<h2><SPAN name="chap28"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2>
<p>“I think we are going to have a fine sunset,” Captain West remarked
last evening.</p>
<p>Miss West and I abandoned our rubber of cribbage and hastened on deck. The
sunset had not yet come, but all was preparing. As we gazed we could see the
sky gathering the materials, grouping the gray clouds in long lines and
towering masses, spreading its palette with slow-growing, glowing tints and
sudden blobs of colour.</p>
<p>“It’s the Golden Gate!” Miss West cried, indicating the west.
“See! We’re just inside the harbour. Look to the south there. If
that isn’t the sky-line of San Francisco! There’s the Call
Building, and there, far down, the Ferry Tower, and surely that is the
Fairmount.” Her eyes roved back through the opening between the cloud
masses, and she clapped her hands. “It’s a sunset within a sunset!
See! The Farallones!”—swimming in a miniature orange and red sunset
all their own. “Isn’t it the Golden Gate, and San Francisco, and
the Farallones?” She appealed to Mr. Pike, who, leaning near, on the
poop-rail, was divided between gazing sourly at Nancy pottering on the main
deck and sourly at Possum, who, on the bridge, crouched with terror each time
the crojack flapped emptily above him.</p>
<p>The mate turned his head and favoured the sky picture with a solemn stare.</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” he growled. “It may look like the
Farallones to you, but to me it looks like a battleship coming right in the
Gate with a bone in its teeth at a twenty-knot clip.”</p>
<p>Sure enough. The floating Farallones had metamorphosed into a giant warship.</p>
<p>Then came the colour riot, the dominant tone of which was green. It was green,
green, green—the blue-green of the springing year, and sere and yellow
green and tawny-brown green of autumn. There were orange green, gold green, and
a copper green. And all these greens were rich green beyond description; and
yet the richness and the greenness passed even as we gazed upon it, going out
of the gray clouds and into the sea, which assumed the exquisite golden pink of
polished copper, while the hollows of the smooth and silken ripples were
touched by a most ethereal pea green.</p>
<p>The gray clouds became a long, low swathe of ruby red, or garnet red—such
as one sees in a glass of heavy burgundy when held to the light. There was such
depth to this red! And, below it, separated from the main colour-mass by a line
of gray-white fog, or line of sea, was another and smaller streak of
ruddy-coloured wine.</p>
<p>I strolled across the poop to the port side.</p>
<p>“Oh! Come back! Look! Look!” Miss West cried to me.</p>
<p>“What’s the use?” I answered. “I’ve something
just as good over here.”</p>
<p>She joined me, and as she did so I noted, a sour grin on Mr. Pike’s face.</p>
<p>The eastern heavens were equally spectacular. That quarter of the sky was sheer
and delicate shell of blue, the upper portions of which faded, changed, through
every harmony, into a pale, yet warm, rose, all trembling, palpitating, with
misty blue tinting into pink. The reflection of this coloured sky-shell upon
the water made of the sea a glimmering watered silk, all changeable, blue,
Nile-green, and salmon-pink. It was silky, silken, a wonderful silk that
veneered and flossed the softly moving, wavy water.</p>
<p>And the pale moon looked like a wet pearl gleaming through the tinted mist of
the sky-shell.</p>
<p>In the southern quadrant of the sky we discovered an entirely different
sunset—what would be accounted a very excellent orange-and-red sunset
anywhere, with grey clouds hanging low and lighted and tinted on all their
under edges.</p>
<p>“Huh!” Mr. Pike muttered gruffly, while we were exclaiming over our
fresh discovery. “Look at the sunset I got here to the north. It
ain’t doing so badly now, I leave it to you.”</p>
<p>And it wasn’t. The northern quadrant was a great fen of colour and cloud,
that spread ribs of feathery pink, fleece-frilled, from the horizon to the
zenith. It was all amazing. Four sunsets at the one time in the sky! Each
quadrant glowed, and burned, and pulsed with a sunset distinctly its own.</p>
<p>And as the colours dulled in the slow twilight, the moon, still misty, wept
tears of brilliant, heavy silver into the dim lilac sea. And then came the hush
of darkness and the night, and we came to ourselves, out of reverie, sated with
beauty, leaning toward each other as we leaned upon the rail side by side.</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>I never grow tired of watching Captain West. In a way he bears a sort of
resemblance to several of Washington’s portraits. He is six feet of
aristocratic thinness, and has a very definite, leisurely and stately grace of
movement. His thinness is almost ascetic. In appearance and manner he is the
perfect old-type New England gentleman.</p>
<p>He has the same gray eyes as his daughter, although his are genial rather than
warm; and his eyes have the same trick of smiling. His skin is pinker than
hers, and his brows and lashes are fairer. But he seems removed beyond passion,
or even simple enthusiasm. Miss West is firm, like her father; but there is
warmth in her firmness. He is clean, he is sweet and courteous; but he is
coolly sweet, coolly courteous. With all his certain graciousness, in cabin or
on deck, so far as his social equals are concerned, his graciousness is cool,
elevated, thin.</p>
<p>He is the perfect master of the art of doing nothing. He never reads, except
the Bible; yet he is never bored. Often, I note him in a deck-chair, studying
his perfect finger-nails, and, I’ll swear, not seeing them at all. Miss
West says he loves the sea. And I ask myself a thousand times, “But
how?” He shows no interest in any phase of the sea. Although he called
our attention to the glorious sunset I have just described, he did not remain
on deck to enjoy it. He sat below, in the big leather chair, not reading, not
dozing, but merely gazing straight before him at nothing.</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>The days pass, and the seasons pass. We left Baltimore at the tail-end of
winter, went into spring and on through summer, and now we are in fall weather
and urging our way south to the winter of Cape Horn. And as we double the Cape
and proceed north, we shall go through spring and summer—a long
summer—pursuing the sun north through its declination and arriving at
Seattle in summer. And all these seasons have occurred, and will have occurred,
in the space of five months.</p>
<p>Our white ducks are gone, and, in south latitude thirty-five, we are wearing
the garments of a temperate clime. I notice that Wada has given me heavier
underclothes and heavier pyjamas, and that Possum, of nights, is no longer
content with the top of the bed but must crawl underneath the bed-clothes.</p>
<p class="center">
* * * * *</p>
<p>We are now off the Plate, a region notorious for storms, and Mr. Pike is on the
lookout for a pampero. Captain West does not seem to be on the lookout for
anything; yet I notice that he spends longer hours on deck when the sky and
barometer are threatening.</p>
<p>Yesterday we had a hint of Plate weather, and to-day an awesome fiasco of the
same. The hint came last evening between the twilight and the dark. There was
practically no wind, and the <i>Elsinore</i>, just maintaining steerage way by
means of intermittent fans of air from the north, floundered exasperatingly in
a huge glassy swell that rolled up as an echo from some blown-out storm to the
south.</p>
<p>Ahead of us, arising with the swiftness of magic, was a dense slate-blackness.
I suppose it was cloud-formation, but it bore no semblance to clouds. It was
merely and sheerly a blackness that towered higher and higher until it overhung
us, while it spread to right and left, blotting out half the sea.</p>
<p>And still the light puffs from the north filled our sails; and still, as the
<i>Elsinore</i> floundered on the huge, smooth swells and the sails emptied and
flapped a hollow thunder, we moved slowly towards that ominous blackness. In
the east, in what was quite distinctly an active thunder cloud, the lightning
fairly winked, while the blackness in front of us was rent with blobs and
flashes of lightning.</p>
<p>The last puffs left us, and in the hushes, between the rumbles of the nearing
thunder, the voices of the men aloft on the yards came to one’s ear as if
they were right beside one instead of being hundreds of feet away and up in the
air. That they were duly impressed by what was impending was patent from the
earnestness with which they worked. Both watches toiled under both mates, and
Captain West strolled the poop in his usual casual way, and gave no orders at
all, save in low conversational tones, when Mr. Pike came upon the poop and
conferred with him.</p>
<p>Miss West, having deserted the scene five minutes before, returned, a proper
sea-woman, clad in oil-skins, sou’wester, and long sea-boots. She ordered
me, quite peremptorily, to do the same. But I could not bring myself to leave
the deck for fear of missing something, so I compromised by having Wada bring
my storm-gear to me.</p>
<p>And then the wind came, smack out of the blackness, with the abruptness of
thunder and accompanied by the most diabolical thunder. And with the rain and
thunder came the blackness. It was tangible. It drove past us in the bellowing
wind like so much stuff that one could feel. Blackness as well as wind impacted
on us. There is no other way to describe it than by the old, ancient old, way
of saying one could not see his hand before his face.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it splendid!” Miss West shouted into my ear, close
beside me, as we clung to the railing of the break of the poop.</p>
<p>“Superb!” I shouted back, my lips to her ear, so that her hair
tickled my face.</p>
<p>And, I know not why—it must have been spontaneous with both of
us—in that shouting blackness of wind, as we clung to the rail to avoid
being blown away, our hands went out to each other and my hand and hers gripped
and pressed and then held mutually to the rail.</p>
<p>“Daughter of Herodias,” I commented grimly to myself; but my hand
did not leave hers.</p>
<p>“What is happening?” I shouted in her ear.</p>
<p>“We’ve lost way,” came her answer. “I think we’re
caught aback! The wheel’s up, but she could not steer!”</p>
<p>The Gabriel voice of the Samurai rang out. “Hard over?” was his
mellow storm-call to the man at the wheel. “Hard over, sir,” came
the helmsman’s reply, vague, cracked with strain, and smothered.</p>
<p>Came the lightning, before us, behind us, on every side, bathing us in flaming
minutes at a time. And all the while we were deafened by the unceasing uproar
of thunder. It was a weird sight—far aloft the black skeleton of spars
and masts from which the sails had been removed; lower down, the sailors
clinging like monstrous bugs as they passed the gaskets and furled; beneath
them the few set sails, filled backward against the masts, gleaming whitely,
wickedly, evilly, in the fearful illumination; and, at the bottom, the deck and
bridge and houses of the <i>Elsinore</i>, and a tangled riff-raff of flying
ropes, and clumps and bunches of swaying, pulling, hauling, human creatures.</p>
<p>It was a great moment, the master’s moment—caught all aback with
all our bulk and tonnage and infinitude of gear, and our heaven-aspiring masts
two hundred feet above our heads. And our master was there, in sheeting flame,
slender, casual, imperturbable, with two men—one of them a
murderer—under him to pass on and enforce his will, and with a horde of
inefficients and weaklings to obey that will, and pull, and haul, and by the
sheer leverages of physics manipulate our floating world so that it would
endure this fury of the elements.</p>
<p>What happened next, what was done, I do not know, save that now and again I
heard the Gabriel voice; for the darkness came, and the rain in pouring,
horizontal sheets. It filled my mouth and strangled my lungs as if I had fallen
overboard. It seemed to drive up as well as down, piercing its way under my
sou’wester, through my oilskins, down my tight-buttoned collar, and into
my sea-boots. I was dizzied, obfuscated, by all this onslaught of thunder,
lightning, wind, blackness, and water. And yet the master, near to me, there on
the poop, lived and moved serenely in all, voicing his wisdom and will to the
wisps of creatures who obeyed and by their brute, puny strength pulled braces,
slacked sheets, dragged courses, swung yards and lowered them, hauled on
buntlines and clewlines, smoothed and gasketed the huge spreads of canvas.</p>
<p>How it happened I know not, but Miss West and I crouched together, clinging to
the rail and to each other in the shelter of the thrumming weather-cloth. My
arm was about her and fast to the railing; her shoulder pressed close against
me, and by one hand she held tightly to the lapel of my oilskin.</p>
<p>An hour later we made our way across the poop to the chart-house, helping each
other to maintain footing as the <i>Elsinore</i> plunged and bucked in the
rising sea and was pressed over and down by the weight of wind on her few
remaining set sails. The wind, which had lulled after the rain, had risen in
recurrent gusts to storm violence. But all was well with the gallant ship. The
crisis was past, and the ship lived, and we lived, and with streaming faces and
bright eyes we looked at each other and laughed in the bright light of the
chart-room.</p>
<p>“Who can blame one for loving the sea?” Miss West cried out
exultantly, as she wrung the rain from her ropes of hair which had gone adrift
in the turmoil. “And the men of the sea!” she cried. “The
masters of the sea! You saw my father . . . ”</p>
<p>“He is a king,” I said.</p>
<p>“He is a king,” she repeated after me.</p>
<p>And the <i>Elsinore</i> lifted on a cresting sea and flung down on her side, so
that we were thrown together and brought up breathless against the wall.</p>
<p>I said good-night to her at the foot of the stairs, and as I passed the open
door to the cabin I glanced in. There sat Captain West, whom I had thought
still on deck. His storm-trappings were removed, his sea-boots replaced by
slippers; and he leaned back in the big leather chair, eyes wide open,
beholding visions in the curling smoke of a cigar against a background of
wildly reeling cabin wall.</p>
<p>It was at eleven this morning that the Plate gave us a fiasco. Last
night’s was a real pampero—though a mild one. To-day’s
promised to be a far worse one, and then laughed at us as a proper cosmic joke.
The wind, during the night, had so eased that by nine in the morning we had all
our topgallant-sails set. By ten we were rolling in a dead calm. By eleven the
stuff began making up ominously in the south’ard.</p>
<p>The overcast sky closed down. Our lofty trucks seemed to scrape the
cloud-zenith. The horizon drew in on us till it seemed scarcely half a mile
away. The <i>Elsinore</i> was embayed in a tiny universe of mist and sea. The
lightning played. Sky and horizon drew so close that the <i>Elsinore</i> seemed
on the verge of being absorbed, sucked in by it, sucked up by it.</p>
<p>Then from zenith to horizon the sky was cracked with forked lightning, and the
wet atmosphere turned to a horrid green. The rain, beginning gently, in dead
calm, grew into a deluge of enormous streaming drops. It grew darker and
darker, a green darkness, and in the cabin, although it was midday, Wada and
the steward lighted lamps. The lightning came closer and closer, until the ship
was enveloped in it. The green darkness was continually a-tremble with flame,
through which broke greater illuminations of forked lightning. These became
more violent as the rain lessened, and, so absolutely were we centred in this
electrical maelstrom, there was no connecting any chain or flash or fork of
lightning with any particular thunder-clap. The atmosphere all about us paled
and flamed. Such a crashing and smashing! We looked every moment for the
<i>Elsinore</i> to be struck. And never had I seen such colours in lightning.
Although from moment to moment we were dazzled by the greater bolts, there
persisted always a tremulous, pulsing lesser play of light, sometimes softly
blue, at other times a thin purple that quivered on into a thousand shades of
lavender.</p>
<p>And there was no wind. No wind came. Nothing happened. The <i>Elsinore</i>,
naked-sparred, under only lower-topsails, with spanker and crojack furled, was
prepared for anything. Her lower-topsails hung in limp emptiness from the
yards, heavy with rain and flapping soggily when she rolled. The cloud mass
thinned, the day brightened, the green blackness passed into gray twilight, the
lightning eased, the thunder moved along away from us, and there was no wind.
In half an hour the sun was shining, the thunder muttered intermittently along
the horizon, and the <i>Elsinore</i> still rolled in a hush of air.</p>
<p>“You can’t tell, sir,” Mr. Pike growled to me. “Thirty
years ago I was dismasted right here off the Plate in a clap of wind that come
on just as that come on.”</p>
<p>It was the changing of the watches, and Mr. Mellaire, who had come on the poop
to relieve the mate, stood beside me.</p>
<p>“One of the nastiest pieces of water in the world,” he concurred.
“Eighteen years ago the Plate gave it to me—lost half our sticks,
twenty hours on our beam-ends, cargo shifted, and foundered. I was two days in
the boat before an English tramp picked us up. And none of the other boats ever
was picked up.”</p>
<p>“The <i>Elsinore</i> behaved very well last night,” I put in
cheerily.</p>
<p>“Oh, hell, that wasn’t nothing,” Mr. Pike grumbled.
“Wait till you see a real pampero. It’s a dirty stretch hereabouts,
and I, for one, ’ll be glad when we get across It. I’d sooner have
a dozen Cape Horn snorters than one of these. How about you, Mr.
Mellaire?”</p>
<p>“Same here, sir,” he answered. “Those sou’-westers are
honest. You know what to expect. But here you never know. The best of
ship-masters can get tripped up off the Plate.”</p>
<p class="poem">
“‘As I’ve found out . . .<br/>
Beyond a doubt,”</p>
<p>Mr. Pike hummed from Newcomb’s <i>Celeste</i>, as he went down the
ladder.</p>
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