The Captain of the Kansas - Page 16/174

"I am beginning to catch on to the reasonableness of that toast of

yours, doctor," said one of the mining engineers, a young American. "I

happen to be a tee-totaler, but I don't mind opening a bottle of the

best for the general welfare when we shove our nose past the Cape of

the large number of young and unprotected females."

Christobal raised his hand.

"All in good time," he said. "Never halloo for the prairie until you

are clear of the forest. If the wind remains in its present quarter,

we are fortunate. Should it happen to veer round to the eastward, and

you see the rocks of Tierra del Fuego lashed by the choppy sea that can

run even through a land-locked channel, you will be ready to open two

bottles as a thanks-offering. Is this your first trip round by the

south?"

"Yes, I crossed by way of Panama. Guess a mule-track over the Sierras

is a heap better than the Pacific in a gale. Jee-whizz!"

A spiteful sea sprang at the Kansas and shook her from stem to stern.

The ship groaned and creaked as though she were in pain; she staggered

an instant, and then swung irresistibly forward with a fierce plunge

that made the plates dance and cutlery rattle in the fiddles.

"I suppose we must endure five hours of this," said Elsie, bravely.

"I don't like it. Why does not Captain Courtenay, or even Mr. Boyle,

put in an appearance? I have hardly seen either of them since the day

I came aboard."

Isobel was petulant, and perhaps a little frightened. She had not yet

reached that stage of confidence familiar to all who cross the open

seas. The first period of a gale is terrifying. Later there comes an

indifference born of supreme trust in the ship. The steady onward

thrust of the engines--the unwavering path across the raging vortex of

tumbling gray waters--the orderly way in which the members of the crew

follow their duties--these are quietly persistent factors in the

gradual soothing of the nerves. Many a timid passenger, after lying

awake through a night of terror, has gone to sleep when the watch began

to swab the deck overhead. Not even a Spartan sailor would begin to

wash woodwork if the ship were sinking.

"All ladies like to see an officer in the saloon during a storm,"

commented Christobal. "I plead guilty to a weakness in that direction

myself, though I know he is much better employed on the bridge."