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"I wonder. You declared you were logical as far as you knew, and when I thought about it I agreed. You imagined the channel wasn't safe and saw I was obstinate. In consequence, you resolved to ride the horse across.
On the whole, I think you were nice!"
"Are you disputing?" Mrs. Austin asked.
"Oh, no," said Olivia. "I am trying to persuade Mr. Musgrave he was rather n.o.ble. Not long since he rode my horse across a spot he didn't think safe for me."
"Then I reckon his nerve is pretty good!" Jefferson remarked.
Austin laughed, Mrs. Austin said nothing, but looked interested, and the blood came to Kit's skin. He almost thought Olivia shabby. Anyhow, he had had enough. If he stopped, he might look like a fool again, and he declared he must write out some cargo lists. Mrs. Austin told him he might come back, and after a glance at Olivia he turned to Jefferson.
"Thank you for the clothes," he said in rather a loud voice. "I'll send them home to-morrow."
He went off and Mrs. Austin said: "I don't altogether see----"
"It isn't very obvious," Olivia replied. "However, I imagine Mr.
Musgrave has some grounds for thinking I ought to understand." She smiled and resumed: "Well, one gets rather tired of the banana men, and although Mr. Musgrave has some drawbacks I think he's good stuff. What do you think, Jake?"
"I reckon you _know_," said Jefferson, who looked at Mrs. Austin. "You see, I brought the young fellow."
"Oh, well," said Olivia, "we will admit that is something, but perhaps it's not important. Mr. Musgrave has engaged to return your clothes. If you had trusted anybody else on board his s.h.i.+p, I expect you would not have got them back. The _correilleros_ keep all they get."
CHAPTER VI
THE INJURED Pa.s.sENGER
The red sunset shone behind Lanzarote's broken hills, and the Trade-wind had, for an hour or two, dropped to a light breeze. _Campeador_'s boat, under jib and spritsail, was beating up the coast. Don Erminio held the tiller; Kit sat on the gunwale and smoked and looked about. Between sea and mountains ran an empty plain, crossed by lava ridges and covered by sand that had blown, for sixty miles, from the Sahara. In the distance, the little whitewashed port of Arrecife glimmered against the dark sea.
The landscape was clean-cut and arid. Kit thought it looked like pictures of Palestine.
Rabbits and vividly-coloured fish occupied the bottom of the boat, for Don Erminio was a keen sportsman and made his sport pay. As a rule, his other ventures were not profitable, and he had taken Kit along the coast to look at a new tomato farm, in which he had bought shares. They found a rude wall, enclosing a belt of sand in which Kit imagined nothing could be forced to grow, and the captain stormed about the knavery of the people who had persuaded him to speculate, until he saw a goat. Now, however, he was resigned and philosophical.
"Business is not for sailors, who are honest people," he remarked in English. "You have seen the _finca de tomate_. _Buen' ejemplo!_"
Kit had seen, and sympathised with the captain.
"Did you invest much money?" he asked.
"Fifty-dollar. Money of my senora, and when I arrive at my house she make _escandolo_. When they start the _finca_ there is a feast, mucho talk and drinky. Me I say, '_Viva la industria._ Take my fifty-dollar.'
_Hombre_, when I calculate the vermouth fifty-dollar buy!"
Kit said it was hard luck and tried not to smile, for the captain's speculations were something of a joke at Las Palmas.
"Other time I buy the mule cart," Don Erminio resumed. "I say, if the merchant want his cargo, he must use my cart. The plan is good, I buy more cart and get rich quick. _Vaya!_ The cart is on the mole, two good mule in front. Comes the _locomotura_, pus.h.i.+ng the concrete block. _Mal rayo!_ The driver not look, and the mule is in the sea. I am no more _commerciante_; I am anarchist!"
Kit thought he understood the accident, for the mole at Las Palmas is narrow and the concrete blocks, carried on rails to its end, are large.
The captain paused and coughed.
"Don Pedro savvy much; he buy whisky," he went on. "Now I have seen the _finca_ mi t'roat is like the lime pit."
Kit's throat did not bother him. He had inherited an ascetic vein and, in a country where wine is cheap, he was abstemious. For all that, he was hungry and he looked ahead to see if the little port got nearer. He hoped the breeze would not freshen much before they arrived. Then he heard blocks rattle and looked astern. A schooner had gone about behind them and was overtaking the boat. Her forefoot swung out of the smooth swell, and a thin streak of foam marked her waterline; her high sails were black against the sunset. As she came up she swerved, a jib was hauled aback to stop her, and her after-canvas flapped.
"_La Malaguena_," said Don Erminio. "Now we get a drink!"
When the schooner forged past somebody threw a rope, Kit pulled down the boat's mast, and in a few minutes he and Don Erminio got on board. She was a beautifully-modelled vessel, belonging to the fruit-carrying fleet, but Kit understood an English merchant had recently chartered her. When he jumped down from the bulwarks, Wolf, the merchant, crossed the deck.
"If you'll come below and smoke, we'll tow your boat," he said and addressed Don Erminio in good Castilian. "Hallo, my friend! How do things go?"
"They do not go well," said the other. "I have seen the tomato farm."
Wolf laughed and took them to the small stern cabin, where he got out two or three bottles, some figs, and cigars. Kit took a _copita_ of sweet, white muscatel and studied his host. Wolf was dark-skinned and wore white clothes, Canary rawhide slippers and a Spanish sash, but his English was good. Although he was fat, his movements and glance were quick.
"We'll put you on board your steamer when we anchor off the town," he said presently.
"Then, you're not going in?" said Kit.
"I think not. Arrecife is an awkward port to make in the dark. If the wind holds light, we'll anchor and wait for daybreak."
"The wind she freshen," said Don Erminio. "I know the reefs like a fish.
I pilot you."
A steward had lighted the swivelled lamp and Kit occupied a locker behind the small swing table. Don Erminio and Wolf were opposite and Kit thought the captain's offer embarra.s.sed the merchant. He, however, smiled and said they would wait. They could not land cargo until the morning, the casino was dull, and to win three or four pesetas was not exciting. Then he turned to Kit.
"Since you sail for Las Palmas soon, I'll give you a pa.s.senger. I expect you know we are trying to start a trade with the tribes on the Sahara coast. One of my men got hurt, and if he goes with you, the doctor will look after him to-morrow. I'd like you to send on a note I'll give you as soon as you arrive and keep the man on board until a boat comes. Then perhaps you needn't register him in your pa.s.senger lists. He's not a Spanish subject and we don't want the _commandancia_ officers to make inquiries about the accident."
"The officers are animals. Me, I know them!" Don Erminio remarked.
"Sometimes they bother one," Wolf agreed. "However, I'll pay the _sobrecargo_ for a first-cla.s.s berth."
Don Erminio spread out his hands indignantly. "No, senor! A friend of yours is a friend of mine. There is no use in being captain if one's friends must pay."
"Oh, well," Wolf said, smiling. "I expect the _sobrecargo_ is accountable for the pa.s.sengers."
He put down an envelope and some money. Kit counted the coins and pushed back three or four.
"You have given me too much."
Wolf looked at Don Erminio, and Kit thought he slightly lifted his brows. Don Erminio shrugged, and Wolf leaned forward to pick up the money. Kit did not know if he got it, for the schooner lurched and the floor slanted. One heard the water rush along her side and a noise on deck. Loose canvas banged, ropes and blocks rattled, and it was plain the breeze had not kept light. As a rule, the boisterous north-easter freshens after dark.
Don Erminio jumped for the ladder and a few moments afterwards Kit got on deck. All was dark and showers of spray blew about, but he saw the schooner was now lying-to, and the crew had partly lowered the big mainsail. The indistinct figures hanging on to the long boom were trying down a reef. Presently they rehoisted the sail and when the schooner started, foam boiled about her lee bulwarks and all forward was lost in a cloud of spray. Kit looked aft and saw _Campeador_'s boat, lifted half her length out of water, at the end of the towrope.
They made two tacks and then hove the schooner to with the lights of the little town abeam. The crew pulled up _Campeador_'s boat, and Kit, balancing on the schooner's rail, waited for a minute before he jumped.
Long, white-topped combers ran in the dark, the schooner rolled, lifting her wet side out of the foam. Sometimes the boat b.u.mped her planks and sometimes swung away on the backwash. At length Kit jumped, and held her off while Don Erminio, rather unsteadily, came down a rope. Then two men appeared at the gangway, carrying another. The boat swung towards the vessel, Kit, bracing himself to bear a load, reached up, and next moment the man fell upon him.
A rope splashed, he stepped the little mast and hoisted the jib. Don Erminio seized the tiller, the schooner vanished, and the boat headed for Arrecife. The pa.s.senger lay in her bottom and did not move. By and by _Campeador_'s lights tossed in the dark ahead, for there was no moon and the gloom was thickened by spray and blowing sand. The steamer rolled savagely and Kit knew if they missed her, it would be awkward to make the shallow, surf-swept port. One could not trust the captain's pilotage; Wolf had been generous with his liquor.
Riding on a comber's crest, they sped past _Campeador_'s stern and Kit saw her side, pierced by lights, lengthen out. He jumped for the mast and dropped sail while Don Erminio shoved down the helm. The boat ran on towards the illuminated square of the gangway under the saloon-deck, and a rope came down. Then Kit, pulling out the mast, held her off with the hook and the steamer rolled her bilge out of the water. Gangway and ladder went up, her side looked like a high, slanted wall; and then she rolled back and buried the ladder in swirling foam.