The next day was Saturday, and whatever
had happened to Evan, he did not forget that this
was the day of the Ernestina’s excursion,
nor would he relinquish his determination to take
it. In his present sore and bitter state of
mind the prospect of a row was rather welcome than
otherwise.
He timed himself to arrive at the
East Twentieth street pier at nine-twenty, that is
to say ten minutes before the steamboat was due to
leave. He found Denton taking tickets at the
gangway as before, but it was a very different face
that Denton turned to him this morning; censure, reproach
and apprehension all had a part in his expression.
“He’s been filled up with great stories
about me,” thought Evan. There was a policeman
standing near Denton. Evan’s eyes glittered
at the sight of him.
Evan made believe not to notice any
change in Denton’s manner. “Good
morning,” he said cheerfully.
Denton made no reply.
“What can I do to-day?” asked Evan.
Denton shook his head.
Evan affected to be greatly surprised. “Why,
what’s the matter?”
“I guess you know,” the other said sorely.
The policeman stepped up. “Is
this the guy as made trouble for you last trip?”
he asked hoarsely.
Denton nodded.
The policeman turned self-righteously
on Evan. “Say, fella, you’d ought
to be ashamed of yourself! Don’t you know
no better than to make trouble for a charity!”
“You’ve got me wrong,
officer,” said Evan sweetly. “I didn’t
make any trouble. It was the other fellows made
trouble for me!”
“Yes, they did!” was the
scornful rejoinder. “That’s what
they all say! Well, they’re running this
show, see? And they don’t want you.
So beat it!”
Evan did not suppose that any charge
would be pressed against him, but even if he were
arrested and allowed to go, it would end the trip as
far as he was concerned. He decided upon a strategic
retreat. A new idea had occurred to him.
“That’s all right, old
fellow,” he said indulgently. “Don’t
apologise.” He turned to go.
The policeman turned a shade pinker
than his wont. “Don’t you get gay,
young fella! I ain’t apologising to the
likes of you!”
“My mistake,” said Evan,
laughing over his shoulder. “Keep the change!”
As he passed out of hearing the blue-coat
was saying sagely to Denton: “He’s
a bad one, all right. You can see it.”
When Evan reached the shore end of
the pier, he was cut off from the view of Denton and
the policeman by a pile of freight which rose between.
Unobserved by them, he made his way out on the next
pier. This pier like its neighbour was occupied
by craft of all kinds, canal-boats, lighters, scows,
etc. Evan came to a stop opposite the Ernestina,
and looked about him.
At his feet lay a large power-boat.
She had a skiff tied to her rail. A burly harbourman,
the skipper evidently, sat on the forward deck with
his chair tipped back against the pilot-house and his
hat pulled over his nose.
“How are you?” said Evan affably.
“How’s yourself?” was the non-committal
reply.
“I see you’ve got a skiff tied alongside,”
said Evan.
“Remarkable fine eyesight!” said the skipper
ironically.
“I’ll give you a dollar if you’ll
put me aboard that steamboat yonder.”
“Why the Hell don’t you walk aboard by
the gangway?”
“Well, you see it’s a
kind of joke I want to put up on them. I want
them to think they’ve gone off and left me, and
then I’ll show myself, see?”
“I never see nothing as don’t concern
me.”
“I’ll make it two dollars.”
“I ain’t running my head into no noose.”
“Oh, I assure you it isn’t a hanging matter.”
“Nothin’ doin’, fella.”
“Well, look here; you be looking
the other way, and I’ll take the skiff, see?
Then you won’t know anything about it.
You can recover it with one of the other skiffs in
the slip here.”
“How do I know you won’t make off down
the river in my skiff?”
“All you’ve got to do is start your engine.”
“Nothin’ doin’!”
“You get the two dollars first of course.”
The skipper let his chair fall forward
and slowly rose. He looked past Evan.
“Hey, Jake!” he cried to one on the pier.
“Wait a minute! I got somepin’
t’ say to yeh.” He stepped to the
stringpiece.
Evan thought he had failed until
he saw a hand poked suggestively behind the skipper.
Into it he hastily thrust two dollars. The
skipper nonchalantly went his ways. Evan stepped
aboard the power boat, skinned over the rail, and
untied the skiff.
A few strokes of the oars brought
him alongside the Ernestina. A steamboat
of this type has a wide overhang bounded by a stout
timber called the “guard.” When
Evan stood up in his skiff his shoulders were at the
level of the guard. But as the ledge it made
was only three inches wide and the gunwale rising
above it provided no hand hold, it was a problem how
to draw himself up.
He finally drew the skiff down to
the paddle-box where the interstices of the gingerbread
work enabled him to get a grip. As he pulled
himself up he thrust the skiff away with his foot.
He climbed back along the ledge to her stern gangway
and vaulting over the rail found himself on the narrow
deck encircling the stern, which is in marine parlance
the “quarter.”
All the business of the vessel was
on the pier side, and this part was deserted.
The sliding door leading to the entrance hall was
closed and Evan took care to keep out of the range
of vision of anyone who might look out through the
panes. He determined to stay where he was until
she got under way. A warning whistle had already
been sounded. He made himself comfortable on
a camp stool.
He chuckled to think of the sensation
his appearance would cause. True, they might
seize him and put him down in the hold again; they
were strong enough. But at least this time they
would not take him by surprise, and he doubted anyway
if they would attack him before the children.
Evan was strong with the children. It might
precipitate a riot on board.
The Ernestina began to back
out of the slip without anybody having stumbled on
Evan’s hiding-place. By this time the skipper
of the power boat had recovered his skiff, and was
watching Evan stolidly. Evan waved him a farewell.
Evan had no notion of risking all
he had gained by venturing out too soon. He
sat tight, entertaining himself as best he could with
the unbeautiful panorama of Long Island City, Greenpoint
(which is anything but green nowadays) and Williamsburgh.
They had passed under the far-flung spans of the
three bridges, rounded Governor’s Island and
headed down the Bay before he ventured to open the
sliding door into the entrance hall.
At the moment there was no one in
the hall who knew him, nor upon the stairway.
He mounted unhindered. At the top he almost
collided with Domville, the meekest of Corinna’s
brethren.
“How are you?” said Evan affably.
Little Domville stood as if rooted
to the deck, his face a study in blank dismay.
Then he turned without a sound, and scurried like
a rabbit down the saloon and out on the after deck,
presumably to spread the dreadful news. Evan
chuckled.
Others in the saloon had recognised
Evan. “Mister! Mister! Tell
us a story! You know. About the robbers
in the cave. They was just going to shoot Three-Fingered
Pete for treachery!”
Evan reflected that he could hardly
do better than take a leaf out of Corinna’s
book, and protect himself with a rampart of children.
So he sat himself down and began, while they pressed
close around:
“Well, Three-Fingered Pete was
just about ready to give up when a shot was heard
at the mouth of the cave, and a clear young voice cried,
‘Hold! in the name of the U. S. cavalry!’”
The door to the after deck opened
and Domville returned with Corinna and Dordess, the
cynical one. Evan watched them without appearing
to, and laughed inwardly at their amazed expressions.
His heart beat fast at the sight of the red-haired
girl. He told himself he hated her now but
perhaps hate can accelerate the pace of a heart too.
For a moment the three remained by
the door in consultation, then Corinna and Domville
went out on deck again, while Dordess came down the
saloon, not towards Evan but on the other side.
Evan was not going to let him pass in silence.
“How are you?” he called cheerfully.
Dordess sent him an ironical and courteous
greeting. He had more savoir faire than
the younger males of Corinna’s family.
He passed out of sight behind the engine trunk.
“Gone to get the others,” thought Evan.
But Dordess presently returned alone,
and nothing happened. He went back to the after
deck. As the minutes passed, Evan grew anxious,
not knowing what they had in store for him, but he
kept the story going.
Suddenly he saw the hump of Staten
Island sweep around into view through the stern windows,
and the Statue of Liberty passed by on the port side.
A few minutes before they had left it to starboard.
Wails began to be raised in the cabin. “Oh!
We’re going back again! What’s
the matter? I don’t want to go back!”
No need for Evan to ask himself then what they were
going to do.
He saw his opportunity when Corinna
appearing in the saloon, stopped to pacify a crying
child near the door. Dordess was on the other
side of the saloon. Going to Corinna’s
side Evan said softly:
“I suppose you’re going back to put me
ashore.”
She did not answer.
He said in the same tone: “Corinna,
I will not submit to such a humiliation a second time.”
“You have brought it on yourself,” she
answered without looking at him.
“Just the same I will not submit to it.”
“What are you going to do about it?” she
asked scornfully.
“I’ll go down to the little
deck outside the entrance hall on the port, that is
the left-hand side. I will wait for you there.
If you do not come to me before we pass under Brooklyn
Bridge, I’ll jump overboard.”
She looked at him startled and searchingly.
“You can’t frighten me that way,”
she said proudly.
“I’m not trying to frighten
you. I’m making a simple statement.
You know what it is to have a strong will.
Very well, others may have as strong a will as your
own. When I say a thing I’d die rather
than go back on it.”
Corinna paled, but would not weaken.
“I am not your keeper,” she said.
“You must do as you will.”
“Give me five minutes talk alone
with you, and I’ll go ashore willingly.
That’s all I came for.”
“I will not come. You
will only make a fool of yourself.”
“Very well, you have your choice,”
said Evan. He turned and went down the stairway.
Back on his camp-stool on the narrow
deck, he felt as a man must feel after burning his
bridges, a little shaky. He knew the lengths
to which a stubborn will may carry a person, and he
was not at all sure of her coming. Not that
he meant to draw back; he spoke truth in saying he
would have died first; he was a good swimmer, and he
had no serious doubt of his ability to reach the shore,
but he did not fancy being dragged out on a pier drenched
and shoeless, and having to give an account of himself.
And in that case Corinna would win out anyway.
The only way he could really get the better of her
would be by committing suicide, and he was not prepared
to go as far as that.
To save time the Ernestina
passed through Buttermilk channel between Brooklyn
and Governor’s Island. On the New York
side the slips of South Ferry and Hamilton Ferry passed
before Evan’s eyes, and a little later Wall
street ferry. The bridge was not visible to him
where he sat, but he knew it was looming close ahead;
the next ferry-house, Fulton Ferry, was almost directly
under it. Finally he got an oblique view of
the approach to the bridge with the trolley cars and
trucks crawling upon it, and he stooped over to untie
his shoes.
Suddenly the Ernestina gave
a little lurch, and he looked up to see what was the
matter. She was swinging around again!
She turned her tail to Brooklyn Bridge and started
out to sea again. Certainly if anybody had been
following her course that morning they would have been
justified in supposing the Captain to be slightly demented.
Evan laced up his shoes. He
grinned to himself in mixed satisfaction and chagrin.
Corinna had found a way to evade the choice he had
given her! True, she had prevented him from
jumping overboard, but she had not come to him.
Clearly she preferred to endure his presence on the
boat all day rather than give him five minutes alone
with her.
The only thing he could think of to
bring her was the power of curiosity. Perhaps
if he stayed where he was she would be forced in the
end to come see what had happened to him. He
determined to try it anyhow.
“But as soon as she looks out
of the door and sees me safe, she’ll fly back,”
he thought. He moved his stool around to the
very stern of the Ernestina. Here he
was invisible unless one came all the way round to
see.
Here his patience was indeed put to
a test. He had nothing to read he
could not have applied his mind to it, if he had had,
and he dared not smoke for fear of betraying himself.
All he could do was to sit and study the scenery.
The Ernestina went back through Buttermilk
channel, and rounded Red Hook. She passed the
Erie basin where upon the boundary fence Evan had
the edification of reading a sign half a mile long
extolling the virtues of a certain English condiment.
And they say the English are not enterprising!
She crossed the mouth of Gowanus bay and passed the
villas of Bay Ridge, and still nothing happened.
But as she approached the Narrows,
Evan thought he heard one of the sliding doors squeak,
and his heart leaped. Jumping up he flattened
himself against the deck house. There was an
agonising pause. If only he dared peep around
the side. Then Corinna came plump into view.
At sight of him a sharp exclamation
escaped her. She hung motionless for a moment,
her face fixed in a comical mask of surprise and indignation,
like a child’s, then she turned to run.
“Wait!” cried Evan peremptorily.
She saw that he could seize her before
she gained the door. She had learned the folly
of running from him. So she stood still.
Drawing herself up she said:
“I have nothing to say to you.
I only wished to make sure that you had not done
anything foolish.”
Evan glanced at the shores.
Staten Island was the nearer less than
half a mile. “It is not too late,”
he said.
“Overboard I go,” said
Evan, “unless you stop here and talk to me as
if I were a Christian.”
She smiled scornfully.
“I shall not be fooled a second time,”
she said.
“You were not fooled the first
time,” he said quietly. He bent down and
started to unlace his shoes.
“What are you doing?” she demanded.
“Can’t swim with my shoes on,” Evan
said without looking up.
He heard her catch her breath, but
her voice was still inflexible. “Do you
think me so simple!”
“I don’t think at all,”
said Evan with his hand on the rail. “I
give you your choice. Will you stop and talk
to me like a reasonable being for five minutes.”
Their hard eyes battled furiously,
and neither pair would down. “No!”
she said, though her lips were white.
He glanced down at the water boiling
from under the Ernestina’s counter, and
gathered himself for the spring.
The glance was too much for Corinna.
“Evan! Evan!” she cried sharply,
and put her hands out.
In a trice he had her in his arms.
“Ah, don’t kiss me!” she begged,
even while her lips surrendered to his.
“Ah, you nearly let me go!” murmured Evan.
“I would have gone too!”
“Then we’d both have drowned. I
couldn’t carry you all that way.”
“I wouldn’t have cared.”
“I’d rather live with
you, you beautiful thing! Why do you want to
kill us both?”
She tore herself from his arms.
“I can’t help myself. This is only
torment.”
“But why? why? I’m
of age. I have a right to know, to judge for
myself. What comes between us?”
“I cannot tell you.”
“And do you expect me to let
you go on your mere say-so? No, by God!
Not while I live!”
“You must let me go!”
“Is it a sin for you to love me?”
“It is impossible.”
“That’s not answering my question.
Have you a husband?”
“Certainly not!” she said indignantly.
He laughed at her tone. “Is
there any other man who has a better claim on you
than I have?”
She shook her head.
“Well, then!” he cried
in great relief. “What’s the matter?
There’s no other reason that I would recognise.”
“Have mercy on me,” she murmured.
“Let me go. Help me to be strong!”
“In other words help you not
to love me,” he said tenderly. “Not
on your life! I will never let you go without
a good reason.”
“I will tell you everything as soon as I can.”
“What does that mean, ’soon as you can’?”
“In a few days, a week maybe.”
“Why not now?”
“Something must happen first.”
“Corinna, don’t you understand
how this mystery tortures one who loves!” he
cried.
“I know. I cannot help myself.”
“But you promise to tell me?”
“Yes, if you will let me entirely alone until
I do tell you.”
“I’ll do my best,” he groaned.
“One can’t promise miracles.”
“And you must not let yourself love me, until
you know.”
“Oh, that’s clearly impossible.
I would have to love you just the same if you had
two or three husbands and were the wickedest woman
in the world beside.”
“I’m not a wicked woman!” she passionately
cried.
“Why, I didn’t suppose
you were,” he said surprised. “But
it wouldn’t make any difference.”
“Let me go now,” she begged. “This
only makes it harder.”
“Tell me you love me, and I’ll
let you go. You owe me that after having had
me assaulted on the last trip.”
“I didn’t know what they were going to
do.”
“Well, tell me you love me, anyhow.”
“I do not love you.”
“You do! It’s in your eyes, your
lips, I know you do!”
“If I told you it would be impossible to manage
you!”
Evan laughed a peal. “Darling
stubborn child! Then kiss me of your own free
will and I’ll let you go.”
“No! No! No!”
“Then I must kiss you.”