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Lorna had hesitated to speak while the young men quarreled. Slowly however her expression of countenance had hardened. She turned from Degger and asked Ralph abruptly:
"Do you really think you can find the dory? Will it be afloat so long?"
"Oh, yes. Hard work to sink one of those boats. With somebody to help me I'm almost sure to recover it."
"You needn't look to me to help you," sneered Degger.
"I'll go back with you," Lorna said quickly. "I can manage the _Fenique_ while you fish for the dory."
"Miss Lorna! You won't think of such a thing!" Degger cried.
She ignored him.
"I'll go below and light a fire, Ralph. My things will be dry in an hour. You put on this coat, or you'll catch cold," and she slipped out of the pilot-coat.
"Not me," said Ralph easily. "Let Degger put it on. He'll be cold riding up to the light in that open car of Zeke's."
Lorna dropped the coat on the bench and without looking again at Degger opened the cabin door and slipped below. Degger's face displayed his chagrin. Ralph chuckled audibly, turned his back on the fellow, too, and shouted sh.o.r.eward.
The coming of the _Fenique_ had been marked by the lookout in the cupola of the life-saving station, and the very member of the crew of whom Ralph had spoken, Zeke Ba.s.sett, now appeared upon the sands.
"Got your car handy, Mr. Ba.s.sett?" called Ralph. "Got a pa.s.senger for you to take to the Twin Rocks Light-and beyond."
"Sure, I'll take him," was Ba.s.sett's reply, seeing that Ralph indicated Degger. "Got enough of the briny, has he? I'll come right out in Sam's skiff for him. You had some weather comin' down, didn't you, Mr.
Endicott?"
"'Some weather' is right," agreed Ralph. "But she's clearing now, don't you think?"
"Sure," said the surfman. "Them black squalls don't really amount to nothin'-after they are over."
Ralph turned to Degger again. The fellow was recovering a measure of his usual confidence. He put on a somewhat uncertain smile.
"If you all think the trouble is over, I don't know but I might go back with you after all."
"I _do_ know that you won't!" Ralph retorted. "You get into that skiff, Degger, when Ba.s.sett comes out for you."
"Say! who are you bullying, I'd like to know?"
"I'm telling you. I did pick you out of the sea, but I don't have to keep you aboard here any longer than I wish to. You'll go ash.o.r.e now."
"Oh, yes! That is the kind of fellow you are," snarled Degger. "You've had it in for me ever since I borrowed some of your loose change back there at Cambridge. I haven't forgotten it-don't think!"
"I thought you had," was Ralph's mild sarcasm.
That did not even cause Conway Degger to blush. He still spoke heatedly.
"I presume you expect me to fall down and wors.h.i.+p you for saving my life."
"Not _you_," sighed Ralph. "Grat.i.tude I am sure is not your besetting sin."
"Oh, you're only jealous," sneered the other. "Anybody can see that.
And you think you'll have a better time alone with Lorva aboard than you would if I went back to the light with you."
Ralph started for him. Then he halted, holding himself in. If there was a fight here on board the motor-boat Lorna must surely be aware of it. He bent on Conway Degger a look that warned him that he had gone far enough.
"I know just the sort of scamp you are, Degger," he said in a low voice.
"I should not have let you hang around as you have. Your rep at college was enough."
"How about your own?" sneered Degger. "There was that Cora Devine-how about _her_?"
"Well, how about her?" rejoined Ralph, with unmoved countenance.
"You try to interfere in my affairs," Degger said furiously, "and somebody will hear all about that Devine girl-believe me!"
"I don't just get you, Degger," Ralph returned calmly. "But if for no other reason, that threat would make me promise to interfere-and to some purpose."
"You--"
"Listen!" commanded Ralph, with a gesture that silenced the oath on Degger's lips. "When Zeke Ba.s.sett takes you as far as the Twin Rocks Light, you pack your grip and go on with him to Clinkerport. I don't care how far you travel beyond Clinkerport. But if you are still at the Light when I get back there, I'll thrash you out of your skin! Believe me, Degger, I mean it. I hope you will be unwise enough to wait for me at the Light. You'll be glad enough to go after I give you what you are suffering for."
He turned to catch the loop of the painter Ba.s.sett tossed him, and drew the skiff alongside the motorboat. Degger did not even hesitate. He stepped down into the small boat, shaking with the cold, if not with fear. He scorned Ralph's pilot-coat. The surfman grinned up at Ralph, nodded, and pulled back to the strand.
Ralph Endicott had taken the bit in his teeth. He was determined to run certain matters his way from this time on!
CHAPTER XIII
CROSS PURPOSES
An odor of coffee was wafted through the cracks around the cabin door.
In a little while Lorna called him.
"I've made a hot drink, Ralph," she said. "Just as soon as I get my clothing dry you must come down and change."
"Thanks, Lorna," Endicott said, accepting the cup of coffee. "But I don't need to. I didn't take a header into the briny as you did. You'd better put on my oilskins. Your dress won't be fit to wear."
He had removed his shoes and socks and rolled up the legs of his trousers. In this free-and-easy costume he could the better get about the wet boat. He swabbed out the c.o.c.kpit and set the waterproof covered cus.h.i.+ons on their edges to dry. He wiped off the machinery with a handful of waste, and tried the spark. The mechanism of the _Fenique_ seemed to have suffered but little from the battering of the heavy seas.
The clouds scattered quickly. The sun appeared again, low hung in the west and of a golden-red-prophesying that old weather-wise doggerel:
"Red at night Sailors' delight."
The slate-colored seas outside the harbor still ran high, but they heaved now without breaking into foam. Their rumbling thunder against the breakwater was more subdued; no longer did the fierce insistence of the black squall mark the sound of the surf. The brief tempest had winged its way out to sea.
"Shall we start soon, Ralph?" asked Lorna, appearing from the cubby in the mannish apparel he had suggested.