The Captain of the Kansas - Page 15/174

Even Isobel failed to draw him further, and she said one day, in a

temper, after a spirited attempt to extract some of his stored

impressions: "The man reminds me of one of those dummy books you see

occasionally, bound in calf and labeled 'Gazetteer of the World.' When

you try to open a volume you find that it is made of wood."

So they nicknamed him "Mr. Wood," and Elsie once inadvertently

addressed him by the name.

"What do you think of the weather, Mr. Wood?" she asked him at

breakfast.

He chanced to notice that she was speaking to him.

"Rotten," he said.

Perhaps he wondered why Miss Maxwell flushed and the others laughed.

But, in actual fact, he was not far wrong in his curious choice of an

adjective that morning. Dr. Christobal's dismal foreboding had been

justified on the second day out. Leaden clouds, a sullen sea, and

occasional puffs of a stinging breeze from the southwest, offered a

sorry exchange for the sunny skies of Chile.

Though the Kansas was not a fast ship, she could have made the

entrance to the Straits on the evening of the fourth day were not

Captain Courtenay wishful to navigate the most dangerous part of the

narrows by daylight. His intent, therefore, was to pick up the

Evangelistas light about midnight, and then crack ahead at fourteen

knots, so as to be off Felix Point on Desolation Island by dawn.

This was not only a prudent and seamanlike course but it would conduce

to the comfort of the passengers. The ship was now running into a

stiff gale. Each hour the sea became heavier, and even the eight

thousand tons of the Kansas felt the impact of the giant rollers on

her starboard bow. Dinner, therefore, promised to be a meal of much

discomfort, cheered only by the knowledge that as soon as the vessel

reached the lee of Desolation Island the giant waves of the Pacific

would lose their power, and all on board would enjoy a quiet night's

rest.

There were no absentees at the table. Dr. Christobal strove to enliven

the others with the promise of peace ere many hours had passed.

"Pay no heed to those fellows!" he cried, as the ship quivered under

the blow of a heavy sea, and they heard the thud of many tons of water

breaking over the bows and fore hatch, while the defeated monster

washed the tightly screwed ports with a venomous swish. "They cannot

harm us now. Let us rather thank kindly Providence which provided

Magellan's water-way; think what it would mean were we compelled to

weather the Cape."