“Not alone?” said the skipper, in a startled voice.
“I don't mind being alone,” said Miss Jewell, gently; “I'm used to it.”
The other's reply was lost in the rush for the 'bus, and for the second time that evening the skipper had to find fault with the seating arrangements. And when a vacancy by the side of Miss Jewell did occur, he was promptly forestalled by a young man in a check suit smoking a large cigar.
They got off at Aldgate, and the girl thanked him for a pleasant evening. A hesitating offer to see her home was at once negatived, and the skipper, watching her and the cook until they disappeared in the traffic, walked slowly and thoughtfully to his ship.
The brig sailed the next evening at eight o'clock, and it was not until six that the cook remarked, in the most casual manner, that his sister was coming down to see him off. She arrived half an hour late, and, so far from wanting to see the cabin again, discovered an inconvenient love of fresh air. She came down at last, at the instance of the cook, and, once below, her mood changed, and she treated the skipper with a soft graciousness which raised him to the seventh heaven. “You'll be good to Bert, won't you?” she inquired, with a smile at that young man.
“I'll treat him like my own brother,” said the skipper, fervently. “No, better than that; I'll treat him like your brother.”
The cook sat erect and, the skipper being occupied with Miss Jewell, winked solemnly at the skylight.
“I know you will,” said the girl, very softly; “but I don't think the men—”
“The men'll do as I wish,” said the skipper, sternly. “I'm the master on this ship—she's half mine, too—and anybody who interferes with him interferes with me. If there's anything you don't like, Bert, you tell me.”
Mr. Jewell, his small, black eyes sparkling, promised, and then, muttering something about his work, exchanged glances with the girl and went up on deck.