Courtenay lost not an instant of favoring tide and fine weather. When

Boyle told him that Walker could work the engines under easy steam, he

dashed up to the bridge three steps at a time. With his hand on the

telegraph, he superintended the hoisting on board of the life-boat and

two of the canoes, which he meant to carry away as trophies--be sure

that Elsie's own special craft was one of them. Meanwhile, Boyle saw

to the safe stowing in the remaining canoes of the wounded Indians in

the fore cabin, and a few furnace bars attached to a rope anchored them

in mid channel, whence their friends could bring them to shore later.

At last, the captain of the Kansas had the supreme satisfaction of

hearing the clang of the electric bell in the engine-room as he put the

telegraph lever successively to "Stand By," and "Slow Ahead."

Gradually the ship crept north, gaining way as the engines increased

their stroke and the full body of the ebb tide made its volume felt.

Round swung the Kansas to the west, just as the sun cleared the

highest peak of the unknown mountains. Courtenay had not forgotten his

bearings. Although he had men using the lead constantly, he did not

need their help. Once clear of the reefs which he had seen when the

vessel first ran into the inlet, he made straight for the pillar rock,

and rather raised the hair of the man at the wheel, not to mention most

of the people on deck, by the nearness of his approach to that solitary

buoy set in the midst of a broken sea. How good it was to feel the

steady thrust of the pistons, the long roll of the ship over the swell!

And then, when Elsie brought him his breakfast, and stood by his side

as he watched the set of the tide with unwavering eyes, what a joy that

was, to listen to her story of the night's wanderings, and to know

that, with God's help, their Odyssey was nearing its end!

For every sailor is a fatalist, and in the unwritten code of the sea

the law runs that once a ship has undergone her supreme trial she has

the freedom of the great highway for that voyage, though she girdle the

earth ere the dock gates open.

But best of all was it to hear Elsie tell how Dr. Christobal had handed

her a bulky packet, in which she found Courtenay's words of farewell,

together with those wonderful letters which fate had held back from her

twice already. They were only glowing epistles from the hundreds of

passengers on the Florida, but six of them were proposals from

enthusiastic ladies, all well dowered, and eager to give their charms

and their cash to the safe keeping of the man who had saved their

lives. It was with reference to some joking comment by Courtenay on

these missives that his sister wrote to congratulate him on having

escaped matrimony under such conditions. Elsie, brimful of high

spirits, amused herself by teasing him with nice phrases culled from

each of the six.




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