“I've been telling her 'ow unsafe it is,” said the boatswain. “I've been telling her that she wants a man to protect her, and she only laughs at me. She don't believe it; d'ye see? Likewise I'm a small man—small, but stiff. She likes tall men.”
“Most women do,” said Mr. Travers, sitting upright and instinctively twisting his moustache. “When I was in the ranks—”
“My idea is,” continued the boatswain, slightly raising his voice, “to kill two birds with one stone—prove to her that she does want being protected, and that I'm the man to protect her. D'ye take my meaning, mate?”
The soldier reached out a hand and felt the other's biceps. “Like a lump o' wood,” he said, approvingly.
“My opinion is,” said the boatswain, with a faint smirk, “that she loves me without knowing it.”
“They often do,” said Mr. Travers, with a grave shake of his head.
“Consequently I don't want 'er to be disappointed,” said the other.
“It does you credit,” remarked Mr. Travers.
“I've got a good head,” said Mr. Benn, “else I shouldn't 'ave got my rating as boatswain as soon as I did; and I've been turning it over in my mind, over and over agin, till my brain-pan fair aches with it. Now, if you do what I want you to to-night and it comes off all right, damme I'll make it a quid.”
“Go on, Vanderbilt,” said Mr. Travers; “I'm listening.”