<h2><SPAN name="chap20"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<p>Heavens!—how I read in this fine weather. I take so little exercise that
my sleep need is very small; and there are so few interruptions, such as life
teems with on the land, that I read myself almost stupid. Recommend me a
sea-voyage any time for a man who is behind in his reading. I am making up
years of it. It is an orgy, a debauch; and I am sure the addled sailors adjudge
me the queerest creature on board.</p>
<p>At times, so fuzzy do I get from so much reading, that I am glad for any
diversion. When we strike the doldrums, which lie between the north-east and
the south-east trades, I shall have Wada assemble my little twenty-two
automatic rifle and try to learn how to shoot. I used to shoot, when I was a
wee lad. I can remember dragging a shot-gun around with me over the hills.
Also, I possessed an air-rifle, with which, on great occasion, I was even able
to slaughter a robin.</p>
<p>While the poop is quite large for promenading, the available space for
deck-chairs is limited to the awnings that stretch across from either side of
the chart-house and that are of the width of the chart-house. This space again
is restricted to one side or the other according to the slant of the morning
and afternoon sun and the freshness of the breeze. Wherefore, Miss West’s
chair and mine are most frequently side by side. Captain West has a chair,
which he infrequently occupies. He has so little to do in the working of the
ship, taking his regular observations and working them up with such celerity,
that he is rarely in the chart-room for any length of time. He elects to spend
his hours in the main cabin, not reading, not doing anything save dream with
eyes wide open in the draught of wind that pours through the open ports and
door from out the huge crojack and the jigger staysails.</p>
<p>Miss West is never idle. Below, in the big after-room, she does her own
laundering. Nor will she let the steward touch her father’s fine linen.
In the main cabin she has installed a sewing-machine. All hand-stitching, and
embroidering, and fancy work she does in the deck-chair beside me. She avers
that she loves the sea and the atmosphere of sea-life, yet, verily, she has
brought her home-things and land-things along with her—even to her pretty
china for afternoon tea.</p>
<p>Most essentially is she the woman and home-maker. She is a born cook. The
steward and Louis prepare dishes extraordinary and <i>de luxe</i> for the cabin
table; yet Miss West is able at a moment’s notice to improve on these
dishes. She never lets any of their dishes come on the table without first
planning them or passing on them. She has quick judgment, an unerring taste,
and is possessed of the needful steel of decision. It seems she has only to
look at a dish, no matter who has cooked it, and immediately divine its lack or
its surplusage, and prescribe a treatment that transforms it into something
indescribably different and delicious—My, how I do eat! I am quite
dumbfounded by the unfailing voracity of my appetite. Already am I quite
convinced that I am glad Miss West is making the voyage.</p>
<p>She has sailed “out East,” as she quaintly calls it, and has an
enormous repertoire of tasty, spicy, Eastern dishes. In the cooking of rice
Louis is a master; but in the making of the accompanying curry he fades into a
blundering amateur compared with Miss West. In the matter of curry she is a
sheer genius. How often one’s thoughts dwell upon food when at sea!</p>
<p>So in this trade-wind weather I see a great deal of Miss West. I read all the
time, and quite a good part of the time I read aloud to her passages, and even
books, with which I am interested in trying her out. Then, too, such reading
gives rise to discussions, and she has not yet uttered anything that would lead
me to change my first judgment of her. She is a genuine daughter of Herodias.</p>
<p>And yet she is not what one would call a cute girl. She isn’t a girl, she
is a mature woman with all the freshness of a girl. She has the carriage, the
attitude of mind, the aplomb of a woman, and yet she cannot be described as
being in the slightest degree stately. She is generous, dependable,
sensible—yes, and sensitive; and her superabundant vitality, the vitality
that makes her walk so gloriously, discounts the maturity of her. Sometimes she
seems all of thirty to me; at other times, when her spirits and risibilities
are aroused, she scarcely seems thirteen. I shall make a point of asking
Captain West the date of the <i>Dixie’s</i> collision with that river
steamer in San Francisco Bay. In a word, she is the most normal, the most
healthy, natural woman I have ever known.</p>
<p>Yes, and she is feminine, despite, no matter how she does her hair, that it is
as invariably smooth and well-groomed as all the rest of her. On the other
hand, this perpetual well-groomedness is relieved by the latitude of dress she
allows herself. She never fails of being a woman. Her sex, and the lure of it,
is ever present. Possibly she may possess high collars, but I have never seen
her in one on board. Her blouses are always open at the throat, disclosing one
of her choicest assets, the muscular, adequate neck, with its fine-textured
garmenture of skin. I embarrass myself by stealing long glances at that bare
throat of hers and at the hint of fine, firm-surfaced shoulder.</p>
<p>Visiting the chickens has developed into a regular function. At least once each
day we make the journey for’ard along the bridge to the top of the
’midship-house. Possum, who is now convalescent, accompanies us. The
steward makes a point of being there so as to receive instructions and report
the egg-output and laying conduct of the many hens. At the present time our
four dozen hens are laying two dozen eggs a day, with which record Miss West is
greatly elated.</p>
<p>Already she has given names to most of them. The cock is Peter, of course. A
much-speckled hen is Dolly Varden. A slim, trim thing that dogs Peter’s
heels she calls Cleopatra. Another hen—the mellowest-voiced one of
all—she addresses as Bernhardt. One thing I have noted: whenever she and
the steward have passed death sentence on a non-laying hen (which occurs
regularly once a week), she takes no part in the eating of the meat, not even
when it is metamorphosed into one of her delectable curries. At such times she
has a special curry made for herself of tinned lobster, or shrimp, or tinned
chicken.</p>
<p>Ah, I must not forget. I have learned that it was no man-interest (in me, if
you please) that brought about her sudden interest to come on the voyage. It
was for her father that she came. Something is the matter with Captain West. At
rare moments I have observed her gazing at him with a world of solicitude and
anxiety in her eyes.</p>
<p>I was telling an amusing story at table yesterday midday, when my glance
chanced to rest upon Miss West. She was not listening. Her food on her fork was
suspended in the air a sheer instant as she looked at her father with all her
eyes. It was a stare of fear. She realized that I was observing, and with
superb control, slowly, quite naturally, she lowered the fork and rested it on
her plate, retaining her hold on it and retaining her father’s face in
her look.</p>
<p>But I had seen. Yes; I had seen more than that. I had seen Captain West’s
face a transparent white, while his eyelids fluttered down and his lips moved
noiselessly. Then the eyelids raised, the lips set again with their habitual
discipline, and the colour slowly returned to his face. It was as if he had
been away for a time and just returned. But I had seen, and guessed her secret.</p>
<p>And yet it was this same Captain West, seven hours later, who chastened the
proud sailor spirit of Mr. Pike. It was in the second dog-watch that evening, a
dark night, and the watch was pulling away on the main deck. I had just come
out of the chart-house door and seen Captain West pace by me, hands in pockets,
toward the break of the poop. Abruptly, from the mizzen-mast, came a snap of
breakage and crash of fabric. At the same instant the men fell backward and
sprawled over the deck.</p>
<p>A moment of silence followed, and then Captain West’s voice went out:</p>
<p>“What carried away, Mr. Pike?”</p>
<p>“The halyards, sir,” came the reply out of the darkness.</p>
<p>There was a pause. Again Captain West’s voice went out.</p>
<p>“Next time slack away on your sheet first.”</p>
<p>Now Mr. Pike is incontestably a splendid seaman. Yet in this instance he had
been wrong. I have come to know him, and I can well imagine the hurt to his
pride. And more—he has a wicked, resentful, primitive nature, and though
he answered respectfully enough, “Yes, sir,” I felt safe in
predicting to myself that the poor devils under him would receive the weight of
his resentment in the later watches of the night.</p>
<p>They evidently did; for this morning I noted a black eye on John Hackey, a San
Francisco hoodlum, and Guido Bombini was carrying a freshly and outrageously
swollen jaw. I asked Wada about the matter, and he soon brought me the news.
Quite a bit of beating up takes place for’ard of the deck-houses in the
night watches while we of the after-guard peacefully slumber.</p>
<p>Even to-day Mr. Pike is going around sullen and morose, snarling at the men
more than usual, and barely polite to Miss West and me when we chance to
address him. His replies are grunted in monosyllables, and his face is set in
superlative sourness. Miss West who is unaware of the occurrence, laughs and
calls it a “sea grouch”—a phenomenon with which she claims
large experience.</p>
<p>But I know Mr. Pike now—the stubborn, wonderful old sea-dog. It will be
three days before he is himself again. He takes a terrible pride in his
seamanship, and what hurts him most is the knowledge that he was guilty of the
blunder.</p>
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