<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
<h3>WETTING THEIR SALT</h3>
<p>Pete Ellinwood, alone except for the
cook, who sat peeling potatoes just outside
the galley, paced the quarter-deck of the
<i>Charming Lass</i>.</p>
<p>He seemed to be an older man than that night
when, goaded beyond endurance by the taunts of
the big Frenchman, he had fought a fight that would
long be remembered in the streets of the roaring
town of St. Pierre.</p>
<p>He felt that he had broken his promise to Ma
Schofield that he would keep guard over her boy.
Now, for all he knew, that boy was lying in jail at
St. Andrew’s, or was perhaps defending his life in
the murderer’s pen.</p>
<p>The night of the fight had been a wild one for
Ellinwood.</p>
<p>At the cry of “Police!” the crowd had seemed to
melt away from him like the bank fog at the sweep
of a breeze. A dozen comrades had seized the
prostrate Jean and hurried him away, and Pete, with
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the instinct of self-preservation, had snatched up his
clothes and dodged down a dark alley toward the
dirty drinking-shops along the water-front.</p>
<p>There, as he dressed himself, he first asked the
question, “Where is Code?”</p>
<p>Then, in a frenzy of remorse, he returned to the
street and began a wild and fruitless search all night.
Then he accidentally learned that the <i>Nettie B.</i> had
been in port two days and that her crew had been
ashore on the night of the fracas.</p>
<p>Sorrowful, bedraggled, and bruised, he rowed out
to the <i>Charming Lass</i> just as the whole crew was
setting out for shore to search for Code and himself.</p>
<p>During the night the barrels of fresh bait had
been lightered to the <i>Lass</i>, and there was nothing
for it but to make sail and get back on the Banks
as soon as possible, leaving Code to his fate but
carrying on the work he had begun.</p>
<p>In accordance with Code’s instructions, Pete automatically
became the skipper of the schooner, and
he selected Jimmie Thomas as his mate. By nightfall
they had picked up the fleet, and early the next
morning the dories were out. Then for eight days
it had been nothing but fish, fish, fish.</p>
<p>Never in all his experience had Pete seen such
schools of cod. They were evidently herding together
in thousands, and had found but scanty food
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_243' name='page_243'></SPAN>243</span>
for such great hosts, for they bit almost on the bare
hook.</p>
<p>Now, as he looked around the still sea, the white
or yellow sails of the fishing fleet showed on all sides
in a vast circle. Not five miles away was the <i>Rosan</i>,
and to the southward of her the <i>Herring Bone</i> with
mean old Jed Martin aboard. Bijonah Tanner had
tried his best to shake Martin, but the hard-fisted
old skipper, knowing and recognizing Tanner’s
“nose” for fish, had clung like a leech and profited
by the other’s sagacity.</p>
<p>Nor was this all the Grande Mignon fleet.</p>
<p>There were Gloucestermen among it, the champion
fishers of the world, who spent their spare
time in drifting past the English boats and hurling
salty wit––at which pastime they often came off
second best.</p>
<p>There were Frenchmen, too, from the Miquelon
Islands, who worked in colored caps and wore
sheath-knives in belts around their waists. Pete
often looked over their dirty decks and wondered if
his late enemy were among them. There were also
vessels called “toothpicks” that did an exclusive
trawling business, never using dories except to
underrun the trawls or to set them out. These vessels
were built on yacht lines and, because they filled
their holds quickly, made quick runs to port with
their catches, thus getting in several trips in a season.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_244' name='page_244'></SPAN>244</span></div>
<p>Also, there were the steam trawlers, the most progressive
of the fleet, owned and operated by huge
fish firms in Boston or Portland. These were not
dependent on the vagaries of the wind and steamed
wherever their skippers divined that fish might be.</p>
<p>Last of all were the seiners after herring and
mackerel, schooners mostly, and out of Gloucester
or Nova Scotia ports, who secured their catch by
encircling schools of fish that played atop of the
water with nets a quarter of a mile long, and pursued
them in by drawstrings much as a man closes
a tobacco-pouch.</p>
<p>This was the cosmopolitan city that lived on the
unmarked lanes of the ocean and preyed upon the
never-failing supplies of fish that moved beneath.</p>
<p>Among the Grande Mignon boats there was intense
rivalry. In the holds the layers of salted fish
rose steadily under the phenomenal fishing. The
salt-barrels were emptied and crowded out by the
cod, hake, and pollock. It was these boats that
Ellinwood watched with the eye of a hawk, for
back in Freekirk Head he knew that Bill Boughton
stood ready to pay a bonus for the first cargo to
reach port. Now was the time when the advance
orders from the West Indies were coming up, and,
because of the failure of the season on the island itself,
these orders stood unfilled.</p>
<p>One or two of the smallest sloops had already wet
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_245' name='page_245'></SPAN>245</span>
their salt and weighed anchor for home, taking letters
and messages; but these, Pete knew, could only
supply an infinitesimal portion of the demand.
What Boughton looked for was a healthy load of
fifteen hundred to two thousand quintals all ready
for drying.</p>
<p>Night and day the work went on. With the first
signs of daylight the dories were swung outboard
and the men took their positions. A catch of two
hundred good-sized cod was now considered the
usual thing for a handliner, and night after night
the piles of silver fish in the pens amidships seemed
to grow in size.</p>
<p>Now they dressed down under lantern light, sometimes
aided by the moon, and the men stood to the
tables until they fell asleep on their feet and split
their fingers instead of the fish. Then, after buckets
of hot coffee, they would fall to again and never
stop until the last wet body had been laid atop of
its thousands of brothers.</p>
<p>The men were constantly on the trawls. Sometimes
they did nothing all day but pick the fish and
rebait, finding, after a trip to the schooner to unload,
that a thousand others had struck on the long lines
of sagging hooks while they were gone.</p>
<p>It was fast and feverish work, and it seemed as
though it would never end.</p>
<p>The situation had resolved itself into a race between
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the schooners, and Ellinwood was of no mind
to come off second best. Like a jockey before a
race, he watched his rivals.</p>
<p>He knew that foxy Bijonah Tanner, who sometimes
looked like an old hump-backed cod himself,
was his most dangerous rival. Tanner said nothing,
but his boats were out early and in late, and the
lanterns on his deck over the dressing pens could
sometimes be seen as late as ten o’clock at night.</p>
<p>Visits among the fleet had now ceased, both because
there was no time for it, and because a man
from another schooner was looked upon as a spy.</p>
<p>At the start of the season it had been expected
that Nat Burns in the <i>Nettie B.</i> would prove a
strong contender for premier honors, but, because
of his ceaseless efforts to drive home his revenge,
Nat had done very little fishing and therefore could
not possibly be in the market.</p>
<p>Other Freekirk Head men shrugged their shoulders
at this. Nat had the money, and could act
that way if it pleased him, they said. But, nevertheless,
he lost favor with a great many of his
former friends, for the reason that the whole fishing
expedition had been a concerted movement to save
the people and credit of the island, and not an exploitation
of individual desires.</p>
<p>Burns had, with his customary indifference to others,
made it just exactly such an exploitation, and the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_247' name='page_247'></SPAN>247</span>
sentiment that had been strong for him at the outset
of the cruise was now turning decidedly the other
way; although he little guessed this or would have
been influenced had he done so.</p>
<p>In reality, then, the race for fish was keenest between
the <i>Charming Lass</i>, the <i>Rosan</i>, and the <i>Herring
Bone</i>, with three other schooners very close on
their heels.</p>
<p>At the end of the nine days there was little space
beneath the deck planks of the <i>Charming Lass</i>, but
every night Pete would come up, slapping his hands
free of salt, and say, “Wal, boys, I guess we can
crowd another day’s work into her,” and the exhausted
men would gather themselves for another
great effort as they rolled forward into their bunks.</p>
<p>Every twenty-four hours they did crowd another
day’s work into her, so that she carried nearly a
hundred and fifty tons and the dripping brine had to
be pumped out of the hold.</p>
<p>It was the night of the day that opened this chapter.</p>
<p>The lanterns by which the men had dressed down
had been lifted from their supports, the cod livers
dumped into the gurry-butt, and the tables removed
from the rails. The two men on the first watch were
sharpening the splitting knives on a tiny grindstone
and walking forward occasionally to see that the
anchor and trawl buoy lights were burning.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_248' name='page_248'></SPAN>248</span></div>
<p>The still air resounded with the snores of the exhausted
men forward in the forecastle.</p>
<p>Silently out of the darkness a dory came toward
the schooner, pulled by the brawny arms of two men.
In the stern of the oncoming boat sat a solitary figure,
who strained his eyes toward his destination.</p>
<p>The dory was within fifty yards of the <i>Lass</i> before
the men on deck became aware of its approach.
Then, fearing some evil work in connection with the
last desperate days of fishing, they rushed to the bulwarks
and challenged the newcomers. They did
not see, a mile away, a schooner without lights gently
rising and falling on the oily sea.</p>
<p>“Who is that?” demanded one man, but he received
no answer except “A friend,” and the boat
continued its stealthy approach. It drew alongside
the ladder in the waist, and the man in the stern-sheets
rose. Kent of the <i>Lass’s</i> crew leaned over
the side and threw the light of his lantern upon the
man.</p>
<p>“By God,” he cried like one who has seen a
ghost, “it’s the skipper.”</p>
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