<h2><SPAN name="chap18"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
<p>Was there ever such a voyage! This morning, when I came on deck, I found nobody
at the wheel. It was a startling sight—the great <i>Elsinore</i>, by the
wind, under an Alpine range of canvas, every sail set from skysails to
try-sails and spanker, slipping across the surface of a mild trade-wind sea,
and no hand at the wheel to guide her.</p>
<p>No one was on the poop. It was Mr. Pike’s watch, and I strolled
for’ard along the bridge to find him. He was on Number One hatch giving
some instructions to the sail-makers. I awaited my chance, until he glanced up
and greeted me.</p>
<p>“Good morning,” I answered. “And what man is at the wheel
now?”</p>
<p>“That crazy Greek, Tony,” he replied.</p>
<p>“A month’s wages to a pound of tobacco he isn’t,” I
offered.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike looked at me with quick sharpness.</p>
<p>“Who is at the wheel?”</p>
<p>“Nobody,” I replied.</p>
<p>And then he exploded into action. The age-lag left his massive frame, and he
bounded aft along the deck at a speed no man on board could have exceeded; and
I doubt if very many could have equalled it. He went up the poop-ladder three
steps at a time and disappeared in the direction of the wheel behind the
chart-house.</p>
<p>Next came a promptitude of bellowed orders, and all the watch was slacking away
after braces to starboard and pulling on after braces to port. I had already
learned the manoeuvre. Mr. Pike was wearing ship.</p>
<p>As I returned aft along the bridge Mr. Mellaire and the carpenter emerged from
the cabin door. They had been interrupted at breakfast, for they were wiping
their mouths. Mr. Pike came to the break of the poop, called down instructions
to the second mate, who proceeded for’ard, and ordered the carpenter to
take the wheel.</p>
<p>As the <i>Elsinore</i> swung around on her heel Mr. Pike put her on the back
track so as to cover the water she had just crossed over. He lowered the
glasses through which he was scanning the sea and pointed down the hatchway
that opened into the big after-room beneath. The ladder was gone.</p>
<p>“Must have taken the lazarette ladder with him,” said Mr. Pike.</p>
<p>Captain West strolled out of the chart-room. He said good morning in his
customary way, courteously to me and formally to the mate, and strolled on
along the poop to the wheel, where he paused to glance into the binnacle.
Turning, he went on leisurely to the break of the poop. Again he came back to
us. Fully two minutes must have elapsed ere he spoke.</p>
<p>“What is the matter, Mr. Pike? Man overboard?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” was the answer.</p>
<p>“And took the lazarette ladder along with him?” Captain West
queried.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. It’s the Greek that jumped over at Baltimore.”</p>
<p>Evidently the affair was not serious enough for Captain West to be the Samurai.
He lighted a cigar and resumed his stroll. And yet he had missed nothing, not
even the absence of the ladder.</p>
<p>Mr. Pike sent look-outs aloft to every skysail-yard, and the <i>Elsinore</i>
slipped along through the smooth sea. Miss West came up and stood beside me,
searching the ocean with her eyes while I told her the little I knew. She
evidenced no excitement, and reassured me by telling me how difficult it was to
lose a man of Tony’s suicidal type.</p>
<p>“Their madness always seems to come upon them in fine weather or under
safe circumstances,” she smiled, “when a boat can be lowered or a
tug is alongside. And sometimes they take life—preservers with them, as
in this case.”</p>
<p>At the end of an hour Mr. Pike wore the <i>Elsinore</i> around, and again
retraced the course she must have been sailing when the Greek went over.
Captain West still strolled and smoked, and Miss West made a brief trip below
to give Wada forgotten instructions about Possum. Andy Pay was called to the
wheel, and the carpenter went below to finish his breakfast.</p>
<p>It all seemed rather callous to me. Nobody was much concerned for the man who
was overboard somewhere on that lonely ocean. And yet I had to admit that
everything possible was being done to find him. I talked a little with Mr.
Pike, and he seemed more vexed than anything else. He disliked to have the
ship’s work interrupted in such fashion.</p>
<p>Mr. Mellaire’s attitude was different.</p>
<p>“We are short-handed enough as it is,” he told me, when he joined
us on the poop. “We can’t afford to lose him even if he is crazy.
We need him. He’s a good sailor most of the time.”</p>
<p>The hail came from the mizzen-skysail-yard. The Maltese Cockney it was who
first sighted the man and called down the information. The mate, looking to
windwards, suddenly lowered his glasses, rubbed his eyes in a puzzled way, and
looked again. Then Miss West, using another pair of glasses, cried out in
surprise and began to laugh.</p>
<p>“What do you make of it, Miss West?” the mate asked.</p>
<p>“He doesn’t seem to be in the water. He’s standing up.”</p>
<p>Mr. Pike nodded.</p>
<p>“He’s on the ladder,” he said. “I’d forgotten
that. It fooled me at first. I couldn’t understand it.” He turned
to the second mate. “Mr. Mellaire, will you launch the long boat and get
some kind of a crew into it while I back the main-yard? I’ll go in the
boat. Pick men that can pull an oar.”</p>
<p>“You go, too,” Miss West said to me. “It will be an
opportunity to get outside the <i>Elsinore</i> and see her under full
sail.”</p>
<p>Mr. Pike nodded consent, so I went along, sitting near him in the stern-sheets
where he steered, while half a dozen hands rowed us toward the suicide, who
stood so weirdly upon the surface of the sea. The Maltese Cockney pulled the
stroke oar, and among the other five men was one whose name I had but recently
learned—Ditman Olansen, a Norwegian. A good seaman, Mr. Mellaire had told
me, in whose watch he was; a good seaman, but “crank-eyed.” When
pressed for an explanation Mr. Mellaire had said that he was the sort of man
who flew into blind rages, and that one never could tell what little thing
would produce such a rage. As near as I could grasp it, Ditman Olansen was a
Berserker type. Yet, as I watched him pulling in good time at the oar, his
large, pale-blue eyes seemed almost bovine—the last man in the world, in
my judgment, to have a Berserker fit.</p>
<p>As we drew close to the Greek he began to scream menacingly at us and to
brandish a sheath-knife. His weight sank the ladder until the water washed his
knees, and on this submerged support he balanced himself with wild writhing and
outflinging of arms. His face, grimacing like a monkey’s, was not a
pretty thing to look upon. And as he continued to threaten us with the knife I
wondered how the problem of rescuing him would be solved.</p>
<p>But I should have trusted Mr. Pike for that. He removed the boat-stretcher from
under the Maltese Cockney’s feet and laid it close to hand in the
stern-sheets. Then he had the men reverse the boat and back it upon the Greek.
Dodging a sweep of the knife, Mr. Pike awaited his chance, until a passing wave
lifted the boat’s stern high, while Tony was sinking toward the trough.
This was the moment. Again I was favoured with a sample of the lightning speed
with which that aged man of sixty-nine could handle his body. Timed precisely,
and delivered in a flash and with weight, the boat-stretcher came down on the
Greek’s head. The knife fell into the sea, and the demented creature
collapsed and followed it, knocked unconscious. Mr. Pike scooped him out, quite
effortlessly it seemed to me, and flung him into the boat’s bottom at my
feet.</p>
<p>The next moment the men were bending to their oars and the mate was steering
back to the <i>Elsinore</i>. It was a stout rap Mr. Pike had administered with
the boat-stretcher. Thin streaks of blood oozed on the damp, plastered hair
from the broken scalp. I could but stare at the lump of unconscious flesh that
dripped sea-water at my feet. A man, all life and movement one moment, defying
the universe, reduced the next moment to immobility and the blackness and
blankness of death, is always a fascinating object for the contemplative eye of
the philosopher. And in this case it had been accomplished so simply, by means
of a stick of wood brought sharply in contact with his skull.</p>
<p>If Tony the Greek be accounted an <i>appearance</i>, what was he now?—a
<i>disappearance</i>? And if so, whither had he disappeared? And whence would
he journey back to reoccupy that body when what we call consciousness returned
to him? The first word, much less the last, of the phenomena of personality and
consciousness yet remains to be uttered by the psychologists.</p>
<p>Pondering thus, I chanced to lift my eyes, and the glorious spectacle of the
<i>Elsinore</i> burst upon me. I had been so long on board, and in board of
her, that I had forgotten she was a white-painted ship. So low to the water was
her hull, so delicate and slender, that the tall, sky-reaching spars and masts
and the hugeness of the spread of canvas seemed preposterous and impossible, an
insolent derision of the law of gravitation. It required effort to realize that
that slim curve of hull inclosed and bore up from the sea’s bottom five
thousand tons of coal. And again, it seemed a miracle that the mites of men had
conceived and constructed so stately and magnificent an element-defying
fabric—mites of men, most woefully like the Greek at my feet, prone to
precipitation into the blackness by means of a rap on the head with a piece of
wood.</p>
<p>Tony made a struggling noise in his throat, then coughed and groaned. From
somewhere he was reappearing. I noticed Mr. Pike look at him quickly, as if
apprehending some recrudescence of frenzy that would require more
boat-stretcher. But Tony merely fluttered his big black eyes open and stared at
me for a long minute of incurious amaze ere he closed them again.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do with him?” I asked the mate.</p>
<p>“Put ’m back to work,” was the reply. “It’s all
he’s good for, and he ain’t hurt. Somebody’s got to work this
ship around the Horn.”</p>
<p>When we hoisted the boat on board I found Miss West had gone below. In the
chart-room Captain West was winding the chronometers. Mr. Mellaire had turned
in to catch an hour or two of sleep ere his watch on deck at noon. Mr.
Mellaire, by the way, as I have forgotten to state, does not sleep aft. He
shares a room in the ’midship-house with Mr. Pike’s Nancy.</p>
<p>Nobody showed sympathy for the unfortunate Greek. He was bundled out upon
Number Two hatch like so much carrion and left there unattended, to recover
consciousness as he might elect. Yes, and so inured have I become that I make
free to admit I felt no sympathy for him myself. My eyes were still filled with
the beauty of the <i>Elsinore</i>. One does grow hard at sea.</p>
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