Blow the Man Down - A Romance of the Coast - Page 209/334

"I'm no nigger, and I'm not crazy!" shouted Mayo.

The swinging lantern in the companionway lighted him dimly. But in the

gloom his dusky hue was only the more accentuated. His excitement seemed

that of a man whose wits had been touched.

"I knew it was a trick. But what was the trick?" he demanded, starting

toward Bradish, his clutching hands outspread.

Captain Downs kicked at this obstreperous sailor, and at the same time

fanned a blow at his head with open palm.

Mayo avoided both the foot and the hand. "What does the law say about

striking a sailor, captain? Hold on, there! I'm just as good a man as

you are. Don't you tell those men to lay hands on me." He backed away

from the sailors who came running aft, with the second mate marshaling

them. He stripped up his sleeve and held his arm across the radiance of

the binnacle light. "That's a white man's skin, isn't it?" he demanded.

"What kind of play-acting is all this?" asked Old Mull, with astonished

indignation.

In that crisis Mayo controlled his tongue after a mighty effort to

steady himself. He was prompted to obey his mood and announce his

identity with all the fury that was in him. But here stood the man who

had served as one of the tools of his enemies, whoever they were. For

his weapon against this man Mayo had only a few words of gossip which

had been dropped in an unwary moment; he realized his position; he

regretted his passionate haste. He was not ready to put himself into the

power of his enemies by telling this man who he was; he remembered that

he was running away from the law.

Bradish gaped at this intruder without seeming to understand what it all

meant.

"Passengers better get below out of the muss," advised Captain Downs.

"Here's a crazy nigger, mate. Grab him and tie him up."

Mayo backed to the rack at the rail and pulled out two belaying-pins,

mighty weapons, one for each hand.

Bradish hurried away into the depths of the house, manifestly glad to

get out from underfoot.

"Don't you allow those niggers to lay their hands on me," repeated the

man at bay. "Captain Downs, let me have a word to you in private." He

had desperately decided on making a confidant of one of his kind. He

bitterly needed the help a master mariner could give him.

"Get at him!" roared the skipper. "Go in, you niggers!"