Instinctively he began to look about the cabin for a barometer.

Already that day the Olenia's glass had warned him by its downward

tendency. He wondered whether further reading would indicate something

more ominous than fog.

Across the cabin he noted some sort of an instrument swinging from a

hook on a carline. He investigated. It was a makeshift barometer, the

advertising gift of a yeast company. The contents of its tube were

roiled to the height of the mark which was lettered "Tornado."

"You can't tell nothing from that!" Captain Candage had come down into

the cabin and stood behind his involuntary guest. "It has registered

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'Tornado' ever since the glass got cracked. And even at that, it's about

as reliable as any of the rest of them tinkerdiddle things."

"Haven't you a regular barometer--an aneroid?" inquired Captain Mayo.

"I can smell all the weather I need to without bothering with one of

them contrivances," declared the master of the schooner, in lordly

manner. He began to pull dirty oilskins out of a locker.

Mayo hurried up the companionway and put out his head. There were both

weight and menace in the wind which hooted past his ears. The fog was

gone, but the night was black, without glimmer of stars. The white

crests of the waves which galloped alongside flaked the darkness with

ominous signalings.

"If you can smell weather, Captain Candage, your nose ought to tell you

that this promises to be something pretty nasty."

"Oh, it might be called nasty by lubbers on a gingerbread yacht, but

I have sailed the seas in my day and season, and I don't run for an

inshore puddle every time the wind whickers a little." He was fumbling

with a button under his crisp roll of chin beard and gave the other man

a stare of superiority.

"You don't class me with yacht-lubbers, do you?"

"Well, you was just on a yacht, wasn't you?"

"Look here, Captain Candage, you may just as well understand, now and

here, that I'm one of your kind of sailors. Excuse me for personal

talk, but I want to inform you that from fifteen to twenty I was a

Grand-Banksman. Last season I was captain of the beam trawler Laura and

Marion. And I have steamboated in the Sound and have been a first mate

in the hard-pine trade in Southern waters. I have had a chance to find

out more or less about weather."

"Un-huh!" remarked the skipper, feigning indifference. "What about it?"




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