<h2>V</h2></div>
<p>They drifted past Pernambuco, and
touched at Trinidad, and so worked
south and somewhat westward for Cape Horn.
And in Joel grew, stronger and ever, the resolve
to hunt out Mark, and find him, and fetch him
home.... The blood tie was strong on Joel;
stronger than any memory of Mark’s derision.
And—for the honor of the House of Shore, it
were well to prove the matter, if Mark were
dead. It is not well for a Shore to abandon
his ship in strange seas.</p>
<p>He asked Aaron, two weeks after their first
talk, whether they had questioned the white men
on the pearling schooner.</p>
<p>“Oh, aye,” said Aaron cheerfully. “I sought
’em out, myself. Three of them, they was;
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_62' name='page_62'></SPAN>62</span>
and ill-favored. A slinky small man, and a
rat-eyed large man, and a fat man in between;
all unshaven, and filthy, and drunken as owls.
They’d seen naught of Mark Shore, they said.
I’m thinking he’d let them see but little of him.
He had no tenderness for dirt.”</p>
<p>Joel told Priss nothing of what he hoped and
feared; nor did he question Jim Finch in the
matter. Finch was a good man at set tasks, but
he was too amiable, and he had no clamp upon
his lips.... Joel did not wish the word to go
abroad among the men. He was glad that
most of the crew were new since last voyage;
but the officers were unchanged, save that he
stood in his brother’s shoes.</p>
<p>They left Trinidad behind them, and shouldered
their way southward, the blunt bow of
the <i>Nathan Ross</i> battering the seas. And they
came to the Straits, and worked in, and made
their westing day by day, while little Priss,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_63' name='page_63'></SPAN>63</span>
wide-eyed on the deck, watched the gaunt cliffs
past whose wave-gnawed feet they stole. And
so at last the Pacific opened out before them,
and they caught the winds, and worked toward
Easter Island.</p>
<p>But their progress was slow. To men unschooled
in the patience of the whaling trade, it
would have been insufferably slow. For they
struck fish; and day after day they hung idle on
the waves while the trypots boiled; and day
after day they loitered on good whaling
grounds, when the boats were out thrice and
four times between sun’s rise and set. If Joel
was impatient, he gave no sign. If his desires
would have made him hasten on, his duty held
him here, where rich catches waited for the taking;
and while there were fish to be taken, he
would not leave them behind.</p>
<p>Priscilla hated it. She hated the grime, and
the smoke, and the smell of boiling oil; and she
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_64' name='page_64'></SPAN>64</span>
hated this dawdling on the open seas, with never
a glimpse of land. More than once she made
Joel bear the brunt of her own unrest; and because
it is not always good for two people to be
too much together, and because she had nothing
better to do, she began to pick Joel to pieces in
her thoughts, and fret at his patience and stolidity.
She wished he would grow angry, wished
even that he might be angry with her.... She
wished for anything to break the long days of
deadly calm. And she watched Joel more intently
than it is well for wife to watch husband,
or for husband to watch wife.</p>
<p>He did so many things that tried her sore.
He had a fashion, when he had finished eating,
of setting his hands against the table and pushing
himself back from the board with slow and
solid satisfaction. She came to the point where
she longed to scream when he did this. When
they were at table in the main cabin, she
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_65' name='page_65'></SPAN>65</span>
watched with such agony of trembling nerves
for that movement of his that she forgot to eat,
and could not relish what she ate.</p>
<p>Joel was a man, and his life was moving
smoothly. His ship’s casks were filling more
swiftly than he had any right to hope; his wife
was at his side; his skies were clear. He was
happy, and comfortable, and well content.
Sometimes, when they were preparing for sleep,
at night, in the cabin at the stern, he would relax
on the couch there. But she did not wish
for him to put his feet upon the cushions; she
said that his shoes were dirty. He offered to
take off his shoes; and she shuddered....</p>
<p>He had a fashion of stretching and yawning
comfortably as he bade her good night; and
sometimes a yawn caught him in the middle of a
word, and he talked while he yawned. She
hated this. She was passing through that hard
middle ground, that purgatory between maidenhood
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_66' name='page_66'></SPAN>66</span>
and wifehood in the course of which married
folk find each other only human, after all.
And she had not yet come to accept this condition,
and to glory in it. She had always
thought of Joel as a hero, a protector, a fine,
stalwart, able, noble man. Now she forgot
that he was commander of this ship and master
of the men aboard her, and saw in him only a
man who, when work was done, liked to take his
ease—and who talked through his yawns.</p>
<p>She gnawed at this bone of discontent, in the
hours when Joel was busy with his work. She
was furiously resentful of Joel’s flesh-and-bloodness....
And Joel, because he was too
busy to be introspective, continued calmly
happy and content.</p>
<p>The whales led them past Easter Island for
a space; and then, abruptly, they were gone.
Came day on day when the men at the masthead
saw no misty spout against the wide blue
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_67' name='page_67'></SPAN>67</span>
of the sea, no glistening black body lying awash
among the waves. And the Nathan Ross, with
all hands scrubbing white the decks again, bent
northward, working toward that maze of tiny
islands which dots the wide South Seas.</p>
<p>Their water was getting stale, and running
somewhat low; and they needed fresh foodstuffs.
Joel planned to touch at the first land
that offered. Tubuai, that would be. He
marked their progress on the chart.</p>
<p>On the evening before they would reach the
island, when Joel and Priss were preparing for
sleep, Priss burst out furiously, like a teapot
that boils over. The storm came without warning,
and—so far as Joel could see—without
provocation. She was sick, she said, of the
endless wastes of blue. She wanted to see land.
To step on it. If she were not allowed to do so
very soon, she would die.</p>
<p>Joel, at first, was minded to tell her they
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_68' name='page_68'></SPAN>68</span>
would sight land in the morning; then, with one
of the blundering impulses to which husbands
fall victim at such moments, he decided to wait
and surprise her. So, instead of telling her, he
chuckled as though at some secret jest, and tried
to quiet her by patting her dark head.</p>
<p>She fell silent at his caress; and Joel thought
she was appeased. As a matter of fact, she was
hating him for having laughed at her; and her
calm was ferocious. He discovered this, too
late....</p>
<p>He had just kissed her good night. She
turned her cheek to his lips; and he was faintly
hurt at this. But he only said cheerfully:
“There, Priss.... You’ll be all right in the
morning....”</p>
<p>He yawned in mid-sentence, so that the last
two or three words sounded as though he were
trying to swallow a large and hot potato while
he uttered them. Priss could stand no more of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_69' name='page_69'></SPAN>69</span>
that. Positively. So she slapped his face.</p>
<p>He was amazed; and he stood, looking at her
helplessly, while the slapped cheek grew red and
red. Priss burst into tears, stamped her foot,
called him names she did not mean, and as a
climax, darted into her own cabin, and swung
the door, and snapped the latch.</p>
<p>Joel did not in the least understand; and he
went to his bunk at last, profoundly troubled.</p>
<p>An hour after they anchored, the next day, at
Tubuai, a boat came out from shore and ran
alongside, and Mark Shore swung across the
rail, aboard the <i>Nathan Ross</i>.</p>
<hr class='major' />
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name='page_70' name='page_70'></SPAN>70</span>
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