"Come along, pup," he said. "Let us sample Dr. Christobal's cookery.

You have shared my watch; now you shall share my breakfast. We have

both earned it."

It was in his mind to knock loudly on Elsie's door and awaken her;

therefore he was dimly conscious of a feeling of disappointment when he

saw her, in company with Christobal, leaning over the rail of the

promenade deck, and evidently discussing the weird beauty of the scene

spread before her wondering eyes.

The ship was now so sheltered by the shoulder of the southern cape that

the keen breeze yet rushing in from the sea passed hundreds of feet

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above her masts. There was nothing more than a tidal swell on the

surface of the water, in which the heavy-laden vessel rested as in a

dock. In the new and extraordinary quietude the light thud of the

donkey-engine sounded with a strange distinctness, and Elsie and her

companion heard Courtenay's approaching footsteps almost as soon as he

gained the deck.

Instantly she ran towards him, with hands out-stretched.

"Let me be the first to congratulate you," she cried, her cheeks

mantling with a rush of color and her lips quivering with excitement.

"How wonderful of you to bring the ship through all those awful reefs

and things! No; you must not say you have done nothing marvelous. Dr.

Christobal has told me everything. Next to Providence, Captain

Courtenay, we owe our lives to you."

Courtenay felt it would hurt her were he to smile at her earnestness.

But he did say: "Surely it is not so very remarkable that I should do my best to

safeguard the ship and such of her passengers and crew as survive last

night's ordeal."

"I know that quite well. Even I would have striven to help when my

life was at stake. But the really wonderful thing is that you should

have guessed an unknown track in the dark; that you should actually be

able to guide a helpless ship through waters so full of dangers that it

would be folly to venture in their midst in broad daylight and with

full steam-power."

Then Courtenay took off his sou'wester, and bowed.

"I had no idea I had such expert critics on board. Is it you,

Christobal, who has followed the ship's course so closely?"

"Not I, my dear fellow. Miss Maxwell is only saying what I feel,

indeed, but could not have expressed as admirably. Our silent friend,

Tollemache, is the man who observes. I was so amazed when I came on

deck half an hour ago that I sought him out, and he told me something

of the night's later happenings. So I took the liberty of arousing

Miss Maxwell from a very sound sleep, but we thought it best not to

disturb you by appearing on the bridge until you had done everything

you had planned."




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