Blow the Man Down - A Romance of the Coast - Page 216/334

They waited in silence, in which they heard the whummle and screech

of the wind outside and the angry squalling of the sheathing of the

plunging schooner's cabin walls.

The voice which replied to Captain Downs's query did not sound human. It

was a sort of muffled wail, but there was no mistaking its positiveness.

"No!" said the man behind the door.

Back to the table lurched Captain Downs. He pounded down his fist. "That

settles it with me!" Then he poised his big hand on the edge of the

table-cover. "I was ready to tip one way or the other and it needed

only a little push. I have tipped." Down came the palm flat on the

table-cloth with final and decisive firmness. "Young man," he informed

Bradish, "there's an extra stateroom, there, off this dining-saloon. You

take it!"

"What can I tell my father?" wailed the girl, the fire of her

determination suddenly quenched by sobbing helplessness.

"You can tell him that I temporarily adopted you as my daughter at three

bells on this particular evening, and I'll go to him and back you up if

it becomes necessary." He opened the door leading aft and bowed. "Now,

you trot along to your stateroom, sissy!"

After hesitating a few moments she hurried away. The skipper locked the

door and slipped the key into his pocket.

"Do you think I'm going to--" began Bradish, angrily.

"I ain't wasting any thoughts on you, sir. I'm saving 'em all for the

Drusilla M. Alden just now."

The craft's plunging roll gave evidence that the sea was making. At

that instant the first mate came down a few steps of the forward

companionway, entering through the coach-house door.

"She's breezing up fresh from east'ard, sir!" he reported.

"So I've judged from the way this sheathing is talking up. I'll be on

deck at once, Mr. Dodge."

That report was a summons to a sailor; Mayo came staggering out of the

stateroom. He looked neither to right nor left nor at either of the men

in the saloon. He stumbled toward the companionway, reaching his hands

in front of him after the fashion in which a man gropes in the dark.

"Are you letting a nigger--and a crazy one at that--decide the biggest

thing in my life?" raged Bradish.

"I know what I'm doing," Captain Downs assured him. But the skipper was

manifestly amazed by the expression he saw on Mayo's face.

"I won't stand for it! Here, you!" Bradish rushed across the room and

intercepted Mayo.