the vision of my kind down all its mad, violent, and masterful past was strong upon me.  Already, since our departure from Baltimore, three other men, masters, had occupied this high place and gone their way—the Samurai, Mr. Pike, and Mr. Mellaire.  I stood here, fourth, no seaman, merely a master by the blood of my ancestors; and the work of the Elsinore in the world went on.

Bert Rhine, his head and face swathed in bandages, stood there beneath me, and I felt for him a tingle of respect.  He, too, in a subterranean, ghetto way was master over his rats.  Nosey Murphy and Kid Twist stood shoulder to shoulder with their stricken gangster leader.  It was his will, because of his terrible injury, to get in to land and doctors as quickly as possible.  He preferred taking his chance in court against the chance of losing his life, or, perhaps, his eyesight.

The crew was divided against itself; and Isaac Chantz, the Jew, his wounded shoulder with a hunch to it, seemed to lead the revolt against the gangsters.  His wound was enough to convict him in any court, and well he knew it.  Beside him, and at his shoulders, clustered the Maltese Cockney, Andy Fay, Arthur Deacon, Frank Fitzgibbon, Richard Giller, and John Hackey.

In another group, still allegiant to the gangsters, were men such as Shorty, Sorensen, Lars Jacobsen, and Larry.  Charles Davis was prominently in the gangster group.  A fourth group was composed of Sundry Buyers, Nancy, and Tony the Greek.  This group was distinctly neutral.  And, finally, unaffiliated, quite by himself, stood Mulligan Jacobs—listening, I fancy, to far echoes of ancient wrongs, and feeling, I doubt not, the bite of the iron-hot hooks in his brain.

“What are you going to do with us, sir?” Isaac Chantz demanded of me, in defiance to the gangsters, who were expected to do the talking.

Bert Rhine lurched angrily toward the sound of the Jew’s voice.  Chantz’s partisans drew closer to him.

“Jail you,” I answered from above.  “And it shall go as hard with all of you as I can make it hard.”

“Maybe you will an’ maybe you won’t,” the Jew retorted.

“Shut up, Chantz!” Bert Rhine commanded.

“And you’ll get yours, you wop,” Chantz snarled, “if I have to do it myself.”

I am afraid that I am not so successfully the man of action that I have been priding myself on being; for, so curious and interested was I in observing the moving drama beneath me that for the moment I failed to glimpse the tragedy into which it was culminating.

“Bombini!” Bert Rhine said.

His voice was imperative.  It was the order of a master to the dog at heel.  Bombini responded.  He drew his knife and started to advance upon the Jew.  But a deep rumbling, animal-like in its sound and menace, arose in the throats of those about the Jew.

Bombini hesitated and glanced back across his shoulder at the leader, whose face he could not see for bandages and who he knew could not see.

“’Tis a good deed—do it, Bombini,” Charles Davis encouraged.

“Shut your face, Davis !” came out from Bert Rhine’s bandages.

Kid Twist drew a revolver, shoved the muzzle of it first into Bombini’s side, then covered the men about the Jew.

Really, I felt a momentary twinge of pity for the Italian.  He was caught between the mill-stones, “Bombini, stick that Jew,” Bert Rhine commanded.

The Italian advanced a step, and, shoulder to shoulder, on either side, Kid Twist and Nosey Murphy advanced with him.

“I cannot see him,” Bert Rhine went on; “but by God I will see him!”

And so speaking, with one single, virile movement he tore away the bandages.  The toll of pain he must have paid is beyond measurement.  I saw the horror of his face, but the description of it is beyond the limits of any English I possess.  I was aware that Margaret, at my shoulder, gasped and shuddered.

“Bombini!—stick him,” the gangster repeated.  “And stick any man that raises a yap.  Murphy!  See that Bombini does his work.”

Murphy’s knife was out and at the bravo’s back.  Kid Twist covered the Jew’s group with his revolver.  And the three advanced.

It was at this moment that I suddenly recollected myself and passed from dream to action.

“Bombini!” I said sharply.

He paused and looked up.

“Stand where you are,” I ordered, “till I do some talking.—Chantz!  Make no mistake.  Rhine is boss for’ard.  You take his orders . . . until we get into Valparaiso ; then you’ll take your chances along with him in jail.  In the meantime, what Rhine says goes.  Get that, and get it straight.  I am behind Rhine until the police come on board.—Bombini! do whatever Rhine tells you.  I’ll shoot the man who tries to stop you.—Deacon!  Stand away from Chantz.  Go over to the fife-rail.”

All hands knew the stream of lead my automatic rifle could throw, and Arthur Deacon knew it.  He hesitated barely a moment, then obeyed.

“Fitzgibbon!—Giller!—Hackey!” I called in turn, and was obeyed.  “Fay!” I called twice, ere the response came.

Isaac Chantz stood alone, and Bombini now showed eagerness.

“Chantz!” I said; “don’t you think it would be healthier to go over to the fife-rail and be good?”

He debated the matter not many seconds, resheathed his knife, and complied.

The tang of power!  I was minded to let literature get the better of me and read the rascals a lecture; but thank heaven I had sufficient proportion and balance to refrain.

“ Rhine !” I said.

He turned his corroded face up to me and blinked in an effort to see.

“As long as Chantz takes your orders, leave him alone.  We’ll need every hand to work the ship in.  As for yourself, send Murphy aft in half an hour and I’ll give him the best the medicine-chest affords.  That is all.  Go for’ard.”

And they shambled away, beaten and dispirited.

“But that man—his face—what happened to him?” Margaret asked of me.

Sad it is to end love with lies.  Sadder still is it to begin love with lies.  I had tried to hide this one happening from Margaret, and I had failed.  It could no longer be hidden save by lying; and so I told her the truth, told her how and why the gangster had had his face dashed with sulphuric acid by the old steward who knew white men and their ways.

* * * * *

There is little more to write.  The mutiny of the Elsinore is over.  The divided crew is ruled by the gangsters, who are as intent on getting their leader into port as I am intent on getting all of them into jail.  The first lap of the voyage of the Elsinore draws to a close.  Two days, at most, with our present sailing, will bring us into Valparaiso .  And then, as beginning a new voyage, the Elsinore will depart for Seattle .

* * * * *

One thing more remains for me to write, and then this strange log of a strange cruise will be complete.  It happened only last night.  I am yet fresh from it, and athrill with it and with the promise of it.

Margaret and I spent the last hour of the second dog-watch together at the break of the poop.  It was good again to feel the Elsinore yielding to the wind-pressure on her canvas, to feel her again slipping and sliding through the water in an easy sea.

Hidden by the darkness, clasped in each other’s arms, we talked love and love plans.  Nor am I shamed to confess that I was all for immediacy.  Once in Valparaiso , I contended, we would fit out the Elsinore with fresh crew and officers and send her on her way.  As for us, steamers and rapid travelling would fetch us quickly home.  Furthermore, Valparaiso being a place where such things as licences and ministers obtained, we would be married ere we caught the fast steamers for home.

But Margaret was obdurate.  The Wests had always stood by their ships, she urged; had always brought their ships in to the ports intended or had gone down with their ships in the effort.  The Elsinore had cleared from Baltimore for Seattle with the Wests in the high place.  The Elsinore would re-equip with officers and men in Valparaiso , and the

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