The Captain laughed.
“I told ye so. Mine is the universal physiognomy! Stuffy night, wasn’t it?” he added, changing the subject abruptly.
Isabelle glanced at him quickly.
“I didn’t find it so,” she said. “Coming to breakfast, Miss Watts?”
“Yes. Walk round the deck with us once, as an appetizer?”
“No, thanks. I’m famished.”
“Miss Bryce would rather devour an Irishman as an appetizer before breakfast. ‘Fee, fi, fo, fum, I smell the blood of an Irishman’.”
“I’d prefer an Englishman, or a German!” retorted Isabelle, as she nodded and led the way to breakfast.
She pondered his remark about the stuffy night with a fluttering heart. Did he know? Did he suspect her? She watched men with moustaches, and tried to listen to their conversation. There were a good many English officers aboard with the regulation hirsute adornment of the upper lip. True to our custom of following English fashions, more than half the American men aboard had diminutive twisted affairs on the upper lip. There was no use trying to identify “the man” by the moustache. She listened for conversation verging upon the Far East—incidentally Chinese embroideries—but in vain.
She watched her chance when no one was about, to consult the ship register to see what men were in that corridor. She discovered five English officers were in that tier. In short they arrived, and disembarked without Isabelle finding a single clue to the gentleman who had her treasured coat.