to the windlass."

Mr. Pike turned on his heel, and I swung alongside of him as he moved
aft.

"What do you make of them?" I queried.

"The limit," he grunted.  "I know their kidney.  They've done time,
the three of them.  They're just plain sweepings of hell--"

Here his speech was broken off by the spectacle that greeted him on
Number Two hatch.  Sprawled out on the hatch were five or six men,
among them Larry, the tatterdemalion who had called him "old stiff"
earlier in the afternoon.  That Larry had not obeyed orders was
patent, for he was sitting with his back propped against his sea-bag,
which ought to have been in the forecastle.  Also, he and the group
with him ought to have been for'ard manning the windlass.

The mate stepped upon the hatch and towered over the man.

"Get up," he ordered.

Larry made an effort, groaned, and failed to get up.

"I can't," he said.

"Sir!"

"I can't, sir.  I was drunk last night an' slept in Jefferson Market.
An' this mornin' I was froze tight, sir.  They had to pry me loose."

"Stiff with the cold you were, eh?" the mate grinned.

"It's well ye might say it, sir," Larry answered.

"And you feel like an old stiff, eh?"

Larry blinked with the troubled, querulous eyes of a monkey.  He was
beginning to apprehend he knew not what, and he knew that bending
over him was a man-master.

"Well, I'll just be showin' you what an old stiff feels like,
anyways."  Mr. Pike mimicked the other's brogue.

And now I shall tell what I saw happen.  Please remember what I have
said of the huge paws of Mr. Pike, the fingers much longer than mine
and twice as thick, the wrists massive-boned, the arm-bones and the
shoulder-bones of the same massive order.  With one flip of his right
hand, with what I might call an open-handed, lifting, upward slap,
save that it was the ends of the fingers only that touched Larry's
face, he lifted Larry into the air, sprawling him backward on his
back across his sea-bag.

The man alongside of Larry emitted a menacing growl and started to
spring belligerently to his feet.  But he never reached his feet.
Mr. Pike, with the back of same right hand, open, smote the man on
the side of the face.  The loud smack of the impact was startling.
The mate's strength was amazing.  The blow looked so easy, so
effortless; it had seemed like the lazy stroke of a good-natured
bear, but in it was such a weight of bone and muscle that the man
went down sidewise and rolled off the hatch on to the deck.

At this moment, lurching aimlessly along, appeared O'Sullivan.  A
sudden access of muttering, on his part, reached Mr. Pike's ear, and
Mr. Pike, instantly keen as a wild animal, his paw in the act of
striking O'Sullivan, whipped out like a revolver shot, "What's that?"
Then he noted the sense-struck face of O'Sullivan and withheld the
blow.  "Bug-house," Mr. Pike commented.

Involuntarily I had glanced to see if Captain West was on the poop,
and found that we were hidden from the poop by the 'midship house.

Mr. Pike, taking no notice of the man who lay groaning on the deck,
stood over Larry, who was likewise groaning.  The rest of the
sprawling men were on their feet, subdued and respectful.  I, too,
was respectful of this terrific, aged figure of a man.  The
exhibition had quite convinced me of the verity of his earlier
driving and killing days.

"Who's the old stiff now?" he demanded.

"'Tis me, sir," Larry moaned contritely.

"Get up!"

Larry got up without any difficulty at all.

"Now get for'ard to the windlass!  The rest of you!"

And they went, sullenly, shamblingly, like the cowed brutes they
were.



CHAPTER VI



I climbed the ladder on the side of the for'ard house (which house
contained, as I discovered, the forecastle, the galley, and the
donkey-engine room), and went part way along the bridge to a position
by the foremast, where I could observe the crew heaving up anchor.
The Britannia was alongside, and we were getting under way.

A considerable body of men was walking around with the windlass or
variously engaged on the forecastle-head.  Of the crew proper were
two watches of fifteen men each.  In addition were sailmakers, boys,
bosuns, and the carpenter.  Nearly forty men were they, but such men!
They were sad and lifeless.  There was no vim, no go, no activity.
Every step and movement was an effort, as if they were dead men
raised out of coffins or sick men dragged from hospital beds.  Sick
they were--whiskey-poisoned.  Starved they were, and weak from poor
nutrition.  And worst of all, they were imbecile and lunatic.

I looked aloft at the intricate ropes, at the steel masts rising and
carrying huge yards of steel, rising higher and higher, until steel
masts and yards gave way to slender spars of wood, while ropes and
stays turned into a delicate tracery of spider-thread against the
sky.  That such a wretched muck of men should be able to work this
magnificent ship through all storm and darkness and peril of the sea
was beyond all seeming.  I remembered the two mates, the super-
efficiency, mental and physical, of Mr. Mellaire and Mr. Pike--could
they make this human wreckage do it?  They, at least, evinced no
doubts of their ability.  The sea?  If this feat of mastery were
possible, then clear it was that I knew nothing of the sea.

I looked back at the misshapen, starved, sick, stumbling hulks of men
who trod the dreary round of the windlass.  Mr. Pike was right.
These were not the brisk, devilish, able-bodied men who manned the
ships of the old clipper-ship days; who fought their officers, who
had the points of their sheath-knives broken off, who killed and were
killed, but who did their work as men.  These men, these shambling
carcasses at the windlass--I looked, and looked, and vainly I strove
to conjure the vision of them swinging aloft in rack and storm,
"clearing the raffle," as Kipling puts it, "with their clasp knives
in their teeth."  Why didn't they sing a chanty as they hove the
anchor up?  In the old days, as I had read, the anchor always came up
to the rollicking sailor songs of sea-chested men.

I tired of watching the spiritless performance, and went aft on an
exploring trip along the slender bridge.  It was a beautiful
structure, strong yet light, traversing the length of the ship in
three aerial leaps.  It spanned from the forecastle-head to the
forecastle-house, next to the 'midship house, and then to the poop.
The poop, which was really the roof or deck over all the cabin space
below, and which occupied the whole after-part of the ship, was very
large.  It was broken only by the half-round and half-covered wheel-
house at the very stern and by the chart-house.  On either side of
the latter two doors opened into a tiny hallway.  This, in turn, gave
access to the chart-room and to a stairway that led down into the
cabin quarters beneath.

I peeped into the chart-room and was greeted with a smile by Captain
West.  He was lolling back comfortably in a swing chair, his feet
cocked on the desk opposite.  On a broad, upholstered couch sat the
pilot.  Both were smoking cigars; and, lingering for a moment to
listen to the conversation, I grasped that the pilot was an ex-sea-
captain.

As I descended the stairs, from Miss West's room came a sound of
humming and bustling, as she settled her belongings.  The energy she
displayed, to judge by the cheerful noises of it, was almost
perturbing.

Passing by the pantry, I put my head inside the door to greet the
steward and courteously let him know that I was aware of his
existence.  Here, in his little realm, it was plain that efficiency
reigned.  Everything was spotless and in order, and I could have
wished and wished vainly for a more noiseless servant than he ashore.
His face, as he regarded me, had as little or as much expression as
the Sphinx.  But his slant, black eyes were bright, with
intelligence.

"What do you think of the crew?" I asked, in order to put words to my
invasion of his castle.

"Buggy-house," he answered promptly, with a disgusted shake of the
head.  "Too much buggy-house.  All crazy.  You see.  No good.
Rotten.  Down to hell."

That was all, but it verified my own judgment.  While it might be
true, as Miss West had said, that every ship's crew contained several
lunatics and idiots, it was a foregone conclusion that our crew
contained far more than several.  In fact, and as it was to turn out,
our crew, even in these degenerate sailing days, was an unusual crew
in so far as its helplessness and worthlessness were beyond the
average.

I found my own room (in reality it was two rooms) delightful.  Wada
had unpacked and stored away my entire outfit of clothing, and had
filled numerous shelves with the library I had brought along.
Everything was in order and place, from my shaving outfit in the
drawer beside the wash-basin, and my sea-boots and oilskins hung
ready to hand, to my writing materials on the desk, before which a
swing arm-chair, leather-upholstered and screwed solidly to the
floor, invited me.  My pyjamas and dressing-gown were out.  My
slippers, in their accustomed place by the bed, also invited me.

Here, aft, all was fitness, intelligence.  On deck it was what I have
described--a nightmare spawn of creatures, assumably human, but
malformed, mentally and physically, into caricatures of men.  Yes, it
was an unusual crew; and that Mr. Pike and Mr. Mellaire could whip it
into the efficient shape necessary to work this vast and intricate
and beautiful fabric of a ship was beyond all seeming of possibility.

Depressed as I was by what I had just witnessed on deck, there came
to me, as I leaned back in my chair and opened the second volume of
George Moore's Hail and Farewell, a premonition that the voyage was
to be disastrous.  But then, as I looked about the room, measured its
generous space, realized that I was more comfortably situated than I
had ever been on any passenger steamer, I dismissed foreboding
thoughts and caught a pleasant vision of myself, through weeks and
months, catching up with all the necessary reading which I had so
long neglected.

Once, I asked Wada if he had seen the crew.  No, he hadn't, but the
steward had said that in all his years at sea this was the worst crew
he had ever seen.

"He say, all crazy, no sailors, rotten," Wada said.  "He say all big
fools and bime by much trouble.  'You see,' he say all the time.
'You see, You see.'  He pretty old man--fifty-five years, he say.
Very smart man for Chinaman.  Just now, first time for long time, he
go to sea.  Before, he have big business in San Francisco.  Then he
get much trouble--police.  They say he opium smuggle.  Oh, big, big
trouble.  But he catch good lawyer.  He no go to jail.  But long time
lawyer work, and when trouble all finish lawyer got all his business,
all his money, everything.  Then he go to sea, like before.  He make
good money.  He get sixty-five dollars a month on this ship.  But he
don't like.  Crew all crazy.  When this time finish he leave ship, go
back start business in San Francisco."

Later, when I had Wada open one of the ports for ventilation, I could
hear the gurgle and swish of water alongside, and I knew the anchor
was up and that we were in the grip of the Britannia, towing down the
Chesapeake to sea.  The idea suggested itself that it was not too
late.  I could very easily abandon the adventure and return to
Baltimore on the Britannia when she cast off the Elsinore.  And then
I heard a slight tinkling of china from the pantry as the steward
proceeded to set the table, and, also, it was so warm and
comfortable, and George Moore was so irritatingly fascinating.



CHAPTER VII



In every way dinner proved up beyond my expectations, and I
registered a note that the cook, whoever or whatever he might be, was
a capable man at his trade.  Miss West served, and, though she and
the steward were strangers, they worked together splendidly.  I
should have thought, from the smoothness of the service, that he was
an old house servant who for years had known her every way.

The pilot ate in the chart-house, so that at table were the four of
us that would always be at table together.  Captain West and his
daughter faced each other, while I, on the captain's right, faced Mr.
Pike.  This put Miss West across the corner on my right.

Mr. Pike, his dark sack coat (put on for the meal) bulging and
wrinkling over the lumps of muscles that padded his stooped
shoulders, had nothing at all to say.  But he had eaten too many
years at captains' tables not to have proper table manners.  At first
I thought he was abashed by Miss West's presence.  Later, I decided
it was due to the presence of the captain.  For Captain West had a
way with him that I was beginning to learn.  Far removed as Mr. Pike
and Mr. Mellaire were from the sailors, individuals as they were of
an entirely different and superior breed, yet equally as different
and far removed from his officers was Captain West.  He was a serene
and absolute aristocrat.  He neither talked "ship" nor anything else
to Mr. Pike.

On the other hand, Captain West's attitude toward me was that of a
social equal.  But then, I was a passenger.  Miss West treated me the
same way, but unbent more to Mr. Pike.  And Mr. Pike, answering her
with "Yes, Miss," and "No, Miss," ate good-manneredly and with his
shaggy-browed gray eyes studied me across the table.  I, too, studied
him.  Despite his violent past, killer and driver that he was, I
could not help liking the man.  He was honest, genuine.  Almost more
than for that, I liked him for the spontaneous boyish laugh he gave
on the occasions when I reached the points of several funny stories.
No man could laugh like that and be all bad.  I was glad that it was
he, and not Mr. Mellaire, who was to sit opposite throughout the
voyage.  And I was very glad that Mr. Mellaire was not to eat with us
at all.

I am afraid that Miss West and I did most of the talking.  She was
breezy, vivacious, tonic, and I noted again that the delicate, almost
fragile oval of her face was given the lie by her body.  She was a
robust, healthy young woman.  That was undeniable.  Not fat--heaven
forbid!--not even plump; yet her lines had that swelling roundness
that accompanies long, live muscles.  She was full-bodied, vigorous;
and yet not so full-bodied as she seemed.  I remember with what
surprise, when we arose from table, I noted her slender waist.  At
that moment I got the impression that she was willowy.  And willowy
she was, with a normal waist and with, in addition, always that
informing bodily vigour that made her appear rounder and robuster
than she really was.

It was the health of her that interested me.  When I studied her face
more closely I saw that only the lines of the oval of it were
delicate.  Delicate it was not, nor fragile.  The flesh was firm, and
the texture of the skin was firm and fine as it moved over the firm
muscles of face and neck.  The neck was a beautiful and adequate
pillar of white.  Its flesh was firm, its skin fine, and it was
muscular.  The hands, too, attracted me--not small, but well-shaped,
fine, white and strong, and well cared for.  I could only conclude
that she was an unusual captain's daughter, just as her father was an
unusual captain and man.  And their noses were alike, just the hint-
touch of the beak of power and race.

While Miss West was telling of the unexpectedness of the voyage, of
how suddenly she had decided to come--she accounted for it as a whim-
-and while she told of all the complications she had encountered in
her haste of preparation, I found myself casting up a tally of the
efficient ones on board the Elsinore.  They were Captain West and his
daughter, the two mates, myself, of course, Wada and the steward,
and, beyond the shadow of a doubt, the cook.  The dinner vouched for
him.  Thus I found our total of efficients to be eight.  But the
cook, the steward, and Wada were servants, not sailors, while Miss
West and myself were supernumeraries.  Remained to work, direct, do,
but three efficients out of a total ship's company of forty-five.  I
had no doubt that other efficients there were; it seemed impossible
that my first impression of the crew should be correct.  There was
the carpenter.  He might, at his trade, be as good as the cook.  Then
the two sailmakers, whom I had not yet seen, might prove up.

A little later during the meal I ventured to talk about what had
interested me and aroused my admiration, namely, the masterfulness
with which Mr. Pike and Mr. Mellaire had gripped hold of that woeful,
worthless crew.  It was all new to me, I explained, but I appreciated
the need of it.  As I led up to the occurrence on Number Two hatch,
when Mr. Pike had lifted up Larry and toppled him back with a mere
slap from the ends of his fingers, I saw in Mr. Pike's eyes a
warning, almost threatening, expression.  Nevertheless, I completed
my description of the episode.

When I had quite finished there was a silence.  Miss West was busy
serving coffee from a copper percolator.  Mr. Pike, profoundly
occupied with cracking walnuts, could not quite hide the wicked,
little, half-humorous, half-revengeful gleam in his eyes.  But
Captain West looked straight at me, but from oh! such a distance--
millions and millions of miles away.  His clear blue eyes were as
serene as ever, his tones as low and soft.

"It is the one rule I ask to be observed, Mr. Pathurst--we never
discuss the sailors."

It was a facer to me, and with quite a pronounced fellow-feeling for
Larry I hurriedly added:

"It was not merely the discipline that interested me.  It was the
feat of strength."

"Sailors are trouble enough without our hearing about them, Mr.
Pathurst," Captain West went on, as evenly and imperturbably as if I
had not spoken.  "I leave the handling of the sailors to my officers.
That's their business, and they are quite aware that I tolerate no
undeserved roughness or severity."

Mr. Pike's harsh face carried the faintest shadow of an amused grin
as he stolidly regarded the tablecloth.  I glanced to Miss West for
sympathy.  She laughed frankly, and said:

"You see, father never has any sailors.  And it's a good plan, too."

"A very good plan," Mr. Pike muttered.

Then Miss West kindly led the talk away from that subject, and soon
had us laughing with a spirited recital of a recent encounter of hers
with a Boston cab-driver.

Dinner over, I stepped to my room in quest of cigarettes, and
incidentally asked Wada about the cook.  Wada was always a great
gatherer of information.

"His name Louis," he said.  "He Chinaman, too.  No; only half
Chinaman.  Other half Englishman.  You know one island Napoleon he
stop long time and bime by die that island?"

"St. Helena," I prompted.

"Yes, that place Louis he born.  He talk very good English."

At this moment, entering the hall from the deck, Mr. Mellaire, just
relieved by the mate, passed me on his way to the big room in the
stern where the second table was set.  His "Good evening, sir," was
as stately and courteous as any southern gentleman of the old days
could have uttered it.  And yet I could not like the man.  His
outward seeming was so at variance with the personality that resided
within.  Even as he spoke and smiled I felt that from inside his
skull he was watching me, studying me.  And somehow, in a flash of
intuition, I knew not why, I was reminded of the three strange young
men, routed last from the forecastle, to whom Mr. Pike had read the
law.  They, too, had given me a similar impression.

Behind Mr. Mellaire slouched a self-conscious, embarrassed
individual, with the face of a stupid boy and the body of a giant.
His feet were even larger than Mr. Pike's, but the hands--I shot a
quick glance to see--were not so large as Mr. Pike's.

As they passed I looked inquiry to Wada.

"He carpenter.  He sat second table.  His name Sam Lavroff.  He come
from New York on ship.  Steward say he very young for carpenter,
maybe twenty-two, three years old."

As I approached the open port over my desk I again heard the swish
and gurgle of water and again realized that we were under way.  So
steady and noiseless was our progress, that, say seated at table, it
never entered one's head that we were moving or were anywhere save on
the solid land. I had been used to steamers all my life, and it was
difficult immediately to adjust myself to the absence of the
propeller-thrust vibration.

"Well, what do you think?" I asked Wada, who, like myself, had never
made a sailing-ship voyage.

He smiled politely.

"Very funny ship.  Very funny sailors. I don't know.  Mebbe all
right.  We see."

"You think trouble?" I asked pointedly.

"I think sailors very funny," he evaded.



CHAPTER VIII



Having lighted my cigarette, I strolled for'ard along the deck to
where work was going on.  Above my head dim shapes of canvas showed
in the starlight. Sail was being made, and being made slowly, as I
might judge, who was only the veriest tyro in such matters.  The
indistinguishable shapes of men, in long lines, pulled on ropes.
They pulled in sick and dogged silence, though Mr. Pike, ubiquitous,
snarled out orders and rapped out oaths from every angle upon their
miserable heads.

Certainly, from what I had read, no ship of the old days ever
proceeded so sadly and blunderingly to sea.  Ere long Mr. Mellaire
joined Mr. Pike in the struggle of directing the men.  It was not yet
eight in the evening, and all hands were at work.  They did not seem
to know the ropes.  Time and again, when the half-hearted suggestions
of the bosuns had been of no avail, I saw one or the other of the
mates leap to the rail and put the right rope in the hands of the
men.

These, on the deck, I concluded, were the hopeless ones.  Up aloft,
from sounds and cries, I knew were other men, undoubtedly those who
were at least a little seaman-like, loosing the sails.

But on deck!  Twenty or thirty of the poor devils, tailed on a rope
that hoisted a yard, would pull without concerted effort and with
painfully slow movements.  "Walk away with it!" Mr. Pike would yell.
And perhaps for two or three yards they would manage to walk with the
rope ere they came to a halt like stalled horses on a hill.  And yet,
did either of the mates spring in and add his strength, they were
able to move right along the deck without stopping.  Either of the
mates, old men that they were, was muscularly worth half-a-dozen of
the wretched creatures.

"This is what sailin's come to," Mr. Pike paused to snort in my ear.
"This ain't the place for an officer down here pulling and hauling.
But what can you do when the bosuns are worse than the men?"

"I thought sailors sang songs when they pulled," I said.

"Sure they do.  Want to hear 'em?"

I knew there was malice of some sort in his voice, but I answered
that I'd like to very much.

"Here, you bosun!" Mr. Pike snarled.  "Wake up!  Start a song!
Topsail halyards!"

In the pause that followed I could have sworn that Sundry Buyers was
pressing his hands against his abdomen, while Nancy, infinite
bleakness freezing upon his face, was wetting his lips to begin.

Nancy it was who began, for from no other man, I was confident, could
have issued so sepulchral a plaint.  It was unmusical, unbeautiful,
unlively, and indescribably doleful.  Yet the words showed that it
should have ripped and crackled with high spirits and lawlessness,
for the words poor Nancy sang were:


"Away, way, way, yar,
We'll kill Paddy Doyle for bus boots."


"Quit it!  Quit it!" Mr. Pike roared.  "This ain't a funeral!  Ain't
there one of you that can sing?  Come on, now!  It's a topsail-yard--
"

He broke off to leap in to the pin-rail and get the wrong ropes out
of the men's hands to put into them the right rope.

"Come on, bosun!  Break her out!"

Then out of the gloom arose Sundry Buyers' voice, cracked and crazy
and even more lugubrious than Nancy's:


"Then up aloft that yard must go,
Whiskey for my Johnny."


The second line was supposed to be the chorus, but not more than two
men feebly mumbled it.  Sundry Buyers quavered the next line:


"Oh, whiskey killed my sister Sue."


Then Mr. Pike took a hand, seizing the hauling-part next to the pin
and lifting his voice with a rare snap and devilishness:


"And whiskey killed the old man, too,
Whiskey for my Johnny."


He sang the devil-may-care lines on and on, lifting the crew to the
work and to the chorused emphasis of "Whiskey for my Johnny."

And to his voice they pulled, they moved, they sang, and were alive,
until he interrupted the song to cry "Belay!"

And then all the life and lilt went out of them, and they were again
maundering and futile things, getting in one another's way, stumbling
and shuffling through the darkness, hesitating to grasp ropes, and,
when they did take hold, invariably taking hold of the wrong rope
first.  Skulkers there were among them, too; and once, from for'ard
of the 'midship house, I heard smacks, and curses, and groans, and
out of the darkness hurriedly emerged two men, on their heels Mr.
Pike, who chanted a recital of the distressing things that would
befall them if he caught them at such tricks again.

The whole thing was too depressing for me to care to watch further,
so I strolled aft and climbed the poop.  In the lee of the chart-
house Captain West and the pilot were pacing slowly up and down.
Passing on aft, I saw steering at the wheel the weazened little old
man I had noted earlier in the day.  In the light of the binnacle his
small blue eyes looked more malevolent than ever.  So weazened and
tiny was he, and so large was the brass-studded wheel, that they
seemed of a height.  His face was withered, scorched, and wrinkled,
and in all seeming he was fifty years older than Mr. Pike.  He was
the most remarkable figure of a burnt-out, aged man one would expect
to find able seaman on one of the proudest sailing-ships afloat.
Later, through Wada, I was to learn that his name was Andy Fay and
that he claimed no more years than sixty-three.

I leaned against the rail in the lee of the wheel-house, and stared
up at the lofty spars and myriad ropes that I could guess were there.
No, I decided I was not keen on the voyage.  The whole atmosphere of
it was wrong.  There were the cold hours I had waited on the pier-
ends.  There was Miss West coming along.  There was the crew of
broken men and lunatics.  I wondered if the wounded Greek in the
'midship house still gibbered, and if Mr. Pike had yet sewed him up;
and I was quite sure I would not care to witness such a transaction
in surgery.

Even Wada, who had never been in a sailing-ship, had his doubts of
the voyage.  So had the steward, who had spent most of a life-time in
sailing-ships.  So far as Captain West was concerned, crews did not
exist.  And as for Miss West, she was so abominably robust that she
could not be anything else than an optimist in such matters.  She had
always lived; her red blood sang to her only that she would always
live and that nothing evil would ever happen to her glorious
personality.

Oh, trust me, I knew the way of red blood.  Such was my condition
that the red-blood health of Miss West was virtually an affront to
me--for I knew how unthinking and immoderate such blood could be.
And for five months at least--there was Mr. Pike's offered wager of a
pound of tobacco or a month's wages to that effect--I was to be pent
on the same ship with her.  As sure as cosmic sap was cosmic sap,
just that sure was I that ere the voyage was over I should be
pestered by her making love to me.  Please do not mistake me.  My
certainty in this matter was due, not to any exalted sense of my own
desirableness to women, but to my anything but exalted concept of
women as instinctive huntresses of men.  In my experience women
hunted men with quite the same blind tropism that marks the pursuit
of the sun by the sunflower, the pursuit of attachable surfaces by
the tendrils of the grapevine.

Call me blase--I do not mind, if by blase is meant the world-
weariness, intellectual, artistic, sensational, which can come to a
young man of thirty.  For I was thirty, and I was weary of all these
things--weary and in doubt.  It was because of this state that I was
undertaking the voyage.  I wanted to get away by myself, to get away
from all these things, and, with proper perspective, mull the matter
over.

It sometimes seemed to me that the culmination of this world-sickness
had been brought about by the success of my play--my first play, as
every one knows.  But it had been such a success that it raised the
doubt in my own mind, just as the success of my several volumes of
verse had raised doubts.  Was the public right?  Were the critics
right?  Surely the function of the artist was to voice life, yet what
did I know of life?

So you begin to glimpse what I mean by the world-sickness that
afflicted me.  Really, I had been, and was, very sick.  Mad thoughts
of isolating myself entirely from the world had hounded me.  I had
even canvassed the idea of going to Molokai and devoting the rest of
my years to the lepers--I, who was thirty years old, and healthy and
strong, who had no particular tragedy, who had a bigger income than I
knew how to spend, who by my own achievement had put my name on the
lips of men and proved myself a power to be reckoned with--I was that
mad that I had considered the lazar house for a destiny.

Perhaps it will be suggested that success had turned my head.  Very
well.  Granted.  But the turned head remains a fact, an
incontrovertible fact--my sickness, if you will, and a real sickness,
and a fact.  This I knew:  I had reached an intellectual and artistic
climacteric, a life-climacteric of some sort.  And I had diagnosed my
own case and prescribed this voyage.  And here was the atrociously
healthy and profoundly feminine Miss West along--the very last
ingredient I would have considered introducing into my prescription.

A woman!  Woman!  Heaven knows I had been sufficiently tormented by
their persecutions to know them.  I leave it to you:  thirty years of
age, not entirely unhandsome, an intellectual and artistic place in
the world, and an income most dazzling--why shouldn't women pursue
me?  They would have pursued me had I been a hunchback, for the sake
of my artistic place alone, for the sake of my income alone.

Yes; and love!  Did I not know love--lyric, passionate, mad, romantic
love?  That, too, was of old time with me.  I, too, had throbbed and
sung and sobbed and sighed--yes, and known grief, and buried my dead.
But it was so long ago.  How young I was--turned twenty-four!  And
after that I had learned the bitter lesson that even deathless grief
may die; and I had laughed again and done my share of philandering
with the pretty, ferocious moths that fluttered around the light of
my fortune and artistry; and after that, in turn, I had retired
disgusted from the lists of woman, and gone on long lance-breaking
adventures in the realm of mind.  And here I was, on board the
Elsinore, unhorsed by my encounters with the problems of the
ultimate, carried off the field with a broken pate.

As I leaned against the rail, dismissing premonitions of disaster, I
could not help thinking of Miss West below, bustling and humming as
she made her little nest.  And from her my thought drifted on to the
everlasting mystery of woman.  Yes, I, with all the futuristic
contempt for woman, am ever caught up afresh by the mystery of woman.

Oh, no illusions, thank you.  Woman, the love-seeker, obsessing and
possessing, fragile and fierce, soft and venomous, prouder than
Lucifer and as prideless, holds a perpetual, almost morbid,
attraction for the thinker.  What is this flame of her, blazing
through all her contradictions and ignobilities?--this ruthless
passion for life, always for life, more life on the planet?  At times
it seems to me brazen, and awful, and soulless.  At times I am made
petulant by it.  And at other times I am swayed by the sublimity of
it.  No; there is no escape from woman.  Always, as a savage returns
to a dark glen where goblins are and gods may be, so do I return to
the contemplation of woman.

Mr. Pike's voice interrupted my musings.  From for'ard, on the main
deck, I heard him snarl:

"On the main-topsail-yard, there!--if you cut that gasket I'll split
your damned skull!"

Again he called, with a marked change of voice, and the Henry he
called to I concluded was the training-ship boy.

"You, Henry, main-skysail-yard, there!" he cried.  "Don't make those
gaskets up!  Fetch 'em in along the yard and make fast to the tye!"

Thus routed from my reverie, I decided to go below to bed.  As my
hand went out to the knob of the chart-house door again the mate's
voice rang out:

"Come on, you gentlemen's sons in disguise!  Wake up!  Lively now!"



CHAPTER IX



I did not sleep well.  To begin with, I read late.  Not till two in
the morning did I reach up and turn out the kerosene reading-lamp
which Wada had purchased and installed for me.  I was asleep
immediately--perfect sleep being perhaps my greatest gift; but almost
immediately I was awake again.  And thereafter, with dozings and cat-
naps and restless tossings, I struggled to win to sleep, then gave it
up.  For of all things, in my state of jangled nerves, to be
afflicted with hives!  And still again, to be afflicted with hives in
cold winter weather!

At four I lighted up and went to reading, forgetting my irritated
skin in Vernon Lee's delightful screed against William James, and his
"will to believe."  I was on the weather side of the ship, and from
overhead, through the deck, came the steady footfalls of some officer
on watch.  I knew that they were not the steps of Mr. Pike, and
wondered whether they were Mr. Mellaire's or the pilot's.  Somebody
above there was awake.  The work was going on, the vigilant seeing
and overseeing, that, I could plainly conclude, would go on through
every hour of all the hours on the voyage.

At half-past four I heard the steward's alarm go off, instantly
suppressed, and five minutes later I lifted my hand to motion him in
through my open door.  What I desired was a cup of coffee, and Wada
had been with me through too many years for me to doubt that he had
given the steward precise instructions and turned over to him my
coffee and my coffee-making apparatus.

The steward was a jewel.  In ten minutes he served me with a perfect
cup of coffee.  I read on until daylight, and half-past eight found
me, breakfast in bed finished, dressed and shaved, and on deck.  We
were still towing, but all sails were set to a light favouring breeze
from the north.  In the chart-room Captain West and the pilot were
smoking cigars.  At the wheel I noted what I decided at once was an
efficient.  He was not a large man; if anything he was undersized.
But his countenance was broad-browed and intelligently formed.  Tom,
I later learned, was his name--Tom Spink, an Englishman.  He was
blue-eyed, fair-skinned, well-grizzled, and, to the eye, a hale fifty
years of age.  His reply of "Good morning, sir" was cheery, and he
smiled as he uttered the simple phrase.  He did not look sailor-like,
as did Henry, the training-ship boy; and yet I felt at once that he
was a sailor, and an able one.

It was Mr. Pike's watch, and on asking him about Tom he grudgingly
admitted that the man was the "best of the boiling."

Miss West emerged from the chart-house, with a rosy morning face and
her vital, springy limb-movement, and immediately began establishing
her contacts.  On asking how I had slept, and when I said wretchedly,
she demanded an explanation.  I told her of my affliction of hives
and showed her the lumps on my wrists.

"Your blood needs thinning and cooling," she adjudged promptly.
"Wait a minute.  I'll see what can be done for you."

And with that she was away and below and back in a trice, in her hand
a part glass of water into which she stirred a teaspoonful of cream
of tartar.

"Drink it," she ordered, as a matter of course.

I drank it.  And at eleven in the morning she came up to my deck-
chair with a second dose of the stuff.  Also she reproached me
soundly for permitting Wada to feed meat to Possum.  It was from her
that Wada and I learned how mortal a sin it was to give meat to a
young puppy.  Furthermore, she laid down the law and the diet for
Possum, not alone to me and Wada, but to the steward, the carpenter,
and Mr. Mellaire.  Of the latter two, because they ate by themselves
in the big after-room and because Possum played there, she was
especially suspicious; and she was outspoken in voicing her
suspicions to their faces.  The carpenter mumbled embarrassed
asseverations in broken English of past, present, and future
innocence, the while he humbly scraped and shuffled before her on his
huge feet.  Mr. Mellaire's protestations were of the same nature,
save that they were made with the grace and suavity of a
Chesterfield.

In short, Possum's diet raised quite a tempest in the Elsinore
teapot, and by the time it was over Miss West had established this
particular contact with me and given me a feeling that we were the
mutual owners of the puppy.  I noticed, later in the day, that it was
to Miss West that Wada went for instructions as to the quantity of
warm water he must use to dilute Possum's condensed milk.

Lunch won my continued approbation of the cook.  In the afternoon I
made a trip for'ard to the galley to make his acquaintance.  To all
intents he was a Chinese, until he spoke, whereupon, measured by
speech alone, he was an Englishman.  In fact, so cultured was his
speech that I can fairly say it was vested with an Oxford accent.
He, too, was old, fully sixty--he acknowledged fifty-nine.  Three
things about him were markedly conspicuous:  his smile, that embraced
all of his clean-shaven Asiatic face and Asiatic eyes; his even-
rowed, white, and perfect teeth, which I deemed false until Wada
ascertained otherwise for me; and his hands and feet.  It was his
hands, ridiculously small and beautifully modelled, that led my
scrutiny to his feet.  They, too, were ridiculously small and very
neatly, almost dandifiedly, shod.

We had put the pilot off at midday, but the Britannia towed us well
into the afternoon and did not cast us off until the ocean was wide
about us and the land a faint blur on the western horizon.  Here, at
the moment of leaving the tug, we made our "departure"--that is to
say, technically began the voyage, despite the fact that we had
already travelled a full twenty-four hours away from Baltimore.

It was about the time of casting off, when I was leaning on the poop-
rail gazing for'ard, when Miss West joined me.  She had been busy
below all day, and had just come up, as she put it, for a breath of
air.  She surveyed the sky in weather-wise fashion for a full five
minutes, then remarked:

"The barometer's very high--30 degrees 60.  This light north wind
won't last.  It will either go into a calm or work around into a
north-east gale."

"Which would you prefer?" I asked.

"The gale, by all means.  It will help us off the land, and it will
put me through my torment of sea-sickness more quickly.  Oh, yes,"
she added, "I'm a good sailor, but I do suffer dreadfully at the
beginning of every voyage.  You probably won't see me for a couple of
days now.  That's why I've been so busy getting settled first."

"Lord Nelson, I have read, never got over his squeamishness at sea,"
I said.

"And I've seen father sea-sick on occasion," she answered.  "Yes, and
some of the strongest, hardest sailors I have ever known."

Mr. Pike here joined us for a moment, ceasing from his everlasting
pacing up and down to lean with us on the poop-rail.

Many of the crew were in evidence, pulling on ropes on the main deck
below us.  To my inexperienced eye they appeared more unprepossessing
than ever.

"A pretty scraggly crew, Mr. Pike," Miss West remarked.

"The worst ever," he growled, "and I've seen some pretty bad ones.
We're teachin' them the ropes just now--most of 'em."

"They look starved," I commented.

"They are, they almost always are," Miss West answered, and her eyes
roved over them in the same appraising, cattle-buyer's fashion I had
marked in Mr. Pike.  "But they'll fatten up with regular hours, no
whiskey, and solid food--won't they, Mr. Pike?"

"Oh, sure.  They always do.  And you'll see them liven up when we get
'em in hand . . . maybe.  They're a measly lot, though."

I looked aloft at the vast towers of canvas.  Our four masts seemed
to have flowered into all the sails possible, yet the sailors beneath
us, under Mr. Mellaire's direction, were setting triangular sails,
like jibs, between the masts, and there were so many that they
overlapped one another.  The slowness and clumsiness with which the
men handled these small sails led me to ask:

"But what would you do, Mr. Pike, with a green crew like this, if you
were caught right now in a storm with all this canvas spread?"

He shrugged his shoulders, as if I had asked what he would do in an
earthquake with two rows of New York skyscrapers falling on his head
from both sides of a street.

"Do?" Miss West answered for him.  "We'd get the sail off.  Oh, it
can be done, Mr. Pathurst, with any kind of a crew.  If it couldn't,
I should have been drowned long ago."

"Sure," Mr. Pike upheld her.  "So would I."

"The officers can perform miracles with the most worthless sailors,
in a pinch," Miss West went on.

Again Mr. Pike nodded his head and agreed, and I noted his two big
paws, relaxed the moment before and drooping over the rail, quite
unconsciously tensed and folded themselves into fists.  Also, I noted
fresh abrasions on the knuckles.  Miss West laughed heartily, as from
some recollection.

"I remember one time when we sailed from San  Francisco with a most
hopeless crew.  It was in the Lallah Rookh--YOU remember her, Mr.
Pike?"

"Your father's fifth command," he nodded.  "Lost on the West Coast
afterwards--went ashore in that big earthquake and tidal wave.
Parted her anchors, and when she hit under the cliff, the cliff fell
on her."

"That's the ship.  Well, our crew seemed mostly cow-boys, and
bricklayers, and tramps, and more tramps than anything else.  Where
the boarding-house masters got them was beyond imagining.  A number
of them were shanghaied, that was certain.  You should have seen them
when they were first sent aloft."  Again she laughed.  "It was better
than circus clowns.  And scarcely had the tug cast us off, outside
the Heads, when it began to blow up and we began to shorten down.
And then our mates performed miracles.  You remember Mr. Harding--
Silas Harding?"

"Don't I though!" Mr. Pike proclaimed enthusiastically.  "He was some
man, and he must have been an old man even then."

"He was, and a terrible man," she concurred, and added, almost
reverently:  "And a wonderful man."  She turned her face to me.  "He
was our mate.  The men were sea-sick and miserable and green.  But
Mr. Harding got the sail off the Lallah Rookh just the same.  What I
wanted to tell you was this:

"I was on the poop, just like I am now, and Mr. Harding had a lot of
those miserable sick men putting gaskets on the main-lower-topsail.
How far would that be above the deck, Mr. Pike?"

"Let me see . . . the Lallah Rookh."  Mr. Pike paused to consider.
"Oh, say around a hundred feet."

"I saw it myself.  One of the green hands, a tramp--and he must
already have got a taste of Mr. Harding--fell off the lower-topsail-
yard.  I was only a little girl, but it looked like certain death,
for he was falling from the weather side of the yard straight down on
deck.  But he fell into the belly of the mainsail, breaking his fall,
turned a somersault, and landed on his feet on deck and unhurt.  And
he landed right alongside of Mr. Harding, facing him.  I don't know
which was the more astonished, but I think Mr. Harding was, for he
stood there petrified.  He had expected the man to be killed.  Not so
the man.  He took one look at Mr. Harding, then made a wild jump for
the rigging and climbed right back up to that topsail-yard.

Miss West and the mate laughed so heartily that they scarcely heard
me say:

"Astonishing!  Think of the jar to the man's nerves, falling to
apparent death that way."

"He'd been jarred harder by Silas Harding, I guess," was Mr. Pike's
remark, with another burst of laughter, in which Miss West joined.

Which was all very well in a way.  Ships were ships, and judging by
what I had seen of our present crew harsh treatment was necessary.
But that a young woman of the niceness of Miss West should know of
such things and be so saturated in this side of ship life was not
nice.  It was not nice for me, though it interested me, I confess,--
and strengthened my grip on reality.  Yet it meant a hardening of
one's fibres, and I did not like to think of Miss West being so
hardened.

I looked at her and could not help marking again the fineness and
firmness of her skin.  Her hair was dark, as were her eyebrows, which
were almost straight and rather low over her long eyes.  Gray her
eyes were, a warm gray, and very steady and direct in expression,
intelligent and alive.  Perhaps, taking her face as a whole, the most
noteworthy expression of it was a great calm.  She seemed always in
repose, at peace with herself and with the external world.  The most
beautiful feature was her eyes, framed in lashes as dark as her brows
and hair.  The most admirable feature was her nose, quite straight,
very straight, and just the slightest trifle too long.  In this it
was reminiscent of her father's nose.  But the perfect modelling of
the bridge and nostrils conveyed an indescribable advertisement of
race and blood.

Hers was a slender-lipped, sensitive, sensible, and generous mouth--
generous, not so much in size, which was quite average, but generous
rather in tolerance, in power, and in laughter.  All the health and
buoyancy of her was in her mouth, as well as in her eyes.  She rarely
exposed her teeth in smiling, for which purpose she seemed chiefly to
employ her eyes; but when she laughed she showed strong white teeth,
even, not babyish in their smallness, but just the firm, sensible,
normal size one would expect in a woman as healthy and normal as she.

I would never have called her beautiful, and yet she possessed many
of the factors that go to compose feminine beauty.  She had all the
beauty of colouring, a white skin that was healthy white and that was
emphasized by the darkness of her lashes, brows, and hair.  And, in
the same way, the darkness of lashes and brows and the whiteness of
skin set off the warm gray of her eyes.  The forehead was, well,
medium-broad and medium high, and quite smooth.  No lines nor hints
of lines were there, suggestive of nervousness, of blue days of
depression and white nights of insomnia.  Oh, she bore all the marks
of the healthy, human female, who never worried nor was vexed in the
spirit of her, and in whose body every process and function was
frictionless and automatic.

"Miss West has posed to me as quite a weather prophet," I said to the
mate.  "Now what is your forecast of our coming weather?"

"She ought to be," was Mr. Pike's reply as he lifted his glance
across the smooth swell of sea to the sky.  "This ain't the first
time she's been on the North Atlantic in winter."  He debated a
moment, as he studied the sea and sky.  "I should say, considering
the high barometer, we ought to get a mild gale from the north-east
or a calm, with the chances in favour of the calm."

She favoured me with a triumphant smile, and suddenly clutched the
rail as the Elsinore lifted on an unusually large swell and sank into
the trough with a roll from windward that flapped all the sails in
hollow thunder.

"The calm has it," Miss West said, with just a hint of grimness.
"And if this keeps up I'll be in my bunk in about five minutes."

She waved aside all sympathy.  "Oh, don't bother about me, Mr.
Pathurst.  Sea-sickness is only detestable and horrid, like sleet,
and muddy weather, and poison ivy; besides, I'd rather be sea-sick
than have the hives."

Something went wrong with the men below us on the deck, some
stupidity or blunder that was made aware to us by Mr. Mellaire's
raised voice.  Like Mr. Pike, he had a way of snarling at the sailors
that was distinctly unpleasant to the ear.

On the faces of several of the sailors bruises were in evidence.
One, in particular, had an eye so swollen that it was closed.

"Looks as if he had run against a stanchion in the dark," I observed.

Most eloquent, and most unconscious, was the quick flash of Miss
West's eyes to Mr. Pike's big paws, with freshly abraded knuckles,
resting on the rail.  It was a stab of hurt to me.  SHE KNEW.



CHAPTER X



That evening the three men of us had dinner alone, with racks on the
table, while the Elsinore rolled in the calm that had sent Miss West
to her room.

"You won't see her for a couple of days," Captain West told me.  "Her
mother was the same way--a born sailor, but always sick at the outset
of a voyage.''

"It's the shaking down."  Mr. Pike astonished me with the longest
observation I had yet heard him utter at table.  "Everybody has to
shake down when they leave the land.  We've got to forget the good
times on shore, and the good things money'll buy, and start watch and
watch, four hours on deck and four below.  And it comes hard, and all
our tempers are strung until we can make the change.  Did it happen
that you heard Caruso and Blanche Arral this winter in New York, Mr.
Pathurst?"

I nodded, still marvelling over this spate of speech at table.

"Well, think of hearing them, and Homer, and Witherspoon, and Amato,
every night for nights and nights at the Metropolitan; and then to
give it the go-by, and get to sea and shake down to watch and watch."

"You don't like the sea?" I queried.

He sighed.

"I don't know.  But of course the sea is all I know--"

"Except music," I threw in.

"Yes, but the sea and all the long-voyaging has cheated me out of
most of the music I oughta have had coming to me."

"I suppose you've heard Schumann Heink?"

"Wonderful, wonderful!" he murmured fervently, then regarded me with
an eager wistfulness.  "I've half-a-dozen of her records, and I've
got the second dog-watch below.  If Captain West don't mind . . . "
(Captain West nodded that he didn't mind).  "And if you'd want to
hear them?  The machine is a good one."

And then, to my amazement, when the steward had cleared the table,
this hoary old relic of man-killing and man-driving days, battered
waif of the sea that he was, carried in from his room a most splendid
collection of phonograph records.  These, and the machine, he placed
on the table.  The big doors were opened, making the dining-room and
the main cabin into one large room.  It was in the cabin that Captain
West and I lolled in big leather chairs while Mr. Pike ran the
phonograph.  His face was in a blaze of light from the swinging
lamps, and every shade of expression was visible to me.

In vain I waited for him to start some popular song.  His records
were only of the best, and the care he took of them was a revelation.
He handled each one reverently, as a sacred thing, untying and
unwrapping it and brushing it with a fine camel's hair brush while it
revolved and ere he placed the needle on it.  For a time all I could
see was the huge brute hands of a brute-driver, with skin off the
knuckles, that expressed love in their every movement.  Each touch on
the discs was a caress, and while the record played he hovered over
it and dreamed in some heaven of music all his own.

During this time Captain West lay back and smoked a cigar.  His face
was expressionless, and he seemed very far away, untouched by the
music.  I almost doubted that he heard it.  He made no remarks
between whiles, betrayed no sign of approbation or displeasure.  He
seemed preternaturally serene, preternaturally remote.  And while I
watched him I wondered what his duties were.  I had not seen him
perform any.  Mr. Pike had attended to the loading of the ship.  Not
until she was ready for sea had Captain West come on board.  I had
not seen him give an order.  It looked to me that Mr. Pike and Mr.
Mellaire did the work.  All Captain West did was to smoke cigars and
keep blissfully oblivious of the Elsinore's crew.

When Mr. Pike had played the "Hallelujah Chorus" from the Messiah,
and "He Shall Feed His Flock," he mentioned to me, almost
apologetically, that he liked sacred music, and for the reason,
perhaps, that for a short period, a child ashore in San Francisco, he
had been a choir boy.

"And then I hit the dominie over the head with a baseball bat and
sneaked off to sea again," he concluded with a harsh laugh.

And thereat he fell to dreaming while he played Meyerbeer's "King of
Heaven," and Mendelssohn's "O Rest in the Lord."

When one bell struck, at quarter to eight, he carried his music, all
carefully wrapped, back into his room.  I lingered with him while he
rolled a cigarette ere eight bells struck.

"I've got a lot more good things," he said confidentially:  "Coenen's
'Come Unto Me,' and Faure's 'Crucifix'; and there's 'O Salutaris,'
and 'Lead, Kindly Light' by the Trinity Choir; and 'Jesu, Lover of My
Soul' would just melt your heart.  I'll play 'em for you some night."

"Do you believe in them?" I was led to ask by his rapt expression and
by the picture of his brute-driving hands which I could not shake
from my consciousness.

He hesitated perceptibly, then replied:

"I do . . . when I'm listening to them."


My sleep that night was wretched.  Short of sleep from the previous
night, I closed my book and turned my light off early.  But scarcely
had I dropped into slumber when I was aroused by the recrudescence of
my hives.  All day they had not bothered me; yet the instant I put
out the light and slept, the damnable persistent itching set up.
Wada had not yet gone to bed, and from him I got more cream of
tartar.  It was useless, however, and at midnight, when I heard the
watch changing, I partially dressed, slipped into my dressing-gown,
and went up on to the poop.

I saw Mr. Mellaire beginning his four hours' watch, pacing up and
down the port side of the poop; and I slipped away aft, past the man
at the wheel, whom I did not recognize, and took refuge in the lee of
the wheel-house.

Once again I studied the dim loom and tracery of intricate rigging
and lofty, sail-carrying spars, thought of the mad, imbecile crew,
and experienced premonitions of disaster.  How could such a voyage be
possible, with such a crew, on the huge Elsinore, a cargo-carrier
that was only a steel shell half an inch thick burdened with five
thousand tons of coal?  It was appalling to contemplate.  The voyage
had gone wrong from the first.  In the wretched unbalance that loss
of sleep brings to any good sleeper, I could decide only that the
voyage was doomed.  Yet how doomed it was, in truth, neither I nor a
madman could have dreamed.

I thought of the red-blooded Miss West, who had always lived and had
no doubts but what she would always live.  I thought of the killing
and driving and music-loving Mr. Pike.  Many a haler remnant than he
had gone down on a last voyage.  As for Captain West, he did not
count.  He was too neutral a being, too far away, a sort of favoured
passenger who had nothing to do but serenely and passively exist in
some Nirvana of his own creating.

Next I remembered the self-wounded Greek, sewed up by Mr. Pike and
lying gibbering between the steel walls of the 'midship-house.  This
picture almost decided me, for in my fevered imagination he typified
the whole mad, helpless, idiotic crew.  Certainly I could go back to
Baltimore.  Thank God I had the money to humour my whims.  Had not
Mr. Pike told me, in reply to a question, that he estimated the
running expenses of the Elsinore at two hundred dollars a day?  I
could afford to pay two hundred a day, or two thousand, for the
several days that might be necessary to get me back to the land, to a
pilot tug, or any inbound craft to Baltimore.

I was quite wholly of a mind to go down and rout out Captain West to
tell him my decision, when another presented itself:  THEN ARE YOU,
THE THINKER AND PHILOSOPHER, THE WORLD-SICK ONE, AFRAID TO GO DOWN,
TO CEASE IN THE DARKNESS?  Bah!  My own pride in my life-
pridelessness saved Captain West's sleep from interruption.  Of
course I would go on with the adventure, if adventure it might be
called, to go sailing around Cape Horn with a shipload of fools and
lunatics--and worse; for I remembered the three Babylonish and
Semitic ones who had aroused Mr. Pike's ire and who had laughed so
terribly and silently.

Night thoughts!  Sleepless thoughts!  I dismissed them all and
started below, chilled through by the cold.  But at the chart-room
door I encountered Mr. Mellaire.

"A pleasant evening, sir," he greeted me.  "A pity there's not a
little wind to help us off the land."

"What do you think of the crew?" I asked, after a moment or so.

Mr. Mellaire shrugged his shoulders.

"I've seen many queer crews in my time, Mr. Pathurst.  But I never
saw one as queer as this--boys, old men, cripples and--you saw Tony
the Greek go overboard yesterday?  Well, that's only the beginning.
He's a sample.  I've got a big Irishman in my watch who's going bad.
Did you notice a little, dried-up Scotchman?"

"Who looks mean and angry all the time, and who was steering the
evening before last?"

"The very one--Andy Fay.  Well, Andy Fay's just been complaining to
me about O'Sullivan.  Says O'Sullivan's threatened his life.  When
Andy Fay went off watch at eight he found O'Sullivan stropping a
razor.  I'll give you the conversation as Andy gave it to me:

"'Says O'Sullivan to me, "Mr. Fay, I'll have a word wid yeh?"
"Certainly," says I; "what can I do for you?"  "Sell me your sea-
boots, Mr. Fay," says O'Sullivan, polite as can be.  "But what will
you be wantin' of them?" says I.  "'Twill be a great favour," says
O'Sullivan.  "But it's my only pair," says I; "and you have a pair of
your own," says I.  "Mr. Fay, I'll be needin' me own in bad weather,"
says O'Sullivan.  "Besides," says I, "you have no money."  "I'll pay
for them when we pay off in Seattle," says O'Sullivan.  "I'll not do
it," says I; "besides, you're not tellin' me what you'll be doin'
with them."  "But I will tell yeh," says O'Sullivan; "I'm wantin' to
throw 'em over the side."  And with that I turns to walk away, but
O'Sullivan says, very polite and seducin'-like, still a-stroppin' the
razor, "Mr. Fay," says he, "will you kindly step this way an' have
your throat cut?"  And with that I knew my life was in danger, and I
have come to make report to you, sir, that the man is a violent
lunatic.'

"Or soon will be," I remarked.  "I noticed him yesterday, a big man
muttering continually to himself?"

"That's the man," Mr. Mellaire said.

"Do you have many such at sea?" I asked.

"More than my share, I do believe, sir."

He was lighting a cigarette at the moment, and with a quick movement
he pulled off his cap, bent his head forward, and held up the blazing
match that I might see.

I saw a grizzled head, the full crown of which was not entirely bald,
but partially covered with a few sparse long hairs.  And full across
this crown, disappearing in the thicker fringe above the ears, ran
the most prodigious scar I had ever seen.  Because the vision of it
was so fleeting, ere the match blew out, and because of the scar's
very prodigiousness, I may possibly exaggerate, but I could have
sworn that I could lay two fingers deep into the horrid cleft and
that it was fully two fingers broad.  There seemed no bone at all,
just a great fissure, a deep valley covered with skin; and I was
confident that the brain pulsed immediately under that skin.

He pulled his cap on and laughed in an amused, reassuring way.

"A crazy sea cook did that, Mr. Pathurst, with a meat-axe.  We were
thousands of miles from anywhere, in the South Indian Ocean at the
time, running our Easting down, but the cook got the idea into his
addled head that we were lying in Boston Harbour, and that I wouldn't
let him go ashore.  I had my back to him at the time, and I never
knew what struck me."

"But how could you recover from so fearful an injury?" I questioned.
"There must have been a splendid surgeon on board, and you must have
had wonderful vitality."

He shook his head.

"It must have been the vitality . . . and the molasses."

"Molasses!"

"Yes; the captain had old-fashioned prejudices against antiseptics.
He always used molasses for fresh wound-dressings.  I lay in my bunk
many weary weeks--we had a long passage--and by the time we reached
Hong Kong the thing was healed, there was no need for a shore
surgeon, and I was standing my third mate's watch--we carried third
mates in those days."

Not for many a long day was I to realize the dire part that scar in
Mr. Mellaire's head was to play in his destiny and in the destiny of
the Elsinore.  Had I known at the time, Captain West would have
received the most unusual awakening from sleep that he ever
experienced; for he would have been routed out by a very determined,
partially-dressed passenger with a proposition capable of going to
the extent of buying the Elsinore outright with all her cargo, so
that she might be sailed straight back to Baltimore.

As it was, I merely thought it a very marvellous thing that Mr.
Mellaire should have lived so many years with such a hole in his
head.

We talked on, and he gave me many details of that particular
happening, and of other happenings at sea on the part of the lunatics
that seem to infest the sea.

And yet I could not like the man.  In nothing he said, nor in the
manner of saying things, could I find fault.  He seemed generous,
broad-minded, and, for a sailor, very much of a man of the world.  It
was easy for me to overlook his excessive suavity of speech and
super-courtesy of social mannerism.  It was not that.  But all the
time I was distressingly, and, I suppose, intuitively aware, though
in the darkness I couldn't even see his eyes, that there, behind
those eyes, inside that skull, was ambuscaded an alien personality
that spied upon me, measured me, studied me, and that said one thing
while it thought another thing.

When I said good night and went below it was with the feeling that I
had been talking with the one half of some sort of a dual creature.
The other half had not spoken.  Yet I sensed it there, fluttering and
quick, behind the mask of words and flesh.



CHAPTER XI



But I could not sleep.  I took more cream of tartar.  It must be the
heat of the bed-clothes, I decided, that excited my hives.  And yet,
whenever I ceased struggling for sleep, and lighted the lamp and
read, my skin irritation decreased.  But as soon as I turned out the
lamp and closed my eyes I was troubled again.  So hour after hour
passed, through which, between vain attempts to sleep, I managed to
wade through many pages of Rosny's Le Termite--a not very cheerful
proceeding, I must say, concerned as it is with the microscopic and
over-elaborate recital of Noel Servaise's tortured nerves, bodily
pains, and intellectual phantasma.  At last I tossed the novel aside,
damned all analytical Frenchmen, and found some measure of relief in
the more genial and cynical Stendhal.

Over my head I could hear Mr. Mellaire steadily pace up and down.  At
four the watches changed, and I recognized the age-lag in Mr. Pike's
promenade.  Half an hour later, just as the steward's alarm went off,
instantly checked by that light-sleeping Asiatic, the Elsinore began
to heel over on my side.  I could hear Mr. Pike barking and snarling
orders, and at times a trample and shuffle of many feet passed over
my head as the weird crew pulled and hauled.  The Elsinore continued
to heel over until I could see the water against my port, and then
she gathered way and dashed ahead at such a rate that I could hear
the stinging and singing of the foam through the circle of thick
glass beside me.

The steward brought me coffee, and I read till daylight and after,
when Wada served me breakfast and helped me dress.  He, too,
complained of inability to sleep.  He had been bunked with Nancy in
one of the rooms in the 'midship-house.  Wada described the
situation.  The tiny room, made of steel, was air-tight when the
steel door was closed.  And Nancy insisted on keeping the door
closed.  As a result Wada, in the upper bunk, had stifled.  He told
me that the air had got so bad that the flame of the lamp, no matter
how high it was turned, guttered down and all but refused to burn.
Nancy snored beautifully through it all, while he had been unable to
close his eyes.

"He is not clean," quoth Wada.  "He is a pig.  No more will I sleep
in that place."

On the poop I found the Elsinore, with many of her sails furled,
slashing along through a troubled sea under an overcast sky.  Also I
found Mr. Mellaire marching up and down, just as I had left him hours
before, and it took quite a distinct effort for me to realize that he
had had the watch off between four and eight.  Even then, he told me,
he had slept from four until half-past seven.

"That is one thing, Mr. Pathurst, I always sleep like a baby . . .
which means a good conscience, sir, yes, a good conscience."

And while he enunciated the platitude I was uncomfortably aware that
that alien thing inside his skull was watching me, studying me.

In the cabin Captain West smoked a cigar and read the Bible.  Miss
West did not appear, and I was grateful that to my sleeplessness the
curse of sea-sickness had not been added.

Without asking permission of anybody, Wada arranged a sleeping place
for himself in a far corner of the big after-room, screening the
corner with a solidly lashed wall of my trunks and empty book boxes.

It was a dreary enough day, no sun, with occasional splatters of rain
and a persistent crash of seas over the weather rail and swash of
water across the deck.  With my eyes glued to the cabin ports, which
gave for'ard along the main deck, I could see the wretched sailors,
whenever they were given some task of pull and haul, wet through and
through by the boarding seas.  Several times I saw some of them taken
off their feet and rolled about in the creaming foam.  And yet,
erect, unstaggering, with certitude of weight and strength, among
these rolled men, these clutching, cowering ones, moved either Mr.
Pike or Mr. Mellaire.  They were never taken off their feet.  They
never shrank away from a splash of spray or heavier bulk of down-
falling water.  They had fed on different food, were informed with a
different spirit, were of iron in contrast with the poor miserables
they drove to their bidding.

In the afternoon I dozed for half-an-hour in one of the big chairs in
the cabin.  Had it not been for the violent motion of the ship I
could have slept there for hours, for the hives did not trouble.
Captain West, stretched out on the cabin sofa, his feet in carpet
slippers, slept enviably.  By some instinct, I might say, in the deep
of sleep, he kept his place and was not rolled off upon the floor.
Also, he lightly held a half-smoked cigar in one hand.  I watched him
for an hour, and knew him to be asleep, and marvelled that he
maintained his easy posture and did not drop the cigar.

After dinner there was no phonograph.  The second dog-watch was Mr.
Pike's on deck.  Besides, as he explained, the rolling was too
severe.  It would make the needle jump and scratch his beloved
records.

And no sleep!  Another weary night of torment, and another dreary,
overcast day and leaden, troubled sea.  And no Miss West.  Wada, too,
is sea-sick, although heroically he kept his feet and tried to tend
on me with glassy, unseeing eyes.  I sent him to his bunk, and read
through the endless hours until my eyes were tired, and my brain,
between lack of sleep and over-use, was fuzzy.

Captain West is no conversationalist.  The more I see of him the more
I am baffled.  I have not yet found a reason for that first
impression I received of him.  He has all the poise and air of a
remote and superior being, and yet I wonder if it be not poise and
air and nothing else.  Just as I had expected, that first meeting,
ere he spoke a word, to hear fall from his lips words of untold
beneficence and wisdom, and then heard him utter mere social
commonplaces, so I now find myself almost forced to conclude that his
touch of race, and beak of power, and all the tall, aristocratic
slenderness of him have nothing behind them.

And yet, on the other hand, I can find no reason for rejecting that
first impression.  He has not shown any strength, but by the same
token he has not shown any weakness.  Sometimes I wonder what resides
behind those clear blue eyes.  Certainly I have failed to find any
intellectual backing.  I tried him out with William James' Varieties
of Religious Experience.  He glanced at a few pages, then returned it
to me with the frank statement that it did not interest him.  He has
no books of his own.  Evidently he is not a reader.  Then what is he?
I dared to feel him out on politics.  He listened courteously, said
sometimes yes and sometimes no, and, when I ceased from very
discouragement, said nothing.

Aloof as the two officers are from the men, Captain West is still
more aloof from his officers.  I have not seen him address a further
word to Mr. Mellaire than "Good morning" on the poop.  As for Mr.
Pike, who eats three times a day with him, scarcely any more
conversation obtains between them.  And I am surprised by what seems
the very conspicuous awe with which Mr. Pike seems to regard his
commander.

Another thing.  What are Captain West's duties?  So far he has done
nothing, save eat three times a day, smoke many cigars, and each day
stroll a total of one mile around the poop.  The mates do all the
work, and hard work it is, four hours on deck and four below, day and
night with never a variation.  I watch Captain West and am amazed.
He will loll back in the cabin and stare straight before him for
hours at a time, until I am almost frantic to demand of him what are
his thoughts.  Sometimes I doubt that he is thinking at all.  I give
him up.  I cannot fathom him.

Altogether a depressing day of rain-splatter and wash of water across
the deck.  I can see, now, that the problem of sailing a ship with
five thousand tons of coal around the Horn is more serious than I had
thought.  So deep is the Elsinore in the water that she is like a log
awash.  Her tall, six-foot bulwarks of steel cannot keep the seas
from boarding her.  She has not the buoyancy one is accustomed to
ascribe to ships.  On the contrary, she is weighted down until she is
dead, so that, for this one day alone, I am appalled at the thought
of how many thousands of tons of the North Atlantic have boarded her
and poured out through her spouting scuppers and clanging ports.

Yes, a depressing day.  The two mates have alternated on deck and in
their bunks.  Captain West has dozed on the cabin sofa or read the
Bible.  Miss West is still sea-sick.  I have tired myself out with
reading, and the fuzziness of my unsleeping brain makes for
melancholy.  Even Wada is anything but a cheering spectacle, crawling
out of his bunk, as he does at stated intervals, and with sick,
glassy eyes trying to discern what my needs may be.  I almost wish I
could get sea-sick myself.  I had never dreamed that a sea voyage
could be so unenlivening as this one is proving.



CHAPTER XII



Another morning of overcast sky and leaden sea, and of the Elsinore,
under half her canvas, clanging her deck ports, spouting water from
her scuppers, and dashing eastward into the heart of the Atlantic.
And I have failed to sleep half-an-hour all told.  At this rate, in a
very short time I shall have consumed all the cream of tartar on the
ship.  I never have had hives like these before.  I can't understand
it.  So long as I keep my lamp burning and read I am untroubled.  The
instant I put out the lamp and drowse off the irritation starts and
the lumps on my skin begin to form.

Miss West may be sea-sick, but she cannot be comatose, because at
frequent intervals she sends the steward to me with more cream of
tartar.

I have had a revelation to-day.  I have discovered Captain West.  He
is a Samurai.--You remember the Samurai that H. G. Wells describes in
his Modern Utopia--the superior breed of men who know things and are
masters of life and of their fellow-men in a super-benevolent, super-
wise way?  Well, that is what Captain West is.  Let me tell it to
you.

We had a shift of wind to-day.  In the height of a south-west gale
the wind shifted, in the instant, eight points, which is equivalent
to a quarter of the circle.  Imagine it!  Imagine a gale howling from
out of the south-west.  And then imagine the wind, in a heavier and
more violent gale, abruptly smiting you from the north-west.  We had
been sailing through a circular storm, Captain West vouchsafed to me,
before the event, and the wind could be expected to box the compass.

Clad in sea-boots, oilskins and sou'wester, I had for some time been
hanging upon the rail at the break of the poop, staring down
fascinated at the poor devils of sailors, repeatedly up to their
necks in water, or submerged, or dashed like straws about the deck,
while they pulled and hauled, stupidly, blindly, and in evident fear,
under the orders of Mr. Pike.

Mr. Pike was with them, working them and working with them.  He took
every chance they took, yet somehow he escaped being washed off his
feet, though several times I saw him entirely buried from view.
There was more than luck in the matter; for I saw him, twice, at the
head of a line of the men, himself next to the pin.  And twice, in
this position, I saw the North Atlantic curl over the rail and fall
upon them.  And each time he alone remained, holding the turn of the
rope on the pin, while the rest of them were rolled and sprawled
helplessly away.

Almost it seemed to me good fun, as at a circus, watching their
antics.  But I did not apprehend the seriousness of the situation
until, the wind screaming higher than ever and the sea a-smoke and
white with wrath, two men did not get up from the deck.  One was
carried away for'ard with a broken leg--it was Iare Jacobson, a dull-
witted Scandinavian; and the other, Kid Twist, was carried away,
unconscious, with a bleeding scalp.

In the height of the gusts, in my high position, where the seas did
not break, I found myself compelled to cling tightly to the rail to
escape being blown away.  My face was stung to severe pain by the
high-driving spindrift, and I had a feeling that the wind was blowing
the cobwebs out of my sleep-starved brain.

And all the time, slender, aristocratic, graceful in streaming
oilskins, in apparent unconcern, giving no orders, effortlessly
accommodating his body to the violent rolling of the Elsinore,
Captain West strolled up and down.

It was at this stage in the gale that he unbent sufficiently to tell
me that we were going through a circular storm and that the wind was
boxing the compass.  I did notice that he kept his gaze pretty
steadily fixed on the overcast, cloud-driven sky.  At last, when it
seemed the wind could not possibly blow more fiercely, he found in
the sky what he sought.  It was then that I first heard his voice--a
sea-voice, clear as a bell, distinct as silver, and of an ineffable
sweetness and volume, as it might be the trump of Gabriel.  That
voice!--effortless, dominating!  The mighty threat of the storm, made
articulate by the resistance of the Elsinore, shouted in all the
stays, bellowed in the shrouds, thrummed the taut ropes against the
steel masts, and from the myriad tiny ropes far aloft evoked a
devil's chorus of shrill pipings and screechings.  And yet, through
this bedlam of noise, came Captain West's voice, as of a spirit
visitant, distinct, unrelated, mellow as all music and mighty as an
archangel's call to judgment.  And it carried understanding and
command to the man at the wheel, and to Mr. Pike, waist-deep in the
wash of sea below us.  And the man at the wheel obeyed, and Mr. Pike
obeyed, barking and snarling orders to the poor wallowing devils who
wallowed on and obeyed him in turn.  And as the voice was the face.
This face I had never seen before.  It was the face of the spirit
visitant, chaste with wisdom, lighted by a splendour of power and
calm.  Perhaps it was the calm that smote me most of all.  It was as
the calm of one who had crossed chaos to bless poor sea-worn men with
the word that all was well.  It was not the face of the fighter.  To
my thrilled imagination it was the face of one who dwelt beyond all
strivings of the elements and broody dissensions of the blood.

The Samurai had arrived, in thunders and lightnings, riding the wings
of the storm, directing the gigantic, labouring Elsinore in all her
intricate massiveness, commanding the wisps of humans to his will,
which was the will of wisdom.

And then, that wonderful Gabriel voice of his, silent (while his
creatures laboured his will), unconcerned, detached and casual, more
slenderly tall and aristocratic than ever in his streaming oilskins,
Captain West touched my shoulder and pointed astern over our weather
quarter.  I looked, and all that I could see was a vague smoke of sea
and air and a cloud-bank of sky that tore at the ocean's breast.  And
at the same moment the gale from the south-west ceased.  There was no
gale, no moving zephyrs, nothing but a vast quietude of air.

"What is it?" I gasped, out of equilibrium from the abrupt cessation
of wind.

"The shift," he said.  "There she comes."

And it came, from the north-west, a blast of wind, a blow, an
atmospheric impact that bewildered and stunned and again made the
Elsinore harp protest.  It forced me down on the rail.  I was like a
windle-straw.  As I faced this new abruptness of gale it drove the
air back into my lungs, so that I suffocated and turned my head aside
to breathe in the lee of the draught.  The man at the wheel again
listened to the Gabriel voice; and Mr. Pike, on the deck below,
listened and repeated the will of the voice; and Captain West, in
slender and stately balance, leaned into the face of the wind and
slowly paced the deck.

It was magnificent.  Now, and for the first time, I knew the sea, and
the men who overlord the sea.  Captain West had vindicated himself,
exposited himself.  At the height and crisis of storm he had taken
charge of the Elsinore, and Mr. Pike had become, what in truth was
all he was, the foreman of a gang of men, the slave-driver of slaves,
serving the one from beyond--the Samurai.

A minute or so longer Captain West strolled up and down, leaning
easily into the face of this new and abominable gale or resting his
back against it, and then he went below, pausing for a moment, his
hand on the knob of the chart-room door, to cast a last measuring
look at the storm-white sea and wrath-sombre sky he had mastered.

Ten minutes later, below, passing the open cabin door, I glanced in
and saw him.  Sea-boots and storm-trappings were gone; his feet, in
carpet slippers, rested on a hassock; while he lay back in the big
leather chair smoking dreamily, his eyes wide open, absorbed, non-
seeing--or, if they saw, seeing things beyond the reeling cabin walls
and beyond my ken.  I have developed an immense respect for Captain
West, though now I know him less than the little I thought I knew him
before.



CHAPTER XIII



Small wonder that Miss West remains sea-sick on an ocean like this,
which has become a factory where the veering gales manufacture the
selectest and most mountainous brands of cross-seas.  The way the
poor Elsinore pitches, plunges, rolls, and shivers, with all her
lofty spars and masts and all her five thousand tons of dead-weight
cargo, is astonishing.  To me she is the most erratic thing
imaginable; yet Mr. Pike, with whom I now pace the poop on occasion,
tells me that coal is a good cargo, and that the Elsinore is well-
loaded because he saw to it himself.

He will pause abruptly, in the midst of his interminable pacing, in
order to watch her in her maddest antics.  The sight is very pleasant
to him, for his eyes glisten and a faint glow seems to irradiate his
face and impart to it a hint of ecstasy.  The Elsinore has a snug
place in his heart, I am confident.  He calls her behaviour
admirable, and at such times will repeat to me that it was he who saw
to her loading.

It is very curious, the habituation of this man, through a long life
on the sea, to the motion of the sea.  There IS a rhythm to this
chaos of crossing, buffeting waves.  I sense this rhythm, although I
cannot solve it.  But Mr. Pike KNOWS it.  Again and again, as we
paced up and down this afternoon, when to me nothing unusually antic
seemed impending, he would seize my arm as I lost balance, and as the
Elsinore smashed down on her side and heeled over and over with a
colossal roll that seemed never to end, and that always ended with an
abrupt, snap-of-the-whip effect as she began the corresponding roll
to windward.  In vain I strove to learn how Mr. Pike forecasts these
antics, and I am driven to believe that he does not consciously
forecast them at all.  He FEELS them; he knows them.  They, and the
sea, are ingrained in him.

Toward the end of our little promenade I was guilty of impatiently
shaking off a sudden seizure of my arm in his big paw.  If ever, in
an hour, the Elsinore had been less gymnastic than at that moment, I
had not noticed it.  So I shook off the sustaining clutch, and the
next moment the Elsinore had smashed down and buried a couple of
hundred feet of her starboard rail beneath the sea, while I had shot
down the deck and smashed myself breathless against the wall of the
chart-house.  My ribs and one shoulder are sore from it yet.  Now how
did he know?

And he never staggers nor seems in danger of being rolled away.  On
the contrary, such a surplus of surety of balance has he that time
and again he lent his surplus to me.  I begin to have more respect,
not for the sea, but for the men of the sea, and not for the
sweepings of seamen that are as slaves on our decks, but for the real
seamen who are their masters--for Captain West, for Mr. Pike, yes,
and for Mr. Mellaire, dislike him as I do.

As early as three in the afternoon the wind, still a gale, went back
to the south-west.  Mr. Mellaire had the deck, and he went below and
reported the change to Captain West.

"We'll wear ship at four, Mr. Pathurst," the second mate told me when
he came back.  "You'll find it an interesting manoeuvre."

"But why wait till four?" I asked.

"The Captain's orders, sir.  The watches will be changing, and we'll
have the use of both of them, without working a hardship on the watch
below by calling it out now."

And when both watches were on deck Captain West, again in oilskins,
came out of the chart-house.  Mr. Pike, out on the bridge, took
charge of the many men who, on deck and on the poop, were to manage
the mizzen-braces, while Mr. Mellaire went for'ard with his watch to
handle the fore-and main-braces.  It was a pretty manoeuvre, a play
of leverages, by which they cased the force of the wind on the after
part of the Elsinore and used the force of the wind on the for'ard
part.

Captain West gave no orders whatever, and, to all intents, was quite
oblivious of what was being done.  He was again the favoured
passenger, taking a stroll for his health's sake.  And yet I knew
that both his officers were uncomfortably aware of his presence and
were keyed to their finest seamanship.  I know, now, Captain West's
position on board.  He is the brains of the Elsinore.  He is the
master strategist.  There is more in directing a ship on the ocean
than in standing watches and ordering men to pull and haul.  They are
pawns, and the two officers are pieces, with which Captain West plays
the game against sea, and wind, and season, and ocean current.  He is
the knower.  They are his tongue, by which he makes his knowledge
articulate.


A bad night--equally bad for the Elsinore and for me.  She is
receiving a sharp buffeting at the hands of the wintry North
Atlantic.  I fell asleep early, exhausted from lack of sleep, and
awoke in an hour, frantic with my lumped and burning skin.  More
cream of tartar, more reading, more vain attempts to sleep, until
shortly before five, when the steward brought me my coffee, I wrapped
myself in my dressing-gown, and like a being distracted prowled into
the cabin.  I dozed in a leather chair and was thrown out by a
violent roll of the ship.  I tried the sofa, sinking to sleep
immediately, and immediately thereafter finding myself precipitated
to the floor.  I am convinced that when Captain West naps on the sofa
he is only half asleep.  How else can he maintain so precarious a
position?--unless, in him, too, the sea and its motion be ingrained.

I wandered into the dining-room, wedged myself into a screwed chair,
and fell asleep, my head on my arms, my arms on the table.  And at
quarter past seven the steward roused me by shaking my shoulders.  It
was time to set table.

Heavy with the brief heaviness of sleep I had had, I dressed and
stumbled up on to the poop in the hope that the wind would clear my
brain.  Mr. Pike had the watch, and with sure, age-lagging step he
paced the deck.  The man is a marvel--sixty-nine years old, a life of
hardship, and as sturdy as a lion.  Yet of the past night alone his
hours had been:  four to six in the afternoon on deck; eight to
twelve on deck; and four to eight in the morning on deck.  In a few
minutes he would be relieved, but at midday he would again be on
deck.

I leaned on the poop-rail and stared for'ard along the dreary waste
of deck.  Every port and scupper was working to ease the weight of
North Atlantic that perpetually fell on board.  Between the rush of
the cascades, streaks of rust showed everywhere.  Some sort of a
wooden pin-rail had carried away on the starboard-rail at the foot of
the mizzen-shrouds, and an amazing raffle of ropes and tackles washed
about.  Here Nancy and half-a-dozen men worked sporadically, and in
fear of their lives, to clear the tangle.

The long-suffering bleakness was very pronounced on Nancy's face, and
when the walls of water, in impending downfall, reared above the
Elsinore's rail, he was always the first to leap for the life-line
which had been stretched fore and aft across the wide space of deck.

The rest of the men were scarcely less backward in dropping their
work and springing to safety--if safety it might be called, to grip a
rope in both hands and have legs sweep out from under, and be
wrenched full-length upon the boiling surface of an ice-cold flood.
Small wonder they look wretched.  Bad as their condition was when
they came aboard at Baltimore, they look far worse now, what of the
last several days of wet and freezing hardship.

From time to time, completing his for'ard pace along the poop, Mr.
Pike would pause, ere he retraced his steps, and snort sardonic glee
at what happened to the poor devils below.  The man's heart is
callous.  A thing of iron, he has endured; and he has no patience nor
sympathy with these creatures who lack his own excessive iron.

I noticed the stone-deaf man, the twisted oaf whose face I have
described as being that of an ill-treated and feeble-minded faun.
His bright, liquid, pain-filled eyes were more filled with pain than
ever, his face still more lean and drawn with suffering.  And yet his
face showed an excess of nervousness, sensitiveness, and a pathetic
eagerness to please and do.  I could not help observing that, despite
his dreadful sense-handicap and his wrecked, frail body, he did the
most work, was always the last of the group to spring to the life-
line and always the first to loose the life-line and slosh knee-deep
or waist-deep through the churning water to attack the immense and
depressing tangle of rope and tackle.

I remarked to Mr. Pike that the men seemed thinner and weaker than
when they came on board, and he delayed replying for a moment while
he stared down at them with that cattle-buyer's eye of his.

"Sure they are," he said disgustedly.  "A weak breed, that's what
they are--nothing to build on, no stamina.  The least thing drags
them down.  Why, in my day we grew fat on work like that--only we
didn't; we worked so hard there wasn't any chance for fat.  We kept
in fighting trim, that was all.  But as for this scum and slum--say,
you remember, Mr. Pathurst, that man I spoke to the first day, who
said his name was Charles Davis?"

"The one you thought there was something the matter with?"

"Yes, and there was, too.  He's in that 'midship room with the Greek
now.  He'll never do a tap of work the whole Voyage.  He's a hospital
case, if there ever was one.  Talk about shot to pieces!  He's got
holes in him I could shove my fist through.  I don't know whether
they're perforating ulcers, or cancers, or cannon-shot wounds, or
what not.  And he had the nerve to tell me they showed up after he
came on board!"

"And he had them all the time?" I asked.

"All the time!  Take my word, Mr. Pathurst, they're years old.  But
he's a wonder.  I watched him those first days, sent him aloft, had
him down in the fore-hold trimming a few tons of coal, did everything
to him, and he never showed a wince.  Being up to the neck in the
salt water finally fetched him, and now he's reported off duty--for
the voyage.  And he'll draw his wages for the whole time, have all
night in, and never do a tap.  Oh, he's a hot one to have passed over
on us, and the Elsinore's another man short."

"Another!" I exclaimed.  "Is the Greek going to die?"

"No fear.  I'll have him steering in a few days.  I refer to the
misfits.  If we rolled a dozen of them together they wouldn't make
one real man.  I'm not saying it to alarm you, for there's nothing
alarming about it; but we're going to have proper hell this voyage."
He broke off to stare reflectively at his broken knuckles, as if
estimating how much drive was left in them, then sighed and
concluded, "Well, I can see I've got my work cut out for me."

Sympathizing with Mr. Pike is futile; the only effect is to make his
mood blacker.  I tried it, and he retaliated with:

"You oughta see the bloke with curvature of the spine in Mr.
Mellaire's watch.  He's a proper hobo, too, and a land lubber, and
don't weigh more'n a hundred pounds, and must be fifty years old, and
he's got curvature of the spine, and he's able seaman, if you please,
on the Elsinore.  And worse than all that, he puts it over on you;
he's nasty, he's mean, he's a viper, a wasp.  He ain't afraid of
anything because he knows you dassent hit him for fear of croaking
him.  Oh, he's a pearl of purest ray serene, if anybody should slide
down a backstay and ask you.  If you fail to identify him any other
way, his name is Mulligan Jacobs."


After breakfast, again on deck, in Mr. Mellaire's watch, I discovered
another efficient.  He was at the wheel, a small, well-knit, muscular
man of say forty-five, with black hair graying on the temples, a big
eagle-face, swarthy, with keen, intelligent black eyes.

Mr. Mellaire vindicated my judgment by telling me the man was the
best sailor in his watch, a proper seaman.  When he referred to the
man as the Maltese Cockney, and I asked why, he replied:

"First, because he is Maltese, Mr. Pathurst; and next, because he
talks Cockney like a native.  And depend upon it, he heard Bow Bells
before he lisped his first word."

"And has O'Sullivan bought Andy Fay's sea-boots yet?" I queried.

It was at this moment that Miss West emerged upon the poop.  She was
as rosy and vital as ever, and certainly, if she had been sea-sick,
she flew no signals of it.  As she came toward me, greeting me, I
could not help remarking again the lithe and springy limb-movement
with which she walked, and her fine, firm skin.  Her neck, free in a
sailor collar, with white sweater open at the throat, seemed almost
redoubtably strong to my sleepless, jaundiced eyes.  Her hair, under
a white knitted cap, was smooth and well-groomed.  In fact, the
totality of impression she conveyed was of a well-groomedness one
would not expect of a sea-captain's daughter, much less of a woman
who had been sea-sick.  Life!--that is the key of her, the essential
note of her--life and health.  I'll wager she has never entertained a
morbid thought in that practical, balanced, sensible head of hers.

"And how have you been?" she asked, then rattled on with sheer
exuberance ere I could answer.  "Had a lovely night's sleep.  I was
really over my sickness yesterday, but I just devoted myself to
resting up.  I slept ten solid hours--what do you think of that?"

"I wish I could say the same," I replied with appropriate dejection,
as I swung in beside her, for she had evinced her intention of
promenading.

"Oh, then you've been sick?"

"On the contrary," I answered dryly.  "And I wish I had been.  I
haven't had five hours' sleep all told since I came on board.  These
pestiferous hives.

I held up a lumpy wrist to show.  She took one glance at it, halted
abruptly, and, neatly balancing herself to the roll, took my wrist in
both her hands and gave it close scrutiny.

"Mercy!" she cried; and then began to laugh.

I was of two minds.  Her laughter was delightful to the ear, there
was such a mellowness, and healthiness, and frankness about it.  On
the other hand, that it should be directed at my misfortune was
exasperating.  I suppose my perplexity showed in my face, for when
she had eased her laughter and looked at me with a sobering
countenance, she immediately went off into more peals.

"You poor child," she gurgled at last.  "And when I think of all the
cream of tartar I made you consume!"

It was rather presumptuous of her to poor-child me, and I resolved to
take advantage of the data I already possessed in order to ascertain
just how many years she was my junior.  She had told me she was
twelve years old the time the Dixie collided with the river steamer
in San Francisco Bay.  Very well, all I had to do was to ascertain
the date of that disaster and I had her.  But in the meantime she
laughed at me and my hives.

"I suppose it is--er--humorous, in some sort of way," I said a bit
stiffly, only to find that there was no use in being stiff with Miss
West, for it only set her off into more laughter.

"What you needed," she announced, with fresh gurglings, "was an
exterior treatment."

"Don't tell me I've got the chicken-pox or the measles," I protested.

"No."  She shook her head emphatically while she enjoyed another
paroxysm.  "What you are suffering from is a severe attack . . . "

She paused deliberately, and looked me straight the eyes.

"Of bedbugs," she concluded.  And then, all seriousness and
practicality, she went on:  "But we'll have that righted in a jiffy.
I'll turn the Elsinore's after-quarters upside down, though I know
there are none in father's room or mine.  And though this is my first
voyage with Mr. Pike I know he's too hard-bitten" (here I laughed at
her involuntary pun) "an old sailor not to know that his room is
clean.  Yours" (I was perturbed for fear she was going to say that I
had brought them on board) "have most probably drifted in from
for'ard.  They always have them for'ard.

"And now, Mr. Pathurst, I am going down to attend to your case.
You'd better get your Wada to make up a camping kit for you.  The
next couple of nights you'll spend in the cabin or chart-room.  And
be sure Wada removes all silver and metallic tarnishable stuff from
your rooms.  There's going to be all sorts of fumigating, and tearing
out of woodwork, and rebuilding.  Trust me.  I know the vermin.



CHAPTER XIV



Such a cleaning up and turning over!  For two nights, one in the
chart-room and one on the cabin sofa, I have soaked myself in sleep,
and I am now almost stupid with excess of sleep.  The land seems very
far away.  By some strange quirk, I have an impression that weeks, or
months, have passed since I left Baltimore on that bitter March
morning.  And yet it was March 28, and this is only the first week in
April.

I was entirely right in my first estimation of Miss West.  She is the
most capable, practically masterful woman I have ever encountered.
What passed between her and Mr. Pike I do not know; but whatever it
was, she was convinced that he was not the erring one.  In some
strange way, my two rooms are the only ones which have been invaded
by this plague of vermin.  Under Miss West's instructions bunks,
drawers, shelves, and all superficial woodwork have been ripped out.
She worked the carpenter from daylight till dark, and then, after a
night of fumigation, two of the sailors, with turpentine and white
lead, put the finishing touches on the cleansing operations.  The
carpenter is now busy rebuilding my rooms.  Then will come the
painting, and in two or three more days I expect to be settled back
in my quarters.

Of the men who did the turpentining and white-leading there have been
four.  Two of them were quickly rejected by Miss West as not being up
to the work.  The first one, Steve Roberts, which he told me was his
name, is an interesting fellow.  I talked with him quite a bit ere
Miss West sent him packing and told Mr. Pike that she wanted a real
sailor.

This is the first time Steve Roberts has ever seen the sea.  How he
happened to drift from the western cattle-ranges to New York he did
not explain, any more than did he explain how he came to ship on the
Elsinore.  But here he is, not a sailor on horseback, but a cowboy on
the sea.  He is a small man, but most powerfully built.  His
shoulders are very broad, and his muscles bulge under his shirt; and
yet he is slender-waisted, lean-limbed, and hollow-cheeked.  This
last, however, is not due to sickness or ill-health.  Tyro as he is
on the sea, Steve Roberts is keen and intelligent . . . yes, and
crooked.  He has a way of looking straight at one with utmost
frankness while he talks, and yet it is at such moments I get most
strongly the impression of crookedness.  But he is a man, if trouble
should arise, to be reckoned with.  In ways he suggests a kinship
with the three men Mr. Pike took so instant a prejudice against--Kid
Twist, Nosey Murphy, and Bert Rhine.  And I have already noticed, in
the dog-watches, that it is with this trio that Steve Roberts chums.

The second sailor Miss West rejected, after silently watching him
work for five minutes, was Mulligan Jacobs, the wisp of a man with
curvature of the spine.  But before she sent him packing other things
occurred in which I was concerned.  I was in the room when Mulligan
Jacobs first came in to go to work, and I could not help observing
the startled, avid glance he threw at my big shelves of books.  He
advanced on them in the way a robber might advance on a secret hoard
of gold, and as a miser would fondle gold so Mulligan Jacobs fondled
these book-titles with his eyes.

And such eyes!  All time bitterness and venom Mr. Pike had told me
the man possessed was there in his eyes.  They were small, pale-blue,
and gimlet-pointed with fire.  His eyelids were inflamed, and but
served to ensanguine the bitter and cold-blazing intensity of the
pupils.  The man was constitutionally a hater, and I was not long in
learning that he hated all things except books.

"Would you care to read some of them?" I said hospitably.

All the caress in his eyes for the books vanished as he turned his
head to look at me, and ere he spoke I knew that I, too, was hated.

"It's hell, ain't it?--you with a strong body and servants to carry
for you a weight of books like this, and me with a curved spine that
puts the pot-hooks of hell-fire into my brain?"

How can I possibly convey the terrible venomousness with which he
uttered these words?  I know that Mr. Pike, dragging his feet down
the hall past my open door, gave me a very gratifying sense of
safety.  Being alone in the room with this man seemed much the same
as if I were locked in a cage with a tiger-cat.  The devilishness,
the wickedness, and, above all, the pitch of glaring hatred with
which the man eyed me and addressed me, were most unpleasant.  I
swear I knew fear--not calculated caution, not timid apprehension,
but blind, panic, unreasoned terror.  The malignancy of the creature
was blood curdling; nor did it require words to convey it:  it poured
from him, out of his red-rimmed, blazing eyes, out of his withered,
twisted, tortured face, out of his broken-nailed, crooked talons of
hands.  And yet, in that very moment of instinctive startle and
repulsion, the thought was in my mind that with one hand I could take
the throat of the weazened wisp of a crippled thing and throttle the
malformed life out of it.

But there was little encouragement in such thought--no more than a
man might feel in a cave of rattlesnakes or a pit of centipedes, for,
crush them with his very bulk, nevertheless they would first sink
their poison into him.  And so with this Mulligan Jacobs.  My fear of
him was the fear of being infected with his venom.  I could not help
it; for I caught a quick vision of the black and broken teeth I had
seen in his mouth sinking into my flesh, polluting me, eating me with
their acid, destroying me.

One thing was very clear.  In the creature was no fear.  Absolutely,
he did not know fear.  He was as devoid of it as the fetid slime one
treads underfoot in nightmares.  Lord, Lord! that is what the thing
was, a nightmare.

"You suffer pain often?" I asked, attempting to get myself in hand by
the calculated use of sympathy.

"The hooks are in me, in the brain, white-hot hooks that burn an'
burn," was his reply.  "But by what damnable right do you have all
these books, and time to read 'em, an' all night in to read 'em, an'
soak in them, when me brain's on fire, and I'm watch and watch, an'
me broken spine won't let me carry half a hundredweight of books
about with me?"

Another madman, was my conclusion; and yet I was quickly compelled to
modify it, for, thinking to play with a rattle-brain, I asked him
what were the books up to half a hundredweight he carried, and what
were the writers he preferred.  His library, he told me, among other
things included, first and f ore-most, a complete Byron.  Next was a
complete Shakespeare; also a complete Browning in one volume.  A full
hall-dozen he had in the forecastle of Renan, a stray volume of
Lecky, Winwood Reade's Martyrdom of Man, several of Carlyle, and
eight or ten of Zola.  Zola he swore by, though Anatole France was a
prime favourite.

He might be mad, was my revised judgment, but he was most differently
mad from any madman I had ever encountered.  I talked on with him
about books and bookmen.  He was most universal and particular.  He
liked O. Henry.  George Moore was a cad and a four--flusher.  Edgar
Saltus' Anatomy of Negation was profounder than Kant.  Maeterlinck
was a mystic frump.  Emerson was a charlatan.  Ibsen's Ghosts was the
stuff, though Ibsen was a bourgeois lickspittler.  Heine was the real
goods.  He preferred Flaubert to de Maupassant, and Turgenieff to
Tolstoy; but Gorky was the best of the Russian boiling.  John
Masefield knew what he was writing about, and Joseph Conrad was
living too fat to turn out the stuff he first turned out.

And so it went, the most amazing running commentary on literature I
had ever heard.  I was hugely interested, and I quizzed him on
sociology.  Yes, he was a Red, and knew his Kropotkin, but he was no
anarchist.  On the other hand, political action was a blind-alley
leading to reformism and quietism.  Political socialism had gone to
pot, while industrial unionism was the logical culmination of
Marxism.  He was a direct actionist.  The mass strike was the thing.
Sabotage, not merely as a withdrawal of efficiency, but as a keen
destruction-of-profits policy, was the weapon.  Of course he believed
in the propaganda of the deed, but a man was a fool to talk about it.
His job was to do it and keep his mouth shut, and the way to do it
was to shoot the evidence.  Of course, HE talked; but what of it?
Didn't he have curvature of the spine?  He didn't care when he got
his, and woe to the man who tried to give it to him.

And while he talked he hated me.  He seemed to hate the things he
talked about and espoused.  I judged him to be of Irish descent, and
it was patent that he was self-educated.  When I asked him how it was
he had come to sea, he replied that the hooks in his brain were as
hot one place as another.  He unbent enough to tell me that he had
been an athlete, when he was a young man, a professional foot-racer
in Eastern Canada.  And then his disease had come upon him, and for a
quarter of a century he had been a common tramp and vagabond, and he
bragged of a personal acquaintance with more city prisons and county
jails than any man that ever existed.

It was at this stage in our talk that Mr. Pike thrust his head into
the doorway.  He did not address me, but he favoured me with a most
sour look of disapprobation.  Mr. Pike's countenance is almost
petrified.  Any expression seems to crack it--with the exception of
sourness.  But when Mr. Pike wants to look sour he has no difficulty
at all.  His hard-skinned, hard-muscled face just flows to sourness.
Evidently he condemned my consuming Mulligan Jacobs's time.  To
Mulligan Jacobs he said in his customary snarl:

"Go on an' get to your work.  Chew the rag in your watch below."

And then I got a sample of Mulligan Jacobs.  The venom of hatred I
had already seen in his face was as nothing compared with what now
was manifested.  I had a feeling that, like stroking a cat in cold
weather, did I touch his face it would crackle electric sparks.

"Aw, go to hell, you old stiff," said Mulligan Jacobs.

If ever I had seen murder in a man s eyes, I saw it then in the
mate's.  He lunged into the room, his arm tensed to strike, the hand
not open but clenched.  One stroke of that bear's paw and Mulligan
Jacobs and all the poisonous flame of him would have been quenched in
the everlasting darkness.  But he was unafraid.  Like a cornered rat,
like a rattlesnake on the trail, unflinching, sneering, snarling, he
faced the irate giant.  More than that.  He even thrust his face
forward on its twisted neck to meet the blow.

It was too much for Mr. Pike; it was too impossible to strike that
frail, crippled, repulsive thing.

"It's me that can call you the stiff," said Mulligan Jacobs.  "I
ain't no Larry.  G'wan an' hit me.  Why don't you hit me?"

And Mr. Pike was too appalled to strike the creature.  He, whose
whole career on the sea had been that of a bucko driver in a
shambles, could not strike this fractured splinter of a man.  I swear
that Mr. Pike actually struggled with himself to strike.  I saw it.
But he could not.

"Go on to your work," he ordered.  "The voyage is young yet,
Mulligan.  I'll have you eatin' outa my hand before it's over."

And Mulligan Jacobs's face thrust another inch closer on its twisted
neck, while all his concentrated rage seemed on the verge of bursting
into incandescence.  So immense and tremendous was the bitterness
that consumed him that he could find no words to clothe it.  All he
could do was to hawk and guttural deep in his throat until I should
not have been surprised had he spat poison in the mate's face.

And Mr. Pike turned on his heel and left the room, beaten, absolutely
beaten.


I can't get it out of my mind.  The picture of the mate and the
cripple facing each other keeps leaping up under my eyelids.  This is
different from the books and from what I know of existence.  It is
revelation.  Life is a profoundly amazing thing.  What is this bitter
flame that informs Mulligan Jacobs?  How dare he--with no hope of any
profit, not a hero, not a leader of a forlorn hope nor a martyr to
God, but a mere filthy, malignant rat--how dare he, I ask myself, be
so defiant, so death-inviting?  The spectacle of him makes me doubt
all the schools of the metaphysicians and the realists.  No
philosophy has a leg to stand on that does not account for Mulligan
Jacobs.  And all the midnight oil of philosophy I have burned does
not enable me to account for Mulligan Jacobs . . . unless he be
insane.  And then I don't know.

Was there ever such a freight of human souls on the sea as these
humans with whom I am herded on the Elsinore?


And now, working in my rooms, white-leading and turpentining, is
another one of them.  I have learned his name.  It is Arthur Deacon.
He is the pallid, furtive-eyed man whom I observed the first day when
the men were routed out of the forecastle to man the windlass--the
man I so instantly adjudged a drug-fiend.  He certainly looks it.

I asked Mr. Pike his estimate of the man.

"White slaver," was his answer.  "Had to skin outa New York to save
his skin.  He'll be consorting with those other three larrakins I
gave a piece of my mind to."

"And what do you make of them?" I asked.

"A month's wages to a pound of tobacco that a district attorney, or a
committee of some sort investigating the New York police is lookin'
for 'em right now.  I'd like to have the cash somebody's put up in
New York to send them on this get-away.  Oh, I know the breed."

"Gangsters?" I queried.

"That's what.  But I'll trim their dirty hides.  I'll trim 'em.  Mr.
Pathurst, this voyage ain't started yet, and this old stiff's a long
way from his last legs.  I'll give them a run for their money.  Why,
I've buried better men than the best of them aboard this craft.  And
I'll bury some of them that think me an old stiff."

He paused and looked at me solemnly for a full half minute.

"Mr. Pathurst, I've heard you're a writing man.  And when they told
me at the agents' you were going along passenger, I made a point of
going to see your play.  Now I'm not saying anything about that play,
one way or the other.  But I just want to tell you, that as a writing
man you'll get stuff in plenty to write about on this voyage.  Hell's
going to pop, believe me, and right here before you is the stiff
that'll do a lot of the poppin'.  Some several and plenty's going to
learn who's an old stiff."



CHAPTER XV



How I have been sleeping!  This relief of renewed normality is
delicious--thanks to Miss West.  Now why did not Captain West, or Mr.
Pike, both experienced men, diagnose my trouble for me?  And then
there was Wada.  But no; it required Miss West.  Again I contemplate
the problem of woman.  It is just such an incident among a million
others that keeps the thinker's gaze fixed on woman.  They truly are
the mothers and the conservers of the race.

Rail as I will at Miss West's red-blood complacency of life, yet I
must bow my head to her life-giving to me.  Practical, sensible,
hard-headed, a comfort-maker and a nest-builder, possessing all the
distressing attributes of the blind-instinctive race-mother,
nevertheless I must confess I am most grateful that she is along.
Had she not been on the Elsinore, by this time I should have been so
overwrought from lack of sleep that I would be biting my veins and
howling--as mad a hatter as any of our cargo of mad hatters.  And so
we come to it--the everlasting mystery of woman.  One may not be able
to get along with her; yet is it patent, as of old time, that one
cannot get along without her.  But, regarding Miss West, I do
entertain one fervent hope, namely, that she is not a suffragette.
That would be too much.

Captain West may be a Samurai, but he is also human.  He was really a
bit fluttery this morning, in his reserved, controlled way, when he
regretted the plague of vermin I had encountered in my rooms.  It
seems he has a keen sense of hospitality, and that he is my host on
the Elsinore, and that, although he is oblivious of the existence of
the crew, he is not oblivious of my comfort.  By his few expressions
of regret it appears that he cannot forgive himself for his careless
acceptance of the erroneous diagnosis of my affliction.  Yes; Captain
West is a real human man.  Is he not the father of the slender-faced,
strapping-bodied Miss West?

"Thank goodness that's settled," was Miss West's exclamation this
morning, when we met on the poop and after I had told her how
gloriously I had slept.

And then, that nightmare episode dismissed because, forsooth, for all
practical purposes--it was settled, she next said:

"Come on and see the chickens."

And I accompanied her along the spidery bridge to the top of the
'midship-house, to look at the one rooster and the four dozen fat
hens in the ship's chicken-coop.

As I accompanied her, my eyes dwelling pleasurably on that vital gait
of hers as she preceded me, I could not help reflecting that, coming
down on the tug from Baltimore, she had promised not to bother me nor
require to be entertained.

COME AND SEE THE CHICKENS!--Oh, the sheer female possessiveness of
that simple invitation!  For effrontery of possessiveness is there
anything that can exceed the nest-making, planet-populating, female,
human woman?--COME AND SEE THE CHICKENS!  Oh, well, the sailors
for'ard may be hard-bitten, but I can promise Miss West that here,
aft, is one male passenger, unmarried and never married, who is an
equally hard-bitten adventurer on the sea of matrimony.  When I go
over the census I remember at least several women, superior to Miss
West, who trilled their song of sex and failed to shipwreck me.

As I read over what I have written I notice how the terminology of
the sea has stolen into my mental processes.  Involuntarily I think
in terms of the sea.  Another thing I notice is my excessive use of
superlatives.  But then, everything on board the Elsinore is
superlative.  I find myself continually combing my vocabulary in
quest of just and adequate words.  Yet am I aware of failure.  For
example, all the words of all the dictionaries would fail to
approximate the exceeding terribleness of Mulligan Jacobs.

But to return to the chickens.  Despite every precaution, it was
evident that they had had a hard time during the past days of storm.
It was equally evident that Miss West, even during her sea-sickness,
had not neglected them.  Under her directions the steward had
actually installed a small oil-stove in the big coop, and she now
beckoned him up to the top of the house as he was passing for'ard to
the galley.  It was for the purpose of instructing him further in the
matter of feeding them.

Where were the grits?  They needed grits.  He didn't know.  The sack
had been lost among the miscellaneous stores, but Mr. Pike had
promised a couple of sailors that afternoon to overhaul the
lazarette.

"Plenty of ashes," she told the steward.  "Remember.  And if a sailor
doesn't clean the coop each day, you report to me.  And give them
only clean food--no spoiled scraps, mind.  How many eggs yesterday?"

The steward's eyes glistened with enthusiasm as he said he had got
nine the day before and expected fully a dozen to-day.

"The poor things," said Miss West--to me.  "You've no idea how bad
weather reduces their laying."  She turned back upon the steward.
"Mind now, you watch and find out which hens don't lay, and kill them
first.  And you ask me each time before you kill one."

I found myself neglected, out there on top the draughty house, while
Miss West talked chickens with the Chinese ex-smuggler.  But it gave
me opportunity to observe her.  It is the length of her eyes that
accentuates their steadiness of gaze--helped, of course, by the dark
brows and lashes.  I noted again the warm gray of her eyes.  And I
began to identify her, to locate her.  She is a physical type of the
best of the womanhood of old New England.  Nothing spare nor meagre,
nor bred out, but generously strong, and yet not quite what one would
call robust.  When I said she was strapping-bodied I erred.  I must
fall back on my other word, which will have to be the last:  Miss
West is vital-bodied.  That is the key-word.

When we had regained the poop, and Miss West had gone below, I
ventured my customary pleasantry with Mr. Mellaire of:

"And has O'Sullivan bought Andy Fay's sea-boots yet?"

"Not yet, Mr. Pathurst," was the reply, "though he nearly got them
early this morning.  Come on along, sir, and I'll show you."

Vouchsafing no further information, the second mate led the way along
the bridge, across the 'midship-house and the for'ard-house.  From
the edge of the latter, looking down on Number One hatch, I saw two
Japanese, with sail-needles and twine, sewing up a canvas-swathed
bundle that unmistakably contained a human body.

"O'Sullivan used a razor," said Mr. Mellaire.

"And that is Andy Fay?" I cried.

"No, sir, not Andy.  That's a Dutchman.  Christian Jespersen was his
name on the articles.  He got in O'Sullivan's way when O'Sullivan
went after the boots.  That's what saved Andy.  Andy was more active.
Jespersen couldn't get out of his own way, much less out of
O'Sullivan's.  There's Andy sitting over there."

I followed Mr. Mellaire's gaze, and saw the burnt-out, aged little
Scotchman squatted on a spare spar and sucking a pipe.  One arm was
in a sling and his head was bandaged.  Beside him squatted Mulligan
Jacobs.  They were a pair.  Both were blue-eyed, and both were
malevolent-eyed.  And they were equally emaciated.  It was easy to
see that they had discovered early in the voyage their kinship of
bitterness.  Andy Fay, I knew, was sixty-three years old, although he
looked a hundred; and Mulligan Jacobs, who was only about fifty, made
up for the difference by the furnace-heat of hatred that burned in
his face and eyes.  I wondered if he sat beside the injured bitter
one in some sense of sympathy, or if he were there in order to gloat.

Around the corner of the house strolled Shorty, flinging up to me his
inevitable clown-grin.  One hand was swathed in bandages.

"Must have kept Mr. Pike busy," was my comment to Mr. Mellaire.

"He was sewing up cripples about all his watch from four till eight."

"What?" I asked.  "Are there any more?"

"One more, sir, a sheeny.  I didn't know his name before, but Mr.
Pike got it--Isaac B. Chantz.  I never saw in all my life at sea as
many sheenies as are on board the Elsinore right now.  Sheenies don't
take to the sea as a rule.  We've certainly got more than our share
of them.  Chantz isn't badly hurt, but you ought to hear him
whimper."

"Where's O'Sullivan?" I inquired.

"In the 'midship-house with Davis, and without a mark.  Mr. Pike got
into the rumpus and put him to sleep with one on the jaw.  And now
he's lashed down and talking in a trance.  He's thrown the fear of
God into Davis.  Davis is sitting up in his bunk with a marlin-spike,
threatening to brain O'Sullivan if he starts to break loose, and
complaining that it's no way to run a hospital.  He'd have padded
cells, straitjackets, night and day nurses, and violent wards, I
suppose--and a convalescents' home in a Queen Anne cottage on the
poop.

"Oh dear, oh dear," Mr. Mellaire sighed.  "This is the funniest
voyage and the funniest crew I've ever tackled.  It's not going to
come to a good end.  Anybody can see that with half an eye.  It'll be
dead of winter off the Horn, and a fo'c's'le full of lunatics and
cripples to do the work.--Just take a look at that one.  Crazy as a
bedbug.  He's likely to go overboard any time.''

I followed his glance and saw Tony the Greek, the one who had sprung
overboard the first day.  He had just come around the corner of the
house, and, beyond one arm in a sling, seemed in good condition.  He
walked easily and with strength, a testimonial to the virtues of Mr.
Pike's rough surgery.

My eyes kept returning to the canvas-covered body of Christian
Jespersen, and to the Japanese who sewed with sail-twine his sailor's
shroud.  One of them had his right hand in a huge wrapping of cotton
and bandage.

"Did he get hurt, too?" I asked.

"No, sir.  He's the sail-maker.  They're both sail-makers.  He's a
good one, too.  Yatsuda is his name.  But he's just had blood-
poisoning and lain in hospital in New York for eighteen months.  He
flatly refused to let them amputate.  He's all right now, but the
hand is dead, all except the thumb and fore-finger, and he's teaching
himself to sew with his left hand.  He's as clever a sail-maker as
you'll find at sea."

"A lunatic and a razor make a cruel combination," I remarked.

"It's put five men out of commission," Mr. Mellaire sighed.  "There's
O'Sullivan himself, and Christian Jespersen gone, and Andy Fay, and
Shorty, and the sheeny.  And the voyage not started yet.  And there's
Lars with the broken leg, and Davis laid off for keeps--why, sir,
we'll soon be that weak it'll take both watches to set a staysail."

Nevertheless, while I talked in a matter-of-fact way with Mr.
Mellaire, I was shocked--no; not because death was aboard with us.  I
have stood by my philosophic guns too long to be shocked by death, or
by murder.  What affected me was the utter, stupid bestiality of the
affair.  Even murder--murder for cause--I can understand.  It is
comprehensible that men should kill one another in the passion of
love, of hatred, of patriotism, of religion.  But this was different.
Here was killing without cause, an orgy of blind-brutishness, a thing
monstrously irrational.

Later on, strolling with Possum on the main deck, as I passed the
open door of the hospital I heard the muttering chant of O'Sullivan,
and peeped in.  There he lay, lashed fast on his back in the lower
bunk, rolling his eyes and raving.  In the top bunk, directly above,
lay Charles Davis, calmly smoking a pipe.  I looked for the marlin-
spike.  There it was, ready to hand, on the bedding beside him.

"It's hell, ain't it, sir?" was his greeting.  "And how am I goin' to
get any sleep with that baboon chattering away there.  He never lets
up--keeps his chin-music goin' right along when he's asleep, only
worse.  The way he grits his teeth is something awful.  Now I leave
it to you, sir, is it right to put a crazy like that in with a sick
man?  And I am a sick man.''

While he talked the massive form of Mr. Pike loomed beside me and
halted just out of sight of the man in the bunk.  And the man talked
on.

"By rights, I oughta have that lower bunk.  It hurts me to crawl up
here.  It's inhumanity, that's what it is, and sailors at sea are
better protected by the law than they used to be.  And I'll have you
for a witness to this before the court when we get to Seattle."

Mr. Pike stepped into the doorway.

"Shut up, you damned sea-lawyer, you," he snarled.  "Haven't you
played a dirty trick enough comin' on board this ship in your
condition?  And if I have anything more out of you . . . "

Mr. Pike was so angry that he could not complete the threat.  After
spluttering for a moment he made a fresh attempt.

"You . . . you . . . well, you annoy me, that's what you do."

"I know the law, sir," Davis answered promptly.  "I worked full able
seaman on this here ship.  All hands can testify to that.  I was
aloft from the start.  Yes, sir, and up to my neck in salt water day
and night.  And you had me below trimmin' coal.  I did full duty and
more, until this sickness got me--"

"You were petrified and rotten before you ever saw this ship," Mr.
Pike broke in.

"The court'll decide that, sir," replied the imperturbable Davis.

"And if you go to shoutin' off your sea-lawyer mouth," Mr. Pike
continued, "I'll jerk you out of that and show you what real work
is."

"An' lay the owners open for lovely damages when we get in," Davis
sneered.

"Not if I bury you before we get in," was the mate's quick, grim
retort.  "And let me tell you, Davis, you ain't the first sea-lawyer
I've dropped over the side with a sack of coal to his feet."

Mr. Pike turned, with a final "Damned sea-lawyer!" and started along
the deck.  I was walking behind him when he stopped abruptly.

"Mr. Pathurst."

Not as an officer to a passenger did he thus address me.  His tone
was imperative, and I gave heed.

"Mr. Pathurst.  From now on the less you see aboard this ship the
better.  That is all."

And again he turned on his heel and went his way.



CHAPTER XVI



No, the sea is not a gentle place.  It must be the very hardness of
the life that makes all sea-people hard.  Of course, Captain West is
unaware that his crew exists, and Mr. Pike and Mr. Mellaire never
address the men save to give commands.  But Miss West, who is more
like myself, a passenger, ignores the men.  She does not even say
good-morning to the man at the wheel when she first comes on deck.
Nevertheless I shall, at least to the man at the wheel.  Am I not a
passenger?

Which reminds me.  Technically I am not a passenger.  The Elsinore
has no licence to carry passengers, and I am down on the articles as
third mate and am supposed to receive thirty-five dollars a month.
Wada is down as cabin boy, although I paid a good price for his
passage and he is my servant.

Not much time is lost at sea in getting rid of the dead.  Within an
hour after I had watched the sail-makers at work Christian Jespersen
was slid overboard, feet first, a sack of coal to his feet to sink
him.  It was a mild, calm day, and the Elsinore, logging a lazy two
knots, was not hove to for the occasion.  At the last moment Captain
West came for'ard, prayer-book in hand, read the brief service for
burial at sea, and returned immediately aft.  It was the first time I
had seen him for'ard.

I shall not bother to describe the burial.  All I shall say of it is
that it was as sordid as Christian Jespersen's life had been and as
his death had been.

As for Miss West, she sat in a deck-chair on the poop busily engaged
with some sort of fancy work.  When Christian Jespersen and his coal
splashed into the sea the crew immediately dispersed, the watch below
going to its bunks, the watch on deck to its work.  Not a minute
elapsed ere Mr. Mellaire was giving orders and the men were pulling
and hauling.  So I returned to the poop to be unpleasantly impressed
by Miss West's smiling unconcern.

"Well, he's buried," I observed.

"Oh," she said, with all the tonelessness of disinterest, and went on
with her stitching.

She must have sensed my frame of mind, for, after a moment, she
paused from her sewing and looked at me

Your first sea funeral, Mr. Pathurst?

"Death at sea does not seem to affect you," I said bluntly.

"Not any more than on the land."  She shrugged her shoulders.  "So
many people die, you know.  And when they are strangers to you . . .
well, what do you do on the land when you learn that some workers
have been killed in a factory you pass every day coming to town?  It
is the same on the sea."

"It's too bad we are a hand short," I said deliberately.

It did not miss her.  Just as deliberately she replied:

"Yes, isn't it?  And so early in the voyage, too."  She looked at me,
and when I could not forbear a smile of appreciation she smiled back.

"Oh, I know very well, Mr. Pathurst, that you think me a heartless
wretch.  But it isn't that it's . . . it's the sea, I suppose.  And
yet, I didn't know this man.  I don't remember ever having seen him.
At this stage of the voyage I doubt if I could pick out half-a-dozen
of the sailors as men I had ever laid eyes on.  So why vex myself
with even thinking of this stupid stranger who was killed by another
stupid stranger?  As well might one die of grief with reading the
murder columns of the daily papers."

"And yet, it seems somehow different," I contended.

"Oh, you'll get used to it," she assured me cheerfully, and returned
to her sewing.

I asked her if she had read Moody's Ship of Souls, but she had not.
I searched her out further.  She liked Browning, and was especially
fond of The Ring and the Book.  This was the key to her.  She cared
only for healthful literature--for the literature that exposits the
vital lies of life.

For instance, the mention of Schopenhauer produced smiles and
laughter.  To her all the philosophers of pessimism were laughable.
The red blood of her would not permit her to take them seriously.  I
tried her out with a conversation I had had with De Casseres shortly
before leaving New York.  De Casseres, after tracing Jules de
Gaultier's philosophic genealogy back to Schopenhauer and Nietzsche,
had concluded with the proposition that out of their two formulas de
Gaultier had constructed an even profounder formula.  The "Will-to-
Live" of the one and the "Will-to-Power" of the other were, after
all, only parts of de Gaultier's supreme generalization, the "Will-
to-Illusion."

I flatter myself that even De Casseres would have been pleased with
the way I repeated his argument.  And when I had concluded it, Miss
West promptly demanded if the realists might not be fooled by their
own phrases as often and as completely as were the poor common
mortals with the vital lies they never questioned.

And there we were.  An ordinary young woman, who had never vexed her
brains with ultimate problems, hears such things stated for the first
time, and immediately, and with a laugh, sweeps them all away.  I
doubt not that De Casseres would have agreed with her.

"Do you believe in God?" I asked rather abruptly.  She dropped her
sewing into her lap, looked at me meditatively, then gazed on and
away across the flashing sea and up into the azure dome of sky.  And
finally, with true feminine evasion, she replied:

"My father does."

"But you?" I insisted.

"I really don't know.  I don't bother my head about such things.  I
used to when I was a little girl.  And yet . . . yes, surely I
believe in God.  At times, when I am not thinking about it at all, I
am very sure, and my faith that all is well is just as strong as the
faith of your Jewish friend in the phrases of the philosophers.
That's all it comes to, I suppose, in every case--faith.  But, as I
say, why bother?"

"Ah, I have you now, Miss West!" I cried.  "You are a true daughter
of Herodias."

"It doesn't sound nice," she said with a moue.

"And it isn't," I exulted.  "Nevertheless, it is what you are.  It is
Arthur Symon's poem, The Daughters of Herodias.  Some day I shall
read it to you, and you will answer.  I know you will answer that
you, too, have looked often upon the stars."

We had just got upon the subject of music, of which she possesses a
surprisingly solid knowledge, and she was telling me that Debussy and
his school held no particular charm for her, when Possum set up a
wild yelping.

The puppy had strayed for'ard along the bridge to the 'midship-house,
and had evidently been investigating the chickens when his disaster
came upon him.  So shrill was his terror that we both stood up.  He
was dashing along the bridge toward us at full speed, yelping at
every jump and continually turning his head back in the direction
whence he came.

I spoke to him and held out my hand, and was rewarded with a snap and
clash of teeth as he scuttled past.  Still with head turned back, he
went on along the poop.  Before I could apprehend his danger, Mr.
Pike and Miss West were after him.  The mate was the nearer, and with
a magnificent leap gained the rail just in time to intercept Possum,
who was blindly going overboard under the slender railing.  With a
sort of scooping kick Mr. Pike sent the animal rolling half across
the poop.  Howling and snapping more violently, Possum regained his
feet and staggered on toward the opposite railing.

"Don't touch him!" Mr. Pike cried, as Miss West showed her intention
of catching the crazed little animal with her hands.  "Don't touch'm!
He's got a fit."

But it did not deter her.  He was half-way under the railing when she
caught him up and held him at arm's length while he howled and barked
and slavered.

"It's a fit," said Mr. Pike, as the terrier collapsed and lay on the
deck jerking convulsively.

"Perhaps a chicken pecked him," said Miss West.  "At any rate, get a
bucket of water."

"Better let me take him," I volunteered helplessly, for I was
unfamiliar with fits.

"No; it's all right," she answered.  "I'll take charge of him.  The
cold water is what he needs.  He got too close to the coop, and a
peck on the nose frightened him into the fit."

"First time I ever heard of a fit coming that way," Mr. Pike
remarked, as he poured water over the puppy under Miss West's
direction.  "It's just a plain puppy fit.  They all get them at sea."

"I think it was the sails that caused it," I argued.  "I've noticed
that he is very afraid of them.  When they flap, he crouches down in
terror and starts to run.  You noticed how he ran with his head
turned back?"

"I've seen dogs with fits do that when there was nothing to frighten
them," Mr. Pike contended.

"It was a fit, no matter what caused it," Miss West stated
conclusively.  "Which means that he has not been fed properly.  From
now on I shall feed him.  You tell your boy that, Mr. Pathurst.
Nobody is to feed Possum anything without my permission."

At this juncture Wada arrived with Possum's little sleeping box, and
they prepared to take him below.

"It was splendid of you, Miss West," I said, "and rash, as well, and
I won't attempt to thank you.  But I tell you what-you take him.
He's your dog now."

She laughed and shook her head as I opened the chart-house door for
her to pass.

"No; but I'll take care of him for you.  Now don't bother to come
below.  This is my affair, and you would only be in the way.  Wada
will help me."

And I was rather surprised, as I returned to my deck chair and sat
down, to find how affected I was by the little episode.  I
remembered, at the first, that my pulse had been distinctly
accelerated with the excitement of what had taken place.  And
somehow, as I leaned back in my chair and lighted a cigarette, the
strangeness of the whole voyage vividly came to me.  Miss West and I
talk philosophy and art on the poop of a stately ship in a circle of
flashing sea, while Captain West dreams of his far home, and Mr. Pike
and Mr. Mellaire stand watch and watch and snarl orders, and the
slaves of men pull and haul, and Possum has fits, and Andy Fay and
Mulligan Jacobs burn with hatred unconsumable, and the small-handed
half-caste Chinese cooks for all, and Sundry Buyers perpetually
presses his abdomen, and O'Sullivan raves in the steel cell of the
'midship-house, and Charles Davis lies about him nursing a marlin-
spike, and Christian Jespersen, miles astern, is deep sunk in the sea
with a sack of coal at his feet.



CHAPTER XVII



Two weeks out to-day, on a balmy sea, under a cloud-flecked sky, and
slipping an easy eight knots through the water to a light easterly
wind.  Captain West said he was almost convinced that it was the
north-east trade.  Also, I have learned that the Elsinore, in order
to avoid being jammed down on Cape San Roque, on the Brazil coast,
must first fight eastward almost to the coast of Africa.  On
occasion, on this traverse, the Cape Verde Islands are raised.  No
wonder the voyage from Baltimore to Seattle is reckoned at eighteen
thousand miles.

I found Tony, the suicidal Greek, steering this morning when I came
on deck.  He seemed sensible enough, and quite rationally took off
his hat when I said good morning to him.  The sick men are improving
nicely, with the exceptions of Charles Davis and O'Sullivan.  The
latter still is lashed to his bunk, and Mr. Pike has compelled Davis
to attend on him.  As a result, Davis moves about the deck, bringing
food and water from the galley and grumbling his wrongs to every
member of the crew.

Wada told me a strange thing this morning.  It seems that he, the
steward, and the two sail-makers foregather each evening in the
cook's room--all being Asiatics--where they talk over ship's gossip.
They seem to miss little, and Wada brings it all to me.  The thing
Wada told me was the curious conduct of Mr. Mellaire.  They have sat
in judgment on him and they do not approve of his intimacy with the
three gangsters for'ard.

"But, Wada," I said, "he is not that kind of a man.  He is very hard
and rough with all the sailors.  He treats them like dogs.  You know
that."

"Sure," assented Wada.  "Other sailors he do that.  But those three
very bad men he make good friends.  Louis say second mate belong aft
like first mate and captain.  No good for second mate talk like
friend with sailors.  No good for ship.  Bime by trouble.  You see.
Louis say Mr. Mellaire crazy do that kind funny business."

All of which, if it were true, and I saw no reason to doubt it, led
me to inquire.  It seems that the gangsters, Kid Twist, Nosey Murphy,
and Bert Rhine, have made themselves cocks of the forecastle.
Standing together, they have established a reign of terror and are
ruling the forecastle.  All their training in New York in ruling the
slum brutes and weaklings in their gangs fits them for the part.  As
near as I could make out from Wada's tale, they first began on the
two Italians in their watch, Guido Bombini and Mike Cipriani.  By
means I cannot guess, they have reduced these two wretches to
trembling slaves.  As an instance, the other night, according to the
ship's gossip, Bert Rhine made Bombini get out of bed and fetch him a
drink of water.

Isaac Chantz is likewise under their rule, though he is treated more
kindly.  Herman Lunkenheimer, a good-natured but simple-minded dolt
of a German, received a severe beating from the three because he
refused to wash some of Nosey Murphy's dirty garments.  The two
bosuns are in fear of their lives with this clique, which is growing;
for Steve Roberts, the ex-cowboy, and the white-slaver, Arthur
Deacon, have been admitted to it.

I am the only one aft who possesses this information, and I confess I
don't know what to do with it.  I know that Mr. Pike would tell me to
mind my own business.  Mr. Mellaire is out of the question.  And
Captain West hasn't any crew.  And I fear Miss West would laugh at me
for my pains.  Besides, I understand that every forecastle has its
bully, or group of bullies; so this is merely a forecastle matter and
no concern of the afterguard.  The ship's work goes on.  The only
effect I can conjecture is an increase in the woes of the
unfortunates who must bow to this petty tyranny for'ard.

- Oh, and another thing Wada told me.  The gangster clique has
established its privilege of taking first cut of the salt-beef in the
meat-kids.  After that, the rest take the rejected pieces.  But I
will say, contrary to my expectations, the Elsinore's forecastle is
well found.  The men are not on whack.  They have all they want to
eat.  A barrel of good hardtack stands always open in the forecastle.
Louis bakes fresh bread for the sailors three times a week.  The
variety of food is excellent, if not the quality.  There is no
restriction in the amount of water for drinking purposes.  And I can
only say that in this good weather the men's appearance improves
daily.

Possum is very sick.  Each day he grows thinner.  Scarcely can I call
him a perambulating skeleton, because he is too weak to walk.  Each
day, in this delightful weather, Wada, under Miss West's
instructions, brings him up in his box and places him out of the wind
on the awninged poop.  She has taken full charge of the puppy, and
has him sleep in her room each night.  I found her yesterday, in the
chart-room, reading up the Elsinore's medical library.  Later on she
overhauled the medicine-chest.  She is essentially the life-giving,
life-conserving female of the species.  All her ways, for herself and
for others, make toward life.

And yet--and this is so curious it gives me pause--she shows no
interest in the sick and injured for'ard.

They are to her cattle, or less than cattle.  As the life-giver and
race-conserver, I should have imagined her a Lady Bountiful, tripping
regularly into that ghastly steel-walled hospital room of the
midship-house and dispensing gruel, sunshine, and even tracts.  On
the contrary, as with her father, these wretched humans do not exist.

And still again, when the steward jammed a splinter under his nail,
she was greatly concerned, and manipulated the tweezers and pulled it
out.  The Elsinore reminds me of a slave plantation before the war;
and Miss West is the lady of the plantation, interested only in the
house-slaves.  The field slaves are beyond her ken or consideration,
and the sailors are the Elsinore's field slaves.  Why, several days
back, when Wada suffered from a severe headache, she was quite
perturbed, and dosed him with aspirin.  Well, I suppose this is all
due to her sea-training.  She has been trained hard.

We have the phonograph in the second dog-watch every other evening in
this fine weather.  On the alternate evenings this period is Mr.
Pike's watch on deck.  But when it is his evening below, even at
dinner, he betrays his anticipation by an eagerness ill suppressed.
And yet, on each such occasion, he punctiliously waits until we ask
if we are to be favoured with music.  Then his hard-bitten face
lights up, although the lines remain hard as ever, hiding his
ecstasy, and he remarks gruffly, off-handedly, that he guesses he can
play over a few records.  And so, every other evening, we watch this
killer and driver, with lacerated knuckles and gorilla paws, brushing
and caressing his beloved discs, ravished with the music of them,
and, as he told me early in the voyage, at such moments believing in
God.

A strange experience is this life on the Elsinore.  I confess, while
it seems that I have been here for long months, so familiar am I with
every detail of the little round of living, that I cannot orient
myself.  My mind continually strays from things non-understandable to
things incomprehensible--from our Samurai captain with the exquisite
Gabriel voice that is heard only in the tumult and thunder of storm;
on to the ill-treated and feeble-minded faun with the bright, liquid,
pain-filled eyes; to the three gangsters who rule the forecastle and
seduce the second mate; to the perpetually muttering O'Sullivan in
the steel-walled hole and the complaining Davis nursing the marlin-
spike in the upper bunk; and to Christian Jespersen somewhere adrift
in this vastitude of ocean with a coal-sack at his feet.  At such
moments all the life on the Elsinore becomes as unreal as life to the
philosopher is unreal.

I am a philosopher.  Therefore, it is unreal to me.  But is it unreal
to Messrs.  Pike and Mellaire? to the lunatics and idiots? to the
rest of the stupid herd for'ard?  I cannot help remembering a remark
of De Casseres.  It was over the wine in Mouquin's.  Said he:  "The
profoundest instinct in man is to war against the truth; that is,
against the Real.  He shuns facts from his infancy.  His life is a
perpetual evasion.  Miracle, chimera and to-morrow keep him alive.
He lives on fiction and myth.  It is the Lie that makes him free.
Animals alone are given the privilege of lifting the veil of Isis;
men dare not.  The animal, awake, has no fictional escape from the
Real because he has no imagination.  Man, awake, is compelled to seek
a perpetual escape into Hope, Belief, Fable, Art, God, Socialism,
Immortality, Alcohol, Love.  From Medusa-Truth he makes an appeal to
Maya-Lie."

Ben will agree that I have quoted him fairly.  And so, the thought
comes to me, that to all these slaves of the Elsinore the Real is
real because they fictionally escape it.  One and all they are
obsessed with the belief that they are free agents.  To me the Real
is unreal, because I have torn aside the veils of fiction and myth.
My pristine fictional escape from the Real, making me a philosopher,
has bound me absolutely to the wheel of the Real.  I, the super-
realist, am the only unrealist on board the Elsinore.  Therefore I,
who penetrate it deepest, in the whole phenomena of living on the
Elsinore see it only as phantasmagoria.

Paradoxes?  I admit it.  All deep thinkers are drowned in the sea of
contradictions.  But all the others on the Elsinore, sheer surface
swimmers, keep afloat on this sea--forsooth, because they have never
dreamed its depth.  And I can easily imagine what Miss West's
practical, hard-headed judgment would be on these speculations of
mine.  After all, words are traps.  I don't know what I know, nor
what I think I think.

This I do know:  I cannot orient myself.  I am the maddest and most
sea-lost soul on board.  Take Miss West.  I am beginning to admire
her.  Why, I know not, unless it be because she is so abominably
healthy.  And yet, it is this very health of her, the absence of any
shred of degenerative genius, that prevents her from being great . .
. for instance, in her music.

A number of times, now, I have come in during the day to listen to
her playing.  The piano is good, and her teaching has evidently been
of the best.  To my astonishment I learn that she is a graduate of
Bryn Mawr, and that her father took a degree from old Bowdoin long
ago.  And yet she lacks in her music.

Her touch is masterful.  She has the firmness and weight (without
sharpness or pounding) of a man's playing--the strength and surety
that most women lack and that some women know they lack.  When she
makes a slip she is ruthless with herself, and replays until the
difficulty is overcome.  And she is quick to overcome it.

Yes, and there is a sort of temperament in her work, but there is no
sentiment, no fire.  When she plays Chopin, she interprets his
sureness and neatness.  She is the master of Chopin's technique, but
she never walks where Chopin walks on the heights.  Somehow, she
stops short of the fulness of music.

I did like her method with Brahms, and she was not unwilling, at my
suggestion, to go over and over the Three Rhapsodies.  On the Third
Intermezzo she was at her best, and a good best it was.

"You were talking of Debussy," she remarked.  "I've got some of his
stuff here.  But I don't get into it.  I don't understand it, and
there is no use in trying.  It doesn't seem altogether like real
music to me.  It fails to get hold of me, just as I fail to get hold
of it."

"Yet you like MacDowell," I challenged.

"Y. . . es," she admitted grudgingly.  "His New England Idylls and
Fireside Tales.  And I like that Finnish man's stuff, Sibelius, too,
although it seems to me too soft, too richly soft, too beautiful, if
you know what I mean.  It seems to cloy."

What a pity, I thought, that with that noble masculine touch of hers
she is unaware of the deeps of music.  Some day I shall try to get
from her just what Beethoven, say, and Chopin, mean to her.  She has
not read Shaw's Perfect Wagnerite, nor had she ever heard of
Nietzsche's Case of Wagner.  She likes Mozart, and old Boccherini,
and Leonardo Leo.  Likewise she is partial to Schumann, especially
Forest Scenes.  And she played his Papillons most brilliantly.  When
I closed my eyes I could have sworn it was a man's fingers on the
keys.

And yet, I must say it, in the long run her playing makes me nervous.
I am continually led up to false expectations.  Always, she seems
just on the verge of achieving the big thing, the super-big thing,
and always she just misses it by a shade.  Just as I am prepared for
the culminating flash and illumination, I receive more perfection of
technique.  She is cold.  She must be cold . . . Or else, and the
theory is worth considering, she is too healthy.

I shall certainly read to her The Daughters of Herodias.



CHAPTER XVIII



Was there ever such a voyage!  This morning, when I came on deck, I
found nobody at the wheel.  It was a startling sight--the great
Elsinore, by the wind, under an Alpine range of canvas, every sail
set from skysails to try-sails and spanker, slipping across the
surface of a mild trade-wind sea, and no hand at the wheel to guide
her.

No one was on the poop.  It was Mr. Pike's watch, and I strolled
for'ard along the bridge to find him.  He was on Number One hatch
giving some instructions to the sail-makers.  I awaited my chance,
until he glanced up and greeted me.

"Good morning," I answered.  "And what man is at the wheel now?"

"That crazy Greek, Tony," he replied.

"A month's wages to a pound of tobacco he isn't," I offered.

Mr. Pike looked at me with quick sharpness.

"Who is at the wheel?"

"Nobody," I replied.

And then he exploded into action.  The age-lag left his massive
frame, and he bounded aft along the deck at a speed no man on board
could have exceeded; and I doubt if very many could have equalled it.
He went up the poop-ladder three steps at a time and disappeared in
the direction of the wheel behind the chart-house.

Next came a promptitude of bellowed orders, and all the watch was
slacking away after braces to starboard and pulling on after braces
to port.  I had already learned the manoeuvre.  Mr. Pike was wearing
ship.

As I returned aft along the bridge Mr. Mellaire and the carpenter
emerged from the cabin door.  They had been interrupted at breakfast,
for they were wiping their mouths.  Mr. Pike came to the break of the
poop, called down instructions to the second mate, who proceeded
for'ard, and ordered the carpenter to take the wheel.

As the Elsinore swung around on her heel Mr. Pike put her on the back
track so as to cover the water she had just crossed over.  He lowered
the glasses through which he was scanning the sea and pointed down
the hatchway that opened into the big after-room beneath.  The ladder
was gone.

"Must have taken the lazarette ladder with him," said Mr. Pike.

Captain West strolled out of the chart-room.  He said good morning in
his customary way, courteously to me and formally to the mate, and
strolled on along the poop to the wheel, where he paused to glance
into the binnacle.  Turning, he went on leisurely to the break of the
poop.  Again he came back to us.  Fully two minutes must have elapsed
ere he spoke.

"What is the matter, Mr. Pike?  Man overboard?"

"Yes, sir," was the answer.

"And took the lazarette ladder along with him?" Captain West queried.

"Yes, sir.  It's the Greek that jumped over at Baltimore."

Evidently the affair was not serious enough for Captain West to be
the Samurai.  He lighted a cigar and resumed his stroll.  And yet he
had missed nothing, not even the absence of the ladder.

Mr. Pike sent look-outs aloft to every skysail-yard, and the Elsinore
slipped along through the smooth sea.  Miss West came up and stood
beside me, searching the ocean with her eyes while I told her the
little I knew.  She evidenced no excitement, and reassured me by
telling me how difficult it was to lose a man of Tony's suicidal
type.

"Their madness always seems to come upon them in fine weather or
under safe circumstances," she smiled, "when a boat can be lowered or
a tug is alongside.  And sometimes they take life--preservers with
them, as in this case."

At the end of an hour Mr. Pike wore the Elsinore around, and again
retraced the course she must have been sailing when the Greek went
over.  Captain West still strolled and smoked, and Miss West made a
brief trip below to give Wada forgotten instructions about Possum.
Andy Pay was called to the wheel, and the carpenter went below to
finish his breakfast.

It all seemed rather callous to me.  Nobody was much concerned for
the man who was overboard somewhere on that lonely ocean.  And yet I
had to admit that everything possible was being done to find him.  I
talked a little with Mr. Pike, and he seemed more vexed than anything
else.  He disliked to have the ship's work interrupted in such
fashion.

Mr. Mellaire's attitude was different.

"We are short-handed enough as it is," he told me, when he joined us
on the poop.  "We can't afford to lose him even if he is crazy.  We
need him.  He's a good sailor most of the time."

The hail came from the mizzen-skysail-yard.  The Maltese Cockney it
was who first sighted the man and called down the information.  The
mate, looking to windwards, suddenly lowered his glasses, rubbed his
eyes in a puzzled way, and looked again.  Then Miss West, using
another pair of glasses, cried out in surprise and began to laugh.

"What do you make of it, Miss West?" the mate asked.

"He doesn't seem to be in the water.  He's standing up."

Mr. Pike nodded.

"He's on the ladder," he said.  "I'd forgotten that.  It fooled me at
first.  I couldn't understand it."  He turned to the second mate.
"Mr. Mellaire, will you launch the long boat and get some kind of a
crew into it while I back the main-yard?  I'll go in the boat.  Pick
men that can pull an oar."

"You go, too," Miss West said to me.  "It will be an opportunity to
get outside the Elsinore and see her under full sail."

Mr. Pike nodded consent, so I went along, sitting near him in the
stern-sheets where he steered, while half a dozen hands rowed us
toward the suicide, who stood so weirdly upon the surface of the sea.
The Maltese Cockney pulled the stroke oar, and among the other five
men was one whose name I had but recently learned--Ditman Olansen, a
Norwegian.  A good seaman, Mr. Mellaire had told me, in whose watch
he was; a good seaman, but "crank-eyed."  When pressed for an
explanation Mr. Mellaire had said that he was the sort of man who
flew into blind rages, and that one never could tell what little
thing would produce such a rage.  As near as I could grasp it, Ditman
Olansen was a Berserker type.  Yet, as I watched him pulling in good
time at the oar, his large, pale-blue eyes seemed almost bovine--the
last man in the world, in my judgment, to have a Berserker fit.

As we drew close to the Greek he began to scream menacingly at us and
to brandish a sheath-knife.  His weight sank the ladder until the
water washed his knees, and on this submerged support he balanced
himself with wild writhing and outflinging of arms.  His face,
grimacing like a monkey's, was not a pretty thing to look upon.  And
as he continued to threaten us with the knife I wondered how the
problem of rescuing him would be solved.

But I should have trusted Mr. Pike for that.  He removed the boat-
stretcher from under the Maltese Cockney's feet and laid it close to
hand in the stern-sheets.  Then he had the men reverse the boat and
back it upon the Greek.  Dodging a sweep of the knife, Mr. Pike
awaited his chance, until a passing wave lifted the boat's stern
high, while Tony was sinking toward the trough.  This was the moment.
Again I was favoured with a sample of the lightning speed with which
that aged man of sixty-nine could handle his body.  Timed precisely,
and delivered in a flash and with weight, the boat-stretcher came
down on the Greek's head.  The knife fell into the sea, and the
demented creature collapsed and followed it, knocked unconscious.
Mr. Pike scooped him out, quite effortlessly it seemed to me, and
flung him into the boat's bottom at my feet.

The next moment the men were bending to their oars and the mate was
steering back to the Elsinore.  It was a stout rap Mr. Pike had
administered with the boat-stretcher.  Thin streaks of blood oozed on
the damp, plastered hair from the broken scalp.  I could but stare at
the lump of unconscious flesh that dripped sea-water at my feet.  A
man, all life and movement one moment, defying the universe, reduced
the next moment to immobility and the blackness and blankness of
death, is always a fascinating object for the contemplative eye of
the philosopher.  And in this case it had been accomplished so
simply, by means of a stick of wood brought sharply in contact with
his skull.

If Tony the Greek be accounted an APPEARANCE, what was he now?--a
DISAPPEARANCE?  And if so, whither had he disappeared?  And whence
would he journey back to reoccupy that body when what we call
consciousness returned to him?  The first word, much less the last,
of the phenomena of personality and consciousness yet remains to be
uttered by the psychologists.

Pondering thus, I chanced to lift my eyes, and the glorious spectacle
of the Elsinore burst upon me.  I had been so long on board, and in
board of her, that I had forgotten she was a white-painted ship.  So
low to the water was her hull, so delicate and slender, that the
tall, sky-reaching spars and masts and the hugeness of the spread of
canvas seemed preposterous and impossible, an insolent derision of
the law of gravitation.  It required effort to realize that that slim
curve of hull inclosed and bore up from the sea's bottom five
thousand tons of coal.  And again, it seemed a miracle that the mites
of men had conceived and constructed so stately and magnificent an
element-defying fabric--mites of men, most woefully like the Greek at
my feet, prone to precipitation into the blackness by means of a rap
on the head with a piece of wood.

Tony made a struggling noise in his throat, then coughed and groaned.
From somewhere he was reappearing.  I noticed Mr. Pike look at him
quickly, as if apprehending some recrudescence of frenzy that would
require more boat-stretcher.  But Tony merely fluttered his big black
eyes open and stared at me for a long minute of incurious amaze ere
he closed them again.

"What are you going to do with him?" I asked the mate.

"Put 'm back to work," was the reply.  "It's all he's good for, and
he ain't hurt.  Somebody's got to work this ship around the Horn."

When we hoisted the boat on board I found Miss West had gone below.
In the chart-room Captain West was winding the chronometers.  Mr.
Mellaire had turned in to catch an hour or two of sleep ere his watch
on deck at noon.  Mr. Mellaire, by the way, as I have forgotten to
state, does not sleep aft.  He shares a room in the 'midship-house
with Mr. Pike's Nancy.

Nobody showed sympathy for the unfortunate Greek.  He was bundled out
upon Number Two hatch like so much carrion and left there unattended,
to recover consciousness as he might elect.  Yes, and so inured have
I become that I make free to admit I felt no sympathy for him myself.
My eyes were still filled with the beauty of the Elsinore.  One does
grow hard at sea.



CHAPTER XIX



One does not mind the trades.  We have held the north-east trade for
days now, and the miles roll off behind us as the patent log whirls
and tinkles on the taffrail.  Yesterday, log and observation
approximated a run of two hundred and fifty-two miles; the day before
we ran two hundred and forty, and the day before that two hundred and
sixty-one.  But one does not appreciate the force of the wind.  So
balmy and exhilarating is it that it is so much atmospheric wine.  I
delight to open my lungs and my pores to it.  Nor does it chill.  At
any hour of the night, while the cabin lies asleep, I break off from
my reading and go up on the poop in the thinnest of tropical pyjamas.

I never knew before what the trade wind was.  And now I am infatuated
with it.  I stroll up and down for an hour at a time, with whichever
mate has the watch.  Mr. Mellaire is always full-garmented, but Mr.
Pike, on these delicious nights, stands his first watch after
midnight in his pyjamas.  He is a fearfully muscular man.  Sixty-nine
years seem impossible when I see his single, slimpsy garments pressed
like fleshings against his form and bulged by heavy bone and huge
muscle.  A splendid figure of a man!  What he must have been in the
hey-day of youth two score years and more ago passes comprehension.

The days, so filled with simple routine, pass as in a dream.  Here,
where time is rigidly measured and emphasized by the changing of the
watches, where every hour and half-hour is persistently brought to
one's notice by the striking of the ship's bells fore and aft, time
ceases.  Days merge into days, and weeks slip into weeks, and I, for
one, can never remember the day of the week or month.

The Elsinore is never totally asleep.  Day and night, always, there
are the men on watch, the look-out on the forecastle head, the man at
the wheel, and the officer of the deck.  I lie reading in my bunk,
which is on the weather side, and continually over my head during the
long night hours impact the footsteps of one mate or the other,
pacing up and down, and, as I well know, the man himself is for ever
peering for'ard from the break of the poop, or glancing into the
binnacle, or feeling and gauging the weight and direction of wind on
his cheek, or watching the cloud-stuff in the sky adrift and a-scud
across the stars and the moon.  Always, always, there are wakeful
eyes on the Elsinore.

Last night, or this morning, rather, about two o'clock, as I lay with
the printed page swimming drowsily before me, I was aroused by an
abrupt outbreak of snarl from Mr. Pike.  I located him as at the
break of the poop; and the man at whom he snarled was Larry,
evidently on the main deck beneath him.  Not until Wada brought me
breakfast did I learn what had occurred.

Larry, with his funny pug nose, his curiously flat and twisted face,
and his querulous, plaintive chimpanzee eyes, had been moved by some
unlucky whim to venture an insolent remark under the cover of
darkness on the main deck.  But Mr. Pike, from above, at the break of
the poop, had picked the offender unerringly.  This was when the
explosion occurred.  Then the unfortunate Larry, truly half-devil and
all child, had waxed sullen and retorted still more insolently; and
the next he knew, the mate, descending upon him like a hurricane, had
handcuffed him to the mizzen fife-rail.

Imagine, on Mr. Pike's part, that this was one for Larry and at least
ten for Kid Twist, Nosey Murphy, and Bert Rhine.  I'll not be so
absurd as to say that the mate is afraid of those gangsters.  I doubt
if he has ever experienced fear.  It is not in him.  On the other
hand, I am confident that he apprehends trouble from these men, and
that it was for their benefit he made this example of Larry.

Larry could stand no more than an hour in irons, at which time his
stupid brutishness overcame any fear he might have possessed, because
he bellowed out to the poop to come down and loose him for a fair
fight.  Promptly Mr. Pike was there with the key to the handcuffs.
As if Larry had the shred of a chance against that redoubtable aged
man!  Wada reported that Larry, amongst other things, had lost a
couple of front teeth and was laid up in his bunk for the day.  When
I met Mr. Pike on deck after eight o'clock I glanced at his knuckles.
They verified Wada's tale.

I cannot help being amused by the keen interest I take in little
events like the foregoing.  Not only has time ceased, but the world
has ceased.  Strange it is, when I come to think of it, in all these
weeks I have received no letter, no telephone call, no telegram, no
visitor.  I have not been to the play.  I have not read a newspaper.
So far as I am concerned, there are no plays nor newspapers.  All
such things have vanished with the vanished world.  All that exists
is the Elsinore, with her queer human freightage and her cargo of
coal, cleaving a rotund of ocean of which the skyline is a dozen
miles away.

I am reminded of Captain Scott, frozen on his south-polar venture,
who for ten months after his death was believed by the world to be
alive.  Not until the world learned of his death was he anything but
alive to the world.  By the same token, was he not alive?  And by the
same token, here on the Elsinore, has not the land-world ceased?  May
not the pupil of one's eye be, not merely the centre of the world,
but the world itself?  Truly, it is tenable that the world exists
only in consciousness.  "The world is my idea," said Schopenhauer.
Said Jules de Gaultier, "The world is my invention."  His dogma was
that imagination created the Real.  Ah, me, I know that the practical
Miss West would dub my metaphysics a depressing and unhealthful
exercise of my wits.

To-day, in our deck chairs on the poop, I read The Daughters of
Herodias to Miss West.  It was superb in its effect--just what I had
expected of her.  She hemstitched a fine white linen handkerchief for
her father while I read.  (She is never idle, being so essentially a
nest-maker and comfort-producer and race-conserver; and she has a
whole pile of these handkerchiefs for her father.)

She smiled, how shall I say?--oh, incredulously, triumphantly, oh,
with all the sure wisdom of all the generations of women in her warm,
long gray eyes, when I read:


"But they smile innocently and dance on,
Having no thought but this unslumbering thought:
'Am I not beautiful?  Shall I not be loved?'
Be patient, for they will not understand,
Not till the end of time will they put by
The weaving of slow steps about men's hearts."


"But it is well for the world that it is so," was her comment.

Ah, Symons knew women!  His perfect knowledge she attested when I
read that magnificent passage:


"They do not understand that in the world
There grows between the sunlight and the grass
Anything save themselves desirable.
It seems to them that the swift eyes of men
Are made but to be mirrors, not to see
Far-off, disastrous, unattainable things.
'For are not we,' they say, 'the end of all?
Why should you look beyond us?  If you look
Into the night, you will find nothing there:
We also have gazed often at the stars.'"


"It is true," said Miss West, in the pause I permitted in order to
see how she had received the thought.  "We also have gazed often at
the stars."

It was the very thing I had predicted to her face that she would say.

"But wait," I cried.  "Let me read on."  And I read:


"'We, we alone among all beautiful things,
We only are real:  for the rest are dreams.
Why will you follow after wandering dreams
When we await you?  And you can but dream
Of us, and in our image fashion them.'"


"True, most true," she murmured, while all unconsciously pride and
power mounted in her eyes.

"A wonderful poem," she conceded--nay, proclaimed--when I had done.

"But do you not see .  .  ."  I began impulsively, then abandoned the
attempt.  For how could she see, being woman, the "far-off,
disastrous, unattainable things," when she, as she so stoutly
averred, had gazed often on the stars?

She?  What could she see, save what all women see--that they only are
real, and that all the rest are dreams.

"I am proud to be a daughter of Herodias," said Miss West.

"Well," I admitted lamely, "we agree.  You remember it is what I told
you you were."

"I am grateful for the compliment," she said; and in those long gray
eyes of hers were limned and coloured all the satisfaction, and self-
certitude and answering complacency of power that constitute so large
a part of the seductive mystery and mastery that is possessed by
woman.



CHAPTER XX



Heavens!--how I read in this fine weather.  I take so little exercise
that my sleep need is very small; and there are so few interruptions,
such as life teems with on the land, that I read myself almost
stupid.  Recommend me a sea-voyage any time for a man who is behind
in his reading.  I am making up years of it.  It is an orgy, a
debauch; and I am sure the addled sailors adjudge me the queerest
creature on board.

At times, so fuzzy do I get from so much reading, that I am glad for
any diversion.  When we strike the doldrums, which lie between the
north-east and the south-east trades, I shall have Wada assemble my
little twenty-two automatic rifle and try to learn how to shoot.  I
used to shoot, when I was a wee lad.  I can remember dragging a shot-
gun around with me over the hills.  Also, I possessed an air-rifle,
with which, on great occasion, I was even able to slaughter a robin.

While the poop is quite large for promenading, the available space
for deck-chairs is limited to the awnings that stretch across from
either side of the chart-house and that are of the width of the
chart-house.  This space again is restricted to one side or the other
according to the slant of the morning and afternoon sun and the
freshness of the breeze.  Wherefore, Miss West's chair and mine are
most frequently side by side.  Captain West has a chair, which he
infrequently occupies.  He has so little to do in the working of the
ship, taking his regular observations and working them up with such
celerity, that he is rarely in the chart-room for any length of time.
He elects to spend his hours in the main cabin, not reading, not
doing anything save dream with eyes wide open in the draught of wind
that pours through the open ports and door from out the huge crojack
and the jigger staysails.

Miss West is never idle.  Below, in the big after-room, she does her
own laundering.  Nor will she let the steward touch her father's fine
linen.  In the main cabin she has installed a sewing-machine.  All
hand-stitching, and embroidering, and fancy work she does in the
deck-chair beside me.  She avers that she loves the sea and the
atmosphere of sea-life, yet, verily, she has brought her home-things
and land-things along with her--even to her pretty china for
afternoon tea.

Most essentially is she the woman and home-maker.  She is a born
cook.  The steward and Louis prepare dishes extraordinary and de luxe
for the cabin table; yet Miss West is able at a moment's notice to
improve on these dishes.  She never lets any of their dishes come on
the table without first planning them or passing on them.  She has
quick judgment, an unerring taste, and is possessed of the needful
steel of decision.  It seems she has only to look at a dish, no
matter who has cooked it, and immediately divine its lack or its
surplusage, and prescribe a treatment that transforms it into
something indescribably different and delicious--My, how I do eat!  I
am quite dumbfounded by the unfailing voracity of my appetite.
Already am I quite convinced that I am glad Miss West is making the
voyage.

She has sailed "out East," as she quaintly calls it, and has an
enormous repertoire of tasty, spicy, Eastern dishes.  In the cooking
of rice Louis is a master; but in the making of the accompanying
curry he fades into a blundering amateur compared with Miss West.  In
the matter of curry she is a sheer genius.  How often one's thoughts
dwell upon food when at sea!

So in this trade-wind weather I see a great deal of Miss West.  I
read all the time, and quite a good part of the time I read aloud to
her passages, and even books, with which I am interested in trying
her out.  Then, too, such reading gives rise to discussions, and she
has not yet uttered anything that would lead me to change my first
judgment of her.  She is a genuine daughter of Herodias.

And yet she is not what one would call a cute girl.  She isn't a
girl, she is a mature woman with all the freshness of a girl.  She
has the carriage, the attitude of mind, the aplomb of a woman, and
yet she cannot be described as being in the slightest degree stately.
She is generous, dependable, sensible--yes, and sensitive; and her
superabundant vitality, the vitality that makes her walk so
gloriously, discounts the maturity of her.  Sometimes she seems all
of thirty to me; at other times, when her spirits and risibilities
are aroused, she scarcely seems thirteen.  I shall make a point of
asking Captain West the date of the Dixie's collision with that river
steamer in San Francisco Bay.  In a word, she is the most normal, the
most healthy, natural woman I have ever known.

Yes, and she is feminine, despite, no matter how she does her hair,
that it is as invariably smooth and well-groomed as all the rest of
her.  On the other hand, this perpetual well-groomedness is relieved
by the latitude of dress she allows herself.  She never fails of
being a woman.  Her sex, and the lure of it, is ever present.
Possibly she may possess high collars, but I have never seen her in
one on board.  Her blouses are always open at the throat, disclosing
one of her choicest assets, the muscular, adequate neck, with its
fine-textured garmenture of skin.  I embarrass myself by stealing
long glances at that bare throat of hers and at the hint of fine,
firm-surfaced shoulder.

Visiting the chickens has developed into a regular function.  At
least once each day we make the journey for'ard along the bridge to
the top of the 'midship-house.  Possum, who is now convalescent,
accompanies us.  The steward makes a point of being there so as to
receive instructions and report the egg-output and laying conduct of
the many hens.  At the present time our four dozen hens are laying
two dozen eggs a day, with which record Miss West is greatly elated.

Already she has given names to most of them.  The cock is Peter, of
course.  A much-speckled hen is Dolly Varden.  A slim, trim thing
that dogs Peter's heels she calls Cleopatra.  Another hen--the
mellowest-voiced one of all--she addresses as Bernhardt.  One thing I
have noted:  whenever she and the steward have passed death sentence
on a non-laying hen (which occurs regularly once a week), she takes
no part in the eating of the meat, not even when it is metamorphosed
into one of her delectable curries.  At such times she has a special
curry made for herself of tinned lobster, or shrimp, or tinned
chicken.

Ah, I must not forget.  I have learned that it was no man-interest
(in me, if you please) that brought about her sudden interest to come
on the voyage.  It was for her father that she came.  Something is
the matter with Captain West.  At rare moments I have observed her
gazing at him with a world of solicitude and anxiety in her eyes.

I was telling an amusing story at table yesterday midday, when my
glance chanced to rest upon Miss West.  She was not listening.  Her
food on her fork was suspended in the air a sheer instant as she
looked at her father with all her eyes.  It was a stare of fear.  She
realized that I was observing, and with superb control, slowly, quite
naturally, she lowered the fork and rested it on her plate, retaining
her hold on it and retaining her father's face in her look.

But I had seen.  Yes; I had seen more than that.  I had seen Captain
West's face a transparent white, while his eyelids fluttered down and
his lips moved noiselessly.  Then the eyelids raised, the lips set
again with their habitual discipline, and the colour slowly returned
to his face.  It was as if he had been away for a time and just
returned.  But I had seen, and guessed her secret.

And yet it was this same Captain West, seven hours later, who
chastened the proud sailor spirit of Mr. Pike.  It was in the second
dog-watch that evening, a dark night, and the watch was pulling away
on the main deck.  I had just come out of the chart-house door and
seen Captain West pace by me, hands in pockets, toward the break of
the poop.  Abruptly, from the mizzen-mast, came a snap of breakage
and crash of fabric.  At the same instant the men fell backward and
sprawled over the deck.

A moment of silence followed, and then Captain West's voice went out:

"What carried away, Mr. Pike?"

"The halyards, sir," came the reply out of the darkness.

There was a pause.  Again Captain West's voice went out.

"Next time slack away on your sheet first."

Now Mr. Pike is incontestably a splendid seaman.  Yet in this
instance he had been wrong.  I have come to know him, and I can well
imagine the hurt to his pride.  And more--he has a wicked, resentful,
primitive nature, and though he answered respectfully enough, "Yes,
sir," I felt safe in predicting to myself that the poor devils under
him would receive the weight of his resentment in the later watches
of the night.

They evidently did; for this morning I noted a black eye on John
Hackey, a San Francisco hoodlum, and Guido Bombini was carrying a
freshly and outrageously swollen jaw.  I asked Wada about the matter,
and he soon brought me the news.  Quite a bit of beating up takes
place for'ard of the deck-houses in the night watches while we of the
after-guard peacefully slumber.

Even to-day Mr. Pike is going around sullen and morose, snarling at
the men more than usual, and barely polite to Miss West and me when
we chance to address him.  His replies are grunted in monosyllables,
and his face is set in superlative sourness.  Miss West who is
unaware of the occurrence, laughs and calls it a "sea grouch"--a
phenomenon with which she claims large experience.

But I know Mr. Pike now--the stubborn, wonderful old sea-dog.  It
will be three days before he is himself again.  He takes a terrible
pride in his seamanship, and what hurts him most is the knowledge
that he was guilty of the blunder.



CHAPTER XXI



To-day, twenty-eight days out, in the early morning, while I was
drinking my coffee, still carrying the north-east trade, we crossed
the line.  And Charles Davis signalized the event by murdering
O'Sullivan.  It was Boney, the lanky splinter of a youth in Mr.
Mellaire's watch, who brought the news.  The second mate and I had
just arrived in the hospital room, when Mr. Pike entered.

O'Sullivan's troubles were over.  The man in the upper bunk had
completed the mad, sad span of his life with the marlin-spike.

I cannot understand this Charles Davis.  He sat up calmly in his
bunk, and calmly lighted his pipe ere he replied to Mr. Mellaire.  He
certainly is not insane.  Yet deliberately, in cold blood, he has
murdered a helpless man.

"What'd you do it for?" Mr. Mellaire demanded.

"Because, sir," said Charles Davis, applying a second match to his
pipe, "because"--puff, puff--"he bothered my sleep."  Here he caught
Mr. Pike's glowering eye.  "Because"--puff, puff--"he annoyed me.
The next time"--puff, puff--"I hope better judgment will be shown in
what kind of a man is put in with me.  Besides"--puff, puff--"this
top bunk ain't no place for me.  It hurts me to get into it"--puff,
puff--"an' I'm gem' back to that lower bunk as soon as you get
O'Sullivan out of it."

"But what'd you do it for?" Mr. Pike snarled.

"I told you, sir, because he annoyed me.  I got tired of it, an' so,
this morning, I just put him out of his misery.  An' what are you
goin' to do about it?  The man's dead, ain't he?  An' I killed 'm in
self-defence.  I know the law.  What right'd you to put a ravin'
lunatic in with me, an' me sick an' helpless?"

"By God, Davis!" the mate burst forth.  "You'll never draw your pay-
day in Seattle.  I'll fix you out for this, killing a crazy lashed
down in his bunk an' harmless.  You'll follow 'm overside, my
hearty."

"If I do, you'll hang for it, sir," Davis retorted.  He turned his
cool eyes on me.  "An' I call on you, sir, to witness the threats
he's made.  An' you'll testify to them, too, in court.  An' he'll
hang as sure as I go over the side.  Oh, I know his record.  He's
afraid to face a court with it.  He's been up too many a time with
charges of man-killin' an' brutality on the high seas.  An' a man
could retire for life an live off the interest of the fines he's
paid, or his owners paid for him--"

"Shut your mouth or I'll knock it out of your face!" Mr. Pike roared,
springing toward him with clenched, up-raised fist.

Davis involuntarily shrank away.  His flesh was weak, but not so his
spirit.  He got himself promptly in hand and struck another match.

"You can't get my goat, sir," he sneered, under the shadow of the
impending blow.  "I ain't scared to die.  A man's got to die once
anyway, an' it's none so hard a trick to do when you can't help it.
O'Sullivan died so easy it was amazin'.  Besides, I ain't goin' to
die.  I'm goin' to finish this voyage, an' sue the owners when I get
to Seattle.  I know my rights an' the law.  An' I got witnesses."

Truly, I was divided between admiration for the courage of this
wretched sailor and sympathy for Mr. Pike thus bearded by a sick man
he could not bring himself to strike.

Nevertheless he sprang upon the man with calculated fury, gripped him
between the base of the neck and the shoulders with both gnarled
paws, and shook him back and forth, violently and frightfully, for a
full minute.  It was a wonder the man's neck was not dislocated.

"I call on you to witness, sir," Davis gasped at me the instant he
was free.

He coughed and strangled, felt his throat, and made wry neck-
movements indicative of injury.

"The marks'll begin to show in a few minutes," he murmured
complacently as his dizziness left him and his breath came back.

This was too much for Mr. Pike, who turned and left the room,
growling and cursing incoherently, deep in his throat.  When I made
my departure, a moment later, Davis was refilling his pipe and
telling Mr. Mellaire that he'd have him up for a witness in Seattle.


So we have had another burial at sea.  Mr. Pike was vexed by it
because the Elsinore, according to sea tradition, was going too fast
through the water for a proper ceremony.  Thus a few minutes of the
voyage were lost by backing the Elsinore's main-topsail and deadening
her way while the service was read and O'Sullivan was slid overboard
with the inevitable sack of coal at his feet.

"Hope the coal holds out," Mr. Pike grumbled morosely at me five
minutes later.


And we sit on the poop, Miss West and I, tended on by servants,
sipping afternoon tea, sewing fancy work, discussing philosophy and
art, while a few feet away from us, on this tiny floating world, all
the grimy, sordid tragedy of sordid, malformed, brutish life plays
itself out.  And Captain West, remote, untroubled, sits dreaming in
the twilight cabin while the draught of wind from the crojack blows
upon him through the open ports.  He has no doubts, no worries.  He
believes in God.  All is settled and clear and well as he nears his
far home.  His serenity is vast and enviable.  But I cannot shake
from my eyes that vision of him when life forsook his veins, and his
mouth slacked, and his eyelids closed, while his face took on the
white transparency of death.

I wonder who will be the next to finish the game and depart with a
sack of coal.

"Oh, this is nothing, sir," Mr. Mellaire remarked to me cheerfully as
we strolled the poop during the first watch.  "I was once on a voyage
on a tramp steamer loaded with four hundred Chinks--I beg your
pardon, sir--Chinese.  They were coolies, contract labourers, coming
back from serving their time.

"And the cholera broke out.  We hove over three hundred of them
overboard, sir, along with both bosuns, most of the Lascar crew, and
the captain, the mate, the third mate, and the first and third
engineers.  The second and one white oiler was all that was left
below, and I was in command on deck, when we made port.  The doctors
wouldn't come aboard.  They made me anchor in the outer roads and
told me to heave out my dead.  There was some tall buryin' about that
time, Mr. Pathurst, and they went overboard without canvas, coal, or
iron.  They had to.  I had nobody to help me, and the Chinks below
wouldn't lift a hand.

"I had to go down myself, drag the bodies on to the slings, then
climb on deck and heave them up with the donkey.  And each trip I
took a drink.  I was pretty drunk when the job was done."

"And you never caught it yourself?" I queried.  Mr. Mellaire held up
his left hand.  I had often noted that the index finger was missing.

"That's all that happened to me, sir.  The old man'd had a fox-
terrier like yours.  And after the old man passed out the puppy got
real, chummy with me.  Just as I was making the hoist of the last
sling-load, what does the puppy do but jump on my leg and sniff my
hand.  I turned to pat him, and the next I knew my other hand had
slipped into the gears and that finger wasn't there any more.

"Heavens!" I cried.  "What abominable luck to come through such a
terrible experience like that and then lose your finger!"

"That's what I thought, sir," Mr. Mellaire agreed.

"What did you do?" I asked.

"Oh, just held it up and looked at it, and said 'My goodness
gracious!' and took another drink."

"And you didn't get the cholera afterwards?"

"No, sir.  I reckon I was so full of alcohol the germs dropped dead
before they could get to me."  He considered a moment.  "Candidly,
Mr. Pathurst, I don't know about that alcohol theory.  The old man
and the mates died drunk, and so did the third engineer.  But the
chief was a teetotaller, and he died, too."


Never again shall I wonder that the sea is hard.  I walked apart from
the second mate and stared up at the magnificent fabric of the
Elsinore sweeping and swaying great blotting curves of darkness
across the face of the starry sky.



CHAPTER XXII



Something has happened.  But nobody knows, either fore or aft, except
the interested persons, and they will not say anything.  Yet the ship
is abuzz with rumours and guesses.

This I do know:  Mr. Pike has received a fearful blow on the head.
At table, yesterday, at midday, I arrived late, and, passing behind
his chair, I saw a prodigious lump on top of his head.  When I was
seated, facing him, I noted that his eyes seemed dazed; yes, and I
could see pain in them.  He took no part in the conversation, ate
perfunctorily, behaved stupidly at times, and it was patent that he
was controlling himself with an iron hand.

And nobody dares ask him what has happened.  I know I don't dare ask
him, and I am a passenger, a privileged person.  This redoubtable old
sea-relic has inspired me with a respect for him that partakes half
of timidity and half of awe.

He acts as if he were suffering from concussion of the brain.  His
pain is evident, not alone in his eyes and the strained expression of
his face, but by his conduct when he thinks he is unobserved.  Last
night, just for a breath of air and a moment's gaze at the stars, I
came out of the cabin door and stood on the main deck under the break
of the poop.  From directly over my head came a low and persistent
groaning.  My curiosity was aroused, and I retreated into the cabin,
came out softly on to the poop by way of the chart-house, and
strolled noiselessly for'ard in my slippers.  It was Mr. Pike.  He
was leaning collapsed on the rail, his head resting on his arms.  He
was giving voice in secret to the pain that racked him.  A dozen feet
away he could not be heard.  But, close to his shoulder, I could hear
his steady, smothered groaning that seemed to take the form of a
chant.  Also, at regular intervals, he would mutter:

"Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear."  Always he repeated
the phrase five times, then returned to his groaning.  I stole away
as silently as I had come.

Yet he resolutely stands his watches and performs all his duties of
chief officer.  Oh, I forgot.  Miss West dared to quiz him, and he
replied that he had a toothache, and that if it didn't get better
he'd pull it out.

Wada cannot learn what has happened.  There were no eye-witnesses.
He says that the Asiatic clique, discussing the affair in the cook's
room, thinks the three gangsters are responsible.  Bert Rhine is
carrying a lame shoulder.  Nosey Murphy is limping as from some
injury in the hips.  And Kid Twist has been so badly beaten that he
has not left his bunk for two days.  And that is all the data to
build on.  The gangsters are as close-mouthed as Mr. Pike.  The
Asiatic clique has decided that murder was attempted and that all
that saved the mate was his hard skull.

Last evening, in the second dog-watch, I got another proof that
Captain West is not so oblivious of what goes on aboard the Elsinore
as he seems.  I had gone for'ard along the bridge to the mizzen-mast,
in the shadow of which I was leaning.  From the main deck, in the
alley-way between the 'midship-house and the rail, came the voices of
Bert Rhine, Nosey Murphy, and Mr. Mellaire.  It was not ship's work.
They were having a friendly, even sociable chat, for their voices
hummed genially, and now and again one or another laughed, and
sometimes all laughed.

I remembered Wada's reports on this unseamanlike intimacy of the
second mate with the gangsters, and tried to make out the nature of
the conversation.  But the gangsters were low-voiced, and all I could
catch was the tone of friendliness and good-nature.

Suddenly, from the poop, came Captain West's voice.  It was the
voice, not of the Samurai riding the storm, but of the Samurai calm
and cold.  It was clear, soft, and mellow as the mellowest bell ever
cast by eastern artificers of old time to call worshippers to prayer.
I know I slightly chilled to it--it was so exquisitely sweet and yet
as passionless as the ring of steel on a frosty night.  And I knew
the effect on the men beneath me was electrical.  I could FEEL them
stiffen and chill to it as I had stiffened and chilled.  And yet all
he said was:

"Mr. Mellaire."

"Yes, sir," answered Mr. Mellaire, after a moment of tense silence.

"Come aft here," came Captain West's voice.

I heard the second mate move along the deck beneath me and stop at
the foot of the poop-ladder.

"Your place is aft on the poop, Mr. Mellaire," said the cold,
passionless voice.

"Yes, sir," answered the second mate.

That was all.  Not another word was spoken.  Captain West resumed his
stroll on the weather side of the poop, and Mr. Mellaire, ascending
the ladder, went to pacing up and down the lee side.

I continued along the bridge to the forecastle head and purposely
remained there half an hour ere I returned to the cabin by way of the
main deck.  Although I did not analyze my motive, I knew I did not
desire any one to know that I had overheard the occurrence.


I have made a discovery.  Ninety per cent. of our crew is brunette.
Aft, with the exception of Wada and the steward, who are our
servants, we are all blonds.  What led me to this discovery was
Woodruff's Effects of Tropical Light on White Men, which I am just
reading.  Major Woodruff's thesis is that the white-skinned, blue-
eyed Aryan, born to government and command, ever leaving his
primeval, overcast and foggy home, ever commands and governs the rest
of the world and ever perishes because of the too-white light he
encounters.  It is a very tenable hypothesis, and will bear looking
into.

But to return.  Every one of us who sits aft in the high place is a
blond Aryan.  For'ard, leavened with a ten per cent, of degenerate
blonds, the remaining ninety per cent, of the slaves that toil for us
are brunettes.  They will not perish.  According to Woodruff, they
will inherit the earth, not because of their capacity for mastery and
government, but because of their skin-pigmentation which enables
their tissues to resist the ravages of the sun.

And I look at the four of us at table--Captain West, his daughter,
Mr. Pike, and myself--all fair-skinned, blue-eyed, and perishing, yet
mastering and commanding, like our fathers before us, to the end of
our type on the earth.  Ah, well, ours is a lordly history, and
though we may be doomed to pass, in our time we shall have trod on
the faces of all peoples, disciplined them to obedience, taught them
government, and dwelt in the palaces we have compelled them by the
weight of our own right arms to build for us.

The Elsinore depicts this in miniature.  The best of the food and all
spacious and beautiful accommodation is ours.  For'ard is a pig-sty
and a slave-pen.

As a king, Captain West sits above all.  As a captain of soldiers,
Mr. Pike enforces his king's will.  Miss West is a princess of the
royal house.  And I?  Am I not an honourable, noble-lineaged
pensioner on the deeds and achievements of my father, who, in his
day, compelled thousands of the lesser types to the building of the
fortune I enjoy?



CHAPTER XXIII



The north-west trade carried us almost into the south-east trade, and
then left us for several days to roll and swelter in the doldrums.

During this time I have discovered that I have a genius for rifle-
shooting.  Mr. Pike swore I must have had long practice; and I
confess I was myself startled by the ease of the thing.  Of course,
it's the knack; but one must be so made, I suppose, in order to be
able to acquire the knack.

By the end of half an hour, standing on the heaving deck and shooting
at bottles floating on the rolling swell, I found that I broke each
bottle at the first shot.  The supply of empty bottles giving out,
Mr. Pike was so interested that he had the carpenter saw me a lot of
small square blocks of hard wood.  These were more satisfactory.  A
well-aimed shot threw them out of the water and spinning into the
air, and I could use a single block until it had drifted out of
range.  In an hour's time I could, shooting quickly and at short
range, empty my magazine at a block and hit it nine times, and, on
occasion, ten times, out of eleven.

I might not have judged my aptitude as unusual, had I not induced
Miss West and Wada to try their hands.  Neither had luck like mine.
I finally persuaded Mr. Pike, and he went behind the wheel-house so
that none of the crew might see how poor a shot he was.  He was never
able to hit the mark, and was guilty of the most ludicrous misses.

"I never could get the hang of rifle-shooting," he announced
disgustedly, "but when it comes to close range with a gat I'm right
there.  I guess I might as well overhaul mine and limber it up."

He went below and came back with a huge '44 automatic pistol and a
handful of loaded clips.

"Anywhere from right against the body up to ten or twelve feet away,
holding for the stomach, it's astonishing, Mr. Pathurst, what you can
do with a weapon like this.  Now you can't use a rifle in a mix-up.
I've been down and under, with a bunch giving me the boot, when I
turned loose with this.  Talk about damage!  It ranged them the full
length of their bodies.  One of them'd just landed his brogans on my
face when I let'm have it.  The bullet entered just above his knee,
smashed the collarbone, where it came out, and then clipped off an
ear.  I guess that bullet's still going.  It took more than a full-
sized man to stop it.  So I say, give me a good handy gat when
something's doing."

"Ain't you afraid you'll use all your ammunition up?" he asked
anxiously half an hour later, as I continued to crack away with my
new toy.

He was quite reassured when I told him Wada had brought along fifty
thousand rounds for me.

In the midst of the shooting, two sharks came swimming around.  They
were quite large, Mr. Pike said, and he estimated their length at
fifteen feet.  It was Sunday morning, so that the crew, except for
working the ship, had its time to itself, and soon the carpenter,
with a rope for a fish-line and a great iron hook baited with a chunk
of salt pork the size of my head, captured first one, and then the
other, of the monsters.  They were hoisted in on the main deck.  And
then I saw a spectacle of the cruelty of the sea.

The full crew gathered about with sheath knives, hatchets, clubs, and
big butcher knives borrowed from the galley.  I shall not give the
details, save that they gloated and lusted, and roared and bellowed
their delight in the atrocities they committed.  Finally, the first
of the two fish was thrown back into the ocean with a pointed stake
thrust into its upper and lower jaws so that it could not close its
mouth.  Inevitable and prolonged starvation was the fate thus meted
out to it.

"I'll show you something, boys," Andy Fay cried, as they prepared to
handle the second shark.

The Maltese Cockney had been a most capable master of ceremonies with
the first one.  More than anything else, I think, was I hardened
against these brutes by what I saw them do.  In the end, the
maltreated fish thrashed about the deck entirely eviscerated.
Nothing remained but the mere flesh-shell of the creature, yet it
would not die.  It was amazing the life that lingered when all the
vital organs were gone.  But more amazing things were to follow.

Mulligan Jacobs, his arms a butcher's to the elbows, without as much
as "by your leave," suddenly thrust a hunk of meat into my hand.  I
sprang back, startled, and dropped it to the deck, while a gleeful
howl went up from the two-score men.  I was shamed, despite myself.
These brutes held me in little respect; and, after all, human nature
is so strange a compound that even a philosopher dislikes being held
in disesteem by the brutes of his own species.

I looked at what I had dropped.  It was the heart of the shark, and
as I looked, there under my eyes, on the scorching deck where the
pitch oozed from the seams, the heart pulsed with life.

And I dared.  I would not permit these animals to laugh at any
fastidiousness of mine.  I stooped and picked up the heart, and while
I concealed and conquered my qualms I held it in my hand and felt it
beat in my hand.

At any rate, I had won a mild victory over Mulligan Jacobs; for he
abandoned me for the more delectable diversion of torturing the shark
that would not die.  For several minutes it had been lying quite
motionless.  Mulligan Jacobs smote it a heavy blow on the nose with
the flat of a hatchet, and as the thing galvanized into life and
flung its body about the deck the little venomous man screamed in
ecstasy:

"The hooks are in it!--the hooks are in it!--and burnin' hot!"

He squirmed and writhed with fiendish delight, and again he struck it
on the nose and made it leap.

This was too much, and I beat a retreat--feigning boredom, or
cessation of interest, of course; and absently carrying the still
throbbing heart in my hand.

As I came upon the poop I saw Miss West, with her sewing basket,
emerging from the port door of the chart-house.  The deck-chairs were
on that side, so I stole around on the starboard side of the chart-
house in order to fling overboard unobserved the dreadful thing I
carried.  But, drying on the surface in the tropic heat and still
pulsing inside, it stuck to my hand, so that it was a bad cast.
Instead of clearing the railing, it struck on the pin-rail and stuck
there in the shade, and as I opened the door to go below and wash my
hands, with a last glance I saw it pulse where it had fallen.

When I came back it was still pulsing.  I heard a splash overside
from the waist of the ship, and knew the carcass had been flung
overboard.  I did not go around the chart-house and join Miss West,
but stood enthralled by the spectacle of that heart that beat in the
tropic heat.

Boisterous shouts from the sailors attracted my attention.  They had
all climbed to the top of the tall rail and were watching something
outboard.  I followed their gaze and saw the amazing thing.  That
long-eviscerated shark was not dead.  It moved, it swam, it thrashed
about, and ever it strove to escape from the surface of the ocean.
Sometimes it swam down as deep as fifty or a hundred feet, and then,
still struggling to escape the surface, struggled involuntarily to
the surface.  Each failure thus to escape fetched wild laughter from
the men.  But why did they laugh?  The thing was sublime, horrible,
but it was not humorous.  I leave it to you.  What is there laughable
in the sight of a pain-distraught fish rolling helplessly on the
surface of the sea and exposing to the sun all its essential
emptiness?

I was turning away, when renewed shouting drew my gaze.  Half a dozen
other sharks had appeared, smaller ones, nine or ten feet long.  They
attacked their helpless comrade.  They tore him to pieces they
destroyed him, devoured him.  I saw the last shred of him disappear
down their maws.  He was gone, disintegrated, entombed in the living
bodies of his kind, and already entering into the processes of
digestion.  And yet, there, in the shade on the pin-rail, that
unbelievable and monstrous heart beat on.



CHAPTER XXIV



The voyage is doomed to disaster and death.  I know Mr. Pike, now,
and if ever he discovers the identity of Mr. Mellaire, murder will be
done.  Mr. Mellaire is not Mr. Mellaire.  He is not from Georgia.  He
is from Virginia.  His name is Waltham--Sidney Waltham.  He is one of
the Walthams of Virginia, a black sheep, true, but a Waltham.  Of
this I am convinced, just as utterly as I am convinced that Mr. Pike
will kill him if he learns who he is.

Let me tell how I have discovered all this.  It was last night,
shortly before midnight, when I came up on the poop to enjoy a whiff
of the south-east trades in which we are now bowling along, close-
hauled in order to weather Cape San Roque.  Mr. Pike had the watch,
and I paced up and down with him while he told me old pages of his
life.  He has often done this, when not "sea-grouched," and often he
has mentioned with pride--yes, with reverence--a master with whom he
sailed five years.  "Old Captain Somers," he called him--"the finest,
squarest, noblest man I ever sailed under, sir."

Well, last night our talk turned on lugubrious subjects, and Mr.
Pike, wicked old man that he is, descanted on the wickedness of the
world and on the wickedness of the man who had murdered Captain
Somers.

"He was an old man, over seventy years old," Mr. Pike went on.  "And
they say he'd got a touch of palsy--I hadn't seen him for years.  You
see, I'd had to clear out from the coast because of trouble.  And
that devil of a second mate caught him in bed late at night and beat
him to death.  It was terrible.  They told me about it.  Right in San
Francisco, on board the Jason Harrison, it happened, eleven years
ago.

"And do you know what they did?  First, they gave the murderer life,
when he should have been hanged.  His plea was insanity, from having
had his head chopped open a long time before by a crazy sea-cook.
And when he'd served seven years the governor pardoned him.  He
wasn't any good, but his people were a powerful old Virginian family,
the Walthams--I guess you've heard of them--and they brought all
kinds of pressure to bear.  His name was Sidney Waltham."

At this moment the warning bell, a single stroke fifteen minutes
before the change of watch, rang out from the wheel and was repeated
by the look-out on the forecastle head.  Mr. Pike, under his stress
of feeling, had stopped walking, and we stood at the break of the
poop.  As chance would have it, Mr. Mellaire was a quarter of an hour
ahead of time, and he climbed the poop-ladder and stood beside us
while the mate concluded his tale.

"I didn't mind it," Mr. Pike continued, "as long as he'd got life and
was serving his time.  But when they pardoned him out after only
seven years I swore I'd get him.  And I will.  I don't believe in God
or devil, and it's a rotten crazy world anyway; but I do believe in
hunches.  And I know I'm going to get him."

"What will you do?" I queried.

"Do?" Mr. Pike's voice was fraught with surprise that I should not
know.  "Do?  Well, what did he do to old Captain Somers?  Yet he's
disappeared these last three years now.  I've heard neither hide nor
hair of him.  But he's a sailor, and he'll drift back to the sea, and
some day . . . "

In the illumination of a match with which the second mate was
lighting his pipe I saw Mr. Pike's gorilla arms and huge clenched
paws raised to heaven, and his face convulsed and working.  Also, in
that brief moment of light, I saw that the second mate's hand which
held the match was shaking.

"And I ain't never seen even a photo of him," Mr. Pike added.  "But
I've got a general idea of his looks, and he's got a mark
unmistakable.  I could know him by it in the dark.  All I'd have to
do is feel it.  Some day I'll stick my fingers into that mark."

"What did you say, sir, was the captain's name?" Mr. Mellaire asked
casually.

"Somers--old Captain Somers," Mr. Pike answered.

Mr. Mellaire repeated the name aloud several times, and then
hazarded:

"Didn't he command the Lammermoor thirty years ago?"

"That's the man."

"I thought I recognized him.  I lay at anchor in a ship next to his
in Table Bay that time ago."

"Oh, the wickedness of the world, the wickedness of the world," Mr.
Pike muttered as he turned and strode away.

I said good-night to the second mate and had started to go below,
when he called to me in a low voice, "Mr. Pathurst!"

I stopped, and then he said, hurriedly and confusedly:

"Never mind, sir . . . I beg your pardon . . . I--I changed my mind."

Below, lying in my bunk, I found myself unable to read.  My mind was
bent on returning to what had just occurred on deck, and, against my
will, the most gruesome speculations kept suggesting themselves.

And then came Mr. Mellaire.  He had slipped down the booby hatch into
the big after-room and thence through the hallway to my room.  He
entered noiselessly, on clumsy tiptoes, and pressed his finger
warningly to his lips.  Not until he was beside my bunk did he speak,
and then it was in a whisper.

"I beg your pardon, sir, Mr. Pathurst . . . I--I beg your pardon;
but, you see, sir, I was just passing, and seeing you awake I . . . I
thought it would not inconvenience you to . . . you see, I thought I
might just as well prefer a small favour . . . seeing that I would
not inconvenience you, sir . . . I . . . I . . . "

I waited for him to proceed, and in the pause that ensued, while he
licked his dry lips with his tongue, the thing ambushed in his skull
peered at me through his eyes and seemed almost on the verge of
leaping out and pouncing upon me.

"Well, sir," he began again, this time more coherently, "it's just a
little thing--foolish on my part, of course--a whim, so to say--but
you will remember, near the beginning of the voyage, I showed you a
scar on my head . . . a really small affair, sir, which I contracted
in a misadventure.  It amounts to a deformity, which it is my fancy
to conceal.  Not for worlds, sir, would I care to have Miss West, for
instance, know that I carried such a deformity.  A man is a man, sir-
-you understand--and you have not spoken of it to her?"

"No," I replied.  "It just happens that I have not."

"Nor to anybody else?--to, say, Captain West?--or, say, Mr. Pike?"

"No, I haven't mentioned it to anybody," I averred.

He could not conceal the relief he experienced.  The perturbation
went out of his face and manner, and the ambushed thing drew back
deeper into the recess of his skull.

"The favour, sir, Mr. Pathurst, that I would prefer is that you will
not mention that little matter to anybody.  I suppose" (he smiled,
and his voice was superlatively suave) "it is vanity on my part--you
understand, I am sure."

I nodded, and made a restless movement with my book as evidence that
I desired to resume my reading.

"I can depend upon you for that, Mr. Pathurst?"  His whole voice and
manner had changed.  It was practically a command, and I could almost
see fangs, bared and menacing, sprouting in the jaws of that thing I
fancied dwelt behind his eyes.

"Certainly," I answered coldly.

"Thank you, sir--I thank you," he said, and, without more ado,
tiptoed from the room.

Of course I did not read.  How could I?  Nor did I sleep.  My mind
ran on, and on, and not until the steward brought my coffee, shortly
before five, did I sink into my first doze.

One thing is very evident.  Mr. Pike does not dream that the murderer
of Captain Somers is on board the Elsinore.  He has never glimpsed
that prodigious fissure that clefts Mr. Mellaire's, or, rather,
Sidney Waltham's, skull.  And I, for one, shall never tell Mr. Pike.
And I know, now, why from the very first I disliked the second mate.
And I understand that live thing, that other thing, that lurks within
and peers out through the eyes.  I have recognized the same thing in
the three gangsters for'ard.  Like the second mate, they are prison
birds.  The restraint, the secrecy, and iron control of prison life
has developed in all of them terrible other selves.

Yes, and another thing is very evident.  On board this ship, driving
now through the South Atlantic for the winter passage of Cape Horn,
are all the elements of sea tragedy and horror.  We are freighted
with human dynamite that is liable at any moment to blow our tiny
floating world to fragments.



CHAPTER XXV



The days slip by.  The south-east trade is brisk and small splashes
of sea occasionally invade my open ports.  Mr. Pike's room was soaked
yesterday.  This is the most exciting thing that has happened for
some time.  The gangsters rule in the forecastle.  Larry and Shorty
have had a harmless FIGHT.  The hooks continue to burn in Mulligan
Jacobs's brain.  Charles Davis resides alone in his little steel
room, coming out only to get his food from the galley.  Miss West
plays and sings, doctors Possum, launders, and is for ever otherwise
busy with her fancy work.  Mr. Pike runs the phonograph every other
evening in the second dog-watch.  Mr. Mellaire hides the cleft in his
head.  I keep his secret.  And Captain West, more remote than ever,
sits in the draught of wind in the twilight cabin.

We are now thirty-seven days at sea, in which time, until to-day, we
have not sighted a vessel.  And to-day, at one time, no less than six
vessels were visible from the deck.  Not until I saw these ships was
I able thoroughly to realize how lonely this ocean is.

Mr. Pike tells me we are several hundred miles off the South American
coast.  And yet, only the other day, it seems, we were scarcely more
distant from Africa.  A big velvety moth fluttered aboard this
morning, and we are filled with conjecture.  How possibly could it
have come from the South American coast these hundreds of miles in
the teeth of the trades?

The Southern Cross has been visible, of course, for weeks; the North
Star has disappeared behind the bulge of the earth; and the Great
Bear, at its highest, is very low.  Soon it, too, will be gone and we
shall be raising the Magellan Clouds.

I remember the fight between Larry and Shorty.  Wada reports that Mr.
Pike watched it for some time, until, becoming incensed at their
awkwardness, he clouted both of them with his open hands and made
them stop, announcing that until they could make a better showing he
intended doing all the fighting on the Elsinore himself.

It is a feat beyond me to realize that he is sixty-nine years old.
And when I look at the tremendous build of him and at his fearful,
man-handling hands, I conjure up a vision of him avenging Captain
Somers's murder.

Life is cruel.  Amongst the Elsinore's five thousand tons of coal are
thousands of rats.  There is no way for them to get out of their
steel-walled prison, for all the ventilators are guarded with stout
wire-mesh.  On her previous voyage, loaded with barley, they
increased and multiplied.  Now they are imprisoned in the coal, and
cannibalism is what must occur among them.  Mr. Pike says that when
we reach Seattle there will be a dozen or a score of survivors, huge
fellows, the strongest and fiercest.  Sometimes, passing the mouth of
one ventilator that is in the after wall of the chart-house, I can
hear their plaintive squealing and crying from far beneath in the
coal.

Other and luckier rats are in the 'tween decks for'ard, where all the
spare suits of sails are stored.  They come out and run about the
deck at night, steal food from the galley, and lap up the dew.  Which
reminds me that Mr. Pike will no longer look at Possum.  It seems,
under his suggestion, that Wada trapped a rat in the donkey-engine
room.  Wada swears that it was the father of all rats, and that, by
actual measurement, it scaled eighteen inches from nose to the tip of
tail.  Also, it seems that Mr. Pike and Wada, with the door shut in
the former's room, pitted the rat against Possum, and that Possum was
licked.  They were compelled to kill the rat themselves, while
Possum, when all was over, lay down and had a fit.

Now Mr. Pike abhors a coward, and his disgust with Possum is
profound.  He no longer plays with the puppy, nor even speaks to him,
and, whenever he passes him on the deck, glowers sourly at him.

I have been reading up the South Atlantic Sailing Directions, and I
find that we are now entering the most beautiful sunset region in the
world.  And this evening we were favoured with a sample.  I was in my
quarters, overhauling my books, when Miss West called to me from the
foot of the chart-house stairs:

"Mr. Pathurst!--Come quick!  Oh, do come quick!  You can't afford to
miss it!"

Half the sky, from the zenith to the western sea-line, was an
astonishing sheet of pure, pale, even gold.  And through this sheen,
on the horizon, burned the sun, a disc of richer gold.  The gold of
the sky grew more golden, then tarnished before our eyes and began to
glow faintly with red.  As the red deepened, a mist spread over the
whole sheet of gold and the burning yellow sun.  Turner was never
guilty of so audacious an orgy in gold-mist.

Presently, along the horizon, entirely completing the circle of sea
and sky, the tight-packed shapes of the trade wind clouds began to
show through the mist; and as they took form they spilled with rose-
colour at their upper edges, while their bases were a pulsing,
bluish-white.  I say it advisedly.  All the colours of this display
PULSED.

As the gold-mist continued to clear away, the colours became garish,
bold; the turquoises went into greens and the roses turned to the red
of blood.  And the purple and indigo of the long swells of sea were
bronzed with the colour-riot in the sky, while across the water, like
gigantic serpents, crawled red and green sky-reflections.  And then
all the gorgeousness quickly dulled, and the warm, tropic darkness
drew about us.



CHAPTER XXVI



The Elsinore is truly the ship of souls, the world in miniature; and,
because she is such a small world, cleaving this vastitude of ocean
as our larger world cleaves space, the strange juxtapositions that
continually occur are startling.

For instance, this afternoon on the poop.  Let me describe it.  Here
was Miss West, in a crisp duck sailor suit, immaculately white, open
at the throat, where, under the broad collar, was knotted a man-of-
war black silk neckerchief.  Her smooth-groomed hair, a trifle
rebellious in the breeze, was glorious.  And here was I, in white
ducks, white shoes, and white silk shirt, as immaculate and well-
tended as she.  The steward was just bringing the pretty tea-service
for Miss West, and in the background Wada hovered.

We had been discussing philosophy--or, rather, I had been feeling her
out; and from a sketch of Spinoza's anticipations of the modern mind,
through the speculative interpretations of the latest achievements in
physics of Sir Oliver Lodge and Sir William Ramsay, I had come, as
usual, to De Casseres, whom I was quoting, when Mr. Pike snarled
orders to the watch.

"'In this rise into the azure of pure perception, attainable only by
a very few human beings, the spectacular sense is born,'."  I was
quoting.  "'Life is no longer good or evil.  It is a perpetual play
of forces without beginning or end.  The freed Intellect merges
itself with the World-Will and partakes of its essence, which is not
a moral essence but an aesthetic essence . . . "

And at this moment the watch swarmed on to the poop to haul on the
port-braces of the mizzen-sky-sail, royal and topgallant-sail.  The
sailors passed us, or toiled close to us, with lowered eyes.  They
did not look at us, so far removed from them were we.  It was this
contrast that caught my fancy.  Here were the high and low, slaves
and masters, beauty and ugliness, cleanness and filth.  Their feet
were bare and scaled with patches of tar and pitch.  Their unbathed
bodies were garmented in the meanest of clothes, dingy, dirty,
ragged, and sparse.  Each one had on but two garments--dungaree
trousers and a shoddy cotton shirt.

And we, in our comfortable deck-chairs, our two servants at our
backs, the quintessence of elegant leisure, sipped delicate tea from
beautiful, fragile cups, and looked on at these wretched ones whose
labour made possible the journey of our little world.  We did not
speak to them, nor recognize their existence, any more than would
they have dared speak to us.

And Miss West, with the appraising eye of a plantation mistress for
the condition of her field slaves, looked them over.

"You see how they have fleshed up," she said, as they coiled the last
turns of the ropes over the pins and faded away for'ard off the poop.
"It is the regular hours, the good weather, the hard work, the open
air, the sufficient food, and the absence of whisky.  And they will
keep in this fettle until they get off the Horn.  And then you will
see them go down from day to day.  A winter passage of the Horn is
always a severe strain on the men.

"But then, once we are around and in the good weather of the Pacific,
you will see them gain again from day to day.  And when we reach
Seattle they will be in splendid shape.  Only they will go ashore,
drink up their wages in several days, and ship away on other vessels
in precisely the same sodden, miserable condition that they were in
when they sailed with us from Baltimore."

And just then Captain West came out the chart-house door, strolled by
for a single turn up and down, and with a smile and a word for us and
an all-observant eye for the ship, the trim of her sails, the wind,
and the sky, and the weather promise, went back through the chart-
house door--the blond Aryan master, the king, the Samurai.

And I finished sipping my tea of delicious and most expensive aroma,
and our slant-eyed, dark-skinned servitors carried the pretty gear
away, and I read, continuing De Casseres:

"'Instinct wills, creates, carries on the work of the species.  The
Intellect destroys, negatives, satirizes and ends in pure nihilism,
instinct creates life, endlessly, hurling forth profusely and blindly
its clowns, tragedians and comedians.  Intellect remains the eternal
spectator of the play.  It participates at will, but never gives
itself wholly to the fine sport.  The Intellect, freed from the
trammels of the personal will, soars into the ether of perception,
where Instinct follows it in a thousand disguises, seeking to draw it
down to earth.'"



CHAPTER XXVII



We are now south of Rio and working south.  We are out of the
latitude of the trades, and the wind is capricious.  Rain squalls and
wind squalls vex the Elsinore.  One hour we may be rolling
sickeningly in a dead calm, and the next hour we may be dashing
fourteen knots through the water and taking off sail as fast as the
men can clew up and lower away.  A night of calm, when sleep is well-
nigh impossible in the sultry, muggy air, may be followed by a day of
blazing sun and an oily swell from the south'ard, connoting great
gales in that area of ocean we are sailing toward--or all day long
the Elsinore, under an overcast sky, royals and sky sails furled, may
plunge and buck under wind-pressure into a short and choppy head-sea.

And all this means work for the men.  Taking Mr. Pike's judgment,
they are very inadequate, though by this time they know the ropes.
He growls and grumbles, and snorts and sneers whenever he watches
them doing anything.  To-day, at eleven in the morning, the wind was
so violent, continuing in greater gusts after having come in a great
gust, that Mr. Pike ordered the mainsail taken off.  The great
crojack was already off.  But the watch could not clew up the
mainsail, and, after much vain sing-songing and pull-hauling, the
watch below was routed out to bear a hand.

"My God!" Mr. Pike groaned to me.  "Two watches for a rag like that
when half a decent watch could do it!  Look at that preventer bosun
of mine!"

Poor Nancy!  He looked the saddest, sickest, bleakest creature I had
ever seen.  He was so wretched, so miserable, so helpless.  And
Sundry Buyers was just as impotent.  The expression on his face was
of pain and hopelessness, and as he pressed his abdomen he lumbered
futilely about, ever seeking something he might do and ever failing
to find it.  He pottered.  He would stand and stare at one rope for a
minute or so at a time, following it aloft with his eyes through the
maze of ropes and stabs and gears with all the intentness of a man
working out an intricate problem.  Then, holding his hand against his
stomach, he would lumber on a few steps and select another rope for
study.

"Oh dear, oh dear," Mr. Pike lamented.  "How can one drive with
bosuns like that and a crew like that?  Just the same, if I was
captain of this ship I'd drive 'em.  I'd show 'em what drive was, if
I had to lose a few of them.  And when they grow weak off the Horn
what'll we do?  It'll be both watches all the time, which will weaken
them just that much the faster."

Evidently this winter passage of the Horn is all that one has been
led to expect from reading the narratives of the navigators.  Iron
men like the two mates are very respectful of "Cape Stiff," as they
call that uttermost tip of the American continent.  Speaking of the
two mates, iron-made and iron-mouthed that they are, it is amusing
that in really serious moments both of them curse with "Oh dear, oh
dear."

In the spells of calm I take great delight in the little rifle.  I
have already fired away five thousand rounds, and have come to
consider myself an expert.  Whatever the knack of shooting may be,
I've got it.  When I get back I shall take up target practice.  It is
a neat, deft sport.

Not only is Possum afraid of the sails and of rats, but he is afraid
of rifle-fire, and at the first discharge goes yelping and ki-yi-ing
below.  The dislike Mr. Pike has developed for the poor little puppy
is ludicrous.  He even told me that if it were his dog he'd throw it
overboard for a target.  Just the same, he is an affectionate, heart-
warming little rascal, and has already crept so deep into my heart
that I am glad Miss West did not accept him.

And--oh!--he insists on sleeping with me on top the bedding; a
proceeding which has scandalized the mate.  "I suppose he'll be using
your toothbrush next," Mr. Pike growled at me.  But the puppy loves
my companionship, and is never happier than when on the bed with me.
Yet the bed is not entirely paradise, for Possum is badly frightened
when ours is the lee side and the seas pound and smash against the
glass ports.  Then the little beggar, electric with fear to every
hair tip, crouches and snarls menacingly and almost at the same time
whimpers appeasingly at the storm-monster outside.

"Father KNOWS the sea," Miss West said to me this afternoon.  "He
understands it, and he loves it."

"Or it may be habit," I ventured.

She shook her head.

"He does know it.  And he loves it.  That is why he has come back to
it.  All his people before him were sea folk.  His grandfather,
Anthony West, made forty-six voyages between 1801 and 1847.  And his
father, Robert, sailed master to the north-west coast before the gold
days and was captain of some of the fastest Cape Horn clippers after
the gold discovery.  Elijah West, father's great-grandfather, was a
privateersman in the Revolution.  He commanded the armed brig New
Defence.  And, even before that, Elijah's father, in turn, and
Elijah's father's father, were masters and owners on long-voyage
merchant adventures.

"Anthony West, in 1813 and 1814, commanded the David Bruce, with
letters of marque.  He was half-owner, with Gracie & Sons as the
other half-owners.  She was a two-hundred-ton schooner, built right
up in Maine.  She carried a long eighteen-pounder, two ten-pounders,
and ten six-pounders, and she sailed like a witch.  She ran the
blockade off Newport and got away to the English Channel and the Bay
of Biscay.  And, do you know, though she only cost twelve thousand
dollars all told, she took over three hundred thousand dollars of
British prizes.  A brother of his was on the Wasp.

"So, you see, the sea is in our blood.  She is our mother.  As far
back as we can trace all our line was born to the sea."  She laughed
and went on.  "We've pirates and slavers in our family, and all sorts
of disreputable sea-rovers.  Old Ezra West, just how far back I don't
remember, was executed for piracy and his body hung in chains at
Plymouth.

"The sea is father's blood.  And he knows, well, a ship, as you would
know a dog or a horse.  Every ship he sails has a distinct
personality for him.  I have watched him, in high moments, and SEEN
him think.  But oh! the times I have seen him when he does not think-
-when he FEELS and knows everything without thinking at all.  Really,
with all that appertains to the sea and ships, he is an artist.
There is no other word for it."

"You think a great deal of your father," I remarked.

"He is the most wonderful man I have ever known," she replied.
"Remember, you are not seeing him at his best.  He has never been the
same since mother's death.  If ever a man and woman were one, they
were."  She broke off, then concluded abruptly.  "You don't know him.
You don't know him at all."



CHAPTER XXVIII



"I think we are going to have a fine sunset," Captain West remarked
last evening.

Miss West and I abandoned our rubber of cribbage and hastened on
deck.  The sunset had not yet come, but all was preparing.  As we
gazed we could see the sky gathering the materials, grouping the gray
clouds in long lines and towering masses, spreading its palette with
slow-growing, glowing tints and sudden blobs of colour.

"It's the Golden Gate!" Miss West cried, indicating the west.  "See!
We're just inside the harbour.  Look to the south there.  If that
isn't the sky-line of San Francisco!  There's the Call Building, and
there, far down, the Ferry Tower, and surely that is the Fairmount."
Her eyes roved back through the opening between the cloud masses, and
she clapped her hands.  "It's a sunset within a sunset!  See!  The
Farallones!"--swimming in a miniature orange and red sunset all their
own.  "Isn't it the Golden Gate, and San Francisco, and the
Farallones?"  She appealed to Mr. Pike, who, leaning near, on the
poop-rail, was divided between gazing sourly at Nancy pottering on
the main deck and sourly at Possum, who, on the bridge, crouched with
terror each time the crojack flapped emptily above him.

The mate turned his head and favoured the sky picture with a solemn
stare.

"Oh, I don't know," he growled.  "It may look like the Farallones to
you, but to me it looks like a battleship coming right in the Gate
with a bone in its teeth at a twenty-knot clip."

Sure enough.  The floating Farallones had metamorphosed into a giant
warship.

Then came the colour riot, the dominant tone of which was green.  It
was green, green, green--the blue-green of the springing year, and
sere and yellow green and tawny-brown green of autumn.  There were
orange green, gold green, and a copper green.  And all these greens
were rich green beyond description; and yet the richness and the
greenness passed even as we gazed upon it, going out of the gray
clouds and into the sea, which assumed the exquisite golden pink of
polished copper, while the hollows of the smooth and silken ripples
were touched by a most ethereal pea green.

The gray clouds became a long, low swathe of ruby red, or garnet red-
-such as one sees in a glass of heavy burgundy when held to the
light.  There was such depth to this red!  And, below it, separated
from the main colour-mass by a line of gray-white fog, or line of
sea, was another and smaller streak of ruddy-coloured wine.

I strolled across the poop to the port side.

"Oh!  Come back!  Look!  Look!" Miss West cried to me.

"What's the use?" I answered.  "I've something just as good over
here."

She joined me, and as she did so I noted, a sour grin on Mr. Pike's
face.

The eastern heavens were equally spectacular.  That quarter of the
sky was sheer and delicate shell of blue, the upper portions of which
faded, changed, through every harmony, into a pale, yet warm, rose,
all trembling, palpitating, with misty blue tinting into pink.  The
reflection of this coloured sky-shell upon the water made of the sea
a glimmering watered silk, all changeable, blue, Nile-green, and
salmon-pink.  It was silky, silken, a wonderful silk that veneered
and flossed the softly moving, wavy water.

And the pale moon looked like a wet pearl gleaming through the tinted
mist of the sky-shell.

In the southern quadrant of the sky we discovered an entirely
different sunset--what would be accounted a very excellent orange-
and-red sunset anywhere, with grey clouds hanging low and lighted and
tinted on all their under edges.

"Huh!" Mr. Pike muttered gruffly, while we were exclaiming over our
fresh discovery.  "Look at the sunset I got here to the north.  It
ain't doing so badly now, I leave it to you."

And it wasn't.  The northern quadrant was a great fen of colour and
cloud, that spread ribs of feathery pink, fleece-frilled, from the
horizon to the zenith.  It was all amazing.  Four sunsets at the one
time in the sky!  Each quadrant glowed, and burned, and pulsed with a
sunset distinctly its own.

And as the colours dulled in the slow twilight, the moon, still
misty, wept tears of brilliant, heavy silver into the dim lilac sea.
And then came the hush of darkness and the night, and we came to
ourselves, out of reverie, sated with beauty, leaning toward each
other as we leaned upon the rail side by side.


I never grow tired of watching Captain West.  In a way he bears a
sort of resemblance to several of Washington's portraits.  He is six
feet of aristocratic thinness, and has a very definite, leisurely and
stately grace of movement.  His thinness is almost ascetic.  In
appearance and manner he is the perfect old-type New England
gentleman.

He has the same gray eyes as his daughter, although his are genial
rather than warm; and his eyes have the same trick of smiling.  His
skin is pinker than hers, and his brows and lashes are fairer.  But
he seems removed beyond passion, or even simple enthusiasm.  Miss
West is firm, like her father; but there is warmth in her firmness.
He is clean, he is sweet and courteous; but he is coolly sweet,
coolly courteous.  With all his certain graciousness, in cabin or on
deck, so far as his social equals are concerned, his graciousness is
cool, elevated, thin.

He is the perfect master of the art of doing nothing.  He never
reads, except the Bible; yet he is never bored.  Often, I note him in
a deck-chair, studying his perfect finger-nails, and, I'll swear, not
seeing them at all.  Miss West says he loves the sea.  And I ask
myself a thousand times, "But how?" He shows no interest in any phase
of the sea.  Although he called our attention to the glorious sunset
I have just described, he did not remain on deck to enjoy it.  He sat
below, in the big leather chair, not reading, not dozing, but merely
gazing straight before him at nothing.


The days pass, and the seasons pass.  We left Baltimore at the tail-
end of winter, went into spring and on through summer, and now we are
in fall weather and urging our way south to the winter of Cape Horn.
And as we double the Cape and proceed north, we shall go through
spring and summer--a long summer--pursuing the sun north through its
declination and arriving at Seattle in summer.  And all these seasons
have occurred, and will have occurred, in the space of five months.

Our white ducks are gone, and, in south latitude thirty-five, we are
wearing the garments of a temperate clime.  I notice that Wada has
given me heavier underclothes and heavier pyjamas, and that Possum,
of nights, is no longer content with the top of the bed but must
crawl underneath the bed-clothes.


We are now off the Plate, a region notorious for storms, and Mr. Pike
is on the lookout for a pampero.  Captain West does not seem to be on
the lookout for anything; yet I notice that he spends longer hours on
deck when the sky and barometer are threatening.

Yesterday we had a hint of Plate weather, and to-day an awesome
fiasco of the same.  The hint came last evening between the twilight
and the dark.  There was practically no wind, and the Elsinore, just
maintaining steerage way by means of intermittent fans of air from
the north, floundered exasperatingly in a huge glassy swell that
rolled up as an echo from some blown-out storm to the south.

Ahead of us, arising with the swiftness of magic, was a dense slate-
blackness.  I suppose it was cloud-formation, but it bore no
semblance to clouds.  It was merely and sheerly a blackness that
towered higher and higher until it overhung us, while it spread to
right and left, blotting out half the sea.

And still the light puffs from the north filled our sails; and still,
as the Elsinore floundered on the huge, smooth swells and the sails
emptied and flapped a hollow thunder, we moved slowly towards that
ominous blackness.  In the cast, in what was quite distinctly an
active thunder cloud, the lightning fairly winked, while the
blackness in front of us was rent with blobs and flashes of
lightning.

The last puffs left us, and in the hushes, between the rumbles of the
nearing thunder, the voices of the men aloft on the yards came to
one's ear as if they were right beside one instead of being hundreds
of feet away and up in the air.  That they were duly impressed by
what was impending was patent from the earnestness with which they
worked.  Both watches toiled under both mates, and Captain West
strolled the poop in his usual casual way, and gave no orders at all,
save in low conventional tones, when Mr. Pike came upon the poop and
conferred with him.

Miss West, having deserted the scene five minutes before, returned, a
proper sea-woman, clad in oil-skins, sou'wester, and long sea-boots.
She ordered me, quite peremptorily, to do the same.  But I could not
bring myself to leave the deck for fear of missing something, so I
compromised by having Wada bring my storm-gear to me.

And then the wind came, smack out of the blackness, with the
abruptness of thunder and accompanied by the most diabolical thunder.
And with the rain and thunder came the blackness.  It was tangible.
It drove past us in the bellowing wind like so much stuff that one
could feel.  Blackness as well as wind impacted on us.  There is no
other way to describe it than by the old, ancient old, way of saying
one could not see his hand before his face.

"Isn't it splendid!" Miss West shouted into my ear, close beside me,
as we clung to the railing of the break of the poop.

"Superb!" I shouted back, my lips to her ear, so that her hair
tickled my face.

And, I know not why--it must have been spontaneous with both of us--
in that shouting blackness of wind, as we clung to the rail to avoid
being blown away, our hands went out to each other and my hand and
hers gripped and pressed and then held mutually to the rail.

"Daughter of Herodias," I commented grimly to myself; but my hand did
not leave hers.

"What is happening?" I shouted in her ear.

"We've lost way," came her answer.  "I think we're caught aback!  The
wheel's up, but she could not steer!"

The Gabriel voice of the Samurai rang out.  "Hard over?" was his
mellow storm-call to the man at the wheel.  "Hard over, sir," came
the helmsman's reply, vague, cracked with strain, and smothered.

Came the lightning, before us, behind us, on every side, bathing us
in flaming minutes at a time.  And all the while we were deafened by
the unceasing uproar of thunder.  It was a weird sight--far aloft the
black skeleton of spars and masts from which the sails had been
removed; lower down, the sailors clinging like monstrous bugs as they
passed the gaskets and furled; beneath them the few set sails, filled
backward against the masts, gleaming whitely, wickedly, evilly, in
the fearful illumination; and, at the bottom, the deck and bridge and
houses of the Elsinore, and a tangled riff-raff of flying ropes, and
clumps and bunches of swaying, pulling, hauling, human creatures.

It was a great moment, the master's moment--caught all aback with all
our bulk and tonnage and infinitude of gear, and our heaven-aspiring
masts two hundred feet above our heads.  And our master was there, in
sheeting flame, slender, casual, imperturbable, with two men--one of
them a murderer--under him to pass on and enforce his will, and with
a horde of inefficients and weaklings to obey that will, and pull,
and haul, and by the sheer leverages of physics manipulate our
floating world so that it would endure this fury of the elements.

What happened next, what was done, I do not know, save that now and
again I heard the Gabriel voice; for the darkness came, and the rain
in pouring, horizontal sheets.  It filled my mouth and strangled my
lungs as if I had fallen overboard.  It seemed to drive up as well as
down, piercing its way under my sou'wester, through my oilskins, down
my tight-buttoned collar, and into my sea-boots.  I was dizzied,
obfuscated, by all this onslaught of thunder, lightning, wind,
blackness, and water.  And yet the master, near to me, there on the
poop, lived and moved serenely in all, voicing his wisdom and will to
the wisps of creatures who obeyed and by their brute, puny strength
pulled braces, slacked sheets, dragged courses, swung yards and
lowered them, hauled on buntlines and clewlines, smoothed and
gasketed the huge spreads of canvas.

How it happened I know not, but Miss West and I crouched together,
clinging to the rail and to each other in the shelter of the
thrumming weather-cloth.  My arm was about her and fast to the
railing; her shoulder pressed close against me, and by one hand she
held tightly to the lapel of my oilskin.

An hour later we made our way across the poop to the chart-house,
helping each other to maintain footing as the Elsinore plunged and
bucked in the rising sea and was pressed over and down by the weight
of wind on her few remaining set sails.  The wind, which had lulled
after the rain, had risen in recurrent gusts to storm violence.  But
all was well with the gallant ship.  The crisis was past, and the
ship lived, and we lived, and with streaming faces and bright eyes we
looked at each other and laughed in the bright light of the chart-
room.

"Who can blame one for loving the sea?" Miss West cried out
exultantly, as she wrung the rain from her ropes of hair which had
gone adrift in the turmoil.  "And the men of the sea!" she cried.
"The masters of the sea!  You saw my father . . . "

"He is a king," I said.

"He is a king," she repeated after me.

And the Elsinore lifted on a cresting sea and flung down on her side,
so that we were thrown together and brought up breathless against the
wall.

I said good-night to her at the foot of the stairs, and as I passed
the open door to the cabin I glanced in.  There sat Captain West,
whom I had thought still on deck.  His storm-trappings were removed,
his sea-boots replaced by slippers; and he leaned back in the big
leather chair, eyes wide open, beholding visions in the curling smoke
of a cigar against a background of wildly reeling cabin wall.

It was at eleven this morning that the Plate gave us a fiasco.  Last
night's was a real pampero--though a mild one.  To-day's promised to
be a far worse one, and then laughed at us as a proper cosmic joke.
The wind, during the night, had so eased that by nine in the morning
we had all our topgallant-sails set.  By ten we were rolling in a
dead calm.  By eleven the stuff began making up ominously in the
south'ard.

The overcast sky closed down.  Our lofty trucks seemed to scrape the
cloud-zenith.  The horizon drew in on us till it seemed scarcely half
a mile away.  The Elsinore was embayed in a tiny universe of mist and
sea.  The lightning played.  Sky and horizon drew so close that the
Elsinore seemed on the verge of being absorbed, sucked in by it,
sucked up by it.

Then from zenith to horizon the sky was cracked with forked
lightning, and the wet atmosphere turned to a horrid green.  The
rain, beginning gently, in dead calm, grew into a deluge of enormous
streaming drops.  It grew darker and darker, a green darkness, and in
the cabin, although it was midday, Wada and the steward lighted
lamps.  The lightning came closer and closer, until the ship was
enveloped in it.  The green darkness was continually a-tremble with
flame, through which broke greater illuminations of forked lightning.
These became more violent as the rain lessened, and, so absolutely
were we centred in this electrical maelstrom, there was no connecting
any chain or flash or fork of lightning with any particular thunder-
clap.  The atmosphere all about us paled and flamed.  Such a crashing
and smashing!  We looked every moment for the Elsinore to be struck.
And never had I seen such colours in lightning.  Although from moment
to moment we were dazzled by the greater bolts, there persisted
always a tremulous, pulsing lesser play of light, sometimes softly
blue, at other times a thin purple that quivered on into a thousand
shades of lavender.

And there was no wind.  No wind came.  Nothing happened.  The
Elsinore, naked-sparred, under only lower-topsails, with spanker and
crojack furled, was prepared for anything.  Her lower-topsails hung
in limp emptiness from the yards, heavy with rain and flapping
soggily when she rolled.  The cloud mass thinned, the day brightened,
the green blackness passed into gray twilight, the lightning eased,
the thunder moved along away from us, and there was no wind.  In half
an hour the sun was shining, the thunder muttered intermittently
along the horizon, and the Elsinore still rolled in a hush of air.

"You can't tell, sir," Mr. Pike growled to me.  "Thirty years ago I
was dismasted right here off the Plate in a clap of wind that come on
just as that come on."

It was the changing of the watches, and Mr. Mellaire, who had come on
the poop to relieve the mate, stood beside me.

"One of the nastiest pieces of water in the world," he concurred.
"Eighteen years ago the Plate gave it to me--lost half our sticks,
twenty hours on our beam-ends, cargo shifted, and foundered.  I was
two days in the boat before an English tramp picked us up.  And none
of the other boats ever was picked up."

"The Elsinore behaved very well last night," I put in cheerily.

"Oh, hell, that wasn't nothing," Mr. Pike grumbled.  "Wait till you
see a real pampero.  It's a dirty stretch hereabouts, and I, for one,
'll be glad when we get across It.  I'd sooner have a dozen Cape Horn
snorters than one of these.  How about you, Mr. Mellaire?"

"Same here, sir," he answered.  "Those sou'-westers are honest.  You
know what to expect.  But here you never know.  The best of ship-
masters can get tripped up off the Plate."


"'As I've found out .  .
Beyond a doubt,"


Mr. Pike hummed from Newcomb's Celeste, as he went down the ladder.



CHAPTER XXIX



The sunsets grow more bizarre and spectacular off this coast of the
Argentine.  Last evening we had high clouds, broken white and golden,
flung disorderly, generously, over the western half of the sky, while
in the east was painted a second sunset--a reflection, perhaps, of
the first.  At any rate, the eastern sky was a bank of pale clouds
that shed soft, spread rays of blue and white upon a blue-grey sea.

And the evening before last we had a gorgeous Arizona riot in the
west.  Bastioned upon the ocean cloud-tier was piled upon cloud-tier,
spacious and lofty, until we gazed upon a Grand Canyon a myriad times
vaster and more celestial than that of the Colorado.  The clouds took
on the same stratified, serrated, rose-rock formation, and all the
hollows were filled with the opal blues and purple hazes of the
Painted Lands.

The Sailing Directions say that these remarkable sunsets are due to
the dust being driven high into the air by the winds that blow across
the pampas of the Argentine.

And our sunset to-night--I am writing this at midnight, as I sit
propped in my blankets, wedged by pillows, while the Elsinore wallows
damnably in a dead calm and a huge swell rolling up from the Cape
Horn region, where, it does seem, gales perpetually blow.  But our
sunset.  Turner might have perpetrated it.  The west was as if a
painter had stood off and slapped brushfuls of gray at a green
canvas.  On this green background of sky the clouds spilled and
crumpled.

But such a background!  Such an orgy of green!  No shade of green was
missing in the interstices, large and small, between the milky,
curdled clouds--Nile-green high up, and then, in order, each with a
thousand shades, blue-green, brown-green, grey-green, and a wonderful
olive-green that tarnished into a rich bronze-green.

During the display the rest of the horizon glowed with broad bands of
pink, and blue, and pale green, and yellow.  A little later, when the
sun was quite down, in the background of the curdled clouds
smouldered a wine-red mass of colour, that faded to bronze and tinged
all the fading greens with its sanguinary hue.  The clouds themselves
flushed to rose of all shades, while a fan of gigantic streamers of
pale rose radiated toward the zenith.  These deepened rapidly into
flaunting rose-flame and burned long in the slow-closing twilight.

And with all this wonder of the beauty of the world still glowing in
my brain hours afterward, I hear the snarling of Mr. Pike above my
head, and the trample and drag of feet as the men move from rope to
rope and pull and haul.  More weather is making, and from the way
sail is being taken in it cannot be far off.


Yet at daylight this morning we were still wallowing in the same dead
calm and sickly swell.  Miss West says the barometer is down, but
that the warning has been too long, for the Plate, to amount to
anything.  Pamperos happen quickly here, and though the Elsinore,
under bare poles to her upper-topsails, is prepared for anything, it
may well be that they will be crowding on canvas in another hour.

Mr. Pike was so fooled that he actually had set the topgallant-sails,
and the gaskets were being taken off the royals, when the Samurai
came on deck, strolled back and forth a casual five minutes, then
spoke in an undertone to Mr. Pike.  Mr. Pike did not like it.  To me,
a tyro, it was evident that he disagreed with his master.
Nevertheless, his voice went out in a snarl aloft to the men on the
royal-yards to make all fast again.  Then it was clewlines and
buntlines and lowering of yards as the topgallant-sails were stripped
off.  The crojack was taken in, and some of the outer fore-and-aft
handsails, whose order of names I can never remember.

A breeze set in from the south-west, blowing briskly under a clear
sky.  I could see that Mr. Pike was secretly pleased.  The Samurai
had been mistaken.  And each time Mr. Pike glanced aloft at the naked
topgallant- and royal-yards, I knew his thought was that they might
well be carrying sail.  I was quite convinced that the Plate had
fooled Captain West.  So was Miss West convinced, and, being a
favoured person like myself, she frankly told me so.

"Father will be setting sail in half an hour," she prophesied.

What superior weather-sense Captain West possesses I know not, save
that it is his by Samurai right.  The sky, as I have said, was clear.
The air was brittle--sparkling gloriously in the windy sun.  And yet,
behold, in a brief quarter of an hour, the change that took place.  I
had just returned from a trip below, and Miss West was venting her
scorn on the River Plate and promising to go below to the sewing-
machine, when we heard Mr. Pike groan.  It was a whimsical groan of
disgust, contrition, and acknowledgment of inferiority before the
master.

"Here comes the whole River Plate," was what he groaned.

Following his gaze to the south-west, we saw it coming.  It was a
cloud-mass that blotted out the sunlight and the day.  It seemed to
swell and belch and roll over and over on itself as it advanced with
a rapidity that told of enormous wind behind it and in it.  Its speed
was headlong, terrific; and, beneath it, covering the sea, advancing
with it, was a gray bank of mist.

Captain West spoke to the mate, who bawled the order along, and the
watch, reinforced by the watch below, began dewing up the mainsail
and foresail and climbing into the rigging.

"Keep off!  Put your wheel over!  Hard over!" Captain West called
gently to the helmsman.

And the big wheel spun around, and the Elsinore's bow fell off so
that she might not be caught aback by the onslaught of wind.

Thunder rode in that rushing, rolling blackness of cloud; and it was
rent by lightning as it fell upon us.

Then it was rain, wind, obscureness of gloom, and lightning.  I
caught a glimpse of the men on the lower-yards as they were blotted
from view and as the Elsinore heeled over and down.  There were
fifteen men of them to each yard, and the gaskets were well passed
ere we were struck.  How they regained the deck I do not know, I
never saw; for the Elsinore, under only upper- and lower-topsails,
lay down on her side, her port-rail buried in the sea, and did not
rise.

There was no maintaining an unsupported upright position on that
acute slant of deck.  Everybody held on.  Mr. Pike frankly gripped
the poop-rail with both hands, and Miss West and I made frantic
clutches and scrambled for footing.  But I noticed that the Samurai,
poised lightly, like a bird on the verge of flight, merely rested one
hand on the rail.  He gave no orders.  As I divined, there was
nothing to be done.  He waited--that was all--in tranquillity and
repose.  The situation was simple.  Either the masts would go, or the
Elsinore would rise with her masts intact, or she would never rise
again.

In the meantime she lay dead, her lee yardarms almost touching the
sea, the sea creaming solidly to her hatch-combings across the
buried, unseen rail.

The minutes were as centuries, until the bow paid off and the
Elsinore, turned tail before it, righted to an even keel.
Immediately this was accomplished Captain West had her brought back
upon the wind.  And immediately, thereupon, the big foresail went
adrift from its gaskets.  The shock, or succession of shocks, to the
ship, from the tremendous buffeting that followed, was fearful.  It
seemed she was being racked to pieces.  Master and mate were side by
side when this happened, and the expressions on their faces typified
them.  In neither face was apprehension.  Mr. Pike's face bore a sour
sneer for the worthless sailors who had botched the job.  Captain
West's face was serenely considerative.

Still, nothing was to be done, could be done; and for five minutes
the Elsinore was shaken as in the maw of some gigantic monster, until
the last shreds of the great piece of canvas had been torn away.

"Our foresail has departed for Africa," Miss West laughed in my ear.

She is like her father, unaware of fear.

"And now we may as well go below and be comfortable," she said five
minutes later.  "The worst is over.  It will only be blow, blow,
blow, and a big sea making."


All day it blew.  And the big sea that arose made the Elsinore's
conduct almost unlivable.  My only comfort was achieved by taking to
my bunk and wedging myself with pillows buttressed against the bunk's
sides by empty soap-boxes which Wada arranged.  Mr. Pike, clinging to
my door-casing while his legs sprawled adrift in a succession of
terrific rolls, paused to tell me that it was a new one on him in the
pampero line.  It was all wrong from the first.  It had not come on
right.  It had no reason to be.

He paused a little longer, and, in a casual way, that under the
circumstances was ridiculously transparent, exposed what was at
ferment in his mind.

First of all he was absurd enough to ask if Possum showed symptoms of
sea-sickness.  Next, he unburdened his wrath for the inefficients who
had lost the foresail, and sympathized with the sail-makers for the
extra work thrown upon them.  Then he asked permission to borrow one
of my books, and, clinging to my bunk, selected Buchner's Force and
Matter from my shelf, carefully wedging the empty space with the
doubled magazine I use for that purpose.

Still he was loth to depart, and, cudgelling his brains for a
pretext, he set up a rambling discourse on River Plate weather.  And
all the time I kept wondering what was behind it all.  At last it
came.

"By the way, Mr. Pathurst," he remarked, "do you happen to remember
how many years ago Mr. Mellaire said it was that he was dismasted and
foundered off here?"

I caught his drift on the instant.

"Eight years ago, wasn't it?" I lied.

Mr. Pike let this sink in and slowly digested it, while the Elsinore
was guilty of three huge rolls down to port and back again.

"Now I wonder what ship was sunk off the Plate eight years ago?" he
communed, as if with himself.  "I guess I'll have to ask Mr. Mellaire
her name.  You can search me for all any I can recollect."

He thanked me with unwonted elaborateness for Force and Matter, of
which I knew he would never read a line, and felt his way to the
door.  Here he hung on for a moment, as if struck by a new and most
accidental idea.

"Now it wasn't, by any chance, that he said eighteen years ago?" he
queried.

I shook my head.

"Eight years ago," I said.  "That's the way I remember it, though why
I should remember it at all I don't know.  But that is what he said,"
I went on with increasing confidence.  "Eight years ago.  I am sure
of it."

Mr. Pike looked at me ponderingly, and waited until the Elsinore had
fairly righted for an instant ere he took his departure down the
hall.

I think I have followed the working of his mind.  I have long since
learned that his memory of ships, officers, cargoes, gales, and
disasters is remarkable.  He is a veritable encyclopaedia of the sea.
Also, it is patent that he has equipped himself with Sidney Waltham's
history.  As yet, he does not dream that Mr. Mellaire is Sidney
Waltham, and he is merely wondering if Mr. Mellaire was a ship-mate
of Sidney Waltham eighteen years ago in the ship lost off the Plate.

In the meantime, I shall never forgive Mr. Mellaire for this slip he
has made.  He should have been more careful.



CHAPTER XXX



An abominable night!  A wonderful night!  Sleep?  I suppose I did
sleep, in catnaps, but I swear I heard every bell struck until three-
thirty.  Then came a change, an easement.  No longer was it a
stubborn, loggy fight against pressures.  The Elsinore moved.  I
could feel her slip, and slide, and send, and soar.  Whereas before
she had been flung continually down to port, she now rolled as far to
one side as to the other.

I knew what had taken place.  Instead of remaining hove-to on the
pampero, Captain West had turned tail and was running before it.
This, I understood, meant a really serious storm, for the north-east
was the last direction in which Captain West desired to go.  But at
any rate the movement, though wilder, was easier, and I slept.  I was
awakened at five by the thunder of seas that fell aboard, rushed down
the main deck, and crashed against the cabin wall.  Through my open
door I could see water swashing up and down the hall, while half a
foot of water creamed and curdled from under my bunk across the floor
each time the ship rolled to starboard.

The steward brought me my coffee, and, wedged by boxes and pillows,
like an equilibrist, I sat up and drank it.  Luckily I managed to
finish it in time, for a succession of terrific rolls emptied one of
my book-shelves.  Possum, crawling upward from my feet under the
covered way of my bed, yapped with terror as the seas smashed and
thundered and as the avalanche of books descended upon us.  And I
could not but grin when the Paste Board Crown smote me on the head,
while the puppy was knocked gasping with Chesterton's What's Wrong
with the World?

"Well, what do you think?" I queried of the steward who was helping
to set us and the books to rights.

He shrugged his shoulders, and his bright slant eyes were very bright
as he replied:

"Many times I see like this.  Me old man.  Many times I see more bad.
Too much wind, too much work.  Rotten dam bad."

I could guess that the scene on deck was a spectacle, and at six
o'clock, as gray light showed through my ports in the intervals when
they were not submerged, I essayed the side-board of my bunk like a
gymnast, captured my careering slippers, and shuddered as I thrust my
bare feet into their chill sogginess.  I did not wait to dress.
Merely in pyjamas I headed for the poop, Possum wailing dismally at
my desertion.

It was a feat to travel the narrow halls.  Time and again I paused
and held on until my finger-tips hurt.  In the moments of easement I
made progress.  Yet I miscalculated.  The foot of the broad stairway
to the chart-house rested on a cross-hall a dozen feet in length.
Over-confidence and an unusually violent antic of the Elsinore caused
the disaster.  She flung down to starboard with such suddenness and
at such a pitch that the flooring seemed to go out from under me and
I hustled helplessly down the incline.  I missed a frantic clutch at
the newel-post, flung up my arm in time to save my face, and, most
fortunately, whirled half about, and, still falling, impacted with my
shoulder muscle-pad on Captain West's door.

Youth will have its way.  So will a ship in a sea.  And so will a
hundred and seventy pounds of a man.  The beautiful hardwood door-
panel splintered, the latch fetched away, and I broke the nails of
the four fingers of my right hand in a futile grab at the flying
door, marring the polished surface with four parallel scratches.  I
kept right on, erupting into Captain West's spacious room with the
big brass bed.

Miss West, swathed in a woollen dressing-gown, her eyes heavy still
with sleep, her hair glorious and for the once ungroomed, clinging in
the doorway that gave entrance on the main cabin, met my startled
gaze with an equally startled gaze.

It was no time for apologies.  I kept right on my mad way, caught the
foot stanchion, and was whipped around in half a circle flat upon
Captain West's brass bed.

Miss West was beginning to laugh.

"Come right in," she gurgled.

A score of retorts, all deliciously inadvisable, tickled my tongue,
so I said nothing, contenting myself with holding on with my left
hand while I nursed my stinging right hand under my arm-pit.  Beyond
her, across the floor of the main cabin, I saw the steward in pursuit
of Captain West's Bible and a sheaf of Miss West's music.  And as she
gurgled and laughed at me, beholding her in this intimacy of storm,
the thought flashed through my brain:

SHE IS A WOMAN.  SHE IS DESIRABLE.

Now did she sense this fleeting, unuttered flash of mine?  I know
not, save that her laughter left her, and long conventional training
asserted itself as she said:

"I just knew everything was adrift in father's room.  He hasn't been
in it all night.  I could hear things rolling around . . . What is
wrong?  Are you hurt?"

"Stubbed my fingers, that's all," I answered, looking at my broken
nails and standing gingerly upright.

"My, that WAS a roll," she sympathized.

"Yes; I'd started to go upstairs," I said, "and not to turn into your
father's bed.  I'm afraid I've ruined the door."

Came another series of great rolls.  I sat down on the bed and held
on.  Miss West, secure in the doorway, began gurgling again, while
beyond, across the cabin carpet, the steward shot past, embracing a
small writing-desk that had evidently carried away from its
fastenings when he seized hold of it for support.  More seas smashed
and crashed against the for'ard wall of the cabin; and the steward,
failing of lodgment, shot back across the carpet, still holding the
desk from harm.

Taking advantage of favouring spells, I managed to effect my exit and
gain the newel-post ere the next series of rolls came.  And as I
clung on and waited, I could not forget what I had just seen.
Vividly under my eyelids burned the picture of Miss West's sleep-
laden eyes, her hair, and all the softness of her.  A WOMAN AND
DESIRABLE kept drumming in my brain.

But I forgot all this, when, nearly at the top, I was thrown up the
hill of the stairs as if it had suddenly become downhill.  My feet
flew from stair to stair to escape falling, and I flew, or fell,
apparently upward, until, at the top, I hung on for dear life while
the stern of the Elsinore flung skyward on some mighty surge.

Such antics of so huge a ship!  The old stereotyped "toy" describes
her; for toy she was, the sheerest splinter of a plaything in the
grip of the elements.  And yet, despite this overwhelming sensation
of microscopic helplessness, I was aware of a sense of surety.  There
was the Samurai.  Informed with his will and wisdom, the Elsinore was
no cat's-paw.  Everything was ordered, controlled.  She was doing
what he ordained her to do, and, no matter what storm-Titans bellowed
about her and buffeted her, she would continue to do what he ordained
her to do.

I glanced into the chart-room.  There he sat, leaned back in a screw-
chair, his sea-booted legs, wedged against the settee, holding him in
place in the most violent rolls.  His black oilskin coat glistened in
the lamplight with a myriad drops of ocean that advertised a recent
return from deck.  His sou'wester, black and glistening, was like the
helmet of some legendary hero.  He was smoking a cigar, and he smiled
and greeted me.  But he seemed very tired and very old--old with
wisdom, however, not weakness.  The flesh of his face, the pink
pigment quite washed and worn away, was more transparent than ever;
and yet never was he more serene, never more the master absolute of
our tiny, fragile world.  The age that showed in him was not a matter
of terrestrial years.  It was ageless, passionless, beyond human.
Never had he appeared so great to me, so far remote, so much a spirit
visitant.

And he cautioned and advised me, in silver-mellow beneficent voice,
as I essayed the venture of opening the chart-house door to gain
outside.  He knew the moment, although I never could have guessed it
for myself, and gave the word that enabled me to win the poop.

Water was everywhere.  The Elsinore was rushing through a blurring
whirr of water.  Seas creamed and licked the poop-deck edge, now to
starboard, now to port.  High in the air, over-towering and
perilously down-toppling, following-seas pursued our stern.  The air
was filled with spindrift like a fog or spray.  No officer of the
watch was in sight.  The poop was deserted, save for two helmsmen in
streaming oilskins under the half-shelter of the open wheel-house.  I
nodded good morning to them.

One was Tom Spink, the elderly but keen and dependable English
sailor.  The other was Bill Quigley, one of a forecastle group of
three that herded uniquely together, though the other two, Frank
Fitzgibbon and Richard Oiler, were in the second mate's watch.  The
three had proved handy with their fists, and clannish; they had
fought pitched forecastle battles with the gangster clique and won a
sort of neutrality of independence for themselves.  They were not
exactly sailors--Mr. Mellaire sneeringly called them the
"bricklayers"--but they had successfully refused subservience to the
gangster crowd.

To cross the deck from the chart-house to the break of the poop was
no slight feat, but I managed it and hung on to the railing while the
wind stung my flesh with the flappings of my pyjamas.  At this
moment, and for the moment, the Elsinore righted to an even keel, and
dashed along and down the avalanching face of a wave.  And as she
thus righted her deck was filled with water level from rail to rail.
Above this flood, or knee-deep in it, Mr. Pike and half-a-dozen
sailors were bunched on the fife-rail of the mizzen-mast.  The
carpenter, too, was there, with a couple of assistants.

The next roll spilled half a thousand tons of water outboard sheer
over the starboard-rail, while all the starboard ports opened
automatically and gushed huge streams.  Then came the opposite roll
to port, with a clanging shut of the iron doors; and a hundred tons
of sea sloshed outboard across the port-rail, while all the iron
doors on that side opened wide and gushed.  And all this time, it
must not be forgotten, the Elsinore was dashing ahead through the
sea.

The only sail she carried was three upper-topsails.  Not the tiniest
triangle of headsail was on her.  I had never seen her with so little
wind-surface, and the three narrow strips of canvas, bellied to the
seemingness of sheet-iron with the pressure of the wind, drove her
before the gale at astonishing speed.

As the water on the deck subsided the men on the fife-rail left their
refuge.  One group, led by the redoubtable Mr. Pike, strove to
capture a mass of planks and twisted steel.  For the moment I did not
recognize what it was.  The carpenter, with two men, sprang upon
Number Three hatch and worked hurriedly and fearfully.  And I knew
why Captain West had turned tail to the storm.  Number Three hatch
was a wreck.  Among other things the great timber, called the
"strong-back," was broken.  He had had to run, or founder.  Before
our decks were swept again I could make out the carpenter's emergency
repairs.  With fresh timbers he was bolting, lashing, and wedging
Number Three hatch into some sort of tightness.

When the Elsinore dipped her port-rail under and scooped several
hundred tons of South Atlantic, and then, immediately rolling her
starboard-rail under, had another hundred tons of breaking sea fall
in board upon her, all the men forsook everything and scrambled for
life upon the fife-rail.  In the bursting spray they were quite
hidden; and then I saw them and counted them all as they emerged into
view.  Again they waited for the water to subside.

The mass of wreckage pursued by Mr. Pike and his men ground a hundred
feet along the deck for'ard, and, as the Elsinore's stern sank down
in some abyss, ground back again and smashed up against the cabin
wall.  I identified this stuff as part of the bridge.  That portion
which spanned from the mizzen-mast to the 'midship-house was missing,
while the starboard boat on the 'midship-house was a splintered mess.

Watching the struggle to capture and subdue the section of bridge, I
was reminded of Victor Hugo's splendid description of the sailor's
battle with a ship's gun gone adrift in a night of storm.  But there
was a difference, I found that Hugo's narrative had stirred me more
profoundly than was I stirred by this actual struggle before my eyes.

I have repeatedly said that the sea makes one hard.  I now realized
how hard I had become as I stood there at the break of the poop in my
wind-shipped, spray-soaked pyjamas.  I felt no solicitude for the
forecastle humans who struggled in peril of their lives beneath me.
They did not count.  Ah--I was even curious to see what might happen,
did they get caught by those crashing avalanches of sea ere they
could gain the safety of the fife-rail.

And I saw.  Mr. Pike, in the lead, of course, up to his waist in
rushing water, dashed in, caught the flying wreckage with a turn of
rope, and fetched it up short with a turn around one of the port
mizzen-shrouds.  The Elsinore flung down to port, and a solid wall of
down-toppling green upreared a dozen feet above the rail.  The men
fled to the fife-rail.  But Mr. Pike, holding his turn, held on,
looked squarely into the wall of the wave, and received the downfall.
He emerged, still holding by the turn the captured bridge.

The feeble-minded faun (the stone-deaf man) led the way to Mr. Pike's
assistance, followed by Tony, the suicidal Greek.  Paddy was next,
and in order came Shorty, Henry the training-ship boy, and Nancy,
last, of course, and looking as if he were going to execution.

The deck-water was no more than knee-deep, though rushing with
torrential force, when Mr. Pike and the six men lifted the section of
bridge and started for'ard with it.  They swayed and staggered, but
managed to keep going.

The carpenter saw the impending ocean-mountain first.  I saw him cry
to his own men and then to Mr. Pike ere he fled to the fife-rail.
But Mr. Pike's men had no chance.  Abreast of the 'midship-house, on
the starboard side, fully fifteen feet above the rail and twenty
above the deck, the sea fell on board.  The top of the 'midship-house
was swept clean of the splintered boat.  The water, impacting against
the side of the house, spouted skyward as high as the crojack-yard.
And all this, in addition to the main bulk of the wave, swept and
descended upon Mr. Pike and his men.

They disappeared.  The bridge disappeared.  The Elsinore rolled to
port and dipped her deck full from rail to rail.  Next, she plunged
down by the head, and all this mass of water surged forward.  Through
the creaming, foaming surface now and then emerged an arm, or a head,
or a back, while cruel edges of jagged plank and twisted steel rods
advertised that the bridge was turning over and over.  I wondered
what men were beneath it and what mauling they were receiving.

And yet these men did not count.  I was aware of anxiety only for Mr.
Pike.  He, in a way, socially, was of my caste and class.  He and I
belonged aft in the high place; ate at the same table.  I was acutely
desirous that he should not be hurt or killed.  The rest did not
matter.  They were not of my world.  I imagine the old-time skippers,
on the middle passage, felt much the same toward their slave-cargoes
in the fetid 'tween decks.

The Elsinore's bow tilted skyward while her stern fell into a foaming
valley.  Not a man had gained his feet.  Bridge and men swept back
toward me and fetched up against the mizzen-shrouds.  And then that
prodigious, incredible old man appeared out of the water, on his two
legs, upright, dragging with him, a man in each hand, the helpless
forms of Nancy and the Faun.  My heart leapt at beholding this mighty
figure of a man-killer and slave-driver, it is true, but who sprang
first into the teeth of danger so that his slaves might follow, and
who emerged with a half-drowned slave in either hand.

I knew augustness and pride as I gazed--pride that my eyes were blue,
like his; that my skin was blond, like his; that my place was aft
with him, and with the Samurai, in the high place of government and
command.  I nearly wept with the chill of pride that was akin to awe
and that tingled and bristled along my spinal column and in my brain.
As for the rest--the weaklings and the rejected, and the dark-
pigmented things, the half-castes, the mongrel-bloods, and the dregs
of long-conquered races--how could they count?  My heels were iron as
I gazed on them in their peril and weakness.  Lord!  Lord!  For ten
thousand generations and centuries we had stamped upon their faces
and enslaved them to the toil of our will.

Again the Elsinore rolled to starboard and to port, while the spume
spouted to our lower-yards and a thousand tons of South Atlantic
surged across from rail to rail.  And again all were down and under,
with jagged plank and twisted steel overriding them.  And again that
amazing blond-skinned giant emerged, on his two legs upstanding, a
broken waif like a rat in either hand.  He forced his way through
rushing, waist-high water, deposited his burdens with the carpenter
on the fife-rail, and returned to drag Larry reeling to his feet and
help him to the fife-rail.  Out of the wash, Tony, the Greek, crawled
on hands and knees and sank down helplessly at the fife-rail.  There
was nothing suicidal now in his mood.  Struggle as he would, he could
not lift himself until the mate, gripping his oilskin at the collar,
with one hand flung him through the air into the carpenter's arms.

Next came Shorty, his face streaming blood, one arm hanging useless,
his sea-boots stripped from him.  Mr. Pike pitched him into the fife-
rail, and returned for the last man.  It was Henry, the training-ship
boy.  Him I had seen, unstruggling, motionless, show at the surface
like a drowned man and sink again as the flood surged aft and smashed
him against the cabin.  Mr. Pike, shoulder-deep, twice beaten to his
knees and under by bursting seas, caught the lad, shouldered him, and
carried him away for'ard.

An hour later, in the cabin, I encountered Mr. Pike going into
breakfast.  He had changed his clothes, and he had shaved!  Now how
could one treat a hero such as he save as I treated him when I
remarked off-handedly that he must have had a lively watch?

"My," he answered, equally off-handedly, "I did get a prime soaking."

That was all.  He had had no time to see me at the poop-rail.  It was
merely the day's work, the ship's work, the MAN'S work--all capitals,
if you please, in MAN.  I was the only one aft who knew, and I knew
because I had chanced to see.  Had I not been on the poop at that
early hour no one aft ever would have known those gray, storm-morning
deeds of his.

"Anybody hurt?" I asked.

"Oh, some of the men got wet.  But no bones broke.  Henry'll be laid
off for a day.  He got turned over in a sea and bashed his head.  And
Shorty's got a wrenched shoulder, I think.--But, say, we got Davis
into the top bunk!  The seas filled him full and he had to climb for
it.  He's all awash and wet now, and you oughta seen me praying for
more."  He paused and sighed.  "I'm getting old, I guess.  I oughta
wring his neck, but somehow I ain't got the gumption.  Just the same,
he'll be overside before we get in."

"A month's wages against a pound of tobacco he won't," I challenged.

"No," said Mr. Pike slowly.  "But I'll tell you what I will do.  I'll
bet you a pound of tobacco even, or a month's wages even, that I'll
have the pleasure of putting a sack of coal to his feet that never
will come off."

"Done," said I.

"Done," said Mr. Pike.  "And now I guess I'll get a bite to eat."



CHAPTER XXXI



The more I see of Miss West the more she pleases me.  Explain it in
terms of propinquity, or isolation, or whatever you will; I, at
least, do not attempt explanation.  I know only that she is a woman
and desirable.  And I am rather proud, in a way, to find that I am
just a man like any man.  The midnight oil, and the relentless
pursuit I have endured in the past from the whole tribe of women,
have not, I am glad to say, utterly spoiled me.

I am obsessed by that phrase--a WOMAN AND DESIRABLE.  It beats in my
brain, in my thought.  I go out of my way to steal a glimpse of Miss
West through a cabin door or vista of hall when she does not know I
am looking.  A woman is a wonderful thing.  A woman's hair is
wonderful.  A woman's softness is a magic.--Oh, I know them for what
they are, and yet this very knowledge makes them only the more
wonderful.  I know--I would stake my soul--that Miss West has
considered me as a mate a thousand times to once that I have so
considered her.  And yet--she is a woman and desirable.

And I find myself continually reminded of Richard Le Gallienne's
inimitable quatrain:


"Were I a woman, I would all day long
Sing my own beauty in some holy song,
Bend low before it, hushed and half afraid,
And say 'I am a woman' all day long."


Let me advise all philosophers suffering from world-sickness to take
a long sea voyage with a woman like Miss West.

In this narrative I shall call her "Miss West" no more.  She has
ceased to be Miss West.  She is Margaret.  I do not think of her as
Miss West.  I think of her as Margaret.  It is a pretty word, a
woman-word.  What poet must have created it!  Margaret!  I never tire
of it.  My tongue is enamoured of it.  Margaret West!  What a name to
conjure with!  A name provocative of dreams and mighty connotations.
The history of our westward-faring race is written in it.  There is
pride in it, and dominion, and adventure, and conquest.  When I
murmur it I see visions of lean, beaked ships, of winged helmets, and
heels iron-shod of restless men, royal lovers, royal adventurers,
royal fighters.  Yes, and even now, in these latter days when the sun
consumes us, still we sit in the high seat of government and command.

Oh--and by the way--she is twenty-four years old.  I asked Mr. Pike
the date of the Dixie's collision with the river steamer in San
Francisco Bay.  This occurred in 1901.  Margaret was twelve years old
at the time.  This is 1913.  Blessings on the head of the man who
invented arithmetic!  She is twenty-four.  Her name is Margaret, and
she is desirable.


There are so many things to tell about.  Where and how this mad
voyage, with a mad crew, will end is beyond all surmise.  But the
Elsinore drives on, and day by day her history is bloodily written.
And while murder is done, and while the whole floating drama moves
toward the bleak southern ocean and the icy blasts of Cape Horn, I
sit in the high place with the masters, unafraid, I am proud to say,
in an ecstasy, I am proud to say, and I murmur over and over to
MYSELF--MARGARET, A WOMAN; MARGARET, AND DESIRABLE.

But to resume.  It is the first day of June.  Ten days have passed
since the pampero.  When the strong back on Number Three hatch was
repaired Captain West came back on the wind, hove to, and rode out
the gale.  Since then, in calm, and fog, and damp, and storm, we have
won south until to-day we are almost abreast of the Falklands.  The
coast of the Argentine lies to the West, below the sea-line, and some
time this morning we crossed the fiftieth parallel of south latitude.
Here begins the passage of Cape Horn, for so it is reckoned by the
navigators--fifty south in the Atlantic to fifty south in the
Pacific.

And yet all is well with us in the matter of weather.  The Elsinore
slides along with favouring winds.  Daily it grows colder.  The great
cabin stove roars and is white-hot, and all the connecting doors are
open, so that the whole after region of the ship is warm and
comfortable.  But on the deck the air bites, and Margaret and I wear
mittens as we promenade the poop or go for'ard along the repaired
bridge to see the chickens on the 'midship-house.  The poor, wretched
creatures of instinct and climate!  Behold, as they approach the
southern mid-winter of the Horn, when they have need of all their
feathers, they proceed to moult, because, forsooth, this is the
summer time in the land they came from.  Or is moulting determined by
the time of year they happen to be born?  I shall have to look into
this.  Margaret will know.

Yesterday ominous preparations were made for the passage of the Horn.
All the braces were taken from the main deck pin-rails and geared and
arranged so that they may be worked from the tops of the houses.

Thus, the fore-braces run to the top of the forecastle, the main-
braces to the top of the 'midship-house, and the mizzen-braces to the
poop.  It is evident that they expect our main deck frequently to be
filled with water.  So evident is it that a laden ship when in big
seas is like a log awash, that fore and aft, on both sides, along the
deck, shoulder-high, life-lines have been rigged.  Also, the two iron
doors, on port and starboard, that open from the cabin directly upon
the main deck, have been barricaded and caulked.  Not until we are in
the Pacific and flying north will these doors open again.

And while we prepare to battle around the stormiest headland in the
world our situation on board grows darker.  This morning Petro
Marinkovich, a sailor in Mr. Mellaire's watch, was found dead on
Number One hatch.  The body bore several knife-wounds and the throat
was cut.  It was palpably done by some one or several of the
forecastle hands; but not a word can be elicited.  Those who are
guilty of it are silent, of course; while others who may chance to
know are afraid to speak.

Before midday the body was overside with the customary sack of coal.
Already the man is a past episode.  But the humans for'ard are tense
with expectancy of what is to come.  I strolled for'ard this
afternoon, and noted for the first time a distinct hostility toward
me.  They recognize that I belong with the after-guard in the high
place.  Oh, nothing was said; but it was patent by the way almost
every man looked at me, or refused to look at me.  Only Mulligan
Jacobs and Charles Davis were outspoken.

"Good riddance," said Mulligan Jacobs.  "The Guinea didn't have the
spunk of a louse.  And he's better off, ain't he?  He lived dirty,
an' he died dirty, an' now he's over an' done with the whole dirty
game.  There's men on board that oughta wish they was as lucky as
him.  Theirs is still a-coming to 'em."

"You mean . . . ?" I queried.

"Whatever you want to think I mean," the twisted wretch grinned
malevolently into my face.

Charles Davis, when I peeped into his iron room, was exuberant.

"A pretty tale for the court in Seattle," he exulted.  "It'll only
make my case that much stronger.  And wait till the reporters get
hold of it!  The hell-ship Elsinore!  They'll have pretty pickin's!"

"I haven't seen any hell-ship," I said coldly.

"You've seen my treatment, ain't you?" he retorted.  "You've seen the
hell I've got, ain't you?"

"I know you for a cold-blooded murderer," I answered.

"The court will determine that, sir.  All you'll have to do is to
testify to facts."

"I'll testify that had I been in the mate's place I'd have hanged you
for murder."

His eyes positively sparkled.

"I'll ask you to remember this conversation when you're under oath,
sir," he cried eagerly.

I confess the man aroused in me a reluctant admiration.  I looked
about his mean, iron-walled room.  During the pampero the place had
been awash.  The white paint was peeling off in huge scabs, and iron-
rust was everywhere.  The floor was filthy.  The place stank with the
stench of his sickness.  His pannikin and unwashed eating-gear from
the last meal were scattered on the floor:  His blankets were wet,
his clothing was wet.  In a corner was a heterogeneous mass of soggy,
dirty garments.  He lay in the very bunk in which he had brained
O'Sullivan.  He had been months in this vile hole.  In order to live
he would have to remain months more in it.  And while his rat-like
vitality won my admiration, I loathed and detested him in very
nausea.

"Aren't you afraid?" I demanded.  "What makes you think you will last
the voyage?  Don't you know bets are being made that you won't?"

So interested was he that he seemed to prick up his ears as he raised
on his elbow.

"I suppose you're too scared to tell me about them bets," he sneered.

"Oh, I've bet you'll last," I assured him.

"That means there's others that bet I won't," he rattled on hastily.
"An' that means that there's men aboard the Elsinore right now
financially interested in my taking-off."

At this moment the steward, bound aft from the galley, paused in the
doorway and listened, grinning.  As for Charles Davis, the man had
missed his vocation.  He should have been a land-lawyer, not a sea-
lawyer.

"Very well, sir," he went on.  "I'll have you testify to that in
Seattle, unless you're lying to a helpless sick man, or unless you'll
perjure yourself under oath."

He got what he was seeking, for he stung me to retort:

"Oh, I'll testify.  Though I tell you candidly that I don't think
I'll win my bet."

"You loose 'm bet sure," the steward broke in, nodding his head.
"That fellow him die damn soon."

"Bet with'm, sir," David challenged me.  "It's a straight tip from
me, an' a regular cinch."

The whole situation was so gruesome and grotesque, and I had been
swept into it so absurdly, that for the moment I did not know what to
do or say.

"It's good money," Davis urged.  "I ain't goin' to die.  Look here,
steward, how much you want to bet?"

"Five dollar, ten dollar, twenty dollar," the steward answered, with
a shoulder-shrug that meant that the sum was immaterial.

"Very well then, steward.  Mr. Pathurst covers your money, say for
twenty.  Is it a go, sir?"

"Why don't you bet with him yourself?" I demanded.

"Sure I will, sir.  Here, you steward, I bet you twenty even I don't
die."

The steward shook his head.

"I bet you twenty to ten," the sick man insisted.  "What's eatin'
you, anyway?"

"You live, me lose, me pay you," the steward explained.  "You die, I
win, you dead; no pay me."

Still grinning and shaking his head, he went his way.

"Just the same, sir, it'll be rich testimony," David chuckled.  "An'
can't you see the reporters eatin' it up?"

The Asiatic clique in the cook's room has its suspicions about the
death of Marinkovich, but will not voice them.  Beyond shakings of
heads and dark mutterings, I can get nothing out of Wada or the
steward.  When I talked with the sail-maker, he complained that his
injured hand was hurting him and that he would be glad when he could
get to the surgeons in Seattle.  As for the murder, when pressed by
me, he gave me to understand that it was no affair of the Japanese or
Chinese on board, and that he was a Japanese.

But Louis, the Chinese half-caste with the Oxford accent, was more
frank.  I caught him aft from the galley on a trip to the lazarette
for provisions.

"We are of a different race, sir, from these men," he said; "and our
safest policy is to leave them alone.  We have talked it over, and we
have nothing to say, sir, nothing whatever to say.  Consider my
position.  I work for'ard in the galley; I am in constant contact
with the sailors; I even sleep in their section of the ship; and I am
one man against many.  The only other countryman I have on board is
the steward, and he sleeps aft.  Your servant and the two sail-makers
are Japanese.  They are only remotely kin to us, though we've agreed
to stand together and apart from whatever happens."

"There is Shorty," I said, remembering Mr. Pike's diagnosis of his
mixed nationality.

"But we do not recognize him, sir," Louis answered suavely.  "He is
Portuguese; he is Malay; he is Japanese, true; but he is a mongrel,
sir, a mongrel and a bastard.  Also, he is a fool.  And please, sir,
remember that we are very few, and that our position compels us to
neutrality."

"But your outlook is gloomy," I persisted.  "How do you think it will
end?"

"We shall arrive in Seattle most probably, some of us.  But I can
tell you this, sir:  I have lived a long life on the sea, but I have
never seen a crew like this.  There are few sailors in it; there are
bad men in it; and the rest are fools and worse.  You will notice I
mention no names, sir; but there are men on board whom I do not care
to antagonize.  I am just Louis, the cook.  I do my work to the best
of my ability, and that is all, sir."

"And will Charles Davis arrive in Seattle?" I asked, changing the
topic in acknowledgment of his right to be reticent.

"No, I do not think so, sir," he answered, although his eyes thanked
me for my courtesy.  "The steward tells me you have bet that he will.
I think, sir, it is a poor bet.  We are about to go around the Horn.
I have been around it many times.  This is midwinter, and we are
going from east to west.  Davis' room will be awash for weeks.  It
will never be dry.  A strong healthy man confined in it could well
die of the hardship.  And Davis is far from well.  In short, sir, I
know his condition, and he is in a shocking state.  Surgeons might
prolong his life, but here in a wind-jammer it is shortened very
rapidly.  I have seen many men die at sea.  I know, sir.  Thank you,
sir."

And the Eurasian Chinese-Englishman bowed himself away.



CHAPTER XXXII



Things are worse than I fancied.  Here are two episodes within the
last seventy-two hours.  Mr. Mellaire, for instance, is going to
pieces.  He cannot stand the strain of being on the same vessel with
the man who has sworn to avenge Captain Somers's murder, especially
when that man is the redoubtable Mr. Pike.

For several days Margaret and I have been remarking the second mate's
bloodshot eyes and pain-lined face and wondering if he were sick.
And to-day the secret leaked out.  Wada does not like Mr. Mellaire,
and this morning, when he brought me breakfast, I saw by the wicked,
gleeful gleam in his almond eyes that he was spilling over with some
fresh, delectable ship's gossip.

For several days, I learned, he and the steward have been solving a
cabin mystery.  A gallon can of wood alcohol, standing on a shelf in
the after-room, had lost quite a portion of its contents.  They
compared notes and then made of themselves a Sherlock Holmes and a
Doctor Watson.  First, they gauged the daily diminution of alcohol.
Next they gauged it several times daily, and learned that the
diminution, whenever it occurred, was first apparent immediately
after meal-time.  This focussed their attention on two suspects--the
second mate and the carpenter, who alone sat in the after-room.  The
rest was easy.  Whenever Mr. Mellaire arrived ahead of the carpenter
more alcohol was missing.  When they arrived and departed together,
the alcohol was undisturbed.  The carpenter was never alone in the
room.  The syllogism was complete.  And now the steward stores the
alcohol under his bunk.

But wood alcohol is deadly poison.  What a constitution this man of
fifty must have!  Small wonder his eyes have been bloodshot.  The
great wonder is that the stuff did not destroy him.

I have not whispered a word of this to Margaret; nor shall I whisper
it.  I should like to put Mr. Pike on his guard; and yet I know that
the revealing of Mr. Mellaire's identity would precipitate another
killing.  And still we drive south, close-hauled on the wind, toward
the inhospitable tip of the continent.  To-day we are south of a line
drawn between the Straits of Magellan and the Falklands, and to-
morrow, if the breeze holds, we shall pick up the coast of Tierra del
Fuego close to the entrance of the Straits of Le Maire, through which
Captain West intends to pass if the wind favours.

The other episode occurred last night.  Mr. Pike says nothing, yet he
knows the crew situation.  I have been watching some time now, ever
since the death of Marinkovich; and I am certain that Mr. Pike never
ventures on the main deck after dark.  Yet he holds his tongue,
confides in no man, and plays out the bitter perilous game as a
commonplace matter of course and all in the day's work.

And now to the episode.  Shortly after the close of the second dog-
watch last evening I went for'ard to the chickens on the 'midship-
house on an errand for Margaret.  I was to make sure that the steward
had carried out her orders.  The canvas covering to the big chicken
coop had to be down, the ventilation insured, and the kerosene stove
burning properly.  When I had proved to my satisfaction the
dependableness of the steward, and just as I was on the verge of
returning to the poop, I was drawn aside by the weird crying of
penguins in the darkness and by the unmistakable noise of a whale
blowing not far away.

I had climbed around the end of the port boat, and was standing
there, quite hidden in the darkness, when I heard the unmistakable
age-lag step of the mate proceed along the bridge from the poop.  It
was a dim starry night, and the Elsinore, in the calm ocean under the
lee of Tierra del Fuego, was slipping gently and prettily through the
water at an eight-knot clip.

Mr. Pike paused at the for'ard end of the housetop and stood in a
listening attitude.  From the main deck below, near Number Two hatch,
across the mumbling of various voices, I could recognize Kid Twist,
Nosey Murphy, and Bert Rhine--the three gangsters.  But Steve
Roberts, the cow-boy, was also there, as was Mr. Mellaire, both of
whom belonged in the other watch and should have been turned in; for,
at midnight, it would be their watch on deck.  Especially wrong was
Mr. Mellaire's presence, holding social converse with members of the
crew--a breach of ship ethics most grievous.

I have always been cursed with curiosity.  Always have I wanted to
know; and, on the Elsinore, I have already witnessed many a little
scene that was a clean-cut dramatic gem.  So I did not discover
myself, but lurked behind the boat.

Five minutes passed.  Ten minutes passed.  The men still talked.  I
was tantalized by the crying of the penguins, and by the whale,
evidently playful, which came so close that it spouted and splashed a
biscuit-toss away.  I saw Mr. Pike's head turn at the sound; he
glanced squarely in my direction, but did not see me.  Then he
returned to listening to the mumble of voices from beneath.

Now whether Mulligan Jacobs just happened along, or whether he was
deliberately scouting, I do not know.  I tell what occurred.  Up-and-
down the side of the 'midship-house is a ladder.  And up this ladder
Mulligan Jacobs climbed so noiselessly that I was not aware of his
presence until I heard Mr. Pike snarl

"What the hell you doin' here?"

Then I saw Mulligan Jacobs in the gloom, within two yards of the
mate.

"What's it to you?" Mulligan Jacobs snarled back.  The voices below
hushed.  I knew every man stood there tense and listening.  No; the
philosophers have not yet explained Mulligan Jacobs.  There is
something more to him than the last word has said in any book.  He
stood there in the darkness, a fragile creature with curvature of the
spine, facing alone the first mate, and he was not afraid.

Mr. Pike cursed him with fearful, unrepeatable words, and again
demanded what he was doing there.

"I left me plug of tobacco here when I was coiling down last," said
the little twisted man--no; he did not say it.  He spat it out like
so much venom.

"Get off of here, or I'll throw you off, you and your tobacco," raged
the mate.

Mulligan Jacobs lurched closer to Mr. Pike, and in the gloom and with
the roll of the ship swayed in the other's face.

"By God, Jacobs!" was all the mate could say.

"You old stiff," was all the terrible little cripple could retort.

Mr. Pike gripped him by the collar and swung him in the air.

"Are you goin' down?--or am I goin' to throw you down?" the mate
demanded.

I cannot describe their manner of utterance.  It was that of wild
beasts.

"I ain't ate outa your hand yet, have I?" was the reply.

Mr. Pike tried to say something, still holding the cripple suspended,
but he could do no more than strangle in his impotence of rage.

"You're an old stiff, an old stiff, an old stiff," Mulligan Jacobs
chanted, equally incoherent and unimaginative with brutish fury.

"Say it again and over you go," the mate managed to enunciate
thickly.

"You're an old stiff," gasped Mulligan Jacobs.  He was flung.  He
soared through the air with the might of the fling, and even as he
soared and fell through the darkness he reiterated:

"Old stiff!  Old stiff !"

He fell among the men on Number Two hatch, and there were confusion
and movement below, and groans.

Mr. Pike paced up and down the narrow house and gritted his teeth.
Then he paused.  He leaned his arms on the bridge-rail, rested his
head on his arms for a full minute, then groaned:

"Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear."  That was all.  Then he went
aft, slowly, dragging his feet along the bridge.



CHAPTER XXXIII



The days grow gray.  The sun has lost its warmth, and each noon, at
meridian, it is lower in the northern sky.  All the old stars have
long since gone, and it would seem the sun is following them.  The
world--the only world I know--has been left behind far there to the
north, and the hill of the earth is between it and us.  This sad and
solitary ocean, gray and cold, is the end of all things, the falling-
off place where all things cease.  Only it grows colder, and grayer,
and penguins cry in the night, and huge amphibians moan and slubber,
and great albatrosses, gray with storm-battling of the Horn, wheel
and veer.


"Land ho!" was the cry yesterday morning.  I shivered as I gazed at
this, the first land since Baltimore a few centuries ago.  There was
no sun, and the morning was damp and cold with a brisk wind that
penetrated any garment.  The deck thermometer marked 30--two degrees
below freezing-point; and now and then easy squalls of snow swept
past.

All of the land that was to be seen was snow.  Long, low chains of
peaks, snow-covered, arose out of the ocean.  As we drew closer,
there were no signs of life.  It was a sheer, savage, bleak, forsaken
land.  By eleven, off the entrance of Le Maire Straits, the squalls
ceased, the wind steadied, and the tide began to make through in the
direction we desired to go.

Captain West did not hesitate.  His orders to Mr. Pike were quick and
tranquil.  The man at the wheel altered the course, while both
watches sprang aloft to shake out royals and skysails.  And yet
Captain West knew every inch of the risk he took in this graveyard of
ships.

When we entered the narrow strait, under full sail and gripped by a
tremendous tide, the rugged headlands of Tierra del Fuego dashed by
with dizzying swiftness.  Close we were to them, and close we were to
the jagged coast of Staten Island on the opposite shore.  It was
here, in a wild bight, between two black and precipitous walls of
rock where even the snow could find no lodgment, that Captain West
paused in a casual sweep of his glasses and gazed steadily at one
place.  I picked the spot up with my own glasses and was aware of an
instant chill as I saw the four masts of a great ship sticking out of
the water.  Whatever craft it was, it was as large as the Elsinore,
and it had been but recently wrecked.

"One of the German nitrate ships," said Mr. Pike.  Captain West
nodded, still studying the wreck, then said:

"She looks quite deserted.  Just the same, Mr. Pike, send several of
your best-sighted sailors aloft, and keep a good lookout yourself.
There may be some survivors ashore trying to signal us."

But we sailed on, and no signals were seen.  Mr. Pike was delighted
with our good fortune.  He was guilty of walking up and down, rubbing
his hands and chuckling to himself.  Not since 1888, he told me, had
he been through the Straits of Le Maire.  Also, he said that he knew
of shipmasters who had made forty voyages around the Horn and had
never once had the luck to win through the straits.  The regular
passage is far to the east around Staten Island, which means a loss
of westing, and here, at the tip of the world, where the great west
wind, unobstructed by any land, sweeps round and around the narrow
girth of earth, westing is the thing that has to be fought for mile
by mile and inch by inch.  The Sailing Directions advise masters on
the Horn passage:  Make Westing.  WHATEVER YOU DO, MAKE WESTING.

When we emerged from the straits in the early afternoon the same
steady breeze continued, and in the calm water under the lee of
Tierra del Fuego, which extends south-westerly to the Horn, we
slipped along at an eight-knot clip.

Mr. Pike was beside himself.  He could scarcely tear himself from the
deck when it was his watch below.  He chuckled, rubbed his hands, and
incessantly hummed snatches from the Twelfth Mass.  Also, he was
voluble.

"To-morrow morning we'll be up with the Horn.  We'll shave it by a
dozen or fifteen miles.  Think of it!  We'll just steal around!  I
never had such luck, and never expected to.  Old girl Elsinore,
you're rotten for'ard, but the hand of God is at your helm."

Once, under the weather cloth, I came upon him talking to himself.
It was more a prayer.

"If only she don't pipe up," he kept repeating.  "If only she don't
pipe up."

Mr. Mellaire was quite different.

"It never happens," he told me.  "No ship ever went around like this.
You watch her come.  She always comes a-smoking out of the sou'west."

"But can't a vessel ever steal around?" I asked.

"The odds are mighty big against it, sir," he answered.  "I'll give
you a line on them.  I'll wager even, sir, just a nominal bet of a
pound of tobacco, that inside twenty-four hours we'll he hove to
under upper-topsails.  I'll wager ten pounds to five that we're not
west of the Horn a week from now; and, fifty to fifty being the
passage, twenty pounds to five that two weeks from now we're not up
with fifty in the Pacific."

As for Captain West, the perils of Le Maire behind, he sat below, his
slippered feet stretched before him, smoking a cigar.  He had nothing
to say whatever, although Margaret and I were jubilant and dared
duets through all of the second dog-watch.


And this morning, in a smooth sea and gentle breeze, the Horn bore
almost due north of us not more than six miles away.  Here we were,
well abreast and reeling off westing.

"What price tobacco this morning?" I quizzed Mr. Mellaire.

"Going up," he came back.  "Wish I had a thousand bets like the one
with you, sir."

I glanced about at sea and sky and gauged the speed of our way by the
foam, but failed to see anything that warranted his remark.  It was
surely fine weather, and the steward, in token of the same, was
trying to catch fluttering Cape pigeons with a bent pin on a piece of
thread.

For'ard, on the poop, I encountered Mr. Pike.  It WAS an encounter,
for his salutation was a grunt.

"Well, we're going right along," I ventured cheerily.

He made no reply, but turned and stared into the gray south-west with
an expression sourer than any I had ever seen on his face.  He
mumbled something I failed to catch, and, on my asking him to repeat
it, he said:

"It's breeding weather.  Can't you see it?"

I shook my head.

"What d'ye think we're taking off the kites for?" he growled.

I looked aloft.  The skysails were already furled; men were furling
the royals; and the topgallant-yards were running down while
clewlines and buntlines bagged the canvas.  Yet, if anything, our
northerly breeze fanned even more gently.

"Bless me if I can see any weather," I said.

"Then go and take a look at the barometer," he grunted, as he turned
on his heel and swung away from me.

In the chart-room was Captain West, pulling on his long sea-boots.
That would have told me had there been no barometer, though the
barometer was eloquent enough of itself.  The night before it had
stood at 30.10.  It was now 28.64.  Even in the pampero it had not
been so low as that.

"The usual Cape Horn programme," Captain West smiled to me, as he
stood up in all his lean and slender gracefulness and reached for his
long oilskin coat.

Still I could scarcely believe.

"Is it very far away?" I inquired.

He shook his head, and forebore in the act of speaking to lift his
hand for me to listen.  The Elsinore rolled uneasily, and from
without came the soft and hollow thunder of sails emptying themselves
against the masts and gear.

We had chatted a bare five minutes, when again he lifted his head.
This time the Elsinore heeled over slightly and remained heeled over,
while the sighing whistle of a rising breeze awoke in the rigging.

"It's beginning to make," he said, in the good old Anglo-Saxon of the
sea.

And then I heard Mr. Pike snarling out orders, and in my heart
discovered a growing respect for Cape Horn--Cape Stiff, as the
sailors call it.

An hour later we were hove to on the port tack under upper-topsails
and foresail.  The wind had come out of the south-west, and our
leeway was setting us down upon the land.  Captain West gave orders
to the mate to stand by to wear ship.  Both watches had been taking
in sail, so that both watches were on deck for the manoeuvre.

It was astounding, the big sea that had arisen in so short a time.
The wind was blowing a gale that ever, in recurring gusts, increased
upon itself.  Nothing was visible a hundred yards away.  The day had
become black-gray.  In the cabin lamps were burning.  The view from
the poop, along the length of the great labouring ship, was
magnificent.  Seas burst and surged across her weather-rail and kept
her deck half filled, despite the spouting ports and gushing
scuppers.

On each of the two houses and on the poop the ship's complement, all
in oilskins, was in groups.  For'ard, Mr. Mellaire had charge.  Mr.
Pike took charge of the 'midship-house and the poop.  Captain West
strolled up and down, saw everything, said nothing; for it was the
mate's affair.

When Mr. Pike ordered the wheel hard up, he slacked off all the
mizzen-yards, and followed it with a partial slacking of the main-
yards, so that the after-pressures were eased.  The foresail and
fore-lower- and-upper-topsails remained flat in order to pay the head
off before the wind.  All this took time.  The men were slow, not
strong, and without snap.  They reminded me of dull oxen by the way
they moved and pulled.  And the gale, ever snorting harder, now
snorted diabolically.  Only at intervals could I glimpse the group on
top the for'ard-house.  Again and again, leaning to it and holding
their heads down, the men on the 'midship-house were obliterated by
the drive of crested seas that burst against the rail, spouted to the
lower-yards, and swept in horizontal volumes across to leeward.  And
Mr. Pike, like an enormous spider in a wind-tossed web, went back and
forth along the slender bridge that was itself a shaken thread in the
blast of the storm.

So tremendous were the gusts that for the time the Elsinore refused
to answer.  She lay down to it; she was swept and racked by it; but
her head did not pay off before it, and all the while we drove down
upon that bitter, iron coast.  And the world was black-gray, and
violent, and very cold, with the flying spray freezing to ice in
every lodgment.

We waited.  The groups of men, head down to it, waited.  Mr. Pike,
restless, angry, his blue eyes as bitter as the cold, his mouth as
much a-snarl as the snarl of the elements with which he fought,
waited.  The Samurai waited, tranquil, casual, remote.  And Cape Horn
waited, there on our lee, for the bones of our ship and us.

And then the Elsinore's bow paid off.  The angle of the beat of the
gale changed, and soon, with dreadful speed, we were dashing straight
before it and straight toward the rocks we could not see.  But all
doubt was over.  The success of the manoeuvre was assured.  Mr.
Mellaire, informed by messenger along the bridge from Mr. Pike,
slacked off the head-yards.  Mr. Pike, his eye on the helmsman, his
hand signalling the order, had the wheel put over to port to check
the Elsinore's rush into the wind as she came up on the starboard
tack.  All was activity.  Main- and mizzen-yards were braced up, and
the Elsinore, snugged down and hove to, had a lee of thousands of
miles of Southern Ocean.

And all this had been accomplished in the stamping ground of storm,
at the end of the world, by a handful of wretched weaklings, under
the drive of two strong mates, with behind them the placid will of
the Samurai.

It had taken thirty minutes to wear ship, and I had learned how the
best of shipmasters can lose their ships without reproach.  Suppose
the Elsinore had persisted in her refusal to payoff?  Suppose
anything had carried away?  And right here enters Mr. Pike.  It is
his task ever to see that every rope and block and all the myriad
other things in the vast and complicated gear of the Elsinore are in
strength not to carry away.  Always have the masters of our race
required henchmen like Mr. Pike, and it seems the race has well
supplied those henchmen.

Ere I went below I heard Captain West tell Mr. Pike that while both
watches were on deck it would be just as well to put a reef in the
foresail before they furled it.  The mainsail and the crojack being
off, I could see the men black on the fore-yard.  For half-an-hour I
lingered, watching them.  They seemed to make no progress with the
reef.  Mr. Mellaire was with them, having direct supervision of the
job, while Mr. Pike, on the poop, growled and grumbled and spat
endless blasphemies into the flying air.

"What's the matter?" I asked.

"Two watches on a single yardarm and unable to put a reef in a
handkerchief like that!" he snorted.  "What'll it be if we're off
here a month?"

"A month!" I cried.

"A month isn't anything for Cape Stiff," he said grimly.  "I've been
off here seven weeks and then turned tail and run around the other
way."

"Around the world?" I gasped.

"It was the only way to get to 'Frisco," he answered.  "The Horn's
the Horn, and there's no summer seas that I've ever noticed in this
neighbourhood."

My fingers were numb and I was chilled through when I took a last
look at the wretched men on the fore-yard and went below to warm up.

A little later, as I went in to table, through a cabin port I stole a
look for'ard between seas and saw the men still struggling on the
freezing yard.

The four of us were at table, and it was very comfortable, in spite
of the Elsinore's violent antics.  The room was warm.  The storm-
racks on the table kept each dish in its place.  The steward served
and moved about with ease and apparent unconcern, although I noticed
an occasional anxious gleam in his eyes when he poised some dish at a
moment when the ship pitched and flung with unusual wildness.

And now and again I thought of the poor devils on the yard.  Well,
they belonged there by right, just as we belonged here by right in
this oasis of the cabin.  I looked at Mr. Pike and wagered to myself
that half-a-dozen like him could master that stubborn foresail.  As
for the Samurai, I was convinced that alone, not moving from his
seat, by a tranquil exertion of will, he could accomplish the same
thing.

The lighted sea-lamps swung and leaped in their gimbals, ever
battling with the dancing shadows in the murky gray.  The wood-work
creaked and groaned.  The jiggermast, a huge cylinder of hollow steel
that perforated the apartment through deck above and floor beneath,
was hideously vocal with the storm.  Far above, taut ropes beat
against it so that it clanged like a boiler-shop.  There was a
perpetual thunder of seas falling on our deck and crash of water
against our for'ard wall; while the ten thousand ropes and gears
aloft bellowed and screamed as the storm smote them.

And yet all this was from without.  Here, at this well-appointed
table, was no draught nor breath of wind, no drive of spray nor wash
of sea.  We were in the heart of peace in the midmost centre of the
storm.  Margaret was in high spirits, and her laughter vied with the
clang of the jiggermast.  Mr. Pike was gloomy, but I knew him well
enough to attribute his gloom, not to the elements, but to the
inefficients futilely freezing on the yard.  As for me, I looked
about at the four of us--blue-eyed, gray-eyed, all fair-skinned and
royal blond--and somehow it seemed that I had long since lived this,
and that with me and in me were all my ancestors, and that their
lives and memories were mine, and that all this vexation of the sea
and air and labouring ship was of old time and a thousand times
before.



CHAPTER XXXIV



"How are you for a climb?" Margaret asked me, shortly after we had
left the table.

She stood challengingly at my open door, in oilskins, sou'wester, and
sea-boots.

"I've never seen you with a foot above the deck since we sailed," she
went on.  "Have you a good head?"

I marked my book, rolled out of my bunk in which I had been wedged,
and clapped my hands for Wada.

"Will you?" she cried eagerly.

"If you let me lead," I answered airily, "and if you will promise to
hold on tight.  Whither away?"

"Into the top of the jigger.  It's the easiest.  As for holding on,
please remember that I have often done it.  It is with you the doubt
rests."

"Very well," I retorted; "do you lead then.  I shall hold on tight."

"I have seen many a landsman funk it," she teased.  "There are no
lubber-holes in our tops."

"And most likely I shall," I agreed.  "I've never been aloft in my
life, and since there is no hole for a lubber."

She looked at me, half believing my confession of weakness, while I
extended my arms for the oilskin which Wada struggled on to me.

On the poop it was magnificent, and terrible, and sombre.  The
universe was very immediately about us.  It blanketed us in storming
wind and flying spray and grayness.  Our main deck was impassable,
and the relief of the wheel came aft along the bridge.  It was two
o'clock, and for over two hours the frozen wretches had laid out upon
the fore-yard.  They were still there, weak, feeble, hopeless.
Captain West, stepping out in the lee of the chart-house, gazed at
them for several minutes.

"We'll have to give up that reef," he said to Mr. Pike.  "Just make
the sail fast.  Better put on double gaskets."

And with lagging feet, from time to time pausing and holding on as
spray and the tops of waves swept over him, the mate went for'ard
along the bridge to vent his scorn on the two watches of a four-
masted ship that could not reef a foresail.

It is true.  They could not do it, despite their willingness, for
this I have learned:  THE MEN DO THEIR WEAK BEST WHENEVER THE ORDER
IS GIVEN TO SHORTEN SAIL.  It must be that they are afraid.  They
lack the iron of Mr. Pike, the wisdom and the iron of Captain West.
Always, have I noticed, with all the alacrity of which they are
capable, do they respond to any order to shorten down.  That is why
they are for'ard, in that pigsty of a forecastle, because they lack
the iron.  Well, I can say only this:  If nothing else could have
prevented the funk hinted at by Margaret, the sorry spectacle of
these ironless, spineless creatures was sufficient safeguard.  How
could I funk in the face of their weakness--I, who lived aft in the
high place?

Margaret did not disdain the aid of my hand as she climbed upon the
pin-rail at the foot of the weather jigger-rigging.  But it was
merely the recognition of a courtesy on her part, for the next moment
she released her mittened hand from mine, swung boldly outboard into
the face of the gale, and around against the ratlines.  Then she
began to climb.  I followed, almost unaware of the ticklishness of
the exploit to a tyro, so buoyed up was I by her example and by my
scorn of the weaklings for'ard.  Where men could go, I could go.
What men could do, I could do.  And no daughter of the Samurai could
out-game me.

Yet it was slow work.  In the windward rolls against the storm-gusts
one was pinned helplessly, like a butterfly, against the rigging.  At
such times, so great was the pressure one could not lift hand nor
foot.  Also, there was no need for holding on.  As I have said, one
was pinned against the rigging by the wind.

Through the snow beginning to drive the deck grew small beneath me,
until a fall meant a broken back or death, unless one landed in the
sea, in which case the result would be frigid drowning.  And still
Margaret climbed.  Without pause she went out under the overhanging
platform of the top, shifted her holds to the rigging that went aloft
from it, and swung around this rigging, easily, carelessly, timing
the action to the roll, and stood safely upon the top.

I followed.  I breathed no prayers, knew no qualms, as I presented my
back to the deck and climbed out under the overhang, feeling with my
hands for holds I could not see.  I was in an ecstasy.  I could dare
anything.  Had she sprung into the air, stretched out her arms, and
soared away on the breast of the gale, I should have unhesitatingly
followed her.

As my head outpassed the edge of the top so that she came into view,
I could see she was looking at me with storm-bright eyes.  And as I
swung around the rigging lightly and joined her, I saw approval in
her eyes that was quickly routed by petulance.

"Oh, you've done this sort of thing before," she reproached, calling
loudly, so that I might hear, her lips close to my ear.

I shook a denial with my head that brightened her eyes again.  She
nodded and smiled, and sat down, dangling her sea-boots into snow-
swirled space from the edge of the top.  I sat beside her, looking
down into the snow that hid the deck while it exaggerated the depth
out of which we had climbed.

We were all alone there, a pair of storm petrels perched in mid air
on a steel stick that arose out of snow and that vanished above into
snow.  We had come to the tip of the world, and even that tip had
ceased to be.  But no.  Out of the snow, down wind, with motionless
wings, driving fully eighty or ninety miles an hour, appeared a huge
albatross.  He must have been fifteen feet from wing-tip to wing-tip.
He had seen his danger ere we saw him, and, tilting his body on the
blast, he carelessly veered clear of collision.  His head and neck
were rimed with age or frost--we could not tell which--and his bright
bead-eye noted us as he passed and whirled away on a great circle
into the snow to leeward.

Margaret's hand shot out to mine.

"It alone was worth the climb!" she cried.  And then the Elsinore
flung down, and Margaret's hand clutched tighter for holding, while
from the hidden depths arose the crash and thunder of the great west
wind drift upon our decks.

Quickly as the snow-squall had come, it passed with the same sharp
quickness, and as in a flash we could see the lean length of the ship
beneath us--the main deck full with boiling flood, the forecastle-
head buried in a bursting sea, the lookout, stationed for very life
back on top the for'ard-house, hanging on, head down, to the wind-
drive of ocean, and, directly under us, the streaming poop and Mr.
Mellaire, with a handful of men, rigging relieving tackles on the
tiller.  And we saw the Samurai emerge in the lee of the chart-house,
swaying with casual surety on the mad deck, as he spoke what must
have been instructions to Mr. Pike.

The gray circle of the world had removed itself from us for several
hundred yards, and we could see the mighty sweep of sea.  Shaggy
gray-beards, sixty feet from trough to crest, leapt out of the
windward murky gray, and in unending procession rushed upon the
Elsinore, one moment overtoppling her slender frailness, the next
moment splashing a hundred tons of water on her deck and flinging her
skyward as they passed beneath and foamed and crested from sight in
the murky gray to leeward.  And the great albatrosses veered and
circled about us, beating up into the bitter violence of the gale and
sweeping grandly away before it far faster than it blew.

Margaret forbore from looking to challenge me with eloquent,
questioning eyes.  With numb fingers inside my thick mitten, I drew
aside the ear-flap of her sou'wester and shouted:

"It is nothing new.  I have been here before.  In the lives of all my
fathers have I been here.  The frost is on my cheek, the salt bites
my nostrils, the wind chants in my ears, and it is an old happening.
I know, now, that my forbears were Vikings.  I was seed of them in
their own day.  With them I have raided English coasts, dared the
Pillars of Hercules, forayed the Mediterranean, and sat in the high
place of government over the soft sun-warm peoples.  I am Hengist and
Horsa; I am of the ancient heroes, even legendary to them.  I have
bearded and bitten the frozen seas, and, aforetime of that, ere ever
the ice-ages came to be, I have dripped my shoulders in reindeer
gore, slain the mastodon and the sabre-tooth, scratched the record of
my prowess on the walls of deep-buried caves--ay, and suckled she-
wolves side by side with my brother-cubs, the scars of whose fangs
are now upon me."

She laughed deliciously, and a snow-squall drove upon us and cut our
cheeks, and the Elsinore flung over and down as if she would never
rise again, while we held on and swept through the air in a dizzying
arc.  Margaret released a hand, still laughing, and pressed aside my
ear-flap.

"I don't know anything about it," she cried.  "It sounds like poetry.
But I believe it.  It has to be, for it has been.  I have heard it
aforetime, when skin-clad men sang in fire-circles that pressed back
the frost and night."

"And the books?" she queried maliciously, as we prepared to descend.

"They can go hang, along with all the brain-sick, world-sick fools
that wrote them," I replied.

Again she laughed deliciously, though the wind tore the sound away as
she swung out into space, muscled herself by her arms while she
caught footholds beneath her which she could not see, and passed out
of my sight under the perilous overhang of the top.



CHAPTER XXXV



"What price tobacco?" was Mr. Mellaire's greeting, when I came on
deck this morning, bruised and weary, aching in every bone and muscle
from sixty hours of being tossed about.

The wind had fallen to a dead calm toward morning, and the Elsinore,
her several spread sails booming and slatting, rolled more miserably
than ever.  Mr. Mellaire pointed for'ard of our starboard beam.  I
could make out a bleak land of white and jagged peaks.

"Staten Island, the easterly end of it," said Mr. Mellaire.

And I knew that we were in the position of a vessel just rounding
Staten Island preliminary to bucking the Horn.  And, yet, four days
ago, we had run through the Straits of Le Maire and stolen along
toward the Horn.  Three days ago we had been well abreast of the Horn
and even a few miles past.  And here we were now, starting all over
again and far in the rear of where we had originally started.


The condition of the men is truly wretched.  During the gale the
forecastle was washed out twice.  This means that everything in it
was afloat and that every article of clothing, including mattresses
and blankets, is wet and will remain wet in this bitter weather until
we are around the Horn and well up in the good-weather latitudes.
The same is true of the 'midship-house.  Every room in it, with the
exception of the cook's and the sail-makers' (which open for'ard on
Number Two hatch), is soaking.  And they have no fires in their rooms
with which to dry things out.

I peeped into Charles Davis's room.  It was terrible.  He grinned to
me and nodded his head.

"It's just as well O'Sullivan wasn't here, sir," he said.  "He'd a-
drowned in the lower bunk.  And I want to tell you I was doing some
swimmin' before I could get into the top one.  And salt water's bad
for my sores.  I oughtn't to be in a hole like this in Cape Horn
weather.  Look at the ice, there, on the floor.  It's below freezin'
right now in this room, and my blankets are wet, and I'm a sick man,
as any man can tell that's got a nose."

"If you'd been decent to the mate you might have got decent treatment
in return," I said.

"Huh!" he sneered.  "You needn't think you can lose me, sir.  I can
grow fat on this sort of stuff.  Why, sir, when I think of the court
doin's in Seattle I just couldn't die.  An' if you'll listen to me,
sir, you'll cover the steward's money.  You can't lose.  I'm advisin'
you, sir, because you're a sort of decent sort.  Anybody that bets on
my going over the side is a sure loser."

"How could you dare ship on a voyage like this in your condition?" I
demanded.

"Condition?" he queried with a fine assumption of innocence.  "Why,
that is why I did ship.  I was in tiptop shape when I sailed.  All
this come out on me afterward.  You remember seem' me aloft, an' up
to my neck in water.  And I trimmed coal below, too.  A sick man
couldn't do it.  And remember, sir, you'll have to testify to how I
did my duty at the beginning before I took down."

"I'll bet with you myself if you think I'm goin' to die," he called
after me.

Already the sailors show marks of the hardship they are enduring.  It
is surprising, in so short a time, how lean their faces have grown,
how lined and seamed.  They must dry their underclothing with their
body heat.  Their outer garments, under their oilskins, are soggy.
And yet, paradoxically, despite their lean, drawn faces, they have
grown very stout.  Their walk is a waddle, and they bulge with
seaming corpulency.  This is due to the amount of clothing they have
on.  I noticed Larry, to-day, had on two vests, two coats, and an
overcoat, with his oilskin outside of that.  They are elephantine in
their gait for, in addition to everything else, they have wrapped
their feet, outside their sea-boots, with gunny sacking.

It IS cold, although the deck thermometer stood at thirty-three to-
day at noon.  I had Wada weigh the clothing I wear on deck.  Omitting
oilskins and boots, it came to eighteen pounds.  And yet I am not any
too warm in all this gear when the wind is blowing.  How sailors,
after having once experienced the Horn, can ever sign on again for a
voyage around is beyond me.  It but serves to show how stupid they
must be.

I feel sorry for Henry, the training-ship boy.  He is more my own
kind, and some day he will make a henchman of the afterguard and a
mate like Mr. Pike.  In the meantime, along with Buckwheat, the other
boy who berths in the 'midship-house with him, he suffers the same
hardship as the men.  He is very fair-skinned, and I noticed this
afternoon, when he was pulling on a brace, that the sleeves of his
oil-skins, assisted by the salt water, have chafed his wrists till
they are raw and bleeding and breaking out in sea-boils.  Mr.
Mellaire tells me that in another week there will be a plague of
these boils with all hands for'ard.

"When do you think we'll be up with the Horn again?" I innocently
queried of Mr. Pike.

He turned upon me in a rage, as if I had insulted him, and positively
snarled in my face ere he swung away without the courtesy of an
answer.  It is evident that he takes the sea seriously.  That is why,
I fancy, he is so excellent a seaman.


The days pass--if the interval of sombre gray that comes between the
darknesses can be called day.  For a week, now, we have not seen the
sun.  Our ship's position in this waste of storm and sea is
conjectural.  Once, by dead reckoning, we gained up with the Horn and
a hundred miles south of it.  And then came another sou'west gale
that tore our f ore-topsail and brand new spencer out of the belt-
ropes and swept us away to a conjectured longitude east of Staten
Island.

Oh, I know now this Great West Wind that blows for ever around the
world south of 55.  And I know why the chart-makers have capitalized
it, as, for instance, when I read "The Great West Wind Drift."  And I
know why the Sailing Directions advise:  "WHATEVER YOU DO, MAKE
WESTING! MAKE WESTING!"

And the West Wind and the drift of the West Wind will not permit the
Elsinore to make westing.  Gale follows gale, always from the west,
and we make easting.  And it is bitter cold, and each gale snorts up
with a prelude of driving snow.

In the cabin the lamps burn all day long.  No more does Mr. Pike run
the phonograph, nor does Margaret ever touch the piano.  She
complains of being bruised and sore.  I have a wrenched shoulder from
being hurled against the wall.  And both Wada and the steward are
limping.  Really, the only comfort I can find is in my bunk, so
wedged with boxes and pillows that the wildest rolls cannot throw me
out.  There, save for my meals and for an occasional run on deck for
exercise and fresh air, I lie and read eighteen and nineteen hours
out of the twenty-four.  But the unending physical strain is very
wearisome.

How it must be with the poor devils for'ard is beyond conceiving.
The forecastle has been washed out several times, and everything is
soaking wet.  Besides, they have grown weaker, and two watches are
required to do what one ordinary watch could do.  Thus, they must
spend as many hours on the sea-swept deck and aloft on the freezing
yards as I do in my warm, dry bunk.  Wada tells me that they never
undress, but turn into their wet bunks in their oil-skins and sea-
boots and wet undergarments.

To look at them crawling about on deck or in the rigging is enough.
They are truly weak.  They are gaunt-cheeked and haggard-gray of
skin, with great dark circles under their eyes.  The predicted plague
of sea-boils and sea-cuts has come, and their hands and wrists and
arms are frightfully afflicted.  Now one, and now another, and
sometimes several, either from being knocked down by seas or from
general miserableness, take to the bunk for a day or so off.  This
means more work for the others, so that the men on their feet are not
tolerant of the sick ones, and a man must be very sick to escape
being dragged out to work by his mates.

I cannot but marvel at Andy Fay and Mulligan Jacobs.  Old and fragile
as they are, it seems impossible that they can endure what they do.
For that matter, I cannot understand why they work at all.  I cannot
understand why any of them toil on and obey an order in this freezing
hell of the Horn.  Is it because of fear of death that they do not
cease work and bring death to all of us?  Or is it because they are
slave-beasts, with a slave-psychology, so used all their lives to
being driven by their masters that it is beyond their mental power to
refuse to obey?

And yet most of them, in a week after we reach Seattle, will be on
board other ships outward bound for the Horn.  Margaret says the
reason for this is that sailors forget.  Mr. Pike agrees.  He says
give them a week in the south-east trades as we run up the Pacific
and they will have forgotten that they have ever been around the
Horn.  I wonder.  Can they be as stupid as this?  Does pain leave no
record with them?  Do they fear only the immediate thing?  Have they
no horizons wider than a day?  Then indeed do they belong where they
are.

They ARE cowardly.  This was shown conclusively this morning at two
o'clock.  Never have I witnessed such panic fear, and it was fear of
the immediate thing--fear, stupid and beast-like.  It was Mr.
Mellaire's watch.  As luck would have it, I was reading Boas's Mind
of Primitive Man when I heard the rush of feet over my head.  The
Elsinore was hove to on the port tack at the time, under very short
canvas.  I was wondering what emergency had brought the watch upon
the poop, when I heard another rush of feet that meant the second
watch.  I heard no pulling and hauling, and the thought of mutiny
flashed across my mind.

Still nothing happened, and, growing curious, I got into my sea-
boots, sheepskin coat, and oilskin, put on my sou'wester and mittens,
and went on deck.  Mr. Pike had already dressed and was ahead of me.
Captain West, who in this bad weather sleeps in the chart-room, stood
in the lee doorway of the house, through which the lamplight streamed
on the frightened faces of the men.

Those of the 'midship-house were not present, but every man Jack of
the forecastle, with the exception of Andy Fay and Mulligan Jacobs,
as I afterwards learned, had joined in the flight aft.  Andy Fay, who
belonged in the watch below, had calmly remained in his bunk, while
Mulligan Jacobs had taken advantage of the opportunity to sneak into
the forecastle and fill his pipe.

"What is the matter, Mr. Pike?" Captain West asked.

Before the mate could reply, Bert Rhine snickered:

"The devil's come aboard, sir."

But his snicker was palpably an assumption of unconcern he did not
possess.  The more I think over it the more I am surprised that such
keen men as the gangsters should have been frightened by what had
occurred.  But frightened they were, the three of them, out of their
bunks and out of the precious surcease of their brief watch below.

So fear-struck was Larry that he chattered and grimaced like an ape,
and shouldered and struggled to get away from the dark and into the
safety of the shaft of light that shone out of the chart-house.
Tony, the Greek, was just as bad, mumbling to himself and continually
crossing himself.  He was joined in this, as a sort of chorus, by the
two Italians, Guido Bombini and Mike Cipriani.  Arthur Deacon was
almost in collapse, and he and Chantz, the Jew, shamelessly clung to
each other for support.  Bob, the fat and overgrown youth, was
sobbing, while the other youth, Bony the Splinter, was shivering and
chattering his teeth.  Yes, and the two best sailors for'ard, Tom
Spink and the Maltese Cockney, stood in the background, their backs
to the dark, their faces yearning toward the light.

More than all other contemptible things in this world there are two
that I loathe and despise:  hysteria in a woman; fear and cowardice
in a man.  The first turns me to ice.  I cannot sympathize with
hysteria.  The second turns my stomach.  Cowardice in a man is to me
positively nauseous.  And this fear-smitten mass of human animals on
our reeling poop raised my gorge.  Truly, had I been a god at that
moment, I should have annihilated the whole mass of them.  No; I
should have been merciful to one.  He was the Faun.  His bright,
pain-liquid, and flashing-eager eyes strained from face to face with
desire to understand.  He did not know what had occurred, and, being
stone-deaf, had thought the rush aft a response to a call for all
hands.

I noticed Mr. Mellaire.  He may be afraid of Mr. Pike, and he is a
murderer; but at any rate he has no fear of the supernatural.  With
two men above him in authority, although it was his watch, there was
no call for him to do anything.  He swayed back and forth in balance
to the violent motions of the Elsinore and looked on with eyes that
were amused and cynical.

"What does the devil look like, my man?" Captain West asked.

Bert Rhine grinned sheepishly.

"Answer the captain!" Mr. Pike snarled at him.

Oh, it was murder, sheer murder, that leapt into the gangster's eyes
for the instant, in acknowledgment of the snarl.  Then he replied to
Captain West:

"I didn't wait to see, sir.  But it's one whale of a devil."

"He's as big as a elephant, sir," volunteered Bill Quigley.  "I
seen'm face to face, sir.  He almost got me when I run out of the
fo'c's'le."

"Oh, Lord, sir!" Larry moaned.  "The way he hit the house, sir.  It
was the call to Judgment."

"Your theology is mixed, my man," Captain West smiled quietly, though
I could not help seeing how tired was his face and how tired were his
wonderful Samurai eyes.

He turned to the mate.

"Mr. Pike, will you please go for'ard and interview this devil?
Fasten him up and tie him down and I'll take a look at him in the
morning."

"Yes, sir," said Mr. Pike; and Kipling's line came to me:


"Woman, Man, or God or Devil, was there anything we feared?"


And as I went for'ard through the wall of darkness after Mr. Pike and
Mr. Mellaire along the freezing, slender, sea-swept bridge--not a
sailor dared to accompany us--other lines of "The Galley Slave"
drifted through my brain, such as:


"Our bulkheads bulged with cotton and our masts were stepped in gold
-
We ran a mighty merchandise of niggers in the hold. . . "


And:


"By the brand upon my shoulder, by the gall of clinging steel,
By the welts the whips have left me, by the scars that never heal . .
. "


And:


"Battered chain-gangs of the orlop, grizzled draughts of years gone
by . . . "


And I caught my great, radiant vision of Mr. Pike, galley slave of
the race, and a driver of men under men greater than he; the faithful
henchman, the able sailorman, battered and grizzled, branded and
galled, the servant of the sweep-head that made mastery of the sea.
I know him now.  He can never again offend me.  I forgive him
everything--the whiskey raw on his breath the day I came aboard at
Baltimore, his moroseness when sea and wind do not favour, his
savagery to the men, his snarl and his sneer.

On top the 'midship-house we got a ducking that makes me shiver to
recall.  I had dressed too hastily properly to fasten my oilskin
about my neck, so that I was wet to the skin.  We crossed the next
span of bridge through driving spray, and were well upon the top of
the for'ard-house when something adrift on the deck hit the for'ard
wall a terrific smash.

"Whatever it is, it's playing the devil," Mr. Pike yelled in my ear,
as he endeavoured to locate the thing by the dry-battery light-stick
which he carried.

The pencil of light travelled over dark water, white with foam, that
churned upon the deck.

"There it goes!" Mr. Pike cried, as the Elsinore dipped by the head
and hurtled the water for'ard.

The light went out as the three of us caught holds and crouched to a
deluge of water from overside.  As we emerged, from under the
forecastle-head we heard a tremendous thumping and battering.  Then,
as the bow lifted, for an instant in the pencil of light that
immediately lost it, I glimpsed a vague black object that bounded
down the inclined deck where no water was.  What became of it we
could not see.

Mr. Pike descended to the deck, followed by Mr. Mellaire.  Again, as
the Elsinore dipped by the head and fetched a surge of sea-water from
aft along the runway, I saw the dark object bound for'ard directly at
the mates.  They sprang to safety from its charge, the light went
out, while another icy sea broke aboard.

For a time I could see nothing of the two men.  Next, in the light
flashed from the stick, I guessed that Mr. Pike was in pursuit of the
thing.  He evidently must have captured it at the rail against the
starboard rigging and caught a turn around it with a loose end of
rope.  As the vessel rolled to windward some sort of a struggle
seemed to be going on.  The second mate sprang to the mate's
assistance, and, together, with more loose ends, they seemed to
subdue the thing.

I descended to see.  By the light-stick we made it out to be a large,
barnacle-crusted cask.

"She's been afloat for forty years," was Mr. Pike's judgment.  "Look
at the size of the barnacles, and look at the whiskers."

"And it's full of something," said Mr. Mellaire.  "Hope it isn't
water."

I rashly lent a hand when they started to work the cask for'ard,
between seas and taking advantage of the rolls and pitches, to the
shelter under the forecastle-head.  As a result, even through my
mittens, I was cut by the sharp edges of broken shell.

"It's liquor of some sort," said the mate, "but we won't risk
broaching it till morning."

"But where did it come from?" I asked.

"Over the side's the only place it could have come from."  Mr. Pike
played the light over it.  "Look at it!  It's been afloat for years
and years."

"The stuff ought to be well-seasoned," commented Mr. Mellaire.

Leaving them to lash the cask securely, I stole along the deck to the
forecastle and peered in.  The men, in their headlong flight, had
neglected to close the doors, and the place was afloat.  In the
flickering light from a small and very smoky sea-lamp it was a dismal
picture.  No self-respecting cave-man, I am sure, would have lived in
such a hole.

Even as I looked a bursting sea filled the runway between the house
and rail, and through the doorway in which I stood the freezing water
rushed waist-deep.  I had to hold on to escape being swept inside the
room.  From a top bunk, lying on his side, Andy Fay regarded me
steadily with his bitter blue eyes.  Seated on the rough table of
heavy planks, his sea-booted feet swinging in the water, Mulligan
Jacobs pulled at his pipe.  When he observed me he pointed to pulpy
book-pages that floated about.

"Me library's gone to hell," he mourned as he indicated the flotsam.
"There's me Byron.  An' there goes Zola an' Browning with a piece of
Shakespeare runnin' neck an' neck, an' what's left of Anti-Christ
makin' a bad last.  An' there's Carlyle and Zola that cheek by jowl
you can't tell 'em apart."

Here the Elsinore lay down to starboard, and the water in the
forecastle poured out against my legs and hips.  My wet mittens
slipped on the iron work, and I swept down the runway into the
scuppers, where I was turned over and over by another flood that had
just boarded from windward.

I know I was rather confused, and that I had swallowed quite a deal
of salt water, ere I got my hands on the rungs of the ladder and
climbed to the top of the house.  On my way aft along the bridge I
encountered the crew coming for'ard.  Mr. Mellaire and Mr. Pike were
talking in the lee of the chart-house, and inside, as I passed below,
Captain West was smoking a cigar.

After a good rub down, in dry pyjamas, I was scarcely back in my bunk
with the Mind of Primitive Man before me, when the stampede over my
head was repeated.  I waited for the second rush.  It came, and I
proceeded to dress.

The scene on the poop duplicated the previous one, save that the men
were more excited, more frightened.  They were babbling and
chattering all together.

"Shut up!" Mr. Pike was snarling when I came upon them.  "One at a
time, and answer the captain's question."

"It ain't no barrel this time, sir," Tom Spink said.  "It's alive.
An' if it ain't the devil it's the ghost of a drownded man.  I see 'm
plain an' clear.  He's a man, or was a man once--"

"They was two of 'em, sir," Richard Giller, one of the "bricklayers,"
broke in.

"I think he looked like Petro Marinkovich, sir," Tom Spink went on.

"An' the other was Jespersen--I seen 'm," Giller added.

"They was three of 'em, sir," said Nosey Murphy.  "O'Sullivan, sir,
was the other one.  They ain't devils, sir.  They're drownded men.
They come aboard right over the bows, an' they moved slow like
drownded men.  Sorensen seen the first one first.  He caught my arm
an' pointed, an' then I seen 'm.  He was on top the for'ard-house.
And Olansen seen 'm, an' Deacon, sir, an' Hackey.  We all seen 'm,
sir . . . an' the second one; an' when the rest run away I stayed
long enough to see the third one.  Mebbe there's more.  I didn't wait
to see."

Captain West stopped the man.

"Mr. Pike," he said wearily, "will you straighten this nonsense out."

"Yes, sir," Mr. Pike responded, then turned on the man.  "Come on,
all of you!  There's three devils to tie down this time."

But the men shrank away from the order and from him.

"For two cents . . . " I heard Mr. Pike growl to himself, then choke
off utterance.

He flung about on his heel and started for the bridge.  In the same
order as on the previous trip, Mr. Mellaire second, and I bringing up
the rear, we followed.  It was a similar journey, save that we caught
a ducking midway on the first span of bridge as well as a ducking on
the 'midship-house.

We halted on top the for'ard-house.  In vain Mr. Pike flashed his
light-stick.  Nothing was to be seen nor heard save the white-flecked
dark water on our deck, the roar of the gale in our rigging, and the
crash and thunder of seas falling aboard.  We advanced half-way
across the last span of bridge to the f ore-castle head, and were
driven to pause and hang on at the foremast by a bursting sea.

Between the drives of spray Mr. Pike flashed his stick.  I heard him
exclaim something.  Then he went on to the forecastle-head, followed
by Mr. Mellaire, while I waited by the foremast, clinging tight, and
endured another ducking.  Through the emergencies I could see the
pencil of light, appearing and disappearing, darting here and there.
Several minutes later the mates were back with me.

"Half our head-gear's carried away," Mr. Pike told me.  "We must have
run into something."

"I felt a jar, right after you' went below, sir, last time," said Mr.
Mellaire.  "Only I thought it was a thump of sea."

"So did I feel it," the mate agreed.  "I was just taking off my
boots.  I thought it was a sea.  But where are the three devils?"

"Broaching the cask," the second mate suggested.

We made the forecastle-head, descended the iron ladder, and went
for'ard, inside, underneath, out of the wind and sea.  There lay the
cask, securely lashed.  The size of the barnacles on it was
astonishing.  They were as large as apples and inches deep.  A down-
fling of bow brought a foot of water about our boots; and as the bow
lifted and the water drained away, it drew out from the shell-crusted
cask streamers of seaweed a foot or so in length.

Led by Mr. Pike and watching our chance between seas, we searched the
deck and rails between the forecastle-head and the for'ard-house and
found no devils.  The mate stepped into the forecastle doorway, and
his light-stick cut like a dagger through the dim illumination of the
murky sea-lamp.  And we saw the devils.  Nosey Murphy had been right.
There were three of them.

Let me give the picture:  A drenched and freezing room of rusty,
paint-scabbed iron, low-roofed, double-tiered with bunks, reeking
with the filth of thirty men, despite the washing of the sea.  In a
top bunk, on his side, in sea-boots and oilskins, staring steadily
with blue, bitter eyes, Andy Fay; on the table, pulling at a pipe,
with hanging legs dragged this way and that by the churn of water,
Mulligan Jacobs, solemnly regarding three men, sea-booted and bloody,
who stand side by side, of a height and not duly tall, swaying in
unison to the Elsinore's down-flinging and up-lifting.

But such men!  I know my East Side and my East End, and I am
accustomed to the faces of all the ruck of races, yet with these
three men I was at fault.  The Mediterranean had surely never bred
such a breed; nor had Scandinavia.  They were not blonds.  They were
not brunettes.  Nor were they of the Brown, or Black, or Yellow.
Their skin was white under a bronze of weather.  Wet as was their
hair, it was plainly a colourless, sandy hair.  Yet their eyes were
dark--and yet not dark.  They were neither blue, nor gray, nor green,
nor hazel.  Nor were they black.  They were topaz, pale topaz; and
they gleamed and dreamed like the eyes of great cats.  They regarded
us like walkers in a dream, these pale-haired storm-waifs with pale,
topaz eyes.  They did not bow, they did not smile, in no way did they
recognize our presence save that they looked at us and dreamed.

But Andy Fay greeted us.

"It's a hell of a night an' not a wink of sleep with these goings-
on," he said.

"Now where did they blow in from a night like this?" Mulligan Jacobs
complained.

"You've got a tongue in your mouth," Mr. Pike snarled.  "Why ain't
you asked 'em?"

"As though you didn't know I could use the tongue in me mouth, you
old stiff," Jacobs snarled back.

But it was no time for their private feud.  Mr. Pike turned on the
dreaming new-comers and addressed them in the mangled and aborted
phrases of a dozen languages such as the world-wandering Anglo-Saxon
has had every opportunity to learn but is too stubborn-brained and
wilful-mouthed to wrap his tongue about.

The visitors made no reply.  They did not even shake their heads.
Their faces remained peculiarly relaxed and placid, incurious and
pleasant, while in their eyes floated profounder dreams.  Yet they
were human.  The blood of their injuries stained them and clotted on
their clothes.

"Dutchmen," snorted Mr. Pike, with all due contempt for other breeds,
as he waved them to make themselves at home in any of the bunks.

Mr. Pike's ethnology is narrow.  Outside his own race he is aware of
only three races:  niggers, Dutchmen, and Dagoes.

Again our visitors proved themselves human.  They understood the
mate's invitation, and, glancing first at one another, they climbed
into three top-bunks and closed their eyes.  I could swear the first
of them was asleep in half a minute.

"We'll have to clean up for'ard, or we'll be having the sticks about
our ears," the mate said, already starting to depart.  "Get the men
along, Mr. Mellaire, and call out the carpenter."



CHAPTER XXXVI



And no westing!  We have been swept back three degrees of casting
since the night our visitors came on board.  They are the great
mystery, these three men of the sea.  "Horn Gypsies," Margaret calls
them; and Mr. Pike dubs them "Dutchmen."  One thing is certain, they
have a language of their own which they talk with one another.  But
of our hotch-potch of nationalities fore and aft there is no person
who catches an inkling of their language or nationality.

Mr. Mellaire raised the theory that they were Finns of some sort, but
this was indignantly denied by our big-footed youth of a carpenter,
who swears he is a Finn himself.  Louis, the cook, avers that
somewhere over the world, on some forgotten voyage, he has
encountered men of their type; but he can neither remember the voyage
nor their race.  He and the rest of the Asiatics accept their
presence as a matter of course; but the crew, with the exception of
Andy Fay and Mulligan Jacobs, is very superstitious about the new-
comers, and will have nothing to do with them.

"No good will come of them, sir," Tom Spink, at the wheel, told us,
shaking his head forebodingly.

Margaret's mittened hand rested on my arm as we balanced to the easy
roll of the ship.  We had paused from our promenade, which we now
take each day, religiously, as a constitutional, between eleven and
twelve.

"Why, what is the matter with them?" she queried, nudging me privily
in warning of what was coming.

"Because they ain't men, Miss, as we can rightly call men.  They
ain't regular men."

"It was a bit irregular, their manner of coming on board," she
gurgled.

"That's just it, Miss," Tom Spink exclaimed, brightening perceptibly
at the hint of understanding.  "Where'd they come from?  They won't
tell.  Of course they won't tell.  They ain't men.  They're spirits--
ghosts of sailors that drowned as long ago as when that cask went
adrift from a sinkin' ship, an' that's years an' years, Miss, as
anybody can see, lookin' at the size of the barnacles on it."

"Do you think so?" Margaret queried.

"We all think so, Miss.  We ain't spent our lives on the sea for
nothin'.  There's no end of landsmen don't believe in the Flyin'
Dutchman.  But what do they know?  They're just landsmen, ain't they?
They ain't never had their leg grabbed by a ghost, such as I had, on
the Kathleen, thirty-five years ago, down in the hole 'tween the
water-casks.  An' didn't that ghost rip the shoe right off of me?
An' didn't I fall through the hatch two days later an' break my
shoulder?"

"Now, Miss, I seen 'em makin' signs to Mr. Pike that we'd run into
their ship hove to on the other tack.  Don't you believe it.  There
wasn't no ship."

"But how do you explain the carrying away of our head-gear?" I
demanded.

"There's lots of things can't be explained, sir," was Tom Spink's
answer.  "Who can explain the way the Finns plays tom-fool tricks
with the weather?  Yet everybody knows it.  Why are we havin' a hard
passage around the Horn, sir?  I ask you that.  Why, sir?"

I shook my head.

"Because of the carpenter, sir.  We've found out he's a Finn.  Why
did he keep it quiet all the way down from Baltimore?"

"Why did he tell it?" Margaret challenged.

"He didn't tell it, Miss--leastways, not until after them three
others boarded us.  I got my suspicions he knows more about 'm than
he's lettin' on.  An' look at the weather an' the delay we're
gettin'.  An' don't everybody know the Finns is regular warlocks an'
weather-breeders?"

My ears pricked up.

"Where did you get that word warlock?" I questioned.

Tom Spink looked puzzled.

"What's wrong with it, sir?" he asked.

"Nothing.  It's all right.  But where did you get it?"

"I never got it, sir.  I always had it.  That's what Finns is--
warlocks."

"And these three new-comers--they aren't Finns?" asked Margaret.

The old Englishman shook his head solemnly.

"No, Miss.  They're drownded sailors a long time drownded.  All you
have to do is look at 'm.  An' the carpenter could tell us a few if
he was minded."


Nevertheless, our mysterious visitors are a welcome addition to our
weakened crew.  I watch them at work.  They are strong and willing.
Mr. Pike says they are real sailormen, even if he doesn't understand
their lingo.  His theory is that they are from some small old-country
or outlander ship, which, hove to on the opposite tack to the
Elsinore, was run down and sunk.

I have forgotten to say that we found the barnacled cask nearly
filled with a most delicious wine which none of us can name.  As soon
as the gale moderated Mr. Pike had the cask brought aft and broached,
and now the steward and Wada have it all in bottles and spare
demijohns.  It is beautifully aged, and Mr. Pike is certain that it
is some sort of a mild and unheard-of brandy.  Mr. Mellaire merely
smacks his lips over it, while Captain West, Margaret, and I
steadfastly maintain that it is wine.

The condition of the men grows deplorable.  They were always poor at
pulling on ropes, but now it takes two or three to pull as much as
one used to pull.  One thing in their favour is that they are well,
though grossly, fed.  They have all they want to eat, such as it is,
but it is the cold and wet, the terrible condition of the forecastle,
the lack of sleep, and the almost continuous toil of both watches on
deck.  Either watch is so weak and worthless that any severe task
requires the assistance of the other watch.  As an instance, we
finally managed a reef in the fore-sail in the thick of a gale.  It
took both watches two hours, yet Mr. Pike tells me that under similar
circumstances, with an average crew of the old days, he has seen a
single watch reef the foresail in twenty minutes.

I have learned one of the prime virtues of a steel sailing-ship.
Such a craft, heavily laden, does not strain her seams open in bad
weather and big seas.  Except for a tiny leak down in the fore-peak,
with which we sailed from Baltimore and which is bailed out with a
pail once in several weeks, the Elsinore is bone-dry.  Mr. Pike tells
me that had a wooden ship of her size and cargo gone through the
buffeting we have endured, she would be leaking like a sieve.

And Mr. Mellaire, out of his own experience, has added to my respect
for the Horn.  When he was a young man he was once eight weeks in
making around from 50 in the Atlantic to 50 in the Pacific.  Another
time his vessel was compelled to put back twice to the Falklands for
repairs.  And still another time, in a wooden ship running back in
distress to the Falklands, his vessel was lost in a shift of gale in
the very entrance to Port Stanley.  As he told me:

"And after we'd been there a month, sir, who should come in but the
old Lucy Powers.  She was a sight!--her foremast clean gone out of
her and half her spars, the old man killed from one of the spars
falling on him, the mate with two broken arms, the second mate sick,
and what was left of the crew at the pumps.  We'd lost our ship, so
my skipper took charge, refitted her, doubled up both crews, and we
headed the other way around, pumping two hours in every watch clear
to Honolulu."

The poor wretched chickens!  Because of their ill-judged moulting
they are quite featherless.  It is a marvel that one of them
survives, yet so far we have lost only six.  Margaret keeps the
kerosene stove going, and, though they have ceased laying, she
confidently asserts that they are all layers and that we shall have
plenty of eggs once we get fine weather in the Pacific.

There is little use to describe these monotonous and perpetual
westerly gales.  One is very like another, and they follow so fast on
one another's heels that the sea never has a chance to grow calm.  So
long have we rolled and tossed about that the thought, say, of a
solid, unmoving billiard-table is inconceivable.  In previous
incarnations I have encountered things that did not move, but . . .
they were in previous incarnations.

We have been up to the Diego Ramirez Rocks twice in the past ten
days.  At the present moment, by vague dead reckoning, we are two
hundred miles east of them.  We have been hove down to our hatches
three times in the last week.  We have had six stout sails, of the
heaviest canvas, furled and double-gasketed, torn loose and stripped
from the yards.  Sometimes, so weak are our men, not more than half
of them can respond to the call for all hands.

Lars Jacobson, who had his leg broken early in the voyage, was
knocked down by a sea several days back and had the leg rebroken.
Ditman Olansen, the crank-eyed Norwegian, went Berserker last night
in the second dog-watch and pretty well cleaned out his half of the
forecastle.  Wada reports that it required the bricklayers,
Fitzgibbon and Gilder, the Maltese Cockney, and Steve Roberts, the
cowboy, finally to subdue the madman.  These are all men of Mr.
Mellaire's watch.  In Mr. Pike's watch John Hackey, the San Francisco
hoodlum, who has stood out against the gangsters, has at last
succumbed and joined them.  And only this morning Mr. Pike dragged
Charles Davis by the scruff of the neck out of the forecastle, where
he had caught him expounding sea-law to the miserable creatures.  Mr.
Mellaire, I notice on occasion, remains unduly intimate with the
gangster clique.  And yet nothing serious happens.

And Charles Davis does not die.  He seems actually to be gaining in
weight.  He never misses a meal.  From the break of the poop, in the
shelter of the weather cloth, our decks a thunder and rush of
freezing water, I often watch him slip out of his room between seas,
mug and plate in hand, and hobble for'ard to the galley for his food.
He is a keen judge of the ship's motions, for never yet have I seen
him get a serious ducking.  Sometimes, of course, he may get
splattered with spray or wet to the knees, but he manages to be out
of the way whenever a big graybeard falls on board.



CHAPTER XXXVII



A wonderful event to-day!  For five minutes, at noon, the sun was
actually visible.  But such a sun!--a pale and cold and sickly orb
that at meridian was only 90 degrees 18 minutes above the horizon.
And within the hour we were taking in sail and lying down to the
snow-gusts of a fresh south-west gale.

WHATEVER YOU DO, MAKE WESTING! MAKE WESTING!--this sailing rule of
the navigators for the Horn has been bitten out of iron.  I can
understand why shipmasters, with a favouring slant of wind, have left
sailors, fallen overboard, to drown without heaving-to to lower a
boat.  Cape Horn is iron, and it takes masters of iron to win around
from east to west.

And we make easting!  This west wind is eternal.  I listen
incredulously when Mr. Pike or Mr. Mellaire tells of times when
easterly winds have blown in these latitudes.  It is impossible.
Always does the west wind blow, gale upon gale and gales everlasting,
else why the "Great West Wind Drift" printed on the charts!  We of
the afterguard are weary of this eternal buffeting.  Our men have
become pulpy, washed-out, sore-corroded shadows of men.  I should not
be surprised, in the end, to see Captain West turn tail and run
eastward around the world to Seattle.  But Margaret smiles with
surety, and nods her head, and affirms that her father will win
around to 50 in the Pacific.

How Charles Davis survives in that wet, freezing, paint-scabbed room
of iron in the 'midship-house is beyond me--just as it is beyond me
that the wretched sailors in the wretched forecastle do not lie down
in their bunks and die, or, at least, refuse to answer the call of
the watches.

Another week has passed, and we are to-day, by observation, sixty
miles due south of the Straits of Le Maire, and we are hove-to, in a
driving gale, on the port tack.  The glass is down to 28.58, and even
Mr. Pike acknowledges that it is one of the worst Cape Horn snorters
he has ever experienced.

In the old days the navigators used to strive as far south as 64
degrees or 65 degrees, into the Antarctic drift ice, hoping, in a
favouring spell, to make westing at a prodigious rate across the
extreme-narrowing wedges of longitude.  But of late years all
shipmasters have accepted the hugging of the land all the way around.
Out of ten times ten thousand passages of Cape Stiff from east to
west, this, they have concluded, is the best strategy.  So Captain
West hugs the land.  He heaves-to on the port tack until the leeward
drift brings the land into perilous proximity, then wears ship and
heaves-to on the port tack and makes leeway off shore.

I may be weary of all this bitter movement of a labouring ship on a
frigid sea, but at the same time I do not mind it.  In my brain burns
the flame of a great discovery and a great achievement.  I have found
what makes all the books go glimmering; I have achieved what my very
philosophy tells me is the greatest achievement a man can make.  I
have found the love of woman.  I do not know whether she cares for
me.  Nor is that the point.  The point is that in myself I have risen
to the greatest height to which the human male animal can rise.

I know a woman and her name is Margaret.  She is Margaret, a woman
and desirable.  My blood is red.  I am not the pallid scholar I so
proudly deemed myself to be.  I am a man, and a lover, despite the
books.  As for De Casseres--if ever I get back to New York, equipped
as I now am, I shall confute him with the same ease that he has
confuted all the schools.  Love is the final word.  To the rational
man it alone gives the super-rational sanction for living.  Like
Bergson in his overhanging heaven of intuition, or like one who has
bathed in Pentecostal fire and seen the New Jerusalem, so I have trod
the materialistic dictums of science underfoot, scaled the last peak
of philosophy, and leaped into my heaven, which, after all, is within
myself.  The stuff that composes me, that is I, is so made that it
finds its supreme realization in the love of woman.  It is the
vindication of being.  Yes, and it is the wages of being, the payment
in full for all the brittleness and frailty of flesh and breath.

And she is only a woman, like any woman, and the Lord knows I know
what women are.  And I know Margaret for what she is--mere woman; and
yet I know, in the lover's soul of me, that she is somehow different.
Her ways are not as the ways of other women, and all her ways are
delightful to me.  In the end, I suppose, I shall become a nest-
builder, for of a surety nest-building is one of her pretty ways.
And who shall say which is the worthier--the writing of a whole
library or the building of a nest?

The monotonous days, bleak and gray and soggy cold, drag by.  It is
now a month since we began the passage of the Horn, and here we are,
not so well forward as a month ago, because we are something like a
hundred miles south of the Straits of Le Maire.  Even this position
is conjectural, being arrived at by dead reckoning, based on the
leeway of a ship hove-to, now on the one tack, now on the other, with
always the Great West Wind Drift making against us.  It is four days
since our last instrument-sight of the sun.

This storm-vexed ocean has become populous.  No ships are getting
round, and each day adds to our number.  Never a brief day passes
without our sighting from two or three to a dozen hove-to on port
tack or starboard tack.  Captain West estimates there must be at
least two hundred sail of us.  A ship hove-to with preventer tackles
on the rudder-head is unmanageable.  Each night we take our chance of
unavoidable and disastrous collision.  And at times, glimpsed through
the snow-squalls, we see and curse the ships, east-bound, that drive
past us with the West Wind and the West Wind Drift at their backs.
And so wild is the mind of man that Mr. Pike and Mr. Mellaire still
aver that on occasion they have known gales to blow ships from east
to west around the Horn.  It surely has been a year since we of the
Elsinore emerged from under the lee of Tierra Del Fuego into the
snorting south-west gales.  A century, at least, has elapsed since we
sailed from Baltimore.


And I don't give a snap of my fingers for all the wrath and fury of
this dim-gray sea at the tip of the earth.  I have told Margaret that
I love her.  The tale was told in the shelter of the weather cloth,
where we clung together in the second dog-watch last evening.  And it
was told again, and by both of us, in the bright-lighted chart-room
after the watches had been changed at eight bells.  Yes, and her face
was storm-bright, and all of her was very proud, save that her eyes
were warm and soft and fluttered with lids that just would flutter
maidenly and womanly.  It was a great hour--our great hour.

A poor devil of a man is most lucky when, loving, he is loved.
Grievous indeed must be the fate of the lover who is unloved.  And I,
for one, and for still other reasons, congratulate myself upon the
vastitude of my good fortune.  For see, were Margaret any other sort
of a woman, were she . . . well, just the lovely and lovable and
adorably snuggly sort who seem made just precisely for love and
loving and nestling into the strong arms of a man--why, there
wouldn't be anything remarkable or wonderful about her loving me.
But Margaret is Margaret, strong, self-possessed, serene, controlled,
a very mistress of herself.  And there's the miracle--that such a
woman should have been awakened to love by me.  It is almost
unbelievable.  I go out of my way to get another peep into those
long, cool, gray eyes of hers and see them grow melting soft as she
looks at me.  She is no Juliet, thank the Lord; and thank the Lord I
am no Romeo.  And yet I go up alone on the freezing poop, and under
my breath chant defiantly at the snorting gale, and at the graybeards
thundering down on us, that I am a lover.  And I send messages to the
lonely albatrosses veering through the murk that I am a lover.  And I
look at the wretched sailors crawling along the spray-swept bridge
and know that never in ten thousand wretched lives could they
experience the love I experience, and I wonder why God ever made
them.


"And the one thing I had firmly resolved from the start," Margaret
confessed to me this morning in the cabin, when I released her from
my arms, "was that I would not permit you to make love to me."

"True daughter of Herodias," I gaily gibed, "so such was the drift of
your thoughts even as early as the very start.  Already you were
looking upon me with a considerative female eye."

She laughed proudly, and did not reply.

"What possibly could have led you to expect that I would make love to
you?" I insisted.

"Because it is the way of young male passengers on long voyages," she
replied.

"Then others have . . . ?"

"They always do," she assured me gravely.

And at that instant I knew the first ridiculous pang of jealousy; but
I laughed it away and retorted:

"It was an ancient Chinese philosopher who is first recorded as
having said, what doubtlessly the cave men before him gibbered,
namely, that a woman pursues a man by fluttering away in advance of
him."

"Wretch!" she cried.  "I never fluttered.  When did I ever flutter!"

"It is a delicate subject . . . " I began with assumed hesitancy.

"When did I ever flutter?" she demanded.

I availed myself of one of Schopenhauer's ruses by making a shift.

"From the first you observed nothing that a female could afford to
miss observing," I charged.  "I'll wager you knew as quickly as I the
very instant when I first loved you."

"I knew the first time you hated me," she evaded.

"Yes, I know, the first time I saw you and learned that you were
coming on the voyage," I said.  "But now I repeat my challenge.  You
knew as quickly as I the first instant I loved you."

Oh, her eyes were beautiful, and the repose and certitude of her were
tremendous, as she rested her hand on my arm for a moment and in a
low, quiet voice said:

"Yes, I . . . I think I know.  It was the morning of that pampero off
the Plate, when you were thrown through the door into my father's
stateroom.  I saw it in your eyes.  I knew it.  I think it was the
first time, the very instant."

I could only nod my head and draw her close to me.  And she looked up
at me and added:

"You were very ridiculous.  There you sat, on the bed, holding on
with one hand and nursing the other hand under your arm, staring at
me, irritated, startled, utterly foolish, and then . . . how, I don't
know . . . I knew that you had just come to know . . . "

"And the very next instant you froze up," I charged ungallantly.

"And that was why," she admitted shamelessly, then leaned away from
me, her hands resting on my shoulders, while she gurgled and her lips
parted from over her beautiful white teeth.

One thing I, John Pathurst, know:  that gurgling laughter of hers is
the most adorable laughter that was ever heard.



CHAPTER XXXVIII



I wonder.  I wonder.  Did the Samurai make a mistake?  Or was it the
darkness of oncoming death that chilled and clouded that star-cool
brain of his, and made a mock of all his wisdom?  Or was it the
blunder that brought death upon him beforehand?  I do not know, I
shall never know; for it is a matter no one of us dreams of hinting
at, much less discussing.

I shall begin at the beginning--yesterday afternoon.  For it was
yesterday afternoon, five weeks to a day since we emerged from the
Straits of Le Maire into this gray storm-ocean, that once again we
found ourselves hove to directly off the Horn.  At the changing of
the watches at four o'clock, Captain West gave the command to Mr.
Pike to wear ship.  We were on the starboard tack at the time, making
leeway off shore.  This manoeuvre placed us on the port tack, and the
consequent leeway, to me, seemed on shore, though at an acute angle,
to be sure.

In the chart-room, glancing curiously at the chart, I measured the
distance with my eye and decided that we were in the neighbourhood of
fifteen miles off Cape Horn.

"With our drift we'll be close up under the land by morning, won't
we?" I ventured tentatively.

"Yes," Captain West nodded; "and if it weren't for the West Wind
Drift, and if the land did not trend to the north-east, we'd be
ashore by morning.  As it is, we'll be well under it at daylight,
ready to steal around if there is a change, ready to wear ship if
there is no change."

It did not enter my head to question his judgment.  What he said had
to be.  Was he not the Samurai?

And yet, a few minutes later, when he had gone below, I noticed Mr.
Pike enter the chart-house.  After several paces up and down, and a
brief pause to watch Nancy and several men shift the weather cloth
from lee to weather, I strolled aft to the chart-house.  Prompted by
I know not what, I peeped through one of the glass ports.

There stood Mr. Pike, his sou'wester doffed, his oilskins streaming
rivulets to the floor, while he, dividers and parallel rulers in
hand, bent over the chart.  It was the expression of his face that
startled me.  The habitual sourness had vanished.  All that I could
see was anxiety and apprehension . . . yes, and age.  I had never
seen him look so old; for there, at that moment, I beheld the wastage
and weariness of all his sixty-nine years of sea-battling and sea-
staring.

I slipped away from the port and went along the deck to the break of
the poop, where I held on and stood staring through the gray and
spray in the conjectural direction of our drift.  Somewhere, there,
in the north-east and north, I knew was a broken, iron coast of rocks
upon which the graybeards thundered.  And there, in the chart-room, a
redoubtable sailorman bent anxiously over a chart as he measured and
calculated, and measured and calculated again, our position and our
drift.

And I knew it could not be.  It was not the Samurai but the henchman
who was weak and wrong.  Age was beginning to tell upon him at last,
which could not be otherwise than expected when one considered that
no man in ten thousand had weathered age so successfully as he.

I laughed at my moment's qualm of foolishness and went below, well
content to meet my loved one and to rest secure in her father's
wisdom.  Of course he was right.  He had proved himself right too
often already on the long voyage from Baltimore.

At dinner Mr. Pike was quite distrait.  He took no part whatever in
the conversation, and seemed always to be listening to something from
without--to the vexing clang of taut ropes that came down the hollow
jiggermast, to the muffled roar of the gale in the rigging, to the
smash and crash of the seas along our decks and against our iron
walls.

Again I found myself sharing his apprehension, although I was too
discreet to question him then, or afterwards alone, about his
trouble.  At eight he went on deck again to take the watch till
midnight, and as I went to bed I dismissed all forebodings and
speculated as to how many more voyages he could last after this
sudden onslaught of old age.

I fell asleep quickly, and awoke at midnight, my lamp still burning,
Conrad's Mirror of the Sea on my breast where it had dropped from my
hands.  I heard the watches change, and was wide awake and reading
when Mr. Pike came below by the booby-hatch and passed down my hail
by my open door, on his way to his room.

In the pause I had long since learned so well I knew he was rolling a
cigarette.  Then I heard him cough, as he always did, when the
cigarette was lighted and the first inhalation of smoke flushed his
lungs.

At twelve-fifteen, in the midst of Conrad's delightful chapter, "The
Weight of the Burden," I heard Mr. Pike come along the hall.

Stealing a glance over the top of my book, I saw him go by, sea-
booted, oilskinned, sou'westered.  It was his watch below, and his
sleep was meagre in this perpetual bad weather, yet he was going on
deck.

I read and waited for an hour, but he did not return; and I knew that
somewhere up above he was staring into the driving dark.  I dressed
fully, in all my heavy storm-gear, from sea-boots and sou'-wester to
sheepskin under my oilskin coat.  At the foot of the stairs I noted
along the hall that Margaret's light was burning.  I peeped in--she
keeps her door open for ventilation--and found her reading.

"Merely not sleepy," she assured me.

Nor in the heart of me do I believe she had any apprehension.  She
does not know even now, I am confident, the Samurai's blunder--if
blunder it was.  As she said, she was merely not sleepy, although
there is no telling in what occult ways she may have received though
not recognized Mr. Pike's anxiety.

At the head of the stairs, passing along the tiny hall to go out the
lee door of the chart-house, I glanced into the chart-room.  On the
couch, lying on his back, his head uncomfortably high, I thought,
slept Captain West.  The room was warm from the ascending heat of the
cabin, so that he lay unblanketed, fully dressed save for oilskins
and boots.  He breathed easily and steadily, and the lean, ascetic
lines of his face seemed softened by the light of the low-turned
lamp.  And that one glance restored to me all my surety and faith in
his wisdom, so that I laughed at myself for having left my warm bed
for a freezing trip on deck.

Under the weather cloth at the break of the poop I found Mr.
Mellaire.  He was wide awake, but under no strain.  Evidently it had
not entered his mind to consider, much less question, the manoeuvre
of wearing ship the previous afternoon.

"The gale is breaking," he told me, waving his mittened hand at a
starry segment of sky momentarily exposed by the thinning clouds.

But where was Mr. Pike?  Did the second mate know he was on deck?  I
proceeded to feel Mr. Mellaire out as we worked our way aft, along
the mad poop toward the wheel.  I talked about the difficulty of
sleeping in stormy weather, stated the restlessness and semi-insomnia
that the violent motion of the ship caused in me, and raised the
query of how bad weather affected the officers.

"I noticed Captain West, in the chart-room, as I came up, sleeping
like a baby," I concluded.

We leaned in the lee of the chart-house and went no farther.

"Trust us to sleep just the same way, Mr. Pathurst," the second mate
laughed.  "The harder the weather the harder the demand on us, and
the harder we sleep.  I'm dead the moment my head touches the pillow.
It takes Mr. Pike longer, because he always finishes his cigarette
after he turns in.  But he smokes while he's undressing, so that he
doesn't require more than a minute to go deado.  I'll wager he hasn't
moved, right now, since ten minutes after twelve."

So the second mate did not dream the first was even on deck.  I went
below to make sure.  A small sea-lamp was burning in Mr. Pike's room,
and I saw his bunk unoccupied.  I went in by the big stove in the
dining-room and warmed up, then again came on deck.  I did not go
near the weather cloth, where I was certain Mr. Mellaire was; but,
keeping along the lee of the poop, I gained the bridge and started
for'ard.

I was in no hurry, so I paused often in that cold, wet journey.  The
gale was breaking, for again and again the stars glimmered through
the thinning storm-clouds.  On the 'midship-house was no Mr. Pike.  I
crossed it, stung by the freezing, flying spray, and carefully
reconnoitred the top of the for'ard-house, where, in such bad
weather, I knew the lookout was stationed.  I was within twenty feet
of them, when a wider clearance of starry sky showed me the figures
of the lookout, whoever he was, and of Mr. Pike, side by side.  Long
I watched them, not making my presence known, and I knew that the old
mate's eyes were boring like gimlets into the windy darkness that
separated the Elsinore from the thunder-surfed iron coast he sought
to find.

Coming back to the poop I was caught by the surprised Mr. Mellaire.

"Thought you were asleep, sir," he chided.

"I'm too restless," I explained.  "I've read until my eyes are tired,
and now I'm trying to get chilled so that I can fall asleep while
warming up in my blankets."

"I envy you, sir," he answered.  "Think of it!  So much of all night
in that you cannot sleep.  Some day, if ever I make a lucky strike, I
shall make a voyage like this as a passenger, and have all watches
below.  Think of it!  All blessed watches below!  And I shall, like
you, sir, bring a Jap servant along, and I'll make him call me at
every changing of the watches, so that, wide awake, I can appreciate
my good fortune in the several minutes before I roll over and go to
sleep again."

We laughed good night to each other.  Another peep into the chart-
room showed me Captain West sleeping as before.  He had not moved in
general, though all his body moved with every roll and fling of the
ship.  Below, Margaret's light still burned, but a peep showed her
asleep, her book fallen from her hands just as was the so frequent
case with my books.

And I wondered.  Half the souls of us on the Elsinore slept.  The
Samurai slept.  Yet the old first mate, who should have slept, kept a
bitter watch on the for'ard-house.  Was his anxiety right?  Could it
be right?  Or was it the crankiness of ultimate age?  Were we
drifting and leewaying to destruction?  Or was it merely an old man
being struck down by senility in the midst of his life-task?

Too wide awake to think of sleeping, I ensconced myself with The
Mirror of the Sea at the dining-table.  Nor did I remove aught of my
storm-gear save the soggy mittens, which I wrung out and hung to dry
by the stove.  Four bells struck, and six bells, and Mr. Pike had not
returned below.  At eight bells, with the changing of the watches, it
came upon me what a night of hardship the old mate was enduring.
Eight to twelve had been his own watch on deck.  He had now completed
the four hours of the second mate's watch and was beginning his own
watch, which would last till eight in the morning--twelve consecutive
hours in a Cape Horn gale with the mercury at freezing.

Next--for I had dozed--I heard loud cries above my head that were
repeated along the poop.  I did not know till afterwards that it was
Mr. Pike's command to hard-up the helm, passed along from for'ard by
the men he had stationed at intervals on the bridge.

All that I knew at this shock of waking was that something was
happening above.  As I pulled on my steaming mittens and hurried my
best up the reeling stairs, I could hear the stamp of men's feet that
for once were not lagging.  In the chart-house hall I heard Mr. Pike,
who had already covered the length of the bridge from the for'ard-
house, shouting:

"Mizzen-braces!  Slack, damn you!  Slack on the run!  But hold a
turn!  Aft, here, all of you!  Jump!  Lively, if you don't want to
swim!  Come in, port-braces!  Don't let 'm get away!  Lee-braces!--if
you lose that turn I'll split your skull!  Lively!  Lively!--Is that
helm hard over!  Why in hell don't you answer?"

All this I heard as I dashed for the lee door and as I wondered why I
did not hear the Samurai's voice.

Then, as I passed the chart-room door, I saw him.

He was sitting on the couch, white-faced, one sea-boot in his hands,
and I could have sworn his hands were shaking.  That much I saw, and
the next moment was out on deck.

At first, just emerged from the light, I could see nothing, although
I could hear men at the pin-rails and the mate snarling and shouting
commands.  But I knew the manoeuvre.  With a weak crew, in the big,
tail-end sea of a broken gale, breakers and destruction under her
lee, the Elsinore was being worn around.  We had been under lower-
topsails and a reefed foresail all night.  Mr. Pike's first action,
after putting the wheel up, had been to square the mizzen-yards.
With the wind-pressure thus eased aft, the stern could more easily
swing against the wind while the wind-pressure on the for'ard-sails
paid the bow off.

But it takes time to wear a ship, under short canvas, in a big sea.
Slowly, very slowly, I could feel the direction of the wind altering
against my cheek.  The moon, dim at first, showed brighter and
brighter as the last shreds of a flying cloud drove away from before
it.  In vain I looked for any land.

"Main-braces!--all of you!--jump!" Mr. Pike shouted, himself leading
the rush along the poop.  And the men really rushed.  Not in all the
months I had observed them had I seen such swiftness of energy.

I made my way to the wheel, where Tom Spink stood.  He did not notice
me.  With one hand holding the idle wheel, he was leaning out to one
side, his eyes fixed in a fascinated stare.  I followed its
direction, on between the chart-house and the port-jigger shrouds,
and on across a mountain sea that was very vague in the moonlight.
And then I saw it!  The Elsinore's stern was flung skyward, and
across that cold ocean I saw land--black rocks and snow-covered
slopes and crags.  And toward this land the Elsinore, now almost
before the wind, was driving.

From the 'midship-house came the snarls of the mate and the cries of
the sailors.  They were pulling and hauling for very life.  Then came
Mr. Pike, across the poop, leaping with incredible swiftness, sending
his snarl before him.

"Ease that wheel there!  What the hell you gawkin' at?  Steady her as
I tell you.  That's all you got to do!"

From for'ard came a cry, and I knew Mr. Mellaire was on top of the
for'ard-house and managing the fore-yards.

"Now!"--from Mr. Pike.  "More spokes!  Steady!  Steady!  And be ready
to check her!"

He bounded away along the poop again, shouting for men for the
mizzen-braces.  And the men appeared, some of his watch, others of
the second mate's watch, routed from sleep--men coatless, and
hatless, and bootless; men ghastly-faced with fear but eager for once
to spring to the orders of the man who knew and could save their
miserable lives from miserable death.  Yes--and I noted the delicate-
handed cook, and Yatsuda, the sail-maker, pulling with his one
unparalysed hand.  It was all hands to save ship, and all hands knew
it.  Even Sundry Buyers, who had drifted aft in his stupidity instead
of being for'ard with his own officer, forebore to stare about and to
press his abdomen.  For the nonce he pulled like a youngling of
twenty.

The moon covered again, and it was in darkness that the Elsinore
rounded up on the wind on the starboard tack.  This, in her case,
under lower-topsails only, meant that she lay eight points from the
wind, or, in land terms, at right angles to the wind.

Mr. Pike was splendid, marvellous.  Even as the Elsinore was rounding
to on the wind, while the head-yards were still being braced, and
even as he was watching the ship's behaviour and the wheel, in
between his commands to Tom Spink of "A spoke!  A spoke or two!
Another!  Steady!  Hold her!  Ease her!" he was ordering the men
aloft to loose sail.  I had thought, the manoeuvre of wearing
achieved, that we were saved, but this setting of all three upper-
topsails unconvinced me.

The moon remained hidden, and to leeward nothing could be seen.  As
each sail was set, the Elsinore was pressed farther and farther over,
and I realized that there was plenty of wind left, despite the fact
that the gale had broken or was breaking.  Also, under this
additional canvas, I could feel the Elsinore moving through the
water.  Pike now sent the Maltese Cockney to help Tom Spink at the
wheel.  As for himself, he took his stand beside the booby-hatch,
where he could gauge the Elsinore, gaze to leeward, and keep his eye
on the helmsmen.

"Full and by," was his reiterated command.  "Keep her a good full--a
rap-full; but don't let her fall away.  Hold her to it, and drive
her."

He took no notice whatever of me, although I, on my way to the lee of
the chart-house, stood at his shoulder a full minute, offering him a
chance to speak.  He knew I was there, for his big shoulder brushed
my arm as he swayed and turned to warn the helmsmen in the one breath
to hold her up to it but to keep her full.  He had neither time nor
courtesy for a passenger in such a moment.

Sheltering by the chart-house, I saw the moon appear.  It grew
brighter and brighter, and I saw the land, dead to leeward of us, not
three hundred yards away.  It was a cruel sight--black rock and
bitter snow, with cliffs so perpendicular that the Elsinore could
have laid alongside of them in deep water, with great gashes and
fissures, and with great surges thundering and spouting along all the
length of it.

Our predicament was now clear to me.  We had to weather the bight of
land and islands into which we had drifted, and sea and wind worked
directly on shore.  The only way out was to drive through the water,
to drive fast and hard, and this was borne in upon me by Mr. Pike
bounding past to the break of the poop, where I heard him shout to
Mr. Mellaire to set the mainsail.

Evidently the second mate was dubious, for the next cry of Mr. Pike's
was:

"Damn the reef!  You'd be in hell first!  Full mainsail!  All hands
to it!"

The difference was appreciable at once when that huge spread of
canvas opposed the wind.  The Elsinore fairly leaped and quivered as
she sprang to it, and I could feel her eat to windward as she at the
same time drove faster ahead.  Also, in the rolls and gusts, she was
forced down till her lee-rail buried and the sea foamed level across
to her hatches.  Mr. Pike watched her like a hawk, and like certain
death he watched the Maltese Cockney and Tom Spink at the wheel.

"Land on the lee bow!" came a cry from for'ard, that was carried on
from mouth to mouth along the bridge to the poop.

I saw Mr. Pike nod his head grimly and sarcastically.  He had already
seen it from the lee-poop, and what he had not seen he had guessed.
A score of times I saw him test the weight of the gusts on his cheek
and with all the brain of him study the Elsinore's behaviour.  And I
knew what was in his mind.  Could she carry what she had?  Could she
carry more?

Small wonder, in this tense passage of time, that I had forgotten the
Samurai.  Nor did I remember him until the chart-house door swung
open and I caught him by the arm.  He steadied and swayed beside me,
while he watched that cruel picture of rock and snow and spouting
surf.

"A good full!" Mr. Pike snarled.  "Or I'll eat your heart out.  God
damn you for the farmer's hound you are, Tom Spink!.  Ease her!  Ease
her!  Ease her into the big ones, damn you!  Don't let her head fall
off!  Steady!  Where in hell did you learn to steer?  What cow-farm
was you raised on?"

Here he bounded for'ard past us with those incredible leaps of his.

"It would be good to set the mizzen-topgallant," I heard Captain West
mutter in a weak, quavery voice.  "Mr. Pathurst, will you please tell
Mr. Pike to set the mizzen-topgallant?"

And at that very instant Mr. Pike's voice rang out from the break of
the poop:

"Mr. Mellaire!--the mizzen-topgallant!"

Captain West's head drooped until his chin rested on his breast, and
so low did he mutter that I leaned to hear.

"A very good officer," he said.  "An excellent officer.  Mr.
Pathurst, if you will kindly favour me, I should like to go in.  I .
. . I haven't got on my boots."

The muscular feat was to open the heavy iron door and hold it open in
the rolls and plunges.  This I accomplished; but when I had helped
Captain West across the high threshold he thanked me and waived
further services.  And I did not know even then he was dying.

Never was a Blackwood ship driven as was the Elsinore during the next
half-hour.  The full-jib was also set, and, as it departed in shreds,
the fore-topmast staysail was being hoisted.  For'ard of the
'midship-house it was made unlivable by the bursting seas.  Mr.
Mellaire, with half the crew, clung on somehow on top the 'midship-
house, while the rest of the crew was with us in the comparative
safety of the poop.  Even Charles Davis, drenched and shivering, hung
on beside me to the brass ring-handle of the chart-house door.

Such sailing!  It was a madness of speed and motion, for the Elsinore
drove over and through and under those huge graybeards that thundered
shore-ward.  There were times, when rolls and gusts worked against
her at the same moment, when I could have sworn the ends of her
lower-yardarms swept the sea.

It was one chance in ten that we could claw off.  All knew it, and
all knew there was nothing more to do but await the issue.  And we
waited in silence.  The only voice was that of the mate,
intermittently cursing, threatening, and ordering Tom Spink and the
Maltese Cockney at the wheel.  Between whiles, and all the while, he
gauged the gusts, and ever his eyes lifted to the main-topgallant-
yard.  He wanted to set that one more sail.  A dozen times I saw him
half-open his mouth to give the order he dared not give.  And as I
watched him, so all watched him.  Hard-bitten, bitter-natured, sour-
featured and snarling-mouthed, he was the one man, the henchman of
the race, the master of the moment.  "And where," was my thought, "O
where was the Samurai?"

One chance in ten?  It was one in a hundred as we fought to weather
the last bold tooth of rock that gashed into sea and tempest between
us and open ocean.  So close were we that I looked to see our far-
reeling skysail-yards strike the face of the rock.  So close were we,
no more than a biscuit toss from its iron buttress, that as we sank
down into the last great trough between two seas I can swear every
one of us held breath and waited for the Elsinore to strike.

Instead we drove free.  And as if in very rage at our escape, the
storm took that moment to deal us the mightiest buffet of all.  The
mate felt that monster sea coming, for he sprang to the wheel ere the
blow fell.  I looked for'ard, and I saw all for'ard blotted out by
the mountain of water that fell aboard.  The Elsinore righted from
the shock and reappeared to the eye, full of water from rail to rail.
Then a gust caught her sails and heeled her over, spilling half the
enormous burden outboard again.

Along the bridge came the relayed cry of "Man overboard!"

I glanced at the mate, who had just released the wheel to the
helmsmen.  He shook his head, as if irritated by so trivial a
happening, walked to the corner of the half-wheelhouse, and stared at
the coast he had escaped, white and black and cold in the moonlight.

Mr. Mellaire came aft, and they met beside me in the lee of the
chart-house.

"All hands, Mr. Mellaire," the mate said, "and get the mainsail off
of her.  After that, the mizzen-topgallant."

"Yes, sir," said the second.

"Who was it?" the mate asked, as Mr. Mellaire was turning away.

"Boney--he was no good, anyway," came the answer.

That was all.  Boney the Splinter was gone, and all hands were
answering the command of Mr. Mellaire to take in the mainsail.  But
they never took it in; for at that moment it started to blow away out
of the bolt-ropes, and in but few moments all that was left of it was
a few short, slatting ribbons.

"Mizzen-topgallant-sail!" Mr. Pike ordered.  Then, and for the first
time, he recognized my existence.

"Well rid of it," he growled.  "It never did set properly.  I was
always aching to get my hands on the sail-maker that made it."

On my way below a glance into the chart-room gave me the cue to the
Samurai's blunder--if blunder it can be called, for no one will ever
know.  He lay on the floor in a loose heap, rolling willy-nilly with
every roll of the Elsinore.



CHAPTER XXXIX



There is so much to write about all at once.  In the first place,
Captain West.  Not entirely unexpected was his death.  Margaret tells
me that she was apprehensive from the start of the voyage--and even
before.  It was because of her apprehension that she so abruptly
changed her plans and accompanied her father.

What really happened we do not know, but the agreed surmise is that
it was some stroke of the heart.  And yet, after the stroke, did he
not come out on deck?  Or could the first stroke have been followed
by another and fatal one after I had helped him inside through the
door?  And even so, I have never heard of a heart-stroke being
preceded hours before by a weakening of the mind.  Captain West's
mind seemed quite clear, and must have been quite clear, that last
afternoon when he wore the Elsinore and started the lee-shore drift.
In which case it was a blunder.  The Samurai blundered, and his heart
destroyed him when he became aware of the blunder.

At any rate the thought of blunder never enters Margaret's head.  She
accepts, as a matter of course, that it was all a part of the
oncoming termination of his sickness.  And no one will ever undeceive
her.  Neither Mr. Pike, Mr. Mellaire, nor I, among ourselves, mention
a whisper of what so narrowly missed causing disaster.  In fact, Mr.
Pike does not talk about the matter at all.--And then, again, might
it not have been something different from heart disease?  Or heart
disease complicated with something else that obscured his mind that
afternoon before his death?  Well, no one knows, and I, for one,
shall not sit, even in secret judgment, on the event.


At midday of the day we clawed off Tierra Del Fuego the Elsinore was
rolling in a dead calm, and all afternoon she rolled, not a score of
miles off the land.  Captain West was buried at four o'clock, and at
eight bells that evening Mr. Pike assumed command and made a few
remarks to both watches.  They were straight-from-the-shoulder
remarks, or, as he called them, they were "brass tacks."

Among other things he told the sailors that they had another boss,
and that they would toe the mark as they never had before.  Up to
this time they had been loafing in an hotel, but from this time on
they were going to work.

"On this hooker, from now on," he perorated, "it's going to be like
old times, when a man jumped the last day of the voyage as well as
the first.  And God help the man that don't jump.  That's all.
Relieve the wheel and lookout."


And yet the men are in terribly wretched condition.  I don't see how
they can jump.  Another week of westerly gales, alternating with
brief periods of calm, has elapsed, making a total of six weeks off
the Horn.  So weak are the men that they have no spirit left in them-
-not even the gangsters.  And so afraid are they of the mate that
they really do their best to jump when he drives them, and he drives
them all the time.  Mr. Mellaire shakes his head.

"Wait till they get around and up into better weather," he astonished
me by telling me the other afternoon.  "Wait till they get dried out,
and rested up, with more sleep, and their sores healed, and more
flesh on their bones, and more spunk in their blood--then they won't
stand for this driving.  Mr. Pike can't realize that times have
changed, sir, and laws have changed, and men have changed.  He's an
old man, and I know what I am talking about."

"You mean you've been listening to the talk of the men?" I challenged
rashly, all my gorge rising at the unofficerlike conduct of this
ship's officer.

The shot went home, for, in a flash, that suave and gentle film of
light vanished from the surface of the eyes, and the watching,
fearful thing that lurked behind inside the skull seemed almost to
leap out at me, while the cruel gash of mouth drew thinner and
crueller.  And at the same time, on my inner sight, was grotesquely
limned a picture of a brain pulsing savagely against the veneer of
skin that covered that cleft of skull beneath the dripping sou'-
wester.  Then he controlled himself, the mouth-gash relaxed, and the
suave and gentle film drew again across the eyes.

"I mean, sir," he said softly, "that I am speaking out of a long sea
experience.  Times have changed.  The old driving days are gone.  And
I trust, Mr. Pathurst, that you will not misunderstand me in the
matter, nor misinterpret what I have said."

Although the conversation drifted on to other and calmer topics, I
could not ignore the fact that he had not denied listening to the
talk of the men.  And yet, even as Mr. Pike grudgingly admits, he is
a good sailorman and second mate save for his unholy intimacy with
the men for'ard--an intimacy which even the Chinese cook and the
Chinese steward deplore as unseamanlike and perilous.

Even though men like the gangsters are so worn down by hardship that
they have no heart of rebellion, there remain three of the frailest
for'ard who will not die, and who are as spunky as ever.  They are
Andy Fay, Mulligan Jacobs, and Charles Davis.  What strange, abysmal
vitality informs them is beyond all speculation.  Of course, Charles
Davis should have been overside with a sack of coal at his feet long
ago.  And Andy Fay and Mulligan Jacobs are only, and have always
been, wrecked and emaciated wisps of men.  Yet far stronger men than
they have gone over the side, and far stronger men than they are laid
up right now in absolute physical helplessness in the soggy
forecastle bunks.  And these two bitter flames of shreds of things
stand all their watches and answer all calls for both watches.

Yes; and the chickens have something of this same spunk of life in
them.  Featherless, semi-frozen despite the oil-stove, sprayed
dripping on occasion by the frigid seas that pound by sheer weight
through canvas tarpaulins, nevertheless not a chicken has died.  Is
it a matter of selection?  Are these the iron-vigoured ones that
survived the hardships from Baltimore to the Horn, and are fitted to
survive anything?  Then for a De Vries to take them, save them, and
out of them found the hardiest breed of chickens on the planet!  And
after this I shall always query that phrase, most ancient in our
language--"chicken-hearted."  Measured by the Elsinore's chickens, it
is a misnomer.

Nor are our three Horn Gypsies, the storm-visitors with the dreaming,
topaz eyes, spunkless.  Held in superstitious abhorrence by the rest
of the crew, aliens by lack of any word of common speech,
nevertheless they are good sailors and are always first to spring
into any enterprise of work or peril.  They have gone into Mr.
Mellaire's watch, and they are quite apart from the rest of the
sailors.  And when there is a delay, or wait, with nothing to do for
long minutes, they shoulder together, and stand and sway to the heave
of deck, and dream far dreams in those pale, topaz eyes, of a
country, I am sure, where mothers, with pale, topaz eyes and sandy
hair, birth sons and daughters that breed true in terms of topaz eyes
and sandy hair.

But the rest of the crew!  Take the Maltese Cockney.  He is too
keenly intelligent, too sharply sensitive, successfully to endure.
He is a shadow of his former self.  His cheeks have fallen in.  Dark
circles of suffering are under his eyes, while his eyes, Latin and
English intermingled, are cavernously sunken and as bright-burning as
if aflame with fever.

Tom Spink, hard-fibred Anglo-Saxon, good seaman that he is, long
tried and always proved, is quite wrecked in spirit.  He is whining
and fearful.  So broken is he, though he still does his work, that he
is prideless and shameless.

"I'll never ship around the Horn again, sir," he began on me the
other day when I greeted him good morning at the wheel.  "I've sworn
it before, but this time I mean it.  Never again, sir.  Never again."

"Why did you swear it before?" I queried.

"It was on the Nahoma, sir, four years ago.  Two hundred and thirty
days from Liverpool to 'Frisco.  Think of it, sir.  Two hundred and
thirty days!  And we was loaded with cement and creosote, and the
creosote got loose.  We buried the captain right here off the Horn.
The grub gave out.  Most of us nearly died of scurvy.  Every man Jack
of us was carted to hospital in 'Frisco.  It was plain hell, sir,
that's what it was, an' two hundred and thirty days of it."

"Yet here you are," I laughed; "signed on another Horn voyage."

And this morning Tom Spink confided the following tome:

"If only we'd lost the carpenter, sir, instead of Boney."

I did not catch his drift for the moment; then I remembered.  The
carpenter was the Finn, the Jonah, the warlock who played tricks with
the winds and despitefully used poor sailormen.


Yes, and I make free to confess that I have grown well weary of this
eternal buffeting by the Great West Wind.  Nor are we alone in our
travail on this desolate ocean.  Never a day does the gray thin, or
the snow-squalls cease that we do not sight ships, west-bound like
ourselves, hove-to and trying to hold on to the meagre westing they
possess.  And occasionally, when the gray clears and lifts, we see a
lucky ship, bound east, running before it and reeling off the miles.
I saw Mr. Pike, yesterday, shaking his fist in a fury of hatred at
one such craft that flew insolently past us not a quarter of a mile
away.

And the men are jumping.  Mr. Pike is driving with those block-square
fists of his, as many a man's face attests.  So weak are they, and so
terrible is he, that I swear he could whip either watch single-
handed.  I cannot help but note that Mr. Mellaire refuses to take
part in this driving.  Yet I know that he is a trained driver, and
that he was not averse to driving at the outset of the voyage.  But
now he seems bent on keeping on good terms with the crew.  I should
like to know what Mr. Pike thinks of it, for he cannot possibly be
blind to what is going on; but I am too well aware of what would
happen if I raised the question.  He would insult me, snap my head
off, and indulge in a three-days' sea-grouch.  Things are sad and
monotonous enough for Margaret and me in the cabin and at table,
without invoking the blight of the mate's displeasure.



CHAPTER XL



Another brutal sea-superstition vindicated.  From now on and for
always these imbeciles of ours will believe that Finns are Jonahs.
We are west of the Diego de Ramirez Rocks, and we are running west at
a twelve-knot clip with an easterly gale at our backs.  And the
carpenter is gone.  His passing, and the coming of the easterly wind,
were coincidental.

It was yesterday morning, as he helped me to dress, that I was struck
by the solemnity of Wada's face.  He shook his head lugubriously as
he broke the news.  The carpenter was missing.  The ship had been
searched for him high and low.  There just was no carpenter.

"What does the steward think?" I asked.  "What does Louis think?--and
Yatsuda?"

"The sailors, they kill 'm carpenter sure," was the answer.  "Very
bad ship this.  Very bad hearts.  Just the same pig, just the same
dog.  All the time kill.  All the time kill.  Bime-by everybody kill.
You see."

The old steward, at work in his pantry, grinned at me when I
mentioned the matter.

"They make fool with me, I fix 'em," he said vindictively.  "Mebbe
they kill me, all right; but I kill some, too."

He threw back his coat, and I saw, strapped to the left side of his
body, in a canvas sheath, so that the handle was ready to hand, a
meat knife of the heavy sort that butchers hack with.  He drew it
forth- it was fully two feet long--and, to demonstrate its razor-
edge, sliced a sheet of newspaper into many ribbons.

"Huh!" he laughed sardonically.  "I am Chink, monkey, damn fool, eh?-
-no good, eh? all rotten damn to hell.  I fix 'em, they make fool
with me."

And yet there is not the slightest evidence of foul play.  Nobody
knows what happened to the carpenter.  There are no clues, no traces.
The night was calm and snowy.  No seas broke on board.  Without doubt
the clumsy, big-footed, over-grown giant of a boy is overside and
dead.  The question is:  did he go over of his own accord, or was he
put over?

At eight o'clock Mr. Pike proceeded to interrogate the watches.  He
stood at the break of the poop, in the high place, leaning on the
rail and gazing down at the crew assembled on the main deck beneath
him.

Man after man he questioned, and from each man came the one story.
They knew no more about it than did we--or so they averred.

"I suppose you'll be chargin' next that I hove that big lummux
overboard with me own hands," Mulligan Jacobs snarled, when he was
questioned.  "An' mebbe I did, bein' that husky an' rampagin' bull-
like."

The mate's face grew more forbidding and sour, but without comment he
passed on to John Hackey, the San Francisco hoodlum.

It was an unforgettable scene--the mate in the high place, the men,
sullen and irresponsive, grouped beneath.  A gentle snow drifted
straight down through the windless air, while the Elsinore, with
hollow thunder from her sails, rolled down on the quiet swells so
that the ocean lapped the mouths of her scuppers with long-drawn,
shuddering sucks and sobs.  And all the men swayed in unison to the
rolls, their hands in mittens, their feet in sack-wrapped sea-boots,
their faces worn and sick.  And the three dreamers with the topaz
eyes stood and swayed and dreamed together, incurious of setting and
situation.

And then it came--the hint of easterly air.  The mate noted it first.
I saw him start and turn his cheek to the almost imperceptible
draught.  Then I felt it.  A minute longer he waited, until assured,
when, the dead carpenter forgotten, he burst out with orders to the
wheel and the crew.  And the men jumped, though in their weakness the
climb aloft was slow and toilsome; and when the gaskets were off the
topgallant-sails and the men on deck were hoisting yards and sheeting
home, those aloft were loosing the royals.

While this work went on, and while the yards were being braced
around, the Elsinore, her bow pointing to the west, began moving
through the water before the first fair wind in a month and a half.

Slowly that light air fanned to a gentle breeze while all the time
the snow fell steadily.  The barometer, down to 28.80, continued to
fall, and the breeze continued to grow upon itself.  Tom Spink,
passing by me on the poop to lend a hand at the final finicky
trimming of the mizzen-yards, gave me a triumphant look.
Superstition was vindicated.  Events had proved him right.  Fair wind
had come with the going of the carpenter, which said warlock had
incontestably taken with him overside his bag of wind-tricks.

Mr. Pike strode up and down the poop, rubbing his hands, which he was
too disdainfully happy to mitten, chuckling and grinning to himself,
glancing at the draw of every sail, stealing adoring looks astern
into the gray of snow out of which blew the favouring wind.  He even
paused beside me to gossip for a moment about the French restaurants
of San Francisco and how, therein, the delectable California fashion
of cooking wild duck obtained.

"Throw 'em through the fire," he chanted.  "That's the way--throw 'em
through the fire--a hot oven, sixteen minutes--I take mine fourteen,
to the second--an' squeeze the carcasses."

By midday the snow had ceased and we were bowling along before a
stiff breeze.  At three in the afternoon we were running before a
growing gale.  It was across a mad ocean we tore, for the mounting
sea that made from eastward bucked into the West End Drift and
battled and battered down the huge south-westerly swell.  And the big
grinning dolt of a Finnish carpenter, already food for fish and bird,
was astern there somewhere in the freezing rack and drive.

Make westing!  We ripped it off across these narrowing degrees of
longitude at the southern tip of the planet where one mile counts for
two.  And Mr. Pike, staring at his bending topgallant-yards, swore
that they could carry away for all he cared ere he eased an inch of
canvas.  More he did.  He set the huge crojack, biggest of all sails,
and challenged God or Satan to start a seam of it or all its seams.

He simply could not go below.  In such auspicious occasions all
watches were his, and he strode the poop perpetually with all age-lag
banished from his legs.  Margaret and I were with him in the chart-
room when he hurrahed the barometer, down to 28.55 and falling.  And
we were near him, on the poop, when he drove by an east-bound lime-
juicer, hove-to under upper-topsails.  We were a biscuit-toss away,
and he sprang upon the rail at the jigger-shrouds and danced a war-
dance and waved his free arm, and yelled his scorn and joy at their
discomfiture to the several oilskinned figures on the stranger
vessel's poop.

Through the pitch-black night we continued to drive.  The crew was
sadly frightened, and I sought in vain, in the two dog-watches, for
Tom Spink, to ask him if he thought the carpenter, astern, had opened
wide the bag-mouth and loosed all his tricks.  For the first time I
saw the steward apprehensive.

"Too much," he told me, with ominous rolling head.  "Too much sail,
rotten bad damn all to hell.  Bime-by, pretty quick, all finish.  You
see."

"They talk about running the easting down," Mr. Pike chortled to me,
as we clung to the poop-rail to keep from fetching away and breaking
ribs and necks.  "Well, this is running your westing down if anybody
should ride up in a go-devil and ask you."

It was a wretched, glorious night.  Sleep was impossible--for me, at
any rate.  Nor was there even the comfort of warmth.  Something had
gone wrong with the big cabin stove, due to our wild running, I
fancy, and the steward was compelled to let the fire go out.  So we
are getting a taste of the hardship of the forecastle, though in our
case everything is dry instead of soggy or afloat.  The kerosene
stoves burned in our state room, but so smelly was mine that I
preferred the cold.

To sail on one's nerve in an over-canvassed harbour cat-boat is all
the excitement any glutton can desire.  But to sail, in the same
fashion, in a big ship off the Horn, is incredible and terrible.  The
Great West Wind Drift, setting squarely into the teeth of the
easterly gale, kicked up a tideway sea that was monstrous.  Two men
toiled at the wheel, relieving in pairs every half-hour, and in the
face of the cold they streamed with sweat long ere their half-hour
shift was up.

Mr. Pike is of the elder race of men.  His endurance is prodigious.
Watch and watch, and all watches, he held the poop.

"I never dreamed of it," he told me, at midnight, as the great gusts
tore by and as we listened for our lighter spars to smash aloft and
crash upon the deck.  "I thought my last whirling sailing was past.
And here we are!  Here we are!

"Lord!  Lord!  I sailed third mate in the little Vampire before you
were born.  Fifty-six men before the mast, and the last Jack of 'em
an able seaman.  And there were eight boys, an' bosuns that was
bosuns, an' sail-makers an' carpenters an' stewards an' passengers to
jam the decks.  An' three driving mates of us, an' Captain Brown, the
Little Wonder.  He didn't weigh a hundredweight, an' he drove us--he
drove US, three drivin' mates that learned from him what drivin' was.

"It was knock down and drag out from the start.  The first hour of
puttin' the men to fair perished our knuckles.  I've got the smashed
joints yet to show.  Every sea-chest broke open, every sea-bag turned
out, and whiskey bottles, knuckle-dusters, sling-shots, bowie-knives,
an' guns chucked overside by the armful.  An' when we chose the
watches, each man of fifty-six of 'em laid his knife on the main-
hatch an' the carpenter broke the point square off.-Yes, an' the
little Vampire only eight hundred tons.  The Elsinore could carry her
on her deck.  But she was ship, all ship, an' them was men's days."

Margaret, save for inability to sleep, did not mind the driving,
although Mr. Mellaire, on the other hand, admitted apprehension.

"He's got my goat," he confided to me.  "It isn't right to drive a
cargo-carrier this way.  This isn't a ballasted yacht.  It's a coal-
hulk.  I know what driving was, but it was in ships made to drive.
Our iron-work aloft won't stand it.  Mr. Pathurst, I tell you frankly
that it is criminal, it is sheer murder, to run the Elsinore with
that crojack on her.  You can see yourself, sir.  It's an after-sail.
All its tendency is to throw her stern off and her bow up to it.  And
if it ever happens, sir, if she ever gets away from the wheel for two
seconds and broaches to . . . "

"Then what?" I asked, or, rather, shouted; for all conversation had
to be shouted close to ear in that blast of gale.

He shrugged his shoulders, and all of him was eloquent with the
unuttered, unmistakable word-finish."

At eight this morning Margaret and I struggled up to the poop.  And
there was that indomitable, iron old man.  He had never left the deck
all night.  His eyes were bright, and he appeared in the pink of
well-being.  He rubbed his hands and chuckled greeting to us, and
took up his reminiscences.

"In '51, on this same stretch, Miss West, the Flying Cloud, in
twenty-four hours, logged three hundred and seventy-four miles under
her topgallant-sails.  That was sailing.  She broke the record, that
day, for sail an' steam."

"And what are we averaging, Mr. Pike?" Margaret queried, while her
eyes were fixed on the main deck, where continually one rail and then
the other dipped under the ocean and filled across from rail to rail,
only to spill out and take in on the next roll.

"Thirteen for a fair average since five o'clock yesterday afternoon,"
he exulted.  "In the squalls she makes all of sixteen, which is going
some, for the Elsinore."

"I'd take the crojack off if I had charge," Margaret criticised.

"So would I, so would I, Miss West," he replied; "if we hadn't been
six weeks already off the Horn."

She ran her eyes aloft, spar by spar, past the spars of hollow steel
to the wooden royals, which bent in the gusts like bows in some
invisible archer's hands.

"They're remarkably good sticks of timber," was her comment.

"Well may you say it, Miss West," he agreed.  "I'd never a-believed
they'd a-stood it myself.  But just look at 'm!  Just look at 'm!"

There was no breakfast for the men.  Three times the galley had been
washed out, and the men, in the forecastle awash, contented
themselves with hard tack and cold salt horse.  Aft, with us, the
steward scalded himself twice ere he succeeded in making coffee over
a kerosene-burner.

At noon we picked up a ship ahead, a lime-juicer, travelling in the
same direction, under lower-topsails and one upper-topsail.  The only
one of her courses set was the foresail.

The way that skipper's carryin' on is shocking," Mr. Pike sneered.
"He should be more cautious, and remember God, the owners, the
underwriters, and the Board of Trade."

Such was our speed that in almost no time we were up with the
stranger vessel and passing her.  Mr. Pike was like a boy just loosed
from school.  He altered our course so that we passed her a hundred
yards away.  She was a gallant sight, but, such was our speed, she
appeared standing still.  Mr. Pike jumped upon the rail and insulted
those on her poop by extending a rope's end in invitation to take a
tow.

Margaret shook her head privily to me as she gazed at our bending
royal-yards, but was caught in the act by Mr. Pike, who cried out:

"What kites she won't carry she can drag!"

An hour later I caught Tom Spink, just relieved from his shift at the
wheel and weak from exhaustion.

"What do you think now of the carpenter and his bag of tricks?"  I
queried.

"Lord lumme, it should a-ben the mate, sir," was his reply.

By five in the afternoon we had logged 314 miles since five the
previous day, which was two over an average of thirteen knots for
twenty-four consecutive hours.

"Now take Captain Brown of the little Vampire," Mr. Pike grinned to
me, for our sailing made him good-natured.  "He never would take in
until the kites an' stu'n'sails was about his ears.  An' when she was
blown' her worst an' we was half-fairly shortened down, he'd turn in
for a snooze, an' say to us, 'Call me if she moderates.'  Yes, and
I'll never forget the night when I called him an' told him that
everything on top the houses had gone adrift, an' that two of the
boats had been swept aft and was kindling-wood against the break of
the cabin.  'Very well, Mr. Pike,' he says, battin' his eyes and
turnin' over to go to sleep again.  'Very well, Mr. Pike,' says he.
'Watch her.  An' Mr. Pike . . .' 'Yes, sir,' says I.  'Give me a
call, Mr. Pike, when the windlass shows signs of comin' aft.'  That's
what he said, his very words, an' the next moment, damme, he was
snorin'."


It is now midnight, and, cunningly wedged into my bunk, unable to
sleep, I am writing these lines with flying dabs of pencil at my pad.
And no more shall I write, I swear, until this gale is blown out, or
we are blown to Kingdom Come.



CHAPTER XLI



The days have passed and I have broken my resolve; for here I am
again writing while the Elsinore surges along across a magnificent,
smoky, dusty sea.  But I have two reasons for breaking my word.
First, and minor, we had a real dawn this morning.  The gray of the
sea showed a streaky blue, and the cloud-masses were actually pink-
tipped by a really and truly sun.

Second, and major, WE ARE AROUND THE HORN!  We are north of 50 in the
Pacific, in Longitude 80.49, with Cape Pillar and the Straits of
Magellan already south of east from us, and we are heading north-
north-west.  WE ARE AROUND THE HORN!  The profound significance of
this can be appreciated only by one who has wind-jammed around from
east to west.  Blow high, blow low, nothing can happen to thwart us.
No ship north of 50 was ever blown back.  From now on it is plain
sailing, and Seattle suddenly seems quite near.

All the ship's company, with the exception of Margaret, is better
spirited.  She is quiet, and a little down, though she is anything
but prone to the wastage of grief.  In her robust, vital philosophy
God's always in heaven.  I may describe her as being merely subdued,
and gentle, and tender.  And she is very wistful to receive gentle
consideration and tenderness from me.  She is, after all, the genuine
woman.  She wants the strength that man has to give, and I flatter
myself that I am ten times a stronger man than I was when the voyage
began, because I am a thousand times a more human man since I told
the books to go hang and began to revel in the human maleness of the
man that loves a woman and is loved.

Returning to the ship's company.  The rounding of the Horn, the
better weather that is continually growing better, the easement of
hardship and toil and danger, with the promise of the tropics and of
the balmy south-east trades before them--all these factors contribute
to pick up our men again.  The temperature has already so moderated
that the men are beginning to shed their surplusage of clothing, and
they no longer wrap sacking about their sea-boots.  Last evening, in
the second dog-watch, I heard a man actually singing.

The steward has discarded the huge, hacking knife and relaxed to the
extent of engaging in an occasional sober romp with Possum.  Wada's
face is no longer solemnly long, and Louis' Oxford accent is more
mellifluous than ever.  Mulligan Jacobs and Andy Fay are the same
venomous scorpions they have always been.  The three gangsters, with
the clique they lead, have again asserted their tyrrany and thrashed
all the weaklings and feeblings in the forecastle.  Charles Davis
resolutely refuses to die, though how he survived that wet and
freezing room of iron through all the weeks off the Horn has elicited
wonder even from Mr. Pike, who has a most accurate knowledge of what
men can stand and what they cannot stand.

How Nietzsche, with his eternal slogan of "Be hard!  Be hard!" would
have delighted in Mr. Pike!

And--oh!--Larry has had a tooth removed.  For some days distressed
with a jumping toothache, he came aft to the mate for relief.  Mr.
Pike refused to "monkey" with the "fangled" forceps in the medicine-
chest.  He used a tenpenny nail and a hammer in the good old way to
which he was brought up.  I vouch for this.  I saw it done.  One blow
of the hammer and the tooth was out, while Larry was jumping around
holding his jaw.  It is a wonder it wasn't fractured.  But Mr. Pike
avers he has removed hundreds of teeth by this method and never known
a fractured jaw.  Also, he avers he once sailed with a skipper who
shaved every Sunday morning and never touched a razor, nor any
cutting-edge, to his face.  What he used, according to Mr. Pike, was
a lighted candle and a damp towel.  Another candidate for Nietzsche's
immortals who are hard!

As for Mr. Pike himself, he is the highest-spirited, best-conditioned
man on board.  The driving to which he subjected the Elsinore was
meat and drink.  He still rubs his hands and chuckles over the memory
of it.

"Huh!" he said to me, in reference to the crew; "I gave 'em a taste
of real old-fashioned sailing.  They'll never forget this hooker--at
least them that don't take a sack of coal overside before we reach
port."

"You mean you think we'll have more sea-burials?" I inquired.

He turned squarely upon me, and squarely looked me in the eyes for
the matter of five long seconds.

"Huh!" he replied, as he turned on his heel.  "Hell ain't begun to
pop on this hooker."

He still stands his mate's watch, alternating with Mr. Mellaire, for
he is firm in his conviction that there is no man for'ard fit to
stand a second mate's watch.  Also, he has kept his old quarters.
Perhaps it is out of delicacy for Margaret; for I have learned that
it is the invariable custom for the mate to occupy the captain's
quarters when the latter dies.  So Mr. Mellaire still eats by himself
in the big after-room, as he has done since the loss of the
carpenter, and bunks as before in the 'midship-house with Nancy.



CHAPTER XLII



Mr. Mellaire was right.  The men would not accept the driving when
the Elsinore won to easier latitudes.  Mr. Pike was right.  Hell had
not begun to pop.  But it has popped now, and men are overboard
without even the kindliness of a sack of coal at their feet.  And yet
the men, though ripe for it, did not precipitate the trouble.  It was
Mr. Mellaire.  Or, rather, it was Ditman Olansen, the crank-eyed
Norwegian.  Perhaps it was Possum.  At any rate, it was an accident,
in which the several-named, including Possum, played their respective
parts.

To begin at the beginning.  Two weeks have elapsed since we crossed
50, and we are now in 37--the same latitude as San Francisco, or, to
be correct, we are as far south of the equator as San Francisco is
north of it.  The trouble was precipitated yesterday morning shortly
after nine o'clock, and Possum started the chain of events that
culminated in downright mutiny.  It was Mr. Mellaire's watch, and he
was standing on the bridge, directly under the mizzen-top, giving
orders to Sundry Buyers, who, with Arthur Deacon and the Maltese
Cockney, was doing rigging work aloft.

Get the picture and the situation in all its ridiculousness.  Mr.
Pike, thermometer in hand, was coming back along the bridge from
taking the temperature of the coal in the for'ard hold.  Ditman
Olansen was just swinging into the mizzen-top as he went up with
several turns of rope over one shoulder.  Also, in some way, to the
end of this rope was fastened a sizable block that might have weighed
ten pounds.  Possum, running free, was fooling around the chicken-
coop on top the 'midship-house.  And the chickens, featherless but
indomitable, were enjoying the milder weather as they pecked at the
grain and grits which the steward had just placed in their feeding-
trough.  The tarpaulin that covered their pen had been off for
several days.

Now observe.  I am at the break of the poop, leaning on the rail and
watching Ditman Olansen swing into the top with his cumbersome
burden.  Mr. Pike, proceeding aft, has just passed Mr. Mellaire.
Possum, who, on account of the Horn weather and the tarpaulin, has
not seen the chickens for many weeks, is getting reacquainted, and is
investigating them with that keen nose of his.  And a hen's beak,
equally though differently keen, impacts on Possum's nose, which is
as sensitive as it is keen.

I may well say, now that I think it over, that it was this particular
hen that started the mutiny.  The men, well-driven by Mr. Pike, were
ripe for an explosion, and Possum and the hen laid the train.

Possum fell away backwards from the coop and loosed a wild cry of
pain and indignation.  This attracted Ditman Olansen's attention.  He
paused and craned his neck out in order to see, and, in this moment
of carelessness, the block he was carrying fetched away from him
along with the several turns of rope around his shoulder.  Both the
mates sprang away to get out from under.  The rope, fast to the block
and following it, lashed about like a blacksnake, and, though the
block fell clear of Mr. Mellaire, the bight of the rope snatched off
his cap.

Mr. Pike had already started an oath aloft when his eyes caught sight
of the terrible cleft in Mr. Mellaire's head.  There it was, for all
the world to read, and Mr. Pike's and mine were the only eyes that
could read it.  The sparse hair upon the second mate's crown served
not at all to hide the cleft.  It began out of sight in the thicker
hair above the ears, and was exposed nakedly across the whole dome of
head.

The stream of abuse for Ditman Olansen was choked in Mr. Pike's
throat.  All he was capable of for the moment was to stare,
petrified, at that enormous fissure flanked at either end with a
thatch of grizzled hair.  He was in a dream, a trance, his great
hands knotting and clenching unconsciously as he stared at the mark
unmistakable by which he had said that he would some day identify the
murderer of Captain Somers.  And in that moment I remembered having
heard him declare that some day he would stick his fingers in that
mark.

Still as in a dream, moving slowly, right hand outstretched like a
talon, with the fingers drawn downward, he advanced on the second
mate with the evident intention of thrusting his fingers into that
cleft and of clawing and tearing at the brain-life beneath that
pulsed under the thin film of skin.

The second mate backed away along the bridge, and Mr. Pike seemed
partially to come to himself.  His outstretched arm dropped to his
side, and he paused.

"I know you," he said, in a strange, shaky voice, blended of age and
passion.  "Eighteen years ago you were dismasted off the Plate in the
Cyrus Thompson.  She foundered, after you were on your beam ends and
lost your sticks.  You were in the only boat that was saved.  Eleven
years ago, on the Jason Harrison, in San Francisco, Captain Somers
was beaten to death by his second mate.  This second mate was a
survivor of the Cyrus Thompson.  This second mate'd had his skull
split by a crazy sea-cook.  Your skull is split.  This second mate's
name was Sidney Waltham.  And if you ain't Sidney Waltham . . . "

At this point Mr. Mellaire, or, rather, Sidney Waltham, despite his
fifty years, did what only a sailor could do.  He went over the
bridge-rail side-wise, caught the running gear up-and-down the
mizzen-mast, and landed lightly on his feet on top of Number Three
hatch.  Nor did he stop there.  He ran across the hatch and dived
through the doorway of his room in the 'midship-house.

Such must have been Mr. Pike's profundity of passion, that he paused
like a somnambulist, actually rubbed his eyes with the back of his
hand, and seemed to awaken.

But the second mate had not run to his room for refuge.  The next
moment he emerged, a thirty-two Smith and Wesson in his hand, and the
instant he emerged he began shooting.

Mr. Pike was wholly himself again, and I saw him perceptibly pause
and decide between the two impulses that tore at him.  One was to
leap over the bridge-rail and down at the man who shot at him; the
other was to retreat.  He retreated.  And as he bounded aft along the
narrow bridge the mutiny began.  Arthur Deacon, from the mizzen-top,
leaned out and hurled a steel marlin-spike at the fleeing mate.  The
thing flashed in the sunlight as it hurtled down.  It missed Mr. Pike
by twenty feet and nearly impaled Possum, who, afraid of firearms,
was wildly rushing and ki-yi-ing aft.  It so happened that the sharp
point of the marlin-spike struck the wooden floor of the bridge, and
it penetrated the planking with such force that after it had fetched
to a standstill it vibrated violently for long seconds.

I confess that I failed to observe a tithe of what occurred during
the next several minutes.  Piece together as I will, after the event,
I know that I missed much of what took place.  I know that the men
aloft in the mizzen descended to the deck, but I never saw them
descend.  I know that the second mate emptied the chambers of his
revolver, but I did not hear all the shots.  I know that Lars Johnson
left the wheel, and on his broken leg, rebroken and not yet really
mended, limped and scuttled across the poop, down the ladder, and
gained for'ard.  I know he must have limped and scuttled on that bad
leg of his; I know that I must have seen him; and yet I swear that I
have no impression of seeing him.

I do know that I heard the rush of feet of men from for'ard along the
main deck.  And I do know that I saw Mr. Pike take shelter behind the
steel jiggermast.  Also, as the second mate manoeuvred to port on top
of Number Three hatch for his last shot, I know that I saw Mr. Pike
duck around the corner of the chart-house to starboard and get away
aft and below by way of the booby-hatch.  And I did hear that last
futile shot, and the bullet also as it ricochetted from the corner of
the steel-walled chart-house.

As for myself, I did not move.  I was too interested in seeing.  It
may have been due to lack of presence of mind, or to lack of
habituation to an active part in scenes of quick action; but at any
rate I merely retained my position at the break of the poop and
looked on.  I was the only person on the poop when the mutineers, led
by the second mate and the gangsters, rushed it.  I saw them swarm up
the ladder, and it never entered my head to attempt to oppose them.
Which was just as well, for I would have been killed for my pains,
and I could never have stopped them.

I was alone on the poop, and the men were quite perplexed to find no
enemy in sight.  As Bert Rhine went past, he half fetched up in his
stride, as if to knife me with the sheath knife, sharp-pointed, which
he carried in his right hand; then, and I know I correctly measured
the drift of his judgment, he unflatteringly dismissed me as
unimportant and ran on.

Right here I was impressed by the lack of clear-thinking on any of
their parts.  So spontaneously had the ship's company exploded into
mutiny that it was dazed and confused even while it acted.  For
instance, in the months since we left Baltimore there had never been
a moment, day or night, even when preventer tackles were rigged, that
a man had not stood at the wheel.  So habituated were they to this,
that they were shocked into consternation at sight of the deserted
wheel.  They paused for an instant to stare at it.  Then Bert Rhine,
with a quick word and gesture, sent the Italian, Guido Bombini,
around the rear of the half-wheelhouse.  The fact that he completed
the circuit was proof that nobody was there.

Again, in the swift rush of events, I must confess that I saw but
little.  I was aware that more of the men were climbing up the ladder
and gaining the poop, but I had no eyes for them.  I was watching
that sanguinary group aft near the wheel and noting the most
important thing, namely, that it was Bert Rhine, the gangster, and
not the second mate, who gave orders and was obeyed.

He motioned to the Jew, Isaac Chantz, who had been wounded earlier in
the voyage by O'Sullivan, and Chantz led the way to the starboard
chart-house door.  While this was going on, all in flashing fractions
of seconds, Bert Rhine was cautiously inspecting the lazarette
through the open booby-hatch.

Isaac Chantz jerked open the chart-house door, which swung outward.
Things did happen so swiftly!  As he jerked the iron door open a two-
foot hacking butcher knife, at the end of a withered, yellow hand,
flashed out and down on him.  It missed head and neck, but caught him
on top of the left shoulder.

All hands recoiled before this, and the Jew reeled across to the
rail, his right hand clutching at his wound, and between the fingers
I could see the blood welling darkly.  Bert Rhine abandoned his
inspection of the booby-hatch, and, with the second mate, the latter
still carrying his empty Smith & Wesson, sprang into the press about
the chart-house door.

O wise, clever, cautious, old Chinese steward!  He made no emergence.
The door swung emptily back and forth to the rolling of the Elsinore,
and no man knew but what, just inside, with that heavy, hacking knife
upraised, lurked the steward.  And while they hesitated and stared at
the aperture that alternately closed and opened with the swinging of
the door, the booby-hatch, situated between chart-house and wheel,
erupted.  It was Mr. Pike, with his .44 automatic Colt.

There were shots fired, other than by him.  I know I heard them, like
"red-heads" at an old-time Fourth of July; but I do not know who
discharged them.  All was mess and confusion.  Many shots were being
fired, and through the uproar I heard the reiterant, monotonous
explosions from the Colt's .44

I saw the Italian, Mike Cipriani, clutch savagely at his abdomen and
sink slowly to the deck.  Shorty, the Japanese half-caste, clown that
he was, dancing and grinning on the outskirts of the struggle, with a
final grimace and hysterical giggle led the retreat across the poop
and down the poop-ladder.  Never had I seen a finer exemplification
of mob psychology.  Shorty, the most unstable-minded of the
individuals who composed this mob, by his own instability
precipitated the retreat in which the mob joined.  When he broke
before the steady discharge of the automatic in the hand of the mate,
on the instant the rest broke with him.  Least-balanced, his balance
was the balance of all of them.

Chantz, bleeding prodigiously, was one of the first on Shorty's
heels.  I saw Nosey Murphy pause long enough to throw his knife at
the mate.  The missile went wide, with a metallic clang struck the
brass tip of one of the spokes of the Elsinore's wheel, and clattered
on the deck.  The second mate, with his empty revolver, and Bert
Rhine with his sheath-knife, fled past me side by side.

Mr. Pike emerged from the booby-hatch and with an unaimed shot
brought down Bill Quigley, one of the "bricklayers," who fell at my
feet.  The last man off the poop was the Maltese Cockney, and at the
top of the ladder he paused to look back at Mr. Pike, who, holding
the automatic in both hands, was taking careful aim.  The Maltese
Cockney, disdaining the ladder, leaped through the air to the main
deck.  But the Colt merely clicked.  It was the last bullet in it
that had fetched down Bill Quigley.

And the poop was ours.

Events still crowded so closely that I missed much.  I saw the
steward, belligerent and cautious, his long knife poised for a slash,
emerge from the chart-house.  Margaret followed him, and behind her
came Wada, who carried my .22 Winchester automatic rifle.  As he told
me afterwards, he had brought it up under instructions from her.

Mr. Pike was glancing with cool haste at his Colt to see whether it
was jammed or empty, when Margaret asked him the course.

"By the wind," he shouted to her, as he bounded for'ard.  "Put your
helm hard up or we'll be all aback."

Ah!--yeoman and henchman of the race, he could not fail in his
fidelity to the ship under his command.  The iron of all his years of
iron training was there manifest.  While mutiny spread red, and death
was on the wing, he could not forget his charge, the ship, the
Elsinore, the insensate fabric compounded of steel and hemp and woven
cotton that was to him glorious with personality.

Margaret waved Wada in my direction as she ran to the wheel.  As Mr.
Pike passed the corner of the chart-house, simultaneously there was a
report from amidships and the ping of a bullet against the steel
wall.  I saw the man who fired the shot.  It was the cowboy, Steve
Roberts.

As for the mate, he ducked in behind the sheltering jiggermast, and
even as he ducked his left hand dipped into his side coat-pocket, so
that when he had gained shelter it was coming out with a fresh clip
of cartridges.  The empty clip fell to the deck, the loader clip
slipped up the hollow butt, and he was good for eight more shots.

Wada turned the little automatic rifle over to me, where I still
stood under the weather cloth at the break of the poop.

"All ready," he said.  "You take off safety."

"Get Roberts," Mr. Pike called to me.  "He's the best shot for'ard.
If you can't get 'm, jolt the fear of God into him anyway."

It was the first time I had a human target, and let me say, here and
now, that I am convinced I am immune to buck fever.  There he was
before me, less than a hundred feet distant, in the gangway between
the door to Davis' room and the starboard-rail, manoeuvring for
another shot at Mr. Pike.

I must have missed Steve Roberts that first time, but I came so near
him that he jumped.  The next instant he had located me and turned
his revolver on me.  But he had no chance.  My little automatic was
discharging as fast as I could tickle the trigger with my fore-
finger.  The cowboy's first shot went wild of me, because my bullet
arrived ere he got his swift aim.  He swayed and stumbled backward,
but the bullets--ten of them--poured from the muzzle of my Winchester
like water from a garden hose.  It was a stream of lead I played upon
him.  I shall never know how many times I hit him, but I am confident
that after he had begun his long staggering fall at least three
additional bullets entered him ere he impacted on the deck.  And even
as he was falling, aimlessly and mechanically, stricken then with
death, he managed twice again to discharge his weapon.

And after he struck the deck he never moved.  I do believe he died in
the air.

As I held up my gun and gazed at the abruptly-deserted main-deck I
was aware of Wada's touch on my arm.  I looked.  In his hand were a
dozen little .22 long, soft-nosed, smokeless cartridges.  He wanted
me to reload.  I threw on the safety, opened the magazine, and tilted
the rifle so that he could let the fresh cartridges of themselves
slide into place.

"Get some more," I told him.

Scarcely had he departed on the errand when Bill Quigley, who lay at
my feet, created a diversion.  I jumped--yes, and I freely confess
that I yelled--with startle and surprise, when I felt his paws clutch
my ankles and his teeth shut down on the calf of my leg.

It was Mr. Pike to the rescue.  I understand now the Western
hyperbole of "hitting the high places."  The mate did not seem in
contact with the deck.  My impression was that he soared through the
air to me, landing beside me, and, in the instant of landing, kicking
out with one of those big feet of his.  Bill Quigley was kicked clear
away from me, and the next moment he was flying overboard.  It was a
clean throw.  He never touched the rail.

Whether Mike Cipriani, who, till then, had lain in a welter, began
crawling aft in quest of safety, or whether he intended harm to
Margaret at the wheel, we shall never know; for there was no
opportunity given him to show his purpose.  As swiftly as Mr. Pike
could cross the deck with those giant bounds, just that swiftly was
the Italian in the air and following Bill Quigley overside.

The mate missed nothing with those eagle eyes of his as he returned
along the poop.  Nobody was to be seen on the main deck.  Even the
lookout had deserted the forecastle-head, and the Elsinore, steered
by Margaret, slipped a lazy two knots through the quiet sea.  Mr.
Pike was apprehensive of a shot from ambush, and it was not until
after a scrutiny of several minutes that he put his pistol into his
side coat-pocket and snarled for'ard:

"Come out, you rats!  Show your ugly faces!  I want to talk with
you!"

Guido Bombini, gesticulating peaceable intentions and evidently
thrust out by Bert Rhine, was the first to appear.  When it was
observed that Mr. Pike did not fire, the rest began to dribble into
view.  This continued till all were there save the cook, the two
sail-makers, and the second mate.  The last to come out were Tom
Spink, the boy Buckwheat, and Herman Lunkenheimer, the good-natured
but simple-minded German; and these three came out only after
repeated threats from Bert Rhine, who, with Nosey Murphy and Kid
Twist, was patently in charge.  Also, like a faithful dog, Guido
Bombini fawned close to him.

"That will do--stop where you are," Mr. Pike commanded, when the crew
was scattered abreast, to starboard and to port, of Number Three
hatch.

It was a striking scene.  MUTINY ON THE HIGH SEAS!  That phrase,
learned in boyhood from my Marryatt and Cooper, recrudesced in my
brain.  This was it--mutiny on the high seas in the year nineteen
thirteen--and I was part of it, a perishing blond whose lot was cast
with the perishing but lordly blonds, and I had already killed a man.

Mr. Pike, in the high place, aged and indomitable; leaned his arm on
the rail at the break of the poop and gazed down at the mutineers,
the like of which I'll wager had never been assembled in mutiny
before.  There were the three gangsters and ex-jailbirds, anything
but seamen, yet in control of this affair that was peculiarly an
affair of the sea.  With them was the Italian hound, Bombini, and
beside them were such strangely assorted men as Anton Sorensen, Lars
Jacobsen, Frank Fitzgibbon, and Richard Giller--also Arthur Deacon
the white slaver, John Hackey the San Francisco hoodlum, the Maltese
Cockney, and Tony the suicidal Greek.

I noticed the three strange ones, shouldering together and standing
apart from the others as they swayed to the lazy roll and dreamed
with their pale, topaz eyes.  And there was the Faun, stone deaf but
observant, straining to understand what was taking place.  Yes, and
Mulligan Jacobs and Andy Fay were bitterly and eagerly side by side,
and Ditman Olansen, crank-eyed, as if drawn by some affinity of
bitterness, stood behind them, his head appearing between their
heads.  Farthest advanced of all was Charles Davis, the man who by
all rights should long since be dead, his face with its wax-like
pallor startlingly in contrast to the weathered faces of the rest.

I glanced back at Margaret, who was coolly steering, and she smiled
to me, and love was in her eyes--she, too, of the perishing and
lordly race of blonds, her place the high place, her heritage
government and command and mastery over the stupid lowly of her kind
and over the ruck and spawn of the dark-pigmented breeds.

"Where's Sidney Waltham?" the mate snarled.  "I want him.  Bring him
out.  After that, the rest of you filth get back to work, or God have
mercy on you."

The men moved about restlessly, shuffling their feet on the deck.

"Sidney Waltham, I want you--come out!" Mr. Pike called, addressing
himself beyond them to the murderer of the captain under whom once he
had sailed.

The prodigious old hero!  It never entered his head that he was not
the master of the rabble there below him.  He had but one idea, an
idea of passion, and that was his desire for vengeance on the
murderer of his old skipper.

"You old stiff!" Mulligan Jacobs snarled back.

"Shut up, Mulligan!" was Bert Rhine's command, in receipt of which he
received a venomous stare from the cripple.

"Oh, ho, my hearty," Mr. Pike sneered at the gangster.  "I'll take
care of your case, never fear.  In the meantime, and right now, fetch
out that dog."

Whereupon he ignored the leader of the mutineers and began calling,
"Waltham, you dog, come out!  Come out, you sneaking cur!  Come out!"

ANOTHER LUNATIC, was the thought that flashed through my mind;
another lunatic, the slave of a single idea.  He forgets the mutiny,
his fidelity to the ship, in his personal thirst for vengeance.

But did he?  Even as he forgot and called his heart's desire, which
was the life of the second mate, even then, without intention,
mechanically, his sailor's considerative eye lifted to note the draw
of the sails and roved from sail to sail.  Thereupon, so reminded, he
returned to his fidelity.

"Well?" he snarled at Bert Rhine.  "Go on and get for'ard before I
spit on you, you scum and slum.  I'll give you and the rest of the
rats two minutes to return to duty."

And the leader, with his two fellow-gangsters, laughed their weird,
silent laughter.

"I guess you'll listen to our talk, first, old horse," Bert Rhine
retorted.  "--Davis, get up now and show what kind of a spieler you
are.  Don't get cold feet.  Spit it out to Foxy Grandpa an' tell 'm
what's doin'."

"You damned sea-lawyer!" Mr. Pike snarled as Davis opened his mouth
to speak.

Bert Rhine shrugged his shoulders, and half turned on his heel as if
to depart, as he said quietly:

"Oh, well, if you don't want to talk . . . "

Mr. Pike conceded a point.

"Go on!" he snarled.  "Spit the dirt out of your system, Davis; but
remember one thing:  you'll pay for this, and you'll pay through the
nose.  Go on!"

The sea-lawyer cleared his throat in preparation.

"First of all, I ain't got no part in this," he began.

"I'm a sick man, an' I oughta be in my bunk right now.  I ain't fit
to be on my feet.  But they've asked me to advise 'em on the law, an'
I have advised 'em--"

"And the law--what is it?" Mr. Pike broke in.

But Davis was uncowed.

"The law is that when the officers is inefficient, the crew can take
charge peaceably an' bring the ship into port.  It's all law an' in
the records.  There was the Abyssinia, in eighteen ninety-two, when
the master'd died of fever and the mates took to drinkin'--"Go on!"
Mr. Pike shut him off.  "I don't want your citations.  What d'ye
want?  Spit it out."

"Well--and I'm talkin' as an outsider, as a sick man off duty that's
been asked to talk--well, the point is our skipper was a good one,
but he's gone.  Our mate is violent, seekin' the life of the second
mate.  We don't care about that.  What we want is to get into port
with our lives.  An' our lives is in danger.  We ain't hurt nobody.
You've done all the bloodshed.  You've shot an' killed an' thrown two
men overboard, as witnesses'll testify to in court.  An' there's
Roberts, there, dead, too, an' headin' for the sharks--an' what for?
For defendin' himself from murderous an' deadly attack, as every man
can testify an' tell the truth, the whole truth, an' nothin' but the
truth, so help 'm, God--ain't that right, men?"

A confused murmur of assent arose from many of them.

"You want my job, eh?" Mr. Pike grinned.  "An' what are you goin' to
do with me?"

"You'll be taken care of until we get in an' turn you over to the
lawful authorities," Davis answered promptly.  "Most likely you can
plead insanity an' get off easy."

At this moment I felt a stir at my shoulder.  It was Margaret, armed
with the long knife of the steward, whom she had put at the wheel.

"You've got another guess comin', Davis," Mr. Pike said.  "I've got
no more talk with you.  I'm goin' to talk to the bunch.  I'll give
you fellows just two minutes to choose, and I'll tell you your
choices.  You've only got two choices.  You'll turn the second mate
over to me an' go back to duty and take what's comin' to you, or
you'll go to jail with the stripes on you for long sentences.  You've
got two minutes.  The fellows that want jail can stand right where
they are.  The fellows that don't want jail and are willin' to work
faithful, can walk right back to me here on the poop.  Two minutes,
an' you can keep your jaws stopped while you think over what it's
goin' to be."

He turned his head to me and said in an undertone, "Be ready with
that pop-gun for trouble.  An' don't hesitate.  Slap it into 'em--the
swine that think they can put as raw a deal as this over on us."

It was Buckwheat who made the first move; but so tentative was it
that it got no farther than a tensing of the legs and a sway forward
of the shoulders.  Nevertheless it was sufficient to start Herman
Lunkenheimer, who thrust out his foot and began confidently to walk
aft.  Kid Twist gained him in a single spring, and Kid Twist, his
wrist under the German's throat from behind; his knee pressed into
the German's back, bent the man backward and held him.  Even as the
rifle came to my shoulder, the hound Bombini drew his knife directly
beneath Kid Twist's wrist across the up-stretched throat of the man.

It was at this instant that I heard Mr. Pike's "Plug him!" and pulled
the trigger; and of all ungodly things the bullet missed and caught
the Faun, who staggered back, sat down on the hatch, and began to
cough.  And even as he coughed he still strained with pain-eloquent
eyes to try to understand.

No other man moved.  Herman Lunkenheimer, released by Kid Twist, sank
down on the deck.  Nor did I shoot again.  Kid Twist stood again by
the side of Bert Rhine and Guido Bombini fawned near.

Bert Rhine actually visibly smiled.

"Any more of you guys want to promenade aft?" he queried in velvet
tones.

"Two minutes up," Mr. Pike declared.

"An' what are you goin' to do about it, Grandpa?" Bert Rhine sneered.

In a flash the big automatic was out of the mate's pocket and he was
shooting as fast as he could pull trigger, while all hands fled to
shelter.  But, as he had long since told me, he was no shot and could
effectively use the weapon only at close range--muzzle to stomach
preferably.

As we stared at the main deck, deserted save for the dead cowboy on
his back and for the Faun who still sat on the hatch and coughed, an
eruption of men occurred over the for'ard edge of the 'midship-house.

"Shoot!" Margaret cried at my back.

"Don't!" Mr. Pike roared at me.

The rifle was at my shoulder when I desisted.  Louis, the cook, led
the rush aft to us across the top of the house and along the bridge.
Behind him, in single file and not wasting any time, came the
Japanese sail-makers, Henry the training-ship boy, and the other boy
Buckwheat.  Tom Spink brought up the rear.  As he came up the ladder
of the 'midship-house somebody from beneath must have caught him by a
leg in an effort to drag him back.  We saw half of him in sight and
knew that he was struggling and kicking.  He fetched clear abruptly,
gained the top of the house in a surge, and raced aft along the
bridge until he overtook and collided with Buckwheat, who yelled out
in fear that a mutineer had caught him.



CHAPTER XLIII



We who are aft, besieged in the high place, are stronger in numbers
than I dreamed until now, when I have just finished taking the ship's
census.  Of course Margaret, Mr. Pike, and myself are apart.  We
alone represent the ruling class.  With us are servants and serfs,
faithful to their salt, who look to us for guidance and life.

I use my words advisedly.  Tom Spink and Buckwheat are serfs and
nothing else.  Henry, the training-ship boy, occupies an anomalous
classification.  He is of our kind, but he can scarcely be called
even a cadet of our kind.  He will some day win to us and become a
mate or a captain, but in the meantime, of course, his past is
against him.  He is a candidate, rising from the serf class to our
class.  Also, he is only a youth, the iron of his heredity not yet
tested and proven.

Wada, Louis, and the steward are servants of Asiatic breed.  So are
the two Japanese sail-makers--scarcely servants, not to be called
slaves, but something in between.

So, all told, there are eleven of us aft in the citadel.  But our
followers are too servant-like and serf-like to be offensive
fighters.  They will help us defend the high place against all
attack; but they are incapable of joining with us in an attack on the
other end of the ship.  They will fight like cornered rats to
preserve their lives; but they will not advance like tigers upon the
enemy.  Tom Spink is faithful but spirit-broken.  Buckwheat is
hopelessly of the stupid lowly.  Henry has not yet won his spurs.  On
our side remain Margaret, Mr. Pike, and myself.  The rest will hold
the wall of the poop and fight thereon to the death, but they are not
to be depended upon in a sortie.

At the other end of the ship--and I may as well give the roster, are:
the second mate, either to be called Mellaire or Waltham, a strong
man of our own breed but a renegade; the three gangsters, killers and
jackals, Bert Rhine, Nosey Murphy, and Kid Twist; the Maltese Cockney
and Tony the crazy Greek; Frank Fitzgibbon and Richard Giller, the
survivors of the trio of "bricklayers"; Anton Sorensen and Lars
Jacobsen, stupid Scandinavian sailor-men; Ditman Olansen, the crank-
eyed Berserk; John Hackey and Arthur Deacon, respectively hoodlum and
white slaver; Shorty, the mixed-breed clown; Guido Bombini, the
Italian hound; Andy Pay and Mulligan Jacobs, the bitter ones; the
three topaz-eyed dreamers, who are unclassifiable; Isaac Chantz, the
wounded Jew; Bob, the overgrown dolt; the feeble-minded Faun, lung-
wounded; Nancy and Sundry Buyers, the two hopeless, helpless bosuns;
and, finally, the sea-lawyer, Charles Davis.

This makes twenty-seven of them against the eleven of us.  But there
are men, strong in viciousness, among them.  They, too, have their
serfs and bravos.  Guido Bombini and Isaac Chantz are certainly
bravos.  And weaklings like Sorensen, and Jacobsen, and Bob, cannot
be anything else than slaves to the men who compose the gangster
clique.

I failed to tell what happened yesterday, after Mr. Pike emptied his
automatic and cleared the deck.  The poop was indubitably ours, and
there was no possibility of the mutineers making a charge on us in
broad daylight.  Margaret had gone below, accompanied by Wada, to see
to the security of the port and starboard doors that open from the
cabin directly on the main deck.  These are still caulked and tight
and fastened on the inside, as they have been since the passage of
Cape Horn began.

Mr. Pike put one of the sail-makers at the wheel, and the steward,
relieved and starting below, was attracted to the port quarter, where
the patent log that towed astern was made fast.  Margaret had
returned his knife to him, and he was carrying it in his hand when
his attention was attracted astern to our wake.  Mike Cipriani and
Bill Quigley had managed to catch the lazily moving log-line and were
clinging to it.  The Elsinore was moving just fast enough to keep
them on the surface instead of dragging them under.  Above them and
about them circled curious and hungry albatrosses, Cape hens, and
mollyhawks.  Even as I glimpsed the situation one of the big birds, a
ten-footer at least, with a ten-inch beak to the fore, dropped down
on the Italian.  Releasing his hold with one hand, he struck with his
knife at the bird.  Feathers flew, and the albatross, deflected by
the blow, fell clumsily into the water.

Quite methodically, just as part of the day's work, the steward
chopped down with his knife, catching the log-line between the steel
edge and the rail.  At once, no longer buoyed up by the Elsinore's
two-knot drag ahead, the wounded men began to swim and flounder.  The
circling hosts of huge sea-birds descended upon them, with
carnivorous beaks striking at their heads and shoulders and arms.  A
great screeching and squawking arose from the winged things of prey
as they strove for the living meat.  And yet, somehow, I was not very
profoundly shocked.  These were the men whom I had seen eviscerate
the shark and toss it overboard, and shout with joy as they watched
it devoured alive by its brethren.  They had played a violent, cruel
game with the things of life, and the things of life now played upon
them the same violent, cruel game.  As they that rise by the sword
perish by the sword, just so did these two men who had lived cruelly
die cruelly.

"Oh, well," was Mr. Pike's comment, "we've saved two sacks of mighty
good coal."


Certainly our situation might be worse.  We are cooking on the coal-
stove and on the oil-burners.  We have servants to cook and serve for
us.  And, most important of all, we are in possession of all the food
on the Elsinore.

Mr. Pike makes no mistake.  Realizing that with our crowd we cannot
rush the crowd at the other end of the ship, he accepts the siege,
which, as he says, consists of the besieged holding all food supplies
while the besiegers are on the imminent edge of famine.

"Starve the dogs," he growls.  "Starve 'm until they crawl aft and
lick our shoes.  Maybe you think the custom of carrying the stores
aft just happened.  Only it didn't.  Before you and I were born it
was long-established and it was established on brass tacks.  They
knew what they were about, the old cusses, when they put the grub in
the lazarette."

Louis says there is not more than three days' regular whack in the
galley; that the barrel of hard-tack in the forecastle will quickly
go; and that our chickens, which they stole last night from the top
of the 'midship-house, are equivalent to no more than an additional
day's supply.  In short, at the outside limit, we are convinced the
men will be keen to talk surrender within the week.

We are no longer sailing.  In last night's darkness we helplessly
listened to the men loosing headsail-halyards and letting yards go
down on the run.  Under orders of Mr. Pike I shot blindly and many
times into the dark, but without result, save that we heard the
bullets of answering shots strike against the chart-house.  So to-day
we have not even a man at the wheel.  The Elsinore drifts idly on an
idle sea, and we stand regular watches in the shelter of chart-house
and jiggermast.  Mr. Pike says it is the laziest time he has had on
the whole voyage.

I alternate watches with him, although when on duty there is little
to be done, save, in the daytime, to stand rifle in hand behind the
jiggermast, and, in the night, to lurk along the break of the poop.
Behind the chart-house, ready to repel assault, are my watch of four
men:  Tom Spink, Wada, Buckwheat, and Louis.  Henry, the two Japanese
sail-makers, and the old steward compose Mr. Pike's watch.

It is his orders that no one for'ard is to be allowed to show
himself, so, to-day, when the second mate appeared at the corner of
the 'midship-house, I made him take a quick leap back with the thud
of my bullet against the iron wall a foot from his head.  Charles
David tried the same game and was similarly stimulated.

Also, this evening, after dark, Mr. Pike put block-and-tackle on the
first section of the bridge, heaved it out of place, and lowered it
upon the poop.  Likewise he hoisted in the ladder at the break of the
poop that leads down to the main deck.  The men will have to do some
climbing if they ever elect to rush us.

I am writing this in my watch below.  I came off duty at eight
o'clock, and at midnight I go on deck to stay till four to-morrow
morning.  Wada shakes his head and says that the Blackwood Company
should rebate us on the first-class passage paid in advance.  We are
working our passage, he contends.

Margaret takes the adventure joyously.  It is the first time she has
experienced mutiny, but she is such a thorough sea-woman that she
appears like an old hand at the game.  She leaves the deck to the
mate and me; but, still acknowledging his leadership, she has taken
charge below and entirely manages the commissary, the cooking, and
the sleeping arrangements.  We still keep our old quarters, and she
has bedded the new-comers in the big after-room with blankets issued
from the slop-chest.

In a way, from the standpoint of her personal welfare, the mutiny is
the best thing that could have happened to her.  It has taken her
mind off her father and filled her waking hours with work to do.
This afternoon, standing above the open booby-hatch, I heard her
laugh ring out as in the old days coming down the Atlantic.  Yes, and
she hums snatches of songs under her breath as she works.  In the
second dog-watch this evening, after Mr. Pike had finished dinner and
joined us on the poop, she told him that if he did not soon re-rig
his phonograph she was going to start in on the piano.  The reason
she advanced was the psychological effect such sounds of revelry
would have on the starving mutineers.


The days pass, and nothing of moment happens.  We get nowhere.  The
Elsinore, without the steadying of her canvas, rolls emptily and
drifts a lunatic course.  Sometimes she is bow on to the wind, and at
other times she is directly before it; but at all times she is
circling vaguely and hesitantly to get somewhere else than where she
is.  As an illustration, at daylight this morning she came up into
the wind as if endeavouring to go about.  In the course of half an
hour she worked off till the wind was directly abeam.  In another
half hour she was back into the wind.  Not until evening did she
manage to get the wind on her port bow; but when she did, she
immediately paid off, accomplished the complete circle in an hour,
and recommenced her morning tactics of trying to get into the wind.

And there is nothing for us to do save hold the poop against the
attack that is never made.  Mr. Pike, more from force of habit than
anything else, takes his regular observations and works up the
Elsinore's position.  This noon she was eight miles east of
yesterday's position, yet to-day's position, in longitude, was within
a mile of where she was four days ago.  On the other hand she
invariably makes nothing at the rate of seven or eight miles a day.

Aloft, the Elsinore is a sad spectacle.  All is confusion and
disorder.  The sails, unfurled, are a slovenly mess along the yards,
and many loose ends sway dismally to every roll.  The only yard that
is loose is the main-yard.  It is fortunate that wind and wave are
mild, else would the iron-work carry away and the mutineers find the
huge thing of steel about their ears.

There is one thing we cannot understand.  A week has passed, and the
men show no signs of being starved into submission.  Repeatedly and
in vain has Mr. Pike interrogated the hands aft with us.  One and
all, from the cook to Buckwheat, they swear they have no knowledge of
any food for'ard, save the small supply in the galley and the barrel
of hardtack in the forecastle.  Yet it is very evident that those
for'ard are not starving.  We see the smoke from the galley-stove and
can only conclude that they have food to cook.

Twice has Bert Rhine attempted a truce, but both times his white
flag, as soon as it showed above the edge of the 'midship-house, was
fired upon by Mr. Pike.  The last occurrence was two days ago.  It is
Mr. Pike's intention thoroughly to starve them into submission, but
now he is beginning to worry about their mysterious food supply.

Mr. Pike is not quite himself.  He is obsessed, I know beyond any
doubt, with the idea of vengeance on the second mate.  On divers
occasions, now, I have come unexpectedly upon him and found him
muttering to himself with grim set face, or clenching and unclenching
his big square fists and grinding his teeth.  His conversation
continually runs upon the feasibility of our making a night attack
for'ard, and he is perpetually questioning Tom Spink and Louis on
their ideas of where the various men may be sleeping--the point of
which always is:  WHERE IS THE SECOND MATE LIKELY TO BE SLEEPING?

No later than yesterday afternoon did he give me most positive proof
of his obsession.  It was four o'clock, the beginning of the first
dog-watch, and he had just relieved me.  So careless have we grown,
that we now stand in broad daylight at the exposed break of the poop.
Nobody shoots at us, and, occasionally, over the top of the for'ard-
house, Shorty sticks up his head and grins or makes clownish faces at
us.  At such times Mr. Pike studies Shorty's features through the
telescope in an effort to find signs of starvation.  Yet he admits
dolefully that Shorty is looking fleshed-up.

But to return.  Mr. Pike had just relieved me yesterday afternoon,
when the second mate climbed the forecastle-head and sauntered to the
very eyes of the Elsinore, where he stood gazing overside.

"Take a crack at 'm," Mr. Pike said.

It was a long shot, and I was taking slow and careful aim, when he
touched my arm.

"No; don't," he said.

I lowered the little rifle and looked at him inquiringly.

"You might hit him," he explained.  "And I want him for myself."


Life is never what we expect it to be.  All our voyage from Baltimore
south to the Horn and around the Horn has been marked by violence and
death.  And now that it has culminated in open mutiny there is no
more violence, much less death.  We keep to ourselves aft, and the
mutineers keep to themselves for'ard.  There is no more harshness, no
more snarling and bellowing of commands; and in this fine weather a
general festival obtains.

Aft, Mr. Pike and Margaret alternate with phonograph and piano; and
for'ard, although we cannot see them, a full-fledged "foo-foo" band
makes most of the day and night hideous.  A squealing accordion that
Tom Spink says was the property of Mike Cipriani is played by Guido
Bombini, who sets the pace and seems the leader of the foo-foo.
There are two broken-reeded harmonicas.  Someone plays a jew's-harp.
Then there are home-made fifes and whistles and drums, combs covered
with paper, extemporized triangles, and bones made from ribs of salt
horse such as negro minstrels use.

The whole crew seems to compose the band, and, like a lot of monkey-
folk rejoicing in rude rhythm, emphasizes the beat by hammering
kerosene cans, frying-pans, and all sorts of things metallic or
reverberant.  Some genius has rigged a line to the clapper of the
ship's bell on the forecastle-head and clangs it horribly in the big
foo-foo crises, though Bombini can be heard censuring him severely on
occasion.  And to cap it all, the fog-horn machine pumps in at the
oddest moments in imitation of a big bass viol.

And this is mutiny on the high seas!  Almost every hour of my deck-
watches I listen to this infernal din, and am maddened into desire to
join with Mr. Pike in a night attack and put these rebellious and
inharmonious slaves to work.

Yet they are not entirely inharmonious.  Guido Bombini has a
respectable though untrained tenor voice, and has surprised me by a
variety of selections, not only from Verdi, but from Wagner and
Massenet.  Bert Rhine and his crowd are full of rag-time junk, and
one phrase that has caught the fancy of all hands, and which they
roar out at all times, is:  "IT'S A BEAR!  IT'S A BEAR!  IT'S A
BEAR!"  This morning Nancy, evidently very strongly urged, gave a
doleful rendering of Flying Cloud.  Yes, and in the second dog-watch
last evening our three topaz-eyed dreamers sang some folk-song
strangely sweet and sad.

And this is mutiny!  As I write I can scarcely believe it.  Yet I
know Mr. Pike keeps the watch over my head.  I hear the shrill
laughter of the steward and Louis over some ancient Chinese joke.
Wada and the sail-makers, in the pantry, are, I know, talking
Japanese politics.  And from across the cabin, along the narrow
halls, I can hear Margaret softly humming as she goes to bed.

But all doubts vanish at the stroke of eight bells, when I go on deck
to relieve Mr. Pike, who lingers a moment for a "gain," as he calls
it.

"Say," he said confidentially, "you and I can clean out the whole
gang.  All we got to do is sneak for'ard and turn loose.  As soon as
we begin to shoot up, half of 'em'll bolt aft--lobsters like Nancy,
an' Sundry Buyers, an' Jacobsen, an' Bob, an' Shorty, an' them three
castaways, for instance.  An' while they're doin' that, an' our bunch
on the poop is takin' 'em in, you an' me can make a pretty big hole
in them that's left.  What d'ye say?"

I hesitated, thinking of Margaret.

"Why, say," he urged, "once I jumped into that fo'c's'le, at close
range, I'd start right in, blim-blam-blim, fast as you could wink,
nailing them gangsters, an' Bombini, an' the Sheeny, an' Deacon, an'
the Cockney, an' Mulligan Jacobs, an' . . . an' . . . Waltham."

"That would be mine," I smiled.  "You've only eight shots in your
Colt."

Mr. Pike considered a moment, and revised his list.  "All right," he
agreed, "I guess I'll have to let Jacobs go.  What d'ye say?  Are you
game?"

Still I hesitated, but before I could speak he anticipated me and
returned to his fidelity.

"No, you can't do it, Mr. Pathurst.  If by any luck they got the both
of us . . . No; we'll just stay aft and sit tight until they're
starved to it . . . But where they get their tucker gets me.  For'ard
she's as bare as a bone, as any decent ship ought to be, and yet look
at 'em, rolling hog fat.  And by rights they ought to a-quit eatin' a
week ago."



CHAPTER XLIV



Yes, it is certainly mutiny.  Collecting water from the leaders of
the chart-house in a shower of rain this morning, Buckwheat exposed
himself, and a long, lucky revolver-shot from for'ard caught him in
the shoulder.  The bullet was small-calibre and spent ere it reached
him, so that he received no more than a flesh-wound, though he
carried on as if he were dying until Mr. Pike hushed his noise by
cuffing his ears.

I should not like to have Mr. Pike for my surgeon.  He probed for the
bullet with his little finger, which was far too big for the
aperture; and with his little finger, while with his other hand he
threatened another ear-clout, he gouged out the leaden pellet.  Then
he sent the boy below, where Margaret took him in charge with
antiseptics and dressings.

I see her so rarely that a half-hour alone with her these days is an
adventure.  She is busy morning to night in keeping her house in
order.  As I write this, through my open door I can hear her laying
the law down to the men in the after-room.  She has issued
underclothes all around from the slop-chest, and is ordering them to
take a bath in the rain-water just caught.  And to make sure of their
thoroughness in the matter, she has told off Louis and the steward to
supervise the operation.  Also, she has forbidden them smoking their
pipes in the after-room.  And, to cap everything, they are to scrub
walls, ceiling, everything, and then start to-morrow morning at
painting.  All of which serves to convince me almost that mutiny does
not obtain and that I have imagined it.

But no.  I hear Buckwheat blubbering and demanding how he can take a
bath in his wounded condition.  I wait and listen for Margaret's
judgment.  Nor am I disappointed.  Tom Spink and Henry are told off
to the task, and the thorough scrubbing of Buckwheat is assured.


The mutineers are not starving.  To-day they have been fishing for
albatrosses.  A few minutes after they caught the first one its
carcase was flung overboard.  Mr. Pike studied it through his sea-
glasses, and I heard him grit his teeth when he made certain that it
was not the mere feathers and skin but the entire carcass.  They had
taken only its wing-bones to make into pipe-stems.  The inference was
obvious:  STARVING MEN WOULD NOT THROW MEAT AWAY IN SUCH FASHION.

But where do they get their food?  It is a sea-mystery in itself,
although I might not so deem it were it not for Mr. Pike.

"I think, and think, till my brain is all frazzled out," he tells me;
"and yet I can't get a line on it.  I know every inch of space on the
Elsinore, and know there isn't an ounce of grub anywhere for'ard, and
yet they eat!  I've overhauled the lazarette.  As near as I can make
it out, nothing is missing.  Then where do they get it?  That's what
I want to know.  Where do they get it?"

I know that this morning he spent hours in the lazarette with the
steward and the cook, overhauling and checking off from the lists of
the Baltimore agents.  And I know that they came up out of the
lazarette, the three of them, dripping with perspiration and baffled.
The steward has raised the hypothesis that, first of all, there were
extra stores left over from the previous voyage, or from previous
voyages, and, next, that the stealing of these stores must have taken
place during the night-watches when it was Mr. Pike's turn below.

At any rate, the mate takes the food mystery almost as much to heart
as he takes the persistent and propinquitous existence of Sidney
Waltham.

I am coming to realize the meaning of watch-and-watch.  To begin
with, I spend on deck twelve hours, and a fraction more, of each
twenty-four.  A fair portion of the remaining twelve is spent in
eating, in dressing, and in undressing, and with Margaret.  As a
result, I feel the need for more sleep than I am getting.  I scarcely
read at all, now.  The moment my head touches the pillow I am asleep.
Oh, I sleep like a baby, eat like a navvy, and in years have not
enjoyed such physical well-being.  I tried to read George Moore last
night, and was dreadfully bored.  He may be a realist, but I solemnly
aver he does not know reality on that tight, little, sheltered-life
archipelago of his.  If he could wind-jam around the Horn just one
voyage he would be twice the writer.

And Mr. Pike, for practically all of his sixty-nine years, has stood
his watch-and-watch, with many a spill-over of watches into watches.
And yet he is iron.  In a struggle with him I am confident that he
would break me like so much straw.  He is truly a prodigy of a man,
and, so far as to-day is concerned, an anachronism.

The Faun is not dead, despite my unlucky bullet.  Henry insisted that
he caught a glimpse of him yesterday.  To-day I saw him myself.  He
came to the corner of the 'midship-house and gazed wistfully aft at
the poop, straining and eager to understand.  In the same way I have
often seen Possum gaze at me.

It has just struck me that of our eight followers five are Asiatic
and only three are our own breed.  Somehow it reminds me of India and
of Clive and Hastings.

And the fine weather continues, and we wonder how long a time must
elapse ere our mutineers eat up their mysterious food and are starved
back to work.

We are almost due west of Valparaiso and quite a bit less than a
thousand miles off the west coast of South America.  The light
northerly breezes, varying from north-east to west, would, according
to Mr. Pike, work us in nicely for Valparaiso if only we had sail on
the Elsinore.  As it is, sailless, she drifts around and about and
makes nowhere save for the slight northerly drift each day.


Mr. Pike is beside himself.  In the past two days he has displayed
increasing possession of himself by the one idea of vengeance on the
second mate.  It is not the mutiny, irksome as it is and helpless as
it makes him; it is the presence of the murderer of his old-time and
admired skipper, Captain Somers.

The mate grins at the mutiny, calls it a snap, speaks gleefully of
how his wages are running up, and regrets that he is not ashore,
where he would be able to take a hand in gambling on the reinsurance.
But the sight of Sidney Waltham, calmly gazing at sea and sky from
the forecastle-head, or astride the far end of the bowsprit and
fishing for sharks, saddens him.  Yesterday, coming to relieve me, he
borrowed my rifle and turned loose the stream of tiny pellets on the
second mate, who coolly made his line secure ere he scrambled in-
board.  Of course, it was only one chance in a hundred that Mr. Pike
might have hit him, but Sidney Waltham did not care to encourage the
chance.

And yet it is not like mutiny--not like the conventional mutiny I
absorbed as a boy, and which has become classic in the literature of
the sea.  There is no hand-to-hand fighting, no crash of cannon and
flash of cutlass, no sailors drinking grog, no lighted matches held
over open powder-magazines.  Heavens!--there isn't a single cutlass
nor a powder-magazine on board.  And as for grog, not a man has had a
drink since Baltimore.


Well, it is mutiny after all.  I shall never doubt it again.  It may
be nineteen-thirteen mutiny on a coal-carrier, with feeblings and
imbeciles and criminals for mutineers; but at any rate mutiny it is,
and at least in the number of deaths it is reminiscent of the old
days.  For things have happened since last I had opportunity to write
up this log.  For that matter, I am now the keeper of the Elsinore's
official log as well, in which work Margaret helps me.

And I might have known it would happen.  At four yesterday morning I
relieved Mr. Pike.  When in the darkness I came up to him at the
break of the poop, I had to speak to him twice to make him aware of
my presence.  And then he merely grunted acknowledgment in an absent
sort of way.

The next moment he brightened up, and was himself save that he was
too bright.  He was making an effort.  I felt this, but was quite
unprepared for what followed.

"I'll be back in a minute," he said, as he put his leg over the rail
and lightly and swiftly lowered himself down into the darkness.

There was nothing I could do.  To cry out or to attempt to reason
with him would only have drawn the mutineers' attention.  I heard his
feet strike the deck beneath as he let go.  Immediately he started
for'ard.  Little enough precaution he took.  I swear that clear to
the 'midship-house I heard the dragging age-lag of his feet.  Then
that ceased, and that was all.

I repeat.  That was all.  Never a sound came from for'ard.  I held my
watch till daylight.  I held it till Margaret came on deck with her
cheery "What ho of the night, brave mariner?"  I held the next watch
(which should have been the mate's) till midday, eating both
breakfast and lunch behind the sheltering jiggermast.  And I held all
afternoon, and through both dog-watches, my dinner served likewise on
the deck.

And that was all.  Nothing happened.  The galley-stove smoked three
times, advertising the cooking of three meals.  Shorty made faces at
me as usual across the rim of the for'ard-house.  The Maltese Cockney
caught an albatross.  There was some excitement when Tony the Greek
hooked a shark off the jib-boom, so big that half a dozen tailed on
to the line and failed to land it.  But I caught no glimpse of Mr.
Pike nor of the renegade Sidney Waltham.

In short, it was a lazy, quiet day of sunshine and gentle breeze.
There was no inkling to what had happened to the mate.  Was he a
prisoner?  Was he already overside?  Why were there no shots?  He had
his big automatic.  It is inconceivable that he did not use it at
least once.  Margaret and I discussed the affair till we were well a-
weary, but reached no conclusion.

She is a true daughter of the race.  At the end of the second dog-
watch, armed with her father's revolver, she insisted on standing the
first watch of the night.  I compromised with the inevitable by
having Wada make up my bed on the deck in the shelter of the cabin
skylight just for'ard of the jiggermast.  Henry, the two sail-makers
and the steward, variously equipped with knives and clubs, were
stationed along the break of the poop.

And right here I wish to pass my first criticism on modern mutiny.
On ships like the Elsinore there are not enough weapons to go around.
The only firearms now aft are Captain West's .38 Colt revolver, and
my .22 automatic Winchester.  The old steward, with a penchant for
hacking and chopping, has his long knife and a butcher's cleaver.
Henry, in addition to his sheath-knife, has a short bar of iron.
Louis, despite a most sanguinary array of butcher-knives and a big
poker, pins his cook's faith on hot water and sees to it that two
kettles are always piping on top the cabin stove.  Buckwheat, who on
account of his wound is getting all night in for a couple of nights,
cherishes a hatchet.

The rest of our retainers have knives and clubs, although Yatsuda,
the first sail-maker, carries a hand-axe, and Uchino, the second
sail-maker, sleeping or waking, never parts from a claw-hammer.  Tom
Spink has a harpoon.  Wada, however, is the genius.  By means of the
cabin stove he has made a sharp pike-point of iron and fitted it to a
pole.  To-morrow be intends to make more for the other men.

It is rather shuddery, however, to speculate on the terrible
assortment of cutting, gouging, jabbing and slashing weapons with
which the mutineers are able to equip themselves from the carpenter's
shop.  If it ever comes to an assault on the poop there will be a
weird mess of wounds for the survivors to dress.  For that matter,
master as I am of my little rifle, no man could gain the poop in the
day-time.  Of course, if rush they will, they will rush us in the
night, when my rifle will be worthless.  Then it will be blow for
blow, hand-to-hand, and the strongest pates and arms will win.

But no.  I have just bethought me.  We shall be ready for any night-
rush.  I'll take a leaf out of modern warfare, and show them not only
that we are top-dog (a favourite phrase of the mate), but WHY we are
top-dog.  It is simple--night illumination.  As I write I work opt
the idea--gasoline, balls of oakum, caps and gunpowder from a few
cartridges, Roman candles, and flares blue, red, and green, shallow
metal receptacles to carry the explosive and inflammable stuff; and a
trigger-like arrangement by which, pulling on a string, the caps are
exploded in the gunpowder and fire set to the gasoline-soaked oakum
and to the flares and candles.  It will be brain as well as brawn
against mere brawn.


I have worked like a Trojan all day, and the idea is realized.
Margaret helped me out with suggestions, and Tom Spink did the
sailorizing.  Over our head, from the jiggermast, the steel stays
that carry the three jigger-trysails descend high above the break of
the poop and across the main deck to the mizzenmast.  A light line
has been thrown over each stay, and been thrown repeatedly around so
as to form an unslipping knot.  Tom Spink waited till dark, when he
went aloft and attached loose rings of stiff wire around the stays
below the knots.  Also he bent on hoisting-gear and connected
permanent fastenings with the sliding rings.  And further, between
rings and fastenings, is a slack of fifty feet of light line.

This is the idea:  after dark each night we shall hoist our three
metal wash-basins, loaded with inflammables, up to the stays.  The
arrangement is such that at the first alarm of a rush, by pulling a
cord the trigger is pulled that ignites the powder, and the very same
pull operates a trip-device that lets the rings slide down the steel
stays.  Of course, suspended from the rings, are the illuminators,
and when they have run down the stays fifty feet the lines will
automatically bring them to rest.  Then all the main deck between the
poop and the mizzen-mast will be flooded with light, while we shall
be in comparative darkness.

Of course each morning before daylight we shall lower all this
apparatus to the deck, so that the men for'ard will not guess what we
have up our sleeve, or, rather, what we have up on the trysail-stays.
Even to-day the little of our gear that has to be left standing
aroused their curiosity.  Head after head showed over the edge of the
for'ard-house as they peeped and peered and tried to make out what we
were up to.  Why, I find myself almost looking forward to an attack
in order to see the device work.



CHAPTER XLV



And what has happened to Mr. Pike remains a mystery.  For that
matter, what has happened to the second mate?  In the past three days
we have by our eyes taken the census of the mutineers.  Every man has
been seen by us with the sole exception of Mr. Mellaire, or Sidney
Waltham, as I assume I must correctly name him.  He has not appeared-
-does not appear; and we can only speculate and conjecture.

In the past three days various interesting things have taken place.
Margaret stands watch and watch with me, day and night, the clock
around; for there is no one of our retainers to whom we can entrust
the responsibility of a watch.  Though mutiny obtains and we are
besieged in the high place, the weather is so mild and there is so
little call on our men that they have grown careless and sleep aft of
the chart-house when it is their watch on deck.  Nothing ever
happens, and, like true sailors, they wax fat and lazy.  Even have I
found Louis, the steward, and Wada guilty of cat-napping.  In fact,
the training-ship boy, Henry, is the only one who has never lapsed.

Oh, yes, and I gave Tom Spink a thrashing yesterday.  Since the
disappearance of the mate he had had little faith in me, and had been
showing vague signs of insolence and insubordination.  Both Margaret
and I had noted it independently.  Day before yesterday we talked it
over.

"He is a good sailor, but weak," she said.  "If we let him go on, he
will infect the rest."

"Very well, I'll take him in hand," I announced valorously.

"You will have to," she encouraged.  "Be hard.  Be hard.  You must be
hard."

Those who sit in the high places must be hard, yet have I discovered
that it is hard to be hard.  For instance, easy enough was it to drop
Steve Roberts as he was in the act of shooting at me.  Yet it is most
difficult to be hard with a chuckle-headed retainer like Tom Spink--
especially when he continually fails by a shade to give sufficient
provocation.  For twenty-four hours after my talk with Margaret I was
on pins and needles to have it out with him, yet rather than have had
it out with him I should have preferred to see the poop rushed by the
gang from the other side.

Not in a day can the tyro learn to employ the snarling immediacy of
mastery of Mr. Pike, nor the reposeful, voiceless mastery of a
Captain West.  Truly, the situation was embarrassing.  I was not
trained in the handling of men, and Tom Spink knew it in his chuckle-
headed way.  Also, in his chuckle-headed way, he was dispirited by
the loss of the mate.  Fearing the mate, nevertheless he had depended
on the mate to fetch him through with a whole skin, or at least
alive.  On me he has no dependence.  What chance had the gentleman
passenger and the captain's daughter against the gang for'ard?  So he
must have reasoned, and, so reasoning, become despairing and
desperate.

After Margaret had told me to be hard I watched Tom Spink with an
eagle eye, and he must have sensed my attitude, for he carefully
forebore from overstepping, while all the time he palpitated just on
the edge of overstepping.  Yes, and it was clear that Buckwheat was
watching to learn the outcome of this veiled refractoriness.  For
that matter, the situation was not being missed by our keen-eyed
Asiatics, and I know that I caught Louis several times verging on the
offence of offering me advice.  But he knew his place and managed to
keep his tongue between his teeth.

At last, yesterday, while I held the watch, Tom Spink was guilty of
spitting tobacco juice on the deck.

Now it must be understood that such an act is as grave an offence of
the sea as blasphemy is of the Church.

It was Margaret who came to where I was stationed by the jiggermast
and told me what had occurred; and it was she who took my rifle and
relieved me so that I could go aft.

There was the offensive spot, and there was Tom Spink, his cheek
bulging with a quid.

"Here, you, get a swab and mop that up," I commanded in my harshest
manner.

Tom Spink merely rolled his quid with his tongue and regarded me with
sneering thoughtfulness.  I am sure he was no more surprised than was
I by the immediateness of what followed.  My fist went out like an
arrow from a released bow, and Tom Spink staggered back, tripped
against the corner of the tarpaulin-covered sounding-machine, and
sprawled on the deck.  He tried to make a fight of it, but I followed
him up, giving him no chance to set himself or recover from the
surprise of my first onslaught.

Now it so happens that not since I was a boy have I struck a person
with my naked fist, and I candidly admit that I enjoyed the trouncing
I administered to poor Tom Spink.  Yes, and in the rapid play about
the deck I caught a glimpse of Margaret.  She had stepped out of the
shelter of the mast and was looking on from the corner of the chart-
house.  Yes, and more; she was looking on with a cool, measuring eye.

Oh, it was all very grotesque, to be sure.  But then, mutiny on the
high seas in the year nineteen-thirteen is also grotesque.  No lists
here between mailed knights for a lady's favour, but merely the
trouncing of a chuckle-head for spitting on the deck of a coal-
carrier.  Nevertheless, the fact that my lady looked on added zest to
my enterprise, and, doubtlessly, speed and weight to my blows, and at
least half a dozen additional clouts to the unlucky sailor.

Yes, man is strangely and wonderfully made.  Now that I coolly
consider the matter, I realize that it was essentially the same
spirit with which I enjoyed beating up Tom Spink, that I have in the
past enjoyed contests of the mind in which I have out-epigrammed
clever opponents.  In the one case, one proves himself top-dog of the
mind; in the other, top-dog of the muscle.  Whistler and Wilde were
just as much intellectual bullies as I was a physical bully yesterday
morning when I punched Tom Spink into lying down and staying down.

And my knuckles are sore and swollen.  I cease writing for a moment
to look at them and to hope that they will not stay permanently
enlarged.

At any rate, Tom Spink took his disciplining and promised to come in
and be good.

"Sir!" I thundered at him, quite in Mr. Pike's most bloodthirsty
manner.

"Sir," he mumbled with bleeding lips.  "Yes, sir, I'll mop it up,
sir.  Yes, sir."

I could scarcely keep from laughing in his face, the whole thing was
so ludicrous; but I managed to look my haughtiest, and sternest, and
fiercest, while I superintended the deck-cleansing.  The funniest
thing about the affair was that I must have knocked Tom Spink's quid
down his throat, for he was gagging and hiccoughing all the time he
mopped and scrubbed.

The atmosphere aft has been wonderfully clear ever since.  Tom Spink
obeys all orders on the jump, and Buckwheat jumps with equal
celerity.  As for the five Asiatics, I feel that they are stouter
behind me now that I have shown masterfulness.  By punching a man's
face I verily believe I have doubled our united strength.  And there
is no need to punch any of the rest.  The Asiatics are keen and
willing.  Henry is a true cadet of the breed, Buckwheat will follow
Tom Spink's lead, and Tom Spink, a proper Anglo-Saxon peasant, will
lead Buckwheat all the better by virtue of the punching.


Two days have passed, and two noteworthy things have happened.  The
men seem to be nearing the end of their mysterious food supply, and
we have had our first truce.

I have noted, through the glasses, that no more carcasses of the
mollyhawks they are now catching are thrown overboard.  This means
that they have begun to eat the tough and unsavoury creatures,
although it does not mean, of course, that they have entirely
exhausted their other stores.

It was Margaret, her sailor's eye on the falling barometer and on the
"making" stuff adrift in the sky, who called my attention to a coming
blow.

"As soon as the sea rises," she said, "we'll have that loose main-
yard and all the rest of the top-hamper tumbling down on deck."

So it was that I raised the white flag for a parley.  Bert Rhine and
Charles Davis came abaft the 'midship-house, and, while we talked,
many faces peered over the for'ard edge of the house and many forms
slouched into view on the deck on each side of the house.

"Well, getting tired?" was Bert Rhine's insolent greeting.  "Anything
we can do for you?"

"Yes, there is," I answered sharply.  "You can save your heads so
that when you return to work there will be enough of you left to do
the work."

"If you are making threats--" Charles Davis began, but was silenced
by a glare from the gangster.

"Well, what is it?" Bert Rhine demanded.  "Cough it off your chest."

"It's for your own good," was my reply.  "It is coming on to blow,
and all that unfurled canvas aloft will bring the yards down on your
heads.  We're safe here, aft.  You are the ones who will run risks,
and it is up to you to hustle your crowd aloft and make things fast
and ship-shape."

"And if we don't?" the gangster sneered.

"Why, you'll take your chances, that is all," I answered carelessly.
"I just want to call your attention to the fact that one of those
steel yards, end-on, will go through the roof of your forecastle as
if it were so much eggshell."

Bert Rhine looked to Charles Davis for verification, and the latter
nodded.

"We'll talk it over first," the gangster announced.

"And I'll give you ten minutes," I returned.  "If at the end of ten
minutes you've not started taking in, it will be too late.  I shall
put a bullet into any man who shows himself."

"All right, we'll talk it over."

As they started to go back, I called:

"One moment."

They stopped and turned about.

"What have you done to Mr. Pike?" I asked.

Even the impassive Bert Rhine could not quite conceal his surprise.

"An' what have you done with Mr. Mellaire!" he retorted.  "You tell
us, an' we'll tell you."

I am confident of the genuineness of his surprise.  Evidently the
mutineers have been believing us guilty of the disappearance of the
second mate, just as we have been believing them guilty of the
disappearance of the first mate.  The more I dwell upon it the more
it seems the proposition of the Kilkenny cats, a case of mutual
destruction on the part of the two mates.

"Another thing," I said quickly.  "Where do you get your food?"

Bert Rhine laughed one of his silent laughs; Charles Davis assumed an
expression of mysteriousness and superiority; and Shorty, leaping
into view from the corner of the house, danced a jig of triumph.

I drew out my watch.

"Remember," I said, "you've ten minutes in which to make a start."

They turned and went for'ard, and, before the ten minutes were up,
all hands were aloft and stowing canvas.  All this time the wind, out
of the north-west, was breezing up.  The old familiar harp-chords of
a rising gale were strumming along the rigging, and the men, I verily
believe from lack of practice, were particularly slow at their work.

"It would be better if the upper-and-lower top-sails are set so that
we can heave to," Margaret suggested.  "They will steady her and make
it more comfortable for us."

I seized the idea and improved upon it.

"Better set the upper and lower topsails so that we can handle the
ship," I called to the gangster, who was ordering the men about,
quite like a mate, from the top of the 'midship-house.

He considered the idea, and then gave the proper orders, although it
was the Maltese Cockney, with Nancy and Sundry Buyers under him, who
carried the orders out.

I ordered Tom Spink to the long-idle wheel, and gave him the course,
which was due east by the steering compass.  This put the wind on our
port quarter, so that the Elsinore began to move through the water
before a fair breeze.  And due east, less than a thousand miles away,
lay the coast of South America and the port of Valparaiso.

Strange to say, none of our mutineers objected to this, and after
dark, as we tore along before a full-sized gale, I sent my own men up
on top the chart-house to take the gaskets off the spanker.  This was
the only sail we could set and trim and in every way control.  It is
true the mizzen-braces were still rigged aft to the poop, according
to Horn practice.  But, while we could thus trim the mizzen-yards,
the sails themselves, in setting or furling, were in the hands of the
for'ard crowd.

Margaret, beside me in the darkness at the break of the poop, put her
hand in mine with a warm pressure, as both our tiny watches swayed up
the spanker and as both of us held our breaths in an effort to feel
the added draw in the Elsinore's speed.

"I never wanted to marry a sailor," she said.  "And I thought I was
safe in the hands of a landsman like you.  And yet here you are, with
all the stuff of the sea in you, running down your easting for port.
Next thing, I suppose, I'll see you out with a sextant, shooting the
sun or making star-observations."



CHAPTER XLVI



Four more days have passed; the gale has blown itself out; we are not
more than three hundred and fifty miles off Valparaiso; and the
Elsinore, this time due to me and my own stubbornness, is rolling in
the wind and heading nowhere in a light breeze at the rate of nothing
but driftage per hour.

In the height of the gusts, in the three days and nights of the gale,
we logged as much as eight, and even nine, knots.  What bothered me
was the acquiescence of the mutineers in my programme.  They were
sensible enough in the simple matter of geography to know what I was
doing.  They had control of the sails, and yet they permitted me to
run for the South American coast.

More than that, as the gale eased on the morning of the third day,
they actually went aloft, set top-gallant-sails, royals, and
skysails, and trimmed the yards to the quartering breeze.  This was
too much for the Saxon streak in me, whereupon I wore the Elsinore
about before the wind, fetched her up upon it, and lashed the wheel.
Margaret and I are agreed in the hypothesis that their plan is to get
inshore until land is sighted, at which time they will desert in the
boats.

"But we don't want them to desert," she proclaims with flashing eyes.
"We are bound for Seattle.  They must return to duty.  They've got
to, soon, for they are beginning to starve."

"There isn't a navigator aft," I oppose.

Promptly she withers me with her scorn.

"You, a master of books, by all the sea-blood in your body should be
able to pick up the theoretics of navigation while I snap my fingers.
Furthermore, remember that I can supply the seamanship.  Why, any
squarehead peasant, in a six months' cramming course at any seaport
navigation school, can pass the examiners for his navigator's papers.
That means six hours for you.  And less.  If you can't, after an
hour's reading and an hour's practice with the sextant, take a
latitude observation and work it out, I'll do it for you."

"You mean you know?"

She shook her head.

"I mean, from the little I know, that I know I can learn to know a
meridian sight and the working out of it.  I mean that I can learn to
know inside of two hours."

Strange to say, the gale, after easing to a mild breeze, recrudesced
in a sort of after-clap.  With sails untrimmed and flapping, the
consequent smashing, crashing, and rending of our gear can be
imagined.  It brought out in alarm every man for'ard.

"Trim the yards!" I yelled at Bert Rhine, who, backed for counsel by
Charles Davis and the Maltese Cockney, actually came directly beneath
me on the main deck in order to hear above the commotion aloft.

"Keep a-runnin, an' you won't have to trim," the gangster shouted up
to me.

"Want to make land, eh?" I girded down at him.  "Getting hungry, eh?
Well, you won't make land or anything else in a thousand years once
you get all your top-hamper piled down on deck."

I have forgotten to state that this occurred at midday yesterday.

"What are you goin' to do if we trim?" Charles Davis broke in.

"Run off shore," I replied, "and get your gang out in deep sea where
it will be starved back to duty."

"We'll furl, an' let you heave to," the gangster proposed.

I shook my head and held up my rifle.  "You'll have to go aloft to do
it, and the first man that gets into the shrouds will get this."

"Then she can go to hell for all we care," he said, with emphatic
conclusiveness.

And just then the fore-topgallant-yard carried away--luckily as the
bow was down-pitched into a trough of sea-and when the slow,
confused, and tangled descent was accomplished the big stick lay
across the wreck of both bulwarks and of that portion of the bridge
between the foremast and the forecastle head.

Bert Rhine heard, but could not see, the damage wrought.  He looked
up at me challengingly, and sneered:

"Want some more to come down?"

It could not have happened more apropos.  The port-brace, and
immediately afterwards the starboard-brace, of the crojack-yard-
carried away.  This was the big, lowest spar on the mizzen, and as
the huge thing of steel swung wildly back and forth the gangster and
his followers turned and crouched as they looked up to see.  Next,
the gooseneck of the truss, on which it pivoted, smashed away.
Immediately the lifts and lower-topsail sheets parted, and with a
fore-and-aft pitch of the ship the spar up-ended and crashed to the
deck upon Number Three hatch, destroying that section of the bridge
in its fall.

All this was new to the gangster--as it was to me--but Charles Davis
and the Maltese Cockney thoroughly apprehended the situation.

"Stand out from under!" I yelled sardonically; and the three of them
cowered and shrank away as their eyes sought aloft for what new spar
was thundering down upon them.

The lower-topsail, its sheets parted by the fall of the crojack-yard,
was tearing out of the bolt-ropes and ribboning away to leeward and
making such an uproar that they might well expect its yard to carry
away.  Since this wreckage of our beautiful gear was all new to me, I
was quite prepared to see the thing happen.

The gangster-leader, no sailor, but, after months at sea, intelligent
enough and nervously strong enough to appreciate the danger, turned
his head and looked up at me.  And I will do him the credit to say
that he took his time while all our world of gear aloft seemed
smashing to destruction.

"I guess we'll trim yards," he capitulated.

"Better get the skysails and royals off," Margaret said in my ear.

"While you're about it, get in the skysails and royals!" I shouted
down.  "And make a decent job of the gasketing!"

Both Charles Davis and the Maltese Cockney advertised their relief in
their faces as they heard my words, and, at a nod from the gangster,
they started for'ard on the run to put the orders into effect.

Never, in the whole voyage, did our crew spring to it in more lively
fashion.  And lively fashion was needed to save our gear.  As it was,
they cut away the remnants of the mizzen-lower-topsail with their
sheath-knives, and they loosed the main-skysail out of its bolt-
ropes.

The first infraction of our agreement was on the main-lower-topsail.
This they attempted to furl.  The carrying away of the crojack and
the blowing away of the mizzen-lower-topsail gave me freedom to see
and aim, and when the tiny messengers from my rifle began to spat
through the canvas and to spat against the steel of the yard, the men
strung along it desisted from passing the gaskets.  I waved my will
to Bert Rhine, who acknowledged me and ordered the sail set again and
the yard trimmed.

"What is the use of running off-shore?" I said to Margaret, when the
kites were snugged down and all yards trimmed on the wind.  "Three
hundred and fifty miles off the land is as good as thirty-five
hundred so far as starvation is concerned."

So, instead of making speed through the water toward deep sea, I hove
the Elsinore to on the starboard tack with no more than leeway
driftage to the west and south.

But our gallant mutineers had their will of us that very night.  In
the darkness we could hear the work aloft going on as yards were run
down, sheets let go, and sails dewed up and gasketed.  I did try a
few random shots, and all my reward was to hear the whine and creak
of ropes through sheaves and to receive an equally random fire of
revolver-shots.

It is a most curious situation.  We of the high place are masters of
the steering of the Elsinore, while those for'ard are masters of the
motor power.  The only sail that is wholly ours is the spanker.  They
control absolutely--sheets, halyards, clewlines, buntlines, braces,
and down-hauls--every sail on the fore and main.  We control the
braces on the mizzen, although they control the canvas on the mizzen.
For that matter, Margaret and I fail to comprehend why they do not go
aloft any dark night and sever the mizzen-braces at the yard-ends.
All that prevents this, we are decided, is laziness.  For if they did
sever the braces that lead aft into our hands, they would be
compelled to rig new braces for'ard in some fashion, else, in the
rolling, would the mizzenmast be stripped of every spar.

And still the mutiny we are enduring is ridiculous and grotesque.
There was never a mutiny like it.  It violates all standards and
precedents.  In the old classic mutinies, long ere this, attacking
like tigers, the seamen should have swarmed over the poop and killed
most of us or been most of them killed.

Wherefore I sneer at our gallant mutineers, and recommend trained
nurses for them, quite in the manner of Mr. Pike.  But Margaret
shakes her head and insists that human nature is human nature, and
that under similar circumstances human nature will express itself
similarly.  In short, she points to the number of deaths that have
already occurred, and declares that on some dark night, sooner or
later, whenever the pinch of hunger sufficiently sharpens, we shall
see our rascals storming aft.

And in the meantime, except for the tenseness of it, and for the
incessant watchfulness which Margaret and I alone maintain, it is
more like a mild adventure, more like a page out of some book of
romance which ends happily.

It is surely romance, watch and watch for a man and a woman who love,
to relieve each other's watches.  Each such relief is a love passage
and unforgettable.  Never was there wooing like it--the muttered
surmises of wind and weather, the whispered councils, the kissed
commands in palms of hands, the dared contacts of the dark.

Oh, truly, I have often, since this voyage began, told the books to
go hang.  And yet the books are at the back of the race-life of me.
I am what I am out of ten thousand generations of my kind.  Of that
there is no discussion.  And yet my midnight philosophy stands the
test of my breed.  I must have selected my books out of the ten
thousand generations that compose me.  I have killed a man--Steve
Roberts.  As a perishing blond without an alphabet I should have done
this unwaveringly.  As a perishing blond with an alphabet, plus the
contents in my brain of the philosophizing of all philosophers, I
have killed this same man with the same unwaveringness.  Culture has
not emasculated me.  I am quite unaffected.  It was in the day's
work, and my kind have always been day-workers, doing the day's work,
whatever it might be, in high adventure or dull ploddingness, and
always doing it.

Never would I ask to set back the dial of time or event.  I would
kill Steve Roberts again, under the same circumstances, as a matter
of course.  When I say I am unaffected by this happening I do not
quite mean it.  I am affected.  I am aware that the spirit of me is
informed with a sober elation of efficiency.  I have done something
that had to be done, as any man will do what has to be done in the
course of the day's work.

Yes, I am a perishing blond, and a man, and I sit in the high place
and bend the stupid ones to my will; and I am a lover, loving a royal
woman of my own perishing breed, and together we occupy, and shall
occupy, the high place of government and command until our kind
perish from the earth.



CHAPTER XLVII



Margaret was right.  The mutiny is not violating standards and
precedents.  We have had our hands full for days and nights.  Ditman
Olansen, the crank-eyed Berserker, has been killed by Wada, and the
training-ship boy, the one lone cadet of our breed, has gone overside
with the regulation sack of coal at his feet.  The poop has been
rushed.  My illuminating invention has proved a success.  The men are
getting hungry, and we still sit in command in the high place.

First of all the attack on the poop, two nights ago, in Margaret's
watch.  No; first, I have made another invention.  Assisted by the
old steward, who knows, as a Chinese ought, a deal about fireworks,
and getting my materials from our signal rockets and Roman candles, I
manufactured half a dozen bombs.  I don't really think they are very
deadly, and I know our extemporized fuses are slower than our voyage
is at the present time; but nevertheless the bombs have served the
purpose, as you shall see.

And now to the attempt to rush the poop.  It was in Margaret's watch,
from midnight till four in the morning, when the attack was made.
Sleeping on the deck by the cabin skylight, I was very close to her
when her revolver went off, and continued to go off.

My first spring was to the tripping-lines on my illuminators.  The
igniting and releasing devices worked cleverly.  I pulled two of the
tripping-lines, and two of the contraptions exploded into light and
noise and at the same time ran automatically down the jigger-trysail-
stays, and automatically fetched up at the ends of their lines.  The
illumination was instantaneous and gorgeous.  Henry, the two sail-
makers, and the steward--at least three of them awakened from sound
sleep, I am sure--ran to join us along the break of the poop.  All
the advantage lay with us, for we were in the dark, while our foes
were outlined against the light behind them.

But such light!  The powder crackled, fizzed, and spluttered and
spilled out the excess of gasolene from the flaming oakum balls so
that streams of fire dripped down on the main deck beneath.  And the
stuff of the signal-flares dripped red light and blue and green.

There was not much of a fight, for the mutineers were shocked by our
fireworks.  Margaret fired her revolver haphazardly, while I held my
rifle for any that gained the poop.  But the attack faded away as
quickly as it had come.  I did see Margaret overshoot some man,
scaling the poop from the port-rail, and the next moment I saw Wada,
charging like a buffalo, jab him in the chest with the spear he had
made and thrust the boarder back and down.

That was all.  The rest retreated for'ard on the dead run, while the
three trysails, furled at the foot of the stays next to the mizzen
and set on fire by the dripping gasolene, went up in flame and burned
entirely away and out without setting the rest of the ship on fire.
That is one of the virtues of a ship steel-masted and steel-stayed.

And on the deck beneath us, crumpled, twisted, face hidden so that we
could not identify him, lay the man whom Wada had speared.

And now I come to a phase of adventure that is new to me.  I have
never found it in the books.  In short, it is carelessness coupled
with laziness, or vice versa.  I had used two of my illuminators.
Only one remained.  An hour later, convinced of the movement aft of
men along the deck, I let go the third and last and with its
brightness sent them scurrying for'ard.  Whether they were attacking
the poop tentatively to learn whether or not I had exhausted my
illuminators, or whether or not they were trying to rescue Ditman
Olansen, we shall never know.  The point is:  they did come aft; they
were compelled to retreat by my illuminator; and it was my last
illuminator.  And yet I did not start in, there and then, to
manufacture fresh ones.  This was carelessness.  It was laziness.
And I hazarded our lives, perhaps, if you please, on a psychological
guess that I had convinced our mutineers that we had an inexhaustible
stock of illuminators in reserve.

The rest of Margaret's watch, which I shared with her, was
undisturbed.  At four I insisted that she go below and turn in, but
she compromised by taking my own bed behind the skylight.

At break of day I was able to make out the body, still lying as last
I had seen it.  At seven o'clock, before breakfast, and while
Margaret still slept, I sent the two boys, Henry and Buckwheat, down
to the body.  I stood above them, at the rail, rifle in hand and
ready.  But from for'ard came no signs of life; and the lads, between
them, rolled the crank-eyed Norwegian over so that we could recognize
him, carried him to the rail, and shoved him stiffly across and into
the sea.  Wada's spear-thrust had gone clear through him.

But before twenty-four hours were up the mutineers evened the score
handsomely.  They more than evened it, for we are so few that we
cannot so well afford the loss of one as they can.  To begin with--
and a thing I had anticipated and for which I had prepared my bombs--
while Margaret and I ate a deck-breakfast in the shelter of the
jiggermast a number of the men sneaked aft and got under the overhang
of the poop.  Buckwheat saw them coming and yelled the alarm, but it
was too late.  There was no direct way to get them out.  The moment I
put my head over the rail to fire at them, I knew they would fire up
at me with all the advantage in their favour.  They were hidden.  I
had to expose myself.

Two steel doors, tight-fastened and caulked against the Cape Horn
seas, opened under the overhang of the poop from the cabin on to the
main deck.  These doors the men proceeded to attack with sledge-
hammers, while the rest of the gang, sheltered by the 'midship-house,
showed that it stood ready for the rush when the doors were battered
down.

Inside, the steward guarded one door with his hacking knife, while
with his spear Wada guarded the other door.  Nor, while I had
dispatched them to this duty, was I idle.  Behind the jiggermast I
lighted the fuse of one of my extemporized bombs.  When it was
sputtering nicely I ran across the poop to the break and dropped the
bomb to the main deck beneath, at the same time making an effort to
toss it in under the overhang where the men battered at the port-
door.  But this effort was distracted and made futile by a popping of
several revolver shots from the gangways amidships.  One IS jumpy
when soft-nosed bullets putt-putt around him.  As a result, the bomb
rolled about on the open deck.

Nevertheless, the illuminators had earned the respect of the
mutineers for my fireworks.  The sputtering and fizzling of the fuse
were too much for them, and from under the poop they ran for'ard like
so many scuttling rabbits.  I know I could have got a couple with my
rifle had I not been occupied with lighting the fuse of a second
bomb.  Margaret managed three wild shots with her revolver, and the
poop was immediately peppered by a scattering revolver fire from
for'ard.

Being provident (and lazy, for I have learned that it takes time and
labour to manufacture home-made bombs), I pinched off the live end of
the fuse in my hand.  But the fuse of the first bomb, rolling about
on the main deck, merely fizzled on; and as I waited I resolved to
shorten my remaining fuses.  Any of the men who fled, had he had the
courage, could have pinched off the fuse, or tossed the bomb
overboard, or, better yet, he could have tossed it up amongst us on
the poop.

It took fully five minutes for that blessed fuse to burn its slow
length, and when the bomb did go off it was a sad disappointment.  I
swear it could have been sat upon with nothing more than a jar to
one's nerves.  And yet, in so far as the intimidation goes, it did
its work.  The men have not since ventured under the overhang of the
poop.

That the mutineers were getting short of food was patent.  The
Elsinore, sailless, drifted about that morning, the sport of wind and
wave; and the gang put many lines overboard for the catching of
molly-hawks and albatrosses.  Oh, I worried the hungry fishers with
my rifle.  No man could show himself for'ard without having a bullet
whop against the iron-work perilously near him.  And still they
caught birds--not, however, without danger to themselves, and not
without numerous losses of birds due to my rifle.

Their procedure was to toss their hooks and bait over the rail from
shelter and slowly to pay the lines out as the slight windage of the
Elsinore's hull, spars, and rigging drifted her through the water.
When a bird was hooked they hauled in the line, still from shelter,
till it was alongside.  This was the ticklish moment.  The hook,
merely a hollow and acute-angled triangle of sheet-copper floating on
a piece of board at the end of the line, held the bird by pinching
its curved beak into the acute angle.  The moment the line slacked
the bird was released.  So, when alongside, this was the problem:  to
lift the bird out of the water, straight up the side of the ship,
without once jamming and easing and slacking.  When they tried to do
this from shelter invariably they lost the bird.

They worked out a method.  When the bird was alongside the several
men with revolvers turned loose on me, while one man, overhauling and
keeping the line taut, leaped to the rail and quickly hove the bird
up and over and inboard.  I know this long-distance revolver fire
seriously bothered me.  One cannot help jumping when death, in the
form of a piece of flying lead, hits the rail beside him, or the mast
over his head, or whines away in a ricochet from the steel shrouds.
Nevertheless, I managed with my rifle to bother the exposed men on
the rail to the extent that they lost one hooked bird out of two.
And twenty-six men require a quantity of albatrosses and mollyhawks
every twenty-four hours, while they can fish only in the daylight.

As the day wore along I improved on my obstructive tactics.  When the
Elsinore was up in the eye of the wind, and making sternway, I found
that by putting the wheel sharply over, one way or the other, I could
swing her bow off.  Then, when she had paid off till the wind was
abeam, by reversing the wheel hard across to the opposite hard-over I
could take advantage of her momentum away from the wind and work her
off squarely before it.  This made all the wood-floated triangles of
bird-snares tow aft along her sides.

The first time I was ready for them.  With hooks and sinkers on our
own lines aft, we tossed out, grappled, captured, and broke off nine
of their lines.  But the next time, so slow is the movement of so
large a ship, the mutineers hauled all their lines safely inboard ere
they towed aft within striking distance of my grapnels.

Still I improved.  As long as I kept the Elsinore before the wind
they could not fish.  I experimented.  Once before it, by means of a
winged-out spanker coupled with patient and careful steering, I could
keep her before it.  This I did, hour by hour one of my men relieving
another at the wheel.  As a result all fishing ceased.

Margaret was holding the first dog-watch, four to six.  Henry was at
the wheel steering.  Wada and Louis were below cooking the evening
meal over the big coal-stove and the oil-burners.  I had just come up
from below and was standing beside the sounding-machine, not half a
dozen feet from Henry at the wheel.  Some obscure sound from the
ventilator must have attracted me, for I was gazing at it when the
thing happened.

But first, the ventilator.  This is a steel shaft that leads up from
the coal-carrying bowels of the ship beneath the lazarette and that
wins to the outside-world via the after-wall of the chart-house.  In
fact, it occupies the hollow inside of the double walls of the
afterwall of the chart-house.  Its opening, at the height of a man's
head, is screened with iron bars so closely set that no mature-bodied
rat can squeeze between.  Also, this opening commands the wheel,
which is a scant fifteen feet away and directly across the booby-
hatch.  Some mutineer, crawling along the space between the coal and
the deck of the lower hold, had climbed the ventilator shaft and was
able to take aim through the slits between the bars.

Practically simultaneously, I saw the out-rush of smoke and heard the
report.  I heard a grunt from Henry, and, turning my head, saw him
cling to the spokes and turn the wheel half a revolution as he sank
to the deck.  It must have been a lucky shot.  The boy was perforated
through the heart or very near to the heart--we have no time for
post-mortems on the Elsinore.

Tom Spink and the second sail-maker, Uchino, sprang to Henry's side.
The revolver continued to go off through the ventilator slits, and
the bullets thudded into the front of the half wheel-house all about
them.  Fortunately they were not hit, and they immediately scrambled
out of range.  The boy quivered for the space of a few seconds, and
ceased to move; and one more cadet of the perishing breed perished as
he did his day's work at the wheel of the Elsinore off the west coast
of South America, bound from Baltimore to Seattle with a cargo of
coal.



CHAPTER XLVIII



The situation is hopelessly grotesque.  We in the high place command
the food of the Elsinore, but the mutineers have captured her
steering-gear.  That is to say, they have captured it without coming
into possession of it.  They cannot steer, neither can we.  The poop,
which is the high place, is ours.  The wheel is on the poop, yet we
cannot touch the wheel.  From that slitted opening in the ventilator-
shaft they are able to shoot down any man who approaches the wheel.
And with that steel wall of the chart-house as a shield they laugh at
us as from a conning tower.

I have a plan, but it is not worth while putting into execution
unless its need becomes imperative.  In the darkness of night it
would be an easy trick to disconnect the steering-gear from the short
tiller on the rudder-head, and then, by re-rigging the preventer
tackles, steer from both sides of the poop well enough for'ard to be
out of the range of the ventilator.

In the meantime, in this fine weather, the Elsinore drifts as she
lists, or as the windage of her lists and the sea-movement of waves
lists.  And she can well drift.  Let the mutineers starve.  They can
best be brought to their senses through their stomachs.


And what are wits for, if not for use?  I am breaking the men's
hungry hearts.  It is great fun in its way.  The mollyhawks and
albatrosses, after their fashion, have followed the Elsinore up out
of their own latitudes.  This means that there are only so many of
them and that their numbers are not recruited.  Syllogism:  major
premise, a definite and limited amount of bird-meat; minor premise,
the only food the mutineers now have is bird-meat; conclusion,
destroy the available food and the mutineers will be compelled to
come back to duty.

I have acted on this bit of logic.  I began experimentally by tossing
small chunks of fat pork and crusts of stale bread overside.  When
the birds descended for the feast I shot them.  Every carcass thus
left floating on the surface of the sea was so much less meat for the
mutineers.

But I bettered the method.  Yesterday I overhauled the medicine-
chest, and I dosed my chunks of fat pork and bread with the contents
of every bottle that bore a label of skull and cross-bones.  I even
added rough-on-rats to the deadliness of the mixture--this on the
suggestion of the steward.

And to-day, behold, there is no bird left in the sky.  True, while I
played my game yesterday, the mutineers hooked a few of the birds;
but now the rest are gone, and that is bound to be the last food for
the men for'ard until they resume duty.

Yes; it is grotesque.  It is a boy's game.  It reads like Midshipman
Easy, like Frank Mildmay, like Frank Reade, Jr.; and yet, i' faith,
life and death's in the issue.  I have just gone over the toll of our
dead since the voyage began.

First, was Christian Jespersen, killed by O'Sullivan when that maniac
aspired to throw overboard Andy Fay's sea-boots; then O'Sullivan,
because he interfered with Charles Davis' sleep, brained by that
worthy with a steel marlin-spike; next Petro Marinkovich, just ere we
began the passage of the Horn, murdered undoubtedly by the gangster
clique, his life cut out of him with knives, his carcass left lying
on deck to be found by us and be buried by us; and the Samurai,
Captain West, a sudden though not a violent death, albeit occurring
in the midst of all elemental violence as Mr. Pike clawed the
Elsinore off the lee-shore of the Horn; and Boney the Splinter,
following, washed overboard to drown as we cleared the sea-gashing
rock-tooth where the southern tip of the continent bit into the
storm-wrath of the Antarctic; and the big-footed, clumsy youth of a
Finnish carpenter, hove overside as a Jonah by his fellows who
believed that Finns control the winds; and Mike Cipriani and Bill
Quigley, Rome and Ireland, shot down on the poop and flung overboard
alive by Mr. Pike, still alive and clinging to the log-line, cut
adrift by the steward to be eaten alive by great-beaked albatrosses,
mollyhawks, and sooty-plumaged Cape hens; Steve Roberts, one-time
cowboy, shot by me as he tried to shoot me; Herman Lunkenheimer, his
throat cut before all of us by the hound Bombini as Kid Twist
stretched the throat taut from behind; the two mates, Mr. Pike and
Mr. Mellaire, mutually destroying each other in what must have been
an unwitnessed epic combat; Ditman Olansen, speared by Wada as he
charged Berserk at the head of the mutineers in the attempt to rush
the poop; and last, Henry, the cadet of the perishing house, shot at
the wheel, from the ventilator-shaft, in the course of his day's
work.

No; as I contemplate this roll-call of the dead which I have just
made I see that we are not playing a boy's game.  Why, we have lost a
third of us, and the bloodiest battles of history have rarely
achieved such a percentage of mortality.  Fourteen of us have gone
overside, and who can tell the end?

Nevertheless, here we are, masters of matter, adventurers in the
micro-organic, planet-weighers, sun-analysers, star-rovers, god-
dreamers, equipped with the human wisdom of all the ages, and yet,
quoting Mr. Pike, to come down to brass tacks, we are a lot of
primitive beasts, fighting bestially, slaying bestially, pursuing
bestially food and water, air for our lungs, a dry space above the
deep, and carcasses skin-covered and intact.  And over this menagerie
of beasts Margaret and I, with our Asiatics under us, rule top-dog.
We are all dogs--there is no getting away from it.  And we, the fair-
pigmented ones, by the seed of our ancestry rulers in the high place,
shall remain top-dog over the rest of the dogs.  Oh, there is
material in plenty for the cogitation of any philosopher on a
windjammer in mutiny in this Year of our Lord 1913.


Henry was the fourteenth of us to go overside into the dark and salty
disintegration of the sea.  And in one day he has been well avenged;
for two of the mutineers have followed him.  The steward called my
attention to what was taking place.  He touched my arm half beyond
his servant's self, as he gloated for'ard at the men heaving two
corpses overside.  Weighted with coal, they sank immediately, so that
we could not identify them.

"They have been fighting," I said.  "It is good that they should
fight among themselves."

But the old Chinese merely grinned and shook his head.

"You don't think they have been fighting?" I queried.

"No fight.  They eat'm mollyhawk and albatross; mollyhawk and
albatross eat'm fat pork; two men he die, plenty men much sick, you
bet, damn to hell me very much glad.  I savve."

And I think he was right.  While I was busy baiting the sea-birds the
mutineers were catching them, and of a surety they must have caught
some that had eaten of my various poisons.

The two poisoned ones went over the side yesterday.  Since then we
have taken the census.  Two men only have not appeared, and they are
Bob, the fat and overgrown feebling youth, and, of all creatures, the
Faun.  It seems my fate that I had to destroy the Faun--the poor,
tortured Faun, always willing and eager, ever desirous to please.
There is a madness of ill luck in all this.  Why couldn't the two
dead men have been Charles Davis and Tony the Greek?  Or Bert Rhine
and Kid Twist? or Bombini and Andy Fay?  Yes, and in my heart I know
I should have felt better had it been Isaac Chantz and Arthur Deacon,
or Nancy and Sundry Buyers, or Shorty and Larry.


The steward has just tendered me a respectful bit of advice.

"Next time we chuck'm overboard like Henry, much better we use old
iron."

"Getting short of coal?" I asked.

He nodded affirmation.  We use a great deal of coal in our cooking,
and when the present supply gives out we shall have to cut through a
bulkhead to get at the cargo.



CHAPTER XLIX



The situation grows tense.  There are no more sea-birds, and the
mutineers are starving.  Yesterday I talked with Bert Rhine.  To-day
I talked with him again, and he will never forget, I am certain, the
little talk we had this morning.

To begin with, last evening, at five o'clock, I heard his voice
issuing from between the slits of the ventilator in the after-wall of
the chart-house.  Standing at the corner of the house, quite out of
range, I answered him.

"Getting hungry?" I jeered.  "Let me tell you what we are going to
have for dinner.  I have just been down and seen the preparations.
Now, listen:  first, caviare on toast; then, clam bouillon; and
creamed lobster; and tinned lamb chops with French peas--you know,
the peas that melt in one's mouth; and California asparagus with
mayonnaise; and--oh, I forgot to mention fried potatoes and cold pork
and beans; and peach pie; and coffee, real coffee.  Doesn't it make
you hungry for your East Side?  And, say, think of the free lunch
going to waste right now in a thousand saloons in good old New York."

I had told him the truth.  The dinner I described (principally coming
out of tins and bottles, to be sure) was the dinner we were to eat.

"Cut that," he snarled.  "I want to talk business with YOU."

"Right down to brass tacks," I gibed.  "Very well, when are you and
the rest of your rats going to turn to?"

"Cut that," he reiterated.  "I've got you where 1 want you now.  Take
it from me, I'm givin' it straight.  I'm not tellin' you how, but
I've got you under my thumb.  When I come down on you, you'll crack."

"Hell is full of cocksure rats like you," I retorted; although I
never dreamed how soon he would be writhing in the particular hell
preparing for him.

"Forget it," he sneered back.  "I've got you where I want you.  I'm
just tellin' you, that's all."

"Pardon me," I replied, "when I tell you that I'm from Missouri.
You'll have to show ME."

And as I thus talked the thought went through my mind of how I
naturally sought out the phrases of his own vocabulary in order to
make myself intelligible to him.  The situation was bestial, with
sixteen of our complement already gone into the dark; and the terms I
employed, perforce, were terms of bestiality.  And I thought, also,
of I who was thus compelled to dismiss the dreams of the utopians,
the visions of the poets, the king-thoughts of the king-thinkers, in
a discussion with this ripened product of the New York City inferno.
To him I must talk in the elemental terms of life and death, of food
and water, of brutality and cruelty.

"I give you your choice," he went on.  "Give in now, an' you won't be
hurt, none of you."

"And if we don't?" I dared airily.

"You'll be sorry you was ever born.  You ain't a mush-head, you've
got a girl there that's stuck on you.  It's about time you think of
her.  You ain't altogether a mutt.  You get my drive?"

Ay, I did get it; and somehow, across my brain flashed a vision of
all I had ever read and heard of the siege of the Legations at
Peking, and of the plans of the white men for their womenkind in the
event of the yellow hordes breaking through the last lines of
defence.  Ay, and the old steward got it; for I saw his black eyes
glint murderously in their narrow, tilted slits.  He knew the drift
of the gangster's meaning.

"You get my drive?" the gangster repeated.

And I knew anger.  Not ordinary anger, but cold anger.  And I caught
a vision of the high place in which we had sat and ruled down the
ages in all lands, on all seas.  I saw my kind, our women with us, in
forlorn hopes and lost endeavours, pent in hill fortresses, rotted in
jungle fastnesses, cut down to the last one on the decks of rocking
ships.  And always, our women with us, had we ruled the beasts.  We
might die, our women with us; but, living, we had ruled.  It was a
royal vision I glimpsed.  Ay, and in the purple of it I grasped the
ethic, which was the stuff of the fabric of which it was builded.  It
was the sacred trust of the seed, the bequest of duty handed down
from all ancestors.

And I flamed more coldly.  It was not red-brute anger.  It was
intellectual.  It was based on concept and history; it was the
philosophy of action of the strong and the pride of the strong in
their own strength.  Now at last I knew Nietzsche.  I knew the
rightness of the books, the relation of high thinking to high-
conduct, the transmutation of midnight thought into action in the
high place on the poop of a coal-carrier in the year nineteen-
thirteen, my woman beside me, my ancestors behind me, my slant-eyed
servitors under me, the beasts beneath me and beneath the heel of me.
God!  I felt kingly.  I knew at last the meaning of kingship.

My anger was white and cold.  This subterranean rat of a miserable
human, crawling through the bowels of the ship to threaten me and
mine!  A rat in the shelter of a knot-hole making a noise as beast-
like as any rat ever made!  And it was in this spirit that I answered
the gangster.

"When you crawl on your belly, along the open deck, in the broad
light of day, like a yellow cur that has been licked to obedience,
and when you show by your every action that you like it and are glad
to do it, then, and not until then, will I talk with you."

Thereafter, for the next ten minutes, he shouted all the Billingsgate
of his kind at me through the slits in the ventilator.  But I made no
reply.  I listened, and I listened coldly, and as I listened I knew
why the English had blown their mutinous Sepoys from the mouths of
cannon in India long years ago.


And when, this morning, I saw the steward struggling with a five-
gallon carboy of sulphuric acid, I never dreamed the use he intended
for it.

In the meantime I was devising another way to overcome that deadly
ventilator shaft.  The scheme was so simple that I was shamed in that
it had not occurred to me at the very beginning.  The slitted opening
was small.  Two sacks of flour, in a wooden frame, suspended by ropes
from the edge of the chart-house roof directly above, would
effectually cover the opening and block all revolver fire.

No sooner thought than done.  Tom Spink and Louis were on top the
chart-house with me and preparing to lower the flour, when we heard a
voice issuing from the shaft.

"Who's in there now?"  I demanded.  "Speak up."

"I'm givin' you a last chance," Bert Rhine answered.

And just then, around the corner of the house, stepped the steward.
In his hand he carried a large galvanized pail, and my casual thought
was that he had come to get rain-water from the barrels.  Even as I
thought it, he made a sweeping half-circle with the pail and sloshed
its contents into the ventilator-opening.  And even as the liquid
flew through the air I knew it for what it was--undiluted sulphuric
acid, two gallons of it from the carboy.

The gangster must have received the liquid fire in the face and eyes.
And, in the shock of pain, he must have released all holds and fallen
upon the coal at the bottom of the shaft.  His cries and shrieks of
anguish were terrible, and I was reminded of the starving rats which
had squealed up that same shaft during the first months of the
voyage.  The thing was sickening.  I prefer that men be killed
cleanly and easily.

The agony of the wretch I did not fully realize until the steward,
his bare fore-arms sprayed by the splash from the ventilator slats,
suddenly felt the bite of the acid through his tight, whole skin and
made a mad rush for the water-barrel at the corner of the house.  And
Bert Rhine, the silent man of soundless laughter, screaming below
there on the coal, was enduring the bite of the acid in his eyes!

We covered the ventilator opening with our flour-device; the screams
from below ceased as the victim was evidently dragged for'ard across
the coal by his mates; and yet I confess to a miserable forenoon.  As
Carlyle has said:  "Death is easy; all men must die"; but to receive
two gallons of full-strength sulphuric acid full in the face is a
vastly different and vastly more horrible thing than merely to die.
Fortunately, Margaret was below at the time, and, after a few
minutes, in which I recovered my balance, I bullied and swore all our
hands into keeping the happening from her.


Oh, well, and we have got ours in retaliation.  Off and on, through
all of yesterday, after the ventilator tragedy, there were noises
beneath the cabin floor or deck.  We heard them under the dining-
table, under the steward's pantry, under Margaret's stateroom.

This deck is overlaid with wood, but under the wood is iron, or steel
rather, such as of which the whole Elsinore is builded.

Margaret and I, followed by Louis, Wada, and the steward, walked
about from place to place, wherever the sounds arose of tappings and
of cold-chisels against iron.  The tappings seemed to come from
everywhere; but we concluded that the concentration necessary on any
spot to make an opening large enough for a man's body would
inevitably draw our attention to that spot.  And, as Margaret said:

"If they do manage to cut through, they must come up head-first, and,
in such emergence, what chance would they have against us?"

So I relieved Buckwheat from deck duty, placed him on watch over the
cabin floor, to be relieved by the steward in Margaret's watches.

In the late afternoon, after prodigious hammerings and clangings in a
score of places, all noises ceased.  Neither in the first and second
dog-watches, nor in the first watch of the night, were the noises
resumed.  When I took charge of the poop at midnight Buckwheat
relieved the steward in the vigil over the cabin floor; and as I
leaned on the rail at the break of the poop, while my four hours
dragged slowly by, least of all did I apprehend danger from the
cabin--especially when I considered the two-gallon pail of raw
sulphuric acid ready to hand for the first head that might arise
through an opening in the floor not yet made.  Our rascals for'ard
might scale the poop; or cross aloft from mizzenmast to jigger and
descend upon our heads; but how they could invade us through the
floor was beyond me.

But they did invade.  A modern ship is a complex affair.  How was I
to guess the manner of the invasion?

It was two in the morning, and for an hour I had been puzzling my
head with watching the smoke arise from the after-division of the
for'ard-house and with wondering why the mutineers should have up
steam in the donkey-engine at such an ungodly hour.  Not on the whole
voyage had the donkey-engine been used.  Four bells had just struck,
and I was leaning on the rail at the break of the poop when I heard a
prodigious coughing and choking from aft.  Next, Wada ran across the
deck to me.

"Big trouble with Buckwheat," he blurted at me.  "You go quick."

I shoved him my rifle and left him on guard while I raced around the
chart-house.  A lighted match, in the hands of Tom Spink, directed
me.  Between the booby-hatch and the wheel, sitting up and rocking
back and forth with wringings of hands and wavings of arms, tears of
agony bursting from his eyes, was Buckwheat.  My first thought was
that in some stupid way he had got the acid into his own eyes.  But
the terrible fashion in which he coughed and strangled would quickly
have undeceived me, had not Louis, bending over the booby-companion,
uttered a startled exclamation.

I joined him, and one whiff of the air that came up from below made
me catch my breath and gasp.  I had inhaled sulphur.  On the instant
I forgot the Elsinore, the mutineers for'ard, everything save one
thing.

The next I know, I was down the booby-ladder and reeling dizzily
about the big after-room as the sulphur fumes bit my lungs and
strangled me.  By the dim light of a sea-lantern I saw the old
steward, on hands and knees, coughing and gasping, the while he shook
awake Yatsuda, the first sail-maker.  Uchino, the second sail-maker,
still strangled in his sleep.

It struck me that the air might be better nearer the floor, and I
proved it when I dropped on my hands and knees.  I rolled Uchino out
of his blankets with a quick jerk, wrapped the blankets about my
head, face, and mouth, arose to my feet, and dashed for'ard into the
hall.  After a couple of collisions with the wood-work I again
dropped to the floor and rearranged the blankets so that, while my
mouth remained covered, I could draw or withdraw, a thickness across
my eyes.

The pain of the fumes was bad enough, but the real hardship was the
dizziness I suffered.  I blundered into the steward's pantry, and out
of it, missed the cross-hall, stumbled through the next starboard
opening in the long hall, and found myself bent double by violent
collision with the dining-room table.

But I had my bearings.  Feeling my way around the table and bumping
most of the poisoned breath out of me against the rotund-bellied
stove, I emerged in the cross-hall and made my way to starboard.
Here, at the base of the chart-room stairway, I gained the hall that
led aft.  By this time my own situation seemed so serious that,
careless of any collision, I went aft in long leaps.

Margaret's door was open.  I plunged into her room.  The moment I
drew the blanket-thickness from my eyes I knew blindness and a
modicum of what Bert Rhine must have suffered.  Oh, the intolerable
bite of the sulphur in my lungs, nostrils, eyes, and brain!  No light
burned in the room.  I could only strangle and stumble for'ard to
Margaret's bed, upon which I collapsed.

She was not there.  I felt about, and I felt only the warm hollow her
body had left in the under-sheet.  Even in my agony and helplessness
the intimacy of that warmth her body had left was very dear to me.
Between the lack of oxygen in my lungs (due to the blankets), the
pain of the sulphur, and the mortal dizziness in my brain, I felt
that I might well cease there where the linen warmed my hand.

Perhaps I should have ceased, had I not heard a terrible coughing
from along the hall.  It was new life to me.  I fell from bed to
floor and managed to get upright until I gained the hall, where again
I fell.  Thereafter I crawled on hands and knees to the foot of the
stairway.  By means of the newel-post I drew myself upright and
listened.  Near me something moved and strangled.  I fell upon it and
found in my arms all the softness of Margaret.

How describe that battle up the stairway?  It was a crucifixion of
struggle, an age-long nightmare of agony.  Time after time, as my
consciousness blurred, the temptation was upon me to cease all effort
and let myself blur down into the ultimate dark.  I fought my way
step by step.  Margaret was now quite unconscious, and I lifted her
body step by step, or dragged it several steps at a time, and fell
with it, and back with it, and lost much that had been so hardly
gained.  And yet out of it all this I remember:  that warm soft body
of hers was the dearest thing in the world--vastly more dear than the
pleasant land I remotely remembered, than all the books and all the
humans I had ever known, than the deck above, with its sweet pure air
softly blowing under the cool starry sky.

As I look back upon it I am aware of one thing:  the thought of
leaving her there and saving myself never crossed my mind.  The one
place for me was where she was.

Truly, this which I write seems absurd and purple; yet it was not
absurd during those long minutes on the chart-room stairway.  One
must taste death for a few centuries of such agony ere he can receive
sanction for purple passages.

And as I fought my screaming flesh, my reeling brain, and climbed
that upward way, I prayed one prayer:  that the chart-house doors out
upon the poop might not be shut.  Life and death lay right there in
that one point of the issue.  Was there any creature of my creatures
aft with common sense and anticipation sufficient to make him think
to open those doors?  How I yearned for one man, for one proved
henchman, such as Mr. Pike, to be on the poop!  As it was, with the
sole exception of Tom Spink and Buckwheat, my men were Asiatics.

I gained the top of the stairway, but was too far gone to rise to my
feet.  Nor could I rise upright on my knees.  I crawled like any
four-legged animal--nay, I wormed my way like a snake, prone to the
deck.  It was a matter of several feet to the doorway.  I died a
score of times in those several feet; but ever I endured the agony of
resurrection and dragged Margaret with me.  Sometimes the full
strength I could exert did not move her, and I lay with her and
coughed and strangled my way through to another resurrection.

And the door was open.  The doors to starboard and to port were both
open; and as the Elsinore rolled a draught through the chart-house
hall my lungs filled with pure, cool air.  As I drew myself across
the high threshold and pulled Margaret after me, from very far away I
heard the cries of men and the reports of rifle and revolver.  And,
ere I fainted into the blackness, on my side, staring, my pain gone
so beyond endurance that it had achieved its own anaesthesia, I
glimpsed, dream-like and distant, the sharply silhouetted poop-rail,
dark forms that cut and thrust and smote, and, beyond, the mizzen-
mast brightly lighted by our illuminators.


Well, the mutineers failed to take the poop.  My five Asiatics and
two white men had held the citadel while Margaret and I lay
unconscious side by side.

The whole affair was very simple.  Modern maritime quarantine demands
that ships shall not carry vermin that are themselves plague-
carriers.  In the donkey-engine section of the for'ard house is a
complete fumigating apparatus.  The mutineers had merely to lay and
fasten the pipes aft across the coal, to chisel a hole through the
double-deck of steel and wood under the cabin, and to connect up and
begin to pump.  Buckwheat had fallen asleep and been awakened by the
strangling sulphur fumes.  We in the high place had been smoked out
by our rascals like so many rats.

It was Wada who had opened one of the doors.  The old steward had
opened the other.  Together they had attempted the descent of the
stairway and been driven back by the fumes.  Then they had engaged in
the struggle to repel the rush from for'ard.

Margaret and I are agreed that sulphur, excessively inhaled, leaves
the lungs sore.  Only now, after a lapse of a dozen hours, can we
draw breath in anything that resembles comfort.  But still my lungs
were not so sore as to prevent my telling her what I had learned she
meant to me.  And yet she is only a woman--I tell her so; I tell her
that there are at least seven hundred and fifty millions of two-
legged, long-haired, gentle-voiced, soft-bodied, female humans like
her on the planet, and that she is really swamped by the immensity of
numbers of her sex and kind.  But I tell her something more.  I tell
her that of all of them she is the only one.  And, better yet, to
myself and for myself, I believe it.  I know it.  The last least part
of me and all of me proclaims it.

Love IS wonderful.  It is the everlasting and miraculous amazement.
Oh, trust me, I know the old, hard scientific method of weighing and
calculating and classifying love.  It is a profound foolishness, a
cosmic trick and quip, to the contemplative eye of the philosopher--
yes, and of the futurist.  But when one forsakes such intellectual
flesh-pots and becomes mere human and male human, in short, a lover,
then all he may do, and which is what he cannot help doing, is to
yield to the compulsions of being and throw both his arms around love
and hold it closer to him than is his own heart close to him.  This
is the summit of his life, and of man's life.  Higher than this no
man may rise.  The philosophers toil and struggle on mole-hill peaks
far below.  He who has not loved has not tasted the ultimate sweet of
living.  I know.  I love Margaret, a woman.  She is desirable.



CHAPTER L



In the past twenty-four hours many things have happened.  To begin
with, we nearly lost the steward in the second dog-watch last
evening.  Through the slits in the ventilator some man thrust a knife
into the sacks of flour and cut them wide open from top to bottom.
In the dark the flour poured to the deck unobserved.

Of course, the man behind could not see through the screen of empty
sacks, but he took a blind pot-shot at point-blank range when the
steward went by, slip-sloppily dragging the heels of his slippers.
Fortunately it was a miss, but so close a miss was it that his cheek
and neck were burned with powder grains.

At six bells in the first watch came another surprise.  Tom Spink
came to me where I stood guard at the for'ard end of the poop.  His
voice shook as he spoke.

"For the love of God, sir, they've come," he said.

"Who?" I asked sharply.

"Them," he chattered.  "The ones that come aboard off the Horn, sir,
the three drownded sailors.  They're there, aft, sir, the three of
'em, standin' in a row by the wheel."

"How did they get there?"

"Bein' warlocks, they flew, sir.  You didn't see 'm go by you, did
you, sir?"

"No," I admitted.  "They never went by me."

Poor Tom Spink groaned.

"But there are lines aloft there on which they could cross over from
mizzen to jigger," I added.  "Send Wada to me."

When the latter relieved me I went aft.  And there in a row were our
three pale-haired storm-waifs with the topaz eyes.  In the light of a
bull's-eye, held on them by Louis, their eyes never seemed more like
the eyes of great cats.  And, heavens, they purred!  At least, the
inarticulate noises they made sounded more like purring than anything
else.  That these sounds meant friendliness was very evident.  Also,
they held out their hands, palms upward, in unmistakable sign of
peace.  Each in turn doffed his cap and placed my hand for a moment
on his head.  Without doubt this meant their offer of fealty, their
acceptance of me as master.

I nodded my head.  There was nothing to be said to men who purred
like cats, while sign-language in the light of the bull's-eye was
rather difficult.  Tom Spink groaned protest when I told Louis to
take them below and give them blankets.

I made the sleep-sign to them, and they nodded gratefully, hesitated,
then pointed to their mouths and rubbed their stomachs.

"Drowned men do not eat," I laughed to Tom Spink.  "Go down and watch
them.  Feed them up, Louis, all they want.  It's a good sign of short
rations for'ard."

At the end of half an hour Tom Spink was back.

"Well, did they eat?" I challenged him.

But he was unconvinced.  The very quantity they had eaten was a
suspicious thing, and, further, he had heard of a kind of ghost that
devoured dead bodies in graveyards.  Therefore, he concluded, mere
non-eating was no test for a ghost.

The third event of moment occurred this morning at seven o'clock.
The mutineers called for a truce; and when Nosey Murphy, the Maltese
Cockney, and the inevitable Charles Davis stood beneath me on the
main deck, their faces showed lean and drawn.  Famine had been my
great ally.  And in truth, with Margaret beside me in that high place
of the break of the poop, as I looked down on the hungry wretches I
felt very strong.  Never had the inequality of numbers fore and aft
been less than now.  The three deserters, added to our own nine, made
twelve of us, while the mutineers, after subtracting Ditman Olansen,
Bob and the Faun, totalled only an even score.  And of these Bert
Rhine must certainly be in a bad way, while there were many
weaklings, such as Sundry Buyers, Nancy, Larry, and Lars Jacobsen.

"Well, what do you want?" I demanded.  "I haven't much time to waste.
Breakfast is ready and waiting."

Charles Davis started to speak, but I shut him off.

"I'll have nothing out of you, Davis.  At least not now.  Later on,
when I'm in that court of law you've bothered me with for half the
voyage, you'll get your turn at talking.  And when that time comes
don't forget that I shall have a few words to say."

Again he began, but this time was stopped by Nosey Murphy.

"Aw, shut your trap, Davis," the gangster snarled, "or I'll shut it
for you."  He glanced up to me.  "We want to go back to work, that's
what we want."

"Which is not the way to ask for it," I answered.

"Sir," he added hastily.

"That's better," I commented.

"Oh, my God, sir, don't let 'm come aft."  Tom Spink muttered
hurriedly in my ear.  "That'd be the end of all of us.  And even if
they didn't get you an' the rest, they'd heave me over some dark
night.  They ain't never goin' to forgive me, sir, for joinin' in
with the afterguard."

I ignored the interruption and addressed the gangster.

"There's nothing like going to work when you want to as badly as you
seem to.  Suppose all hands get sail on her just to show good
intention."

"We'd like to eat first, sir," he objected.

"I'd like to see you setting sail, first," was my reply.  "And you
may as well get it from me straight that what I like goes, aboard
this ship."--I almost said "hooker."

Nosey Murphy hesitated and looked to the Maltese Cockney for counsel.
The latter debated, as if gauging the measure of his weakness while
he stared aloft at the work involved.  Finally he nodded.

"All right, sir," the gangster spoke up.  "We'll do it . . . but
can't something be cookin' in the galley while we're doin' it?"

I shook my head.

"I didn't have that in mind, and I don't care to change my mind now.
When every sail is stretched and every yard braced, and all that mess
of gear cleared up, food for a good meal will be served out.  You
needn't bother about the spanker nor the mizzen-braces.  We'll make
your work lighter by that much."

In truth, as they climbed aloft they showed how miserably weak they
were.  There were some too feeble to go aloft.  Poor Sundry Buyers
continually pressed his abdomen as he toiled around the deck-
capstans; and never was Nancy's face quite so forlorn as when he
obeyed the Maltese Cockney's command and went up to loose the mizzen-
skysail.

In passing, I must note one delicious miracle that was worked before
our eyes.  They were hoisting the mizzen-upper-topsail-yard by means
of one of the patent deck-capstans.  Although they had reversed the
gear so as to double the purchase, they were having a hard time of
it.  Lars Jacobsen was limping on his twice-broken leg, and with him
were Sundry Buyers, Tony the Greek, Bombini, and Mulligan Jacobs.
Nosey Murphy held the turn.

When they stopped from sheer exhaustion Murphy's glance chanced to
fall on Charles Davis, the one man who had not worked since the
outset of the voyage and who was not working now.

"Bear a hand, Davis," the gangster called.

Margaret gurgled low laughter in my ear as she caught the drift of
the episode.

The sea-lawyer looked at the other in amazement ere he answered:

"I guess not."

After nodding Sundry Buyers over to him to take the turn Murphy
straightened his back and walked close to Davis, then said very
quietly:

"I guess yes."

That was all.  For a space neither spoke.  Davis seemed to be giving
the matter judicial consideration.  The men at the capstan panted,
rested, and looked on--all save Bombini, who slunk across the deck
until he stood at Murphy's shoulder.

Under such circumstances the decision Charles Davis gave was
eminently the right one, although even then he offered a compromise.

"I'll hold the turn," he volunteered.

"You'll lump around one of them capstan-bars," Murphy said.

The sea-lawyer made no mistake.  He knew in all absoluteness that he
was choosing between life and death, and he limped over to the
capstan and found his place.  And as the work started, and as he
toiled around and around the narrow circle, Margaret and I
shamelessly and loudly laughed our approval.  And our own men stole
for'ard along the poop to peer down at the spectacle of Charles Davis
at work.

All of which must have pleased Nosey Murphy, for, as he continued to
hold the turn and coil down, he kept a critical eye on Davis.

"More juice, Davis!" he commanded with abrupt sharpness.

And Davis, with a startle, visibly increased his efforts.

This was too much for our fellows, who, Asiatics and all, applauded
with laughter and hand-clapping.  And what could I do?  It was a gala
day, and our faithful ones deserved some little recompense of
amusement.  So I ignored the breach of discipline and of poop
etiquette by strolling away aft with Margaret.

At the wheel was one of our storm-waifs.  I set the course due east
for Valparaiso, and sent the steward below to bring up sufficient
food for one substantial meal for the mutineers.

"When do we get our next grub, sir?" Nosey Murphy asked, as the
steward served the supplies down to him from the poop.

"At midday," I answered.  "And as long as you and your gang are good,
you'll get your grub three times each day.  You can choose your own
watches any way you please.  But the ship's work must be done, and
done properly.  If it isn't, then the grub stops.  That will do.  Now
go for'ard."

"One thing more, sir," he said quickly.  "Bert Rhine is awful bad.
He can't see, sir.  It looks like he's going to lose his face.  He
can't sleep.  He groans all the time."


It was a busy day.  I made a selection of things from the medicine-
chest for the acid-burned gangster; and, finding that Murphy knew how
to manipulate a hypodermic syringe, entrusted him with one.

Then, too, I practised with the sextant and think I fairly caught the
sun at noon and correctly worked up the observation.  But this is
latitude, and is comparatively easy.  Longitude is more difficult.
But I am reading up on it.

All afternoon a gentle northerly fan of air snored the Elsinore
through the water at a five-knot clip, and our course lay east for
land, for the habitations of men, for the law and order that men
institute whenever they organize into groups.  Once in Valparaiso,
with police flag flying, our mutineers will be taken care of by the
shore authorities.

Another thing I did was to rearrange our watches aft so as to split
up the three storm-visitors.  Margaret took one in her watch, along
with the two sail-makers, Tom Spink, and Louis.  Louis is half white,
and all trustworthy, so that, at all times, on deck or below, he is
told off to the task of never letting the topaz-eyed one out of his
sight.

In my watch are the steward, Buckwheat, Wada, and the other two
topaz-eyed ones.  And to one of them Wada is told off; and to the
other is assigned the steward.  We are not taking any chances.
Always, night and day, on duty or off, these storm-strangers will
have one of our proved men watching them.


Yes; and I tried the stranger men out last evening.  It was after a
council with Margaret.  She was sure, and I agreed with her, that the
men for'ard are not blindly yielding to our bringing them in to be
prisoners in Valparaiso.  As we tried to forecast it, their plan is
to desert the Elsinore in the boats as soon as we fetch up with the
land.  Also, considering some of the bitter lunatic spirits for'ard,
there would be a large chance of their drilling the Elsinore's steel
sides and scuttling her ere they took to the boats.  For scuttling a
ship is surely as ancient a practice as mutiny on the high seas.

So it was, at one in the morning, that I tried out our strangers.
Two of them I took for'ard with me in the raid on the small boats.
One I left beside Margaret, who kept charge of the poop.  On the
other side of him stood the steward with his big hacking knife.  By
signs I had made it clear to him, and to his two comrades who were to
accompany me for'ard, that at the first sign of treachery he would be
killed.  And not only did the old steward, with signs emphatic and
unmistakable, pledge himself to perform the execution, but we were
all convinced that he was eager for the task.

With Margaret I also left Buckwheat and Tom Spink.  Wada, the two
sail-makers, Louis, and the two topaz-eyed ones accompanied me.  In
addition to fighting weapons we were armed with axes.  We crossed the
main deck unobserved, gained the bridge by way of the 'midship-house,
and by way of the bridge gained the top of the for'ard-house.  Here
were the first boats we began work on; but, first of all, I called in
the lookout from the forecastle-head.

He was Mulligan Jacobs; and he picked his way back across the wreck
of the bridge where the fore-topgallant-yard still lay, and came up
to me unafraid, as implacable and bitter as ever.

"Jacobs," I whispered, "you are to stay here beside me until we
finish the job of smashing the boats.  Do you get that?"

"As though it could fright me," he growled all too loudly.  "Go ahead
for all I care.  I know your game.  And I know the game of the hell's
maggots under our feet this minute.  'Tis they that'd desert in the
boats.  'Tis you that'll smash the boats an' jail 'm kit an' crew."

"S-s-s-h," I vainly interpolated.

"What of it?" he went on as loudly as ever.  "They're sleepin' with
full bellies.  The only night watch we keep is the lookout.  Even
Rhine's asleep.  A few jolts of the needle has put a clapper to his
eternal moanin'.  Go on with your work.  Smash the boats.  'Tis
nothin' I care.  'Tis well I know my own crooked back is worth more
to me than the necks of the scum of the world below there."

"If you felt that way, why didn't you join us?" I queried.

"Because I like you no better than them an' not half so well.  They
are what you an' your fathers have made 'em.  An' who in hell are you
an' your fathers?  Robbers of the toil of men.  I like them little.
I like you and your fathers not at all.  Only I like myself and me
crooked back that's a livin' proof there ain't no God and makes
Browning a liar."

"Join us now," I urged, meeting him in his mood.  "It will be easier
for your back."

"To hell with you," was his answer.  "Go ahead an' smash the boats.
You can hang some of them.  But you can't touch me with the law.
'Tis me that's a crippled creature of circumstance, too weak to raise
a hand against any man--a feather blown about by the windy contention
of men strong in their back an' brainless in their heads."

"As you please," I said.

"As I can't help pleasin'," he retorted, "bein' what I am an' so made
for the little flash between the darknesses which men call life.  Now
why couldn't I a-ben a butterfly, or a fat pig in a full trough, or a
mere mortal man with a straight back an' women to love me?  Go on an'
smash the boats.  Play hell to the top of your bent.  Like me, you'll
end in the darkness.  And your darkness'll be--as dark as mine."

"A full belly puts the spunk back into you," I sneered.

"'Tis on an empty belly that the juice of my dislike turns to acid.
Go on an' smash the boats."

"Whose idea was the sulphur?" I asked.

"I'm not tellin' you the man, but I envied him until it showed
failure.  An' whose idea was it--to douse the sulphuric into Rhine's
face?  He'll lose that same face, from the way it's shedding."

"Nor will I tell you," I said.  "Though I will tell you that I am
glad the idea was not mine."

"Oh, well," he muttered cryptically, "different customs on different
ships, as the cook said when he went for'ard to cast off the spanker
sheet."

Not until the job was done and I was back on the poop did I have time
to work out the drift of that last figure in its terms of the sea.
Mulligan Jacobs might have been an artist, a philosophic poet, had he
not been born crooked with a crooked back.

And we smashed the boats.  With axes and sledges it was an easier
task than I had imagined.  On top of both houses we left the boats
masses of splintered wreckage, the topaz-eyed ones working most
energetically; and we regained the poop without a shot being fired.
The forecastle turned out, of course, at our noise, but made no
attempt to interfere with us.

And right here I register another complaint against the sea-
novelists.  A score of men for'ard, desperate all, with desperate
deeds behind them, and jail and the gallows facing them not many days
away, should have only begun to fight.  And yet this score of men did
nothing while we destroyed their last chance for escape.

"But where did they get the grub?" the steward asked me afterwards.

This question he has asked me every day since the first day Mr. Pike
began cudgelling his brains over it.  I wonder, had I asked Mulligan
Jacobs the question, if he would have told me?  At any rate, in court
at Valparaiso that question will be answered.  In the meantime I
suppose I shall submit to having the steward ask me it daily.

"It is murder and mutiny on the high seas," I told them this morning,
when they came aft in a body to complain about the destruction of the
boats and to demand my intentions.

And as I looked down upon the poor wretches from the break of the
poop, standing there in the high place, the vision of my kind down
all its mad, violent, and masterful past was strong upon me.
Already, since our departure from Baltimore, three other men,
masters, had occupied this high place and gone their way--the
Samurai, Mr. Pike, and Mr. Mellaire.  I stood here, fourth, no
seaman, merely a master by the blood of my ancestors; and the work of
the Elsinore in the world went on.

Bert Rhine, his head and face swathed in bandages, stood there
beneath me, and I felt for him a tingle of respect.  He, too, in a
subterranean, ghetto way was master over his rats.  Nosey Murphy and
Kid Twist stood shoulder to shoulder with their stricken gangster
leader.  It was his will, because of his terrible injury, to get in
to land and doctors as quickly as possible.  He preferred taking his
chance in court against the chance of losing his life, or, perhaps,
his eyesight.

The crew was divided against itself; and Isaac Chantz, the Jew, his
wounded shoulder with a hunch to it, seemed to lead the revolt
against the gangsters.  His wound was enough to convict him in any
court, and well he knew it.  Beside him, and at his shoulders,
clustered the Maltese Cockney, Andy Fay, Arthur Deacon, Frank
Fitzgibbon, Richard Giller, and John Hackey.

In another group, still allegiant to the gangsters, were men such as
Shorty, Sorensen, Lars Jacobsen, and Larry.  Charles Davis was
prominently in the gangster group.  A fourth group was composed of
Sundry Buyers, Nancy, and Tony the Greek.  This group was distinctly
neutral.  And, finally, unaffiliated, quite by himself, stood
Mulligan Jacobs--listening, I fancy, to far echoes of ancient wrongs,
and feeling, I doubt not, the bite of the iron-hot hooks in his
brain.

"What are you going to do with us, sir?" Isaac Chantz demanded of me,
in defiance to the gangsters, who were expected to do the talking.

Bert Rhine lurched angrily toward the sound of the Jew's voice.
Chantz's partisans drew closer to him.

"Jail you," I answered from above.  "And it shall go as hard with all
of you as I can make it hard."

"Maybe you will an' maybe you won't," the Jew retorted.

"Shut up, Chantz!" Bert Rhine commanded.

"And you'll get yours, you wop," Chantz snarled, "if I have to do it
myself."

I am afraid that I am not so successfully the man of action that I
have been priding myself on being; for, so curious and interested was
I in observing the moving drama beneath me that for the moment I
failed to glimpse the tragedy into which it was culminating.

"Bombini!" Bert Rhine said.

His voice was imperative.  It was the order of a master to the dog at
heel.  Bombini responded.  He drew his knife and started to advance
upon the Jew.  But a deep rumbling, animal-like in its SOUND and
menace, arose in the throats of those about the Jew.

Bombini hesitated and glanced back across his shoulder at the leader,
whose face he could not see for bandages and who he knew could not
see.

"'Tis a good deed--do it, Bombini," Charles Davis encouraged.

"Shut your face, Davis!" came out from Bert Rhine's bandages.

Kid Twist drew a revolver, shoved the muzzle of it first into
Bombini's side, then covered the men about the Jew.

Really, I felt a momentary twinge of pity for the Italian.  He was
caught between the mill-stones, "Bombini, stick that Jew," Bert Rhine
commanded.

The Italian advanced a step, and, shoulder to shoulder, on either
side, Kid Twist and Nosey Murphy advanced with him.

"I cannot see him," Bert Rhine went on; "but by God I will see him!"

And so speaking, with one single, virile movement he tore away the
bandages.  The toll of pain he must have paid is beyond measurement.
I saw the horror of his face, but the description of it is beyond the
limits of any English I possess.  I was aware that Margaret, at my
shoulder, gasped and shuddered.

"Bombini!--stick him," the gangster repeated.  "And stick any man
that raises a yap.  Murphy!  See that Bombini does his work."

Murphy's knife was out and at the bravo's back.  Kid Twist covered
the Jew's group with his revolver.  And the three advanced.

It was at this moment that I suddenly recollected myself and passed
from dream to action.

"Bombini!" I said sharply.

He paused and looked up.

"Stand where you are," I ordered, "till I do some talking.--Chantz!
Make no mistake.  Rhine is boss for'ard.  You take his orders . . .
until we get into Valparaiso; then you'll take your chances along
with him in jail.  In the meantime, what Rhine says goes.  Get that,
and get it straight.  I am behind Rhine until the police come on
board.--Bombini! do whatever Rhine tells you.  I'll shoot the man who
tries to stop you.--Deacon!  Stand away from Chantz.  Go over to the
fife-rail."

All hands knew the stream of lead my automatic rifle could throw, and
Arthur Deacon knew it.  He hesitated barely a moment, then obeyed.

"Fitzgibbon!--Giller!--Hackey!" I called in turn, and was obeyed.
"Fay!" I called twice, ere the response came.

Isaac Chantz stood alone, and Bombini now showed eagerness.

"Chantz!" I said; "don't you think it would be healthier to go over
to the fife-rail and be good?"

He debated the matter not many seconds, resheathed his knife, and
complied.

The tang of power!  I was minded to let literature get the better of
me and read the rascals a lecture; but thank heaven I had sufficient
proportion and balance to refrain.

"Rhine!" I said.

He turned his corroded face up to me and blinked in an effort to see.

"As long as Chantz takes your orders, leave him alone.  We'll need
every hand to work the ship in.  As for yourself, send Murphy aft in
half an hour and I'll give him the best the medicine-chest affords.
That is all.  Go for'ard."

And they shambled away, beaten and dispirited.

"But that man--his face--what happened to him?" Margaret asked of me.

Sad it is to end love with lies.  Sadder still is it to begin love
with lies.  I had tried to hide this one happening from Margaret, and
I had failed.  It could no longer be hidden save by lying; and so I
told her the truth, told her how and why the gangster had had his
face dashed with sulphuric acid by the old steward who knew white men
and their ways.


There is little more to write.  The mutiny of the Elsinore is over.
The divided crew is ruled by the gangsters, who are as intent on
getting their leader into port as I am intent on getting all of them
into jail.  The first lap of the voyage of the Elsinore draws to a
close.  Two days, at most, with our present sailing, will bring us
into Valparaiso.  And then, as beginning a new voyage, the Elsinore
will depart for Seattle.


One thing more remains for me to write, and then this strange log of
a strange cruise will be complete.  It happened only last night.  I
am yet fresh from it, and athrill with it and with the promise of it.

Margaret and I spent the last hour of the second dog-watch together
at the break of the poop.  It was good again to feel the Elsinore
yielding to the wind-pressure on her canvas, to feel her again
slipping and sliding through the water in an easy sea.

Hidden by the darkness, clasped in each other's arms, we talked love
and love plans.  Nor am I shamed to confess that I was all for
immediacy.  Once in Valparaiso, I contended, we would fit out the
Elsinore with fresh crew and officers and send her on her way.  As
for us, steamers and rapid travelling would fetch us quickly home.
Furthermore, Valparaiso being a place where such things as licences
and ministers obtained, we would be married ere we caught the fast
steamers for home.

But Margaret was obdurate.  The Wests had always stood by their
ships, she urged; had always brought their ships in to the ports
intended or had gone down with their ships in the effort.  The
Elsinore had cleared from Baltimore for Seattle with the Wests in the
high place.  The Elsinore would re-equip with officers and men in
Valparaiso, and the Elsinore would arrive in Seattle with a West
still on board.

"But think, dear heart," I objected.  "The voyage will require
months.  Remember what Henley has said:  'Every kiss we take or give
leaves us less of life to live.'"

She pressed her lips to mine.

"We kiss," she said.

But I was stupid.

"Oh, the weary, weary months," I complained.  "You dear silly," she
gurgled.  "Don't you understand?"

"I understand only that it is many a thousand miles from Valparaiso
to Seattle," I answered.

"You won't understand," she challenged.

"I am a fool," I admitted.  "I am aware of only one thing:  I want
you.  I want you."

"You are a dear, but you are very, very stupid," she said, and as she
spoke she caught my hand and pressed the palm of it against her
cheek.  "What do you feel?" she asked.

"Hot cheeks--cheeks most hot."

"I am blushing for what your stupidity compels me to say," she
explained.  "You have already said that such things as licences and
ministers obtain in Valparaiso . . . and . . . and, well . . . "

"You mean . . . ?"  I stammered.

"Just that," she confirmed.

"The honeymoon shall be on the Elsinore from Valparaiso all the way
to Seattle?" I rattled on.

"The many thousands of miles, the weary, weary months," she teased in
my own intonations, until I stifled her teasing with my lips.





End of Project Gutenberg's The Mutiny of the "Elsinore", by Jack London

