A crash which shook him bodily brought Paul Lavelle upstanding from the berth in the lounge. The daze of a heavy sleep clung to him. For an instant he could not imagine where he was. He was in utter darkness.
There was another crash where the spanker boom slammed back from starboard to port again. Then, theDaphnelay over under the impact of a vicious gust of wind.
It was the boom which had awakened the sleeper. He leaped out on deck to find himself in a shapeless blackness. There was barely a breeze, but the air was filled with eery noises. Overhead, overside, wherever he turned, he heard them—snarls, whines, whimperings, and the creaking as of huge pinions wheeling. A wolf pack might have been disputing a kill with a horde of vultures.
The contrast of this with the exquisite moonlight night upon which Lavelle had closed his eyes was appalling. He groped his way to the wheel, which was in beckets to keep it from rolling, and peered into the compass. An unconscious sigh of thankfulness for the forethought which had made him light the binnacle lamp escaped from him. TheDaphnewas heading north by east. The gust of wind which had slammed the spanker boom must have come out of the southeast. He faced that point. Another gust confirmed the assumption. He ran into the lounge and struck a match. The silver watch lay on the chart table. It said 1 o'clock. He had not returned for this, but to see the barometer. It stood at 30:00; just where it had hung all day.
But what he had not discovered by daylight he now saw in the flickering match light. The barometer hand and the indicator were caught together. His heart went cold, he lit another match and struck the bulkhead with his clenched fist. The blow jarred the hand and indicator apart. The delicate wisp of blue steel quivered at 30:00 for a breath. Then, it began to fall. It reached 29:10 and clung. Even as the match went out it recorded 29:00 and was still falling.
He had seen a mercurial barometer go from 29:30 to 26:03 in theKau Lung. That was a world's record!
Despair seized him. What could he and a lone woman do in a brute of a vessel like this—undermanned even with twenty men before the mast?
"God Almighty, what have I done?" he cried aloud in agony of spirit.
A smash of wind from the south'ard was the answer he got.
He gritted his teeth and flung a curse at the sea:
"I'll beat you—you and all your foulness! You sneak!" he yelled at the blackness.
He dropped down through the companionway, calling "Emily! Emily!"
There was no answer. She was asleep, poor girl, he thought. That was why she had let him oversleep; why she had not called him when it turned black.
"Emily! Emily! Where are you?"
Echoes answered him. Running forward, he saw the light beaming from the derelict's room. As he reached the doorway he beheld the girl standing beside the old man's berth, a book in her left hand and her right uplifted.
"So help me God," the derelict was solemnly repeating after her.
As the last word came from his lips he discovered Lavelle.
"'Th' Prince'!" he cried and fell back, a hand at his brow in salute.
The book dropped from Emily's hand. She swayed where she stood. She had fought and won a battle as brave as any field of war ever knew. Yet an angry glance, which struck her and cut like a whiplash, was her reward.
"Why didn't you answer me when I called?" Lavelle demanded, but paused not on an answer. "Get aft to that wheel! Go! Run! Keep her nor'east until I can get back to you!"
With that he was gone from her. Like a soldier, without questioning, without a word, she went aft to do what this man had bidden.
The fire under the donkey was dead when Lavelle got to the engine room. It would take an hour to make steam. The barometer and his sea wisdom told him that he had only minutes to prepare.
Whatever the battle was to be it was with his own hands that Paul Lavelle must fight it. With this realization a terrific rage filled him. It was fed with each breath that he snatched out of the blackness. The sea was a personal enemy. Thus men who deal with it in long intimacy come to visualize it. The sea was a sneak—a coward; always striking below the belt.
Lavelle had squared the yards before he had gone aft in the evening, leaving the braces slack so as to cast theDaphneon the most advantageous tack at the first coming of a breeze. He had expected a wind from the north and west. Here it was out of the southeast. The gusts which had roused him had struck the bark on the starboard quarter. It had brought her to on that side. She was now forging ahead on the starboard tack. As she rode she was under a double-reefed foresail, reefed upper and lower fore and main topsails, foretopmast-staysail, and inner or boom jib. The growing breeze lifted the slack out of the starboard or weather braces. The lone worker in the darkness led the falls of the lee braces to the main deck capstan and hove them in. And wherever he went he belayed rope and line with a double hitch. There was a finality about everything he did.
He set the maintopmast-staysail, hoisting it with the capstan. He would ride her with that if it should be possible to heave her to after he had located the bearing of the storm's center.
He ran aft only to stop at the entrance to the alleyway. He remembered the boom jib.
"Too much headsail with a reefed spanker," he muttered.
He sped forward again, found the jib halyards, and let them go. As a last touch of precaution he bent the jib downhaul to the foretopmast-staysail clew as a preventer sheet.
Aft he sped again and through the cabin. A faint murmur came to him as he ran by the derelict's room.
Out of the pile of slop-chest staff in the after cabin he snatched an oilskin coat and sou'wester. He struggled into them as he climbed through the companion way into this lounge.
A flash of a match brought the barometer's dial out of the blackness. 28:03!
An impulse to smash it for its trickery seized him. He forbore and plunged outside. He thrust Emily away from the wheel. As he bent to peer into the binnacle she shuddered at the rage which distorted his face. Thus men, she thought, must look in battle with the blood lust upon them. There was something primordial, relentless, about him. He was the elemental man, sensate that a kill was at hand.
TheDaphnewas heeling over, further and further, under the onslaught of the rising wind.
The roughness with which Lavelle had pushed Emily away from the wheel started a demon of resentment to life in her. Her arms were aching. It had seemed that the wheel must draw them from their sockets while she was alone. Steering theDaphnewhile Lavelle had been forward had not been the tame task of the afternoon.
She stood trembling where this man had shoved her. She could have struck him.
"Get below! Close every port—every door! Jump! Then, come back and light that lamp in the lounge!"
Anger swept her at his brutal tone. Tears blinded her. They were the tears of a rage of which she had never believed herself capable, oho could not move.
"Go—on!" he yelled.
A furious squall twisted the two words into a shriek.
A sea slopped over the weather quarter and ran hissing across the deck to leeward. It sucked hungrily at the gold woman's feet and ankles. At its touch her rage grew, but passed from the man at the wheel to the sea. It was the sea that he hated, not her. It was the sea that she hated. It was the sea that had spoken through him. The sea was his enemy. It became in that moment personal to her—her enemy.
Thus the spirit of Lavelle reacted upon Emily Granville's. Could she have seen her face at that instant she would have discovered in it the same elemental, the same primitive passion, which had shocked her in his.
The girl ran from the deck and below.
Lavelle saw her when she returned and lit the lamp in the lounge. She wore a long oilskin. A sou'wester covered her head. Out of the tail of his eye he caught her staring at the barometer. He noted it with a thought that she had "some sense."
She came out to him and had to press her lips against his ear to make him hear her message.
"Everything—closed—be—low! Barom—28:00!"
That was a fall of three-hundredths of an inch in less than ten minutes!
TheDaphnewas in a trap. Somewhere near her—somewhere in the southern quadrants of the compass between the east and the west—the center of a storm was bearing down upon her. Whether the barometer was lying or telling the truth was of little moment now. Lavelle knew he could not be mistaken in the signs of a revolving storm. He knew the meaning of the wolf-like noises and the wing creakings in the air; the oily, sooty, sight-killing blackness. But one sign was absent and, even as he noted this, it appeared—a sickening, brick-red coloring which cuts the eyes acridly like hay smoke. It diffused itself through the blackness without lessening the night's impenetrability. With its coming the wind veered quickly from the S.S.E. into the south. By the law of storms this change told the lone man arrayed against the sea that the center was bearing upon theDaphneeight points to the right, or out of the S.S.W. The bark was trapped in the storm's advancing or dangerous semicircle. He could not heave her to now. There was but one thing to do: Run. Let the storm overtake the bark and catch her in its vortex and—the sea must win. It depended alone on theDaphne'sworthiness and the hands and brain of the man at her helm to beat it.
With a full-manned ship the thing to do now was heave to. The enraged man laughed to himself at the thought of his trying to do this alone.
By half-past two the wind had veered into the S.S.W. and was blowing a whole gale. Taking it broad over the starboard quarter theDaphnewas fleeing northeast. At times her helmsman was sure she was lifting free of the mauling waters and hurtling through space. Again he felt that she was bound headlong toward the quiet ooze; that no vessel could withstand the onslaughts of wind and brine which were being rained upon her. But never his rage at the sea grew less. It burned in him like a living fire; it robbed him of all sense of fatigue.
Emily, sitting in the lounge and watching the barometer for any change, saw the silver watch mark the hour when the day should have been breaking. But no light rifted the blackness outside. The barometer hand clung quivering at 28:00! TheDaphne'smaster—yes, her master, too—had told her she must rest as much as she could. Not for her own sake, but the battle's; that was his reason. "Because I may want to use you!" was what he had yelled when she had put her ear up to his lips.
When the watch said six o'clock and there came no day, Emily suddenly realized what a time had passed since Paul had taken the wheel from her hands—four hours and a half. Not a bite had crossed lips in eleven hours. It was impossible to get forward to the galley. As she admitted this she remembered the canned provisions in the alleyway stateroom opposite the derelict's. She recalled also the flour and biscuit barrels in the starboard alleyway stateroom.
The gold woman went caroming down the companionway and through the reeling saloons. The din of an hundred forges filled them. The derelict's light was giving a last flicker. Daniel McGovern slept. As the lamp went out Emily discovered her book on the floor and picked it up. She put it on a shelf in the storeroom and fled with three cans which she felt out of the darkness. She carried these up into the lounge. One of the cans held corn—the others tomatoes. She dropped below again and groped to the pantry. She was seeking water. There wasn't a drop in the tank. The discovery staggered her. The man at the wheel must drink. An idea of a substitute flashed into her mind. The tomatoes would serve for food and drink. She located a hook under the china racks and found a can opener she remembered having seen there.
As a glimmer of day asserted itself in the blackness, it found Emily standing at the wheel beside Paul, holding a can of tomatoes up to his lips so that he could drink when he dared. He managed to snatch two mouthfuls. Then, the can was blasted out of the girl's hands. It flattened itself against the mizzonmast. The tin cylinder might have been a bit of cardboard. It held where it struck for a second, as if the gale had imbedded it in the steel mast.
With this sudden growth in the fury of the gale came the slightest increase of daylight. This light seemed to spring from the sea; not from overhead. It was sufficient to trace what lay forward of the break of the poop. Two tall, reeling masts with whalebone tips, the edges of the rails, an outline of the top of the forward house, and the forecastle head rising out of a roil of waters composed the suggestion to Emily's mind that that part of theDaphnewas still there. And all round were ragged peaks of water like the ice-crusted crests of mighty mountains. They were Alps gone drunk. TheDaphnewas hurtling from one peak to another—smashing through them.
The light restored Lavelle's vision to enable him to read in one glance the tally of the battle. But a ribband remained of the big mainsail which he had been unable to furl. The fore-upper topsail had left only its leech ropes behind. There was not a head sail left except the foretopmast-staysail. This, the maintopmast-staysail, the reefed foresail, the fore lower topsail, and the upper and lower main topsails and the spanker still held. The fore and aft bridges were gone. A twisted stanchion told where the standard compass had stood. The donkey funnel, the galley stovepipe, and the empty boat-chocks were missing—the top of the forward house was swept clean.
Scarcely had Lavelle's eyes made this assessment when the main upper topsail went. It split with a shot-like crackling. A second later only a wisp of canvas was left to tell that a sail had ever been bent to the yard.
Anger burned in Emily at the sight. It was personal—the ravaging of that sail. The gale flung a cry of protest back in her throat. The slope of Paul's sou'wester hid his face from her. The point of a grim jaw was all that she could see. Only his arms moved with the wheel in steadying the bark's drive. Otherwise he might have been a fixture of the ship. It was not enough to be near him. A yearning to hear his voice came upon her; to look in his eyes; to read his thoughts. She caught him, jerking his head to bring her nearer. She struggled up in the lee of him and pressed her ear to his lips.
"—piece—bacco!"
That was all she heard. She did not understand for the moment what he meant. Then, it dawned upon her wondering consciousness that he wanted a piece of tobacco. A piece of tobacco! Her brain pounded on this as if it would never let the thought go. She fought her way into the lounge, and as she went she remembered a box of oaky, black slabs which she had seen in the slop-chest litter. She had reached the bottom of the companion way when theDaphnegave a shuddering leap. It hurled the girl across the saloon to leeward. She caught the knob of a stateroom door and dragged herself from her knees to her feet. Looking forward, through the port alleyway, she saw a flood of water pouring in through the door opening out on the main deck.
Instinct carried Emily to this breach in the wall of the bark's defense. She got her back to the door, like a woman of the Zuyder Zee warding a broken dyke gate, and she closed it. The strength of the primitive fighting man's woman was hers in the struggle which accomplished this. She cried in anger as she bolted the teakwood slab against the ravaging waters. Yet with this thing done, her first thought was that she must get back to the wheel with a piece of tobacco. Going aft, she did not notice that the derelict's berth was empty, but the man at the wheel knew that the stranger was not there.
Hardly had Emily left the deck when the fore lower topsail went tattering out of its bolt ropes. TheDaphneshook herself as if freed from a leash. The man who watched nodded in approval. Had it been possible for him to have cut this sail away when the main upper topsail had gone he would have done it. In the moment that he nodded he saw the flash of a man's face going over the rail in the welter to leeward. The face was calm. Death seemed already to have masked it. It was the derelict going away.
"Why, that—that's Driscoll—the quartermaster who was with me—stood by me—the night theYakutatwas lost!"
It was thus in the instant that the sea gulped Daniel McGovern that recognition flashed into Paul Lavelle's mind. But as the thought formed he put it away from him. His eyes were tricking him. A man can't stand for six, seven, or eight hours—he had lost count of time—staring at a compass card which whirls and dips like a crazy roulette wheel at Macao and trust his sight. After Chang had spent a twelve-hour trick at theKau Lung'swheel he had imagined many strange things. The quartermaster, Driscoll, had been lost these ten years past—ten years this very month of March. And the sea was trying to make him believe that the derelict was he: endeavoring to trick his brain because it couldn't beat him any other way. This thought refueled his rage.
The belly of the spanker split from head to foot with the sharp staccato-rattling of a Gatling. The helmsman's senses apprehended it as it happened. Before theDaphne'shead had fallen off half a point at this sudden release of pressure on her after part Lavelle had met it.
Emily, struggling to force the lounge door open against the gale, saw and heard the spanker go. It dazed her to note that Lavelle did not glance up. She had to throw herself flat on the deck to get to the wheel. Crawling up under Paul's lee she held the tobacco up in front of him, keenly wondering what he meant to do with it. She had been able to imagine only that he intended to use it in some mysterious way in connection with the compass; perhaps to keep the card from rolling and whirling. Paul settled the mystery quickly by wolfing a corner of the black plug. He nodded with satisfaction as his jaws closed on it. It seemed fantastic to the girl. She could have screamed in delight—she who had loathed tobacco chewers as long as she could remember. The incident was fraught with a message of hope that words could not have conveyed.
By signs Paul made Emily understand that she was to fill and trim the binnacle lamp. This task took her below to levy on the oil in the derelict's lamp and the lamp in the medicine chest. Then it was she discovered that Daniel McGovern had left theDaphne. She realized how the alleyway door had come to be open, but at the time her senses were beyond apprehending that a stranger had come out of the sea and gone back to it. She levied upon the storerooms again and crawled up into the lounge. The silver watch said noon. The barometer stood at 28:01! When she tried to open the door and get back to Paul with food and this news, she could not budge it more than an inch. The gale held it. She looked out of the after weather port. Through the flying spume she saw Paul glance up. His eyes rested on her for a second. He shook his head for her to stay where she was.
There came a lull at three o'clock. Emily's recruited strength enabled her to fight her way to the wheel with another can of tomatoes and some crackers. She replaced the lighted binnacle lamp. It went out. Four times she had to return to the lounge and relight it before she succeeded in spiting the gale. As she straightened up finally in success, she saw Paul's gaze shoot up to windward.
Not three hundred yards away and abreast of theDaphnedrove a big four-masted, painted-port bark—a bulk of twenty-five hundred tons—under a reefed foresail and a reefed main lower topsail. For a breath her midship section hung poised on a peak of water, the rest of her red underbody, fore and aft, clear of the welter. Her poles pierced the lowering sky. The peak dropped from under her like the jet of a fountain ceasing. She fell away into a cañon, wave-walled higher than her tops. The wind went out of her foresail. The topsail drooped. She paused in her flight like a wounded bird, reeled helplessly; and then the wall of water over her stem fell, pooping her. A huddle of men started from around the foot of her jiggermast. One of them in bright yellow oilskins reached the doomed thing's port rail and waved to theDaphnehigh over him as if cheering her on. Another wall of water and still a third crashed upon her. Her bows rose. Stern first she went down to the port of missing ships, a hurricane shrieking her requiem.
In the twinkling of an eye, even as a trout snatches a fly, this proud venture of man was; and then it was no more.
Brain-stunned, incapable of comprehension, Emily crawled round the binnacle and got behind the lee side of the wheel. In a lull she heard Paul yelling.
"—be—low! Eat—rest! Need—help—by and——"
She obeyed as one in a trance. As the lounge door banged behind her the comparative quiet within, though it was a veritable orgy of sound, enveloped her senses like a drug.
It was seven o'clock when she awoke. Through the weather port she saw the yellow-colored head at the wheel touched by a gleam of the binnacle light. Seventeen hours now he had been standing there like that. She lighted the lounge lamp. The barometer stood at 28:00.
When she fought her way out to him with this word and shrieked it at him he simply nodded that he heard.
"When—are—you—going to—let—me—help?"
She succeeded in crying this question into his ear in segments.
"Damn it! Shut—up!"
He cried this at her savagely.
In that instant theDaphne, paused slightly. A shiver went through her. There was a crash which sounded even above the roar of the storm. It was as if a masked battery had ambushed the bark from overhead. The foretop-gallant mast and all its hamper and everything above the crosstrees on the main were going by the board. A streak of lightning illuminated the gale's work.
Emily found the end of the gasket with which Paul was lashed to the wheel shaft. She tied it around her waist and took hold of the lee wheel. It was her answer to his savagery. He saw what she did and he did not send her away.
Thus, with never a word, they stood together for two hours during the height of the storm, hurtling along the coast of eternity.
Of a sudden there came a rift in the clouds overhead. A shaft of moonlight shot through the blackness and Paul's hand covered the gold woman's in a gentle pressure where it clutched a spoke.
"—think—beaten—it!" he shouted at her presently, "—thirsty!"
Emily unlashed herself and brought him another can of tomatoes. She took her post beside him again without a word. By midnight the gale's back was broken. The sea kept dropping with the lessening of the wind. It was long after dawn, however, when Paul unlashed himself from the wheel and put Emily in his place.
"You take her now for a few minutes," he said in a broken husky voice. "Going heave her to."
He started forward. His legs went out from under him. He struggled to his feet only to drop again. He got up moaning and with a curse on his lips. Clutching the rail he reeled down to the main deck.
Emily heard the palls of the capstan and then Paul's voice came to her in a pathetic wail.
"Hard down! Hard down!" he cried, but it was a sweep of his arm which carried his meaning to her. In obeyance she rolled the wheel over. TheDaphnecame round on her heel, until the maintopsail, flying aback, hove her to.
Paul staggered aft again, balanced the wheel and put it in beckets.
"I'm pretty tired—tired," he said in a whisper. He crumpled in exhaustion where he had fought for thirty hours. Blood oozed from the ends of his swollen fingers. His eyes lay far back in his head. His breath came in moans and sobs.
Pain which stabbed with daggers of fire and ground and twisted like the working of cogs stirred Paul about noon into consciousness. He lay across the wheel grating where he had dropped, nor had the gold woman's strength been equal to moving him inside. A pillow was under his head; a blanket covered him. At his feet wrapped likewise in a blanket and her head on one of the lounge cushions slept his "partner." As the hard deck was his pallet, so she had chosen to make it hers. He realized the wonderful meaning of this with a thrill which lifted the daze from his aching brain and eyes.
With the instinct which has been given to women alone to serve and watch by sense Emily awoke in the instant that Paul moved to a sitting posture. Their glances met in a smile of trustful, mutual understanding.
"Well, partner," Paul said drily and looking round theDaphne, "we are a bit battered, but I think we may say—we are still in the ring."
The humanness of the little speech lifted the cloud of the night from her spirit. She laughed. This man could fight as she had never dreamed it possible that human brain and flesh could, and when it was all over he could smile. She brushed away a mist which gathered on her lashes and struggled to her feet.
"And it is worth everything to be—be here in the ring—all the battering—all the strife—with you—a partner like you."
"Thank you. That pays for everything."
As Paul spoke he struggled halfway to his feet only to sink back again with his breath catching in pain. His left hand, with which he had tried to pull himself up, fell from the wheel. He compared it with his right. Both were swollen and purple. The cuffs of the oilskin coat dropped back and showed his shirt wristbands choking the flesh. But it was not his hands that hurt so much as it was his feet. They seemed ready to burst the shoes.
A sob broke from Emily at his helplessness. She dropped on her knees at his side and picked up his right hand. All the tenderness of her woman nature was alive in the instant.
"What is it, Paul? Your feet—your hands!"
Tears choked further utterance. Alarm for his safety seized her. A terrible apprehension touched her heart.
"There never was a battle fought without somebody getting hurt." He tried to smile despite his pain. "Remember I was at the wheel a pretty long time."
"More than thirty hours."
"That long?" He nodded. "Please get me a knife—there ought to be one in the pantry."
"A knife?" she repeated with misgiving. He nodded.
Emily hastened below and returned with a small sharp carver. Paul held out both hands to her.
"Cut——"
She shrank from him with a cry. His smile at the thought which he read in her eyes made her study him with a strange, frightened glance.
"Not my hands—the wristbands, partner."
She severed the wristbands and the tears which fell on the bruised hands seemed for the moment to salve their hurt. He offered to take the knife then, but she knelt quickly at his feet and slashed the wet, binding leather from them. The while she did it he kept abjuring her to be careful not to cut off a foot by mistake. He would have been silent could he have known how sacred to this woman was the doing of this personal service for him. But it was just as well that he was not silent, for as she saw what the sea had done to him it took the last element of her will to keep from breaking down.
"Now you must go and lie down," she urged when she had helped him to get up to a standing position.
"No, I must keep going. I——"
He swayed and sank to his knees. His will nor her strength could keep him up. He gritted his teeth in rebellion.
"I must get up! I will—and go on!"
This came from him in a savage cry. He tried to rise again. He got one foot under him and then fell inertly with his back against the side of the lounge house. Abused Nature would have her due.
The sight of this strong man down, helpless, tore the heart of the gold woman from its moorings. She knelt beside him, agony blinding her with tears.
"Paul, you must listen to me," she pleaded passionately. "You must let me help you inside—where you can rest—where I can do something for you—something to bring back your strength—bathe your hands and feet."
"No, no; not that," he protested faintly.
A gentle relaxation of mind and body was stealing over him under the pressure of the arm with which she supported his head.
"But you must," Emily went on. "It is my part—my duty, my privilege! I will do it! You must do as I say until you are well and strong. It will not be long."
The rebellion of his spirit grew quiet under the influence of her surpassing tenderness. He thought it pleasant to have somebody say must to him.
"Look, Paul, the ocean grows calmer with the minutes. The skies are clearing. There is nothing we could do——"
"But there's so much to do——" His senses began slipping away. He was able to murmur only, "Water," before a long blank came.
The gold woman looked round for the water canister which she had filled and brought aft when Paul had collapsed and fallen asleep. It lay overturned down to leeward. Laying his head on a pillow she ran forward and refilled the canister. At the first sup which she was able to force into his month he opened his eyes.
"More, more," he pleaded when she would have taken the canister from his lips, thinking he could drink no more. "Oh, that is so good," he sighed, finishing the draught. "I feel much better already."
Although Paul smiled bravely, his eyes betrayed him. Emily saw that he was fighting to conceal a great pain.
"Come, Paul." She lifted his head again. "You must try to get inside. You must do this for me."
He looked up into her face, and there was that in it which filled him with meekness.
"I'll do what you say," he answered in a whisper, and he summoned his last reserve of strength.
On hands and knees he crawled into the lounge, Emily taking as much weight from his swollen wrists as she could. She cut the oilskin coat from his shoulders so that he should not suffer the pain of having the sleeves drawn over his hands. She spread a berth deftly, hurried below, and returned with dry comfortable clothing which she found in the lockers under the skipper's bed. The slop-chest supplies were soaking in the water which had come in before she had succeeded in shutting the alleyway door. She went below again and brought lint and bandages from the medicine chest. All of these things she did without suggestion. It was part of the new efficiency unto which she had won. Had she been trained to do what she did she could not have done it more thoroughly. This man whom she served might have been her own child.
Watching her quick movements from where he sat on the floor of the lounge, Paul wondered whence she was drawing the strength that was denied him. Nor was it given to either of them to understand this strength which love can bring to its service. It is something not to be understood.
"Why are you able to do this and why am I——"
"Because you have rendered your service," she interrupted. "You made me rest. You stood alone through all the fight. At times I rebelled at it, but now I am glad. I slept this morning and——" She paused with a shudder. "I know I must have slept—or gone out of my senses—during the storm. There are blanks—so many——We are all alone again, you know. The derelict——"
"I know. Please don't think of it now. Please——"
"No—we will not think of it," she said with an effort. "Come."
She bent over him to help him to the waiting berth. A plait of her hair swept his lips. He kissed it as she drew it back and tossed it over her shoulder. Her bosom touched his head. She did not know that she was but adding torture to his pain.
"No, partner," he protested quickly. "I have let you do too much already. Let me try alone."
By elbow and knee he crawled up on the berth and sat down.
"There," he said with a small note of triumph, and he was fearful of meeting her gaze, for he sensed that she stood waiting. "I think—if——See how she's heading, please."
He looked out through the door at the wheel jerking in its beckets like a horse champing a bit.
Emily went swiftly to the binnacle.
"West nor'west," she called.
"Then this breeze ought to be about nor'nor'west." He paused, and then added quickly as he saw her, in all her innocence, coming back:
"If I could get something warm to drink—some coffee—or tea. Do you think——"
"But you——"
"I'm sure I can do a lot for myself now. See."
He lifted his arms over his head. By a levy on all his will he concealed the pain which tore him at the effort. It satisfied her.
"You shall have something warm to drink as soon as these hands can make it," she said, and as he heard her going forward he threw himself on the berth and buried his face in the pillow to smother the cry of anguish which his lips refused to stay.
Swiftly as Emily moved to her task, it took her longer than she had imagined it would to prepare something. The galley was in a litter of wreckage and the range was water-soaked where the sea had poured through the unprotected vent left by the swept-away stovepipe. When she returned aft again it was to awaken Paul from a doze. In the meantime he had succeeded in changing into the dry clothing she had laid out for him. He had also bandaged his ankles and wrists.
The gold woman brought tea and hardtack biscuits and a jar of marmalade.
"It was the best I could do quickly," she explained, raising the chart table and placing the things on it. The table had fallen some time during the night and the silver watch lay dashed in pieces on the door, its parts mingling with the internals of the barometer which had been torn from its fastenings. The sextant, undamaged, lay where it had been hurled on the starboard bench or berth opposite Paul.
"It's all right, partner," Paul said as Emily discovered the broken things. "Don't worry."
When it came to drinking his tea his hands could not hold the mug in which she was compelled to serve it. She gave it to him mouthful by mouthful. The hot drink was stimulating. There was satisfaction of hunger, too, in the biscuits and marmalade. She stopped feeding him and drank and ate something only when he closed his lips firmly and turned his face from her.
And all the while there was raging within him a battle against the impulse of his consuming love to take this wonderful innocent woman to his breast. Had he not won the right to tell her that he loved her? a voice within kept repeating, and always the specter of the past, armed with the resolution of silence he had formed two days before, cried: "No; unless you are a coward."
"I think I will sleep," Paul said presently, when Emily offered to rub and rebandage his ankles.
"Is it because you do not wish me to do it?"
"Why, no. Of course not."
"You thought nothing of doing it for me. You have done everything for me and with a tenderness that I can remember only as part of my mother. You are so tender and again you are so harsh—as hard and cold as steel."
"The sea makes one harsh——" He could not control his voice and he stopped short in fear of whither he might be led. He noticed then for the first time that Emily's skirt was clinging to her damply. "Do please go below and get into some fresh, dry clothing. The thought that you are looking out for yourself will help me to sleep. Do try to lie down, too."
"If there is nothing more I can do here I will go," she said obediently. "But it is a strange thing: With all the wetting I have undergone I have not the sign of a cold."
"Salt water ought to have at least one virtue," he answered. As he spoke he nodded for her to go below.
Paul Lavelle slept only for a few minutes at a time, if he really slept at all during the next couple of hours. He heard the gold woman descend the companionway and he followed her footsteps through the cabin. Even when all was quiet below and he knew that Emily must be lying down wakefulness rode his brain. He could see the future stretching away in loneliness without this woman in his life, and for the first time in all the suffering he had known he thought of a way out. In his blackest hours of the past ten years this had never occurred to him. To fight on to the end without cease, with never a let-up in the drive, had been the ruling impulse of his spirit. To fight on now in silence and give life to this precious woman; to stand up manfully no matter what the odds, with his whole soul in the battle, until he should bring her to safety—this was the one course. After that there would be a way if it were denied him that he should not suffer death in the giving of life to her. A gnawing pain in his left hand finally drew his attention to it. He saw that the green jade ring which he had worn constantly since leaving Yokohama was choking the finger which it encircled. He sat up to take it off, and as he did so he was startled to hear a strange heavy footfall in the cabin. He was on the point of trying to rise when Emily came up through the companionway. It was her footfall that had alarmed him. As her head and shoulders rose above the teakwood rail around the staircase, the sun, now far down in the west, shot a golden beam through the port over Paul's berth. It touched her head with the fire of a divine beauty.
"Oh, I woke you," she whispered tremulously, and at the same time she sensed his depression of spirit.
"No, I was awake," was all he could say for the moment. It came from his lips in a barely audible voice.
To be loved by and by love to possess a woman like this—the world, aye a thousand worlds—were well lost! That was the thought which excluded everything else from his mind.
The glow of a sleep which had refreshed and restored lingered in the cheeks of the gold woman and in the tips of her shelly ears. Her mouth was retouched with its natural delicate scarlet. Her sensitive nostrils quivered at the sunlight's touch. Her blue-shirted bosom, heaving ever so slightly from the exertion of climbing the companionway, moved the loose plaits of her hair hanging over her shoulders like ropes of molten gold. Hardship had drawn her features only slightly. Youth's capacity of quick recovery was hers. Physically she was little changed, but there was a subtle difference in her. Her whole being now seemed to breathe: "I have no doubt of life."
"I've changed and slept," she said as Paul's glance swept her. "I feel as if there had never been a storm."
She stepped backward with a smile.
"Are you laughing at them?" she asked. She drew back her skirt slightly and exhibited a pair of rubber sea boots which were inches too large for her. There was something boyish in the action that did draw a smile from Lavelle. "You are laughing," she went on, and pouted prettily. "But do so as much as you wish. They're sensible."
"Right you are. They're the very thing for decks like this. We should have thought of them before."
"They're much too large, but I've put on socks and socks and stuffed the toes with things."
This statement of a most obvious fact brought a genuine laugh from Paul. It passed quickly as the pain caused by the ring reasserted itself.
"Oh, let me do that for you," Emily said, crossing to his side. Before he could object she had knelt by him and taken his hand. "Why did I not think of this hours ago? Poor, poor fingers. Am I hurting you? There?"
The perfume of her hair, of her breath, of her whole being was about him. As the ring came off his hand closed on hers and he slipped the jade, with its strange seal in Chinese hieroglyphics, over her third finger. It was her left hand that he had chosen.
"I want you to take this, Emily—to wear it." He was fighting hard to control his voice. "Chang gave it to me the day I left Yokohama—when the old chap thought he would never see me again: the day you and I met."
"But, Paul, I——Poor old Chang would——"
"You must keep it. Have I never told you what it says—that seal?" She shook her head. "In Canton there is a very old temple. It is doubtful who built it. It stands near—not far from the Hall of the Five Hundred Wise Men. This seal is copied from its altars: 'Man has many reckonings with man, but only one with God.'"
The gold woman looked up, starting to repeat the line as Paul finished it. What was on her lips died there, unutterable in the light of his gaze, and what it awakened in her. Her eyes flashed back to his an answer of fire. The barriers of his determination crashed.
"Oh, my darling!" he cried in anguish, and he drew her head to his breast.
The gold woman's mouth met his and clung, rendering with flame its first kiss of love.
"Oh, I love you, woman of all the world, love you, love you! I am living alone by the power of this love. It has been mine for ages. It has been—it is my strength! It is my soul! It is the breath of my soul! Its single impulse, its desire, its law, its life!"
He held her from him and searched her face.
"And I love you. I have always loved you, my——"
A burning kiss blurred the words on her lips.
In silence they held each other's gaze in adoration until suddenly a shadow of dread darkened the man's face.
"Another storm such as we have just passed through——We could not live through it, darling. There was hardly a minute of last night or the day before which did not come armed with a summons to judgment. And, oh, the bitterness that was mine when I thought that you could not know; that I could not tell you what was in the soul of me!"
"But, Paul, even had death come to us then, I should have known it—afterward. I should have known it and you would have known that I loved you."
The firm conviction of this speech filled Paul with a new kind of awe of her.
"Darling," he murmured, and yet, as he kissed her eyes, the specter of the past laid its cold finger upon his lips. He drew back. "Some day you may hate me."
"Paul, Paul! Stop!"
Her voice was fraught with fear.
"If we live the days will come when—I come to you a broken, spurned thing. I have no place among the men of my people. I am wild! Crazy! My tongue should be torn from me for telling you what I have. I have no right to tell—I have no right to love! And you of all women——Emily, there is something—that night on theYakutat, I must tell you—we cannot——"
Her hand closed his lips.
"No, no, no, Paul. You mustn't. I know. There is nothing to tell me. There is no past to come between us. From the moment that I knew on theCambodiathat you were Paul Lavelle I knew the truth. There is no past. But there is a future, my darling—our future." She drew his head to her and kissed his eyes. "My fearless stars. For my faith's reward I ask only this: Your silence until I say you may speak. Promise."
"I promise," he answered, with a strange, indefinable hope burgeoning in his heart.
As he spoke the sun passed from the ports of the lounge and brought Paul Lavelle from his dreaming to the reality of a peril which he had too long forgotten. Emily read his thought.
"I will go forward and prepare our evening meal," she said. She kissed him and went out of the lounge, and at her going torment ruled his heart.
"My God, what have I been doing! What have I been thinking? Where is my manhood that I should be lying here sacrificing her? What a weak, shameless love mine must be!"
A feeling of abasement scourged him as each thought clamored for an answer. Although his body rebelled, he arose and kept his feet. Groping below, he found a pair of boots which would admit his ankles and went forward.
Emily, with a cry of amazement, discovered him suddenly, standing in the engine room door.
"Paul, you must go back. You must rest," she commanded. "It's clear. Go back. How can you stand?"
"There's too much Irish in me, dear," he answered, forcing a smile. "You must never let an Irishman stop to nurse his hurts. He can't keep his mind on pain and the fight at the same time."
"But the fight is over."
"It's never over—when the sea's on the other side."
He was determined and she wisely forbore to say anything else about his physical condition. The meal that she prepared—the hot coffee, the warmth of the galley fire—brought life in them to a glow. Tomatoes formed one of the dishes she cooked. Paul shuddered at the sight of it.
"Not unless I am starving," he said solemnly.
As they rose from the meal Emily sensed that something was lacking.
"Isn't there something else, dearheart? What is it you wish you had?"
"A good cigar—a big, fat, black fellow!" he laughed. "Then, the world would be complete." His glance interpreted his meaning.
"But there is tobacco aboard to chew," she suggested with a smile.
"I never attempted to chew tobacco but once in my life. I was only a little fellow visiting my grandmother's. The gardener provided it, or rather I took it from his workbench. Just as I settled down to prove to myself that I was a man grandmother called me into the house. I was caught. In my fear I swallowed the cud." He made a wry face and then went on in a dreamy way: "During the storm—whether it was last night or the night before, I can't remember—I thought if I could only get a piece of tobacco to chew there was no storm that blew that could put me down. Funny, wasn't it?"
Emily was silent, nor did Paul seem to notice it. She could think only of what his stress of mind must have been during those long black hours.
It was his last personal reference that evening to what had happened during the two nights and a day of theDaphne'swar with the sea. She felt that he did not wish to speak of it. Nor did she.
"As soon as the stars come out I am going to find out where we are——" Emily interrupted him with a laugh. "Where theDaphneis," he added, catching her thought, and joining her laugh.
"I am with the stars, Paul. I feel as if we were alone in space together."
She was standing beside him, looking out through the galley door at the setting sun. He stooped and kissed the crown of her head reverently.
He told her presently that it was more important to put the bark in a condition to get away from where she was than to find out where she was. One thing was certain: theDaphnehad plenty of sea room. The weather promised fair and therewith he summoned all his strength to take advantage of it.
While Emily busied herself about the galley, Paul renewed the fire under the donkey boiler.
"Bully old crew," he said to the engine and patting its piston in the familiar way men come to treat inanimate things which serve them. "Only you can't go aloft. You can set sail, but you can't furl it. But you're not going to fail us. You won't, will you?"
He was starting aft to fill the lamps there when Emily came to the engine room door. The impulse of action that was driving him was in her, too.
"Only give me something to do, Paul, and I'll do it just like a real sailorman."
"Keep your eye on this steam gauge. When it goes to sixty, open the fire door. It mightn't be a bad idea if you learned to sound the ship. There's the sounding rod on that hook. You will find the well between the pumps. Come. I'll show you."
"I know where it is," she said eagerly.
A half-foot of water was sloshing in the port alleyway and in and out of the rooms opening upon it as Paul entered the cabin. He found the plug of a scupper just inside the door and pulled it out. Glancing out on deck, he saw the vent of another scupper. He located this in the mate's room. As he pulled the plug free and withdrew his hand a sheet of paper stuck to it. Half curiously he carried it into the after saloon where he filled the lamps which would be most useful. It was some writing of the poor Sussex lad's, was his thought. As he lighted the first lamp the paper caught his eye again. He picked it up. The first line startled him and led his eyes leaping through the rest of the water-blurred text in a breathless comprehension.
"In the name of God, Amen: Being of sound and disposing mind, I, Emily Granville, spinster, of San Francisco, California, do declare this my last will and testament: After the payment of all just debts the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, wherever it may be, of which I die possessed, is bequeathed to Paul Lavelle, sometimes called Whitridge. I hereby revoke all wills heretofore made by me. In the event of the said Paul Lavelle, sometimes called Whitridge, not surviving, I direct that one-fourth of my entire estate be divided, share and share alike, among those named in said former wills and that the three-fourths remainder be converted by the State into a fund to be used and administered by the State for the succor and assistance of all persons, regardless of race or creed, who may suffer by disaster upon any of the seas. I further direct that this fund shall be known as the Lavelle-Granville fund. If any heir under the said former wills shall contest this will, Paul Lavelle surviving or not surviving, they shall forfeit to him or the said fund any interest they may have had or may claim in the said estate and receive $1. I do this in the realization of the imminent peril of death and as a testimony to the genuine manhood of Paul Lavelle; and also in memory of my father. My faith is that Paul Lavelle in justice must survive and that this will shall come to the eyes of men properly and without suspicion. The language I have used is remembered from my father's will with the hope that it will be binding legally."Aboard the barkDaphneat sea, March 31, 191-."Emily Granville."
"In the name of God, Amen: Being of sound and disposing mind, I, Emily Granville, spinster, of San Francisco, California, do declare this my last will and testament: After the payment of all just debts the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, real and personal, wherever it may be, of which I die possessed, is bequeathed to Paul Lavelle, sometimes called Whitridge. I hereby revoke all wills heretofore made by me. In the event of the said Paul Lavelle, sometimes called Whitridge, not surviving, I direct that one-fourth of my entire estate be divided, share and share alike, among those named in said former wills and that the three-fourths remainder be converted by the State into a fund to be used and administered by the State for the succor and assistance of all persons, regardless of race or creed, who may suffer by disaster upon any of the seas. I further direct that this fund shall be known as the Lavelle-Granville fund. If any heir under the said former wills shall contest this will, Paul Lavelle surviving or not surviving, they shall forfeit to him or the said fund any interest they may have had or may claim in the said estate and receive $1. I do this in the realization of the imminent peril of death and as a testimony to the genuine manhood of Paul Lavelle; and also in memory of my father. My faith is that Paul Lavelle in justice must survive and that this will shall come to the eyes of men properly and without suspicion. The language I have used is remembered from my father's will with the hope that it will be binding legally.
"Aboard the barkDaphneat sea, March 31, 191-.
"Emily Granville."
Paul Lavelle read this wonderful document a second and even a third time. It was epic in his sight. He really had no distinct thought. His mind was whelmed by awe of the character of the gold woman which the wet sheet of paper revealed. There came to him a picture of her writing at the desk in Elston's room on the evening of the day they had come aboard theDaphne. It was then that she had written this will. He kissed the paper because it seemed part of her and then tore it into little bits.
Emily was withdrawing the sounding rod from the well when Paul returned to the deck. Plainly she was in distress.
"I'm afraid, Paul, I'm a poor sailor," she said as he came to her side. "I can't tell anything from this."
Paul took the rod from her and dried it.
"You sounded as the ship rolled. The way to do is to wait until she comes on an even keel. Like this. Now."
"That is just the way I did."
A moment later he hauled the rod out and gasped in dread. It showed four and one-half feet of water in theDaphne'shold!
There surged through him a second later the rage with which he had met and fought the storm. Here was a new and unexpected gage of battle. It swept from him the last vestige of pain and fatigue. Instantly the suggestion of flame, characteristic of the man in action, marked his every movement.
"She's an iron vessel with a coal cargo," he hurriedly told Emily. "If the storm has strained her——" A mist came into his eyes and he glanced overside. "That cursed sea isn't going to get you! It isn't! Come on!"
Emily exhibited but a momentary apprehension of danger. The joy of working with Paul in a freely admitted equality swept it away. The only recognition of her femininity was his insistence upon her wearing a pair of gloves which he had brought from McGavock's room.
Together they got the pumps rigged to the donkey engine and started them sucking two black streams out of the hold.
"Two hours will tell us whether the enemy's in force or not—maybe sooner," Paul said as he left Emily to go about the ship with a lantern to discover if possible if theDaphnehad sprung a leak in her topsides. When he came to the fore hatch his hopes lifted at the thought that the sea might have entered here through the uncalked and untarpaulined covers. It was a dreary tangle of hamper which met his gaze in this part of the vessel. For an instant he was puzzled to observe that everything he touched left a black, oily smear. He crawled up under the forecastle head and there found what he considered an explanation of theDaphne'ssurvival. Two barrels of engine oil were lashed to the heel of the bowsprit. One of these had been sprung by the storm and was still weeping its contents upon the deck. It was this oil running out of the hawse pipes and the scuppers which had calmed the bark's tempestuous way.
This discovery relieved Paul's mind. He had felt compelled to believe that at times during the storm either he or the vessel had been bewitched. In all his long experience he had never seen a vessel make such good weather of things as theDaphne. If he had been in command with a full crew under him he would have poured out oil just as accident had done it. Going aft he paused to tell Emily about the oil and to report everything apparently tight forward.
"A barrel of oil didn't stand for more than thirty hours' steering, did it?" she asked, with pride flashing from her eyes.
In silence Paul went on aft to complete his examination of the ship. It felt strange to have a champion. He found the cabins practically free of water. Everything seemed tight. He stopped for a second in the derelict's door.
"Poor old fellow was out of his head," he muttered. There came to him a picture of the stranger's departure. The loss of this man, with only a flicker of life and mind in him, was but a small thing compared with the destruction of the four-master and all hands in the fullness of strength. But the thought of the derelict moved Paul with a great tenderness. This man had known his father.
"He believed I was 'The Prince,'" he mused. "Well, father, if there's any way of knowing—and I'm sure there must be—you know I've tried to play the game squarely."
An unsettling thought broke in upon this. What had made him think that the derelict was Driscoll, a quartermaster of theYakutat? He shut his mind against what he believed was a vagary. There was no doubt that he must have been out of his senses many times during the storm.
Making his way through the lounge to the poop he paused to examine the sextant. It was undamaged. It made him think of the chronometer. He hurried below to the chart room and wound it and then went forward.
The pumps were still bringing forth their two black streams. Emily stood beside them oiling their bearings with the touch of an engineer.
"I can't make out where this water is coming from. Either she's strained or it pounded in through the fore hatch," he told her. "Everything about deck seems all right. I've looked overside, too. Everything seems all right there. Her masts went clear of her. How did you manage to close that bulkhead door all alone?"
"I don't know, Paul," she answered frankly. She winced. "I don't know where I found the strength to do it. The whole sea was coming in, it seemed. I remember I was very angry. But I have been thinking about the stranger——" Her eyes filled with tears. "Could it be that I—I shut him out in the night—in that——"
"No, no, dear, put that thought away from you forever. He was gone beyond human aid or recall before you got below. I remember your going away from the wheel to do something. You had hardly closed the lounge door when——Let us not think of it."
"He was——" Emily interrupted.
"Let us shut out every thought of those two nights, dear, as long as we can. Shut it out with the past. Soon enough black nights like that will come between us. Won't you try?"
As Paul spoke he took one of her gloved hands and patted it. There was an appeal in his gaze: a flash of the old pain which she had been praying she might never see in those gray eyes again.
"We will not think of it, my 'prince,'" she answered.
With a quick smile he turned away and went forward. She watched him until he disappeared through the door of the sail room in the port side of the forward house.
In less than two hours there was a sudden cessation of the black streams from below and a weird moaning of the pumps where their plungers pounded emptily.
"Paul! Paul!"
The gold woman sent this cry forward, and as she did so she cut off the steam as she had seen Paul do. She thrilled at the sight of the engine stopping at the touch of her small hand. She was laughing as he came to the engine room door and saw what she had done.
"The pumps——There is no more water!" she cried eagerly.
"Give her another turn and let me hear," he said, and he went to the mainmast.
Now the engine turned over at a twist of her wrist.
"Avast!" called Paul at the sound of the dry plungers.
The engine stopped instantly at the word of command. "We're all right, Emily. That water must have pounded through the fore hatch."
She met him with a laugh of sheer joy which made her even white teeth gleam. It was joy at the lifting of the cloud which had fallen upon both of them at the discovery that theDaphnemight have sprung a leak. It was joy, too, that comprehended an ability to do things with her hands.
"I think I should rather be engineer than mate, Paul. It is a lot of fun making this engine go and stop."
"You will have an opportunity to be mate, engineer, and midshipmite in another couple of hours. We are going to have a bit of a moon to-night and I am going to get as much sail bent as possible."
Under the stimulation of some strong coffee they began immediately afterward to bend sail. With the donkey engine's aid it seemed ridiculously easy to snake the heavy rolls of canvas out of the sail room and hoist them aloft. Emily, with a woman's natural quickness, had the trick of using the hoisting drums in perfect control five minutes after Paul explained it to her. It did not surprise him nor was this so because of any personal reason. She thought when he told her that she was as good a working force as any two sailors and better than as many men landlubbers, that it was but an impulse of his natural kindness cheering her.
"Not a bit taffy, dear," said he, noting her doubt. "Every word true. Only thing a woman lacks is bull strength and perhaps judgment in personal matters."
The gold woman laughed.
"Are you arraigning my judgment?" she asked.
"No, but what I said is quite true," he continued seriously. "You can take a woman or girl or boy and in one trick at a wheel teach them to steer better than men who have spent a lifetime at sea."
Emily got that pleasure out of the tasks in which she helped which comes to one working under the direction of another who knows what he is about. Nothing seemed too hard; nothing seemed hard enough. The will of the man was inspiring. As she watched him climbing aloft or dropping below along a shroud or backstay it seemed impossible to believe that he had been down and helpless but a few hours before.
The moon came to light their work. By about 10 o'clock they had bent a new foresail, a new spanker, and new boom jib.
"That much will give us another little lease on this world," Paul said as he called quits for the night. "To-morrow morning we'll get a couple more rags on her, after some fashion."
But his work was not done. The while Emily prepared a snack of supper he went aft and took two stellar observations. The reckoning that they gave him was, indeed, startling. TheDaphnewas five hundred and eighty-five miles northeast of her last position! The navigator could hardly believe his eyes. He took a third set of observations. The result was the same. There had been times during the storm when he had realized that theDaphnewas driving with terrific speed. But he had anticipated nothing like this. Yet in this moment the sight of her clean clipper underbody came to him as he had seen it the morning he and the gold woman swam out from the Isle of Hope. Allowances for the distance made from the first noon until the time the storm had struck theDaphneand of her drift all that day gave him the wonderful speed average of more than sixteen knots an hour while the storm lasted. Still doubt lingered until he drew out of his memory a day's work of the famous clipperFlying Cloud—433¼ statute miles from noon to noon.
TheDaphne, by this reckoning, was lying in the great circle sailing track of vessels bound from the Japan coast toward San Francisco and Puget Sound. All thought of trying to make the Hawaiian Islands left him. The California coast lay less than three thousand miles to the eastward. The prevailing winds in this track from then on would be from the west and northwest. TheDaphne, with fair weather, should be able to make this distance in a month. If no vessel should rescue them they could win home in that time.
"Oh, youDaphnepacket!" he cried in glee as he hurried forward to tell Emily the good news. He went with a snatch of "The Dreadnaught" bursting from him.