Captain Wass grabbed down his megaphone; he wanted to submit a few

remarks which seemed to fit the incident.

But the captain of the Triton was beforehand with a celerity which

matched the up-to-date speed of his craft. He was bellowing through the

huge funnel which a quartermaster was holding for him. His language

was terrific. He cursed freighters in most able style. He asked why the

Nequasset was loafing there in the seaway without steering headway on

her! That amazing query took away Captain Wass's breath and all power

to retort. Asking that of a man who had obeyed the law to the letter! A

fellow who was banging through the fog at eighteen knots' speed blaming

a conscientious skipper because the latter had stopped so as to get out

of the way!

And, above all, going so fast when he asked the question that he was out

of ear-shot before suitable answer could be returned!

Captain Wass revolved those whirling thoughts in a brain which flamed

and showed its fires through the skipper's wide-propped eyes.

Then he banged his megaphone across the pilot-house. It rebounded

against him, and he kicked it into a corner. He began to whack his fist

against a broad placard which was tacked up under his license as master.

The cardboard was freshly white, and its tacks were bright, showing that

it had been recently added as a feature of the pilot-house. Big letters

in red ink at the top counseled, "Safety First." Other big letters

at the bottom warned, "Take No Chances." The center lettering advised

shipmasters that in case of accident the guilty parties would feel all

the weight of Uncle Sam's heavy palm; it was the latest output from

the Department of Commerce and Labor, and bore the signature of the

honorable secretary of the bureau.

Mayo noted that his chief was wholly absorbed in this speechless

activity; therefore he pulled the bells which stopped the backward

churning and sent the freighter on her way. They passed the fisherman in

the Hampton boat; he was bailing his craft.

"That was a rather close call, sir! I am glad that I have been trained

by you to be a careful man. You took no chances!"

"And where have I got to by obeying the United States rules and never

taking chances, Mr. Mayo? At sixty-five I'm master of a freight-scow,

sassed by owners ashore and sassed on the high seas by fellows like that

one who just slammed past us! If that passenger-steamer had hit me the

lawyers would have shoved the tar end of the stick into my hands! It's

all for the good of the hellbent fellows the way things are arranged

in this world at the present time. I'll be lucky if he doesn't lodge

complaint against me when he gets to New York, saying that I got in his

way!" He cut off a fresh sliver of black plug and took his position at

the whistle-pull. "You'd better go get an heiress," he advised his mate,

sourly. "Being an old-fashioned skipper in these days of steam-boating

is what I'm too polite to name. And as to being the other kind--well,

you have just seen him whang past!"




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