It was the first time he had asked this question, and he noted the other’s sudden shudder of revulsion.
“I’ve thought of that. But it can’t be. He was a beast, and she— she’s a little angel. Billy, her mother must have been beautiful. And that’s what made me guess— fear—”
Pelliter wiped his face uneasily, and the two young men stared into each other’s eyes. MacVeigh leaned forward, waiting.
“I figured it all out last night, lying awake there in my bunk,” continued Pelliter, “and as the second best friend I have on earth I want to ask you not to go any farther, Billy. She’s mine. My Jeanne, down there, will love her like a real mother, and we’ll bring her up right. But if you go on, Billy, you’ll find something unpleasant— I— I— swear you will!”
“You know—”
“I’ve guessed,” interrupted the other. “Billy, sometimes a beast— a man beast— holds an attraction for a woman, and Blake was that sort of a beast. You remember— two years ago— a sailor ran away with the wife of a whaler’s captain away up at Narwhale Inlet. Well—”
Again the two men stared silently at each other. MacVeigh turned slowly toward the child. She had fallen asleep, and he could see the dull shimmer of her golden curls as they lay scattered over Pelliter’s pillow.
“Poor little devil!” he exclaimed, softly.
“I believe that woman was Little Mystery’s mother,” Pelliter went on. “She couldn’t bear to leave the little kid when she went with Blake, so she took her along. Some women do that. And after a time she died. Then Blake took up with an Eskimo woman. You know what happened after that. We don’t want Little Mystery to know all this when she grows up. It’s better not. She’s too little to remember, ain’t she? She won’t ever know.”
“I remember the ship,” said Billy, not taking his eyes off Little Mystery. “She was the Silver Seal. Her captain’s name was Thompson.”