<h2><SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<p>Small wonder that Miss West remains sea-sick on an ocean like this, which has
become a factory where the veering gales manufacture the selectest and most
mountainous brands of cross-seas. The way the poor <i>Elsinore</i> pitches,
plunges, rolls, and shivers, with all her lofty spars and masts and all her
five thousand tons of dead-weight cargo, is astonishing. To me she is the most
erratic thing imaginable; yet Mr. Pike, with whom I now pace the poop on
occasion, tells me that coal is a good cargo, and that the <i>Elsinore</i> is
well-loaded because he saw to it himself.</p>
<p>He will pause abruptly, in the midst of his interminable pacing, in order to
watch her in her maddest antics. The sight is very pleasant to him, for his
eyes glisten and a faint glow seems to irradiate his face and impart to it a
hint of ecstasy. The <i>Elsinore</i> has a snug place in his heart, I am
confident. He calls her behaviour admirable, and at such times will repeat to
me that it was he who saw to her loading.</p>
<p>It is very curious, the habituation of this man, through a long life on the
sea, to the motion of the sea. There <i>is</i> a rhythm to this chaos of
crossing, buffeting waves. I sense this rhythm, although I cannot solve it. But
Mr. Pike <i>knows</i> it. Again and again, as we paced up and down this
afternoon, when to me nothing unusually antic seemed impending, he would seize
my arm as I lost balance, and as the <i>Elsinore</i> smashed down on her side
and heeled over and over with a colossal roll that seemed never to end, and
that always ended with an abrupt, snap-of-the-whip effect as she began the
corresponding roll to windward. In vain I strove to learn how Mr. Pike
forecasts these antics, and I am driven to believe that he does not consciously
forecast them at all. He <i>feels</i> them; he knows them. They, and the sea,
are ingrained in him.</p>
<p>Toward the end of our little promenade I was guilty of impatiently shaking off
a sudden seizure of my arm in his big paw. If ever, in an hour, the
<i>Elsinore</i> had been less gymnastic than at that moment, I had not noticed
it. So I shook off the sustaining clutch, and the next moment the
<i>Elsinore</i> had smashed down and buried a couple of hundred feet of her
starboard rail beneath the sea, while I had shot down the deck and smashed
myself breathless against the wall of the chart-house. My ribs and one shoulder
are sore from it yet. Now how did he know?</p>
<p>And he never staggers nor seems in danger of being rolled away. On the
contrary, such a surplus of surety of balance has he that time and again he
lent his surplus to me. I begin to have more respect, not for the sea, but for
the men of the sea, and not for the sweepings of seamen that are as slaves on
our decks, but for the real seamen who are their masters—for Captain
West, for Mr. Pike, yes, and for Mr. Mellaire, dislike him as I do.</p>
<p>As early as three in the afternoon the wind, still a gale, went back to the
south-west. Mr. Mellaire had the deck, and he went below and reported the
change to Captain West.</p>
<p>“We’ll wear ship at four, Mr. Pathurst,” the second mate told
me when he came back. “You’ll find it an interesting
manoeuvre.”</p>
<p>“But why wait till four?” I asked.</p>
<p>“The Captain’s orders, sir. The watches will be changing, and
we’ll have the use of both of them, without working a hardship on the
watch below by calling it out now.”</p>
<p>And when both watches were on deck Captain West, again in oilskins, came out of
the chart-house. Mr. Pike, out on the bridge, took charge of the many men who,
on deck and on the poop, were to manage the mizzen-braces, while Mr. Mellaire
went for’ard with his watch to handle the fore-and main-braces. It was a
pretty manoeuvre, a play of leverages, by which they eased the force of the
wind on the after part of the <i>Elsinore</i> and used the force of the wind on
the for’ard part.</p>
<p>Captain West gave no orders whatever, and, to all intents, was quite oblivious
of what was being done. He was again the favoured passenger, taking a stroll
for his health’s sake. And yet I knew that both his officers were
uncomfortably aware of his presence and were keyed to their finest seamanship.
I know, now, Captain West’s position on board. He is the brains of the
<i>Elsinore</i>. He is the master strategist. There is more in directing a ship
on the ocean than in standing watches and ordering men to pull and haul. They
are pawns, and the two officers are pieces, with which Captain West plays the
game against sea, and wind, and season, and ocean current. He is the knower.
They are his tongue, by which he makes his knowledge articulate.</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>A bad night—equally bad for the <i>Elsinore</i> and for me. She is
receiving a sharp buffeting at the hands of the wintry North Atlantic. I fell
asleep early, exhausted from lack of sleep, and awoke in an hour, frantic with
my lumped and burning skin. More cream of tartar, more reading, more vain
attempts to sleep, until shortly before five, when the steward brought me my
coffee, I wrapped myself in my dressing-gown, and like a being distracted
prowled into the cabin. I dozed in a leather chair and was thrown out by a
violent roll of the ship. I tried the sofa, sinking to sleep immediately, and
immediately thereafter finding myself precipitated to the floor. I am convinced
that when Captain West naps on the sofa he is only half asleep. How else can he
maintain so precarious a position?—unless, in him, too, the sea and its
motion be ingrained.</p>
<p>I wandered into the dining-room, wedged myself into a screwed chair, and fell
asleep, my head on my arms, my arms on the table. And at quarter past seven the
steward roused me by shaking my shoulders. It was time to set table.</p>
<p>Heavy with the brief heaviness of sleep I had had, I dressed and stumbled up on
to the poop in the hope that the wind would clear my brain. Mr. Pike had the
watch, and with sure, age-lagging step he paced the deck. The man is a
marvel—sixty-nine years old, a life of hardship, and as sturdy as a lion.
Yet of the past night alone his hours had been: four to six in the afternoon on
deck; eight to twelve on deck; and four to eight in the morning on deck. In a
few minutes he would be relieved, but at midday he would again be on deck.</p>
<p>I leaned on the poop-rail and stared for’ard along the dreary waste of
deck. Every port and scupper was working to ease the weight of North Atlantic
that perpetually fell on board. Between the rush of the cascades, streaks of
rust showed everywhere. Some sort of a wooden pin-rail had carried away on the
starboard-rail at the foot of the mizzen-shrouds, and an amazing raffle of
ropes and tackles washed about. Here Nancy and half-a-dozen men worked
sporadically, and in fear of their lives, to clear the tangle.</p>
<p>The long-suffering bleakness was very pronounced on Nancy’s face, and
when the walls of water, in impending downfall, reared above the
<i>Elsinore’s</i> rail, he was always the first to leap for the life-line
which had been stretched fore and aft across the wide space of deck.</p>
<p>The rest of the men were scarcely less backward in dropping their work and
springing to safety—if safety it might be called, to grip a rope in both
hands and have legs sweep out from under, and be wrenched full-length upon the
boiling surface of an ice-cold flood. Small wonder they look wretched. Bad as
their condition was when they came aboard at Baltimore, they look far worse
now, what of the last several days of wet and freezing hardship.</p>
<p>From time to time, completing his for’ard pace along the poop, Mr. Pike
would pause, ere he retraced his steps, and snort sardonic glee at what
happened to the poor devils below. The man’s heart is callous. A thing of
iron, he has endured; and he has no patience nor sympathy with these creatures
who lack his own excessive iron.</p>
<p>I noticed the stone-deaf man, the twisted oaf whose face I have described as
being that of an ill-treated and feeble-minded faun. His bright, liquid,
pain-filled eyes were more filled with pain than ever, his face still more lean
and drawn with suffering. And yet his face showed an excess of nervousness,
sensitiveness, and a pathetic eagerness to please and do. I could not help
observing that, despite his dreadful sense-handicap and his wrecked, frail
body, he did the most work, was always the last of the group to spring to the
life-line and always the first to loose the life-line and slosh knee-deep or
waist-deep through the churning water to attack the immense and depressing
tangle of rope and tackle.</p>
<p>I remarked to Mr. Pike that the men seemed thinner and weaker than when they
came on board, and he delayed replying for a moment while he stared down at
them with that cattle-buyer’s eye of his.</p>
<p>“Sure they are,” he said disgustedly. “A weak breed,
that’s what they are—nothing to build on, no stamina. The least
thing drags them down. Why, in my day we grew fat on work like that—only
we didn’t; we worked so hard there wasn’t any chance for fat. We
kept in fighting trim, that was all. But as for this scum and slum—say,
you remember, Mr. Pathurst, that man I spoke to the first day, who said his
name was Charles Davis?”</p>
<p>“The one you thought there was something the matter with?”</p>
<p>“Yes, and there was, too. He’s in that ’midship room with the
Greek now. He’ll never do a tap of work the whole Voyage. He’s a
hospital case, if there ever was one. Talk about shot to pieces! He’s got
holes in him I could shove my fist through. I don’t know whether
they’re perforating ulcers, or cancers, or cannon-shot wounds, or what
not. And he had the nerve to tell me they showed up after he came on
board!”</p>
<p>“And he had them all the time?” I asked.</p>
<p>“All the time! Take my word, Mr. Pathurst, they’re years old. But
he’s a wonder. I watched him those first days, sent him aloft, had him
down in the fore-hold trimming a few tons of coal, did everything to him, and
he never showed a wince. Being up to the neck in the salt water finally fetched
him, and now he’s reported off duty—for the voyage. And he’ll
draw his wages for the whole time, have all night in, and never do a tap. Oh,
he’s a hot one to have passed over on us, and the <i>Elsinore’s</i>
another man short.”</p>
<p>“Another!” I exclaimed. “Is the Greek going to die?”</p>
<p>“No fear. I’ll have him steering in a few days. I refer to the
misfits. If we rolled a dozen of them together they wouldn’t make one
real man. I’m not saying it to alarm you, for there’s nothing
alarming about it; but we’re going to have proper hell this
voyage.” He broke off to stare reflectively at his broken knuckles, as if
estimating how much drive was left in them, then sighed and concluded,
“Well, I can see I’ve got my work cut out for me.”</p>
<p>Sympathizing with Mr. Pike is futile; the only effect is to make his mood
blacker. I tried it, and he retaliated with:</p>
<p>“You oughta see the bloke with curvature of the spine in Mr.
Mellaire’s watch. He’s a proper hobo, too, and a land lubber, and
don’t weigh more’n a hundred pounds, and must be fifty years old,
and he’s got curvature of the spine, and he’s able seaman, if you
please, on the <i>Elsinore</i>. And worse than all that, he puts it over on
you; he’s nasty, he’s mean, he’s a viper, a wasp. He
ain’t afraid of anything because he knows you dassent hit him for fear of
croaking him. Oh, he’s a pearl of purest ray serene, if anybody should
slide down a backstay and ask you. If you fail to identify him any other way,
his name is Mulligan Jacobs.”</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>After breakfast, again on deck, in Mr. Mellaire’s watch, I discovered
another efficient. He was at the wheel, a small, well-knit, muscular man of say
forty-five, with black hair graying on the temples, a big eagle-face, swarthy,
with keen, intelligent black eyes.</p>
<p>Mr. Mellaire vindicated my judgment by telling me the man was the best sailor
in his watch, a proper seaman. When he referred to the man as the Maltese
Cockney, and I asked why, he replied:</p>
<p>“First, because he is Maltese, Mr. Pathurst; and next, because he talks
Cockney like a native. And depend upon it, he heard Bow Bells before he lisped
his first word.”</p>
<p>“And has O’Sullivan bought Andy Fay’s sea-boots yet?” I
queried.</p>
<p>It was at this moment that Miss West emerged upon the poop. She was as rosy and
vital as ever, and certainly, if she had been sea-sick, she flew no signals of
it. As she came toward me, greeting me, I could not help remarking again the
lithe and springy limb-movement with which she walked, and her fine, firm skin.
Her neck, free in a sailor collar, with white sweater open at the throat,
seemed almost redoubtably strong to my sleepless, jaundiced eyes. Her hair,
under a white knitted cap, was smooth and well-groomed. In fact, the totality
of impression she conveyed was of a well-groomedness one would not expect of a
sea-captain’s daughter, much less of a woman who had been sea-sick.
Life!—that is the key of her, the essential note of her—life and
health. I’ll wager she has never entertained a morbid thought in that
practical, balanced, sensible head of hers.</p>
<p>“And how have you been?” she asked, then rattled on with sheer
exuberance ere I could answer. “Had a lovely night’s sleep. I was
really over my sickness yesterday, but I just devoted myself to resting up. I
slept ten solid hours—what do you think of that?”</p>
<p>“I wish I could say the same,” I replied with appropriate
dejection, as I swung in beside her, for she had evinced her intention of
promenading.</p>
<p>“Oh, then you’ve been sick?”</p>
<p>“On the contrary,” I answered dryly. “And I wish I had been.
I haven’t had five hours’ sleep all told since I came on board.
These pestiferous hives. . . ”</p>
<p>I held up a lumpy wrist to show. She took one glance at it, halted abruptly,
and, neatly balancing herself to the roll, took my wrist in both her hands and
gave it close scrutiny.</p>
<p>“Mercy!” she cried; and then began to laugh.</p>
<p>I was of two minds. Her laughter was delightful to the ear, there was such a
mellowness, and healthiness, and frankness about it. On the other hand, that it
should be directed at my misfortune was exasperating. I suppose my perplexity
showed in my face, for when she had eased her laughter and looked at me with a
sobering countenance, she immediately went off into more peals.</p>
<p>“You poor child,” she gurgled at last. “And when I think of
all the cream of tartar I made you consume!”</p>
<p>It was rather presumptuous of her to poor-child me, and I resolved to take
advantage of the data I already possessed in order to ascertain just how many
years she was my junior. She had told me she was twelve years old the time the
<i>Dixie</i> collided with the river steamer in San Francisco Bay. Very well,
all I had to do was to ascertain the date of that disaster and I had her. But
in the meantime she laughed at me and my hives.</p>
<p>“I suppose it is—er—humorous, in some sort of way,” I
said a bit stiffly, only to find that there was no use in being stiff with Miss
West, for it only set her off into more laughter.</p>
<p>“What you needed,” she announced, with fresh gurglings, “was
an exterior treatment.”</p>
<p>“Don’t tell me I’ve got the chicken-pox or the
measles,” I protested.</p>
<p>“No.” She shook her head emphatically while she enjoyed another
paroxysm. “What you are suffering from is a severe attack . . . ”</p>
<p>She paused deliberately, and looked me straight in the eyes.</p>
<p>“Of bedbugs,” she concluded. And then, all seriousness and
practicality, she went on: “But we’ll have that righted in a jiffy.
I’ll turn the <i>Elsinore’s</i> after-quarters upside down, though
I know there are none in father’s room or mine. And though this is my
first voyage with Mr. Pike I know he’s too hard-bitten” (here I
laughed at her involuntary pun) “an old sailor not to know that his room
is clean. Yours” (I was perturbed for fear she was going to say that I
had brought them on board) “have most probably drifted in from
for’ard. They always have them for’ard.</p>
<p>“And now, Mr. Pathurst, I am going down to attend to your case.
You’d better get your Wada to make up a camping kit for you. The next
couple of nights you’ll spend in the cabin or chart-room. And be sure
Wada removes all silver and metallic tarnishable stuff from your rooms.
There’s going to be all sorts of fumigating, and tearing out of woodwork,
and rebuilding. Trust me. I know the vermin.”</p>
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