CHAPTER IX
Whatever his
private sorrows may be, a multimillionaire, like any other workingman, should
keep abreast of his business. Harvey Cheyne, senior, had gone East late in June
to meet a woman broken down, half mad, who dreamed day and night of her son
drowning in the gray seas. He had surrounded her with doctors, trained nurses,
massage-women, and even faith-cure companions, but they were useless. Mrs.
Cheyne lay still and moaned, or talked of her boy by the hour together to any
one who would listen. Hope she had none, and who could offer it? All she needed
was assurance that drowning did not hurt; and her husband watched to guard lest
she should make the experiment. Of his own sorrow he spoke little—hardly
realized the depth of it till he caught himself asking the calendar on his
writing-desk, "What's the use of going on?"
There had always
lain a pleasant notion at the back of his head that, some day, when he had
rounded off everything and the boy had left college, he would take his son to
his heart and lead him into his possessions. Then that boy, he argued, as busy
fathers do, would instantly become his companion, partner, and ally, and there
would follow splendid years of great works carried out together—the old head
backing the young fire. Now his boy was dead—lost at sea, as it might have been
a Swede sailor from one of Cheyne's big teaships; the wife dying, or worse; he
himself was trodden down by platoons of women and doctors and maids and
attendants; worried almost beyond endurance by the shift and change of her poor
restless whims; hopeless, with no heart to meet his many enemies.
He had taken the
wife to his raw new palace in San Diego, where she and her people occupied a
wing of great price, and Cheyne, in a veranda-room, between a secretary and a
typewriter, who was also a telegraphist, toiled along wearily from day to day.
There was a war of rates among four Western railroads in which he was supposed
to be interested; a devastating strike had developed in his lumber camps in
Oregon, and the legislature of the State of California, which has no love for
its makers, was preparing open war against him.
Ordinarily he
would have accepted battle ere it was offered, and have waged a pleasant and
unscrupulous campaign. But now he sat limply, his soft black hat pushed forward
on to his nose, his big body shrunk inside his loose clothes, staring at his
boots or the Chinese junks in the bay, and assenting absently to the
secretary's questions as he opened the Saturday mail.
Cheyne was
wondering how much it would cost to drop everything and pull out. He carried
huge insurances, could buy himself royal annuities, and between one of his
places in Colorado and a little society (that would do the wife good), say in
Washington and the South Carolina islands, a man might forget plans that had
come to nothing. On the other hand—
The click of the
typewriter stopped; the girl was looking at the secretary, who had turned
white.
He passed Cheyne
a telegram repeated from San Francisco:
Picked up by
fishing schooner We're Here having fallen off boat great times on Banks fishing
all well waiting Gloucester Mass care Disko Troop for money or orders wire what
shall do and how is Mama Harvey N. Cheyne.
The father let it fall, laid his head down on the
roller-top of the shut desk, and breathed heavily. The secretary ran for Mrs.
Cheyne's doctor who found Cheyne pacing to and fro.
"What—what
d' you think of it? Is it possible? Is there any meaning to it? I can't quite
make it out," he cried.
"I
can," said the doctor. "I lose seven thousand a year—that's
all." He thought of the struggling New York practice he had dropped at
Cheyne's imperious bidding, and returned the telegram with a sigh.
"You mean
you'd tell her? 'May be a fraud?"
"What's the
motive?" said the doctor, coolly. "Detection's too certain. It's the
boy sure enough."
Enter a French
maid, impudently, as an indispensable one who is kept on only by large wages.
"Mrs. Cheyne
she say you must come at once. She think you are seek."
The master of
thirty millions bowed his head meekly and followed Suzanne; and a thin, high
voice on the upper landing of the great white-wood square staircase cried:
"What is it? What has happened?"
No doors could
keep out the shriek that rang through the echoing house a moment later, when
her husband blurted out the news.
"And that's
all right," said the doctor, serenely, to the typewriter. "About the
only medical statement in novels with any truth to it is that joy don't kill,
Miss Kinzey."
"I know it;
but we've a heap to do first." Miss Kinzey was from Milwaukee, somewhat
direct of speech; and as her fancy leaned towards the secretary, she divined
there was work in hand. He was looking earnestly at the vast roller-map of America
on the wall.
"Milsom,
we're going right across. Private car—straight through—Boston. Fix the
connections," shouted Cheyne down the staircase.
"I thought
so."
The secretary
turned to the typewriter, and their eyes met (out of that was born a story—nothing
to do with this story). She looked inquiringly, doubtful of his resources. He
signed to her to move to the Morse as a general brings brigades into action.
Then he swept his hand musician-wise through his hair, regarded the ceiling,
and set to work, while Miss Kinzey's white fingers called up the Continent of
America.
"K. H. Wade,
Los Angeles— The 'Constance' is at Los Angeles, isn't she, Miss Kinzey?"
"Yep."
Miss Kinzey nodded between clicks as the secretary looked at his watch.
"Ready? Send
'Constance,' private car, here, and arrange for special to leave here Sunday in
time to connect with New York Limited at Sixteenth Street, Chicago, Tuesday
next."
Click-click-click!
"Couldn't you better that?"
"Not on
those grades. That gives 'em sixty hours from here to Chicago. They won't gain
anything by taking a special east of that. Ready? Also arrange with Lake Shore
and Michigan Southern to take 'Constance' on New York Central and Hudson River
Buffalo to Albany, and B. and A. the same Albany to Boston. Indispensable I
should reach Boston Wednesday evening. Be sure nothing prevents. Have also
wired Canniff, Toucey, and Barnes.—Sign, Cheyne."
Miss Kinzey
nodded, and the secretary went on.
"Now then.
Canniff, Toucey, and Barnes, of course. Ready? Canniff, Chicago. Please take my
private car 'Constance' from Santa Fe at Sixteenth Street next Tuesday p. m. on
N. Y. Limited through to Buffalo and deliver N. Y. C. for Albany.—Ever bin to
N' York, Miss Kinzey? We'll go some day.—Ready? Take car Buffalo to Albany on
Limited Tuesday p. m. That's for Toucey."
"Haven't bin
to Noo York, but I know that!" with a toss of the head.
"Beg pardon.
Now, Boston and Albany, Barnes, same instructions from Albany through to
Boston. Leave three-five P. M. (you needn't wire that); arrive nine-five P. M.
Wednesday. That covers everything Wade will do, but it pays to shake up the
managers."
"It's
great," said Miss Kinzey, with a look of admiration. This was the kind of
man she understood and appreciated.
"'Tisn't
bad," said Milsom, modestly. "Now, any one but me would have lost
thirty hours and spent a week working out the run, instead of handing him over
to the Santa Fe straight through to Chicago."
"But see
here, about that Noo York Limited. Chauncey Depew himself couldn't hitch his
car to her," Miss Kinzey suggested, recovering herself.
"Yes, but
this isn't Chauncey. It's Cheyne—lightning. It goes."
"Even so.
Guess we'd better wire the boy. You've forgotten that, anyhow."
"I'll
ask."
When he returned
with the father's message bidding Harvey meet them in Boston at an appointed
hour, he found Miss Kinzey laughing over the keys. Then Milsom laughed too, for
the frantic clicks from Los Angeles ran: "We want to know why-why-why?
General uneasiness developed and spreading."
Ten minutes later
Chicago appealed to Miss Kinzey in these words: "If crime of century is
maturing please warn friends in time. We are all getting to cover here."
This was capped
by a message from Topeka (and wherein Topeka was concerned even Milsom could not
guess): "Don't shoot, Colonel. We'll come down."
Cheyne smiled
grimly at the consternation of his enemies when the telegrams were laid before
him. "They think we're on the warpath. Tell 'em we don't feel like
fighting just now, Milsom. Tell 'em what we're going for. I guess you and Miss
Kinsey had better come along, though it isn't likely I shall do any business on
the road. Tell 'em the truth—for once."
So the truth was
told. Miss Kinzey clicked in the sentiment while the secretary added the
memorable quotation, "Let us have peace," and in board rooms two
thousand miles away the representatives of sixty-three million dollars' worth
of variously manipulated railroad interests breathed more freely. Cheyne was
flying to meet the only son, so miraculously restored to him. The bear was
seeking his cub, not the bulls. Hard men who had their knives drawn to fight
for their financial lives put away the weapons and wished him God-speed, while
half a dozen panic-smitten tin-pot toads perked up their heads and spoke of the
wonderful things they would have done had not Cheyne buried the hatchet.
It was a busy
week-end among the wires; for now that their anxiety was removed, men and
cities hastened to accommodate. Los Angeles called to San Diego and Barstow
that the Southern California engineers might know and be ready in their lonely
roundhouses; Barstow passed the word to the Atlantic and Pacific; and
Albuquerque flung it the whole length of the Atchinson, Topeka, and Santa Fe
management, even into Chicago. An engine, combination-car with crew, and the
great and gilded "Constance" private car were to be
"expedited" over those two thousand three hundred and fifty miles.
The train would take precedence of one hundred and seventy-seven others meeting
and passing; despatchers and crews of every one of those said trains must be
notified. Sixteen locomotives, sixteen engineers, and sixteen firemen would be
needed—each and every one the best available. Two and one half minutes would be
allowed for changing engines, three for watering, and two for coaling.
"Warn the men, and arrange tanks and chutes accordingly; for Harvey Cheyne
is in a hurry, a hurry, a hurry," sang the wires. "Forty miles an
hour will be expected, and division superintendents will accompany this special
over their respective divisions. From San Diego to Sixteenth Street, Chicago,
let the magic carpet be laid down. Hurry! Oh, hurry!"
"It will be
hot," said Cheyne, as they rolled out of San Diego in the dawn of Sunday.
"We're going to hurry, Mama, just as fast as ever we can; but I really
don't think there's any good of your putting on your bonnet and gloves yet.
You'd much better lie down and take your medicine. I'd play you a game of
dominoes, but it's Sunday."
"I'll be
good. Oh, I will be good. Only—taking off my bonnet makes me feel as if we'd
never get there."
"Try to
sleep a little, Mama, and we'll be in Chicago before you know."
"But it's
Boston, Father. Tell them to hurry."
The six-foot
drivers were hammering their way to San Bernardino and the Mohave wastes, but
this was no grade for speed. That would come later. The heat of the desert
followed the heat of the hills as they turned east to the Needles and the
Colorado River. The car cracked in the utter drouth and glare, and they put
crushed ice to Mrs. Cheyne's neck, and toiled up the long, long grades, past
Ash Fork, towards Flagstaff, where the forests and quarries are, under the dry,
remote skies. The needle of the speed-indicator flicked and wagged to and fro;
the cinders rattled on the roof, and a whirl of dust sucked after the whirling
wheels. The crew of the combination sat on their bunks, panting in their
shirtsleeves, and Cheyne found himself among them shouting old, old stories of
the railroad that every trainman knows, above the roar of the car. He told them
about his son, and how the sea had given up its dead, and they nodded and spat
and rejoiced with him; asked after "her, back there," and whether she
could stand it if the engineer "let her out a piece," and Cheyne thought
she could. Accordingly, the great fire-horse was "let 'ut" from
Flagstaff to Winslow, till a division superintendent protested.
But Mrs. Cheyne,
in the boudoir stateroom, where the French maid, sallow-white with fear, clung
to the silver door-handle, only moaned a little and begged her husband to bid
them "hurry." And so they dropped the dry sands and moon-struck rocks
of Arizona behind them, and grilled on till the crash of the couplings and the
wheeze of the brake-hose told them they were at Coolidge by the Continental
Divide.
Three bold and
experienced men—cool, confident, and dry when they began; white, quivering, and
wet when they finished their trick at those terrible wheels—swung her over the
great lift from Albuquerque to Glorietta and beyond Springer, up and up to the
Raton Tunnel on the State line, whence they dropped rocking into La Junta, had
sight of the Arkansaw, and tore down the long slope to Dodge City, where Cheyne
took comfort once again from setting his watch an hour ahead.
There was very
little talk in the car. The secretary and typewriter sat together on the
stamped Spanish-leather cushions by the plate-glass observation-window at the
rear end, watching the surge and ripple of the ties crowded back behind them,
and, it is believed, making notes of the scenery. Cheyne moved nervously
between his own extravagant gorgeousness and the naked necessity of the
combination, an unlit cigar in his teeth, till the pitying crews forgot that he
was their tribal enemy, and did their best to entertain him.
At night the
bunched electrics lit up that distressful palace of all the luxuries, and they
fared sumptuously, swinging on through the emptiness of abject desolation.
Now they heard
the swish of a water-tank, and the guttural voice of a Chinaman, the
click-clink of hammers that tested the Krupp steel wheels, and the oath of a
tramp chased off the rear-platform; now the solid crash of coal shot into the
tender; and now a beating back of noises as they flew past a waiting train. Now
they looked out into great abysses, a trestle purring beneath their tread, or
up to rocks that barred out half the stars. Now scour and ravine changed and
rolled back to jagged mountains on the horizon's edge, and now broke into hills
lower and lower, till at last came the true plains.
At Dodge City an
unknown hand threw in a copy of a Kansas paper containing some sort of an
interview with Harvey, who had evidently fallen in with an enterprising
reporter, telegraphed on from Boston. The joyful journalese revealed that it
was beyond question their boy, and it soothed Mrs. Cheyne for a while. Her one
word "hurry" was conveyed by the crews to the engineers at Nickerson,
Topeka, and Marceline, where the grades are easy, and they brushed the
Continent behind them. Towns and villages were close together now, and a man
could feel here that he moved among people.
"I can't see
the dial, and my eyes ache so. What are we doing?"
"The very
best we can, Mama. There's no sense in getting in before the Limited. We'd only
have to wait."
"I don't
care. I want to feel we're moving. Sit down and tell me the miles."
Cheyne sat down
and read the dial for her (there were some miles which stand for records to
this day), but the seventy-foot car never changed its long steamer-like roll,
moving through the heat with the hum of a giant bee. Yet the speed was not
enough for Mrs. Cheyne; and the heat, the remorseless August heat, was making
her giddy; the clock-hands would not move, and when, oh, when would they be in
Chicago?
It is not true
that, as they changed engines at Fort Madison, Cheyne passed over to the
Amalgamated Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers an endowment sufficient to
enable them to fight him and his fellows on equal terms for evermore. He paid
his obligations to engineers and firemen as he believed they deserved, and only
his bank knows what he gave the crews who had sympathized with him. It is on
record that the last crew took entire charge of switching operations at
Sixteenth Street, because "she" was in a doze at last, and Heaven was
to help any one who bumped her.
Now the highly
paid specialist who conveys the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern Limited from
Chicago to Elkhart is something of an autocrat, and he does not approve of
being told how to back up to a car. None the less he handled the "Constance"
as if she might have been a load of dynamite, and when the crew rebuked him,
they did it in whispers and dumb show.
"Pshaw!"
said the Atchinson, Topeka, and Santa Fe men, discussing life later, "we
weren't runnin' for a record. Harvey Cheyne's wife, she were sick back, an' we
didn't want to jounce her. 'Come to think of it, our runnin' time from San
Diego to Chicago was 57.54. You can tell that to them Eastern way-trains. When
we're tryin' for a record, we'll let you know."
To the Western
man (though this would not please either city) Chicago and Boston are cheek by
jowl, and some railroads encourage the delusion. The Limited whirled the
"Constance" into Buffalo and the arms of the New York Central and
Hudson River (illustrious magnates with white whiskers and gold charms on their
watch-chains boarded her here to talk a little business to Cheyne), who slid
her gracefully into Albany, where the Boston and Albany completed the run from
tide-water to tide-water—total time, eighty-seven hours and thirty-five
minutes, or three days, fifteen hours and one half. Harvey was waiting for
them.
After violent
emotion most people and all boys demand food. They feasted the returned
prodigal behind drawn curtains, cut off in their great happiness, while the trains
roared in and out around them. Harvey ate, drank, and enlarged on his
adventures all in one breath, and when he had a hand free his mother fondled
it. His voice was thickened with living in the open, salt air; his palms were
rough and hard, his wrists dotted with marks of gurrysores; and a fine full
flavour of codfish hung round rubber boots and blue jersey.
The father, well
used to judging men, looked at him keenly. He did not know what enduring harm
the boy might have taken. Indeed, he caught himself thinking that he knew very
little whatever of his son; but he distinctly remembered an unsatisfied,
dough-faced youth who took delight in "calling down the old man," and
reducing his mother to tears—such a person as adds to the gaiety of public
rooms and hotel piazzas, where the ingenuous young of the wealthy play with or
revile the bell-boys. But this well set-up fisher-youth did not wriggle, looked
at him with eyes steady, clear, and unflinching, and spoke in a tone
distinctly, even startlingly, respectful. There was that in his voice, too,
which seemed to promise that the change might be permanent, and that the new
Harvey had come to stay.
"Some one's
been coercing him," thought Cheyne. "Now Constance would never have
allowed that. Don't see as Europe could have done it any better."
"But why
didn't you tell this man, Troop, who you were?" the mother repeated, when
Harvey had expanded his story at least twice.
"Disko
Troop, dear. The best man that ever walked a deck. I don't care who the next
is."
"Why didn't
you tell him to put you ashore? You know Papa would have made it up to him ten
times over."
"I know it;
but he thought I was crazy. I'm afraid I called him a thief because I couldn't
find the bills in my pocket."
"A sailor
found them by the flagstaff that—that night," sobbed Mrs. Cheyne.
"That
explains it, then. I don't blame Troop any. I just said I wouldn't work—on a
Banker, too—and of course he hit me on the nose, and oh! I bled like a stuck
hog."
"My poor
darling! They must have abused you horribly."
"Dunno
quite. Well, after that, I saw a light."
Cheyne slapped
his leg and chuckled. This was going to be a boy after his own hungry heart. He
had never seen precisely that twinkle in Harvey's eye before.
"And the old
man gave me ten and a half a month; he's paid me half now; and I took hold with
Dan and pitched right in. I can't do a man's work yet. But I can handle a dory
'most as well as Dan, and I don't get rattled in a fog—much; and I can take my
trick in light winds—that's steering, dear—and I can 'most bait up a trawl, and
I know my ropes, of course; and I can pitch fish till the cows come home, and
I'm great on old Josephus, and I'll show you how I can clear coffee with a
piece of fish-skin, and—I think I'll have another cup, please. Say, you've no
notion what a heap of work there is in ten and a half a month!"
"I began
with eight and a half, my son," said Cheyne.
"That so?
You never told me, sir."
"You never
asked, Harve. I'll tell you about it some day, if you care to listen. Try a stuffed
olive."
"Troop says the most interesting thing in the
world is to find out how the next man gets his vittles. It's great to have a
trimmed-up meal again. We were well fed, though. But mug on the Banks. Disko
fed us first-class. He's a great man. And Dan—that's his son—Dan's my partner.
And there's Uncle Salters and his manures, an' he reads Josephus. He's sure I'm
crazy yet. And there's poor little Penn, and he is crazy. You mustn't talk to
him about Johnstown, because—
"And, oh,
you must know Tom Platt and Long Jack and Manuel. Manuel saved my life. I'm
sorry he's a Portuguee. He can't talk much, but he's an everlasting musician.
He found me struck adrift and drifting, and hauled me in."
"I wonder
your nervous system isn't completely wrecked," said Mrs. Cheyne.
"What for,
Mama? I worked like a horse and I ate like a hog and I slept like a dead
man."
That was too much
for Mrs. Cheyne, who began to think of her visions of a corpse rocking on the
salty seas. She went to her stateroom, and Harvey curled up beside his father,
explaining his indebtedness.
"You can
depend upon me to do everything I can for the crowd, Harve. They seem to be
good men on your showing."
"Best in the
Fleet, sir. Ask at Gloucester," said Harvey. "But Disko believes
still he's cured me of being crazy. Dan's the only one I've let on to about
you, and our private cars and all the rest of it, and I'm not quite sure Dan
believes. I want to paralyze 'em to-morrow. Say, can't they run the 'Constance'
over to Gloucester? Mama don't look fit to be moved, anyway, and we're bound to
finish cleaning out by tomorrow. Wouverman takes our fish. You see, we're the
first off the Banks this season, and it's four twenty-five a quintal. We held
out till he paid it. They want it quick."
"You mean
you'll have to work to-morrow, then?"
"I told
Troop I would. I'm on the scales. I've brought the tallies with me." He
looked at the greasy notebook with an air of importance that made his father
choke. "There isn't but three—no—two ninety-four or five quintal more by
my reckoning."
"Hire a
substitute," suggested Cheyne, to see what Harvey would say.
"Can't, sir.
I'm tally-man for the schooner. Troop says I've a better head for figures than
Dan. Troop's a mighty just man."
"Well,
suppose I don't move the 'Constance' to-night, how'll you fix it?"
Harvey looked at
the clock, which marked twenty past eleven.
"Then I'll
sleep here till three and catch the four o'clock freight. They let us men from
the Fleet ride free as a rule."
"That's a
notion. But I think we can get the 'Constance' around about as soon as your
men's freight. Better go to bed now."
Harvey spread
himself on the sofa, kicked off his boots, and was asleep before his father
could shade the electrics. Cheyne sat watching the young face under the shadow
of the arm thrown over the forehead, and among many things that occurred to him
was the notion that he might perhaps have been neglectful as a father.
"One never
knows when one's taking one's biggest risks," he said. "It might have
been worse than drowning; but I don't think it has—I don't think it has. If it
hasn't, I haven't enough to pay Troop, that's all; and I don't think it
has."
Morning brought a
fresh sea breeze through the windows, the "Constance" was
side-tracked among freight-cars at Gloucester, and Harvey had gone to his
business.
"Then he'll
fall overboard again and be drowned," the mother said bitterly.
"We'll go
and look, ready to throw him a rope in case. You've never seen him working for
his bread," said the father.
"What nonsense!
As if any one expected—"
"Well, the
man that hired him did. He's about right, too."
They went down
between the stores full of fishermen's oilskins to Wouverman's wharf where the
We're Here rode high, her Bank flag still flying, all hands busy as beavers in
the glorious morning light. Disko stood by the main hatch superintending
Manuel, Penn, and Uncle Salters at the tackle. Dan was swinging the loaded
baskets inboard as Long Jack and Tom Platt filled them, and Harvey, with a
notebook, represented the skipper's interests before the clerk of the scales on
the salt-sprinkled wharf-edge.
"Ready!"
cried the voices below. "Haul!" cried Disko. "Hi!" said
Manuel. "Here!" said Dan, swinging the basket. Then they heard
Harvey's voice, clear and fresh, checking the weights.
The last of the
fish had been whipped out, and Harvey leaped from the string-piece six feet to
a ratline, as the shortest way to hand Disko the tally, shouting, "Two
ninety-seven, and an empty hold!"
"What's the
total, Harve?" said Disko.
"Eight
sixty-five. Three thousand six hundred and seventy-six dollars and a quarter.
'Wish I'd share as well as wage."
"Well, I
won't go so far as to say you hevn't deserved it, Harve. Don't you want to slip
up to Wouverman's office and take him our tallies?"
"Who's that
boy?" said Cheyne to Dan, well used to all manner of questions from those
idle imbeciles called summer boarders.
"Well, he's
kind o' supercargo," was the answer. "We picked him up struck adrift
on the Banks. Fell overboard from a liner, he sez. He was a passenger. He's by
way o' hem' a fisherman now."
"Is he worth
his keep?"
"Ye-ep. Dad,
this man wants to know ef Harve's worth his keep. Say, would you like to go
aboard? We'll fix up a ladder for her."
"I should
very much, indeed. 'Twon't hurt you, Mama, and you'll be able to see for
yourself."
The woman who
could not lift her head a week ago scrambled down the ladder, and stood aghast
amid the mess and tangle aft.
"Be you
anyways interested in Harve?" said Disko.
"Well,
ye-es."
"He's a good
boy, an' ketches right hold jest as he's bid. You've heard haow we found him?
He was sufferin' from nervous prostration, I guess, 'r else his head had hit
somethin', when we hauled him aboard. He's all over that naow. Yes, this is the
cabin. 'Tain't in order, but you're quite welcome to look araound. Those are
his figures on the stove-pipe, where we keep the reckonin' mostly."
"Did he
sleep here?" said Mrs. Cheyne, sitting on a yellow locker and surveying
the disorderly bunks.
"No. He
berthed forward, madam, an' only fer him an' my boy hookin' fried pies an
muggin' up when they ought to ha' been asleep, I dunno as I've any special
fault to find with him."
"There weren't nothin' wrong with Harve,"
said Uncle Salters, descending the steps. "He hung my boots on the
main-truck, and he ain't over an' above respectful to such as knows more'n he
do, specially about farmin'; but he were mostly misled by Dan."
Dan in the
meantime, profiting by dark hints from Harvey early that morning, was executing
a war-dance on deck. "Tom, Tom!" he whispered down the hatch.
"His folks has come, an' Dad hain't caught on yet, an' they're pow-wowin'
in the cabin. She's a daisy, an' he's all Harve claimed he was, by the looks of
him."
"Howly
Smoke!" said Long Jack, climbing out covered with salt and fish-skin.
"D'ye belave his tale av the kid an' the little four-horse rig was
thrue?"
"I knew it
all along," said Dan. "Come an' see Dad mistook in his
judgments."
They came
delightedly, just in time to hear Cheyne say: "I'm glad he has a good
character, because—he's my son."
Disko's jaw
fell,—Long Jack always vowed that he heard the click of it,—and he stared
alternately at the man and the woman.
"I got his
telegram in San Diego four days ago, and we came over."
"In a private
car?" said Dan. "He said ye might."
"In a
private car, of course."
Dan looked at his
father with a hurricane of irreverent winks.
"There was a
tale he told us av drivin' four little ponies in a rig av his own," said
Long Jack. "Was that thrue now?"
"Very
likely," said Cheyne. "Was it, Mama?"
"He had a
little drag when we were in Toledo, I think," said the mother.
Long Jack
whistled. "Oh, Disko!" said he, and that was all.
"I wuz—I am
mistook in my jedgments—worse'n the men o' Marblehead," said Disko, as
though the words were being windlassed out of him. "I don't mind ownin' to
you, Mr. Cheyne, as I mistrusted the boy to be crazy. He talked kinder odd
about money."
"So he told
me."
"Did he tell
ye anything else? 'Cause I pounded him once." This with a somewhat anxious
glance at Mrs. Cheyne.
"Oh,
yes," Cheyne replied. "I should say it probably did him more good
than anything else in the world."
"I jedged
'twuz necessary, er I wouldn't ha' done it. I don't want you to think we abuse
our boys any on this packet."
"I don't
think you do, Mr. Troop."
Mrs. Cheyne had
been looking at the faces—Disko's ivory-yellow, hairless, iron countenance;
Uncle Salters's, with its rim of agricultural hair; Penn's bewildered
simplicity; Manuel's quiet smile; Long Jack's grin of delight, and Tom Platt's
scar. Rough, by her standards, they certainly were; but she had a mother's wits
in her eyes, and she rose with out-stretched hands.
"Oh, tell
me, which is who?" said she, half sobbing. "I want to thank you and
bless you—all of you."
"Faith, that
pays me a hunder time," said Long Jack.
Disko introduced
them all in due form. The captain of an old-time Chinaman could have done no
better, and Mrs. Cheyne babbled incoherently. She nearly threw herself into
Manuel's arms when she understood that he had first found Harvey.
"But how
shall I leave him dreeft?" said poor Manuel. "What do you yourself if
you find him so? Eh, wha-at? We are in one good boy, and I am ever so pleased
he come to be your son."
"And he told
me Dan was his partner!" she cried. Dan was already sufficiently pink, but
he turned a rich crimson when Mrs. Cheyne kissed him on both cheeks before the
assembly. Then they led her forward to show her the foc'sle, at which she wept
again, and must needs go down to see Harvey's identical bunk, and there she
found the nigger cook cleaning up the stove, and he nodded as though she were
some one he had expected to meet for years. They tried, two at a time, to
explain the boat's daily life to her, and she sat by the pawl-post, her gloved
hands on the greasy table, laughing with trembling lips and crying with dancing
eyes.
"And who's
ever to use the We're Here after this?" said Long Jack to Tom Platt.
"I feel as if she'd made a cathedral av ut all."
"Cathedral!"
sneered Tom Platt. "Oh, if it had bin even the Fish C'mmission boat instid
of this bally-hoo o' blazes. If we only hed some decency an' order an'
side-boys when she goes over! She'll have to climb that ladder like a hen, an'
we—we ought to be mannin' the yards!"
"Then Harvey
was not mad," said Penn, slowly, to Cheyne.
"No,
indeed—thank God," the big millionaire replied, stooping down tenderly.
"It must be
terrible to be mad. Except to lose your child, I do not know anything more
terrible. But your child has come back? Let us thank God for that."
"Hello!"
cried Harvey, looking down upon them benignly from the wharf.
"I wuz
mistook, Harve. I wuz mistook," said Disko, swiftly, holding up a hand.
"I wuz mistook in my jedgments. Ye needn't rub in any more."
"Guess I'll
take care o' that," said Dan, under his breath.
"You'll be
goin' off naow, won't ye?"
"Well, not
without the balance of my wages, 'less you want to have the We're Here
attached."
"Thet's so;
I'd clean forgot"; and he counted out the remaining dollars. "You
done all you contracted to do, Harve; and you done it 'baout's well as if you'd
been brought up—" Here Disko brought himself up. He did not quite see
where the sentence was going to end.
"Outside of
a private car?" suggested Dan, wickedly.
"Come on,
and I'll show her to you," said Harvey.
Cheyne stayed to
talk with Disko, but the others made a procession to the depot, with Mrs.
Cheyne at the head. The French maid shrieked at the invasion; and Harvey laid
the glories of the "Constance" before them without a word. They took
them in in equal silence—stamped leather, silver door-handles and rails, cut
velvet, plate-glass, nickel, bronze, hammered iron, and the rare woods of the
continent inlaid.
"I told
you," said Harvey; "I told you." This was his crowning revenge,
and a most ample one.
Mrs. Cheyne
decreed a meal, and that nothing might be lacking to the tale Long Jack told
afterwards in his boarding-house, she waited on them herself. Men who are
accustomed to eat at tiny tables in howling gales have curiously neat and
finished manners; but Mrs. Cheyne, who did not know this, was surprised. She
longed to have Manuel for a butler; so silently and easily did he comport
himself among the frail glassware and dainty silver. Tom Platt remembered the great
days on the Ohio and the manners of foreign potentates who dined with the
officers; and Long Jack, being Irish, supplied the small talk till all were at
their ease.
In the We're
Here's cabin the fathers took stock of each other behind their cigars. Cheyne
knew well enough when he dealt with a man to whom he could not offer money;
equally well he knew that no money could pay for what Disko had done. He kept
his own counsel and waited for an opening.
"I hevn't
done anything to your boy or fer your boy excep' make him work a piece an'
learn him how to handle the hog-yoke," said Disko. "He has twice my
boy's head for figgers."
"By the
way," Cheyne answered casually, "what d'you calculate to make of your
boy?"
Disko removed his
cigar and waved it comprehensively round the cabin. "Dan's jest plain boy,
an' he don't allow me to do any of his thinkin'. He'll hev this able little
packet when I'm laid by. He ain't noways anxious to quit the business. I know
that."
"Mmm! 'Ever
been West, Mr. Troop?"
"'Bin's fer
ez Noo York once in a boat. I've no use for railroads. No more hez Dan. Salt
water's good enough fer the Troops. I've been 'most everywhere—in the nat'ral
way, o' course."
"I can give
him all the salt water he's likely to need—till he's a skipper."
"Haow's
that? I thought you wuz a kinder railroad king. Harve told me so when—I was
mistook in my jedgments."
"We're all
apt to be mistaken. I fancied perhaps you might know I own a line of
tea-clippers—San Francisco to Yokohama—six of 'em—iron-built, about seventeen
hundred and eighty tons apiece.
"Blame that
boy! He never told. I'd ha' listened to that, instid o' his truck abaout
railroads an' pony-carriages."
"He didn't
know."
"'Little
thing like that slipped his mind, I guess."
"No, I only
capt—took hold of the 'Blue M.' freighters—Morgan and McQuade's old line—this
summer." Disko collapsed where he sat, beside the stove.
"Great
Caesar Almighty! I mistrust I've been fooled from one end to the other. Why,
Phil Airheart he went from this very town six year back—no, seven—an' he's mate
on the San Jose—now—twenty-six days was her time out. His sister she's livin'
here yet, an' she reads his letters to my woman. An' you own the 'Blue M.'
freighters?"
Cheyne nodded.
"If I'd
known that I'd ha' jerked the We're Here back to port all standin', on the
word."
"Perhaps
that wouldn't have been so good for Harvey."
"If I'd only
known! If he'd only said about the cussed Line, I'd ha' understood! I'll never
stand on my own jedgments again—never. They're well-found packets. Phil
Airheart he says so."
"I'm glad to
have a recommend from that quarter. Airheart's skipper of the San Jose now.
What I was getting at is to know whether you'd lend me Dan for a year or two,
and we'll see if we can't make a mate of him. Would you trust him to
Airheart?"
"It's a resk
taking a raw boy—"
"I know a
man who did more for me."
"That's
diff'runt. Look at here naow, I ain't recommendin' Dan special because he's my
own flesh an' blood. I know Bank ways ain't clipper ways, but he hain't much to
learn. Steer he can—no boy better, if I say it—an' the rest's in our blood an'
get; but I could wish he warn't so cussed weak on navigation."
"Airheart
will attend to that. He'll ship as boy for a voyage or two, and then we can put
him in the way of doing better. Suppose you take him in hand this winter, and
I'll send for him early in the spring. I know the Pacific's a long ways
off—"
"Pshaw! We
Troops, livin' an' dead, are all around the earth an' the seas thereof."
"But I want
you to understand—and I mean this—any time you think you'd like to see him,
tell me, and I'll attend to the transportation. 'Twon't cost you a cent."
"If you'll
walk a piece with me, we'll go to my house an' talk this to my woman. I've bin
so crazy mistook in all my jedgments, it don't seem to me this was like to be
real."
They went
blue-trimmed of nasturtiums over to Troop's eighteen-hundred-dollar, white
house, with a retired dory full in the front yard and a shuttered parlour which
was a museum of oversea plunder. There sat a large woman, silent and grave,
with the dim eyes of those who look long to sea for the return of their
beloved. Cheyne addressed himself to her, and she gave consent wearily.
"We lose one
hundred a year from Gloucester only, Mr. Cheyne," she said—"one
hundred boys an' men; and I've come so's to hate the sea as if 'twuz alive an'
listenin'. God never made it fer humans to anchor on. These packets o' yours
they go straight out, I take it' and straight home again?"
"As straight
as the winds let 'em, and I give a bonus for record passages. Tea don't improve
by being at sea."
"When he wuz
little he used to play at keeping store, an' I had hopes he might follow that
up. But soon's he could paddle a dory I knew that were goin' to be denied
me."
"They're
square-riggers, Mother; iron-built an' well found. Remember what Phil's sister
reads you when she gits his letters."
"I've never
known as Phil told lies, but he's too venturesome (like most of 'em that use
the sea). If Dan sees fit, Mr. Cheyne, he can go—fer all o' me."
"She jest
despises the ocean," Disko explained, "an' I—I dunno haow to act
polite, I guess, er I'd thank you better."
"My
father—my own eldest brother—two nephews—an' my second sister's man," she
said, dropping her head on her hand. "Would you care fer any one that took
all those?"
Cheyne was
relieved when Dan turned up and accepted with more delight than he was able to
put into words. Indeed, the offer meant a plain and sure road to all desirable
things; but Dan thought most of commanding watch on broad decks, and looking
into far-away harbours.
Mrs. Cheyne had
spoken privately to the unaccountable Manuel in the matter of Harvey's rescue.
He seemed to have no desire for money. Pressed hard, he said that he would take
five dollars, because he wanted to buy something for a girl.
Otherwise—"How shall I take money when I make so easy my eats and smokes?
You will giva some if I like or no? Eh, wha-at? Then you shall giva me money,
but not that way. You shall giva all you can think." He introduced her to
a snuffy Portuguese priest with a list of semi-destitute widows as long as his
cassock. As a strict Unitarian, Mrs. Cheyne could not sympathize with the
creed, but she ended by respecting the brown, voluble little man.
Manuel, faithful
son of the Church, appropriated all the blessings showered on her for her
charity. "That letta me out," said he. "I have now ver' good
absolutions for six months"; and he strolled forth to get a handkerchief
for the girl of the hour and to break the hearts of all the others.
Salters went West
for a season with Penn, and left no address behind. He had a dread that these
millionary people, with wasteful private cars, might take undue interest in his
companion. It was better to visit inland relatives till the coast was clear.
"Never you be adopted by rich folk, Penn," he said in the cars,
"or I'll take 'n' break this checker-board over your head. Ef you forgit
your name agin—which is Pratt—you remember you belong with Salters Troop, an'
set down right where you are till I come fer you. Don't go taggin' araound
after them whose eyes bung out with fatness, accordin' to Scripcher."
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