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diff --git a/old/13073.txt b/old/13073.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..446730c --- /dev/null +++ b/old/13073.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7176 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Trunnell, by T. Jenkins Hains + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Mr. Trunnell + +Author: T. Jenkins Hains + +Release Date: August 1, 2004 [EBook #13073] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. TRUNNELL *** + + + + +Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team. + + + + + + + Mr. Trunnell + + Mate of the Ship "Pirate" + + By T. Jenkins Hains + + Author of "The Wind-jammers," "The Wreck of the Conemaugh," etc. + + 1900 + +To _All Hands under the lee of the weather cloth this is inscribed_ + + + + +MR. TRUNNELL + + + + +I + + +By some means, needless to record here, I found myself, not so many years +ago, "on the beach" at Melbourne, in Australia. + +To be on the beach is not an uncommon occurrence for a sailor in any part +of the world; but, since the question is suggested, I will say that I was +not a very dissipated young fellow of twenty-five, for up to that time I +had never even tasted rum in any form, although I had followed the sea +for seven years. + +I had held a mate's berth, and as I did not care to ship before the mast +on the first vessel bound out, I had remained ashore until a threatening +landlord made it necessary for me to become less particular as to +occupation. + +It was a time when mates were plenty and men were few, so I made the +rounds of the shipping houses with little hope of getting a chance to +show my papers. These, together with an old quadrant, a nautical almanac, +a thick pea coat, and a pipe, were all I possessed of this world's goods, +and I carried the quadrant with me in case I should not succeed in +signing on. I could "spout it," if need be, at some broker's, and thus +raise a few dollars. + +As I made my way along the water front, I noticed a fine clipper ship of +nearly two thousand tons lying at a wharf. She was in the hands of a few +riggers, who were sending aloft her canvas, which, being of a snowy +whiteness, proclaimed her nationality even before I could see her hull. +On reaching the wharf where she lay, I stopped and noticed that she was +loaded deep, for her long black sides were under to within four feet of +her main deck in the waist. + +Her high bulwarks shut off my view of her deck; but, from the sounds that +came down from there, I could tell that she was getting in the last of +her cargo. + +I walked to her stern and read her name in gilt letters: "Pirate, of +Philadelphia." Then I remembered her. She was a Yankee ship of evil +reputation, and although I wanted to get back to my home in New York, I +turned away thankful that I was not homeward bound in that craft. She had +come into port a month before and had reported three men missing from her +papers. There were no witnesses; but the sight of the rest of the crew +told the story of the disappearance of their shipmates, and the skipper +had been clapped into jail. I had heard of the ruffian's sinister record +before, and inwardly hoped he would get his deserts for his brutality, +although I knew there was little chance for it. He belonged to the class +of captains that was giving American packets the hard name they were +getting, so I heartily wished him evil. + +As I turned, looking up at the beautiful fabric with her long, tapering, +t'gallant masts, topped with skysail yards fore and aft, and her +tremendous lower yards nearly ninety feet across, I thought what a +splendid ship she was. It made me angry to think of what a place she must +be for the poor devils who would unwittingly ship aboard her. Only a +sailor knows how much of suffering in blows and curses it cost to +accomplish all that clean paint and scraped spar. + +"Kind o' good hooker, hey?" said a voice close aboard me, and looking +quickly aft I saw a man leaning over the taffrail. He was a +strange-looking fellow, with a great hairy face and bushy head set upon +the broadest of shoulders. As for his legs, he appeared not to have any +at all, for the rail was but three feet high and his shoulders just +reached above it; his enormously long arms were spread along the rail, +elbows outward, and his huge hands folded over the bowl of a pipe which +he sucked complacently. + +"Not so bad to look at," I answered, meaningly. + +"She _is_ a brute in a seaway, but she keeps dry at both ends," assented +the fellow, utterly ignoring my meaning. "It's always so with every +hooker if she's deep. Some takes it forrad and aft, and some takes it +amidships. It's all one s'long as she keeps a dry bilge. Come aboard." + +I hesitated, and then climbed up the mizzen channels, which were level +with the wharf. + +"Short handed?" I suggested, reaching the deck. + +"Naw, there's nobody but me an' the doctor in the after guard; we'll get +a crew aboard early in the morning, though; skipper, too, if what they +say is kerrect." + +"Where's the captain?" I asked. + +He looked queerly at me for a moment; then he spread his short legs +wide apart, and thrust his great hands into his trousers pockets +before speaking. + +"Ain't ye never heard? Limbo, man, and a bad job, too." Here he made a +motion with his hand around his neck which I understood. + +"Murder?" + +He nodded. + +I hesitated about staying any longer, and he spoke up. + +"Got a hog-yoke, I see," he said, "Be ye a mate?" + +I told him I had been. + +"Well, sink me, my boy, that's just what I am aboard here, and they'll be +looking for another to match me. I saw what ye were when I first raised +ye coming along the dock, and sez I, ye're just my size, my bully." + +As he could have walked under my arm when extended horizontally, I +saw he had no poor opinion of himself. However, his words conveyed a +ray of hope. + +"Is the mate with the skipper?" I asked. + +"The second mate is, yep; but he won't raise bail. The old man might +though, _quien sabe_? The agents will hail us to-night and settle +matters, for we're on the load line and nigh steved. We can't wait." + +I reflected a moment. Here was a possible chance for a mate's berth, and +perhaps the skipper would not get bail, after all. In that case I thought +I could hardly manage better, for my fear of the little mate was not +overpowering. I was not exactly of a timid nature,--a man seldom rises to +be mate of a deep-water ship who is,--but I always dreaded a brutal +skipper on account of his absolute authority at sea, where there is no +redress. I had once been mixed up in an affair concerning the +disappearance of one, on a China trader--but no matter. The affair in +hand was tempting and I waited developments. + +The little mate saw my course and laid his accordingly. + +"S'pose you come around about knock-off time. The agents will be +along about then--Sauers and Co.; you know them; and I'll fix the +thing for you." + +"All right," I said, and after a little conversation relating to the +merits of various ships, the _Pirate_ in particular, I left and made my +way back to my lodgings. + +I notified my landlord of my proposed voyage, and he was as gracious as +could be expected, at the same time expressing some wonderment at the +suddenness of my good fortune. + +The more I thought of the matter, the more I felt like trying elsewhere +for a berth; but the time flew so rapidly that I found myself on the way +to the ship before my misgivings took too strong hold of me. + +As I turned down the principal thoroughfare, feeling in a more humorous +frame of mind at the many possibilities open to me, I heard a shout. The +sound came from a side street, and I looked to see what it meant. +Through the door of a saloon a man shot head-long as if fired from a +gun. He struck in the gutter and staggered to his feet, where he was +immediately surrounded by the crowd of men that had followed him. This +promised much in the way of diversion, and I stopped to see what hidden +force lurked behind the door of the saloon. As I did so, a short fellow +with a great bushy head emerged, struggling with half a dozen men who +bore down upon him and tried to surround and seize him. The little man's +face was red from exertion and liquor, but when I caught a glimpse of +his great squat nose and huge mouth I had no difficulty in recognizing +my acquaintance on the _Pirate_. He backed rapidly away from his +antagonists, swinging a pair of arms each of which seemed to be fully +half a fathom long while every instant he let out a yell that sounded +like the bellow of a mad bull. Suddenly he turned and made off down the +street at an astonishing pace for one with such short legs, still +letting out a yell at every jump. + +The men who had set upon him hesitated an instant before they realized he +was getting away; then they started after him, shouting and swearing at a +great rate. He was up to me in an instant, and as he dashed by I narrowly +missed a clip from his hand, which he swung viciously at me as he passed. +I saw in a moment he couldn't escape at the rate he was moving, in spite +of his tremendous exertions, so I stepped aside to watch him as the crowd +rushed past in pursuit. + +The little mate's legs were working like the flying pistons of a +locomotive, and his bush hair and beard were streaming aft in the breeze +as he neared the corner. Suddenly he stopped, turned about, and dashed +right into the foremost of the crowd, letting out a screech and swinging +his long arms. + +"Git out th' way! Th' devil's broke loose an's comin' for ye," he +howled as he sent the foremost man to the pavement. "Don't stop me. I +ain't got no time to stop. Don't stop a little bumpkin buster what's +got business in both hands. Stand away, or I'll run ye down and sink +ye," and he tore through the men, who grabbed him and grappled to get +him down. In a second he was going up the street again in exactly the +opposite direction, having hurled over or dashed aside the fellows who +had seized him. + +"Soo--oo--a-y!" he bellowed as he passed. Then he rushed to a doorway +where stood a boy's bicycle. He jumped upon the saddle with another yell +as he pushed the machine before him, and the next instant was whirling +down the thoroughfare with the rapidity of an express train, bawling for +people to "Stand clear!" In another moment he was out of sight, in a +cloud of dust, and his yells fell to a drone in the distance. + +I was in no hurry to get down to the dock, so I strolled around the +streets for some time. Then, thinking that the little mate had about run +himself out, I made my way to the wharf where the _Pirate_ lay. + +As I drew near the ship, I was aware of a bushy head above her port +quarter-rail, and in a moment the little mate, Trunnell, looked over and +hailed me. He was smoking so composedly and appeared so cool and +satisfied that I could hardly believe it was the same man I had seen +running amuck but an hour before. + +"Have a good ride?" I asked. + +"So, so; 'twas a bit of a thing to do, though I ain't never rid one of +them things afore. They wanted me to cough up stuff for the whole crowd. +But nary a cough. One or two drinks is about all I can stand; so when I +feels good ye don't want to persuade me over much. Come aboard." + +He led me below, where we were joined by the "doctor," a good-looking +negro, who, having washed up his few dishes and put out the fire in his +galley, came aft and assumed an importance in keeping with a cook of an +American clipper ship. + +We sat in the forward cabin and chatted for a few minutes, becoming +better acquainted, and I must say they both acquitted themselves very +creditably for members of the after guard of that notorious vessel. But I +had learned long ago that there were good men on all ships, and I was not +more than ordinarily surprised at my reception. + +The forward cabin was arranged as on all American ships of large +tonnage,--that is, with the house built upon the main deck, the forward +end of which was a passage athwartships to enable one to get out from +either side when the vessel was heeled over at a sharp angle. Next came +the mates' rooms on either side of two alleyways leading into the forward +saloon, and between the alleyways were closets and lockers. The saloon +was quite large and had a table fastened to the floor in the centre, +where we now sat and awaited the appearance of the agents. Aft of this +saloon, and separated from it by a bulkhead, was the captain's cabin and +the staterooms for whatever passengers the ship might carry. + +While we were talking I heard a hail. Mr. Trunnell, the mate, instantly +jumped to his feet and sprang up the companionway aft, his short, stout +legs curving well outward, and giving him the rolling motion often +noticed in short sailors. In a moment there were sounds of footsteps on +deck, and several men started down the companionway. + +The first that reached the cabin deck was a large man with a flowing +beard and sharp eyes which took in every object in the cabin at a +glance. He came into the forward saloon, and the "doctor" stood up to +receive him. He took no notice of the cook, however, but looked sharply +at me. Then the mate came in with two other men who showed in a hundred +ways that they were captains of sailing ships. The large man addressed +one of these. He was a short, stout man with sandy hair; he wore thin +gold earrings, and his sun-bronzed face showed that he had but recently +come ashore. + +"If you don't want to take her out, Cole," said the large man, roughly, +"say so and be done with it. I can get Thompson." + +"There's nothing in it without the freight money. Halve it and +it's a go." + +"Andrews has the whole of it according to contract." + +"But he's jugged." + +"He'll need it all the more," put in the other captain, who was one of +the agents. "Colonel Fermoy has put the rate as high as he can." + +"I'm sorry, colonel," said the stout skipper, turning to the large man. +"Halve or nothing." + +"All right, then, nothing. Mr. Trunnell," he continued, turning to the +mate, "Captain Cole will not take you out in the morning as he promised. +I'll send Captain Thompson along this evening, or the first thing in the +morning. I suppose you know him, so it won't be necessary for me to come +down again. Is this your mate?" And he looked at me. + +"Yessir, that's him," said Mr. Trunnell. + +"Got your papers with you?" asked the colonel. + +I pulled them out of my pocket and laid them upon the table. He glanced +at them a moment and then returned them. + +"All right; get your dunnage aboard this evening and report at the office +at nine o'clock to-night. Eight pounds, hey?" + +I almost gasped. Eight pounds for second mate! Five was the rule. + +"Aye, aye, sir," I answered. + +"Done. Bear a hand, Mr. Trunnell. Jenkinson will have a crew at five in +the morning. Good night." And he turned and left, followed by all except +the "doctor," who remained with me until they were ashore. Mr. Trunnell +came aboard again in a few minutes, and after thanking him for getting me +the job I left the ship and went to attend to my affairs before clearing. + +I had my "dunnage" sent aboard and then stopped at the office and signed +on. After that, the night being young, I strolled along the more +frequented streets and said farewell to my few acquaintances. + +I arrived at the ship before midnight and found the only man there to be +the watchman. Trunnell and the "doctor" had gone uptown, he said, for a +last look around. I turned in at the bottom of an empty berth in one of +the staterooms and waited for the after guard to turn to. + +The mate came aboard about three in the morning, and as there was much to +do, he stuck his head into a bucket of water and tried to get clear of +the effects of the bad liquor he had taken. The "doctor" followed a +little later, and fell asleep on the cabin floor. + +"Has the old man turned up?" asked the mate, bawling into my resting +place and rousing me. + +"Haven't seen any one come aboard," I answered. + +"Well, I reckon he'll be alongside in a few minutes; so you better stand +by for a call." + +While he spoke, the watchman on deck hailed some one, and a moment later +a steady tramp sounded along the main deck, and a man came through the +port door and into the alleyway. + +He hesitated for an instant, while a young man with rosy cheeks and +light curly hair followed through the door and halted alongside the +first comer. + +The stranger was tall and slender, with a long face, and high, sharp +features, his nose curving like a parrot's beak over a heavy dark +mustache. His face was pale and his skin had the clear look of a man who +never is exposed to the sun. But his eyes were the objects that attracted +my gaze. They were bright as steel points and looked out from under +heavy, straight brows with a quick, restless motion I had observed to +belong to men used to sudden and desperate resolves. He advanced into the +cabin and scrutinized the surroundings carefully before speaking. + +"I suppose you are Mr. Trunnell," he said to me, for I had now arisen and +stood in the doorway of the stateroom. His voice was low and distinct, +and I noticed it was not unpleasant. + +"I have that honor," said the little mate, with drunken gravity, sobering +quickly, however, under the stranger's look. + +"There are no passengers?" asked the man, as the younger companion opened +the door leading into the captain's cabin and gazed within. + +"Not a bleeding one, and I'm not sorry for that," said Trunnell; "the old +man wasn't built exactly on passenger lines." + +"You wouldn't take a couple, then, say for a good snug sum?" + +"Well, that's the old man's lay, and I can't say as to the why and +wherefore. He'll probably be along in an hour or two at best, for the tug +will be alongside in a few minutes. We're cleared, and we'll get to sea +as soon as the bloody crimp gets the bleeding windjammers aboard. They +ought to be along presently." + +"Em-m-m," said the man, and stroked his chin thoughtfully. "He'll be +along shortly, will he,--and you are all ready. I think I can hear the +tug coming now, hey? Isn't that it?" + +"S'pose so," answered the mate. + +"Well, just let me insinuate to you politely, my boy, that the sooner you +clear, the better;" his voice was low and full of meaning, and he leaned +toward the mate in a menacing manner; "and if I have to speak to you more +than once, my little friend, you will find out the kind of man Captain +Thompson is. Can you rise to that?" + +Trunnell shrank from the stranger's look, for he stuck his face right +into the mate's, and as he finished he raised his voice to its full +volume. The liquor was still in the stout little fellow's head, and he +drew back one of his long arms as if about to strike; then quickly +recovering himself, he scratched his head and stepped back a pace. + +"How the bleeding thunder could I tell you were Captain Thompson, when +you come aboard here and ask for a passage?" he demanded. "I meant no +disrespect. Not a bit. No, sir, not a bloody bit. I'm here for further +orders. Yessir, I'm here for further orders and nothin' else. Sing out +and I go." + +It was plain that the little bushy-headed fellow was not afraid, for he +squared his broad shoulders and stood at attention like a man who has +dealt with desperate men and knew how to get along with them. At the same +time he knew his position and was careful not to go too far. He was +evidently disturbed, however, for the little thin silver rings in his +ears shook from either nervousness or the effects of liquor. + +The tall man looked keenly at him, and appeared to think. Then he +smiled broadly. + +"Well, you are a clever little chap, Trunnell," he said; "but for +discernment I don't think you'd lay a very straight course, hey? isn't +that it? Not a very straight course. But with my help I reckon we'll +navigate this ship all right. Who's this?" and he turned toward me. + +"That's Mr. Rolling, the second mate. Didn't you meet him at the office? +He was there only a couple of hours ago. Just signed on this evening." + +"Ah, yes, I see. A new hand, hey? Well, Mr. Rolling, I suppose you know +what's expected of you. I don't interfere with my mates after I get to +sea. Can you locate the ship and reckon her course?" + +I told him I could; and although I did not like the unnautical way this +stranger had about him, I was glad to hear that he did not interfere with +his mates. If he were some hard skipper the agents had taken at a pinch, +it was just as well for him to keep to himself aft, and let his mates +stand watch as they should on every high-class ship. The young man, or +rather boy, who had come aboard with him, looked at me curiously with a +pair of bright blue eyes, while the captain spoke, and appeared to enjoy +the interrogation, for he smiled pleasantly. + +"Everything is all ready, as I see," the captain continued. "So I'll go +to bed awhile until my things come aboard. This young man will be third +mate, Mr. Trunnell, and I'll put him under your care. He will go ashore +now and see to the trunks. But let me know the minute the crew come down, +for I won't wait for anything after that. You can let the tug take the +line and be ready to pull us out." + +Then the skipper went into the captain's cabin, and we saw him no more +for several hours. The young man went back up town, and half an hour +later returned with a cab containing a trunk, which was put in the +after-cabin. The skipper heard the noise and bade them not reawaken him +under any circumstances until the ship was well out at sea. + +"If I have to get up and see to our leaving, some one will be sorry for +it," he said, in his menacing voice, and Mr. Trunnell was quite content +to leave him alone. + +At five in the morning the boarding master brought down the men, and a +sorry lot of sailors they were. They counted nineteen all told, and half +of them could not speak English. I went among them and searched their +dunnage for liquor and weapons, and after finding plenty of both, I +bundled the entire outfit into the forecastle and let them sort it the +best they could, with the result that they all struck a fair average in +the way of clothes. Those who were too drunk to be of any use I let +alone, and they made a dirty mess of the clean forecastle. The rest I +turned to with some energy and soon had our towing gear overhauled. + +There was now a considerable crowd collecting on the dock to watch the +ship clear, and as it was still too dark to see objects distinctly, I +couldn't tell what was taking place in the waist, for I had to attend +sharply to the work on the topgallant forecastle. Mr. Trunnell bawled for +the tug to pull away, and the ship started to leave the dock. + +At that instant a man rushed through the crowd and sprang upon the rail +amidships, where, seizing some of the running rigging, he let himself +down to the main deck. He looked aft at Mr. Trunnell, and then seeing +that the mate had command of the ship, he looked into the forward cabin +and came to where I stood bawling out orders to the men who were passing +the tow-line outside the rigging. I called to him and asked who he was +and what he wanted, and he told me quickly that he was the twentieth man +of the crew and had almost got left. + +"What?" I asked; "after getting your advance money?" And I smiled as I +thought of his chance of getting away without being caught. + +"I never welsh, sir," he replied, "and as I signed on, so will I work. I +never skinned a ship yet out of sixpence." + +"Most remarkable," I sneered; but the fellow had such a frank, open face +that I felt sorry afterward. He was a young man and had probably not +learned enough about ships to have such delicate scruples. He had a +smooth face and looked intelligent, although it was evident that he was +not much of a sailor. + +"Well, don't stand gaping. Get to work and show what you are made of. +Stow those slops of yours and get into a jumper quick. Where's your bag?" +I continued. + +"I haven't any." + +"Well, lay up there and help loose the maintopsail. Don't stand here." + +He looked bewildered for a moment and then started up the fore rigging. + +"Here, you blazing idiot," I bawled. "What are you about? Don't you know +one end of a ship from another?" + +The fellow came to me and spoke in a low voice. + +"I have never shipped before the mast--only as cook, or steward," he +said. + +"Well, you infernal beggar, do you mean to say that you've passed +yourself off as a seaman or sailor here?" I cried. + +He nodded. + +"Then, blast you, if I don't make a sailor of you before you get clear of +the ship," I said with some emphasis; for the idea of all hands being +incapable made me angry, as the ship would be dependent entirely upon the +sailors aboard, until we had taught the landsmen something. The whole +outfit was such a scurvy lot it made me sick to think of what would +happen if it should come on to blow suddenly and we had to shorten down +to reefed topsails. The _Pirate_ had double topsail yards fore and aft +and all the modern improvements for handling canvas; but her yards were +tremendous, and to lift either of her courses on the yards would take not +less than half a dozen men even in good weather. + +The fellow hung about while I dressed him down and told him about what a +worthless specimen of humanity he was. Finally I sent him aft to help +where he could, and he lent a hand at the braces in the waist under the +direction of Mr. Trunnell, who stood on the break of the poop, with the +young third mate beside him, and gave his orders utterly oblivious to the +boy's presence. + +In a short time we made an offing, and as the pilot was on the tug, we +had only to let go the line and stand away on our course. The t'gallant +yards were sent up, then the royals sheeted home, and by dint of great +effort and plenty of bawling we got the canvas on her fore and aft and +trimmed the yards so as to make each one look as if at odds with its +fellows, but yet enough to make a fair wind of the gentle southerly +breeze. Then we let go the tow-line and stood to the westward, while the +little tug gave a parting whistle and went heading away into the rising +sun astern. + + + + +II + + +I will say now that when I look back on that morning it is evident there +was a lack of discipline or command on board the _Pirate_; but at the +time it did not appear to me to be the fact, because the lack of +discipline was not apparent in my watch. Trunnell and I divided up the +men between us, and I believe I laid down the law pretty plain to the +Dagos and Swedes who fell to my lot. They couldn't understand much of +what I said, but they could tell something of my meaning when I held up a +rope's-end and belaying-pin before their eyes and made certain +significant gestures in regard to their manipulation. This may strike the +landsman as unnecessary and somewhat brutal; but, before he passes +judgment, he should try to take care of a lot of men who are, for a part, +a little lower than beasts. + +If a man can understand the language you use, he can sometimes be made to +pay attention if he has the right kind of men over him, but when he +cannot understand and goes to sea with the certain knowledge he is on a +hard ship and will probably come to blows in a few minutes, he must have +some ocular demonstration of what is coming if he doesn't jump when a +mate sings out to him. Often the safety of the entire ship depends upon +the quickness with which an order can be carried out, and a man must not +hang back when the danger is deadly. He must do as he is told, instantly +and without question; if he gets killed--why, there is no great loss, for +any owner or skipper can get a crew aboard at any of the large ports of +trade. Of course, if he takes a different point of view, the only thing +for him to do is to stay on the beach. He must not ship on a sailing +packet that is carrying twenty percent more freight than the law allows +and is getting from three to four dollars a ton for carrying it some ten +or fifteen thousand miles over every kind of ocean between the frigid +zones. My men were surly enough, perhaps because they had heard what kind +of treatment they should expect; so after I had told them what they must +do, I bade them go below and straighten out their dunnage. + +Mr. Trunnell, after separating his men from mine, cursed them +individually and collectively as everything he could think of, and only +stopped to scratch his big bushy head to figure out some new +condemnations. While doing this he saw me coming from the port side, and +forthwith he told me to take charge of the ship, as he was dead beat out +and would have to soak his head again before coming on watch. He smelled +horribly of stale liquor, and his eyes were bloodshot. I thought he would +be just as well off below, so I made no protest against taking command. + +"Ye see, I never am used to it," he said, with a grin. "I can't drink +nothin'. Stave me, Rollins, but the first thing I'll be running foul of +some of these Dagos, and I don't want a fracas until I see the lay of the +old man. He's a queer one for sure, hey? Did you ever see a skipper with +such a look? Sech bleeding eyes--an' nose, hey? Like the beak of an old +albatross. He hasn't come out to lay the course yet, but let her go. +She'll head within half a point of what she's doin' now. Sink me, but I +don't believe there's three bloomin' beggars in my watch as can steer the +craft, and she's got a new wheel gear on her too. Call me if the old man +comes on deck." As he finished he staggered into the door of the forward +cabin and made for his room, leaving me in command. + +I went aft and saw the lubber's mark holding on west by south, and after +being satisfied that the man steering could tell port from starboard, I +climbed the steps to the poop and took a good look around. It was a +beautiful morning and the sun shone brightly over our quarter-rail. The +land behind us stood boldly outlined against the sky, and the lumpy +clouds above were rosy with sunlight. + +The air was cool, but not too sharp for comfort; the breeze from the +southward blew steadily and just sent the tops of the waves to foam, here +and there, like white stars appearing and disappearing on the expanse to +windward. The _Pirate_ lay along on the port tack, and with her skysails +to her trucks she made a beautiful sight. Her canvas was snowy white, +showing that no money had been spared on her sails. Her spars were all +painted or scraped and her standing rigging tarred down to a beautiful +blackness. Only on deck and among the ropes of her running gear was shown +that sign of untidiness which distinguishes the merchant vessel from the +man-of-war. + +I managed to get some hands to work on the braces, and finally got the +yards trimmed shipshape and in the American fashion. That was, with the +lower yards sharp on the back-stays, the topsails a little further aft, +the t'gallant a little further still, until the main-skysail was almost +touching with its weather leach cutting into the breeze a point or more +forward of the weather beam. The fore and aft canvas was trimmed well, +and the outer jibs lifted the ship along at a slapping rate. She was +evidently fast in spite of her load, and I looked over the side at the +foam that was seething past the lee channels in swirls and eddies which +gave forth a cheerful hissing sound as they slipped aft at the rate of +six knots an hour. The man at the wheel held her easily, and that was a +blessing; for nothing is much worse for a mate's discomfort than a wild +ship sheering from side to side leaving a wake like the path of some +monstrous snake. + +When I looked again on the main deck I saw the figure of a man whom I +failed to recognize as a member of the ship's company. He was standing +near the opening of the after-hatchway, which had not yet been battened +down, and his gaze was fixed upon me. He was a broad-shouldered fellow, +about the average height, and was dressed in a tight-fitting black coat +which reached to his knees. On his head was a skull cap with a long +tassel hanging down from its top, and in his mouth was a handsome +meerschaum pipe, which hung down by its stem to the middle of his breast. +His beard was long and just turning gray, and his eyebrows were heavy and +prominent. + +I stood staring at the figure, and I must say I never saw a more +brutal expression upon a man's face. His large mouth and thick lips +appeared to wear a sneering smile, while his eyes twinkled with +undisguised amusement. His nose was large and flat like a Hottentot's, +and while I gazed at him in astonishment, he raised it in the air and +gave forth a snort which apparently meant that he was well satisfied +with the way affairs were being carried on aboard the ship and he was +consequently amused. + +"Here! you man; what the deuce are you doing aboard here?" I asked as I +advanced to the break of the poop and stared down at him. He gave another +snort, and looked at me with undisguised contempt, but disdained to +answer and turned away, going to the lee rail and expectorating over the +side. Then he came slowly back across the main deck, while my spleen rose +at his superior indifference. I have always been a man of the people, and +have fought my way along to whatever position I have held on the +comprehensive rule of give and take. Nothing is so offensive to me as the +assumption of superiority when backed solely by a man's own conception of +his value. Therefore it was in no pleasant tone that I addressed the +stranger on his return to the deck beneath me. + +"My fine cock," said I, "if you haven't a tongue, you probably have ears, +and if you don't want them to feel like the grate-bars of the galley +stove, you'll do well to sing out when I speak. Can you rise to that?" + +The man looked me squarely in the eyes, and I never saw such a fiendish +expression come into a human face as that which gathered in his. "You +infernal, impudent--" he began; and here for a moment followed a string +of foul oaths from the man's lips, while he passed his hand behind his +back and drew forth a long knife. Then without a moment's further +hesitation he sprang up the steps to the poop. + +The fiendishness of the attack took me off my guard, for I was not +prepared for such a serious fracas during the first half hour in command +of the deck; but I saw there was little time to lose. There were no +belaying-pins handy, so the thing for me was to get in as close as +possible and get the fellow's knife. + +As he came up the steps, I rushed for him and kicked out with all my +strength, when his face was level with my knees. The toe of my heavy shoe +caught him solidly in the neck, and he went over backward almost in a +complete somersault, landing with a crash upon the main deck just outside +the window of Mr. Trunnell's room. He was stunned by the fall, and I +hastened down to seize him before he could recover. Just as I gained the +main deck, however, he gave a snort and started to his feet. Then he let +out a yell like a madman and closed with me, my right hand luckily +reaching his wrist below the knife. + +It was up and down, and all over the deck for a time, the men crowding +aft around us, but fearing to take a hand. The fellow had enormous +strength, and the way he made that knife hand jump and twist gave me all +I could do to keep fast to it. Soon I found I was losing ground, and he +noted the fact, exerting himself more and more as he found me failing. +Then it dawned upon me that I was in a bad fix, and I tried to think +quickly for some means to save myself. In another mad struggle he would +wrench himself clear, and his ugly look told me plainly how much mercy I +could expect. I gave one last despairing grip on his wrist as he tore +wildly about, and then I felt his arm slip clear of my fingers, and I +waited for the stroke with my left arm drawn up to stop its force as far +as possible. I could almost feel the sting of the steel in my tense +nerves, when something suddenly caught me around the middle and pressed +me with great force against my enemy. His face was almost against mine, +but his arms were pinioned to his sides, powerless, and then I was aware +that we both were encircled by the ape-like arms of the mate, Mr. +Trunnell. How the little fellow held on was a marvel. He braced his short +legs wide apart, and giving a hug that almost took the breath out of me, +bawled lustily for some man to pass a lashing. + +Suddenly a man rushed aft and passed a line around the stranger, and I +saw that the young landlubber to whom, earlier in the morning, I had been +so harsh was a man to be depended on. The young fellow tied my enemy up +in short order, although the knots he used would not have done any credit +to a sailor. But I was more than thankful when I had a chance to wring +the long knife out of the murderous stranger's hand, and I spoke out to +the smooth-faced fellow. "You'll do, my boy, even if you don't know a +yard from a main-brace bumpkin. Pass a line around his legs and stuff a +swab into his mouth if he don't stop swearing." + +"Steady," said Trunnell, "none of that," as the swab was being brought +up. "But, Captain Andrews, if you don't belay your tongue we'll have to +do something." And the little mate squared his shoulders, and gazed +calmly down upon the prostrate stranger who foamed at the mouth with +impotent fury. + +"So," I said, "this is the ruffian who jumped his bail and is aboard here +on the sneak? I reckon we'll tack ship and stand back again to put him +where he belongs." + +I was breathing heavily from the fight, and stood leaning against the +cabin to recover, while Mr. Trunnell and the fellow Jim, who had helped +tie the skipper up, appeared to be in doubt how to proceed. The noise of +the scuffle and our conversation had aroused the captain in the cabin, +and as I finished speaking he came to the break of the poop and looked +down on the main deck. I was aware of his hooked nose and strange, +glinting eyes almost before I turned, as he spoke. He placed his foot +upon the rail and gave a dry cough. + +"I reckon there ain't any call to tack ship," he said slowly; "a pair of +irons'll do the rest. Jest clap them on him, hand and foot, Mr. Rolling, +and then rivet him to the deck away up forrads. If he don't stow that +bazoo of his, you might ram the end of a handspike in his mouth and see +if he'll bite." + +"Who are you, you molly-hawk, to give orders aboard here?" roared +Andrews, from where he lay on deck. "What's happened, Trunnell, when a +swivel-eyed idiot with a beak like an albatross stands on the poop and +talks to me like this?" + +"He's Captain Thompson, in command, owing to the little--the little +fracas you was mixed into last v'yage. We didn't exactly expect to have +ye this trip, sir," said the mate. + +"Well, I'm here, ain't I? Sing out, can't you see me? Has your hair +struck in and tickled your brain so you don't know who's boss aboard +here? Who's this galoot you've just kept from being ripped to ribbons? +I'll settle matters with you later on for meddling in this affair, you +kelp-haired sea-pig. Sink you, Trunnell; I never expected you to turn +rusty like the miserable swab you are." + +"Don't you think it would be best to stand away for port again, sir?" +said the fellow Jim, looking sharply at the skipper on the poop as he +spoke, and then to myself and Trunnell. + +"We don't keer for your suggestions, young feller," said the skipper, +leaning over the rail above us. "When there's any orders to be given, +I'll attend to matters myself." He spoke in a low, even tone, and his +eyes seemed to focus to two sharp, bright points at the sailor, making +his great beak-like nose more prominent. + +"Cast me adrift, Trunnell," commanded the ruffian Andrews, with an oath. +"I'm a-going to kill that lubber you've got for mate anyhow, and it might +as well be done at once as any other time. We'll settle the matter about +who's skipper afterward." + +"I hears ye well enough, Cap'n Andrews," said Trunnell; "but I ain't +eggzactly clear in my mind as to how ye have authority aboard. If I was, +I'd cast ye adrift in spite o' the whole crowd, an' ye could rip an' cut +to your bloody heart's content. Ye know I'd back ye if 'twas all right +and proper; but I never disobeyed an order yet, and stave me, I never +will. I don't care who gives it so long as he has the right." + +"Spoken like a man an' a sailor," came the sudden sharp tones of the +skipper on the poop; and as I looked, the skipper drew forth a watch in +one hand and a long revolver in the other, which clicked to readiness as +it came in a line between his eye and the body of Andrews. "You have just +a few seconds less than a minute to get that fellow forrads and out of +the way," he said slowly, as if counting his words. I made no movement to +drag the ruffian away, for at that minute I would have offered no +objection whatever to seeing the skipper make a target of him; but +Trunnell and the sailor Jim instantly seized Andrews, while he cursed the +captain and dared him shoot. He struggled vainly to get free of his +lashings, but the little bushy-headed mate tucked him under his arm, +while Jim took his feet, and the crowd of gaping men broke away as they +went forward. + + + + +III + + +After I had recovered from my somewhat violent exertions, and bound up +the slight cut that Andrews had made in my hand with his knife, eight +bells had struck, and the steward brought aft the cabin hash. The skipper +went below, and Trunnell and I followed. + +Captain Thompson seated himself at the head of the table and signed for +us to take our places; then it suddenly occurred to me that I was only +second mate, and consequently did not rate the captain's table. Trunnell +noticed my hesitation, but said nothing, and the skipper fell to with +such a hearty good will that he appeared to entirely forget my presence. +I hastily made some excuse to get back on deck, and the little, +bushy-headed mate smiled and nodded approvingly at me as I went up the +alleyway forward. I was much pleased at this delicate hint on his part, +for many mates would have made uncalled-for remarks at such a blunder. It +showed me that the little giant who could keep me from being carved to +rat-line stuff could be civil also. + +I was much taken with him owing to what had happened, and I looked down +at him as he ate, for I could see him very well as I stood near the +mizzen on the port side of the cabin skylight. The glass of the hatch was +raised to let the cabin air, and I watched the bushy head beneath, with +its aggressive beard bending over the dirty table-cloth. The large squat +nose seemed to sniff the good grub as the steward served the fresh beef, +and Trunnell made ready with his knife. + +He laid the blade on his plate and heaped several large chunks of the +meat and potatoes upon it. Then he dropped his chin and seemed to shut +his eyes as he carefully conveyed the load to his mouth, drawing the +steel quickly through his thick lips without spilling more than a +commensurate amount of the stuff upon his beard, and injuring himself in +no way whatever. The quick jerk with which he slipped the steel clear so +as to have it ready for another load made me a trifle nervous; but it was +evident that he was not a novice at eating. Indeed, the skipper appeared +to admire his dexterity, for I saw his small, glinting eyes look sharply +from the little fellow to the boyish third officer who sat to starboard. + +"Never had no call for a fork, eh?" said he, after watching the mate +apparently come within an inch of cutting his head in two. + +"Nope," said Trunnell. + +They ate in silence for some minutes. + +"I like to see a fellow what can make out with the fewest tools. Tools +are good enough for mechanics; a bit an' a bar'll do for a man. Ever been +to New York?" + +"Nope," said Trunnell. + +There was a moment's silence. + +"I might 'a' knowed that," said the skipper, as if to himself. + +Trunnell appeared to sniff sarcasm. + +"Oh, I've been to one or two places in my time," said he. "There ain't +nothin' remarkable about New York except the animals, and I don't keer +fer those." + +"Whatchermean?" + +"Oh, I was closte into the beach off Sandy Hook onct when we was tryin' +to get to the south'ard, an' I see an eliphint about a hundred feet high +on the island acrost the bay. There was a feller aboard as said they had +cows there just as big what give milk. I wouldn't have believed him, but +fer the fact that there ware the eliphint before my eyes." + +"Stuffed, man,--he was stuffed," explained the captain. + +"Stuffed or no; there he ware," persisted Trunnell. "He would 'a' been no +bigger stuffed than alive. 'Tain't likely they could 'a' stretched his +hide more'n a foot." + +The skipper gave the third mate a sly look, and his nose worked busily +like a parrot's beak for a few minutes. + +"You believe lots o' things, eh?" said he, while his nose worked and +wrinkled in amusement. + +"I believe in pretty much all I sees an' some little I hears," said +Trunnell, dryly. + +"'Specially in eliphints, eh?--a hundred feet high?" + +"But not in argufying over facts," retorted Trunnell. "No, sink me, when +I finds I'm argufying agin the world,--agin facts,--I tries to give in +some and let the world get the best o' the argument. I've opinions the +same as you have, but when they don't agree with the rest o' the world, +do I go snortin' around a-tryin' to show how the world is wrong an' I am +right? Sink me if I do. No, I tries to let the other fellow have a show. +I may be right, but if I sees the world is agin me, I--" + +"Right ye are, Trunnell. Spoken O.K." said the skipper. "I like to see a +man what believes in a few things--even if they's eliphints. What do you +think of the fellow forrads? Do you believe in him to any extent?" + +The third mate appeared much amused at the conversation, but did not +speak. He was a remarkably good-looking young fellow, and I noted the +fact at the time. + +Trunnell did not answer the last remark, but held himself very straight +in his chair. + +"Do you believe much in the fellow who was skipper, especially after his +tryin' to carve Mr. Rolling?" + +"I believe him a good sailor," said Trunnell, stiffening up. + +"Ye don't say?" said the skipper. + +"I never critisizez my officers," said Trunnell; and after that the +skipper let him alone. + +I was pleased with Trunnell. His philosophy was all right, and I believed +from that time he was an honest man. Things began to look a little +brighter, and in spite of an aversion to the skipper which had begun to +creep upon me, I now saw that he was an observing fellow, and was quick +to know the value of men. I didn't like his allusion to a bit and bar for +a man, but thought little about the matter. In a short time Trunnell +relieved me, and I went below with the carpenter and steward to our mess. + +The carpenter was a young Irishman, shipped for the first time. This was +the first time I had been to sea with a ship carpenter who was not either +a Russian, a Finn, or a Swede. The steward was a little mulatto, who +announced, as he sat down, after bringing in the hash, that he was bloody +glad he was an Englishman, and looked at me for approval. + +This was to show that he did not approve of the scene he had witnessed on +the main deck in the morning, and I accepted it as a token of friendship. + +"'Tis cold th' owld man thinks it is, whin he has th' skylight wide +open," said Chips, looking up at the form of Trunnell, who stood on the +poop. There was a strange light in the young fellow's eye as he spoke, as +if he wished to impart some information, and had not quite determined +upon the time and place. I took the hint and smiled knowingly, and then +glanced askance at the steward. + +"Faith, he's all right," blurted out Chips; "his skin is a little off th' +color av roses, but his heart is white. We're wid ye, see?" + +"With me for what?" I asked. + +"Anything," he replied. "To go back, to go ahead. There's a fellow +forrads who says go back while ye may." + +"An' it's bloody good advice," said the steward, in a low tone. + +"I'm not exactly in command aboard here," I said. + +"D'ye know who is?" asked Chips. + +"His name is Thompson, I believe," I answered coldly, for I did not +approve of this sudden criticism of the skipper, much as I disliked +his style. + +"See here, mate, ye needn't think we're fer sayin' agin the old man, so +hark ye, don't take it hard like. Did ye iver hear tell av a sailorman +a-callin' a line a 'rope' or a bloomin' hooker like this a 'boat'? No, +sir, ye can lay to it he's niver had a ship before; an' so says Jim +Potts, the same as passed th' line fer ye this mornin'. Kin I pass ye the +junk? It's sort o' snifty fer new slush, but I don't complain." + +"What's the matter with the meat?" I asked, glad to change the +conversation. + +"Jest sort o' snifty." + +"That's what," corroborated the steward, looking at me. "Jest sort o' +smelly like fer new junk." + +"What has Jim Potts got against the old man?" I asked. "You said he +didn't believe the skipper had been in a ship before." + +"Nothin' I knows of, 'cept he was hot fer turnin' back this mornin' an' +tried to get th' men to back him in comin' aft." + +"Do you mean it's mutiny?" + +"Lord, no; jest to blandander ye inter tackin' ship. He most persuaded +Mr. Trunnell, an' wid ye too, 'twould ha' been no mutiny to override the +new skipper, an' land th' other in th' caboose." + +Much as I would have liked to get ashore again, I knew there was no +immediate prospect of it. The skipper would not hear of any such thing. +As for Trunnell acting against orders, I knew from what I had seen of +this sturdy little fellow he would obey implicitly any directions given +him, and at any cost. There was no help for it now. We would be out for +months with the ruffian skipper forward and the strange one aft. I said +nothing more to the carpenter or steward, for it was evident that there +had been some strong arguments used by Jim Potts against the regularity +of the ship's company. The more I thought of this, the more I was +astonished, for the young landsman was not forced to come out in the +ship, and had almost been left, as it was. I went on deck in a troubled +frame of mind, and determined to keep my eye on every one who approached +me, for the voyage had the worst possible beginning. + +There was much to be done about the main deck, so I busied myself the +entire afternoon getting the running gear cleared up and coiled down +shipshape. The skipper stood near the break of the poop much of the time, +but gave no orders, and I noticed that Jim the sailor, or landsman, kept +away from his vicinity. Sometimes it seemed as though the captain would +follow his movements about the deck forward with his keen eyes. + +It was Trunnell's dog-watch that evening, and by the time the bells +struck the vessel was running along to the westward under royals, with +the southerly breeze freshening on her beam. She was a handsome ship. Her +long, tapering spars rose towering into the semi-gloom overhead, and the +great fabric of stretched canvas seemed like a huge cloud resting upon a +dark, floating object on the surface of the sea, which was carried along +rapidly with it, brushing the foam to either side with a roaring, +rattling, seething, musical noise. At least, this is the picture she +presented from the forecastle head looking aft. Her great main yard swung +far over the water to leeward, and the huge bellying courses, setting +tight as a drumhead with the pressure, sent the roaring of the bow-wave +back in a deep booming echo, until the air was full of vibration from the +taut fabric. All around, the horizon was melted into haze, but the stars +were glinting overhead in promise of a clear night. + +I left the forecastle head and came down on the main deck. Here the +six-foot bulwarks shut off the view to windward, but little of the cool +evening breeze. The men on watch were grouped about the waist, sitting on +the combings of the after-hatch, or walking fore and aft in the gangways +to keep the blood stirring. All had pea coats or mufflers over their +jumpers, for the air was frosty. The "doctor" had washed up his pots and +coppers for the evening, and had made his way toward the carpenter's room +in the forward house, where a light shone through the crack of the door. + +On nearly all American ships the carpenter is rated as an officer, but +does not have to stand watch, turning out only during the day-time or +when all hands are called in cases of emergency. The cook, or "doctor," +as he is called, also turns in for the night, as do the steward and cabin +boys; the steward, however, generally has a stateroom aft near those of +the mates, while the "doctor" bunks next his galley. The carpenter having +permission to burn a light, usually turns his shop or bunk-room into a +meeting place for those officers who rate the distinction of being above +the ordinary sailor. Here one can always hear the news aboard ships where +the discipline is not too rigid; for the mates, bos'n, "doctor," steward, +and sometimes even the quartermasters, enjoy his hospitality. + +Trunnell was on the poop, and the captain was below. I had a chance to +get a little better insight into the natures of my shipmates if I could +join in their conversation, or even listen to it for a while. My position +as second mate was not too exalted to prohibit terms of intimacy with the +carpenter, or, for that matter, even the bos'n. + +I took a last look to windward, over the cold southern ocean, where the +sharp evening breeze was rolling the short seas into little patches of +white. The horizon was clear, and there was no prospect for some time of +any sudden call to shorten sail. The sky was a perfect blue vault in +which the stars were twinkling, while the red of the recent sunset held +fair on the jibboom end, showing that the quartermaster at the wheel knew +his business. I edged toward the door of the house, and then seeing that +my actions were not creating too much notice from the poop, I slid back +the white panel and entered. The fog from damp clothes and bad tobacco +hung heavy in the close air and made a blue halo about the little +swinging lamp on the bulkhead. Chips, who was sitting on his sea-chest, +waved his hand in welcome, and the "doctor" nodded and showed his white +teeth. The bos'n was holding forth in full swing in an argument with one +of the quartermasters, and Jim, the fellow I noticed in the morning, was +listening. He arose as I entered, as also did the quartermaster, but the +rest remained seated. I waved my hand in friendly acknowledgment and lit +my pipe at the lamp, while they reseated themselves. + +"Yah, good mornin' to ye--if it ain't too late in the day," said Chips. +"Sit ye down an' listen to me song, for 'tis a quare ship, an' th' only +thing to do is to square our luck wid a good song. Cast loose, bos'n." + +We were all new men to the vessel except the carpenter, and had never +even sailed in the same ship before on any previous voyage. Yet the +bos'n "cast loose" without further orders, and the "doctor" joined in +with his bass voice. Then Chips and the rest bawled forth to the tune of +"Blow a man down," and all the dismal prospect of the future in an +overloaded ship, with bad food and a queer skipper, was lost in the +effort of each one trying to out-bellow his neighbor. Sailors are a +strange set. It takes mighty little to please one at times when he +should, with reason, be sad; while, again, when everything is fair, +nothing will satisfy his whims. + +When the yarn spinning and singing were over, I turned out for my first +watch well pleased with my shipmates. + + + + +IV + + +During the following days all hands were so busy bending new sails and +reeving running gear for our turn of the Cape that there was little time +for anything else. Much of this work could have been avoided had the ship +been under better command when she cleared, but Trunnell had no authority +to do anything, and the agents were waiting until the skipper took +command and could attend to the necessary overhauling. + +At meals I saw little of either Trunnell or Captain Thompson and his +third mate, but in the short hours of the dog-watch in the evening I had +a chance to talk with them upon other subjects than those relating +immediately to the running of the ship. + +The dog-watch is the short watch between six and eight o'clock in the +evening. This is made short to keep one watch from turning to at any +regular time and consequently getting all the disagreeable work to be +done during those hours. For instance, if one watch had to be on deck +every night from twelve until four in the morning, it would mean that the +other watch would be on deck from four to eight, and consequently would +have to do all the washing down of decks and other work which occurs upon +every regulated ship before breakfast. So the dog-watch divides a +four-hour watch and is served alternately. As second mate I had access to +the poop and could come aft on the weather side like any officer, all +sailors, of course, being made to go to leeward. + +Trunnell grew to be confidential, and we often discoursed upon many +subjects during the hours after supper; for there was little time to turn +in when not on dog-watch, and the skipper allowed me aft with much more +freedom than many second mates get. He seldom ventured to join in the +conversations, except when discussing shore topics, for his ignorance of +things nautical was becoming more and more apparent to me every day, and +he saw it. I wondered vaguely how he ever managed to get command of the +ship, and set the reason down to the fact that the agents were glad +enough to get any one to take her out. He, however, checked up Trunnell's +sights every day and commented upon their accuracy with much freedom, +finding fault often, and cautioning him to be more careful in the future. +This somewhat perplexed the mate, as he always made his reckoning by rule +of thumb, and could no more change his method than work out a problem in +trigonometry. The third mate, on the other hand, was quite shy. I noticed +what I had failed to note before, and that was the peculiar feminine tone +of his voice and manner. He never swung his hands or lounged along the +deck like a man used to the sea, and as the regulations call for at least +two years' sea experience certified to by some reputable skipper before a +mate's certificate is issued, this struck me as strange. Besides, he +walked with a short mincing step that failed to swing his rather broad +hips, and his knees were well set back at each stride, that went to show +more conclusively than anything else that he was not used to a heaving +deck. An old sailor, or a young one either, for that matter, will bend +his knees to catch the roll and not try to walk like a soldier. + +One evening after we had been out about a week, Trunnell and I +happened to be standing aft near the taffrail looking up at a royal +preventer stay. + +"D'ye know what th' old man called this cleat?" asked Trunnell, pointing +to where it had been made fast. + +"No," said I. "What did he call it?" + +"A timber noggin." + +"Well, that don't prove there is anything wrong with him, does it?" +I queried. + +"Either that or the timber noggins has changed summat in character since +I seen them last," said Trunnell. "What in Davy Jones would a skipper of +a ship call a cleat a timber noggin for unless he didn't know no better?" + +"A man might or might not have many reasons for calling a cleat a timber +noggin besides that of not knowing any better than to do so," I +responded. "For instance--" + +But Trunnell cut me short. "No, Mr. Rolling, there ain't no use +disguising the fact any more, this skipper don't know nothin' about a +ship. You'll find that out before we get to the west'ard o' the Agullas. +Mind ye, I ain't making no criticism o' the old man. I never does that to +no superior officer, but when a man tells me to do the things he does, it +stands to reason that we've got an old man aboard here who's been in a +ship for the first time as officer." + +I agreed with him, and he was much pleased. + +"A man what finds fault an' criticises everybody above him is always a +failure, Mr. Rolling," he went on. "Yes, sir, the faultfinder is always a +failure. An' the reason so many sailors find fault all the time is +because they is failures. I am tryin' not to find fault with the skipper, +but to pint out that we're in for some rough times if things don't change +aboard in the sailorin' line afore we gets to the west'ard o' the +Agullas. Sink me, if that ain't so, for here we is without half the sails +bent an' no new braces, nothin' but two-year-old manila stuff what's wore +clean through. Them topsails look good enough, but they is as rotten with +the lime in them as if they was burned. No, sir, I ain't makin' no +criticism, but I burns within when I think of the trouble a few dollars +would save. Yes, sir, I burns within." + +Mr. Trunnell here spat profusely to leeward and walked athwartships for +some moments without further remark. The third mate came on deck and +stood near the lee mizzen rigging, looking forward at the foam swirling +from the bends and drifting aft alongside at a rapid rate. The +phosphorus shone brilliantly in the water, and the wake of the ship was +like a path of molten metal, for the night was quite dark and the heavy +banks of clouds which had been making steadily to the westward +over-spread the sky. It was nearly time for the southwest monsoon to +shift, and with this change would likely follow a spell o' weather, as +Trunnell chose to put it. The third mate had never given an order since +he had come aboard, and I noticed Trunnell's sly wink as he glanced in +the direction of the mizzen. + +"Mr. Rolling," said he, "wimmen have been my ruin. Yes, sir, wimmen have +been my ruin, an' I'm that scared o' them I can raise them afore their +topmast is above the horizon. Sink me, if that ain't one." And he leered +at the figure of the third mate, whom we knew as Mr. Bell. + +"What would a woman be doing here as third mate?" I asked; for although I +had come to the same conclusion some days before, I had said nothing to +any one about it. + +"That's the old man's affair," said Trunnell; "it may be his wife, or it +may be his daughter, but any one can see that the fellow's pants are +entirely too big in the heft for a man. An' his voice! Sink me, Rolling, +but you never hearn tell of a man or boy pipin' so soft like. Why, it +skeers me to listen to it. It's just like--but no matter." + +"Like what?" I suggested gently, hoping much. + +But it was of no use. Trunnell looked at me queerly for a moment as if +undecided to give me his confidence. Then he resumed his walk athwart the +deck, and I went forward to the break of the poop and took a look at the +head sails. + +The night was growing darker, and the breeze was dying slowly, and I +wondered why the skipper had not come on deck to take a look around. He +was usually on hand during the earlier hours of evening. + +I reached the side of the third officer, and stood silently gazing at the +canvas which shone dimly through the gathering gloom. As we had always +been separated on account of being in different watches, I had never +addressed the third mate before save in a general way when reporting the +ship's duties aft. + +"Pretty dark night, hey?" I ventured. + +The third officer looked hard at me for the space of a minute, during +which time his face underwent many changes of expression. Then he +answered in a smooth, even tone. + +"Sorter," said he. + +This was hardly what I expected, so I ventured again. + +"Looks as if we might have a spell o' weather, hey? The wind's falling +all the time, and if it keeps on, we'll have a calm night without a +draught of air." + +"What do you mean by a ca'm night without a draft of air?" asked the +young fellow, in a superior tone, while at the same time I detected a +smile lurking about the corners of his eyes. + +If there's one thing I hate to see in a young fellow, it is the +desire to make fun of a superior's conversation. Being an American +sailor, I had little use for _r_'s in every word which held an _a_ +but I had no objection to any one else talking the way they wished. I +was somewhat doubtful just how to sit upon this nebulous third mate, +so I began easily. + +"Do you know," said I, "there are a great many young fellows going out in +ships as officers when they could be of much more benefit to people +generally if they stayed home and helped their mothers to 'bark cark,' or +do other little things around the nursery or kitchen." + +As I finished I thought I heard some one swear fiercely in a low tone. I +looked over the poop rail down to the main deck beneath, but saw no one +near. The third officer seemed to be lost in thought for a moment. + +"It isn't good to be too clever," said he, in the tone which was +unmistakably a woman's. "When a person is good at baking cake, or +'barking cark,' as you choose to call it, the sea is a good place for +them. They can look out for those who haven't sense enough to perform the +function." + +I had a strong notion to ask him outright if he was fitted to perform the +function, but his superior air and the feeling that I might make a +mistake after all and incur the displeasure of the beak-nosed skipper +deterred me. But I was almost certain that our third mate was a woman. + +We remained standing together in the night for a few moments while +neither spoke. My advances had not received the favorable acknowledgment +I had expected, and there was a distinctly disagreeable feeling creeping +upon me while in this neutral presence. I was young and hot-headed, so I +spoke accordingly before leaving the field, or rather deck, in retreat. + +"I wish you had the distinction of belonging to the port watch." + +"Why?" + +"I think I might strengthen your powers of discernment regarding the +relative positions of second and third mates." + +"We'll see who has the better insight in regard to the matter without my +being bored to that extent," said the third officer in his softest tones, +and again I fancied I heard the voice of a man swearing fiercely in a low +voice as if to himself. Then I turned and went aft. + +"It's something queer," said Trunnell, shaking his great shaggy head and +glancing toward the break of the poop. A step sounded on the companion +ladder, and the skipper came on deck. + +"Pretty dark, hey?" he said, and his quick eyes took in both Trunnell and +myself comprehensively. + +"Looks like we might have a spell o' weather if the wind keeps fallin'," +observed Trunnell. + +"Well, I don't suppose a dark night is any worse than a bright one, and I +call to mind many a time I'd give something to see it a bit blacker. Do +you know where you're at?" + +"She's headin' about the same, but if ye don't mind, I'll be gettin' her +down gradual like to her torps'ls if the glass keeps a-fallin'. Short +commons, says I, on the edge o' the monsoon." + +"Short it is, my boy. Get her down low. The more she looks like you, the +better she'll do, hey? What d'you think of that, Mr. Rolling? The shorter +the longer, the longer the shorter--see? The sooner the quicker, eh? +Supposen the question was asked you, Mr. Rolling, what'd you say, hey? +Why is Mr. Trunnell like a lady's bouquet, hey? Why is the little man +like a bunch of flowers? Don't insult him, Mr. Rolling. The sanitary +outfit of the cabin is all right. 'Tain't that. No, split me, it ain't +that. Think a minute." + +Trunnell walked to and fro without a word, while the captain grinned. The +fellow at the wheel, Bill Spielgen, a square-cut man with an angular face +and enormous hands, stared sullenly into the binnacle. + +"It's because he's a daisy," rapped out the skipper. "That's it, Mr. +Rolling, he's a daisy, ha, ha, ha! Split me, if he ain't, ho, ho, ho! +Shorten her down, Trunnell; you're a daisy, and no mistake." + +There was a distinct smell of liquor in the light breeze, and as the +skipper came within the glare of the binnacle lamp I could see he was +well set up. Trunnell went to the break of the poop and called out for +the watch to clew down the fore and mizzen skysails. He was much upset at +the skipper's talk, but knew better than to show it. The captain now +turned his attention to the man at the wheel. + +"How d'you head, Bill?" said he. + +"West b' no'the," said Bill. + +The skipper came to the wheel and stuck his lean face close to the +quartermaster's. His glinting eyes grew to two little points and his +hooked nose wrinkled on the sides as he showed his teeth while he drawled +in a snarling tone:-- + +"D'you set up for a wit, Bill, that you joke with your captain, hey? Is +that it, you square-toed, lantern-jawed swab? Would you like me to rip +you up the back, or lam some of the dirt out of your hide, hey? Is that +it? Don't make jokes at your captain, Bill. It's bad business." + +Then he went on in a more conciliating tone:-- + +"Just remember that I'm a knight of a round table, or square one either, +for that matter, while I'm aboard this boat, and if you forget to mention +my title of 'Sir,' every time you speak of me, you'll want to get your +hide sewed on tight." + +"I beg pardon, sir," said Bill, taking a fresh grip upon the spokes with +his great hands. + +"That's right, my son; you're a beggar aboard this here boat. Don't +aspire to anything else." + +"Aye, aye, sir," said the quartermaster. + +"And now that you've got to your bearings, as Trunnell would say, I'll +tell you a little story about a man who lost a pet dog called Willie." + +I saw that it was high time for me to get forward, and slipped away. I +turned in ready for a call, thinking that perhaps Trunnell was right in +regard to our future prospects in the South Atlantic. + + + + +V + + +When I turned out for the mid-watch that night, Trunnell met me at the +door of the forward cabin. It was pitch dark on deck, and the wind had +died away almost entirely. The canvas had been rolled up, as it had begun +to slat heavily against the masts with the heave from a long, quick swell +that ran rapidly from the southward. The running gear was not new, and +Trunnell was a careful mate, so the ship was down to her upper topsails +on the fore and mizzen and a main t'gallant on mainmast, the courses fore +and after being clewed up and left hanging. + +"He's out for trouble to-night," said the little mate. "Blast him if he +ain't touching the boose again." + +"Who, the skipper?" I asked. + +"He's been below twice during the watch, an' each time he's gettin' worse +an' worse. There he comes now to the edge of the poop." + +I looked and saw our old man rolling easily across the deck to the poop +rail. There he stopped and bawled out loudly,-- + +"Lay aft to the main-brace." + +The men on watch hesitated a moment and then came crowding aft and began +to cast off the weather-brace from its belaying-pin. + +It was so dark I couldn't see how many men were there, but I noticed Bill +the quartermaster, and as I stood waiting to see what would happen, a +little sailor by the name of Johnson, who had a face like a monkey's and +legs set wide apart, so they never touched clear up to his waist, spoke +out to a long, lean Yankee man who jostled me in the darkness. + +"Don't pull a pound on the bleeding line. The old cock's drunk, an' we +ain't here to be hazed around decks like a pack o' damned boys." + +The skipper, however, didn't wait to see if his order was carried out, +but came down from the poop and asked for Trunnell and myself. We went +with him into the forward cabin, and he motioned us to sit down. + +"Did you ever see such a lot o' confounded fools?" he said. "Here I calls +for to take a pull in the main-brace, and the whole crowd of duff-eaters +come layin' aft as if the skipper of a ship should blow them all off to +drinks. Blast me, Trunnell, I'd 'a' thought you'd get them into better +discipline. It's come to a fine state o' things when the whole crew turns +to every time I get thirsty. But never mind, sing out as you says, and +tell the steward what kind o' pisin you'll mix with your blood current. +Mine's the same old thing." + +"It's my watch below now," said Mr. Trunnell, "an' if you'll excuse me, +I'll turn in. The third mate's gone below some time ago." + +"Oh, the boat's all right. It's dead calm, and she can't hurt herself +floating around this ocean," said the old man. "You can take a drink +before you go. Steward! Ahoy there, steward!" + +"Yessir," said that active mulatto, springing out of his cabin. "Yessir; +I hears yo', cap'n." + +"What'll you have?" asked Thompson, addressing the mate. + +Trunnell scratched his big bushy head a moment, and then suggested +that a bottle of the ginger pop which the steward had in the pantry +would do for him. + +"Hell'n blazes, man, take a drink o' something," cried Thompson, turning +upon him with his fierce eyes. "What's the matter with you?" + +"Nothin', only I drinks what I drinks or else I don't drink at all," said +Trunnell. "Ye asked me what I'd have, an' I says it." + +"All right, Shorty," said Thompson, in mock gravity. "You drinks what you +drinks. What's yours, Rolling?" + +"As I've just turned to, a little soda will do for me," I answered. "I'd +rather take my grog in the morning at regular hours." + +Thompson let his hand fall upon the table with a crash, and then sat +motionless, looking from one to the other, his long, beak-like nose +twitching convulsively. + +"Steward," said he, with a nasal drawl which made his hooked nose +wrinkle, "get Mr. Trunnell a drink o' ginger pop, or milk, if he prefers +it, and then, steward, you may get Mr. Rolling a drink o' sody water. +It's hot, but I reckon it'll fizz." + +"Yessah. What's yourn, cap'n?" + +"You don't think there's a priest aboard here, do you, steward, hey?" + +"No, sah, 'tain't likely, but I ken find out, sah. Shall I get yo' drink +fust, sah?" + +"Well, I dunno, I dunno, steward; I can't think what I kin take what +won't offend these gentlemen. You might see first if there's a priest, +an' if you find one you can bring me a pint or so o' holy water. If it's +too strong for you," said he, turning toward Trunnell and myself, "I can +get the steward to dilute it for me, hey?" + +Trunnell made no remark at this. The steward brought in our drinks and +informed the skipper loudly that there was no one in the crew who had +held holy orders. + +"Never mind, then, steward," said Thompson. "I'll wait till it rains and +get it fresh from heaven." + +In a moment Trunnell rose and went into his room with a rough "good +night." Thompson arose and passed through the door in the bulkhead, and I +went on deck to take charge. + +The night was quiet, and I leaned over the poop rail, looking into the +water alongside, which appeared as black as ink. The _Pirate_ had little +or no headway, for it was now dead calm. Forward at the bends a sudden +flare of phosphorescent fire would burn for a moment alongside when the +heavy ship rolled deeply and soused her channels under. The southerly +swell seemed to roll quickly as if there were something behind it, and +the topsails slatted fore and aft with loud flaps as they backed and +filled with the motion. It was a bad night for wearing out gear, and I +was glad Trunnell had rolled up the lighter canvas. Chafing gear had been +scarce aboard, and nothing is so aggravating to a mate as to have his +cotton or spars cut by useless rolling in a quiet seaway. If sails can be +kept full of wind, they will last well enough with care; but let them +slat for a few days, and there is more useless wear than would take place +in a month of ordinary weather, with no headway to pay for it. + +While I looked into the dark water I noticed a long thin streak of fire +moving slowly alongside. It wavered and snaked along, growing brighter at +times and then dying out almost completely. Suddenly it turned at the +fore channels and came slowly aft. I looked harder at the black surface +below me and tried to see what caused the disturbance. In an instant I +beheld a huge shadow, blacker than the surrounding water, outlined +faintly with the phosphorescent glow. It was between twenty and thirty +feet in length, and had the form of a shark. The grim monster swam slowly +aft and rounded the stern, then sank slowly out of sight into the +blackness beneath. + +There is something so uncanny in the silent watchfulness of these giants +of the deep that a sailor always feels unpleasantly disposed toward them. +I thought how ghastly would be the ending of any one who should get +overboard that night. The sudden splash, the warm water about the body, +and the heads of the fellows at the rail starting to pull the unfortunate +aboard. Then the sudden grisly clutch from below, and the dragging down +out of sight and sound forever. + +I began to actually reckon the amount of arsenic I should put into a +chunk of beef to trick the giant at his last meal. + +"Sharp lightning on port bow, sir," came the news from the forward; for, +although I was supposed to be able to see well enough, I had taught the +men of my watch to sing out at everything unusual, more to be certain +that they were awake than anything else. + +I looked up from the black depths and my unpleasant reflections, and +gazed to the southward. As I did so, several sharp flashes showed upon +the dark horizon. It looked as if something were raising fast, and I +stepped below a moment to see the glass. It was down to twenty-eight. +Going on deck at once, I bawled for the watch to clew down the +main-topgallantsail. In a moment the men were swarming up the main +rigging, and the sail was let go by the run, the yard settling nicely, +while the clews, buntlines, and leachlines were hauled down in unison. + +"Mizzen topsail!" I cried. + +The watch came up the poop ladders with a rush and tramping of feet that +sounded ominously loud for the work on so quiet a night. The yelling of +the men at the braces coupled with the tramping aroused Captain Thompson +in spite of his liquor, and he came up the after-companion to see what +was the matter. + +"Hey, there, hey!" he bawled. "What are you doing, Rolling? Are you +coming to an anchor already? Have I been asleep six months, and is this +the Breakwater ahead? No? Well, do you expect to get to port without +canvas on the ship? Split me, but I thought you knew how to sail a boat +when you signed on as mate. Don't come any of these grandmother tricks on +me, hey? I won't have it. Don't make a fool of yourself before these men. +Get that topsail up again quicker'n hell can scorch a feather, or I'll be +taking a hand, see! I'll be taking a hand. Jump lively, you dogs!" he +roared, as he finished. + +The topsail was swayed up again, the men silent and sullen with this +extra work. Then came the order for the t'gallantsail, and by the +time that was mastheaded, the skipper followed with orders for +royals, fore and aft. + +During the time these affairs were going on upon the ship, the southern +horizon was lit up again and again by vivid flashes. It appeared to sink +into a deeper gloom afterward, but in another moment we heard the distant +boom of thunder. Before we could get the topgallantsail set there was a +blinding flash off the bow-port, followed by a deep rolling peal of +thunder. I was standing in the waist and sprang to Trunnell's room-- + +"All hands!" I bawled. + +Then I rushed for the mizzen rigging, yelling for the men to clew down +the t'gallantsail and let the topsail halyards go by the run. At the cry +for all hands the men tumbled out, looking around to see what had +happened. It was dead still, and the only sounds were the cries of the +men on deck to those aloft, and the rattling of gear. Trunnell was on +deck in a moment, and as he rushed aft I went for the main rigging with +the intention of saving the upper topsail if I could. It was quick work +getting up those ratlines, but even as I went I heard a deepening murmur +from the southward. The yard came down by the run as I gained the top, +owing to Trunnell having cast off everything, trusting that we might get +some stops on the sail before too late. I heard the skipper roaring out +orders to "hurry there," followed by curses at the slowness of the work. +He appeared to realize now what was happening, and it sobered him. + +As I crawled out to starboard with a couple of hands, Jackson of +Trunnell's watch and Davis of mine, the murmur to the southward swelled +rapidly in volume. I glanced into the blackness, and as I did so there +was a blinding flash. My eyes seemed to be burned out with the +brightness, and a crashing roar thundered in my ears. Instantly afterward +I heard Trunnell's voice:-- + +"Hard up the wheel. Hard up, for God's sake!" + +Then, with a rush that made the mast creak with the strain and laid +us slowly over amid a thunder of thrashing canvas, the hurricane +struck the ship. + +There was nothing to do but hold on with both hands and feet. Jackson, +who was outside of me, gripped the jackstay and threw his feet around +the yard-arm which was springing and jumping away at a terrific rate +with the shock of the cracking topsail. I did likewise, and noticed +that the canvas was bellying forward, which showed that we were not +aback. If we were, I knew our lives were only questions of seconds. +All sounds from below were silenced in the roar about us, but flash +after flash, following rapidly in succession, showed me momentary +glimpses of the deck. + +We were far over the water as the _Pirate_ was laying down with her +topgallant rail beneath the sea. The mizzen topsail had disappeared, as +though made of vapor, leaving the mizzen clear. Forward, the two topsails +and fore topmast staysail were holding, but between the flashes the upper +canvas melted away like a puff of steam, the ragged ends flying and +thrashing into long ribbons to leeward. Three men were on the yard when I +looked at first, and then, almost instantly afterward, the yard was bare. +Whether they had gone overboard I could not tell, but the thought made me +look to myself while I might. + +Pulling myself along the jackstay until I reached the bunt, I managed to +grasp a line that was tailing taut downward toward the deck. This I +grasped quickly with both hands, and bawling with all my might to Jackson +and Davis to follow, I swung clear of the yard. Looking below, the sea +appeared as white as milk in the ghastly light, with the ship's outline +now dimly discernible in contrast. I breathed a prayer that the line was +fast amidships and slid down. There was a terrific ripping instantly +overhead, and I knew the topsail had gone. The line bowed out with the +wind, but led toward the deck near the mast, and in a moment my feet +struck the fife rail. I was safe for the present. Jackson followed close +upon me, but Davis was unable to get the line. He was never seen again. + +Making my way aft by the aid of the weather rail, I reached the poop and +climbed up the steps. The wind nearly swept me from my feet, but I +managed to crawl aft to where I could make out by the flashes the forms +of Trunnell and the skipper. + +"She'll go off soon," yelled the mate in my ear. "Nothin' gone forrads +yet, hey?" + +"Only the canvas and a couple of men," I yelled in reply. + +The wind began to draw further and further aft, showing that the ship was +gradually gathering headway in spite of her list to starboard. Soon she +began to right herself in the storm-torn sea. All was white as snow about +us, and the whiteness gave a ghastly light in the gloom. I could now make +out the maintopsail, dimly, from where I stood, and the outline of the +hull forward. Evidently the fore lower topsail was holding still. +Jackson, who was tall and strong, and who was an American by adoption, +was put to the lee wheel, as his knowledge of English made him quick to +obey. John, a Swede, built very broad with stooping shoulders, and +Erikson, a Norwegian with a great blond head and powerful neck, grasped +the weather spokes. Bill, the other quartermaster, had not shown up, and +we found later that he was one of the missing from the fore topsail yard. + +Trunnell and Captain Thompson called the men aft to the poop, and away we +went into the gloom ahead. + +She was doing a good fifteen knots under her two, or rather one storm +topsail; for we found out afterward that the fore had gone almost +instantly after she had payed off. The water was roaring white astern, +and the wind blew so hard that it was impossible to face it for more than +a moment. The sea was making fast, and I began to wonder how long the +vessel could run before the great heave which I knew must soon follow us. + +Thompson stood bareheaded near the binnacle, and roared to the men to be +careful and keep her steady. It was plain he knew nothing of seamanship, +but could tell that a thing must be done well after the mate had given +orders. He was apparently perfectly sober now, and as cool as though on +the beach. It was evident the man feared nothing and could command. I saw +that I could be of little use aft, so I started forward, hoping to be +able to keep a lookout for a shift of wind and get some gear ready to +heave the vessel to. + +On reaching the main deck, things showed to be in a hopeless mess. +Everything movable had gone to leeward when she was hove down, the +running rigging was lying about, and no attempt had been made to coil +it. The sea, which had been over the lee rail, had washed that on the +starboard side into long tangles which would take hours to clear. I +stumbled over a mass of rope which must have been the fore topsail +brace. I saw a figure moving through the gloom along the bulwarks and +called for the man to lay aft and coil down some of the gear. The man, +however, paid no attention to me, but made his way into the forward +cabin, and as the door opened and the light from within flashed out I +recognized the third mate. + +A man named Hans answered my hail, and I started forward again. The sea +by this time was running rapidly. The ship was so deep that I knew she +would not keep her deck clear, and I started to gain the topgallant +forecastle where the height would make it safer. + +Just as I gained the highest step, a tremendous sea following broke clear +along the top of the rail in the waist, and went forward a good five feet +above her bulwarks, the entire length of the main deck. + +It was terrific. The thundering crash and smothering jar nearly +paralyzed me for a moment. In the dim glare I could see rails, +stanchions, boats, rigging, all in the furious white rush. The _Pirate_ +settled under the load and seemed to stop perfectly still. Then another +huge sea went roaring over her and blotted out everything to the edge of +the forecastle head. + +I stood looking down at the main deck in amazement. How long would the +hatches stand that strain? Everything was out of sight under water, save +the top of the forward house. I looked up into the roaring void above me +and breathed a parting prayer, for it seemed that the ship's end must be +at hand. Then I was aware that she was broaching to, and I grabbed the +rail to meet the sea. + +Every stitch of canvas had gone out of her now, and nothing but the bare +yards were left aloft. How they ever stood the frightful strain was a +miracle and spoke volumes for the Yankee riggers who fitted her out. The +wind bore more and more abeam, and under the pressure she heeled over, +letting the great load on her decks roar off in a torrent to leeward, +over the topgallant rail and waterways. A sea struck her so heavily that +the larger portion of it went thundering clear across her forty feet of +deck, landing bodily to leeward as though the ship were below the +surface. I could hear a bawling coming faintly from the poop and knew +Trunnell was trying to heave her to. Something fluttered from the mizzen +rigging and disappeared into the night. Part of a tarpaulin had gone, but +it was a chance to get another piece large enough on the ratlines to hold +her head up. I tried to make my way aft again to help, for I saw it was +about our only hope, and started to crawl along the weather topgallant +rail. Then a form sprang from the black recess under the forecastle head +and seized me tightly around the body. + + + + +VI + + +The suddenness of this attack and the peculiar position I was in when +seized, put me at a disadvantage. The quick breathing of the man behind +me, and the strong force he put forward as he rushed me toward the ship's +side, made me aware that I was in a bad fix. The assassin was silent as +the grave, save for his panting, but his bearded face against mine was +visible enough to show me the former captain of the ship. + +I was carried half over the rail in an instant by the power of the rush. +The foam showed beneath me, and for a moment it seemed that the man would +accomplish his deadly purpose. It was with a horrid feeling of certain +death before me that I clutched wildly at the forecastle rail. Luckily my +hand caught it, and I was saved from the dive over the side. Then with +frantic strength I twisted around enough to seize the fellow, and dropped +on my knees with a grip around his middle. It was up and down and all +over that side of the forecastle head for some minutes, until we were +both getting tired. We were apparently alone forward, and the fight would +be one of endurance, unless the ruffian happened to have some weapon +about him. + +We struggled on and on in the gloom, with the hurricane roaring over us, +carrying the spray and drift in a smothering storm into our faces. A hand +would slip with a wet grip only to take a fresh hold again, and strain +away to get the other under. + +We rolled with the ship and after a particularly hard rally, in which I +had my hand badly bitten, we eased up near the edge of the forecastle +head. During this breathing spell I managed to get my foot braced against +a ring-bolt. This gave me a slight advantage for a sudden push. In an +instant I shoved with all my might, driving us both to the edge. The +ruffian saw what was coming and tried to turn, but it was too late. One +single instant of frantic fighting, half suspended in the air, and then +over we went, myself on top. + +We landed heavily upon the main deck, and the shock, falling even as I +did upon the body under me, stunned me for several moments. My captain +lay motionless. Then, when a sudden rush of cool water poured over us, I +came to my senses and started to my feet. In another moment I had passed +a line around the desperado, and was dragging him under the lee of the +windlass, where I finally made him fast to the bitts. + +When I started aft again, I found that Trunnell had managed to get a +tarpaulin into the mizzen rigging, and by the aid of this bit of canvas +the _Pirate_ had at last headed the sea within five points. It now took +her forward of the beam and hove her down to her bearings with each roll +to leeward, the sea breaking heavily across the main deck, keeping the +waterways waist deep with the white surge. In this rush objects showed +darkly where they floated from their fastenings until they drifted to a +water-port and passed on overboard. + +I finally managed to dodge the seas enough to get aft alive, though one +caught me under the lee of the fore rigging and nigh smothered me as it +poured over the topgallant rail. + +Trunnell stood near the break of the poop, and beside him were the +skipper and third mate. I noticed a look of surprise come upon the young +officer's face when I came close to them. It was much lighter now, and +the actions of this young fellow interested me. + +"I thought you might have been drowned," he cried, in his high female +voice, but with a significant tone and look at the last word which was +not lost on me in spite of the elements. + +"Everything is all snug forward," I answered, bawling at the captain, but +looking fairly at the third mate. "You can let a few men go and rivet +irons on the convict by the windlass bitts. He seems to have little +trouble unlocking these." And I held up the unlocked irons I had picked +up under the forecastle. + +As I held the irons under the third officer's nose, he drew back. Then he +took them and flung them with an impatient gesture over the side into the +sea. I thought I heard a fierce oath in a deep voice near by, but +Trunnell and the captain were both staring up at the fringe flying from +the maintopsail yard, and had evidently said nothing. There was little +more to do now, for as long as the ship held her head to the sea, she +would probably ride it out, unless some accident happened. + +I was worn out with the exertion from handling canvas and my fracas +forward, so after bawling out some of the details of the occurrence into +Trunnell's ear, I took my watch below to get a rest. The men who +preferred to stay aft clear of the water were allowed to lie down near +the mizzen. Some took advantage of this permission, but for the most part +they stood huddled in a group along the spanker boom, ready for a call. + +I had made it a rule long ago, when I had first gone to sea, that I would +never miss a watch below when my turn came if I could be spared with +convenience. It is a question always with a sailor when he will be called +to shorten sail for a blow, and the best thing he can do is to keep +regular hours when he can, and stand by for a crisis when all hands are +necessary. With a captain it might be different, for the entire +responsibility rests upon him. He also does not have to stand watch, and +consequently has no reason to be tired after several hours on deck. But +with a sailor or mate who stands his four hours off and on, he must take +care he is not pushed beyond his time, for the occasion will certainly +come sooner or later when he will have to stand through several watches +without a rest. Then, if he is already tired out, he will be useless. + +I turned in with a strange feeling about the matter forward and the +third officer's conduct. Although I knew Trunnell would take care that +the ruffian would not get loose again that night during his watch, I +took out a heavy revolver from my locker and stuck it under the pillow +of my bunk. Then I saw that the door and port were fast before I jammed +myself in for a rest. + +I lay a long time thinking over the strange outfit on board, and the more +I thought over the matter, the more I became convinced that the third +officer had taken a hand in letting Andrews loose to try his hand on me +again. There was something uncanny about this officer with a woman's +voice, and I actually began to have a secret loathing not entirely +unmixed with fear for him. + +When I turned out for the morning watch, Trunnell met me in the alleyway. +He looked wild and bushy from his exposure to the elements, his hair +being in snarls and tangles from having a sou'wester jammed over his +ears, and his great flat nose was red from the irritation of the water +that struck and streamed over his bearded face. His whiskers gleamed with +salt in the light of the lamp, and he spat with great satisfaction as he +breathed the quiet air of the cabin. + +"It's letting up, Rolling," he said; "there's a little light to the +easterd now. Sink me, but we've a job bending gear. Everything gone out +of her but her spars, and Lord knows how they stand it. How'd you come to +get caught with all that canvas on her?" + +"Look here, Trunnell," I answered, "you know I'm a sailor even if I'm not +much else, and you know how that canvas came to be on her. I'm almost +glad it's gone. I would be if it wasn't for the fact that we'll be longer +than usual on this run, and I've about made up my mind that the quicker a +decent man gets out of this ship, the better." + +I was buttoning up my oilskins while I spoke, and Trunnell smiled a queer +bit of a smile, which finally spread over his bearded face and crinkled +up the corners of his little eyes into a network of lines and wrinkles. +"I heard the outfly," said he, "and I was only joking ye about the +canvas. It's a quare world. Ye wouldn't think it, but if ye want to see a +true picture of responsibility a-restin' heavy like upon the digestion of +a man, ye'll do well to take a good look at the old man a-standin' there +on the poop. 'What for?' says you; 'God knows,' says me; but there he is, +without a drop o' licker or nothin' in him since he heard ye bellow fer +all hands." + +"I should think he'd feel a little upset after the way he caught her," I +answered; "he probably has the owners' interests a little at heart." + +But Trunnell shook his head until the water flew around. + +"Ye're off agin, me son. It ain't that at all. That man don't care a +whoop for all the owners livin'. Not he. Sink me, Rolling, I got a big +head, but nothin' much in it; in spite o' this, though, I knows a thing +or two when I sees it. That man has some other object in bein' nervous +about this here hooker besides owners. Don't ask me what it is, 'cause I +don't know. But I knows what it ain't." + +"The whole outfit is queer," I answered, "and the sooner I get out of +her, the better satisfied I'll be. No decent sailor would ship in the +craft if he could help it." + +Trunnell gave me a queer look. Then he saw I meant no offence and shook +his great head again. + +"Did it ever occur to ye that ye had a duty to do in the world beside +huntin' soft jobs?" + +"Certainly not that of hunting hard ones," I answered, fastening my belt. + +Trunnell's face underwent a change. He was serious and waited until I had +strapped my sou'wester under my chin before saying anything. + +"Mebbe I'm wrong, an' mebbe I ain't," he said. "But I believes a man has +duties to stick to while he's on watch above water. One of these is not +to turn tail and scud away, a-showin' your stern to every hard thing as +comes along. No, sir, when ye runs into a hard gang like some o' these +here aboard this hooker, stick to her, says me. If every man who's honest +should turn his stern to a wessel that's got a bad name, what would +happen to her? Why, any suckin' swab of a cabin boy kin tell that she'd +get worse an' worse with the bad ones what would take your place. Ain't +that reason? There's got to be some men to man a ship, an' if no honest +ones will, then the owners can't do less than hire raskils. Ye can't sink +a ship just because things have happened aboard her. Oh, Lord, no. Think +a bit, Rolling, an' tell me if ye ain't blamed glad ye ware here, an' +bein' here, ye must 'a' saved some poor devil of a sailor from getting +killed this voyage?" + +"I'm blamed sorry I ever--" + +"Well, now, suppose'n I had a been ashore the day ye had the fracas on +the main deck. Where'd ye been now, hey? A hunderd fathom deep, sure as +Andrews is aboard this here ship, if I knows anything o' his ways, an' +I've sailed two voyages with him afore. No, man; brace up and do yer +dooty as ye may. If every good man was to stay out of bad ships, they'd +get so the devil himself would be afeard to go to sea in them." + +I smiled at the little fellow. Here was a man, who had the reputation of +being but little better than an unhung pirate, preaching a most unselfish +doctrine. We had been below for several minutes, and I could hear the +captain's voice bawling out some order on the deck overhead. The bells +were struck by the automatic clock in the cabin, and I turned to go. + +"You're a good Christian, anyhow, Trunnell," I said as I started. + +Trunnell gave a snort and threw his quid in a corner near a cuspidor. "I +ain't never seen the inside of a church. I only tries to do the square +thing to whoever is a-runnin' of the sea outfit--same as ye'll do if +ye'll take the trouble to think a minit--" + +I was out on the deck, and the wind almost blew me into the scuppers. The +captain was standing right above me on the poop watching the growing +light in the east. The waist was full of foamy water that roared and +surged and washed everything movable about. Above, the masts and spars +looked dark in the dim, gray light of the early morning, the strips of +canvas stretching away from the jackstays and flicking dismally to +leeward. All the yards, however, were trimmed nicely, showing Trunnell's +master hand, and on the mainmast, bellying and straining with the +pressure, was a new storm spencer, set snug and true, holding the +plunging vessel up to the great rolling sea that came like a living hill +from the southwest. Forward, a bit of a staysail was set as taut as a +drumhead, looking no bigger than a good-sized handkerchief. Aft, a +trysail, set on the spanker boom, helped the tarpaulin in the mizzen to +bring her head to the sea. + +I climbed up the poop ladder and took a look around. + +It was a dismal sight. As far as the eye could reach through the white +haze of the flying drift the ocean presented a dirty steel-gray color, +torn into long, ragged streaks of white where the combers rolled on the +high seas before the gale. Overhead all was a deep blank of gray vapor. +The wind was not blowing nearly as hard as it had during my last watch on +deck, but the sea was rolling heavier. It took the _Pirate_ fair on the +port bow, and every now and again it rose so high above her topgallant +rail that it showed green light through the mass that would crash over to +the deck and go roaring white to leeward, making the main deck +uninhabitable. Sometimes a heavy, quick comber would strike her on the +bluff of the bow, and the shock would almost knock the men off their +feet. Then the burst of water would shoot high in the air, going +sometimes clear to the topgallant yard, nearly a hundred feet above the +deck, while all forward would disappear in the flying spray and spume. + +"Fine weather, Rolling, hey?" bawled the skipper to me as I gained the +poop. + +"Oh, it isn't so bad the way she's taking it now. If she hangs on as +well as this during the watch, she'll make good weather of it all +right," I said. + +"I'm glad you think so, my son. Just call down to the steward to bring me +a bracer. Whew, just look at that!" + +As he spoke a huge sea rose on the weather bow and bore down on the +staggering ship. It struck her fair and rolled over her so heavily that I +had to grab a line to keep from being knocked down. The main deck was +full of water, and as it roared off through the ports and over the lee +rail, I looked to see if anything had gone with it. Then I realized how +well we had been washed during the night. + +From the forecastle aft to the poop there was nothing left except the +hatches and deck-house. The boats were all stove to matchwood except one +that was lashed on the forward house. The bulwarks were smashed for many +feet along both sides, but this was no real damage, as it allowed the sea +to run off easier, relieving the deck of the heavy load. The whole main +deck, fore and aft, was as clean stripped as could be, and the hatches +alone were saving us from filling and going under. + +It was a dismal sight, and the men who stood huddled on the +forecastle and poop looked, in their yellow oilskins, like so many +yellow ghosts. I went aft to the wheel and found that Hans and +Johnson were steering without much difficulty, although they had all +they could do to hold her when a sea struck aft. Far astern the light +seemed to be growing brighter, and while I looked there appeared some +long streaks in the heavy banks of vapor which showed a break or two. +I took the glass which hung on the side of the grating and cleaned +the lens with my hand. Sweeping the storm-torn horizon to the +southward, nothing showed but rolling seas and haze. I turned the +glass to the northward, and in a moment I saw a black speck rise and +then disappear from the line of vision. + +"Vessel to lor'ard, sir," I bawled to the captain. + +"I don't care for forty vessels, Rolling. Get me that steward with the +liquor, or there'll be one afloat here without a second mate." + + + + +VII + + +It was with no good feeling that I went below to get the old man a drink. +The steward met me and grinned as he brought forth the liquor. + +"Yessah, it's nine ob dem he takes endurin' de watch. Lord, man, he's got +something pow'rful on his mind. Did yo' ebber feel the heft ob his trunk +he brought aboard, sah? No, sah, dat yo' didn't. Well, it's pow'rful +heavy fo' a man's baggage." + +"What's in it?" I asked. + +"'Deed, I doan know, man, jest what is in it, but I reckon it's something +what worries him. Dat an' Cap'n Andrews forrads worries him some. Chips, +he say as dey goes aft an' have matters straightened out a bit. Dey is +fo' either weldin' irons on de cap'n forrads or puttin' him on de beach. +Jim, Hans, Bendin, an' Frenchy an' a lot more are fo' doing' somethin' +with him. Yessah, dey is dat. Hab a leetle nip 'fore yo' goes?" + +I took one and went back to the quarter-deck. The speck to leeward showed +a bit of storm canvas flying, and we soon could make out she was a large +ship hove to like ourselves on the port tack. Her hull showed now and +again on the seas, and after drifting down toward her for about an hour, +the light grew strong enough to make her out plainly. She was a large +ship, English built, with a turtle-backed stern, painted white on the +tumble-home of the quarter. Her hull was black, and the foam showed in +long white lines of streamers as it was blown across her topsides. She +was making heavy weather of it, and every now and again she would ram her +nose clear out of sight in the high-rolling sea. Then she would rise +heavily, with the white water pouring from her dripping forefoot and +wallow dismally, until her weather rail would appear to roll under. + +The stump of a foremast showed forward and a stout maintopsail strained +away amidships, while aft, where the mizzen should have been, there was +nothing showing above her deck. Her main topgallant mast was also gone at +the cross-trees, but the maintopsail held strongly. Altogether she was +pretty well wrecked aloft. + +While we watched her we drew nearer, and when she came within a couple of +miles I could make out a flag, the English ensign, union down, in the +main rigging. This showed pretty plainly that she was doing badly and +wanted help, but it was absolutely useless to think of doing anything for +her while the wind held and the sea showed no signs of going down. + +Being much lighter than she was, we drifted off more, and we came nearer +and nearer as the morning brightened into a dirty day. In a short time we +had her close under our lee, not half a mile distant. Indeed, it looked +as though we might get closer than we wished to. The wind slacked +gradually, however, and before long we managed to get out our +main-topmast staysail. Then followed a close-reefed foresail balanced aft +by the mizzen lower topsail, which we had saved. This, with the spencer +and canvas already set, gave us a good hold of the ship in spite of the +sea, and we were ready to wear if necessary. The _Pirate_ drifted much +faster under the extra canvas and went to leeward so far that we saw that +she would go clear of the stranger. As we drew near, we now saw how deep +she sat in the water, the seas rolling over her, amidships, with every +plunge. Still she headed up well and was under control. + +While we gazed, a string of flags fluttered from her yard-arm. I dived +below for the code and soon read the signal for help. They were sinking. + +Trunnell turned out on deck, and we waited to see if Captain Thompson +would give the word to do anything. He stood near the rail and gazed +through his glass without saying anything or exhibiting any concern +whatever for the people we could now see upon the stranger's high poop. + +Then he turned to the mate and asked:-- + +"What does he want, Trunnell?" + +"Want's us to stand by him, I reckon," the mate replied. + +"Can we do it without danger in this seaway, hey?" demanded Thompson. +"Answer me that. How the devil can we do anything for a fellow in this +seaway, when we might be rammed by him and sink ourselves?" + +"We'll stand by that ship as long as she's above water," answered +Trunnell, quietly. + +Then came a sudden change upon the captain. He turned upon the mate +quickly, and his bright, glinting eyes seemed to grow to sharp points +on either side of his hooked nose, which worked and twitched under +the excitement. His hand went behind his back and he jerked forth a +long revolver. + +"Who's captain of this here boat, Mr. Trunnell, me or you?" said he, in +his drawling voice. + +"You," answered Trunnell, decisively. + +"Do you presume to give any orders here what don't agree with mine?" + +"No, sir," said Trunnell. + +"Well, just let me hint to you, you bushy-headed little brute, that I +don't want any suggestions from my mates, see? You little snipe, you! +what d'ye mean, anyhow, by saying what we'll do?" + +Several men standing on the poop to keep clear of the seas in the waist, +hitched their trousers a little, and felt for the sheath knives in their +belts. I noticed Jim, the young landsman, pass his hand behind him and +stand waiting. There was an ominous silence and watchfulness among the +crew which was not lost on the captain. He had inspired no respect in +their minds as a sailor, even though he had shown himself fearless. It +was evident that they were with Trunnell. + +"I meant that we would stand by that ship as long as she floated," said +the little mate, looking straight into the pistol barrel, "and I expected +that it would be by your orders, sir." + +Thompson was not a fool. He saw in an instant how the case was, and his +glinting eyes took in the whole outfit of men and mates at one glance. He +may not have wished to help the strangers, but he saw that not to do so +meant more trouble to himself than if he did. + +"This time you expected just right, Trunnell. I mean to stand by those +people, and I order you to get ropes ready to hoist out the boat we have +on the house, there. What I don't want and won't have is orders suggested +by any one aboard here but me. I'm glad you didn't mean to do that, for +I'd hate to kill you. You can get the boat ready." + +Then he put the revolver back into his pocket, and Trunnell went forward +along the shelter of the weather bulwarks and made ready the tackles for +hoisting the boat out. + +By the aid of the powerful glass I made out a figure of a woman standing +upon the ship's poop. She appeared to be watching us intently. Soon a +little sailorly and seaman-like fellow named Ford, whose interest in the +strange ship was marked, came from the group near the mizzen and asked if +he should get the signal halyards ready. Thompson made no objection, and +we bent on the flags which told by the code that we would stand by them +until the sea went down enough to get out a small boat. + +At seven bells the "doctor" managed to get some fire started in the +galley, and all hands had a drink of hot coffee. This was cheering, and +Trunnell soon had the watch hard at work getting out new canvas from the +lazaretto aft. The main deck was getting safer, and although she took the +sea heavily now and then, she was no longer like a half-tide rock in a +strong current. + +Topsails were hoisted out from below and gantlines bent. By the time all +hands had eaten something and eight bells had struck, we were ready to +get up new topsails and start the pumps. + +Luckily there was little water below. In spite of the tremendous +straining the ship had made no more than could be expected, and in a +little over an hour at the brakes we had the satisfaction of having the +pumps suck. + +All that morning we worked aloft getting new gear up. The British ship +drew away on our weather beam, wallowing horribly in the seaway. The wind +died away gradually into a good stiff gale, and by noon we had a break or +two above us that let down the sunlight. This cheered all hands. A good +meal with extra coffee was served forward, and I sat down to the cabin +table with Chips and the steward, to eat ravenously of prime junk and +preserved potatoes. + +"'Tis a quare time ye had ag'in last night, forrads, hey?" said Chips. + +"It was interesting for a few minutes," I answered. "I hope you fixed +the fellow's irons all right. Keys seem to have strange ways aboard +this vessel." + +"Well, ye needn't be afear'd av th' raskil takin' leave ag'in. Sure, an' +I riveted his irons this time, as will take a file an' no less to cut +through. I votes we get th' old man to put him aboard th' first ship what +comes a-heavin' down nigh enough, hey?" + +"It would suit me all right," I answered. + +"Jim and Long Tom an' Hans an' a whole lot av us have th' matter in +mind, an' we'll speak wid th' skipper afore long. There's a divil's mess +below in th' fore-peak, where a barrel has bruk loose that I'll have to +mix wid first. Be ye a-goin' in th' boat aboard th' stranger whin th' +sea goes down?" + +"I suppose so," I said; "that lot generally falls to a second mate." + +"Be sure, thin, ye have th' plug in all right an' th' oars sound, fer th' +sea will be heavy fer a bad craft, and ye mind th' irons last night." + +"I'll just take a look at them before I start. Chips," I said. "Thank you +for keeping tabs on the skipper." + +"It's no great matter," he answered; and then we fell to with a will +until the meal was finished. + + + + +VIII + + +At three bells in the afternoon the sea had begun to go down enough to +allow us to get our new topsails on her and a main-topgallantsail. The +_Pirate_ went smoking through it under the pressure, trembling with each +surge, and throwing a perfect storm of water over her catheads. The +English ship was now a mere speck to windward, almost hull down, and we +would have to beat up to her if we could. + +Just how badly she needed help we of course could not tell. If she were +sinking fast, then she would have to depend upon her own boats, for the +sea was too heavy until late in the afternoon to venture out in our only +one left. We could no longer see her signals, but carried all the sail +possible, without danger of carrying away our spars, in the effort to get +close to her again. + +After standing along for an hour or more we wore ship, and found that we +could just about get within hailing distance to leeward. + +Trunnell had the reef tackles rigged from the main yard, and the +life-boat was slung clear of the lee rail. Then, watching a chance, she +was let go with Hans and Johnson in her to keep her clear and dropped +back to the mizzen channels, where the volunteers were ready to get +aboard her. + +Four men besides myself manned her, and she was instantly let go to keep +her clear of the sea, which hove her first high on the _Pirate's_ +quarter, and then down until our faces were below the copper on her +bends. By dint of quick work we shoved her clear, and started on the +pull, dead to windward. + +How small the _Pirate_ looked when we were but a few fathoms distant in +that sea! Our boat rode the waves nicely without shipping much water, and +several times I turned to look back at the ship, where Trunnell stood +beside the skipper, watching us through the glasses, and waiting to pick +us up on our return. I could see the "doctor's" face above the topgallant +rail forward and that of Chips in the waist. + +It was a long pull. The sea was running high and the wind was still +blowing a half gale, breaking up the heavy oily clouds into long banks +between which the sun shone at intervals. It was a good half hour's work +before we could cover the short distance between the ships. + +We came slowly up under her lee quarter, and when we were quite close I +could see that she was indeed very deep, if not actually sinking. The +words "Royal Sovereign, Liverpool," were painted in gold letters on her +stern, and on the circular buoys hanging upon her quarter-rail was the +same name in black. A group of men stood near the mizzen rigging, and one +short man with a black sou'wester and blue pilot coat hailed us through a +large-mouthed trumpet, which almost hid his bearded face. + +"Boat ahoy! can you come aboard?" he roared. + +"We'll try to come alongside," I bawled. "Stand by to heave a line." + +A man had one ready and hove it well out with a yell to catch. Long Tom, +our lean Yankee sailor, who was pulling bow oar, seized it as it fell +across and took a turn around a thwart. The oars were shipped and we fell +under the vessel's stern, riding the seas without mishap. + +"We're sinking," cried the short man, who was the captain. "Can you take +some of us with you?" + +"Aye, aye; get them aboard here as quick as you can," came the answer. + +There was no time lost now. Men swarmed toward the taffrail, and for an +instant it looked as if there would be something of a panic. The short +skipper, however, flung them aside without ceremony, and the next instant +a female figure appeared at the rail. + +"Haul easy," came the order. Hans and Tom pulled in the line slowly until +the boat's bow was leading almost directly beneath the ship's stern. A +bridle was rigged from the spanker boom and made fast to a life buoy. +Then the lady who had appeared at the taffrail was slung in it rather +uncomfortably and carefully lowered away. She was seized by one of the +men forward, and handed aft to me. + +The woman was quite young. She was slightly built, and I supported her +easily until she was safely in the stern sheets. A few strands of curly +blond hair blew across my face, and gave me a most peculiar feeling as I +brushed them aside. Then she turned up her face, and I saw that she had +most beautiful eyes, soft and gentle, with a trusting look, such as one +sees in children. + +"Thank you, Mr. Sailorman," she said, with a smile. "I'm all right now." + +"Except, perhaps, for a little wetting, you will stay so, I hope," +I answered. + +A heavy woman was being lowered away, and Hans caught her boldly around +the body, trying to keep her from being thrown out of the tossing small +boat. She shrieked dismally. + +"Don't be silly, mamma," cried the young lady aft. "You've been squeezed +tighter than that before, I am sure." + +She was passed aft and took her place beside her daughter in the stern, +expostulating incoherently at the younger one's insinuations. + +Then followed a little man, short and stout, who was evidently the ship's +carpenter, and he was followed by a dozen sailors. + +"Haven't you any boats that will swim?" I asked of the mate, who hung +over the rail above me. + +"We're getting them out now," he answered. + +"Then let us go. We've got a big enough load already." + +In a few moments we were on our way back to the _Pirate_, making good +headway before the wind and sea, and shipping little water. + +The men explained as we went along that the _Sovereign_ had started a +butt during the gale, and she was full of water by this time. They had +kept at the pumps all day, but had given it up when they saw we were +coming for them. The ship's cargo of oil and light woods from the +peninsula had kept her from going to the bottom. She was homeward bound +to Liverpool, and it was the captain's wife and daughter we were bringing +aboard. The hurricane had caught them aback and dismasted them during the +night, and after six hours of plunging helplessly into the sea without +anything but the mainmast and stump of the foremast above the deck, she +had sprung a leak and filled rapidly. The maintopsail they had bent in +the morning after extraordinary exertion, and with this they had managed +to keep her partly under control. + +"She will never go to the bottom with all the soft wood she has in her," +said a sailor who was old and grizzled and had the bearing of a +man-of-war's man. "She can't sink for months. The water is up to her +lower deck already." + +"So that's the reason you were not getting your boats out in a +hurry?" I asked. + +"Sure," said he; "I'd as soon stay in her a bit longer as in many a +bleedin' craft that you sees a-goin' in this trade." + +"I noticed you were one of the first to leave her," said the young girl, +with some spirit. + +"Ah, mum, when you gets along in life like me, hardships is not good for +the constitootion. A sailorman, 'e gets enough o' them without huntin' +any more. Howsumever, if I see any chance o' gettin' the bleedin' craft +in port 'way out here in this Hindian Ocean, I'd be the last to leave. +Bust me, mum, if that ain't the whole truth, an' a little more besides. +You ask your pa." + +Here he gave a sigh, and drew his hand across his forehead as if in pain. +His large pop eyes blinked sadly for a few moments, and his mouth dropped +down at the corners. Then his mahogany-colored face became fixed and his +gaze was upon the craft he had just deserted. What was in the old +fellow's mind? I really felt sorry for him, as he sat there gazing sadly +after his deserted home. Captain Sackett would stay aboard until the +last, his wife informed us, but as there was no necessity of any one +staying now, if their boats could live in the sea that was still running, +it was probable that they would all be aboard us before night. Jenks, the +old sailor, gave it as his opinion that they would have the boats out in +half an hour. + +We came up under the lee of the _Pirate_ and then began the job of +getting our passengers aboard her. + +Trunnell passed a line over the main-brace bumpkin, and held the tossing +craft away from the ship's side until a bridle could be bent and the +ladies hoisted aboard. + +Mrs. Sackett trembled violently and begged that she would not be killed, +much to her daughter's amusement. Finally she was landed on deck, where +she was greeted by the third mate and escorted aft. Miss Sackett was of +different stuff. She insisted that she could grab the mizzen channel +plates and climb aboard. I begged her to desist and be hoisted on deck +properly, but she gave me such a look that I held back and refrained from +passing the line about her. As the boat lifted on a sea she made a spring +for the channel. Her hand caught it all right, but her foot slipped, and +as the boat sank into the hollow trough she was left hanging. + +Trunnell instantly sprang over the side, and letting himself down upon +the channel, seized her hand and lifted her easily to a footing. The +ship rolled down until they were knee deep in the sea, but the little +mate held tight, and then, with one hand above his head, as she rose +again, he lifted his burden easily to the grasp of Jim, who reached over +the side for her. + +After she was landed safely the men crowded up the best way they could, +and the boat was dropped astern with a long painter to keep her clear of +the ship's side. + +Captain Thompson greeted his female passengers awkwardly. He declared in +a drawling tone that he was 'most glad that their boat was wrecked, +inasmuch as it had given him the opportunity to meet the finest ladies he +had ever set eyes on. + +"May the devil grasp me in his holy embrace, madam," said he, "if I am +lying when I says that word. It is my most pious thought, says I." + +Mrs. Sackett was somewhat taken aback at this candor, but managed to keep +her feelings well hidden. Her daughter came to the rescue. "We appreciate +your noble efforts, Captain Thompson. The fact is, we have heard so much +about your gallantry in saving life at sea that we are sure anything we +could say would sound weak in comparison to what you must already have +heard. If you have a spare stateroom, we would be very thankful if we +might have it for a time, as our clothes are quite wet from the sea." + +The skipper was somewhat surprised at the young girl's answer, but he hid +his confusion by bawling for the steward. + +When the mulatto came, he gave numerous orders in regard to bunks, linen, +drying of clothes, etc., regretting over and over again that he was a +single man, and consequently had no wife from whom he could borrow +wearing apparel while that of his guests was drying. + +The third mate, also, took pains to be very civil to them, and his soft +voice could be heard in conversation with Miss Sackett long after they +had gone below. + +I went forward and interviewed the men we had rescued, afterward getting +the "doctor" to serve them something hot, as their galley fire had been +out many hours and they had been eating nothing but ship's bread. + +The _Pirate_ waited all the afternoon with her canvas shortened down to +her lower topsails to keep her from forging ahead too fast. But even when +it grew dark and the British ship could no longer be clearly made out, +her skipper had not gotten out his boats. It was evident that he would +try to save her if possible, and now that his family were safe he cared +little for the risk. Captain Thompson still held the _Pirate_ hove to +under easy canvas, drifting slowly with the wind, which was now no more +than a moderate breeze. The sea, also, was going down fast, and the sky +was showing well between the long lines of greasy-looking clouds which +appeared to sail slowly away to the northeast. The night fell with every +prospect of good weather coming on the following day. + +I went on deck in the dog-watch and took a look around. The _Sovereign_ +was a mere blur on the horizon, but her lights shone clearly. + +"We'll stand by her all night," said Trunnell, "and then if the +skipper doesn't care to leave her,--which he will, however,--we'll +stand away again." + +There was little to do, so the watch lounged around the deck and rested +from the exertion of the past twenty-four hours. Chips told me I had +better come forward after supper and take a smoke in his room, for they +were going to come to some conclusion about the fellow Andrews. There had +been some talk of putting him aboard the English ship, and if we could +get the captain to agree to it, it would be done. + +I loafed around until I saw a light between the crack of his door and the +bulkhead. Then I slid it back, and entered. + +The stuffy little box was full of men. The bos'n, a large man named +Spurgen, who had quite a swagger for a merchant sailor, was holding forth +to the quartermaster, Hans, on nautical operations. + +"An' how'd ye do if ye had an anchor atween, decks widout nothin' to +hoist it out wid?" he was saying as I came in. + +Hans affirmed, with many oaths, that he'd let the "bloody hancor go +bloomin' well to the bottom before he'd fool wid it." This made the bos'n +angry, and he opened with a fierce harangue, accompanied by a description +of the necessary manoeuvres. He also made some remarks relating to the +quartermaster's knowledge of things nautical. + +I took occasion to look about the little room while this was going on and +my fingers warmed up some. I then seated myself on a corner of the chest +near Chips to make myself easy, during which time the bos'n had gained +sufficient ground to enforce silence upon his adversary, and relinquish +the subject of anchors. Then came a pause during which I could +distinguish the "doctor's" voice above the mutterings, and get a whiff of +my own tobacco out of the haze. + +"--five fat roaches; they'll cure you every time," he was saying to +Chips. "It's old man Green's sure remedy, sah, yes, sah. I hearn him tole +his ole mate, Mr. Gantline, when he sailed in the West Coast trade." + +"Faith, ye may stave me, shipmate, but that would be an all-fired tough +dish to swallow," the carpenter declared, with a wry face. "Supposen +they didn't die? They would make a most eternal disagreeable cargo +shiftin' about amongst your ribs. May the devil grab me, ye moke, if I +wouldn't rather swell up an' bust wid th' scurvy than swallow them +fellows kickin'." + +"Bile 'em, white man," said the cook. "Bile 'em in er pint er water--an' +then fling 'em overboard. Who the debble would eat er roach?" + +"Right ye are, shipmate," assented Chips; "'tis an aisy enough dose to +take if all ye do is to throw th' critters to lor'ard. Sink me, though, +if I sees th' benefit av a medicine ye fling to David Jones instead av +placin' it to th' credit av yer own innerds." + +"Yah, yah, Mr. Chips, but you beats me. Yes, sah, you beats me, but yer +haid is thick. Yes, sah, yer haid is thick ernuff, yah, yah," laughed the +"doctor." "What would yer do but drink the water, white man? yes, sah, +drink the water for the acid in the critter. It's salt in yer blood makes +scurvy, from libbin' so long er eatin' nuffin' but salt junk. Lime juice +is good, ef the ole man gives it to yer straight, but he nebber does. No, +sah, dat he nebber do. It's too expensive. Anyways, it doan' hab no +strength like er roach, ner no sech freshness, which am de main pint +after all." + +Seeing himself out of the talk, and having completely growled down the +quartermaster, the bos'n started another subject. This was a tirade +against bad skippers and crimps who stood in too thick with the shipping +commissioners, and whom he swore were in league with each other and the +devil. He was an old sailor, and his seamed face was expressive when +launching into a favorite subject. Here was Jim's chance, and he spoke +out. "Whatever became of Jameson, what was took off by Andrews?" he +asked Chipps. + +"Was he doped?" I asked. + +"Didn't ye niver hear tell from O'Toole an' Garnett? They was Andrews's +mates for a spell, until th' Irishman, God bless him, knocked him +overboards an' nearly killed him in a scuffle on th' India Docks." + +"Cast loose; I want to hear," said the bos'n. + +There was a moment's silence, and Chips looked at me as though +questioning the senior officer of his watch. Then he fixed himself +comfortably on the chest by jamming himself against the bulkhead, locking +his hands about his knees, blowing smoke in a thick cloud. + +I heard the hail of Trunnell from the bridge during this pause, asking +about a t'gallant leach-line. Thinking it well to take a look out, I did +so to see if the men obeyed his orders, and found them rather slow +slacking the line. This made it necessary for me to take a hand in +matters and instil a little discipline among them, which kept me on deck +for some minutes. + + + + +IX + + +When I had a chance to slip back into the forward house, Chips had +already "cast loose" and was in full swing. + +"There ain't no use of tellin' everything one sees aboard ship," he was +saying, "for you know whin things happen on deep water th' world ain't +much th' wiser fer hearing about them. There ain't no telegraphs, an' +th' only witnesses is the men concerned--or the wimmen. The men may or +mayn't say a thing or two after getting the run av th' beach, but as +th' critters have to wait half a year afore getting there, the news av +th' occurrence wears off an' regard for the effects on th' teller takes +place. It's just as often as not th' men keep mum. You know that as +well as I do. + +"This same Andrews as is forrads in irons was running the _Starbuck_ with +Jameson as mate, an' old Garnett as second under him. Ye all know that +old pirit. But this time he didn't have any hand in Andrews's game. +Andrews wanted to marry the girl Jameson had, an' whin he found he had +lost her he played his devil's trick. + +"Jameson hadn't been married a week afore Andrews took him around b' th' +foot av Powell Street in 'Frisco an' set up some drinks. That's the last +any one sees av Jameson fer a year or more on th' West Coast, fer whin he +comes to, he was at sea on that old tank, th' _Baldwin_, an' old man +Jacobs would as soon have landed him on th'moon as put him ashore." + +"A purty bloomin' mean trick," interrupted the bos'n. + +"Th' poor divil did have a hard time av it, fer he wasn't a very fierce +sort o' chap. He ware a gentil spoken, kind-hearted feller, an' ye know +well enough how a man what isn't made of iron wud git along wid Jacobs or +his mates. They hazed him terrible; an', as they ware one hundred an' +seventy days an' nights to Liverpool, he took the scurvy. Ye can reckon +what was left av him afterwards. Whin he left th' hospital, he was glad +enough to ship on a Chilean liner to get even as far to the West Coast as +Valparaiso. + +"He ware aboard this Dago, puttin' in, whin he saw th' _Starbuck_ +standin' out o' th' harbor. His wife ware on th' quarter-deck--" + +"That's the way with most women," snarled the bos'n, interrupting. + +"I don't know about that," continued Chips. "You see, after he had been +gone a few months, an' Andrews had been hangin' around all th' time +gettin' in his pisonous work, she began to have a little faith in th' +villain. It wasn't long afore he convinced her Jameson had deserted, fer +he proved fair enough he had shipped aboard th' _Baldwin_, without so +much as saying good-by. There ware plenty of men to back him on that, +includin' th' boatman what rowed them aboard. Finally, partly by +blandanderin' an' a-feelin' around, fer th' poor gal ware now alone in +th' world, he got her to step aboard th' bleedin' hooker _Starbuck_ the +day he ware ready for sea. Thin he jest stood out--an'--an'--well, after +they'd been out six months th' matter ended as far as Jameson ware +concerned. + +"Jameson took the news hard whin he got th' run av th' beach, but he was +that kindly disposed chap an' went along th' best he could until th' war +broke out. He ware still waitin' at Valparaiso whin they drafted him +into the Dago army, an' he was lucky enough to be on th' side what got +licked. Then there ware no use waitin' there fer th' _Starbuck_ to come +in again, so he made a slant for Peru as they niver took no pris'ners. +Two weeks afterwards Andrews came in again fer nitrates wid Garnett an' +O'Toole fer mates--" + +"Lucky fer Andrews he wasn't there," said the bos'n; "he'd have had his +ornery hide shot full of holes." + +"What's th' use av ye talking like a fool?" said Chips. "Is shootin' up a +feller a-goin' to undo a wrong like that? Th' shootin' was all done on +th' other side, an' Andrews is sound yet an' aboard this here ship. Some +men think av other things besides revenge. Especially kind-hearted +fellers like Jameson what niver cud hurt no one. As soon as some av +Jameson's friends who knew of th' affair told his wife, she wint right +into th' cabin where Andrews was, an' afore he knew what she ware up to, +she had shot herself. Andrews paid her funeral expenses, an' buried her +in th' little Dago cemetery out forninst th' city gate. An' thin Garnett, +who didn't know av his skipper's diviltry, sware vengeance on th' husband +who deserted her, fer she ware gentil and kind wid th' men forrads." + +Here Chips paused and gave me a sidelong look as he refilled his pipe. +Then he lit it and smiled hopefully. + +"They ware a quare pair, them mates, Garnett an' O'Toole," he said. "What +one wasn't th' other was, and _wice wersa_. They lay there two months +loadin' on account o' th' war having blocked th' nitrate beds. + +"Wan day O'Toole saw an old woman come limpin' along th' dock where th' +_Starbuck_ lay. She hobbled on to th' gang-plank an' started aboard, an' +O'Toole began to chaff Garnett. He waren't half bad as a joker. + +"''Pon me whurd, Garnett,' sez he, 'I do belave your own mother is comin' +aboard to visit ye--but no, maybe it's yer swateheart, fer ye have an +uncommon quare taste, ye know. B' th' saints, ye ware always a bold one +fer th' ladies.' + +"We ware lying in th' next berth, not twenty feet away, an' from where I +sat on th' rail I cud hear thim talk an' see what was a-goin' on. + +"'Stave me,' says old Garnett, solemn like, 'that's true enough. Sink her +fer a fool, though, to be a-comin' down here to win back an old +windjammer like me--What? ye mean that old hag driftin' along the deck? +Blast you for a red-headed shell-back, d'ye s'pose I'd take up wid wimmen +av your choice? No, I never makes a superior officer jealous;' an' wid +that he takes out his rag an' mops th' dent in th' top av his head where +there's no hair nor nothin' but grease, an' he draws out his little +pestiverous vial av peppermint salts an' sniffs. + +"'Faith, an' ye'll need to clear yer old head, ye owld raskil, ye've been +too gay fer onct,' says O'Toole. + +"She ware a tough-lookin' old gal, an' her hat brim flopped over her +face. O'Toole met her an' pointed to Garnett. + +"'If it's th' leddy-killer av th' fleet ye're afther, there he Stan's.' + +"Th' old woman looked an' stopped. + +"'No,' says she, in a sort o' jangled tone, 'eets my little gal I looks +fer--she's aboard here wid th' capt'in,' + +"'Ye can't see her,' says Garnett, 'an' ye better get ashore afore I +calls one av thim Dago soldiers to carry ye off an' marry ye.' + +"I cud jest get th' glint av th' old woman's eyes, then she bent her +head lower. + +"'E--eets my leetle gal I must see,' an' there was somethin' in her voice +that made one pay attention, 'twas so deep an' solemn like. I ware +listening an' a few soldiers av th' army what was camped in th' town came +up an' stopped an' looked on. + +"'She ware a good leetle gal--an' I cared for her--Yes, by God, she ware +a good gal,' said th' old one, hoarsely. + +"I cud see O'Toole turn away his head an' Garnett sniff hard at his vial. +'Twas good, he used to say, fer things in th' head. Thin he turned to th' +old woman. + +"'Ye better get ashore, old gal, she ain't aboard here. We don't take +thim kind on deep water.' + +"'I must see her afore I goes,' says th' old woman, an' her voice ware a +whisper that died away, but ware so full av force O'Toole turned to her. + +"'Was it Mrs. Jameson ye wished to see?' he asked. + +"The old woman nodded. + +"'Well--er--faith, an' she--er,' an' thin he stopped to look at Garnett. + +"'She had an accident, by yer lave, 'bout a month ago. How was it ye +niver hearn tell? Waren't ye here whin th' old man brought her ashore?' + +"'I come from 'Frisco,' says she. + +"'Well, I s'pose ye might as well know now as niver,' O'Toole blurted +out; 'she's dead, owld woman. Been dead a month gone. Th' old man buried +her dacent like, fer, as ye say, she ware a rale good gal, 'pon me whurd, +fer a fact, she ware that. 'Tis hard to tell ye, but it's th' truth, th' +whole truth, an' divil a bit besides.' + +"While he talked th' old woman's head went lower, and whin he finished, +she gave a hard gasp. Thin she stood huddled forninst th' deck-house, an' +Garnett started forward to th' men at work stevin' th' last av th' cargo. + +"All av a sudden like I saw her raise her face an' spit a button from her +mouth. Her eyes ware starin' an' lookin' at th' hill away off t' th' +eastward av th' town an' beyant to th' great southern mountings av th' +Andes range. Thin she slowly straightened up an' walked wid a firm step +along th' deck an' th' gang-plank. + +"Th' soldier men made way for her on th' dock, but she looked straight +beyant her nose an' held her way firm an' strong until she went out av +sight, lavin' O'Toole starin' after her. + +"''Pon me whurd, Garnett,' he called, ''tis a most wonderful +thing, look!' + +"''Tis a mother's love, ye haythen; 'pon me whurd, there's nothin' else +like it. See how th' news affected th' poor old crayther. It puts me in +mind av the time whin I had an old leddy t' look after me. 'Tis a rale +jewil av a thing, an' a man only has it th' onct.' + +"'More's th' pity,' says Garnett. 'Sink ye, but ye sure are a tough one +to tell th' old gal on so short notice. But ye niver did have no +feelin's, ye bloomin' heathen.' + +"''Pon me sowl, what cud I do else?' + +"'O' course, 'tain't likely a rough feller like you could do any better, +but whin any wimmen folks come aboard agin, come to a man as is used to +thim. A man as can talk an' act in a way they likes. A man wid some ways +to him. A man--' Here he stooped an' picked up th' button th' old gal +had dropped. + +"'Where did this come from?' he asked. + +"'She had it in her mouth,' says O'Toole. + +"'Well, it's one av th' buttons off a uniform that ain't healthy to be +wearin' around these parts just now.' An' then they both looked hard at +th' little thing. + +"'D'ye s'pose it cud have been?' asked O'Toole. + +"'Been what?' says Garnett. + +"'Jameson, ye blatherin' ijiot. Jameson, th' same as left his wife, +a-comin' here huntin' for her. 'Twas so, fer a fact. He had it in his +mouth to kape us from knowin' his voice, an' by th' same tokin, I calls +to mind th' chokin' in his throat, the scand'lous owld woman he was.' + +"'Stave me, but ye might have been right for onct in yer life, so bear a +hand an' let's stand away after him an' ketch th' old leddy an' see,' +says Garnett. + +"They started off without listenin' to my hail, so I climbed down to th' +dock an' follows. It was evenin' now, an' th' street was crowded, but +they pushed along ahead av me. + +"Ye see it ware Jameson, sure enough, an whin he heard his wife ware +dead, he wint up that street like a man in a dream. He forgot all about +his dress, an' his face ware hard set like a man thinkin' over th' past. +He had some five minutes' start av th' mates, an' whin a poor beggar +woman spoke to him he scared her half to death with his voice when he +asked her th' way to th' cemetery. Thin he remembered his disguise, +stepped into a doorway, pulled off th' dress an' hat an' flung thim to +th' old beggar woman, an' went his way. + +"Garnett an' O'Toole came along a few minutes later an' saw th' beggar. + +"'There he is. That's him,' sung out the old sailor, pintin' to th' old +gal walkin' along wid her rags tied in a bundle tucked under her arm, fer +she had made shift to change thim fer Jameson's slops. + +"''Pon me whurd, ye're right fer onct agin,' says O'Toole. + +"'Well, don't go a-spoilin' th' thing this time. Let me sail inter him, +an' if I wants yer, I'll sing out, an' ye can bear a hand an' help.' +Garnett swung across th' street to overhaul th' old woman, an' came up +behind her. + +"'Evenin', old lady, I wants to have a talk wid ye;' an' he lays his hand +on her shoulder wid a grip to take a piece av flesh out. She stopped an' +turned quick. + +"'_Caramba_!' she yells; 'I teach ye to insult a dacent old lady, you +Yankee dog. Help! Murder! ye bloody raskil! Help, help!' Thin she ware +upon him like a wild cat, a clawin' an' bitin', screechin' and yellin'. + +"'Sink you for a bloody scoundrel, Jameson, I knows ye,' roared Garnett. +'Larry, there, bear a hand. I have him.' + +"'Hold him thin, ye brave man,' sings out O'Toole, comin' up. 'Go it, +owld gal, give it to him. 'Tis a leddy-killer he is fer sure, 'pon me +whurd, fer a fact. Claw him, bite him, even though he's as tough as +nails. Yell him deaf, owld leddy. Do it fer his mether's sake, th' +scand'lous owld rake he is. Get his year in yer teeth an' hold on, fer +'tis a leddy-killer ye have in yer hands at last. Whang his hide off! +Whang him! Whang him!' An' I thought th' old raskil would die av laffin'. + +"We ware crowdin' around thim to see th' fun, an' th' way that old gal +whanged an' lammed, an' lammed an' whanged, wud have brung tears to yer +eyes. 'Twas too much fer human natur' to stan', an' so away goes Garnett +down th' street as fast as his bow-legs can git him over th' beach, wid +his sheets slacked off a-runnin' free, an' likewise, b' th' same tokin, +away squares th' old leddy wid her skysails set an' everythin' drawin' +'cept her skirts, which she holds b' th' clews an' bunts. + +"'After him! Catch th' blackguard!' bawls O'Toole, rolling on th' +pavement, laffin' an' bawlin'. + +"That old beggar was clipper built, fer sure, for wid her skirts clewed +up she ware bearin' down fast on th' old mate an' kept his bow-legs +a-lurchin' afore th' crowd a-comin' along in th' wake a-yellin' an' +hootin' like mad. A man jumped out to stop him, but I knowed Garnett +would niver stop this side o' th' gangway av his ship, an' sure 'nuff, +out flashes his hand an? th' Dago rolls over an' over. They yelled harder +than ever, an' Garnett had to shake out another reef afore he could make +th' gang-plank, an' get aboard. He managed to get below jest as some +soldiers rushed up. Th' noise brought Andrews on deck in time to get men +to keep th' crowd off his ship, an' thin O'Toole comes up. + +"'What's th' row?' he bawls to th' mate, but O'Toole ware laffin' so he +couldn't spake a whurd. Finally he got it out. + +"'Faith, 'tis th' leddy-killer av th' fleet, Garnett, at his owld game,' +sez he. ''Pon me whurd, 'tis a hangin' matter this time, fer th' damage +he's done th' sex. He ware--' but he bruk down afore he could finish. + +"'Twas five minits afore he could tell what had happened, th' old gal +cussin' an' swearin' an' th' crowd a-hootin' an' jeerin', but finally th' +skipper got some soldiers to carry th' old gal away. Thin out comes +Garnett on th' main deck a-smellin' av his little vial, but avoidin' av +th' skipper's eye. + +"'What th' devil did ye mean?' asked Andrews; 'did ye take her to be +Jameson in disguise?' + +"''Pon me whurd,' says O'Toole, 'th' first wan that comes aboard was no +other--an' this one looked enough like him from a stern view. 'Tis a bad +trade, though, this killin' av leddies.' An' he leered so at Garnett he +swore horrible an' went forrads. + +"I ware standin' close enough to catch th' glint in Andrews' eye whin +this ware said, but he took no notice an' went ashore, an' as I followed +after him he was thinkin' hard." + +Here Chips spat quietly into the corner, fingered his pipe, and rammed +the ash down. Then he looked up at the light, and a different +expression came upon him. The bos'n's smile died away, and all sat +listening for the finish. Far forward sounded the cries of men dressing +down the head sheets. + +"I hadn't much to do," continued Chips, softly, "so I walked on an' saw +him stop at a flower stand an' buy a bunch av roses. I wint across to th' +cemetery where th' trees are good to look at an' th' grass is green as +th' sea nigh th' States. I hadn't gone far whin I sees a man standin' +nigh a grave wid another man lyin' on it. I couldn't tell who th' men +ware till I came close, fer 'twas now gettin' dark. Thin when Andrews +stooped an' lifted th' head av th' one lyin' down, I saw them both plain +enough. Jameson's head made me feel sick wid th' horror av it. Whin I +spoke, Andrews let th' poor fellow sink back again, an' as I stood +alongside I saw th' flowers th' skipper had bought lyin' on th' grave +nigh th' hand av poor Jameson, which still held his pistil. Th' old man +said nothin', but there ware a hard look in his eyes as I saw him lookin' +at th' tops av th' big Chilean mountings where th' sunken sun made them a +bloody red. He ware thinkin' hard, an' seemed to be watchin' a flock av +vultures a-comin' over th' range, stringin' out in a long line av black +specks. Thin all av a sudden he stooped an' picked up the flowers an' +placed thim gentle like on th' head av the grave--'twas the only gentil +thing I iver knew him to do--an' thin walked away without a word. That's +th' last I saw av him until I shipped aboard here, for he cleared from +Valparaiso th' next day." + +"An' this is the beggar we're taking back to the States to be skipper of +some American ship, maybe this same one, if he gets clear of the killing +of his quartermaster off Melbourne," said the bos'n. + +"An' that's the reason, by your leave, Mr. Rolling," said Jim, "I say +it's best to go back again and deliver this man up to the proper +authorities." + +"As far as I'm concerned," I answered, "I would just as soon see him safe +where the wind won't annoy him; but I'm not the skipper, and if you want +to get any satisfaction you'll have to go aft." + +"We did," said the bos'n; "we asked the old man, but he wouldn't hear of +it, and Trunnell is with him." + +"Trunnell is with him because he thinks it right," said Jim, with a +shrewd look at me; "but if you were to try to persuade him, I believe he +would come around all right." + +"Why fo' not put him abo'ad the English ship, sah," put in the "doctor." +"I votes we ax the ole man to put 'im abo'ad her." + +All were agreeable to this proposition and decided to go aft the first +thing in the morning watch. Jim stuck out for going back. + +"If you were to go with us, Mr. Rolling, we might persuade +Trunnell," said he. + +"It's no use, he never would--" Before we could continue the discussion +further the bells struck out loudly, and the bos'n and I went on deck for +our watch. + +It was a fine, clear night, and I was glad to get the course from the +mate and walk fore and aft on the weather side of the poop to enjoy it. + + + + +X + + +The morning dawned calm and beautiful. The heavy, oily swell, which still +ran from the effects of the blow, moved in long, smooth humps upon the +sea. Far to the eastward the light of the rising sun tinted the cirrus +clouds above with a rosy hue. + +I was quite tired from the effects of the gale, and the morning watch is +always a cheerless one. The steward had coffee ready, however, and after +a good drink I felt better, and got out the glass to see if I could make +out the _Sovereign_. We had been drifting all night, so that in the +mid-watch Trunnell wore ship and stood up for her to keep in sight. There +she lay, about three miles away off our port beam. Her topsail was the +only canvas she had set, and she was so low in the water that I could not +see her deck amidships at that distance. All except a little of her high +poop appeared to be under, or so low that it was invisible. I wondered +why her captain had not put off sooner, and I knew that as soon as +Thompson came on deck he would be in a fury at his having waited so long. +There was not a breath of air now, so we were certain to be in company +for several hours at least. + +While I looked over the expanse of heaving ocean I saw a black spot +between the ships. In a moment I made out a boat rising and falling, +propelled by four oars, and headed for us. Sometimes she would disappear +behind a high lump of sea and then she would be on top, and I made out +she was coming along right handily. + +As she drew nearer I made her out to be full of men. She came up under +our mizzen channels and hailed. Half the watch was bending over the side +looking at her, and one man threw a line. This was seized, and the next +moment her crew came clambering over the rail. + +Jenks, the old sailor who had come over in the boat with me the day +before, was on deck to receive his shipmates. The old fellow's face +wrinkled with amusement at the sight of his worn-out countrymen until it +looked like the slack of a bellows. There was an unholy twinkle in his +eye as he greeted them. + +On the boarding of the officer of the boat, a tall Englishman who was the +ship's mate, the man Jenks stopped his pleasantry at the tired crew's +expense, but it was too late. He was ordered into the boat, with three +other men who were fresh, to be sent away for the remaining men on the +ship. Then the officer mounted the poop just as Captain Thompson emerged +from below. + +The officer bowed and touched his hat deferentially, but the skipper +stood looking at him out of his glinting eyes, while his nose worked +and twitched. + +"Don't seem to be in much of a hurry, hey?" said our captain, with +his drawl. + +"We've been working steadily all night at the pumps, sir, hopin' to +keep her afloat, sir. The old man--I beg pardon, Captain Sackett,--says +as he'll not abandon her while she swims. The rest of us have +permission to go, sir." + +"Is her cargo of any particular value, then?" + +"Yes, sir. It's palm oil and valuable woods. There's eight hundred +barrels of palm oil in her, and the captain's got his all--every cent he +has in the world. He won't leave her." + +"Do you know what you resemble, hey?" said our skipper, dryly. + +"I do not, sir." + +"Well, I don't want to hurt the feelings of a poor, shipwrecked sailor, +nor insinuate nothing sech as no gentleman ought. No, sirree. You are my +guest aboard here, and damned welcome to you. At the same time, if I ware +telling anybody as to what kind of a fellow you was, I should +say,--yessir, after thinking the matter over carefully, and taking all +points into consideration,--I might say that I thought ye an all-around +white-livered, cowardly cuss, an' that's a fact." + +The English mate turned red. He started to say something, and then +checked himself. Finally he blurted out:-- + +"I've heard tell of some Yankee skippers who've given a bad name to your +infernal shipping, an' I reckon I've run up against one. But no fear! I +recognize you as our saviour, an' won't say a word, sir. The retort +courteous, as the saying is, would be a crack on the jaw of such a +fellow, but I don't say as I'll do it, sir. There's some fellows as needs +rippin' up the back, but you bein' captain of this here ship, I won't say +who they is, sir. No, sir, I won't say who they is, or nothin'. I just +ask that I be sent back aboard the _Sovereign_. The boat ain't gone yet, +and, by the Lord, I'll drown before I get into a ship like this." + +"Well, by hookey, you won't, then," snarled the captain; "you'll stay +aboard this boat. A man that's born to be hung mustn't be drowned. Hey, +there, Rolling," he bawled, looking forward to where I stood, "get out +the boat and go with those fellows. Get all the rest afeard to stay +aboard, and come back. We won't stay here all day waiting for a lot of +fellows too afeard to know what they want." + +The noise of the talking brought a female figure to the combings of the +companionway, and as the skipper finished, Miss Sackett stood on deck. + +The mate of the _Sovereign_ greeted her, and told of her father's +determination to stay aboard his ship with three men who desired the +chance to make heavy salvage. He didn't suppose any of the crew of +the _Pirate_ cared to take chances, but if they did, he would let +them. He said he could work the wreck into some port, probably Cape +Town, and save her. + +"But he will surely be lost," cried Miss Sackett. "I shall go to him +myself and persuade him not to do this foolish thing. You will let me go +in one of the boats, won't you, Captain Thompson?" she cried, turning to +our skipper. + +Thompson was sour, but he admired nerve. The fact of the Englishman +staying alone aboard his wrecked ship appealed to him where nothing +else would. + +"My dear madam," said he, with his drawl, "you shall certainly do jest +what you want to while I'm captain of this boat. But I wouldn't persuade +your father to do anything against his will. How could a sensible fellow +refuse you anything, hey?" + +The young girl overlooked his insolence, and smiled her satisfaction. She +came forward to where the first boat was getting ready to shove off. The +men in her were sullen and ugly, for they had not had their breakfast, +and the row would be a long one. The old sailor, Jenks, with his pop +eyes, and face like the slack of a bellows, scowled sourly. At this +moment our third officer came on deck and to the lady's side. I was just +about to ask her to wait and go in my boat when I heard the shrill tones +of our Mr. Bell. + +"Clear that boat, and stand by to pass this lady aboard," said he, with +some show of authority, and a clever nautical style. "Allow me?" he +continued, as he offered her his arm at the ladder. + +His shrill voice caused a smile of wonder and amusement among the +strangers, but as they knew their own skipper's daughter, they said +nothing besides a few remarks among themselves. + +"Won't you wait and have breakfast before you go," he asked her, as she +reached the top of the rail; but she refused, and decided that her +father's strange whim to stay aboard his sinking ship deserved first +consideration. + +"In that case I shall have to go along also, for you may be very much +exhausted before getting back." + +Just what good he could do in such a case he did not stop to explain, but +climbed over the side, and after lowering her aboard, took his place +beside her in the stern sheets. Then he gave orders to get clear, and the +boat shot away, while I made shift to get my men something to eat before +taking the long pull. + +In fifteen minutes we were ready to start. Chips wanted to go along to +see if anything could be done to help stop the leak in case Captain +Sackett still insisted staying aboard. Johnson, the little sailor with +the thin legs set wide apart, showing daylight between clear to his +waist, Hans, the heavy-shouldered Swede, and Phillippi, a squat Dago, +made up the rest of the boat's crew. Trunnell had come on deck while we +were eating from the mess-kids, and met the skipper on the poop, where he +stopped to talk over some important matter. This importance appeared to +increase in a moment, for the skipper swore harshly and pointed forward +just as my men were coming aft to go over the side. + +"Rolling," he cried, "hold on with that boat a minute, and lay aft here," +I came to the edge of the poop. + +"Get that ruffian Andrews ready and put him aboard the _Sovereign_. The +men here are tired of his ways, and fair exchange is no robbery. We'll +take their men, they'll take one of ours, hey? Do you rise to that?" + +I understood. The men had made it apparent they did not wish to have the +fellow aboard since he persisted in his murderous ways. The skipper had +been importuned by Jim to turn back and put him ashore. This he would not +think of doing, but to propitiate them he had struck upon this new method +of getting rid of his charge. + +I called Jim, the young landsman, to lend a hand getting the fellow +ready. Andrews cursed us all around and demanded to know what we were +going to do with him. No attention was paid to him, however, and he was +bundled into the boat, handcuffed, with his legs free. + +"Tell Captain Sackett I say he's welcome to him," drawled out Thompson, +over the poop rail. "Good luck to you, Andrews," he continued; "you'll +have a pleasant voyage with no enemies to rip and cut. So long!" + +This drew forth a volley of oaths from Andrews, but the skipper smiled, +and we were soon out of earshot. + +"What do you make of the weather, sir?" asked Jim, who pulled stroke oar. +I looked over the smooth, heaving surface of the quiet ocean, and there +was not the first sign of a breeze anywhere. The sun was partly obscured +in a thick haze which seemed to come from everywhere and fill the entire +atmosphere. The first boat was almost aboard the wreck, and we could see +her looking like a black speck in the distance. + +"It looks as though it might come on thick," I answered Jim, "but +there's no danger of our parting company with the _Pirate_ yet. There +isn't enough wind to move her a knot an hour." + +It was a long, hard pull to the _Sovereign_ and when we arrived her +captain was on deck with his daughter. She had finished trying to +persuade him to leave his fortune, and stood near our third officer, +who was ready to start back with the remainder of the crew. All but +four men had insisted on leaving. These were the steward, two +quartermasters, and a sailor. + +"If there is any valuable stuff in the way of currency or spices, you can +turn them over to me, and our captain will give you his receipt for +them," I said, as I came over the side. + +The little Englishman looked slowly up and down my six feet and more of +length as I stood on the rail, and I fancied he smiled slightly. He was +a florid-faced, bearded man, with clear blue eyes which had no sign of +fear in them. + +"I reckon we'll risk taking in what we have," said he; "at the same time +I want to thank your captain for standing by and taking the men he has +already. You don't think he could spare a few volunteers to help me in, +do you? I'll give a hundred pounds to every man who'll stand by and run +the risk." + +"Well," I stammered, "I'm second mate myself, and therefore can't very +well leave; but he's sent you one extra hand. The fellow is a good enough +sailor, but he's in irons for fighting. He wants you to take him in +exchange for the men you've sent." + +The florid face of the English captain grew redder. His blue eyes +seemed to draw to small points that pricked my inner consciousness. I +suppose I showed some of my embarrassment, for he spoke in a gentler +tone than I expected. + +"Sir. I keep no one in peril against his wish. Neither do I run a +convict ship. You may take your desperado back to your captain with +the compliments of Captain Sackett, once of Her Majesty's Naval +Reserve, and tell him the laws of his country are sufficient to deal +with all persons." + +"If I did," I answered, "you would have your men forced back into your +wrecked vessel." And I pointed to the main deck, upon which the sea +rolled and swashed in little foamy waves through the side ports, which +were now below the heave of the swell. She was clear under amidships, and +only the topgallant forecastle and poop were out of water, which was now +nearly level with the floor in the after cabin. Everything showed wreck +and ruin, from the splintered spars and tangled rigging to the +yellow-white gaps in her bulwarks where the masts had crashed through. + +"The will of the Lord is not to be set aside," he went on, with solemn +and pious cheerfulness. "I would not risk so many lives for a man in +irons. If, however, he will recognize the laws of the Almighty, I shall +turn him adrift and trust that my mercy will not meet with ingratitude. +You had better get my men ready, and if you can, take the trunks and +cabin fixings in a boat. They might come to wrong here. My daughter will +show where the things are I should like saved. As for myself, I shall +stay where duty calls me, and will take this ship into some port and save +her cargo, or go down in her. If I lose her, I lose my all, and with a +wife and family I had better be gone with it. The Lord will temper the +wind to the shorn lambs." + +I called to Hans and Johnson to pass up the prisoner, and he soon stood +on the _Sovereign's_ poop, where he glared around him and made some +inaudible remarks. The third mate, who stood near by, was about to speak +to him when Captain Sackett stepped forward. + +"My man," said he, "your captain has asked me to keep you here and help +me work this ship in. You've been a master yourself, they tell me, so +you will appreciate my difficulty. The Lord, however, always helps +those who help themselves, and with his help we will land this vessel +safe in port." + +Andrews looked at the stout skipper sourly for a moment. Then he gave a +deep snort and spat vulgarly upon the deck at his host's feet. + +"What kind o' damn fool have I run up ag'in now, hey?" he mused in a low +tone, as though speaking to himself, while he looked the skipper over. +"Am I dreamin', or do I eternally run up ag'in nautical loonatic asylums? +That's the question." + +"My dear fellow, you don't seem to relish the fact that you must serve +aboard here," said Sackett. "There's nothing irrational in trying to save +a vessel when it's your plain duty to do so. The Lord sometimes dismasts +us to try us. We must not give up our duty because we have hardships to +encounter. Your captain cannot take care of so many people, probably, and +wishes you to stay here with me. If you will pass your word to do your +share of the work, as I believe you will, I shall cast off those irons +this instant and put you second in command. There will then be five of +us, all able-bodied men, to get her in to the Cape." + +"Of all the slumgullion I ever had stick in my craw, this beats me," +observed the prisoner, in his even tone, without taking his eyes off +Sackett. "I pass my word, an' you turn me loose to do my duty. Well--say, +old man, can you tell me of a miracle you reads out o' your Bible? I +wants to make a comparison." Here he gave a loud snort and grinned. +"There's an old sayin' that any port is good in a storm," he went on, +"an' likewise any ship in a calm. I rise to it, old man. I'll be your +mate; for, if things ain't all gone wrong, I'll sail straight inter +Heaven with ye. Cast me loose." + +"It shall be done at once," said Sackett. "I shall request, sir," said +he, turning to me, "that the irons be stricken off your man." + +I told Chips to go ahead and cut them, and then followed Miss Sackett and +the third mate below, to get what belongings they wanted sent aboard the +_Pirate_ to be kept clear of water. + +"It's a pity papa will do this absurd thing," said Miss Sackett, +impetuously, as she landed upon the cabin deck. I was following close +behind her on the companion and hastened to cheer her. + +"There's not much danger," I said; "for the vessel can't possibly sink +with all the oil and wood in her. He will probably bring her in all right +and save many thousands of dollars. Maybe the carpenter can find the leak +and plug it. In that case she'll be as sound as a dollar and safe as a +house, when they get her pumped." + +"I don't know about it," she answered; "I feel that papa is going to his +death, and I know that if mamma finds out he won't leave, she'll come +back aboard. Here is one trunk. That chest under the berth is to go also. +I'll get what clothes I can gather up, and bring them along in a bundle. +Goodness! hear the water slapping about under the deck; it is perfectly +dreadful to think of any one staying aboard a ship half sunk like this." + +The steward, a very clever-looking young man with a brown mustache, +helped us get the things on deck, where they were taken in charge by the +rest of the men, seven in number, who were going with us. + +While we were below, Chips, after cutting Andrews adrift, tried to find +out where the leak was located. The vessel's hold was so full of water, +however, that he gave up the search. Only a survey of her bilge outside +would help clear up matters, and allow work upon it. + +Captain Sackett had taken an observation and had figured himself out to +be within six hundred miles of Cape Town. He was very thankful for our +kindness and stood near by, wishing us all kinds of good luck, while the +things were being lowered over the ship's low side. In a few minutes all +hands were called to get into the _Pirate's_ boat, the one of the +_Sovereign_ being left for the safety of those on board. Miss Sackett +took a tearful farewell of her father, and was placed aft. Then we shoved +off, and were soon leaving the half-sunken ship astern. + +"Cap'n," said Jenks, who sat aft near me, "what d'ye make o' that?" + +He pointed to a white bank of vapor which had rolled up from the +southward, and suddenly enveloped the _Sovereign_ while we were still two +cable lengths distant. I looked and saw the white mist, which we had not +noticed before to be so dense, rolling in long white clouds upon the calm +surface of the ocean. In a moment it had enveloped us, and all around us +was a white wall, the _Pirate_ disappearing ahead. The swell also +appeared to be getting a cross roll to it, and a light air now blew in +our faces. + +I made no answer to the leather-faced sailor, but tried to keep the +boat's head before a heavier roll of the sea, and the wake as much like a +straight line as possible. There was no compass in the craft, and it +would take some nice guesswork to find a ship three miles away. + + + + +XI + + +We went along in silence for some time, the fog seeming to fall like a +pall upon the spirits of the men. The wash of the oars and the gurgle of +the bow-wave were the only sounds that were audible. After half an hour +of this I arose and sent a hail through the bank of mist, which I thought +would reach a vessel within half a mile. There was no sound of an answer, +the dank vapor appearing to deaden my hail and swallow up all noise a +short distance beyond the boat. It was uncanny to feel how weak that yell +appeared. I saw Jim looking at me with a strange light in his eyes as +though he felt danger in the air. + +After an hour more of it, the faces of the men plainly showed their +anxiety. Phillippi, the Dago, was chewing the corner of his dank +mustache, and his eyes wandered aft and then forward. Jenks, with his +large wrinkled face gray with the vapor, sat staring ahead, straining his +ears for the slightest sound that would locate the vessel. I put both +hands to my mouth again, and strained away my hardest. There was no +response, the sound falling flat and dull in the wall of mist. Then I +knew we were in danger, and gave the order to stop rowing. + +The silence around us was now oppressive. We were all waiting to hear +some sound that would locate either one or the other of the vessels. The +breeze carried the masses of vapor in cool spurts into our faces, and I +felt sure the _Pirate_ would soon change her bearings under its +influence. We had been running away from the main heave of the sea, as I +supposed, but now there appeared to be a sidelong motion running with the +swell and at an angle to its general direction. + +"'Tis no manner av use tryin' to keep along as we are, d'ye think so?" +suggested Chips. "We must have passed her." + +I hailed again, and after waiting for an answer, headed the boat around +in the hope that we had overreached the ship, and would come within +hailing distance on our way back. The order was given to pull very +easily, and listen for sounds. + +"This is most disgusting," said Miss Sackett. "I'm as hungry as a bear, +and here we'll be out for the Lord only knows how long. I think you might +have seen to it that I had some breakfast." And she looked at Mr. Bell, +our third officer. + +"There's water under the stern sheets," suggested that officer, meekly. +But the young lady gave a pretty pout, and shrugged her shoulders. + +In a little while we stopped again and hailed loudly. The only sound in +answer was the low hiss of a sea, which had begun to make with the +breeze, and which broke softly ahead. + +Suddenly we heard the distant clang of a ship's bell. It sounded far away +to starboard. + +"Give way, bullies, strong," I cried, and the next instant we were +heading toward it. Then it died away, and we heard it no more. + +After ten minutes' pull, we stopped again, for fear of overreaching our +mark. We hailed and got no answer. Then we rowed slowly along, listening +in the hope they would ring again. In a little while we lay drifting, and +all hands strained their ears for sound. + +Suddenly something alongside gave a loud snort. I started up, and the +men turned their faces forward. A deeper shadow seemed to hang over us, +and the breeze died away. Then the snort was repeated, and a voice +spoke forth:-- + +"Of all the damned fools I ever see, that second mate stands way ahead. +Now I onct thought Trunnell didn't know nothin', but that young whelp is +a pizenous fool, an' must be ripped up the back. Sackett, old man, your +daughter can't leave ye. Here she be alongside with them boatmen agin." + +The voice was drawling and not loud, but I recognized it fast enough. + +In an instant the boat's bow struck the side of the _Sovereign_, and +we saw Andrews leaning over the rail near us, looking down with a +sour smile. + +There was nothing to do but go aboard, for we had nothing to eat in the +small boat, and the danger of getting lost entirely was too great to make +another attempt to get back to the _Pirate_ while the fog lasted. + +Miss Sackett was helped over the rail by her father, who came up +immediately, and the rest scrambled over with some choice English oaths +as they commented upon their luck. Andrews gave me a queer look as I +climbed past him, and for an instant I was ready to spring upon him. But +he gave a snort of disgust and turned away. + +Chips, Jim, and the others of our crew came aboard, and the small boat +was dropped astern where she towed easily, the breeze just giving the +sunken ship steering way under the storm topsail. + +The beef barrels were in no way injured by their immersion in salt water, +so Captain Sackett gave the steward orders to prepare a meal for all +hands upon the cabin stove. Salt junk and tinned fruits were served for +everybody who cared to eat them, and afterward all hands felt better. The +ship's water-tanks were full of good water, and as she listed +considerably to starboard under the gentle breeze, owing to her +water-logged condition, the port tank was accessible from the deck pipe. + +I had enough to eat before coming out, and the predicament we were in did +not tend to strengthen my appetite. I, however, made out to sit down at +the cabin table with Captain Sackett, Andrews, who was now his mate, and +our third officer. Miss Sackett joined us, and we fell to. + +No sooner had Andrews started to shovel in the good junk, and Mr. Bell +the fruit, than Sackett arose from the table and looked severely down +upon them. Fortunately, my satisfied appetite had prevented any +unnecessary hurry to eat on my part, for our new skipper frowned heavily. + +"I wish to give thanks, O Lord," said he, raising his eyes toward the +skylight and dropping his voice into a dignified tone, "for thy kind +mercy in delivering us from the perils of the deep. Make us duly thankful +for thy mercy and for the food thou hast seen fit to place before us." + +"Amen," sounded a gruff voice beside me. + +I looked at Andrews, but he appeared to pay no attention whatever to what +was transpiring. Then I turned to Sackett to see if he had taken offence. + +The stout, ruddy-faced skipper seemed to be changed to stone for an +instant, and his fixed glare was full upon Andrews. + +The ruffian appeared to enjoy the situation, for he gave a fierce snort +and turned his face to the skipper. + +"No offence, old man, sit down and eat your grub. There's no use working +up unchristian-like feeling between us simply because I'm not going to +let any damn foolishness stand between me and my vittles. Eat while ye +may, says I, and God bless you for a kind-hearted, gentle skipper. You +says yourself that the Lord helps them as helps themselves, which goes to +show I'll just make a stab for another piece o' that junk before some +other son of a gun runs afoul of it an' helps himself. Which would be +goin', o' course, agin the will o' the Lord." + +Sackett hardly breathed. His face turned purple with rage. Andrews took +no notice of him save to draw a revolver from his pocket and place it on +the table beside his plate. + +"Sit down and eat, papa," said Miss Sackett, who was at his right hand, +and as she did so she placed her hand upon his shoulder. + +The touch of his daughter's hand seemed to bring the skipper back to his +senses, or rather seemed to enable him to thrust his present feelings +aside for her sake. He sat down and stared at Andrews for fully a minute, +while that ruffian ate and winked ofttimes at Mr. Bell. Once in a while +he would give a loud snort and hold his face upward for an instant. Then +a sour smile would play around his ugly mouth as though he enjoyed his +humor intensely. The third officer frowned severely at him several times, +and then asked in his silly voice if he would please behave himself. + +The effect was altogether too ludicrous to be borne. Miss Sackett +smiled in spite of herself and I almost laughed outright. Then, feeling +sorry for my host, I began to eat as an excuse to hide my feelings. +Sackett ate little, and in silence. When he was through, he arose and +left for the deck, leaving the rest of us at the table. Miss Sackett +followed him quickly, as though she instinctively felt what might +happen if she remained. + +I sat there looking at Andrews for some moments. He raised his head +several times and gave forth his peculiar snort, smiling at Mr. Bell. +"Young fellow," said he, slowly, "we've had a turn or two, an' nothin' +much has come of it. Let's shake an' call it square." And he held out his +hand toward me. + +"I suppose you really had some cause to lose your temper," I answered, +"the day I hailed you from the poop, because you were used to commanding +there. I've heard many unpleasant things about you, Captain Andrews, but +if you will let matters pass, I'm willing. I never turned down a man yet +on hearsay when he was willing to see me half way." + +Here I took his hard, muscular hand and held it for a moment. He smiled +sourly again, but said no more about our fight. + +"Ye see," he went on, after a moment's pause, "I'm second in command +here now, and I'll show you no such treatment like what I got aboard the +_Pirate_. This gun I has here is only to let a man see his limit afore +it's too late. If I didn't show it, he might go too far, and then--well, +I reckon ye know just what might happen, being as Trunnell has told you +what a gentle, soft-hearted fellow I am. He's a rum little dog, that +fuzzy-headed fellow, Trunnell. Did ye ever see sech arms in anything but +an ape? 'Ell an' blazes, he could squeeze a man worse than a Coney +Island maiden gal. Speakin' of maidens, jest let me hint a minute in +regard to the one aboard here. She's a daisy. An out an' out daisy. An' +if there's a-goin' to be any love-makin' going on around, I'll do it. +Yes, sir, don't take any of my duties upon yourself. I'll do it. I'll do +it. Jest remind yourself of that, Mr. Rolling, an' we'll get along fust +rate. The old man don't know me yet, but Mr. Bell here--well, Mr. Bell +knows a thing or two concernin' captains which'll be worth a heap of +gold to some people." + +The third mate looked at me with his boyish eyes for an instant, and his +ruddy cheeks seemed to blush. Then he said softly:-- + +"What he means is, that you and the rest are only passengers, now. All +the men from the _Pirate_, you know. There'll be some salvage for the +four who elected to stay aboard this vessel, and if you understand it in +this light, you, Chips, Jim, and the rest are welcome as passengers. If +you don't, the boat is at your disposal any time." + +"I see," I said. "You are also of the party elected to stay with Captain +Sackett and draw salvage?" + +"That's about the size of it." + +I went on deck, and Chips, Jim, and the men went below to get something +to eat. Sackett was standing at the break of the poop as I came up, and +his daughter stood beside him. They were evidently in earnest +conversation over the scene below, for as I drew near, Miss Sackett +turned to me and said with some show of contempt in her voice:-- + +"Your captain was very kind to send us your volunteer, and we appreciate +it, Mr. Rolling. Perhaps the reason he had no more men offer their +services for a dangerous mission was because he was short of irons." + +"If you mean that American sailors have to be ironed into danger, you are +mistaken," I answered, somewhat nettled. "However, I quite agree with you +in regard to this one as an awkward fellow. Better wait and see how he +acts in time of danger before condemning him." + +I had not the heart to tell her what a ruffian they had turned loose upon +her father. It would do little good, for Sackett had passed his word to +make Andrews second in command, and I knew from what I had seen of this +religious skipper, that he would keep it at any cost. As for Chips, +myself, and the rest of the men, seven of the _Sovereign's_ crew and +ourselves, we were simply passengers, as Mr. Bell had informed us. We had +no right whatever to take any part in affairs aboard, for the salvage +would fall to those who elected to stay. + +Captain Sackett moved away from me as I stood talking to his daughter and +showed he did not wish to discuss Andrews. He went to the edge of the +poop and stared down on the main deck where the water surged to and fro +with the swell. He had a badly wrecked ship under him, and there was +little time to lose getting her in better condition, for a sudden blow +might start to break her up, or roll the seas over her so badly that no +one could live aboard. + +I stood for some minutes talking to the young girl, and when her father +spoke to me she held out her hand, smiling. "We'll be shipmates now and +you'll have a chance to show what a Yankee sailor can do. I believe in +heroes--when they're civil," she added. + +"Unfortunately for the worshipper of heroes, there is a great deal left +to the goddess Chance, in the picking of them," I answered. "Admiration +for human beings should not be hysterical." + +"From the little I've seen of men during the six voyages I've made around +the world in this ship with papa, your advice is somewhat superfluous," +she said, with the slightest raising of the eyebrows. Then she went aft +to the taffrail and stood gazing into the fog astern. + +"Mr. Rolling," said Sackett, "there's no use of thinking about leaving +the ship while the fog lasts, now. You might have made the _Pirate_ by +close reckoning before, but she must have changed her bearings fully a +half a dozen points since you started. She's under canvas, and this +breeze will send her along at least six knots and drift her two with her +yards aback. You might as well take hold here and get some of your men to +lend a hand. The foremast is still alongside, and we might get a jury rig +on her without danger of heeling her on her bilge. She's well loaded, the +oil and light stuff on top, so she won't be apt to turn turtle." + +It was as he said. We were all in the same ship, so as to speak, wrecked +and water-logged to the southward of the Cape. The best thing to do was +to take it in the right spirit and fall to work without delay, getting +her in as shipshape condition as possible. The fog might last a week, and +the _Pirate_ might get clear across the equator before stopping a second +time in her course. I knew that even Trunnell would not wait more than a +few hours; for if we did not turn up then, it was duff to dog's-belly, as +the saying went, that we wouldn't heave in sight at all. The ocean is a +large place for a small boat to get lost in, and without compass or +sextant there would be little chance for her to overhaul a ship standing +along a certain course. + +The dense vapor rolled in cool masses over the wreck, and the gentle +breeze freshened so that the topsail, which still drew fair from the +yard, bellied out and strained away taut on a bowline, taking the wind +from almost due north, or dead away from the Cape. The _Sovereign_ shoved +through it log-wise under the pull, the swell roaring and gurgling along +her sunken channels and through her water ports. She was making not more +than a mile an hour, or hardly as fast as a man could swim, yet on she +went, and as she did so, she was leaving behind our last hope of being +picked up. + + + + +XII + + +The first night we spent aboard the hulk was far from convincing us of +her seaworthiness. I had been in--a sailor is never "on board"--two ships +that had seen fit to leave me above them, but their last throes were no +more trying to the nerves than the ugly rooting of the _Sovereign_ into +the swell during that night. At each roll she appeared to be on the way +to turn her keel toward the sky, and, at a plunge slowly down a +sea-slope, she made us hold our breaths. Down, down, and under she would +gouge, the water roaring and seething over sunken decks amidships, and +even pouring over the topgallant rail until it would seem certain she was +making her way to the bottom, and I would instinctively start to rise +from the cabin transom to make a break for the deck. Then she would +finally stop and take a slow heave to windward, which started a Niagara +thundering below the deck, where the cargo was torn loose and sent +crashing about in a whirlpool. + +I once read a description by an English landsman of a shipwreck, and he +told how the water would rest for an instant level with the rail, seeming +to pause motionless for a fraction of a second before flowing over and +sinking the ship, I lay a long time wondering vaguely at an imagination +that could make such a description possible, and as a heaving swell would +start along the rail at the waist, and go thundering along in a roaring +surf the entire length of the midship section over the edge, fetching up +with a crash against the forward cabin bulkhead, I heartily wished the +writer were aboard to share our sufferings. There was no spoon and teacup +business about that ship, and it sometimes seemed as though seven or +eight seas were rolling over her rails from all directions at once. + +We were still below the thirty-eighth parallel, and consequently the +morning broke early, for it was January and midsummer. I arose from the +transom and went on deck at dawn, and found that the fog had lifted. +Andrews met me as I came from below, and gave me a nod as I took in the +horizon line at a glance. + +"I reckon old hook-nose didn't care to wait any longer," he +growled sourly. + +I took up the glass from the wheel box, and scanned the line carefully. +There was not a thing in sight save the smooth swell, ruffled now by +the slight breeze, and turning a deep blue-gray in the light of the +early morning. The sun rose from a cloudless horizon and shone warmly +upon the wreck. The foam glistened and sparkled in the rosy sunlight, +and looking over the rail I could see deep down into the clear depths. +The copper on the ship's bilge looked a light gray, and even the tacks +were visible. She drifted slowly along with just steering way, and the +spar alongside, which the men had tried to get aboard again, made a +gurgling wake with its heel. + +"What do you make of it, Chips?" I asked, as the carpenter waded out in +the waist and came up the poop ladder. + +"Long cruise an' plenty o' water, that's about th' size av ut, don't ye +think, sir?" the carpenter answered. "Trunnell has been took off, fer +sure. I don't mind stickin' aboard th' bleedin' hooker if there was a +chanst to get th' salvage; but no fear o' that while Andrews is here. +He'll block any argument to divvy up. Seems as we might even get down +under her bilge durin' this spell av weather, an' see where th' leak is +located. 'Tis a butt started, most like. Them English stevedores +generally rams th' stuffin' out av a ship in spite av th' marks they +puts on 'em." + +Captain Sackett came from below and joined us. + +"I'd like to get that foremast aboard while it holds calm," said he; "and +if you'll start the men, we'll have it done by noon. The sooner we all +work together, the better. We ought to get sail on forward in less than a +week, and then, with a jury topmast, make enough way to get in while the +grub holds out." + +The steward got breakfast in the after-cabin, and as soon as the men had +eaten they were turned to rigging tackles to hoist the dragging foremast +aboard. It was trailing by the lee rigging, which had held, and it had +thumped and pounded along the ship's side to such an extent during the +blow that several of her strakes were nearly punched through. It was a +beautiful morning,--the blue sky overhead and the calm, blue ocean all +around us. The men worked well, and even the sour ruffian, Andrews, who +stood near and took charge of part of the work,--for he was an expert +sailor,--seemed to brighten under the sun's influence. Chips went to work +at the stump of the foremast, and cut well into it at a point almost +level with the deck. This he fashioned into a scarf-joint for a +corresponding cut in the piece of mast which had gone overboard. Tackles +were rigged from the main-topmast head, and, by a careful bracing with +guys forward and at both sides, the wreck of the foremast was slowly +raised aboard. + +The _Sovereign_ forged ahead faster when relieved of this load. On the +second day, when we had the foremast fished, and the yards, which had +held to it, safe on deck, ready to be hoisted and slung again, we found +that the vessel had made over seventy miles to the westward along the +thirty-eighth parallel. This was over a mile an hour; but of course some +of this drift was due to the edge of the Agullas current, which was +setting somewhat to the southward and westward. + +Andrews had little to say to me or to Chips. In fact, he appeared to be +satisfied with his lot now that he seemed sure of getting salvage money. +Only Jim, who seemed to have eyes everywhere, distrusted the man, and +spoke to me about him. We had now been on the wreck five days, working +and rigging away at the foremast, and the calm, beautiful weather held +with no signs of a change. Jim was hanging over the side, resting his +feet on the fore channels while he helped Chips to bolt in a deadeye +which had been torn out when the mast had gone. The sun was warm and +shone brilliantly, and Chips sweated and grunted as he pounded away at +the iron. There were no other men in our immediate vicinity, so after +pounding away in silence for a quarter of an hour, the carpenter spoke. + +"'Tis bloody well we've been treated to get no share av the wreck, whin +here we are sweatin' our brains out wid th' work av refittin'," said he. + +"And what the devil is a few hundred pounds of salvage to me?" growled +Jim, hot with his exertion. "See here, man! I've left ten thousand behind +me on the _Pirate_." + +"And a pious regard fer the truth along wid it," added Chips, smiting the +lug-bolt heavily. + +Jim's face was so serious that I asked what he meant, and with the heat +of the work upon him and the absolute hopelessness of ever getting back +aboard our ship before his eyes, he spoke out:-- + +"Did you ever hear of Jackwell, the fellow who cracked the Bank of +Sydney?" he asked. + +Chips and I both admitted that we had. He was the most notorious burglar +in the southern hemisphere. + +"But what are ye askin' sich a question fer?" asked Chips. "What's +burglars got to do wid losin' salvage?" + +"He was aboard the _Pirate_, and a reward awaits the lucky dog who lands +him. Just a trifle of ten thousand dollars," said Jim, fiercely. + +Chips turned on him. + +"Is it sure 'nuff truth ye're tellin', or jest a yarn to soothe our +feelin's?" he demanded. "I don't call to mind any gallus-lookin' chap in +th' watch." + +"He never stood watch, and I wasn't certain of him until we were out to +sea and it was too late. What d'ye suppose I tried to get Trunnell to go +back for? 'Twas the old man, you stupid wood-splitter. You don't think +I'm a sailor, do you?" + +"'Pon me sowl, how cud I? I niver had th' heart to hurt yer feelings, +Jim, me son, or ye'd have heard from me before. But what are ye, thin?" +And Chips leaned back against the rail. + +"Nothing but a--" and Jim opened his coat which he had always worn since +coming aboard the _Pirate_. On the inside was a silver shield stamped +handsomely with the insignia of the detective corps of Melbourne. + +"A sea lawyer aboard a derelict. Ye do fairly well, considerin'. An' th' +old man? You don't really mean it?" + +"What?" I asked; "do you mean that Thompson's a burglar; and that he's +Jackwell himself?" + +"Nothing else, and I'm out for the reward, which I won't get now. You +know now how he came aboard. If I'd only been a few hours sooner, it +would have been all right. He was about to buy his passage when he found +the real Captain Thompson wasn't there, and would probably not be down +until the last minute. That was enough for him. Trunnell was taken clear +aback by his nerve. It was a risky thing to do, but Jackwell takes risks. +The man has more real cheek and impudence than any above ground, or water +either, for that matter. He ain't much afraid of a fight when it comes to +it, although he'd rather use his wits than his gun. That's just what +makes me feel sore. But that isn't all. Andrews is going to get clear of +some of us." + +"He's tried it several times on me," I said, with a smile. "What makes +you think he'll try again?" + +"I heard enough of what was passing between that third mate and steward +last night to know it. But I don't want to scare you fellows," he added, +with a smile. + +Chips gave a grunt of disgust, and I spat contemptuously over the side +without further remark. Our manner was not lost on Jim. He sobered +instantly. + +"You know we're in the way aboard, if we land the hooker all right," he +said slowly. "That's clear as mud. You know also that Trunnell and the +rest aboard the _Pirate_ know we don't belong here and haven't any right +to stay except as passengers. Trunnell saw us put off in the boat. He +could see us plainly when we started and was, of course, looking at us +all the time until the fog closed in. You follow this lay, don't you?" + +Chips and I nodded. + +"Well, if the _Sovereign_ turns up with our boat load missing and Sackett +dead, she'll be in good evidence of what all hands aboard the _Pirate_ +saw, won't she?" + +It dawned suddenly upon us that this was a fact. Trunnell and Thompson, +and in fact all hands, were looking after us, waiting for us to come back +aboard before swinging the yards and standing away again on our course. +There wasn't a man aboard the _Pirate_, we felt certain, who had not seen +the boat start away from the ship with our men and Miss Sackett aboard +her, for they had nothing in the world to do but watch. Then they had +seen the fog envelop us on our way. We had not turned up, and the only +thing to infer, if the _Sovereign_ came in without us, was that we had +missed our way and had gone adrift in the southern ocean. The word of +Andrews and the rest aboard the English ship could hardly be doubted +under the circumstances. If we cut adrift in the small boat or were done +away with as Jim suggested, our friends would be witnesses who would help +our enemies by any testimony they might give. + +Chips dropped his hammer and drew a hand across his forehead, thinking. + +"What did the third mate say in regard to our going?" I asked Jim. + +"I couldn't hear the talk, only part of a sentence whispered by that +man-woman when the steward came into the cabin during the mid-watch last +night with a can of salmon and some ship's bread. They stood near the +door of the alleyway, talking, and I suddenly came bulging into them with +rubber boots on. He said something about Andrews being a fine captain and +perfectly capable of taking this ship in or out any port on the African +coast. That's all." + +I stopped serving the end of the lanyard I was at work on and looked +across the deck to where Andrews stood with several men. His sinister +face with its sour smile was turned toward us as though he studied +our thoughts. + +"You're not over busy, Mr. Rolling," said Sackett, coming along the rail +to the rigging. "I wish you and the carpenter would try to get a gantline +over the side and look along under her for the butt. In this clear water +the chances are good for getting a sight of it if it's well up on her +bilge. We ought to stop her up some while the calm lasts." + + + + +XIII + + +At noon Sackett came on deck to take the sun. His second officer, +Journegan, a heavily built man with mutton-chop whiskers of a colorless +hue, was incapable of the smallest attempt at navigation, so he stood +idly by while his superior let the sun rise until it had reached its +highest point. + +"Eight bells," cried Sackett, and went below to work out the sight. + +"By the grace of God," echoed Andrews, who had come upon the poop. + +The second officer smiled at his attempted wit and struck off the bells. +He appeared to be quite friendly with Andrews and stopped a moment +afterward to chat with him. + +When we went below to dinner the words of Jim were fresh in my mind. How +would Andrews try to get clear of us? The fact that he intended to do it +I firmly believed, for the ruffian had such a sinister character that I +felt certain his only reason for being apparently satisfied at present +was because he intended some treachery. What part the third officer of +the _Pirate_ would play in the affair I could hardly guess. Jim knew +nothing about him, but since he came aboard with Thompson, there was +every reason to believe that this rosy-cheeked youngster with the girl's +voice was an accomplished villain. That Andrews and he understood each +other was certain. Andrews was most blasphemous at meals, and would +endeavor to engage Sackett in an argument concerning devils, hell, and +many other subjects not relating to navigation of the Indian Ocean. At +such times the third mate would raise his piping voice and plead with +Andrews not to shock him with his profanity. The second officer of the +_Sovereign_ appeared to enjoy the situation, and would laugh until +ordered from the table by Sackett. Miss Sackett, of course, would not +dine with the rest, but had her meals served in her stateroom by the +steward, who did it with a very bad grace, grumbling and complaining at +the extra work. He was a good-looking young man, this steward, and the +fact that he complained told plainly that there was something between the +men that was doing away with discipline. The steward's name was Dalton, +and he was a fair specimen of the London cockney. Stout and strong, he +was as ignorant as an animal and about as easily persuaded into doing +things as an obstinate mule. He was also about as hard to dissuade. The +other men of the _Sovereign's_ crew were Bull England, a powerful sailor +who had served many years in the navy, and who was also a prize fighter, +and Dog Daniels, a surly old fellow, who was continually growling at +everything. He was six feet six inches and over in height, and as lean +and gaunt as the white albatross hovering over our wake. Journegan, the +second officer, made the last but not least of the select four who had +elected to stay aboard with Sackett to take in the ship and get salvage. + +If Andrews had weapons, which I had reason to believe he had since his +show of a revolver upon the captain's table, there would be six armed men +against thirteen and a woman, for I had no reason to doubt Sackett was to +be done away with if the rest were. + +I pondered while I ate the cold junk and ship's bread, listening to +Andrews holding forth to Mr. Bell and Journegan upon the fallacy of +trusting to a power that was highly unintelligible. + +"For instance," said he, "for why should I give thanks fer this stinkin' +junk meat when I don't know but what Dalton, there, has put his dirty +hands on it an' pisened it fit to kill? How do I know if he washes his +hands afore cookin', hey? Look at them warts an' tell me if they ain't +ketchin'. Jest think of a stomach full o' warts. Is that anything to be +thankful for, I'd like to know." + +The idea amused Journegan, but it set me to thinking about the medicine +chest in spite of myself. Sackett scowled while this sort of talk went +on, but said nothing to bring forth an outbreak from Andrews. I wondered +why he did not try to get his men with him and clap the fellow in irons. +There was every reason to believe they would have obeyed him at first, +but he hesitated for some religious purpose better known to himself, +until the fellow had obtained such a sway over the crew that it was now +doubtful if it could be done without an open fight between them and the +men he had to back him. + +Sackett announced to me that we had made no westing to speak of, on +account of the ship now being in the southeasterly set of the Agullas +current. We had drifted along with the topsail and two staysails drawing +from the main, and a sort of trysail set from a preventer-stay leading +aft. In spite of this amount of canvas the breeze had been so light that +the sunken ship had not made a mile in two hours. It was disheartening, +but if we could only get at the leak and stop some of the water from +flowing into her, we might get her up a bit and then she would move +faster. Her hatch-combings were high, and the sea had not washed clear +over them yet, while her high strakes would be all the tighter, now that +they had been under water for days. This seemed to be a very fair +argument, but, while the skipper talked, my eyes were upon the glass case +at the end of the cabin, where a row of bottles showed through the front +and above the wooden frames. They contained the drugs usually carried +aboard ship, and while the skipper talked to me I wondered if there were +any poisons in that case which would be of service to Andrews. When we +were through, the captain and I left the cabin, for there had been no +watches at meals; all had eaten together in order to facilitate matters +of cooking, the men only eating at different times from the officers. + +As we passed up the after-companionway, I looked into the case and +endeavored to interest the skipper in drugs for the men in case of +sickness. He showed me a bottle of arnica, one of squibbs, another of +peppermint, and many other drugs used as simple remedies. At the end of a +long row was one containing a white powder, unlabelled. I picked it up +and opened the vial, thinking to taste it to see if it was quinine. Its +weight, however, made me certain this could not be, and I was just about +to put a bit on my tongue when Sackett stopped me. + +"It's bichloride of mercury. Don't taste it," said he. + +I was not much of a chemist; for a mate's knowledge of the atomic theory +must necessarily be slight. + +"What's that?" I asked. + +"Oh, a poison. I only keep it for vermin and certain skin diseases. It's +too deadly to keep around, though, and I've a notion to heave it +overboard--" + +"Steamer on starboard quarter, sir," came the cry of England, who was at +the wheel. + +We were bounding up the companionway in an instant, and looking to the +northward as soon as our feet struck the deck. There, sure enough, was a +dark smudge of smoke on the horizon. + +"Get the glass," said Sackett. + +He took it and gazed hard at the dark streak. + +"I can just make out her mastheads. She seems to be coming along this +way,'" he said, after a moment. + +All hands gathered upon the poop and watched the smoke. Those who hadn't +had their dinner, hastily went below and came up again with the junk in +their hands, munching it as they stood gazing after the rising mastheads. +Soon the funnel of the steamer rose above the horizon, and showed that +she was standing almost directly parallel to our course. We had run up a +distress signal from the main, and now all waited until the stranger +should make it out and send a boat or heave to. Our own boat was towing +astern, so Sackett had her drawn up to the mizzen channels, ready for the +men to get aboard. Miss Sackett came from below and announced that she +was ready to accompany the boat. + +"If you are silly enough to stay, papa, I can't help it," she said. "I am +tired of sitting around in a cabin with my feet in the water, eating +stuff fit for pigs. I think you really ought to give the old boat up." + +"So do I, Missy," said Andrews. "I can't think of any good a-coming to +the old man by staying aboard a craft half sunken like this one. I think +your girl is giving you good advice, Captain Sackett." + +"I think you heard me state just how I felt about the matter, Mr. +Andrews," replied the captain. "If you're disposed to quit, you can go in +the boat." + +"Oh, no," said the ruffian, "I intend to stay." And he lent such emphasis +to the last word that Sackett gave him a sharp glance to see if he meant +anything more. + +In half an hour the steamer was passing abreast, and we were in the boat +rowing hard to head her off. We set a signal on our mast forward, and +pulled desperately, but she never even slowed down, passing along half a +mile distant on the calm ocean. She must have seen us, for the day was +bright and cloudless as could be. We hailed and waved until she was a +speck to the westward, leaving us alone again save for the sunken ship +under our lee. + +"It's just the way with a Dago," said Jenks. "They always leaves a fellow +just when they shouldn't, and when I first seen that yaller flag I felt +pretty sure we'd come in fer somethin' like this." + +No one said anything further, for our disappointment was sharp. Even +Phillippi, the Portuguese, took no offence at the allusion to Dagos, but +rowed in silence back to the _Sovereign_. + +"It seems like you can't leave us," said Andrews, sourly, when we +returned. "There ain't much room aboard this hooker, an' I don't see why +you forever turn back to her when you ain't wanted here." + +Jenks climbed up the mizzen channels, which were now no higher than the +boat's bow, and made the painter fast on deck without remark. Chips +followed him closely. + +"If ye mane there's no room aboard fer us, thin why in hell don't ye git +out th' way an' rid th' ship av a useless ruffian," said the Irishman. + +Andrews scowled at him, but changed his look into a sour smile. + +"By the grace of the good Lord, I never rips up a sailor for slack jaw +aboard the Lord's special appointed ship. Maybe we'll settle the matter +of leaving later on," said the ruffian. + +"Let there be an end of this talk, sir," said Sackett. "Get your men to +work, Mr. Andrews, and you, Mr. Rolling, get the passengers out of that +boat and stand by to try to find the leak. I don't intend to have any +more of this eternal bickering." + +Miss Sackett was helped aboard again. As she stepped on deck she +whispered, "There's no use, Mr. Rolling. We will have to get out. The +only trouble is that the water is gaining slowly in the cabin, and I'm +afraid for papa." + +"It's a pity he won't desert her," I answered; "but if we get away, +Andrews and the rest will be more apt to help him honestly. They won't +while we're here, and he won't force any of his men to stay and obey +orders, as he should. If he only would, we might get the ship in before a +week more of it." + +"It's his way," said the girl. "He believes no captain has the right to +endanger his men for gain. You couldn't take him by force, for he'd make +things warm after he got ashore. If we could only get some of the water +out of her and get away, he could get her in with England, Journegan, +Daniels, and Dalton. Your two men added would make seven. These men could +handle the canvas and steer her as well as twelve." + +I didn't like to tell her that the devil himself would hardly be safe in +the same ship with Andrews. It was quite possible that the ruffian would +turn to and do good work for his share of the salvage when he got clear +of the rest of us, for the amount would be large and tempting. Sackett +would be of more service to him alive than dead. + +"We'll get at the leak this afternoon, if it's possible," I said, and the +young girl went back to her stateroom. + + + + +XIV + + +It was with anything but rising spirits that Chips went at the leak. He +had a frame slung outboard some fifteen feet from the ship's side, +supported by guys from the mainmast and jury foremast. It was after eight +bells in the afternoon before this was finished, and then Sackett and he +went out on it to study the ship's bilge through the calm water. It was +almost flat calm, but the _Sovereign_ had steering way enough to turn her +side to the slanting sun, letting the light shine under her copper. She +was so deep, however, nothing could be made out on the smooth green +surface that showed like a started plank end. Only here and there a lump +or protuberance appeared, showing a bunch of marine growth, or a bent +edge of a plate where it had started to rip off. The water of the Indian +Ocean is always remarkably clear, and this day during the still weather +it was like liquid air. Objects were as distinctly visible three or four +fathoms below the surface as those at a corresponding distance on deck. + +I joined Sackett and Chips on the frame, and studied the ship's bilge the +entire length of her waist. In about half an hour we shifted to starboard +and, by dint of handling the canvas, got her head around so that the sun +shone under this side. Nothing showed like a leak. + +"If a man could dive under her a few times," said Sackett, "he might see, +with the light as good as it is now. What do you think, Mr. Rolling?" + +"It would take a good swimmer to go clear under her broad beam," I +answered. "I don't believe there's any one aboard who could do it, even +with a line around him." + +England, the stout sailor, was standing near the rail while I spoke. + +"If ye don't mind, sir, I'll try me hand at it. Put a line about me body +to haul me in if a shark takes a notion to make a run fer me. Don't haul +unless ye have to, mind, or ye'll scrape the hide off me body." + +"Go ahead at it," said Sackett. + +The heavy man slipped off his jumper in a moment, and I noticed the huge +muscles of his chest and arms. He must have made a good prize fighter in +his day. Coming out on the frame, he had the line stopped around his +waist and then started at the fore rigging to go under the ship to the +other side. + +Nearly all hands came to the rail to watch him, although the water was +knee deep on the deck at this point. He dived gracefully under the side, +and as the bubbles disappeared I could see him going like a fish beneath +the shimmering copper, which gave forth a greenish light in the sunshine. +The line was payed out fast, and in a few moments he arose to port none +the worse for the trip. + +Nothing came of this, as he was too much taken up with the endeavor to go +clear to see anything. His next trip was a fathom or so further aft, and +this time he saw nothing save a very foul bottom. After taking a rest and +a nip of grog he started again, going more slowly as he gained +confidence. + +Six trips tired him greatly in spite of his strength, and he sat for some +minutes upon the frame before making his plunge. Then he stood up and +dived again. + +I could see him swimming down, down, down under the ship's bilge, growing +to a faint brownish yellow speck which wavered and shook with the +refraction of the disturbed surface. Then while I looked the line +slacked, and the brownish yellow object beneath wavered into a larger +size. Evidently he was coming up and had failed to make the five fathoms +necessary to go clear of the keel. I hauled in the line rapidly, for I +knew that he must be exhausted to give it up so soon. The wavering brown +spot grew quickly in size, and in a moment, outlined upon it, I made out +the figure of England straining away for the surface. I hauled +frantically to aid him, and the next moment he broke water and was landed +upon the frame, while the great brown object beneath rose right behind +him, and took the form of a tremendous hammer-headed shark. It came up in +an instant and broached clear of the water at least three feet, but +failed to reach the frame where Bull England clung panting and gasping +for breath. + +"I reckon I've had me dose this time," said he, between his gasps; "I +almost swam down the feller's throat. I ain't exactly skeered, but I'm +too tired to try agin this afternoon, so if any one wants me place on the +end o' this line, he can take it while I rests." + +"Faith," said Chips, "if ye ain't skeered ye'll be so fast enough if ye +go in agin. Look at th' monster! Did ye iver see sech a head? Wan would +think he had sense enough not to be eatin' av a tough sailorman. Big +head, nothin' in it, as the sayin' is." + +Andrews was standing near the rail and appeared much interested in the +diver's work. The fact that it had been interrupted angered him. His face +took on that hideous expression of ferocity I knew meant mischief, and a +string of the foulest oaths followed. He drew forth his pistol and raised +it slowly to a line with his eye on the shark's head, now just awash +under the frame a few feet distant. + +"Crack!" + +The bullet struck it fair on the crown where it was fully three feet +across the eyes. It smashed through, and the huge fish sank slowly under +the force of the stroke. + +Then it suddenly recovered itself and tore the water into foam, +lashing out with its tail and turning over and over, snapping with its +great jaws. + +"It is an unnecessary cruelty, Mr. Andrews," said Sackett, loudly. "Put +that weapon up. It is no use to kill to satisfy a murderous heart. The +fish would leave us in a few moments if it were fed." + +"Watch the Lord's anointed feed it then," snarled the ruffian, with a +fierce oath. "Say a pater for its soul, for it's on its way to hell." + +With that he fired again as the fish broached clear, and I must say one +could hardly help admiring his shooting. The heavy bullet struck within +an inch of the first, although the mark was now several fathoms distant +and thrashing about at a great rate. + +The shark whirled round and started off, leaving a trail of blood which +showed like a dark cloud in its wake. In a moment it had disappeared. + +"Don't swear so hard, my dear Mr. Andrews," cried Mr. Bell, in his high, +piping voice. "You'll scare all the fish." + +Andrews coolly broke his pistol at the breech and tossed out the empty +shells. Then he reloaded it and handed it to the smiling, rosy-cheeked +third mate. + +"You stand by and take care of things while I spell Bull England a bit," +said he. "Journegan," he continued, calling to the English mate, "you +take the line for a while, and let that young fellow rest, while I try +her bilge aft." + +He stripped off his shirt and stood in his trousers. When I saw him, I no +longer wondered why I had failed to overcome him in our first set-to. The +fellow was a perfect mass of muscle, and while I gazed at his strong +frame I wondered at the power in Trunnell's arms, which held us so tight +and saved me that first day on board. + +He came out on the frame, and I made way for Journegan to take the line. +He took a turn, and over he went without delay. + +After four or five attempts to get under the ship, he finally came to the +surface with news. He had been under her bilge, clear down to the keel on +a line with the main channels. Not being able to get further, and seeing +the dark shadow of the keel ahead, he made out to examine as far as he +could go. Close to her garboard strake on the starboard side he saw where +a large butt had started, owing probably to the bad loading of the ship. +This plank end starting outboard was evidently where the water came in. + +Andrews came on deck after this, and all hands began overhauling gear to +get a mattress upon the hole. Lines were rove and passed under the ship's +bilge and keel. These were made fast on deck to the stump of the mizzen +mast, and their ends brought to the capstan through snatch blocks. Planks +were then strapped loosely on the lines and allowed to run along them +freely, being weighted sufficiently to cause them to sink. After they +were slung clear of the ship, they were held in position until a pad of +canvas and oakum was inserted between them and the side. + +It was quite late in the evening before this was accomplished, and work +had to be stopped until daylight. + +At the evening meal Andrews was more sulky than usual. It appeared that +now, since there was a chance of stopping the leak, we would all be +aboard the ship when she made port, for with the water out of her we +might easily make the Cape in a fortnight. + +Sackett said grace as usual, standing up and bowing gravely over the +long board. + +"What's the sense of asking the Lord to make us truly thankful for stuff +what ain't fit to eat anyway," growled Andrews, when he finished. "You +ain't got nothin' to be so blamed thankful for, captain. This grub'll +sure make some of the men sick before we're through. If I ain't mistaken, +some of them will be down with trouble before the leak is swabbed." + +"I'll say what I think best, sir, at my table. If you don't like it, you +can eat with the men," answered Sackett. + +"Oh, I never said nothin' to the contrary, did I?" asked the fellow. + +"Well, pay a little more attention to your behavior, or I'll make a +passenger of you on board," said Sackett, who had lost patience. + +"I never came here on those conditions, and I fail to accept them, my +Lord's anointed. I wasn't asked to come aboard here. Since I'm here, I'll +have my rights, and I don't call to mind the names of any one around +about this ship as will take it upon theirselves to start an argument to +the contrary. No, sir, I'll obey orders so long as they're sensible, but +don't try to run it on a man like me, Sackett. I ain't the sort of stuff +you're made to run against." + +"Oh, Captain Andrews, you have such a dreadful way with you," piped Bell, +the third mate, in his high voice. "Don't you know you really frightened +me with such strong words." + +Journegan laughed outright. + +"If I have to put up with any more of your insolence, sir," said Sackett, +quietly, "I'll have you bound and put away until we are in port." + +"Oh, please don't hurt me, captain," cried Andrews, with his ugly smile. +"I ain't going to do nothing mutinous." + +"Well, stop talking to me, sir. Every word you say is mutinous. I'll have +silence at this table, sir, if I have to bind you up." + +"Cruel, unchristian man!" cried Andrews. "Journegan, my boy, this shows +the uselessness of prayer. Here's a man praying one minute, and before +the Lord has time to answer him he's ready to commit murder. Sink me, if +ever I did see any use of praying one minute and doing things the next. +It's wrorse than my pore old father used to be. 'My son,' he'd say, +'shake out the bunt of yer breeches,' which I'd do. Yessir, sink me if I +didn't do it. 'Shake out the bunt of yer breeches and come here.' Then +he'd grab me and yank me acrost his knee. 'Lord guide a righteous hand,' +he'd say, and with that down would come that righteous hand like the roof +of a house where the bunt of my pants had been. 'Lord give me strength to +lead him into the straight and narrow path,' he'd whine; and sink me, +Journegan, if he wouldn't give me a twist that would slew my innerds +askew and send me flying acrost the room. Lead me into the straight and +narrow path? Man alive, he'd send me drifting along that path like a +bullet from a gun. What's the sense of it, hey?" + +"There ain't none," said Journegan, snickering and rubbing his whiskers +in appreciation of his friend's wit. + +"Mr. Journegan," said Sackett, "you go on deck, sir." + +"What am I doing?" asked the fellow, with a smirk. + +"You go on deck, sir, or I'll be forced to take some action in the matter +of discipline. Do you understand?" continued Sackett, now red in the face +with anger. + +Journegan rose leisurely from the table and went up the companion, +whistling. + +"And now, my young man," continued Sackett, addressing the third mate, "I +don't want to have to tie you up with your friend, but you are not one of +my crew, and I'll trouble you to keep still at my table. Mr. Andrews," he +went on, "you'll have no further authority aboard here, and the sooner +you get into the boat with the rest, the better it will be for you." + +"That's where you make a mistake," said Andrews, coolly. "I'm second in +command here now, and I'll stay until the ship sinks or goes to port, in +spite of you or any one else, unless you care to give me credit for my +share of salvage as a volunteer to bring her in." + +"You will go to your room and not take any further part in the management +of the vessel, I say," Captain Sackett ordered, "If you don't go freely, +I'll order my men to assist you." + +"If there's any one who cares to take the responsibility, let him step +out and make known his name," said Andrews, in an even tone. + +Sackett left the table and went on deck at once. I heard him calling for +Jenks, England, and the rest, and I started up the companion, thinking to +take a hand with Chips and Jim and our men. As I did so, Andrews cursed +me foully, and the third mate made a remark I failed to hear. + +Meeting Chips and Johnson, I sent the latter for Jim and Hans. Phillippi +stood near the wheel, and I beckoned to him. When the six of us were +together, I told them in a few words that Sackett was going to tie +Andrews up for mutiny. They would stand by me and give him help if +necessary. + +We waited near the edge of the poop while Sackett told his men what he +wanted done with Andrews. + +"Men," said he, "there's only one captain aboard here, and that is +myself. If you disobey me, it is mutiny, and you know the penalty." + +"It ain't that we're scared of him," said England, "but he's a tough one +to take without no weapons." + +"I don't ask you to run any risk," said Sackett. "I'll take him and give +him to you to tie up and keep until we're safe in port. You must do this +or you will be insubordinate." + +"Sure," said Dog Daniels, "if you'll take the fellow, we'll guarantee to +keep him fast enough. Hey, Jenks, ain't that so?" + +I thought I saw a suspicion of a smile play over the old sailor's +wrinkled face, and the seams of his leather-like jaws seemed to +grow deeper. + +"That's it," said Dalton. "You take him, and we'll take care of him until +you say let him loose." + +Journegan was at the wheel with one of the men who had left with the old +sailor, Jenks. Sackett did not question him in regard to the matter of +Andrews, as he evidently thought he had already showed signs of mutiny. + +"I'm sorry to have this trouble aboard, sir," said Sackett to me, as he +turned to go down the companion to the cabin. "You and your men can stand +aside while this matter is arranged satisfactorily. Afterward you will +have to take your man away with you when you can go." + +"I'm very sorry the thing has occurred as it has, captain," I said. +"We'll stand by you, if you wish, and help you to carry out any orders." + +"I don't think it will be necessary," answered Sackett. "However, if +anything disagreeable happens, I trust you will do what you may for the +welfare of my daughter, sir. You understand how much she is at the mercy +of these ruffians, should anything happen to me." + +"I will pass my word, sir," I answered. "Your daughter shall come to no +harm while there are a few American sailors afloat to do anything. I do +warn you, though, to keep a lookout on that ruffian. He has tried to take +my life twice, and is under sentence for a murder. Don't let him get his +gun out at you, or there might be an accident." + +"A nice fellow for your captain to send me," said Sackett. "It was no +fault of yours, my friend, so don't think I blame you," he added hastily. + +He started toward the companionway, and had just reached it alone when +the grizzled head of Andrews appeared above the combings. The fellow +stood forth on deck and was followed by our third mate. + +"Lay aft, here, England and Daniels," cried Sackett. + +The men came slowly along the poop. Jenks and Dalton, followed by six +others of the _Sovereign's_ crew who had chosen to desert the ship, +walked aft to the quarter to see if there was anything for them to do. +Some of these men were true to their captain without doubt; but Jenks +placed himself in their front, and by the strange smile the old sailor +had, I knew he was looking for trouble. + +Sackett went straight up to Andrews and stood before him, and for one +brief moment the tableau presented was dramatic enough to be impressed +forcibly upon my memory. It was sturdy, honest manhood against +lawlessness and mutiny. A brave, kind-hearted, religious man, alone, +against the worst human devil I have ever seen or heard of. He was, +indeed, a desperate ruffian, whose life was already forfeited, but +Sackett never flinched for a moment. + + + + +XV + + +The dull night of the southern ocean was closing around the scene on the +_Sovereign's_ deck, making the faces of the men indistinct in the gloom. +The Englishmen stood a little apart from ours, but all looked at the +captain as he walked up to Andrews. England and Daniels stopped when they +were within a fathom of their skipper as though awaiting further orders +before proceeding with their unpleasant duty. + +The mutineer turned slowly at Sackett's approach as though disdaining to +show haste in defence. Then, as the stout, bearded commander halted in +front of him, he raised his head and gave forth that snort of contempt +and annoyance which I knew to mean mischief. + +"Captain Andrews," said Sackett, "you will turn over your weapons to me, +sir. I don't allow my officers to carry them aboard this ship. Afterward +I shall have to place you in arrest until you see fit to obey orders and +show proper discipline, sir." + +"Now see here, my old fellow," said Andrews, "I don't want to hurt you, +but I've obeyed orders here and will obey them when they don't relate to +what I shall eat or say at the table. Don't try any of your infernal +monkey games on me, or you might get hurt." + +"Will you hand over your weapon, sir?" said Sackett, advancing, and +standing close before him. + +Andrews pulled out his long revolver and pointed it at the skipper's +head. Then he gave a snort of anger and glared savagely at the +Englishman. + +Sackett turned to his men. + +"Seize him, and disarm him," he ordered. But England and Daniels +stood motionless. Journegan stepped to one side to keep out of the +line of fire. + +Sackett made a move forward, as if to seize the weapon. There was a sharp +explosion, and both men disappeared for an instant in the spurt of smoke. +Then I saw Sackett stagger sidelong across the deck with the roll of the +ship, and go down heavily upon the wheel gratings. He uttered no word. I +ran to his side, and saw the ashy hue coming upon his ruddy face, and +knew his time was short. I heard the uproar of voices that followed the +moment of silence after the shot, but took no heed. Placing my hand under +his head, I called for Jim to get some brandy from below. Then I bawled +for Chips and the rest to seize the murderer. + +Sackett turned up his kind eyes to mine, and whispered: "I'll be dead in +a few minutes, Mr. Rolling. Do what you can for my men. I tried to do my +duty, sir, and I expect every honest man to do his. Save my--" + +The light had gone out. He was limp and dead on the deck of the ship he +had tried so nobly to save. My hand was wet with blood, and as I withdrew +it, the wild abhorrence of the thing came upon me. + +I stood up, and there, within ten feet of me, was that sneering ruffian +standing coolly, with his pistol in his hand. + +It was such a cold-blooded, horrible thing, done without warning, that I +was speechless. Chips stood near my side, cursing softly, and looking +with fierce eyes at the assassin. Jim came up the companionway, but saw +that all was over. My three sailors were like statues, Phillippi +muttering unintelligibly. + +For nearly a minute after the thing happened I stood there gazing at +Andrews and the rest, paralyzed for action, but noting each and every +movement of the men as though some movement on their part would give me a +cue how to act. + +All of a sudden the piping voice of our third mate rose in a laugh, while +he cried, "He's gone to heaven." + +It was as though something gave away within me, and before I fairly knew +what I was doing, I was rushing upon Andrews to close. + +I remember seeing a bright flash and feeling a heavy blow on my left +side. Then I found myself in the scuppers looking up at a struggle upon +the _Sovereign's_ quarter-deck. + +At the signal of my rush for Andrews, Jim, who was somewhat expert at +tackling persons, dashed at him also from starboard. Chips instantly +followed on the other side, and then, our men seeing how things were to +go, closed from the rear. All six of us would have met at Andrews as a +converging point, had it not been for the scoundrel's pistol. + +His first shot struck me fairly under the heart. It knocked me over, and +I rolled to port, deathly sick. Thinking for a moment I was killed, I +made no immediate effort to recover myself, but lay vomiting and +clutching my side. Then in a moment the weakness began to leave me, and I +was aware that I was clutching the heavy knife I carried in my breast +pocket. I drew it forth, and as I did so, something fell to the deck at +my side, and I saw it was a piece of lead. Then I saw that Andrews's +bullet had jammed itself into the joint of the hilt, smashing flat on the +steel and breaking up, part of it falling away as I drew it forth. The +knife had saved my life; for the shot had been true, and would have been +instantly fatal had it penetrated. + +I started to my feet and saw Jim lying motionless just outside the +swaying crowd, which had now closed about the murderer. At that instant +Andrews fired again, and Hans, who had tried to use his knife, staggered +out of the group and fell dead. Three of the _Sovereign's_ own men who +had intended going back with us were now in the fracas also, and as I +started in two more joined. + +I saw Phillippi's knife flash for an instant. Then came a fierce oath +from Andrews, followed by a snort of rage and pain. Another shot followed +instantly, and Phillippi was lying outside the swaying figures with a +bloody hole through his forehead. + +The only thing I remember as I forced my way into the group and struck at +the scoundrel was that he had one more shot, and I wondered if he would +land it before we had him. + +He warded off my knife-stroke by a desperate wrench, but the blade ripped +his right arm to the bone from shoulder to elbow, laming it absolutely. +Even as it was, he lowered his weapon and fired it instantly as it was +seized. An Englishman named Williams was struck through the body and +lived but a moment afterward. Chips now had the weapon by the barrel, and +just as I was about to drive my knife into the murderer over the shoulder +of Johnson, a heavy hand seized my collar and I was dragged back. +Wrenching myself around, I found that I was engaging the tall sailor, +Daniels, and as I did so, Journegan, England, Dalton, Jenks, and our +third officer fell upon the crowd which had borne Andrews to the deck. + +All of the English sailors who had started to leave the _Sovereign_ were +now fighting with Chips, Johnson, and myself, making eight men as against +six. But the six were of the strongest and most determined rascals that +ever trod a ship's deck. + +As every sailor carries a sheath-knife, the fight promised to be an +interesting one if the men of the _Sovereign's_ crew saw fit to fight it +out. England, however, who was stronger than any two of our men, did not +like going into the matter with the same spirit as Journegan, Daniels, +and Andrews. After he had received a severe cut and had cracked the +skull of the sailor who had given it by knocking him over the head with +an iron belaying-pin, he began to retreat along the deck. Chips had +planted his knife in Andrews's thigh, and had cut Dalton and Journegan +badly in the mix-up. + +The Irishman was unharmed save for a few scratches, and being aided by +Johnson, he soon had the men backing away toward the break of the poop, +the third mate crying out shrilly to stop fighting. The queer young man +was defending Andrews mightily with a knife, and for this reason alone +the scoundrel managed to get to his feet and retreat with the rest, +backing away as they did to the mizzen and from there to the poop rail, +where they were brought to bay. + +Daniels, however, fared worse. We had a struggle for some moments alone, +and just as my knife was in a good position a man struck him from behind, +throwing him off his guard and letting my blade penetrate his throat +until it protruded three inches beyond the back of his neck. Then the +fight was over. + +Chips stopped at my side with Andrews's revolver in his hand. + +"'Tis a pity we've no cartridges fer th' weepin," he panted; +"'twould save th' hangman a lot o' trouble. Now there'll be a +butcher's shop aboard." + +"Come on," I said. "You get to starboard, and I'll take the port side. +We'll rush them and make a finish of it. Here, Frank," I called to a +sailor, "lend me your knife. Mine's no good for this work." + +"My own is broken, sir," said he. + +"Hold on," cried Journegan; "we're not making any fight." + +I could see the five ruffians talking brokenly together while they +recovered their breath. Our third mate was holding forth in a piping +tone, but too low for me to hear the words. + +"We don't want to press the outfly any further," said England. "We ain't +no pirates. All we did was to defend ourselves. One of your fellows cut +me arm open and I hit him over the head, not meanin' no more than to +knock him out for the time bein', as the sayin' is." + +"Will you surrender and put down your knives?" I asked. + +Andrews gave his fierce snort and was about to say something in reply, +but the third mate seized him and stopped him. The assassin was badly +wounded and swayed as he stood, but his spirit was not in the least +beaten. He had killed five men out of six shots from his pistol and would +have had me in the list but for the knife I placed in my breast as a +precaution at the warning from Chips on taking him aboard. His coolness +and steadiness were marvellous. Not a shot had he wasted, and if he had +been relieved a trifle sooner by his half-hearted followers, he would +have had the whole crowd of us at his mercy. No man could have faced a +pistol of that size in the hands of one so quick and steady. + +There was no answer to my question, and I repeated it, Chips adding that +they would go free if they would give up the men who had done killing. + +"Why o' course, we ain't no pirates," said Journegan. + +"Well, chuck out your knives, or we'll be for closing with you," I cried. +"This thing is over, and one or the other will be in command." + +"Why don't ye take the boat an' go clear? Dalton, here, will give ye the +provisions, an' you can get to the north'ard and make port. There ain't +no room for both of us aboard here now, even if we gave up, which we +ain't got no idea o' doin' unless you come out square an' fair." + +"Yes," said Jenks, "you men don't want to make a Kilkenny cat go out of +this ship. Do the square an' fair thing, an' git out. You know, Tommy," +he went on, addressing a sailor, "I don't want to hurt you; but you +know me. You boys can't make no show agin an old man-o'-war's man like +me, as has been up to his waist in blood many a time, an' never ware +the worse for it." + +The sailor addressed spoke to me. + +"Don't you think it a good way, sir? They are good for us if they try +hard, for England can whip any three of us, an' I, for one, don't want to +run against him if it can be helped. We have a boat." + +"Nonsense," said Chips. "We must take 'em." + +I thought a moment. There was a young girl below. Probably she was even +now frightened nearly to death. If anything did go wrong with us,--and it +certainly looked as if it would, when I sized up that crowd,--she would +be worse than dead. There were seven of us left against six, although +Andrews was too badly hurt to fear, but they were much better men +physically. After they had once started to do for us, they were not the +kind who would stick at anything. I was much exhausted, myself, and while +I thought the matter over, it seemed as though to go were the better way +out of the trouble. + +Chips, however, insisted on closing with the men. + +It took me some minutes to convince him that the young fellows with us +were not of the kind to depend on in such a fracas, and that he would be +in a bad way should he tackle England alone. Journegan, Jenks, and Dalton +were all powerful men, armed with sheath-knives sharper and better than +our own, for they had evidently prepared for just such an emergency. + +"Let Dalton provision the whale-boat, and you men get out," said Mr. Bell +after I had finished whispering my views to Chips. + +"Yes," said the steward; "you men stay where you are, and I'll put the +stuff aboard for you, and then you can get out." + +"All right," I answered; "go ahead." + +Some of us sat about the after-skylight, while Andrews and his gang +disposed themselves, as comfortably as they might, around the mizzen. +Dalton went down over the poop, and entered the cabin from forward, and +Chips, Johnson, and myself looked over our dead. + +Jim lay where he fell. There was no sign of life, and Chips swore softly +at the villain's work, when we laid his head back upon the planks. Hans +breathed slightly, but he was going fast. We poured some spirits between +his lips, but he relaxed, and was lifeless in a few minutes. Phillippi +lay with his eyes staring up at the sky. His knife was still clutched in +his dark hand, and his teeth shone white beneath his black mustache. The +other sailor was dead, and while we looked for some sign of life, I heard +a smothered sob come from aft. We turned and saw a slender white form +bending over the body of Captain Sackett. The moon was rising in the +east, lighting the heavens and making a long silver wake over the calm +ocean. By its light I made out Miss Sackett, holding the head of her dead +father in her lap, and crying softly. + + + + +XVI + + +The moon rose higher, and Dalton came and went, carrying provisions +up from the cabin. These he lowered into our boat, which was hauled +alongside, Jenks taking a hand when necessary, although he never came +aft far enough to encounter any of our men. Andrews sat quietly on +the deck and had his cuts bound up and dressed, while Mr. Bell went +below to the medicine chest for whatever he wanted. We kept well +apart, each side feeling a distrust for the other, and neither caring +to provoke a conflict. + +In about an hour Dalton announced the boat was ready. + +"There's salt junk enough for all hands a week or two, and ship's bread +for a month. There's water in the breaker. You can go when you're ready," +said Journegan. + +I went aft to Miss Sackett, where she had sat motionless for a long time +with her face buried in her hands, as if to shut out the cruel sight +around her. + +"We will leave the ship in a few minutes," said I, taking her by the +hand, and trying to raise her gently to her feet. "You must try to bear +up to go with us. Try to walk evenly and quickly when the time comes, for +there may be a struggle yet." + +She let fall her hands from her face, and I saw her eyes, dry and bright +in the moonlight. + +"Can't you kill them?" she asked quietly. "Oh, if I were only a man!" +Then she drew herself up to her full height, and gazed hard at the group +of ruffians at the mizzen. + +"I'll have to go below first, and get my things," she said. "I suppose +you know what is best, to go or stay?" + +"Hurry," I said. "I will wait here at the companion." + +She went below with a firm tread, and I heard her slam the door of her +stateroom. Andrews looked toward me and spoke. + +"You can leave the girl aboard," said he. "You'll have enough in +the boat." + +"Chips," I called, "stand by for a rush. Don't let Dalton get forward +alive. Miss Sackett either goes with us, or we all stay here together and +fight it out." + +Andrews, who had recovered somewhat, now staggered to his feet and drew +his knife. + +"Stand by and follow along the port rail," he said to Journegan and +England. "You two," addressing Bell and Jenks, "go to starboard." + +Dalton, who was below and separated from his fellows, would be our +object. + +Jenks, however, remonstrated at the attack. + +"Hold on," said he, and England stopped. "What's the use of crowding in +this thing like this? Some of us will get killed sure with seven fresh +men out for it, and what's the use? All for a gal. No, sir, says I, +don't go making a fool job of the thing. I ain't out for murder, not +fer no gal." + +"You'll do as I say or get done," answered Andrews, with a fierce snort, +turning toward him. + +Jenks backed toward us, and Bell tried to hold Andrews back. He partly +succeeded, but was close enough to the old man-o'-war's man to get a +slight cut from a blow meant for Andrews. Then England took a hand, and +with Journegan they held the assassin in check. + +Jenks came toward us. + +"I'll go with you fellows if you say so," said he, and he tossed his +knife over the rail to show that he meant no treachery. + +"'Tis a little late ye are, but ye're welcome," said Chips, who had +advanced at my cry nearly to him. Frank, the young English sailor, and +Johnson were both close behind Chins, with the rest following. It looked +as if there would be a collision, after all. + +"Take the girl and go," screamed Bell, almost fainting from the +cut received. + +"Yes, take her and be damned!" cried Journegan. "Only get off before it's +too late." + +"Seems to me," said Chips, "we could do for them now wid no trouble. +Let's try 'em." + +Johnson advanced at the word, but I called him back just as Chips was +making ready for a spring at England. The big prize fighter had made +ready for the Irishman, and for an instant it seemed that we would have +another ending of the affair. + +"Come," I said to one of the young sailors who held back, "get aboard the +small boat," and the fellow, who was shrinking from the knives, took the +opportunity to get away. This made Chips hesitate, and in another moment +I had two more of the men going over the side. + +Miss Sackett came on deck. Her face was ruddy even in the moonlight, but +she carried herself with a firm step to the mizzen channels. + +"Stand by and hold her below there," I bawled, and a man received her +into the boat. Then I called to the rest of our fellows and threw a leg +over the rail to signify that we were going. They came along, Chips last, +with Johnson at his side. The carpenter was furious and wanted to fight +it out, and it would have taken very little to have set him upon them +alone. They, however, when Andrews had been overcome, were by no means +anxious to engage. This seemed strange to me, for they certainly were men +who feared nothing, and the sooner we were out of the way, the surer they +were of getting safe off with their necks. Just what made Bell so +determined to have us go was a puzzle to me. As Chips climbed over the +rail, England came to the side with Journegan. I expected some outburst, +and for an instant the carpenter was at a disadvantage. But they let him +go over without a hostile movement. He stood up in the bow while a man +shoved off. + +"Ah, ye raskils, it's like runnin' away we are, but we ain't. It's but +lavin' to th' hangman what I'd do meself, curse ye." + +The boat of the _Sovereign_ towing at the quarter came abreast us as we +dropped back. Chips still standing and glaring at the ship, with rage in +his voice and eyes. + +He stooped down and lifted an oar as the small boat came alongside, and +with a half-suppressed yell smote her with all his strength upon the +gunwale. The oar crashed through nearly to the water line under the power +of the stroke. + +"Blast ye," he cried, "ye'll niver leave that ship alive," and he smote +the boat again and again, crushing her down until she began to fill. +Johnson took a hand also in spite of England and Journegan hauling away +at the painter. Our men backed water so hard they held her back until the +boat was hopelessly stove and had settled to the thwarts. Then we let go +and drifted away, while the men aboard the _Sovereign_ hurled +belaying-pins and gratings at us. + +"A pleasant voyage to you," came the soft notes of Mr. Bell's voice; and +then we rowed slowly away to the northward, leaving the _Sovereign_ a +dark, sunken grisly thing against the moonlit sky. + +"Rig the mast and sail," I said. "It's no use getting tired before the +struggle comes. We're some six hundred miles out, and may not raise a +vessel for days." + +The oars were taken in, and the tarpaulin which had done duty for a sail +was rigged. Under the pressure of the light air the whale-boat made +steering-way and a little more. The moon now made the night as light as +day, and although it was slightly chilly in this latitude, we suffered +little from the exposure, each settling himself into the most comfortable +position possible, and gazing back at the strange black outline of the +wrecked ship. Her sunken decks and patched-up jury rig with the trysail +set from the after-stay gave her an uncanny look, while her masts and +spars with the set canvas seemed as black as ink against the light sky +beyond. There she lay, a horrid, ghastly thing, wallowing along slowly +toward a port she would never reach. + +While I looked at her, Miss Sackett burst into a hard laugh which jangled +hysterically. She had been silent since she had entered the boat, and +this sudden burst startled me. Her eyes were fixed upon the grim +derelict. They shone in the moonlight and she choked convulsively. + +"Can I hand you some water, ma'm?" asked Jenks. + +"What made you come with us, you rogue?" she asked, without +turning her head. + +"I was with ye from the start, s'help me," said Jenks. "I only goes with +the other side when I feared they'd kill all hands." + +"Well, it's a good thing for you, you contemptible rascal," she answered +in an even tone. + +All of a sudden I noticed a flicker of light above the cabin of the +_Sovereign_. It died away for an instant and then flared again, Miss +Sackett laughed convulsively. + +"Look," she said. + +At that instant a red glare flashed up from the derelict. It shone on her +maintopsail and staysails and lit up the ocean around her. + +"Faith, but she's afire," cried Chips. "Look at them." + +I turned the boat's head around and ran her off before the wind, hauling +up again and standing for the wreck to get near her. Miss Sackett seized +my arm and held it fast. + +"Don't go back for them!" she cried. "You shall not go back for them!" + +"I haven't the least intention of going for them," I answered; "I only +wanted to get close enough to see what they'd do. Did you set her afire?" +I asked bluntly. + +"Of course I did," said the girl, passionately. "Do you suppose I didn't +hear them telling you I should have to remain aboard? What else was there +left for me to do? Would you have me fall into their hands?" + +"Lord save ye, but ye did the right thing," said Chips. Johnson echoed +this sentiment. + +"An' I knew ye ware up to somethin' of the kind when ye went below," +said Jenks, "fer I smelled the smoke and thought to stop it, but there +ware too much risk as it was to add fire, so I had to step out o' the +crowd an' jine ye. I never did nothin' in the fracas, as ye know, except +get hurt." + +In ten minutes we were close aboard the derelict, and her cabin was a +mass of flame. Figures of men showed against the light amidships, and I +finally made out all hands getting out a spar and barrels to make a raft. +The oil in the cargo, however, was too quick for them. It had become +ignited aft and had cut off all retreat by the stove-in boat. Several +explosions followed, and the flames roared high above the maintopsail. +Journegan, Andrews, and another man were seen making their way forward +across the sunken deck. The heat drove them to the topgallant forecastle +and in a few minutes we could see all standing there near the windlass. +The bitts sheltered them from the heat. + +The oil in the ship was not submerged in the after part, owing to her +trimming by the head. It had been the last stuff put aboard and was well +up under her cabin deck. Even that which was awash caught after the fire +had started to heat things up well, and the entire after part of the +_Sovereign_ was a mass of flames. They gave forth a brilliant light, +glowing red and making the sky appear dark beyond. Great clouds of sparks +from the woodwork above soared into the heavens. The light must have been +visible for miles. + +There was absolutely no escape for the men aboard now, except by getting +away on some float. Journegan, Dalton, and England were working hard at +something on the forecastle which appeared to be a raft. The one they had +started aft they had been forced to abandon after an explosion. The +carpenter's tools being below in the hold when the ship filled, they had +nothing but their knives and a small hatchet left to work with. + +Suddenly Mr. Bell made us out in the darkness less than a quarter +of a mile distant. He screamed for us to come back and take him off +the derelict. + +"Pay no attention to him," said Chips. + +I hesitated, with the tiller in my hand. The end of those men seemed so +horrible that I forgot for the instant what they had done. + +"You shall not go back for them while I'm aboard this boat," said Miss +Sackett, quietly, from her seat beside me, and she seized the tiller +firmly to luff the craft. + +"I didn't intend to," I answered; "yet that man's cry had so much of the +woman in it that it was instinctive to turn." + +"Instinctive or not, here we stay. He is the biggest devil of the lot," +answered the girl. "There's some horrible game in getting us away. I'm +certain of it, but don't know what it can be. We'll find out when it's +too late." + +"We might take them aboard one at a time and bind them," I suggested. +This was greeted with growlings from Chips and Johnson. Even Jenks +declared it would never do, and the other sailors made antagonistic +remarks. There was nothing to do but keep away and let them save +themselves as best they might. + +We sailed slowly around the wreck, watching her burn. Hour after hour she +flamed and hissed, the heat being felt at a hundred fathoms distant. And +all the while, the sharp, piping voice of our third mate screamed shrilly +for succor. + +After midnight the _Sovereign_ had burned clear to the water line from +aft to amidships. Even her rails along the waist were burning fiercely +with the oil that had been thrown upon them by the explosions of the +heated barrels. And as she burned out her oil, she sank lower and lower +in the water until she gave forth huge clouds of steam and smoke instead +of flaring flames. In the early hours of the morning, we were still +within two hundred fathoms of her; and she showed nothing in the gray +light save the mainmast and the topgallant forecastle. Her canvas had +gone, and the bare black pole of her mast stuck out of the sea, which now +flowed deep around the foot of it. Upon the blackened forecastle head, +five human forms crouched behind the sheltering bulk of the windlass. +They were silent now and motionless. While I looked, one of them +staggered to his feet and stretched out his hands above his head, gazing +at the light in the east. It was Andrews. He raised his clenched fists +and shook them fiercely at us and at the gray sky above. Then over the +calm, silent ocean came the fierce, raving curses of the doomed villain. + +A gentle air was stirring the swell in the east, which soon filled our +sail. We kept the boat's head away until she pointed in the direction of +the African cape. And so we sailed away, with the echoes of that +villain's voice ringing in our ears, calling forth fierce curses upon the +God he had denied. + +I turned away from the horrible spectacle of that grisly hulk with its +human burden. As I did so, my eyes met those of Miss Sackett. She lowered +hers, took out her handkerchief and, bowing over, buried her face in it, +crying as though her heart would break. + + + + +XVII + + +"If you'll pass the pannikin, I'll take a drink, sir," said Jenks, after +the sun had risen and warmed the chilly air of the southern ocean. + +I tossed the old man-o'-war's man the measure, and he proceeded to draw a +cupful from the water breaker, which was full and lay amidships. + +"It's an uncommon quare taste the stuff has, sure enough," said he, after +he had laid aside his quid and drank a mouthful, "Try a bit, Tom," he +went on, and passed the pannikin to a sailor next him. + +"You're always lookin' fer trouble, old man," said the sailor, draining +off the cupful. + +"An' bloomin' well ready to get out of it by any way he can," added +another. "Fill her up agin an' let me have some. This sun is most hot, in +spite of the breeze. Blast me, Jenks, but you're a suspicious one. It's a +wonder you ever go to sleep." + +The young sailor, Tom, put down the cup and watched Jenks draw it full +again. Then he grew pale. + +"Hold on a bit with that water, you men. There's something wrong with +it," he said. He gulped and placed his hand over his abdomen, while a +spasm of pain passed over his features. + +"My God!" he muttered, and doubled up. Then he vomited violently and his +spasms increased. + +I saw Chips turn white under his tan, and Johnson look with staring eyes +at the water breaker, as though it were a ghost. + +"Knock in the head," I said, "and let's see what's inside of it." + +Two men held the poor fellow gasping over the rail while his agony grew +worse. The rest crowded around aft as much as possible to see what +terrible fate was in store for us. + +The breaker was upended in a moment. Jenks stove in the head with an oar +handle, and we peered inside. + +The water was a clear crystal, like that in the _Sovereign's_ tanks. It +was not discolored in the least. + +"Pass the bailer here," I said; "and then turn the barrel so we can get +the sunlight into it." + +I bailed out a few quarts, looked at it carefully, tasted it slightly, +and then put it carefully back again. I noticed a strange acrid taste. +The barrel was turned toward the sun, and its light was allowed to shine +straight into its depths. I put my head down close to the surface and +peered hard at the bottom. Then I was aware of a whitish powder which +showed against the dark wood. Reaching down, some of this was brought up; +and then I recognized the same powder Captain Sackett had told me was +bichloride of mercury. + +By this time Tom was in convulsions. He strained horribly, and we could +do nothing to relieve his agony. Brandy was given, but it did no good, +and finally he lost consciousness. Miss Sackett nursed him tenderly and +did all she could to make him comfortable, but it was no use. + +The horror of the thing fairly took my senses for a moment. There we +were, miles away from land, without water. The villains had meant us to +tell no tales. All adrift in an open boat, with food and water poisoned, +we had a small chance indeed of ever telling the story of the +_Sovereign's_ loss. Vessels were not plentiful at the high latitude we +were in; and, as we were out of the trade, it was doubtful if we could +even get into the track of the regular Cape route inside a week, to say +nothing of being picked up. It seemed as though Andrews' villany would +finish us yet. + +Far away on the southern horizon, the single mast stuck up above the blue +water like a black rod. I stood up and gazed at it. Chips appeared to +read my thoughts, for he spoke out:-- + +"'Tis no use now, sir; the tanks would be a couple o' fathoms deep, an' +we couldn't get at them. She won't float more'n a day or two, anyhow, wid +th' afterdeck an' cargo burnt free. She'll go under as soon as the oil's +washed out wid a sea, and that'll be th' last av a bad ship." + +I saw that the carpenter was right. There was no water for either Andrews +or ourselves, and it would be foolish to go back to force the tank. + +"Heave the stuff overboard," I said, and Johnson and Jenks raised the +barrel upon the rail. It poured out clear into the blue ocean, and showed +no sign of its deadly character. + +"Break out that barrel of ship's bread," said Chips. + +It was found to be moistened with water all through, and as even the +little poison I had drunk made me horribly nauseated, there was no +thought of tasting the stuff. Over the side it went, floating high in the +boat's wake. Then came the beef. + +"Hold on with that," said Miss Sackett. "It isn't likely they'd poison +everything. I don't remember there being over several pounds of that +mercury in the medicine chest, and you know it won't dissolve readily in +water. They must have had something to dissolve it in first, and it would +have taken too long to fill everything full of the stuff." + +"Who cares to taste the beef?" I asked. + +"Give me a piece, sir," said Johnson. + +He put it in his mouth and chewed slowly upon it at first, as though not +quite certain whether to swallow it or not. Finally he mustered courage +and made away with a portion of it, waiting some minutes to see if it +produced pain. It was apparently all right, and then he swallowed the +rest. We concluded to keep the beef and eat it as a last resort. + +The breeze freshened in the southeast, and we ran along steadily. If it +held, we could make about a hundred miles a day, and raise the African +coast within a week. There was a chance, if we could stand the strain. + +It was now the sixth day since we had left the _Pirate_, and we figured +that she must have rounded the Cape, and would now be standing along up +the South Atlantic with the steady southeast trade behind her. Other +ships would be in the latitude of Cape Town, and if we could make the +northing, we might raise one and be picked up. I pictured the horrors the +poor girl sitting beside me must endure if we were adrift for days in the +whale-boat. What she had already gone through was enough to shake the +nerves of the strongest woman, but here she sat, quietly looking at the +water, her eyes sometimes filled with tears, while not a word of +complaint escaped her lips. + +Her example nerved me. I had passed the order to stop all talking except +when necessary, as it would only add to thirst. We ran along in silence. + +We had no compass save the one hanging to my watch-chain, as big as my +thumb-nail, but I managed to make a pretty straight course for all that. +The wind freshened and was quite cool. The sunlight, sparkling over the +ocean, which now turned dark blue with a speck of white here and there to +windward, warmed us enough to keep off actual chill, but the men who had +taken off their coats to make a little more of a spread to the fair wind +soon requested permission to put them on again. Sitting absolutely quiet +as we were, the air was keener than if we were going about the sheltered +decks of a ship. + +On we went, the swell rolling under us and giving us a twisting motion. +Sometimes we would be in a long hollow where the breeze would fail. Then, +as we rose sternwrard, the little sail would fill, and away we would go, +racing along the slanting crest of the long sea, the foam rushing from +the boat's sides with a hopeful, hissing sound, until the swell would +gain on us and go under, leaving the boat with her bow pointing up the +receding slope and her headway almost gone, to drop into the following +hollow and repeat the action. + +The English sailor who had drank the water was now stone dead. Johnson +gave me a look, and I began a conversation with Miss Sackett, endeavoring +to engage her attention. A splash from forward made her look, and she saw +what had happened. Then she turned and, looking up at me, placed her soft +little hand on mine which lay upon the tiller. + +"You are very good to me, Mr. Rolling, but I can stand suffering as well +as a man," she said. "I thank you just the same." Then her eyes filled +and she turned away her face. I found something to fix at the rudder +head, and when I was through she was looking over the blue water where +the lumpy trade clouds showed above the horizon's rim. + +As the day wore on, the hunger of the men began to show itself. Jenks +kept his wrinkled, leather face to the northward, looking steadily for a +sail, but the other sailors glanced aft several times, and I noticed the +strange glare of the eye which tells of the hungry animal. Some of these +men had eaten nothing for twenty-four hours. One big, heavy-looking young +sailor glanced back several times from the clew of his eye at the girl +sitting aft. But I fixed my gaze upon him so steadily that he shifted his +seat and looked forward. + +Late in the afternoon some of the men insisted on eating the beef, and it +was served to them. No ill effects followed, so all hands took their +ration. This satisfied them for the time being, but I knew the thirst +which must surely follow. I had been adrift in an open boat before in the +Pacific. There had been sixteen men at the start, and at the end of four +weeks of horror seven had been picked up to tell a tale which would make +the blood curdle. The memory of this made me sick with fear and anxiety. + +Johnson felt so much better from his meal that he stood in the bow with +his little monkey-like figure braced against the mast, his legs on the +gunwales. He said jokingly that he'd raise a sail before eight bells in +the afternoon. Suddenly he cried out:-- + +"Sail dead ahead, sir!" + +"'Tis no jokin' matter," growled Chips, angrily. "Shet yer head, ye +monkey, afore I heave ye over th' side." + +Johnson turned fiercely upon him. + +"Jokin', you lummax! Slant yer eye forrads, an' don't sit there a-lookin' +at yerself," he snarled. + +"Steady, there!" I cried. "Where's the vessel?" + +"Right ahead, sir, and standing down this ways, if I see straight." + +I stood up on the stern locker and looked ahead. Sure enough, a white +speck showed on the northern horizon, but I couldn't see enough of the +craft's sails to tell which way she headed. + +The men all wanted to stand at once, and it took some sharp talk to +get them under control; but the young girl at my side showed no signs +of excitement. I looked at her, and her gentle eyes looked straight +into mine. + +"I knew she would come," she said. "I've prayed all the morning." + +In twenty minutes, spent anxiously watching her, the ship raised her +topsails slowly above the line of blue, and then we saw she really was +jammed on the wind and reaching along toward us rapidly. + +"'Tis the _Pirit_, an' no mistake!" cried the carpenter. "Look at them +r'yals! No one but th' bit av a mate, Trunnell, iver mastheaded a yard +like that." + +"The _Pirate_!" yelled Johnson, from forward. + +And so, indeed, it really was. + +I looked at her and then at the sweet face at my side. All the hard lines +of suffering and fright had left it. The eyes now had the same gentle, +trusting look of innocence I had seen the first morning we had taken off +the _Sovereign's_ crew. The reaction was too much for me. I was little +more than a boy in years, so I reached for the girl's hand and kissed it. + +When I looked up I caught the clew of Jenks' eye, but the rest were +looking at the rapidly approaching ship. + + + + +XVIII + + +When the _Pirate_ neared us, we could make out a man coming down the +ratlines from the foretop, showing that she had evidently sighted us even +before we had her. As she drew nearer still, we could see Trunnell +standing on the weather side of the poop, holding to a backstay and +gazing aloft at his canvas, evidently giving orders for the watch to bear +a hand and lay aft to the braces. He would lay his mainyards aback and +heave her to. Along the high topgallant rail could be seen faces, and on +the quarter-deck Mrs. Sackett stood with our friend Thompson, better +known in the Antipodes as Jackwell, the burglar. As I watched him +standing there pointing to us, I thought of poor Jim. + +"Wheel down," I heard Trunnell bawl as the ship came within fifty fathom. +"Slack away that lee brace; steady your wheel." + +Before the ship's headway had slackened we had out the oars and were +rowing for her. In a moment a sailor had flung us a line, and we were +towing along at the mizzen channels, with the men climbing aboard as fast +as they could. + +Miss Sackett was passed over the rail, and her mother took her below. I +was the last one except Johnson to climb up. He stood at the bow ready to +hitch on the tackles. But other men took his place, and as I went over +the rail Thompson came and shook my hand warmly. + +"Sink me, Mr. Rolling, but you've had a time of it, hey?" he said. "How +are the men on the _Sovereign_? We've been standing along north and south +for six days, expecting to pick you up, and here you are. It's all that +Trunnell's doings. I was for going ahead the day we missed you, but that +big-headed little rascal insisted on hunting for you after seeing you +leave the wreck. Where's Jim and Phillippi, and the rest?" + +The sincerity of his welcome had taken me off my guard, and I found +myself standing there shaking his hand. Then I recovered myself. + +"It's a pity Captain Thompson missed this ship the day she sailed," I +said quietly. "We were informed the night before that he'd be with us. It +might have saved the lives of some good men." + +He let go my hand and smiled strangely at me, his hooked nose working, +and his eyes taking that hard glint I knew so well. + +"So you were really waiting for a man you'd never seen, hey? Was that +the lay of it? And when I came aboard and said I was Thompson, you +gulped down the bait, hey, you bleeding fool. Who the dickens do you +think I am, anyhow?" + +"I happen to know that you pass by the name of Jackwell," I said. "Here, +Chips," I called, but the carpenter was already at my side. "What name +did Jim give the captain, and what was his business?" + +"'Tis no use av makin' any more av it, cap'n. We know all about ye. Th' +best thing ye can do is to step down from the quarter-deck." + +"Trunnell," said Thompson, with his drawl, "what d'ye think of these men +coming back clean daft?" + +The mate was close beside us, giving orders for the disposal of the small +boat, and he turned and clasped my hand for the first time. + +"Mighty glad t' see ye both back. I suppose the rest are aboard the +_Sovereign_" said he, looking us over. + +"And they come aboard with a tale that I'm some other man than Captain +Thompson; that I knew that he was coming, and got aboard before him and +went out in his place," said Jackwell. "Sink me, Trunnell, but I'm afeard +you'll have to put them in irons." + +"That's quare enough," said the mate, with a smile. "Come below, Rolling, +and let's have yer yarn. You, too, Chips, ye'll need a nip of good stuff +as well. I'm sorry ye've turned up with a screw loose. All right, cap'n. +Square away when ye're ready. The boat's all right." And the little +bushy-headed fellow turned and led the way down over the poop, entering +the forward cabin, where the steward was waiting to tell us how glad he +was we had turned up, and also serve out good grog with a meal of +potatoes and canned fruit. + +I was so tired and hungry from the exertions of the past +twenty-four hours that I went below without further protest, Chips +following sullenly. + +"I'se sho nuff glad to see yo' folks agin, Marse Rolling," said the +steward. "Take a little o' de stuff what warms an' inwigerates." + +We fell to and ate heartily, and while we did so we told our story. +Trunnell sat, and every now and again scratched his bushy head with +excitement and interest while we told of the way Andrews had done. When +we told how Jim had come to be aboard the _Pirate_, he walked fore and +aft on the cabin deck, shaking his head from side to side, and muttering. + +"Was Jim the only one who knew about the business?" he asked. + +We told him he was, and that no one but Chips and myself had heard what +the detective had said. + +Trunnell sat with his hands in his hair for the remainder of the time we +were filling ourselves. He said nothing further until Chips made some +remark about his taking the ship in. Then he arose and stood before us. + +"It may be as ye say, Rolling. I'd hate to doubt your word, and don't, +in a way, so to speak. But discipline is discipline. You men know that. +Our captain comes aboard with a letter sayin' as he's the Thompson +what'll take the ship out. We has orders to that effect from the owners. +It ain't possible another man could have known o' the thing so quick, +and come aboard to take his place. Leastways, we hain't got no evidence +but the word of a sailor who's dead, to the contrary. It may be as ye +say, but we'll have to stick to this fellow until we take soundings. +When we gets in, then ye may tell yer tale an' find men to back it. +Don't say no more about it while we're out, for it won't do no good, an' +may get ye both in irons. 'Twas a devil ye had for a shipmate when +Andrews went with ye,--a terrible man, sure enough. I've insisted on +standing backwards an' forrads along the track for nearly a week in +hopes we'd pick ye up, an' I've nearly had trouble with the old man for +waiting so long. He's heard o' the fracas, an' will stand along to pick +up his third mate. I don't know as he'll care for Andrews, but he'll +take the girl-mate sure if he's afloat." + +"There's no use av makin' any bones av the matther, Mr. Trunnell," said +Chips. "That third mate an' the murderin' devil ain't comin' aboard this +here ship. Ef they do, I'll kill them meself whin they comes over th' +side." And he arose, lugging out the revolver he had taken from the +ruffian at the close of the fight. + +I stepped into my room and brought forth my own, handing Chips some +cartridges for his. + +"I think the men will stand to us in the matter, Trunnell," I said. + +The little mate looked sorrowfully at us both, and shook his great +head slowly. + +"'Tain't no use o' makin' a fuss," he said at last. "Discipline is +discipline, an' you knows it. If the captain wants them fellows aboard, +aboard they comes, and no one here kin stop them. There's only one +captain to a ship. When his orders don't go, there's blood an' mutiny an' +piracy an' death aboard. Put up your guns. Don't let's say no more about +it till we raise them, for maybe they're gone under by this time. We +won't reach the wreck anyways afore night." + +It happened as he said. When we went on deck, the _Pirate_ had swung her +yards and was standing along in the direction we had come. Thompson, or +rather Jackwell, walked fore and aft on the weather side of the poop, and +gazed at each turn at the horizon ahead. A lookout was posted in the +foretop, while the rest of the men lounged about the decks and discussed +the situation and the tragedy of the day before. + +Chips was for open mutiny, and Johnson backed him. All our men were in +sympathy with us, and some were so outspoken that they could be counted +on if a fresh fracas occurred. The majority, however, were so well under +control that they appeared to be satisfied to obey orders under any +conditions. The Englishmen were neutral. All except Jenks were silent or +advised the recognition of the established authority, telling how we +could square matters afterward with our enemies. + +This shows how a sailor is at the mercy of any one who has been +established in authority. If he resists in any manner, he is mutinous and +is liable to the severest penalties. Here we were with every prospect of +having Andrews and our third mate on board again, to go through some +other horror, unless we turned pirates and took the ship. This was a +risky thing to attempt, for if successful and there was any bloodshed, we +would certainly either swing or pass under a heavy sentence. That is, of +course, if we failed to prove that Thompson was the rascal Jim had told +us he was. On the other hand, if we failed, there was the absolute +certainty of being at the mercy of the rascal's cruelty, unless Trunnell +would be able to control them all. + +The little mate was a strange character. He believed in obeying orders +under any conditions whatever, unless absolute proof could be had that +the one who gave the orders was unauthorized to do so. In spite of his +friendship for me, I knew full well that he would die rather than disobey +the captain, no matter what the order was, provided he considered it a +legitimate one. The fact that the men had committed horrible crimes did +not in any manner disinherit them from the ship in his opinion. They +should be dealt with afterward according to the law. + +I took no part in an argument. Neither did Trunnell or the skipper. They +both seemed satisfied of their position and took no pains to talk to the +men as if they suspected a rising. I stood in the waist and remained +looking steadily at the horizon until the sun dipped, and there was every +prospect that night would come before we raised the black mast of the +wreck. My pistol was in my pocket ready for instant use, and I saw by the +bunch under Chips' coat that he was also ready. His small black mustache +was worked into points under the pressure of his nervous fingers, and he +sat on the hatch-combings apart from all save Johnson. The sailor walked +athwartships before him on the deck as if to get the stiffness out of his +little legs, which seemed now thinner than ever, as the setting sun shone +between them through the curious gap. + +The upper limb of the red sun was just touching the line of water when +the man in the foretop hailed the deck. + +"Wreck on weather bow, sir!" he bawled. + +My heart gave a great jump and I looked at Chips. Johnson made a movement +with his hand as if holding a knife and went to the weather rail and +looked over. + +"Weather maintopsail brace!" came the call from Trunnell. The men came +tumbling aft and took their places. + +"Lee braces, Mr. Rolling," he called again, and I crossed the deck, +knowing that he would jam her as high as he could to make as far to +windward as possible before darkness set in. + +We braced her sharper, and she pointed a bit higher, but she could not +quite head up to the black stick that showed above the horizon. The wind, +however, was steady, and under her royals the _Pirate_ was about the +fastest and prettiest ship afloat. She heeled gently to the breeze and +went through it to the tune of seven knots, rolling the heft of the long +sea away from her clipper bows and tossing off the foam without a jar or +tremble. I looked hard at the distant speck which was now just visible +from the deck, and wondered how Andrews and his crew felt. I could see +nothing of the _Sovereign's_ hull, and hope rose within me. I found +myself saying over and over again to myself, "She's gone under, she's +gone under." Then just before it grew too dark to see any longer I went +aft and took up the glass. Through it the black forecastle of the wreck +showed above the sea. + + + + +XIX + + +It was quite dark before the _Pirate_ had come up with the wreck. The +skipper and Trunnell had gone below to their supper, and I had charge of +the deck, with orders to heave the ship into the wind when we came +abreast, and sing out for the mate to man the boat. + +We were barely able to make within half a mile dead to leeward, but when +we did, I backed the main yards and clewed up the courses, taking in the +royals to keep from drifting off too fast in the gloom. + +Trunnell came on deck and gave orders to get out the boat. She was soon +at the channels, jumping and thrashing in the sea, for the breeze was now +quite strong. The mate jumped into her with four men, and Thompson went +to the break of the poop and told me I could go below to supper. Chips +and the steward came aft, also, and we made out to eat a square meal in +silence, each making a sign to his neighbor toward the back of his belt. + +While we ate, listening for the sound of oars that would tell of the +return of the boat, we could hear snatches of the sad talk of the +two women in the after-cabin, through the bulkhead. This did not +tend to raise our spirits, and we hurried through to be on deck when +Trunnell returned. + +Scarcely had we gained the main deck when we heard the regular sound of +the oars and oar-locks. Soon the dim shadow of the boat was seen heading +toward us, outlined against the light in the eastern sky where the moon +was rising. + +We took our places at the waist and awaited developments. Jackwell stood +directly above me, and I could see his face with its glinting eyes turned +toward me. His mustache was waxed into sharp points and curved upward, +while his protruding chin and beak-like nose appeared to draw even nearer +together. He was evidently quite well satisfied that he would be able to +take care of his passengers, for he said nothing to me to indicate that +he was disturbed by my proximity to the gangway. + +I had decided to shoot Andrews the moment he came over the side, without +a word. This much I had confided to Chips and Johnson. They would stand +by me if there was a general attack, and we would make the best terms +possible afterward. + +The boat drew close aboard, and I could see the backs of the rowers swing +fore and aft to the stroke. Then she shot alongside and was fast to the +mizzen channels, and I stepped back ready for action. Jackwell noticed my +move and drew his pistol. I drew mine, and glancing around I saw that the +carpenter and Johnson were standing near, with their weapons at hand, and +half a dozen sailors with them. I would not be alone. + +A form sprang over the side, and I raised my weapon almost before I knew +it. Then I recognized Trunnell. + +"You can disarm that young fool, Trunnell," said Jackwell, putting away +his gun. "It's lucky for him you've come back without any one, or I'd +have shot him in half a second more." + +The little mate came down the poop steps and went up to me. + +"You better go below, Rolling," said he. "I didn't tell him," he added +under his breath, "that you had said you'd mutiny afore I left, or he +would probably have done for both you and Chips. He doesn't even know now +that Chips was with you, so get into your room and pipe down." + +I was so dazed at Trunnell coming back alone I could hardly talk. I +looked again over the side to see if there was no mistake. All the men +were now aboard, and only the empty craft was there, dancing at the end +of her painter. Then I turned and followed the mate below, he stopping +just long enough to give orders to hoist in the boat and swing the yards. +Jackwell went to the wheel, and away the ship went to the westward, +leaving the shadowy thing there on the eastern horizon to mark the end of +a fine ship. I stopped a moment to look at the derelict, and the rising +moon cast a long line of silver light across the sea. + +Out in that shining track, a dark stick rose from the water. That was the +last I saw of the _Sovereign_. + +"Where were they?" I asked Trunnell, as we came into the cabin. + +"Well," said the little mate, coolly, "since you've worked yourself up so +much over the matter, and as we're a-goin' along on our course agin, as I +suggested to the skipper afore we raised the wrack"--here he went to the +pantry and brought out a bottle, and held it out to me. + +"No," I said; "I don't want anything to drink. Tell me what became of the +fellows on the wreck. It's my second watch, if I remember right, and I'll +be ready to turn out at eight bells." + +"Well," said Trunnell, "where they is an' where they is not, stumps me. +Where a feller goes when he dies is mostly a matter o' guesswork, so I +don't know as I can say eggzackly jest where them fellers is at." + +Here he took a long drink, and wiped his mouth on the back of his hand. I +put my gun in my room, and sat down at the cabin table, where he held the +bottle as though undecided whether to take another drink or put it away +in the pantry. Rum appeared to be easy of access on the ship, and I knew +I could get it any time I wanted it. + +"Well, ye see, the way of it ware like this," went on the mate. "I +didn't take no stock o' those fellers bein' aboard a ship what had been +afire, so when ye went into stays an' swore to do bloody murder an' +suddin death to them fellers, I didn't let on to the old man. What's the +use? says I. We ain't a-goin' to bring them back noways." + +"Weren't they aboard?" I asked. + +Trunnell gave me a long, keen look. + +"Be ye tellin' o' this yarn, Rolling, or me?" he said. + +I asked his pardon for interrupting. + +"As I ware a-sayin' afore ye put in your oar, when I hears that ye both +had told the truth o' the matter o' the fight, it appeared to me that +them fellers couldn't be aboard that wrack. I told the old man so, but he +ware fer standin' along after them anyways. Then I ware clean decided +that the wrack had done fer them." + +"Wasn't there a sign of them aboard?" I asked again. + +"There's such a thing as bein' inquisitive," said Trunnell, looking at me +with his keen little eyes from under their shaggy brows. "Them men ain't +on that wrack--an' I told the skipper so, see?" + +He pulled out his sheath-knife, went to the door of the cabin, and flung +it clear of the ship's side. Then he came back. + +"There's some such thing as justice on ships, when the fellers go too +far; but discipline is discipline. The sooner ye get that through yer +head, the better. As fer them men with Andrews, they had give up any +right to live afore I got there. I told the old man that the chances were +agin their bein' found there. I comes back and reports that they ain't +there. That's all. Where they is I don't much keer. They is plenty o' +sharrucks in this here ocean, and some parts o' them is most likely +helpin' them. The rest is mostly in hell, I reckon, but as I says afore, +that is a matter o' mostly guesswork." + +A dim idea of the horror he had gone through came upon me. + +"Good God, Trunnell," I said, "did you do it alone?" + +"Well, there ware only one strong one in the lot--but look here, young +man, if ye don't turn in pretty soon, ye'll be in trouble agin." + +He poured himself out another drink, and put the bottle in the pantry. +Then he went on deck, and I turned in to think over the spectacle that +must have occurred aboard the blackened derelict. I could see Andrews's +hope and the third mate's joy at being rescued. I could even picture +them undergoing the wild joy I had just felt myself, when we had sighted +the _Pirate_. Then came that nameless something. Had the men seen it? A +rescuer coming aboard with a bloody knife in his belt, and the ship +standing away again on her course for the States on the other side of +the world! + +There would be no explanations, and the blackened wreck, half sunken in +the swell, would tell no tales. Trunnell was really a strange character. + +"Discipline is discipline," I seemed to hear him saying all my watch +below. His step sounded above my head as he walked fore and aft, during +his watch; and during the periods of fitful slumber I enjoyed before +eight bells struck, I fancied him a great giant whose feet struck with +a thunderous sound at every stride. I was almost startled when his +great bushy head was thrust into my room door, and he announced loudly +that it was the mid-watch, and that I would need a stout jacket to ward +off the cold. + + + + +XX + + +For the next three days we went along merrily to the northward, the +beginning of the southeast trade behind us, and our skysails drawing full +overhead. On the third day Cape Agullas was sighted on our beam. Then, +away we went scudding across the South Atlantic Ocean for the equator. + +Miss Sackett and her mother came on deck now and enjoyed the beautiful +weather. The sufferings they had both gone through had made a deep +impression upon them, and they were very quiet. The older woman would sit +for hours in a faded dress saved from the wreck of the _Sovereign_, +gazing sadly at the wake sparkling away in the sunshine astern. The +bright gleams seemed to light up the memories of her past, and sometimes +when I saw her she would have a tear trickling slowly down each cheek. +Men as good as Sackett were scarce on deep water. + +But the daughter was different. She was sad enough, at times. Being +young, however, the loss of her father fell easier upon her. We often +found time to chat together during the day watches on deck, and she +showed a marked interest in the ship, and the people aboard, talking +cheerfully of the future and the probable ending of the voyage. Jenks +interested her and likewise Trunnell; but the sturdy mate paid little +attention to her, devoting all his time to the affairs of her mother. + +Thompson, or Tackwell, still commanded the ship, and Chips and I agreed +there was no use in forcing matters with Trunnell against us. We would +bide our time and wait for him on making harbor. He was doing well enough +now, and since the women had come aboard he had been quieter in his cups, +staying below when not sober enough to talk pleasantly. His mustache he +curled with more care, and his dress was better than before, otherwise he +walked the deck with the same commanding air, and drawled out his orders +as usual. He was the most temperate at the very times when I expected him +to go off into one of his ugly sarcastic fits, and was evidently trying +to carry out the remainder of the voyage without any friction anywhere. +This made matters easy for the mates. + +During this period of good weather the routine duties of the ship took +the place of the fierce excitement of the past. The bright sunshine +cheered us greatly, and the spirits of all on board rose accordingly. The +day watches were spent in healthy labor on the main deck, bending old +sails and sending below the new ones. A ship, unlike a human being, +always puts on her old and dirty clothes in fine weather, and bends her +new and strong ones for facing foul. + +The poultry and pigs, which nearly all deep-water ships carry, were +turned loose to get exercise and air. The "doctor" worked up his +plum-duff on the main hatch in full view of hungry men, and tobacco was +in plenty for those who had money to pay for it, Trunnell giving fair +measure to all who ran bills on the slop chest. + +The little shaggy-headed fellow interested me more than ever now, and he +was in evidence all day long. His hair and beard, which resembled the +mane of a lion, could be seen at all times, from the poop to the +topgallant forecastle, rising above the hatches or going down the +gangways, where he attended to everything in person. Since the night when +he came aboard with his bloody knife, I felt strangely toward him. He +never alluded to the affair again in any way whatever, but went at his +work in the same systematic and seaman-like manner that had, from the +first, marked him as a thorough sailor. He was always considerate to the +men under him, and many times when I expected an outburst of fierce +anger, such as nine out of ten deep-water mates would indulge in at a +stupid blunder of a lazy sailor, he simply gave the fellow a quiet +talking to and impressed him with the absolute necessity of care in his +work. We had plenty of men aboard, and the crew of the _Sovereign_ were +turned to each watch and made to do their share. + +After a few days, Trunnell came to me and told me I might choose a third +mate for him out of the men who had been in the _Sovereign's_ crew. None +of the men of the _Pirate_ he said were up to a mate's berth, except +Johnson, and he, poor fellow, couldn't read or write. Jenks was too +slippery for me after his hand in the fracas, so I asked the steward to +pick me out a man from forward, thinking he would be able to note the +proper qualities better than myself, as he was thrown in closer contact +with the men. The steward, Gunning, was a mulatto, as I have said, and he +was of a sympathetic disposition. Among the men who had first come aboard +from the wreck was an old fellow of nondescript appearance who had very +thoughtfully seized several bottles of Captain Sackett's rum to have in +the small boat in case of sickness. This was made possible by the +flooding of the ship, which made it necessary for the men to live aft. + +The old fellow had apparently enjoyed good health, and had saved a +couple of bottles which he offered to the steward as a bribe for a +recommendation. This kindness on the old man's part had appealed +directly to Gunning, and he had sent him aft to me as the very man I +wanted. He was very talkative and full of anecdotes, proving a most +interesting specimen. + +"I ain't been out o' sight o' land before in my life," said he, in a fit +of confidence the first evening we divided watches, "but old Chris Kingle +believed everything I told him, and here I am, third mate of this hooker, +as sober as a judge, waitin' to get killed the first time I go aloft. +Bleed me, but I'm in a fix; but it's no worse than I expected, for +everything goes wrong nowadays." + +"Well, what do you mean by coming aft here as mate when you know you +can't fill the bill?" I roared, made furious at his confession. + +"Cap," said he, as calmly as if I hadn't spoken, "some men is born +great; some men tries to get great; and some men never has no show at +all, nohow. Take your chances, says I. Mebbe I'm born great, an' it +only needs a little opportunity to bring it out--like the measles. +Anyways, I never let an opportunity fer greatness come along without +laying fer it. I'm agin it now, an' if y' ever hear o' my bein' at sea +agin, just let me know." + +"If you ever see the beach again, you'll have reason to thank me, and +I'll just tell you right now, you can make up your mind for double irons +until we get to Philadelphia," I shouted. + +"Bleed me, cap, that's just about what I didn't think you'd do," the +lubber responded. "Give me a chance, 'n' if I'm no good as third mate, +I'll probably do as fourth. Try me. If I'm born great, I'll show up. If +I'm not, I can at least die great, or greater than I am. I've lived on +land all my life, but I know something about sailing. I'm fifty-two year +old come next fall, an' if I can't sail a ship after all I've seen o' +them, I'll be willing to live in irons or brass, or enny thing." + +"You go below and tell Mr. Gunning to come here to me," I said, in no +pleasant tone, and as the fellow shuffled off to do as I said, his +bloated, red features told plainly what it had cost him to overcome +Gunning and get the steward into the state he must have been to recommend +such a fellow for an officer aboard ship. + +When Gunning came aft, he was so ashamed of himself that I let him go, +and he picked a mate from one of the quartermasters of the watch, while I +turned the old fellow to as a landsman. This had no effect on his +loquacity, however, for he never lost an opportunity for telling a sad +yarn full of the woes of this life and the anticipated ones in the world +to come. He had drank much and thought little, except of his own sorrows +and ill luck, but as his yearnings for sympathy did no harm, he was +seldom repressed. + +We were three months out before we struck into the rains to the southward +of the line, so there was an accumulation of dirty clothes aboard that +would have filled the heart of a laundress with joy--or horror. + +The _Pirate_ was running close on her water, for the port tank had sprung +a leak, and there was no condenser aboard. The allowance had been set at +two quarts per day for each man. This was barely enough to satisfy +ordinary thirst and no more. + +For the first day or two we made good headway into the squally belt. The +heavy, black, and dangerous-looking clouds would come along about every +half-hour, just fast enough to keep the men busy clewing down and +hoisting the lighter canvas nearly all day long, for some would have a +puff of wind ahead of them and some a puff behind, making it all +guesswork as to how hard it would strike. + +After the second day we had the doldrums fair enough, and there we lay +with our courses clewed up and our t'gallantsails wearing out with the +continuous slatting, as the ship rolled lazily on the long, easy +equatorial sea. She was heading all around the compass, for there was +not enough air to give her steering way; so, after dinner, all hands +were allowed to turn out their outfits on the main deck for a grand +wash. When we were under one of those squall-clouds, the water would +fall so heavily that it would be ankle deep in the waist in spite of the +half-dozen five-inch scuppers spouting full streams out at both sides. +The waterfall was enough to take away the breath, standing in it, but +all hands turned out stripped to the waist. The scuppers were plugged, +and soon the waist of the ship, about forty feet wide and sixty long, +looked like a miniature lake with the after-hatch rising like a +snow-white island from the centre, and upon which a miniature surf broke +as the water swashed and swirled with each roll of the ship. Here were +hundreds of gallons of excellent water to wash in, and blankets, +jumpers, flannels, etc., were soon floating at will, while the men +seized whatever of their belongings they could lay hands on, and rubbed +piece after piece with soap. The large pieces, such as blankets, were +hauled into the shallows forward, where the ship's sheer made a gently +sloping beach. Then they were smeared with soap and laid just awash, +while the men would slide along them in their bare feet as though on +ice, squeezing out great quantities of dirty suds. Afterwards they would +be cast adrift in the deep water to rinse. + +I came to the break of the poop and looked down upon the busy scene a few +feet beneath on the main deck. The water here was fully two feet deep in +the scuppers when the ship rolled to either side, and the men were almost +washed off their feet with its rush. Some of them had climbed upon the +island,--the main hatch,--where they sat and wrung the pieces of their +apparel dry. Among these washers was my old third mate, now transformed +into a somewhat shiftless sailor. + +The old fellow's wardrobe was limited. It consisted of his natural +covering in the way of skin and hair, one shirt, and a pair of badly worn +dungaree trousers. The shirt he had worn during the entire cruise, and +perhaps some time before, and as it fitted him tightly, and as his +natural covering of hair on his chest was thick, it had gradually worked +its way through the cloth, curling sharply on the outside, making the +garment and himself as nearly one as possible. This had caused him no +little inconvenience in washing, and it was with great difficulty he had +removed the garment. He had spent half an hour rubbing it with a piece of +salt-water soap, rinsed it thoroughly, and had it spread out on the +hatch-combings. His work being finished, he sat near it, with his knees +drawn up to his breast, his hands locked around his shins, and his face +wearing an expression of deep and very sad thought. + +Trunnell came out on the deck and had his things cast into the water with +the rest. Then he peeled off his shirt and stood forth naked to the +waist, a broad belt strapped tightly about him holding his trousers. His +muscles now showed out for the first time, and I stood gazing at the +enormous bunches on his back and shoulders. He was like some monstrous +giant cut off at the waist and stuck upon a pair of absurdly short legs, +which, however, were simply knots of muscle. + +When he had finished his shirt, he turned over the rest of his belongings +to Johnson to wash for him. Then his gaze fell upon the unhappy-looking +old fellow on the hatch, who was holding his single shirt now in his +hands, waiting for it to dry sufficiently for him to wear it again. As +the rain fell in torrents every few minutes, this appeared an endless +task, and the old man grew more sorrowful. + +"There ain't nothin' in this world fer me," said he, sadly, cc not even a +bloomin' shirt. Here I am shipwrecked and lost on a well-found ship, an' +sink me, I ain't even able to change me clothes, one piece at a time." + +"Ye'll soon be ashore agin, old feller," said Trunnell, "an' then ye'll +have licker an' clothes in plenty." + +"What's licker to me?" said the old man. + +"Why, meat an' drink, when ye has to quit it off sudden like," +said Trunnell. + +"It's clothes I wants, not no rum. Can't ye see I'm nakid as Adam, except +fer this old rag? I wouldn't mind if I ware signed on regular like the +rest, 'cause I could take it out the slop chest in work. But here I is +without no regular work, no chanst to draw on the old man, an' next +month, most like, we'll be running up the latitoods inter frost. I'm in a +hard fix, shipmate, an' you kin see it." + +Trunnell seemed to be thinking for several minutes. Then he spoke. + +"There's lots o' bugs an' things forrads, ain't there?" said he. + +"If by lots ye means millions, I reckon ye're talkin'," said the man. + +"Well," said Trunnell, "I'll tell ye what I'll do. You get a sail needle +an' a line to it about half a fathom long, see?" + +"I sees." + +"Well, then ye go about between decks, an' in the alleyways, an' behind +the bunks, an' around the galley, an' earn yer own outfit with that +needle, see? When ye have a string o' bugs a-fillin' the string like +clear up to the needle's eye, ye bring them aft to me, an' I gives ye +credit fer them in clothes or grog, each string bein' worth a drink, an' +a hundred worth a shirt or pants. Do ye get on to the game?" + +"I get on to it well enough," said the fellow, "but what I wants to know +is, whether ye'll take me whurd o' honner that I'll catch a string o' +bugs afore night, an' give me the rum now to stave off the chill." + +"I will," said Trunnell. + +The old man rose from the hatchway, and struggled hard to get into his +shirt. The garment had shrunk so, however, that the sleeves reached but +to his elbows and the tails to his waist band. He seized the open front +in his hand and looked solemnly at the mate with his sad eyes. + +"Lead me to it! Lead me to it! For the Lord's sake, lead me to it!" he +said quietly. + +And Trunnell went into the forward cabin with the apparition following +eagerly in his wake. + +What a strange little giant he was, this mate! "Discipline is +discipline," he would say, and no man got anything for nothing +aboard his ship. + + + + +XXI + + +We crossed the line in 24 west longitude, running close to the St. Paul's +Rocks. These strange peaks to the southward of the equator caused some +interest aboard, rising as they do out of the middle of the ocean a mile +or more in depth. + +The air was hot and muggy the day we crossed into the northern +hemisphere, and the light breeze died away again, leaving the ship with +her courses clewed up, rolling and wallowing uneasily in the swell. + +Jackwell, as I must always call him now, spruced himself up better than +usual, and paid more attention to the ladies. He avoided me at every +opportunity; but as neither Chips nor myself ever alluded to the story +we had heard from Jim, his courage rose, and he became more familiar +with the men. + +Up to this time, we had not sighted a single sail since the _Sovereign_; +but here on the line, where the fleets of the maritime world congregate +to pick up the north or southeast trades, we sighted many ships bound +both out and in. + +One of these that happened near us was the _Shark_, whaling brig of three +hundred tons, commanded by Captain Henry,--a man who had sailed in +American ships engaged in the deep-water trade for years before he had +taken to whaling. This vessel signalled us; and when we had answered and +found out who our neighbor was, we were invited aboard. + +Jackwell was willing to go with the ladies, as he thought it might prove +a diversion. There was no chance for a breeze, and the ships were within +half a mile of each other, with a smooth sea between. He insisted, +however, that I go along to command the boat. + +Chips and I had from the first decided to try and get a peep at the +captain's trunk, and this might prove our chance. Gunning's tale of its +great weight gave rise to many high thoughts; and if it were gold, much +might be hoped for if we landed our man when we made port. + +A few words with the carpenter was enough, and then I got the men at work +hoisting out the boat. I found time to try and persuade Trunnell to take +my place in the small craft, but he was firm. It would never do, he said, +to leave the ship without a high officer aboard. "There's no telling, +Rolling, just what might happen in this world while a feller is on the +deep sea. No, sir; go ahead and enjoy yourself. There's a-goin' to be +some line jokes, I reckon, aboard that brig. If the skipper ain't been +acrost before, he'll be liable to catch the fun as well as the rest, but +he don't know nothin' about sech things." + +I was a little suspicious at Trunnell's determination to stay aboard, +especially when I found out he knew the captain of the whaler very well. +However, I had the small boat hoisted out and made ready for the +passengers. This time there was a compass and water breaker aboard, and a +foghorn in the stern sheets in case of need. + +Mrs. Sackett was helped into the small craft, and her daughter followed, +both women looking brighter than at any time during the cruise. Mrs. +Sackett was not a bad-looking woman at any time, being of about the +medium height, with a smooth complexion, and her figure finely +proportioned. Her daughter seated herself beside her in the stern, and +Jackwell climbed over the rail. + +He was dressed in a very fine suit of clothes, his shirt-front white, +and his waxed mustache curled fiercely. His glinting eyes had a +somewhat humorous expression, I thought, and he appeared very well +pleased with himself. + +Trunnell came to the rail and leaned over. "Good luck to ye," he cried. +"We'll expect ye back to dinner." + +"Keep an eye on my room, and don't let the steward disturb the charts on +my trunk until I come back. The last sight is worked out on the one lying +on the table," replied Jackwell. + +Then the oars fell across, and we shot out over the smooth ocean to the +brig that rolled lazily half a mile distant. + +The skipper appeared in a most humorous mood, which increased as did the +distance between the ships. + +He talked to Mrs. Sackett incessantly and actually had that lady laughing +happily at his remarks. Miss Sackett did not rise to his humor, however, +and her mother noticed it. + +"Jennie, dear, why don't you laugh? Captain Thompson is so funny," she +said. + +"I will when he gets off a good joke, mother." + +"Get off a good joke?" echoed the skipper. "Well, that's what I call +hard. A good joke? Why, my dear child, I've gotten off the joke of my +life to-day. Sink me, if I ain't played the best joke of the year, and on +Trunnell too, at that. A good joke? ha, ha, hah!" and he threw his head +back and laughed so loud and long that his mirth was infectious, and I +even found myself smiling at him. + +"Tell us what it is," said Miss Jennie. + +"Oh, ho, ho, tell you what it is," laughed Jackwell, and his nose worked +up and down so rapidly that I marvelled at it. His glinting eyes were +almost closed and his face was red with exertion. "And suppose I'd tell +you what it is, Miss Sackett? You wouldn't laugh. Not you. You couldn't +rise to the occasion like your mamma. No, sink me, if I told you what it +was, you wouldn't laugh; so you'll all have to wait till you get back +aboard to hear it. But it's a good one, no fear." + +We were now almost alongside of the brig, and could see her captain at +the gangway, waiting to receive us. All along the rail strange faces +peeped over at us. + +"Way enough," cried Jackwell, and the oars were shipped. The boat +swept alongside, and a ladder was lowered for us. I climbed out first +to be able to assist the ladies, and as I gained the deck I was +greeted by a strongly built, bearded man who looked at me keenly out +of clear blue eyes. + +"I'm glad to see you, sir," said he, holding out his hand. + +I shook hands and turned to help Mrs. Sackett over the rail. Then came +Miss Jennie, and last of all our captain. + +Jackwell sprang up the ladder quickly, and stood in the gangway. + +"How are you, sir, Captain Thomp--" + +Captain Henry checked himself, looking at our skipper as though he had +seen a ghost. + +"Why, Jack--" + +But Jackwell had put up his hand, smiling pleasantly. + +"Jack it is, old man. You haven't forgotten the time I picked you up on +the beach, have you?" he said, laughing. "Mrs. Sackett," he cried, +turning, "allow me to introduce my friend, Captain Henry. Miss Sackett, +also. Here's a skipper who hasn't forgotten the day I pulled him out of +the water on the coast of South Wales, where he was wrecked. Sink me, but +it's a blessing to see gratitude," he cried again, laughing heartily. +"Fancy one skipper pulling another out of the sea, hey? Can you do that?" + +"Well, I want to know," replied Henry. "I never knew you was a--" + +"You never knew what, old man? What is it ye never knew? Sink me, it +would fill every barrel you have below, hey? wouldn't it? What you never +knew, nor never will know, would fill your little ship so full she'd +sink, Henry, or I'm a soger. Ha, ha, hah! my boy; I don't mean to cast no +insinuations at you, but that's a fact, ain't it? But what the dickens +have you got going on aboard?" + +He turned and gazed at the brig's main deck, where tubs of water and +soapsuds were being poured into the trying-out kettles built in the +brig's waist. + +"Why," said Henry, "since you are a sea-capting, you must know the lay of +it. Hain't you never crossed the line in a sailin' ship before?" + +He had apparently recovered himself, and the surprise at meeting an old +acquaintance appeared to give him pleasure. + +Taking Mrs. Sackett by the hand, he led her aft up the poop steps, +Jackwell following, keeping up a continual talk about whales and +whaling skippers. Jennie and I followed behind and examined the brig's +strange outfit. + +The first mate, a man of middle age, lean and gaunt, came forward and +introduced himself. He had sailed in every kind of ship, and was now +whaling, he declared, for the last time. As I had made several "last +voyages" myself, I knew that he meant simply to show involuntarily that +he was a confirmed sailor of the most pronounced sort. + +He showed us the lines and irons, the cutting-in outfit, and the kettles +and furnace for boiling down the blubber. We followed him about, and I +expressed my thanks when we arrived at the poop again, where he left us. +Jennie was not interested, and the fact was not lost upon the old fellow, +who turned away to join his mates at the kettles. + +"Do you know, Mr. Rolling, I don't care a rap for ships," said she. "They +don't interest me any more, and I don't think they are the place for +women, anyhow." + +"It would be mighty lonesome for some men if they acted on that idea and +kept out of them," I answered. + +We were all alone by the mizzen, the captains having gone below with Mrs. +Sackett to show her the interior of the ship. + +The young girl looked up, and I fancied there was just a sparkle of +amusement in her eyes. + +"Do you really think so?" she said. "Can't men find more useful +occupations than following the sea,--that is, those who are lonely?" + +"Some men are fitted to do certain things in this world and unfitted for +others. It would be hard on those whose lines are laid out like that for +them. You don't think a man follows the sea after his first voyage +because he likes it, do you?" I said. + +"Then for Heaven's sake why don't they stay ashore?" she demanded. + +"Would you care for a man who would stay out of a thing that he was +fitted for, simply because it was hard?" I asked her. + +She blushed and turned away. + +"I was not speaking of caring for any one, Mr. Rolling," she replied. +And then she added quickly, "I think we will go below and see what they +have for us." + +"No, wait just one minute, Jennie," I said, taking her hand and stopping +her gently without attracting the attention of the men forward. "This is +the first time we've had a chance to talk of ourselves in two months. I +want to ask you if you really meant that?" + +"Meant what?" she said, stopping and turning around, facing me squarely. + +"That you didn't care for any one?" I stammered, and I remember how my +face burned. + +She let me hold her hand and looked up into my eyes. + +"I never said any such thing--that I didn't care for any one," she +replied. + +"Then do you, Jennie?" + +She made no answer, and let her eyes fall. I let go her hand and drew +myself up, for I was uncertain. + +"I say, Rolling, what the deuce are you two doing?" bawled the voice of +Jackwell from the companion, and then I realized that there was little +privacy aboard a ship of three hundred tons. + +We went aft guiltily, and met the rest coming up the companion with +bottled beer and sandwiches which were served as refreshments. Chairs +were set out by the old mate and two harpooners who had come aft, and the +cook spruced himself up to get us out a plum-duff for lunch. From where +we sat behind the poop rise, nothing could be seen forward, and here we +ate and drank while Jackwell laughed and talked incessantly, being a +completely changed man from the sarcastic and somewhat truculent skipper +I had known for the last three months. It was finally suggested that as +the awning was stretched, the plum-duff could be served on deck better +than below in the stuffy cabin, so here we enjoyed the meal. + + + + +XXII + + +While we ate, Jackwell expanded more and more under the influence of duff +and beer. He leaned back in his chair and gazed at the mainmast. + +"What makes the top of your mast so black, hey? Is it the smoke from the +kettles, or have you been afire? Sink me, Henry, there couldn't have been +any such luck as your old hooker afire and being put out, hey? Ha, ha, +hah! that would have been asking too much of the devil." + +"It's hollow," said the old mate. + +"What? Hollow? What the deuce is your mast hollow for?" + +"Well, that is a question, isn't it, Mrs. Sackett?" said Henry. "Perhaps +he asks you sometimes what a smoke-pipe is hollow for, don't he? I never +seen such a funny man. But he'll never get over it, I want to know." + +"Is it really hollow?" asked Jennie of the old mate. + +"Yessum, it certainly is. Why, it's the smoke-pipe, you know," was the +reply. "We have an engine in the lazarette that'll take us along more'n +three knots in dead calm weather. It's been a lot o' help, when the wind +has been light and ahead, fer picking up the boats. Ye know a whale +always makes dead to windward, mostly, an' if the wind is light and we've +got to go a long ways, the poor devils would most starve waitin' fer us, +like they used to do in the old times. The lower mast is iron. There's +lots of them that way now. The soot makes the canvas black sometimes, but +there ain't no sparks to speak of ever comes out of that top, as it's +mostly blubber we burns." + +Jackwell became silent for several minutes, and then, as his eyes were +still directed at the masthead, I looked again and noticed the topsail +yard settled below the lower masthead. + +"How do you suppose he keeps it up like that?" I asked Jackwell, trying +to be civil. + +"Keeps what up like what?" he said, in his old tone. + +"The yard," I answered shortly. + +"Oh, mostly by force of habit, I reckon," said he, nodding sarcastically +at me and wrinkling his nose. "That's it, ain't it, Henry? Your yards +stay mastheaded mostly by force o' habit, hey? They don't need no ropes." + +I saw I was not forgotten, so afterward I kept quiet when he spoke. In a +moment or two after this there was a wild yell from forward. This +terminated into a deep bass roar, and we all jumped up to see what was +the matter. + +The form of a man sat on the starboard cat-head, and in his mouth was a +horn of enormous size, the mouth being fully three feet across. + +"Sooaye, Sooa-a-aye!" he roared. "Make way fer the great king o' the +sea!" + +I saw the fellow had on a long, rope-yarn beard and a wig to match, while +a pair of black wings hung from his shoulders. + +While he called, creatures swarmed over the bows. Men with beards and men +without, some holding long spears and streamers, and some with +three-pronged tridents, all having huge heads with grotesque faces, and +forked tails which hung down behind. + +"Hooray fer the king o' the sea!" bawled the fellow through the horn; and +then the motley crowd yelled in chorus, some blowing huge conch-shells, +and all making a most hideous racket. + +Jennie stopped her ears and gazed, laughing at the throng. She had been +across the line before in some of the older ships with her father, and +knew of the practice. Mrs. Sackett and Captain Henry cheered and waved +their handkerchiefs, but Jackwell sat silently looking on. Finally all of +us went to the break of the poop, where we could get a better view, and +just as we arrived, a monstrous form came over the knight-heads and stood +forth on deck. + +The fellow had a beard fully a fathom long, and he stood nearly two +fathoms high, his feet being hoof-shaped. Gigantic black canvas wings +hung from his shoulders, and a huge wig of rope-yarn, with the hair +falling to his waist, sat on his head. He was escorted unsteadily to a +seat upon the trying-out furnace. + +"All who have to worship the king, come forth, an' stan' out!" yelled the +man with the horn. This was greeted with cheers and blasts on the +conch-shells. + +Some of our men had never been over before, and one of the boat's crew +confessed. He was quickly seized and brought before King Neptune. + +"Sit ye down, right there in that there cheer," said the king, +scowling fiercely. + +The fellow sat down and stared, smiling at the monster. + +"Have ye paid fer comin' acrost this here latitood, me son?" asked the +king. + +"No," said the sailor. + +"No, what?" roared the king. + +The chair was placed on the edge of the main kettle and the monster +simply raised his hand to one of his retainers. This fellow tilted it up, +sailor and all, into the smother of suds and water. Instantly there were +roars of laughter, as all hands watched the man trying to get clear of +the slippery iron tank. Every time he would get a hold, his fingers would +be rapped sharply, and down he would go, floundering about. He was +finally let off with a fine of a plug of tobacco, all his belongings save +the clothes he had with him. + +Other men followed, for the whaler had a crew of thirty-five. Some were +shaved with a barrel hoop for a razor, and tar for lather, being finally +released for some tobacco. + +"Come aft, O king," bawled Henry, after the fun had grown fast and +furious. "Come aft, and get a donation from the ladies." + +The great fellow was escorted unsteadily to the poop, where he saluted +the women. + +"Have ye never paid toll to go to the other world, yet?" asked the king. + +"No," said Jackwell, who was getting tired of the fun, "I ain't never +been acrost, and I ain't a-going to pay toll." + +"Shall he pay?" asked the king of Henry. + +"Sure," was Henry's response. + +Instantly the giant sprang upon the deck, getting clear of his stilts by +some means or other. He seized Jackwell tightly around the body, and +rushing to the rail, sprang into the sea, his followers yelling +themselves hoarse with delight. + +When they were hauled aboard, Jackwell was in a fury. I expected him to +shoot the sailor who had the audacity to pitch him overboard, but he +controlled himself. The incident, however, ended the fun aboard the brig, +Henry, between fits of laughing, telling the mate to serve all hands with +all the grog they wanted. + +"Do not wait for me, madam," said Jackwell, to Mrs. Sackett. "I shall not +come aboard my ship in this condition. You get Mr. Rolling to take you +and your daughter, and I'll follow, after Captain Henry has given me a +new suit of clothes." + +This appeared to be the best thing to do, as the brig's men were now +getting boisterous with the grog, and our men were drinking also. The +ladies were tired of the performance, although they had enjoyed some of +it very much, and they were glad when I called away the boat's crew to +take them back to the _Pirate_. + +Jackwell appeared at the rail as we started off. + +"Rolling," said he, "tell Trunnell not to stay awake at night worrying +about my health. This bath will not strike in and tickle me to death as +you might be agreeable enough to suppose." + +"Hurry and change your clothes, captain," cried Mrs. Sackett. + +"Madam," said he, with great solemnity as the oars were dropped across, +"do not grieve for me. It will make me unhappy for the rest of my pious +existence if you do. Fare thee well." + +We were now on our way back to the ship, and he stood a moment, waved his +hand, and then disappeared down the companionway. + +In ten minutes we were aboard again, and I met Chips in the waist as I +stopped to get a piece of tobacco. + +"Well, what was it?" I asked. + +"Faith, an' I got caught," said Chips, with a sickly grin. + +"How was it?" I asked. "Come, tell me, while Ford and Tom get the +cushions out of the boat;" and I drew the carpenter into the door of the +forward cabin where Trunnell couldn't see us. + +"'Twas a fine thing ye made me do, but no matter," he began. "Ye see, +whin ye had started well on yer way to th' fisher, I thinks now is th' +time av me life. Trunnell ware sitting and smokin' on the wheel-gratin', +an' all ware as quiet as ye please. I wint below whistling to set him off +his guard, like; an' whin I sees me way clear I takes me chance at the +afther-cabin, an' in I goes. I stopped whistlin' whin I makes th' enthry, +an' I steered straight fer th' chist forninst the captin's room. The door +ware open, an' I see the chist ware a little trunk av a thing, no bigger +than a hand-bag, so to speak. Up on top av it ware a pile av charts an' +things sech as th' raskil sung out to Trunnell not to touch. 'Twas a cute +little thing to do; fer how I could get inter th' outfit without a-movin' +them struck me. + +"I finally grabs th' side av th' trunk an' tries to lift it. Ye may say +I lie, but s'help me, I cud no more lift that little trunk than th' +ship herself. + +"Gold? Why, how cud it 'a' been anything but solid gold? I cud lift that +much lead easy. I stopped a minit and took out me knife, me mind made up +to thry th' lock. I give wan good pick at ut, an' thin I hears a sort av +grunt. There ware Trunnell a-lookin' right down at me from th' top av th' +afther-companion. + +"Sez he, 'An' what may ye be a-doin' wid th' old man's trunk,' sez he. + +"'Sure 'tis me own I thought it ware, by th' weight av it,' sez I. + +"'Is it so heavy, thin?' sez he. + +"'Faith, ye thry an' lift it,' sez I. + +"He come down th' ladder an' took a-hold, shutting th' door to keep th' +steward from a-lookin' in. Thin he takes hold av th' thing an' lifts fer +th' good av his soul. Nary a inch does it move. + +"'I wud have opened it, but I heard th' captin's order not to disturb th' +charts atop av it,' sez I. + +"'Ye would, ye thafe,' sez he. 'An' if ye had, inter irons would ye go +fer th' raskil ye are. I never thought ye ware so bad, Chips,' sez he. + +"'Tis a victim av discipline I am, fer sure, thin,' sez I. 'Ye know I wud +no more steal th' matther av a trunk than fly.' + +"'An' who give ye th' order, ye disciplinarian?' sez he. + +"'Me conscience,' sez I. + +"'Ye better go forrads an' tell yer conscience th' fact that it's a bad +wan fer an honest man to travel wid,' sez he. 'An' tell him also to mind +what I says about obeyin' orders aboard this here ship. If yer conscience +iver wants to command a ship, he don't want to forget that discipline is +discipline, an' whin it comes to thavery, discipline will get ye both in +irons. Slant away afore I loses my temper an' sails inter ye,' sez he. + +"So here I am, all in a mess wid that little mate. But th' trunk av gold +is safe on th' cabin floor." + +I had nothing to say further than that the matter couldn't be helped. If +the trunk was all right, we might land a fortune yet in the reward Jim +had told us about. Jackwell must have made off with a snug little sum. I +climbed over the side again with some of the skipper's clothes, and we +started slowly back to the brig to get him. + +Ford was rowing bow oar, and Johnson aft, and both rowing easily made us +go very slow. However, there was no hurry. Jackwell would in all +probability take several drinks after his bath, and we would only have to +wait aboard the whaler for him until he was ready. The sea was so smooth +that the boat hardly rippled through it, and the sun was warm, making me +somewhat drowsy. The two men rowed in silence for some time, and then +Ford suddenly looked ahead to see how we were going. + +"What's the matter with the bloomin' brig?" said he, rowing with his chin +on his shoulder. + +I looked around, and it seemed as though we had already gone the full +distance to her, and yet had as far again to go. The _Pirate_ was +certainly half a mile away and there was the brig still far ahead. + +"Give way, bullies," I said. "Break an oar or two." + +The men made a response to the order, and the boat went along livelier. I +looked at the brig, and suddenly I noticed a thin trail of smoke coming +from her maintop where the opening in the lower masthead should be. + +We were now within fifty fathoms of her, when Jackwell came to the rail +aft and looked at us. + +"Give way, bullies, you're going to sleep." I said. + +In a few moments we were close aboard, but as we came up, the brig slewed +her stern toward us, and then I noticed for the first time that she was +moving slowly through the water. There was no wind, and I knew in a +moment that she was under steam. She drifted away faster, and the men had +all they could do to keep up. Jackwell leaned over the taffrail and gazed +calmly down at us. + +"That's it, boys, give it to her. You'll soon catch us and be towing +us back again. Sink me, Rolling, but you're the biggest fool I ever +saw," he said. + +I saw the water rippling away from the brig's side, and now could see the +disturbance under her stern where a small wheel turned rapidly. + +"Throw us a line," I cried to Jackwell. + +"What d'ye want a line fer? Are ye a-going with us to the Pacific, or are +ye jest naturally short of lines, hey?" + +"Throw us a line or we'll have to quit," I cried; "the men can't keep up +as it is." + +Jackwell let down the end of the spanker sheet, and Ford grabbed it, +taking a turn around the thwart. The boat still rushed rapidly along. + +"Rolling," said the captain of the _Pirate_, "hadn't you better go home +and tell Trunnell he wants you? Seems to me you'll have a long row back +in the hot sun. I'd ask you all aboard, but this ship ain't mine. She +belongs to a friend who owes me a little due, see? Now be a sensible +little fellow. Rolling, and go back nicely, or I'll have to do some +target practice, or else cut this rope. Give my kindest regards to the +ladies, especially Mrs. Sackett. Tell her that I wouldn't have dreamed of +deserting her under any other circumstances, but this brig has got the +devil in her and is running away with me. I can't stop her, and I can't +say I would if I could. That infernal King Neptune has got hold of her +keel and is pulling us along. Good-by, Rolling; don't by any possible +means disturb the charts on my trunk. There, let go, you Ford." + +Ford cast the line adrift, and the boat's headway slacked. The brig +drifted slowly ahead, going at least three knots through the smooth +water. A long row of smiling faces showed over the rail as we came from +under her stern. One fellow, waving his hand, cried out to report Bill +Jones of Nantucket as "bein' tolerable well, thank ye." It was evident +they knew nothing of Jackwell and treated the going of the brig as a good +joke on greenhorns. + +"That beats me," said Ford, panting from his last exertions. + +"An' me too," said Johnson. "If we'd had Tom and one or two more along +we'd have beat her easy. But ain't he a-comin' back at all at all?" + +"I hardly think we'll see Captain Thompson any more this voyage," +I answered savagely; "but by the Lord Harry, he's left his trunk +all right." + + + + +XXIII + + +When we rowed back to the ship, Trunnell was looking at us through the +glass up to the time we came under the _Pirate's_ counter. He evidently +could see that our skipper wasn't with us, and it seemed as if he could +not quite make up his mind to the fact, but must keep looking through the +telescope as though the powerful glass would bring the missing one into +view. We ran up to the channels, and he looked over the side. A line of +heads in the waist told of the curiosity among the men forward. + +I said nothing, and nothing was said until the painter was made fast and +Ford had sprung on deck. + +"He ain't with ye, Rolling?" asked Trunnell. + +I was too much disgusted to answer. The empty boat was enough to satisfy +any reasonable person. + +Chips came to the rail and leaned over as I came up the chain-plates. +"'Twas so, then? Th' raskil! But what makes th' bloody hooker move? She's +slantin' away as if th' devil himself ware holdin' av her fore foot!" + +"Steam, you poor idiots," I cried out, in disgust, for it was evident +that even Trunnell couldn't tell what made the _Shark_ get headway, +although now the smoke poured handsomely from her masthead. + +Trunnell scratched his bushy head and seemed to be thinking deeply. Then +he put down the glasses and led the way aft without a word, Chips and I +following. We went below and found Mrs. Sackett and Jennie in the saloon. + +"Where's the captain?" they asked in a breath. + +"Faith, an' he's changed ships, if ye please," said Chips. + +"And left a little thing behind he would have liked to have taken with +him," I said. + +"What was the matter?" they both asked. + +Chips and I tried to tell, but we soon made a tangle of it, the only +thing coherent being the fact that the fellow was a crook and had left +his trunk behind. This was so heavy that Chips had failed to lift it. + +"I always knew he was not a sea-captain," cried Jennie. "I don't see how +you men let him fool you so badly." + +Chips and I looked at the mate, but he simply scratched his head. + +"Discipline is discipline," he said. "He ware capting o' this here ship, +an' there ware no way to do but obey his orders. No, sir, discipline is +discipline, an' the sooner ye get it through your heads, the better." + +"But he isn't captain any longer," I said. + +"Well, I don't know about that," said Trunnell. "If he ain't a-comin' +back, he ain't capting, sure. But ye can't tell nothin' about it. He may +come aboard agin in a little while an' want to know why we didn't wait +dinner for him." + +"He sho' would take his trunk," said Gunning, "an' dat's a fact." + +"Why would he?" asked Mrs. Sackett. + +"'Cause he take good care o' dat trunk, ma'm. He sleep wid one eye on it +an' his gun handy. I come near gettin' killed onct when I come into de +cabin, suddin' like, while he was at work ober de things inside." + +"For Heaven's sake, let's look at it," said Mrs. Sackett. + +"'Tis th' best thing we cud do," said Chips. "'Tis no less than solid +gold he stowed in it. Faith, it's as heavy as th' main yard." + +Mrs. Sackett led the way to the captain's room, and Trunnell made no +farther resistance. She opened the door, and we crowded inside. There lay +the trunk on the floor or deck ahead of us. + +"Try yer hand at th' liftin' av th' thing," said Chips to me. + +I reached down and took hold of the handle at the side. Pulling heavily, +I lifted with all my power. The trunk remained stationary. + +"Dere's nothin' but gold in dat thing, sho'," said Gunning. + +"Well, for Heaven's sake! why don't some one open it?" cried Jennie. + +"An' have him a-comin' back aboard, a-wantin' to know who had been at it, +hey?" said Trunnell. "I didn't think ye ware that kind o' missy." + +"Nonsense!" I said. "He isn't coming back. Even if he is, it won't hurt +to lift it, will it?" + +"No, I don't know as it will, only it might upset them charts," +said Trunnell. + +"Try it," I said. "See if it's gold. It'll clink when you shake +it, sure." + +The little giant stooped and gave a grunt of disdain. "I reckon there +ain't nothin' that size I can't lift," said he, in a superior tone, which +was not lost on the women. Trunnell seldom bragged, and we crowded +around, looking for quick results. + +"A little bit o' trunk a-breakin' the backs o' a pair o' fellows as has +the impudence to say they are men an' question the discipline o' the +ship!" he said, with a loud grunt of disgust. "Stan' clear an' let a man +have a chanst. If it's gold, an' ye're right, it'll rattle an' jingle +fast enough; an' I hopes then ye'll be satisfied." + +He took a strong hold of the leather handle at the side and braced his +little legs wide apart. It was evident he would put forth some power. +Then he set the great muscles of his broad back slowly, like a dray horse +testing the load before putting forth his strength. Slowly and surely the +little mate's back raised. He grew red in the face, and we peered over +the treasure, hoping it would rise and give forth the welcome jingle. + +Suddenly there was a ripping sound. Trunnell straightened up quickly, +staggered for an instant, and then pitched forward over the trunk, +uttering a fierce oath. + +Mrs. Sackett screamed. Jennie burst into a wild fit of laughter. Chips +and Gunning stood staring with open mouths and eyes, while Trunnell +picked himself up, with the trunk handle in his iron fist. + +"Faith, an' ye are a good strong man," said the carpenter. "Ye'd make a +fortune as a porter a-liftin' trunks at a hotel." + +"He can lift a little thing like that," said Jennie, mimicking the mate's +tone to perfection. + +Trunnell was now thoroughly mad. If the trunk contained gold, he would +soon find out. + +"Bring yer tools, an' don't stan' laffin' like a loon, ye bloody +Irishman," he said to Chips, and the carpenter disappeared quickly. He +returned in a moment with a brace and bit, a cold chisel, and a hammer. + +"Knock off the top," said Trunnell. + +"Discipline is discipline," whispered Jennie; "and I don't want to be +around if the captain comes back." + +Trunnell was too angry to pay attention to this remark, so he looked +sourly on while the carpenter cut off the rivets holding the lock. + +"There ye are," he said, and we crowded around to look in while the mate +raised the lid. + +Off it came easily enough. We stood perfectly silent for an instant. Then +all except Trunnell burst out laughing. The trunk was empty! + +"Well, sink me down deep, but that ware the heaviest air I ever see," +said Trunnell. Then he picked up a slip of paper in the bottom and looked +at it a moment. It had writing on it, and he unfolded it to read. I +looked over his shoulder and read aloud:-- + +"MY DEAR LITTLE MATE: When you get this here billee ducks, don't do +anything rash. Remember the discipline of the ship, first of all, and +then take the dollar bill here and get somebody to cut your hair fer ye, +as it's too loing fer a man of sense and is disagreeable to the ladies. +If ye thought ye had a pot of gold in this here outfit, ye get left, +sure, and no mistake. Remember money's the root of all evil and thank yer +Lord ye ain't got none. There ain't no answer to this note; but if ye +feel like writing at enny time, address it to Bill Jackwell, care of +anybody at all what happens to be around at the time I'm there--see? +Some day we'll meet agin, fer I'm stuck on the sea and am going to buy a +boat and appoint ye as captain, only yer must cut yer hair and trim up +yer beard some. That's all." + +Trunnell held the dollar bill he had unfurled from the note in his hand +and dropped the note back into the trunk. + +"'Tis screwed fast wid nine big bolts to th' deck," said Chips, who had +examined the outfit carefully. + +Trunnell scratched his bushy head thoughtfully for a moment longer. "Is +there any sech thing as a few men aboard this ship?" he asked. + +I said I thought there was. + +"Then man the boat and row, for the love o' God!" he roared, springing up +the companionway to the deck, leaving us to follow after him. + + + + +XXIV + + +When we reached the deck and looked after the brig, we found that we had +spent more time below than at first imagined. The _Shark_ was hull down +to the southward and evidently going along steadily at a three-knot rate. +The sun was almost on the horizon, and if we started after her, the +chances were that night would fall long before we could lessen the +distance between us materially. Sober appreciation of the affair took the +place of Trunnell's impetuosity. + +"We'll niver see him agin," said Chips, hauling heavily on the +boat tackles. + +"There's no use, Trunnell," I cried; "we can't catch that brig in a +whale-boat." + +He was already hesitating, and stood scratching his shaggy beard. + +"Avast heavin' on that tackle," he bawled. Then he turned to me. "You're +right, Rolling, we've lost a fortune an' the rascal too, but it ain't no +use making bigger fools of ourselves. Stow the boat. After that send +Johnson aft to me with a pair o' scissors. You an' Tom can set the +watches, fer ye see I'm capting of her now. Ye might say, on the side +like, that the first burgoo eater what comes along the weather side o' +the poop while I'm on deck will go over the rail. There's a-goin' to be +some discipline aboard the hooker, or I'll--well, there ain't no tellin' +just what I won't do. I'm capting o' this here ship, an' ye might jest as +well muster the men aft to hear the news." + +Then he disappeared down the companion aft, and I sent Johnson to him +with the shears as he had ordered. + +When Trunnell came on deck again in the evening, his beard was a sight to +be remembered. It looked as though a rat had nibbled it in spots. His +hair was equally well done by the artist, but Jackwell's last order had +been obeyed. The men were mustered aft, and Trunnell announced that he +was the man they wanted to stand from under. They remained silent until +Johnson suggested that three cheers be given for the new skipper. Then +all hands bawled themselves hoarse. That was all. I was now the first +mate and took my meals at the cabin table, where Jennie and her mother +had been wondering at Trunnell's dexterity with his knife. The little +mate appeared to realize that a certain amount of dignity and dress were +necessary for the maintenance of correct discipline aboard, and he +accordingly changed his shirt once a week and wore a new coat of blue +pilot cloth. He sat at the head of the table, and went through his +knife-juggling each meal, to the never ending amusement of Jennie, and +admiration of Gunning, who swore that, "dey ain't no man afloat cud do +dat no better." He, however, came through the rest of the cruise without +even cutting his lip. + +My duties and rating being those of a first mate, I had no longer the +pleasure of being intimate with Chips and the rest forward. The +carpenter, steward, and "doctor" had the quartermaster, Tom, from +Trunnell's watch for a second mate and companion at the second table. Tom +was a Yankee and a good companion, so the change was satisfactory all +around. I sometimes looked in at the carpenter's room in the forward +house, where he and a few chosen spirits would be holding forth upon some +nautical subject, but I had to cut my visits short, for they worried +Trunnell. Being suddenly raised did not quite inspire the necessary +respect in his eyes, unless the person promoted showed unmistakable +dignity and authority by dressing down all who came in contact with him. +For some time it was pretty hard to speak to our little skipper. He +disliked anything he imagined might tend to lessen the discipline aboard +and had a horror of a mate or captain being familiar with the men. + +My room was still in the forward cabin, but I now spent much time in the +saloon, and helped Trunnell to shift his belongings aft to Jackwell's +cabin. The truculent knave had left little behind him save a lot of old +clothes, bonds which were not negotiable, and some wrappers used by the +bank of Melbourne for doing up packets of bills. Upon one of these was a +mark of fifty pounds sterling, showing that Jackwell's assets, unless +enormous, could be made to fit in a very small space. He probably carried +all he owned upon his person. + +We went through everything in the cabin carefully, but the only thing of +interest discovered was the photograph of a plump young woman torn fairly +in two, the lower half bearing the inscription in Jackwell's handwriting, +"Good riddance to bad rubbish." + +I had found this in the chart case and had examined it some minutes +without comment, when Miss Sackett took it from me. She gazed at it a +moment, and cried out, "Why! it's the third mate." + +I instantly seized it again and looked carefully at the features, and +then it was plain enough. There he was, in a neat fitting bodice, the +curly blond hair stylishly dressed, and the plump cheeks showing just +the faintest trace of the dimples of our former third officer. I looked +at the back of the photograph. It had the name of a Melbourne artist +upon it, and beneath, in a female hand, the written words, "Yours +lovingly, Belle." + +Trunnell heard Jennie's exclamation and came up. He took the picture from +me and gazed long at the face. Then he gave a sigh which sounded like a +blackfish drawing in air, handed it back to me, and went up the +companionway, scratching his head in the manner he did when much +disturbed. He said not a word, nor did he mention Mr. Bell's name, and +that night at supper he never raised his eyes from his plate. Afterward +in the mid-watch he came on the poop and walked fore and aft for three +long hours without so much as speaking to me or asking the man at the +wheel the vessel's course. He finally went below, carrying the odor of +grog along with him. He came on deck many nights after this and walked +fore and aft in silence, as though brooding over some unpleasant subject, +and we were clear of the trade and knocking about in the uncertain +latitudes before he appeared to be anything like himself again. + +I avoided any subject relating to the earlier part of the voyage and +tried to cheer him. I thought he had suffered keenly, and was glad +when he stopped drinking and looked me in the eyes without letting his +gaze fall in confusion. Sometimes I caught myself wondering at the +reticence of the men who had rowed him to the burnt wreck that night, +but I found that no one had boarded her except Trunnell and he had +sent the boat astern. + +Tom, the quartermaster, made mate under me, was a good sailor. He did his +work thoroughly, and everything went along without friction throughout +the rest of the voyage to the Breakwater. We picked up the northeast +trade in a few days, and hauled our starboard tacks aboard, bracing the +yards sharp up until it gradually swung more and more to the eastward, +letting us off on a taut bowline for the latitude of the States. + +The _Pirate_ showed herself to be the fast ship she had always been, for +we made the run up the trade in less than three weeks. Trunnell took such +pride in her that all hands were tired out before we ran over the +thirtieth parallel, with the scrubbing, painting, holy-stoning, etc., +that he considered necessary to have her undergo before arriving in port. +As mate of the ship, I had much opportunity to command the deck alone; +that is, without the supervision of any one. Of course, I can't say I +spent much time alone on deck, even when in charge; but I would never let +social matters interfere with work sufficiently to merit a rebuke from +the little skipper. He soon manifested a disposition to be alone during +his watch on deck, and at first I believed this to be due to the exalted +dignity of his position. It hurt me to think he should be so changed, and +I pondered at the peculiarities of mankind for many days. After awhile, +however, he became absorbed in a game of checkers with Mrs. Sackett which +lasted two weeks. Then I forgave him. Whenever he saw Jennie and myself +on deck, he would make haste to get through his business there, and dive +below again. This kindly interest on his part was kept up until we raised +the Delaware Capes. + +How good the land smelled, and how distinctly. It seemed incredible that +one could smell the land twenty miles away, almost before the color of +the water began to change. Yet it was strong in the nostrils; and even +one of the pigs we had not eaten, but had brought back alive, squealed +incessantly, as though instinctively feeling that the voyage was over. + +It was late in the afternoon, but the men were mustered aft, in the +time-worn way of merchant-men, to sign off. Nearly all had bills on the +slop-chest for tobacco or clothes. As each went over the poop he gazed at +the line on the western horizon and smiled gladly. It meant a new life +for more than one. Among the last to go was the old landsman whom +Trunnell had given a chance to earn his clothes by bug-hunting. He smiled +sadly at the setting sun over the dark line which meant home. Then he +shook out several strings of vermin, and holding them at arm's length, +stopped at the cabin window. His cheap trousers failed to reach the tops +of his coarse shoes, and the gap showed the skin on meagre ankles. I was +interested to know what he would take. + +"What d'ye want?" asked Trunnell. + +"I come for a yaller silk ban'kercheef," said he, offering the strings. + +"Don't yer think ye'd better get some o' them woollens? It'll be cold on +the beach." + +"I got clothes a plenty. I want a yaller silk ban'kercheef. Yer got one, +for Sam tole me so. I'm a-goin' ashore to Hennery's, an' I ain't goin' +like no clown without a wipe. Kin I have it?" + +The handkerchief was passed out, and the old fellow went forward smiling. + +What a strange thing is the end of a deep-water voyage! Men who have been +living together for months through suffering and hardship will go over +the ship's side with a cheery farewell. They may meet for a few moments +at the office to draw their pay, and then take a drink all around. That +is all. They seldom see or hear of each other again. The world goes on, +and they drift about, taking what part in affairs Fate has in store for +them. One should come back aboard the ship the day after she makes her +dock and look into the deserted forecastle and about the lonely decks, +where so much has taken place, to realize man's lonely mission. The old +ship-keeper, sitting alone smoking on the hatchway in the evening before +unloading begins, will affront one with his presence. Where are the men, +rough, honest, coarse, or even bad, that used to sit there so often in +the twilight of the dog-watch? There is a strange yearning to see them +again. I watched the sun go down with a feeling of mingled joy and +sorrow,--joy for the return to the States, and sorrow for the parting +which must soon take place between my shipmates. + +When we came to an anchor and made ready to go ashore, the little giant +Trunnell came up to say good-by to the ladies. I had decided to accompany +them to the city. + +When he shook hands, the tears ran down out of his little eyes and +trickled over his bushy beard to the deck. + +"I wishes ye all the best o' luck," said he, and he fumbled in his pocket +for a moment, letting a small piece of paper escape and flutter to the +deck. I stooped and picked it up, glancing at the writing on it. The +words were:-- + +Mrs. William Sackett, 25 Prince St., E.C., London, Eng. + +He snatched it from me and seized my hand, gripping it so hard I almost +cried out. + +"Go along, ye lucky dog," he cried. "Say good-by to Chips an' the rest +afore ye goes ashore. We'll be berthed an' paid off when ye comes back." + +I said good-by to the men at the gangway, and then helped the ladies over +the side into the boat, seating myself in the stern-sheets between them. + +"I should think you'd be thankful to get in at last," said Jennie. + +"Yes," I whispered; "but I have no objections to sailing again as a +mate." + +Her hand closed upon mine behind the backboard. + +"Neither have I," she breathed in return. + +"Whose mate?" I asked her. + +But that's an old story. + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mr. Trunnell, by T. Jenkins Hains + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MR. 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