The Captain of the Kansas - Page 25/174

The concluding sentence was uttered very slowly and clearly. It was

evident he meant the ship's company to understand him. Before any of

his hearers attempted to question him, he jammed the sou'wester on his

head and ran up the stairs. The dog followed, somewhat ruefully, the

cozy saloon being far more to his liking than the wind-swept,

spray-lashed chart-house. Mr. Malcolm promptly stirred his myrmidons

with a command to fall in by boats' crews, and Gomez won his chief's

approval by quietly translating the captain's orders. Beyond Mrs.

Somerville's subdued sobbing there was little outward manifestation

that another crisis in the history of the Kansas and her human

freight had come and gone.

"The skipper did turn up, you see," said the American, when Tollemache

came to him. The silent man screwed his lips together as if he would

put a padlock on them.

"From your knowledge of the coast, do you think he will be able to

beach the ship?" went on Gray, some humorous imp prompting him, even in

that tense moment, to draw the expected answer from his new friend and

ally.

"Yes, in pieces," said Tollemache, and the reply was neither humorous

nor expected.