A crusader and A sign.
It was the 4th of August, 1854, off
Cape Corrientes. Morning was breaking over a
heavy sea, and the closely-reefed topsails of a barque
that ran before it bearing down upon the faint outline
of the Mexican coast. Already the white peak
of Colima showed, ghost-like, in the east; already
the long sweep of the Pacific was gathering strength
and volume as it swept uninterruptedly into the opening
Gulf of California.
As the cold light increased, it could
be seen that the vessel showed evidence of a long
voyage and stress of weather. She had lost one
of her spars, and her starboard davits rolled emptily.
Nevertheless, her rigging was taut and ship-shape,
and her decks scrupulously clean. Indeed, in
that uncertain light, the only moving figure besides
the two motionless shadows at the wheel was engaged
in scrubbing the quarter-deck which, with
its grated settees and stacked camp-chairs, seemed
to indicate the presence of cabin passengers.
For the barque Excelsior, from New York to San Francisco,
had discharged the bulk of her cargo at Callao, and
had extended her liberal cabin accommodation to swell
the feverish Californian immigration, still in its
height.
Suddenly there was a slight commotion
on deck. An order, issued from some invisible
depth of the cabin, was so unexpected that it had to
be repeated sternly and peremptorily. A bustle
forward ensued, two or three other shadows sprang
up by the bulwarks, then the two men bent over the
wheel, the Excelsior slowly swung round on her heel,
and, with a parting salutation to the coast, bore
away to the northwest and the open sea again.
“What’s up now?”
growled one of the men at the wheel to his companion,
as they slowly eased up on the helm.
“’Tain’t the skipper’s,
for he’s drunk as a biled owl, and ain’t
stirred out of his bunk since eight bells,”
said the other. “It’s the first mate’s
orders; but, I reckon, it’s the Senor’s
idea.”
“Then we ain’t goin’ on to Mazatlan?”
“Not this trip, I reckon,” said the third
mate, joining them.
“Why?”
The third mate turned and pointed
to leeward. The line of coast had already sunk
enough to permit the faint silhouette of a trail of
smoke to define the horizon line of sky.
“Steamer goin’ in, eh?”
“Yes. D’ye see it might
be too hot, in there!”
“Then the jig’s up?”
“No. Suthin’s to be done north
of St. Lucas. Hush!”
He made a gesture of silence, although
the conversation, since he had joined them, had been
carried on in a continuous whisper. A figure,
evidently a passenger, had appeared on deck. One
or two of the foreign-looking crew who had drawn near
the group, with a certain undue and irregular familiarity,
now slunk away again.
The passenger was a shrewd, exact,
rectangular-looking man, who had evidently never entirely
succumbed to the freedom of the sea either in his
appearance or habits. He had not even his sea
legs yet; and as the barque, with the full swell of
the Pacific now on her weather bow, was plunging uncomfortably,
he was fain to cling to the stanchions. This did
not, however, prevent him from noticing the change
in her position, and captiously resenting it.
“Look here you; I
say! What have we turned round for? We’re
going away from the land! Ain’t we going
on to Mazatlan?”
The two men at the wheel looked silently
forward, with that exasperating unconcern of any landsman’s
interest peculiar to marine officials. The passenger
turned impatiently to the third mate.
“But this ain’t right,
you know. It was understood that we were going
into Mazatlan. I’ve got business there.”
“My orders, sir,” said the mate curtly,
turning away.
The practical passenger had been observant
enough of sea-going rules to recognize that this reason
was final, and that it was equally futile to demand
an interview with the captain when that gentleman was
not visibly on duty. He turned angrily to the
cabin again.
“You look disturbed, my dear
Banks. I trust you haven’t slept badly,”
said a very gentle voice from the quarter-rail near
him; “or, perhaps, the ship’s going about
has upset you. It’s a little rougher on
this tack.”
“That’s just it,”
returned Banks sharply. “We have gone
about, and we’re not going into Mazatlan at
all. It’s scandalous! I’ll speak
to the captain I’ll complain to the
consignees I’ve got business at Mazatlan I
expect letters I”
“Business, my dear fellow?”
continued the voice, in gentle protest. “You’ll
have time for business when you get to San Francisco.
And as for letters they’ll follow
you there soon enough. Come over here, my boy,
and say hail and farewell to the Mexican coast to
the land of Montezuma and Pizarro. Come here
and see the mountain range from which Balboa feasted
his eyes on the broad Pacific. Come!”
The speaker, though apparently more
at his ease at sea, was in dress and appearance fully
as unnautical as Banks. As he leaned over the
railing, his white, close-fitting trousers and small
patent-leather boots gave him a jaunty, half-military
air, which continued up to the second button of his
black frock-coat, and then so utterly changed its character
that it was doubtful if a greater contrast could be
conceived than that offered by the widely spread lapels
of his coat, his low turned-down collar, loosely knotted
silk handkerchief, and the round, smooth-shaven, gentle,
pacific face above them. His straight long black
hair, shining as if from recent immersion, was tucked
carefully behind his ears, and hung in a heavy, even,
semicircular fringe around the back of his neck where
his tall hat usually rested, as if to leave his forehead
meekly exposed to celestial criticism. When he
had joined the ship at Callao, his fellow-passengers,
rashly trusting to the momentary suggestion of his
legs on the gang-plank, had pronounced him military;
meeting him later at dinner, they had regarded the
mild Methodistic contour of his breast and shoulders
above the table, and entertained the wild idea of
asking him to evoke a blessing. To complete the
confusion of his appearance, he was called “Senor”
Perkins, for no other reason, apparently, than his
occasional, but masterful, use of the Spanish vernacular.
Steadying himself by one of the quarter
stanchions, he waved his right hand oratorically towards
the sinking coast.
“Look at it, sir. One of
the finest countries that ever came from the hand
of the Creator; a land overflowing with milk and honey;
containing, sir, in that one mountain range, the products
of the three zones and yet the abode of
the oppressed and down-trodden; the land of faction,
superstition, tyranny, and political revolution.”
“That’s all very well,”
said Banks irritably, “but Mazatlan is a well-known
commercial port, and has English and American correspondents.
There’s a branch of that Boston firm Potter,
Potts & Potter there. The new line
of steamers is going to stop there regularly.”
Senor Perkins’ soft black eyes
fell for an instant, as if accidentally, on the third
mate, but the next moment he laughed, and, throwing
back his head, inhaled, with evident relish, a long
breath of the sharp, salt air.
“Ah!” he said enthusiastically,
“That’s better than all the business
you can pick up along a malarious coast. Open
your mouth and try to take in the free breath of the
glorious North Pacific. Ah! isn’t it glorious?”
“Where’s the captain?”
said Banks, with despairing irritation. “I
want to see him.”
“The captain,” said Senor
Perkins, with a bland, forgiving smile and a slight
lowering of his voice, “is, I fear, suffering
from an accident of hospitality, and keeps his state-room.
The captain is a good fellow,” continued Perkins,
with gentle enthusiasm; “a good sailor and careful
navigator, and exceedingly attentive to his passengers.
I shall certainly propose getting up some testimonial
for him.”
“But if he’s shut up in
his state-room, who’s giving the orders?”
began Banks angrily.
Senor Perkins put up a small, well-kept
hand deprecatingly.
“Really, my dear boy, I suppose
the captain cannot be omnipresent. Some discretion
must be left to the other officers. They probably
know his ideas and what is to be done better than
we do. You business men trouble yourselves too
much about these things. You should take them
more philosophically. For my part I always confide
myself trustingly to these people. I enter a
ship or railroad car with perfect faith. I say
to myself, ’This captain, or this conductor,
is a responsible man, selected with a view to my safety
and comfort; he understands how to procure that safety
and that comfort better than I do. He worries
himself; he spends hours and nights of vigil to look
after me and carry me to my destination. Why
should I worry myself, who can only assist him by
passive obedience? Why’ ”
But here he was interrupted by a headlong plunge of
the Excelsior, a feminine shriek that was half a laugh,
the rapid patter of small feet and sweep of flying
skirts down the slanting deck, and the sudden and
violent contact of a pretty figure.
The next moment he had forgotten his
philosophy, and his companion his business. Both
flew to the assistance of the fair intruder, who, albeit
the least injured of the trio, clung breathlessly to
the bulwarks.
“Miss Keene!” ejaculated both gentlemen.
“Oh dear! I beg your pardon,”
said the young lady, reddening, with a naïve mingling
of hilarity and embarrassment. “But it seemed
so stuffy in the cabin, and it seemed so easy to get
out on deck and pull myself up by the railings; and
just as I got up here, I suddenly seemed to be sliding
down the roof of a house.”
“And now that you’re here,
your courage should be rewarded,” said the Senor,
gallantly assisting her to a settee, which he lashed
securely. “You are perfectly safe now,”
he added, holding the end of the rope in his hand
to allow a slight sliding movement of the seat as the
vessel rolled. “And here is a glorious
spectacle for you. Look! the sun is just rising.”
The young girl glanced over the vast
expanse before her with sparkling eyes and a suddenly
awakened fancy that checked her embarrassed smile,
and fixed her pretty, parted lips with wonder.
The level rays of the rising sun striking the white
crests of the lifted waves had suffused the whole
ocean with a pinkish opal color: the darker parts
of each wave seemed broken into facets instead of
curves, and glittered sharply. The sea seemed
to have lost its fluidity, and become vitreous; so
much so, that it was difficult to believe that the
waves which splintered across the Excelsior’s
bow did not fall upon her deck with the ring of shattered
glass.
“Sindbad’s Valley of Diamonds!”
said the young girl, in an awed whisper.
“It’s a cross sea in the
Gulf of California, so the mate says,” said
Banks practically; “but I don’t see why
we” . . .
“The Gulf of California?”
repeated the young girl, while a slight shade of disappointment
passed over her bright face; “are we then so
near”
“Not the California you mean,
my dear young lady,” broke in Senor Perkins,
“but the old peninsula of California, which is
still a part of Mexico. It terminates in Cape
St. Lucas, a hundred miles from here, but it’s
still a far cry to San Francisco, which is in Upper
California. But I fancy you don’t seem
as anxious as our friend Mr. Banks to get to your
journey’s end,” he added, with paternal
blandness.
The look of relief which had passed
over Miss Keene’s truthful face gave way to
one of slight embarrassment.
“It hasn’t seemed long,”
she said hastily; and then added, as if to turn the
conversation, “What is this peninsula? I
remember it on our map at school.”
“It’s not of much account,”
interrupted Banks positively. “There ain’t
a place on it you ever heard of. It’s a
kind of wilderness.”
“I differ from you,” said
Senor Perkins gravely. “There are, I have
been told, some old Mexican settlements along the coast,
and there is no reason why the country shouldn’t
be fruitful. But you may have a chance to judge
for yourself,” he continued beamingly. “Since
we are not going into Mazatlan, we may drop in at
some of those places for water. It’s all
on our way, and we shall save the three days we would
have lost had we touched Mazatlan. That,”
he added, answering an impatient interrogation in
Banks’ eye, “at least, is the captain’s
idea, I reckon.” He laughed, and went on
still gayly, “But what’s the
use of anticipating? Why should we spoil any
little surprise that our gallant captain may have
in store for us? I’ve been trying to convert
this business man to my easy philosophy, Miss Keene,
but he is incorrigible; he is actually lamenting his
lost chance of hearing the latest news at Mazatlan,
and getting the latest market quotations, instead of
offering a thanksgiving for another uninterrupted
day of freedom in this glorious air.”
With a half humorous extravagance
he unloosed his already loose necktie, turned his
Byron collar still lower, and squared his shoulders
ostentatiously to the sea breeze. Accustomed as
his two companions were to his habitually extravagant
speech, it did not at that moment seem inconsistent
with the intoxicating morning air and the exhilaration
of sky and wave. A breath of awakening and resurrection
moved over the face of the waters; recreation and
new-born life sparkled everywhere; the past night
seemed forever buried in the vast and exundating sea.
The reefs had been shaken out, and every sail set
to catch the steadier breeze of the day; and as the
quickening sun shone upon the dazzling canvas that
seemed to envelop them, they felt as if wrapped in
the purity of a baptismal robe.
Nevertheless, Miss Keene’s eyes
occasionally wandered from the charming prospect towards
the companion-ladder. Presently she became ominously
and ostentatiously interested in the view again, and
at the same moment a young man’s head and shoulders
appeared above the companionway. With a bound
he was on the slanting deck, moving with the agility
and adaptability of youth, and approached the group.
He was quite surprised to find Miss Keene there so
early, and Miss Keene was equally surprised at his
appearance, notwithstanding the phenomenon had occurred
with singular regularity for the last three weeks.
The two spectators of this gentle comedy received
it as they had often received it before, with a mixture
of apparent astonishment and patronizing unconsciousness,
and, after a decent interval, moved away together,
leaving the young people alone.
The hesitancy and awkwardness which
usually followed the first moments of their charming
isolation were this morning more than usually prolonged.
“It seems we are not going into
Mazatlan, after all,” said Miss Keene at last,
without lifting her conscious eyes from the sea.
“No,” returned the young
fellow quickly. “I heard all about it down
below, and we had quite an indignation meeting over
it. I believe Mrs. Markham wanted to head a deputation
to wait upon the captain in his berth. It seems
that the first officer, or whosoever is running the
ship, has concluded we’ve lost too much time
already, and we’re going to strike a bee-line
for Cape St. Lucas, and give Mazatlan the go-by.
We’ll save four days by it. I suppose it
don’t make any difference to you, Miss Keene,
does it?”
“I? Oh, no!” said the girl hastily.
“I’m rather sorry,” he said
hesitatingly.
“Indeed. Are you tired of the ship?”
she asked saucily.
“No,” he replied bluntly;
“but it would have given us four more days together four
more days before we separated.”
He stopped, with a heightened color.
There was a moment of silence, and the voices of Senor
Perkins and Mr. Banks in political discussion on the
other side of the deck came faintly. Miss Keene
laughed.
“We are a long way from San
Francisco yet, and you may think differently.”
“Never!” he said, impulsively.
He had drawn closer to her, as if
to emphasize his speech. She cast a quick glance
across the deck towards the two disputants, and drew
herself gently away.
“Do you know,” she said
suddenly, with a charming smile which robbed the act
of its sting, “I sometimes wonder if I am really
going to San Francisco. I don’t know how
it is; but, somehow, I never can see myself there.”
“I wish you did, for I’m going there,”
he replied boldly.
Without appearing to notice the significance
of his speech, she continued gravely:
“I have been so strongly impressed
with this feeling at times that it makes me quite
superstitious. When we had that terrible storm
after we left Callao, I thought it meant that that
we were all going down, and we should never be heard
of again.”
“As long as we all went together,”
he said, “I don’t know that it would be
the worst thing that could happen. I remember
that storm, Miss Keene. And I remember” He
stopped timidly.
“What?” she replied, raising
her smiling eyes for the first time to his earnest
face.
“I remember sitting up all night
near your state-room, with a cork jacket and lots
of things I’d fixed up for you, and thinking
I’d die before I trusted you alone in the boat
to those rascally Lascars of the crew.”
“But how would you have prevented
it?” asked Miss Keene, with a compassionate
and half-maternal amusement.
“I don’t know exactly,”
he said, coloring; “but I’d have lashed
you to some spar, or made a raft, and got you ashore
on some island.”
“And poor Mrs. Markham and Mrs.
Brimmer you’d have left them to the
boats and the Lascars, I suppose?” smiled
Miss Keene.
“Oh, somebody would have looked
after Mrs. Markham; and Mrs. Brimmer wouldn’t
have gone with anybody that wasn’t well connected.
But what’s the use of talking?” he added
ruefully. “Nothing has happened, and nothing
is going to happen. You will see yourself in San
Francisco, even if you don’t see me there.
You’re going to a rich brother, Miss Keene,
who has friends of his own, and who won’t care
to know a poor fellow whom you tolerated on the passage,
but who don’t move in Mrs. Brimmer’s set,
and whom Mr. Banks wouldn’t indorse commercially.”
“Ah, you don’t know my brother, Mr. Brace.”
“Nor do you, very well, Miss
Keene. You were saying, only last night, you
hardly remembered him.”
The young girl sighed.
“I was very young when he went
West,” she said explanatorily; “but I
dare say I shall recall him. What I meant is,
that he will be very glad to know that I have been
so happy here, and he will like all those who have
made me so.”
“Then you have been happy?”
“Yes; very.” She
had withdrawn her eyes, and was looking vaguely towards
the companion-way. “Everybody has been so
kind to me.”
“And you are grateful to all?”
“Yes.”
“Equally?”
The ship gave a sudden forward plunge.
Miss Keene involuntarily clutched the air with her
little hand, that had been resting on the settee between
them, and the young man caught it in his own.
“Equally?” he repeated,
with an assumed playfulness that half veiled his anxiety.
“Equally from the beaming Senor Perkins,
who smiles on all, to the gloomy Mr. Hurlstone, who
smiles on no one?”
She quickly withdrew her hand, and
rose. “I smell the breakfast,” she
said laughingly. “Don’t be horrified,
Mr. Brace, but I’m very hungry.”
She laid the hand she had withdrawn lightly on his
arm. “Now help me down to the cabin.”