The Crusade of the Excelsior eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Crusade of the Excelsior.

The Crusade of the Excelsior eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Crusade of the Excelsior.

“Nor do you, very well, Miss Keene.  You were saying, only last night, you hardly remembered him.”

The young girl sighed.

“I was very young when he went West,” she said explanatorily; “but I dare say I shall recall him.  What I meant is, that he will be very glad to know that I have been so happy here, and he will like all those who have made me so.”

“Then you have been happy?”

“Yes; very.”  She had withdrawn her eyes, and was looking vaguely towards the companion-way.  “Everybody has been so kind to me.”

“And you are grateful to all?”

“Yes.”

“Equally?”

The ship gave a sudden forward plunge.  Miss Keene involuntarily clutched the air with her little hand, that had been resting on the settee between them, and the young man caught it in his own.

“Equally?” he repeated, with an assumed playfulness that half veiled his anxiety.  “Equally—­from the beaming Senor Perkins, who smiles on all, to the gloomy Mr. Hurlstone, who smiles on no one?”

She quickly withdrew her hand, and rose.  “I smell the breakfast,” she said laughingly.  “Don’t be horrified, Mr. Brace, but I’m very hungry.”  She laid the hand she had withdrawn lightly on his arm.  “Now help me down to the cabin.”

CHAPTER II.

Another portent.

The saloon of the Excelsior was spacious for the size of the vessel, and was furnished in a style superior to most passenger-ships of that epoch.  The sun was shining through the sliding windows upon the fresh and neatly arranged breakfast-table, but the presence of the ominous “storm-racks,” and partitions for glass and china, and the absence of the more delicate passengers, still testified to the potency of the Gulf of California.  Even those present wore an air of fatigued discontent, and the conversation had that jerky interjectional quality which belonged to people with a common grievance, but a different individual experience.  Mr. Winslow had been unable to shave.  Mrs. Markham, incautiously and surreptitiously opening a port-hole in her state-room for a whiff of fresh air while dressing, had been shocked by the intrusion of the Pacific Ocean, and was obliged to summon assistance and change her dress.  Jack Crosby, who had attired himself for tropical shore-going in white ducks and patent leathers, shivered in the keen northwest Trades, and bewailed the cheap cigars he had expected to buy at Mazatlan.  The entrance of Miss Keene, who seemed to bring with her the freshness and purity of the dazzling outer air, stirred the younger men into some gallant attention, embarrassed, however, by a sense of self-reproach.

Senor Perkins alone retained his normal serenity.  Already seated at the table between the two fair-headed children of Mrs. Brimmer, he was benevolently performing parental duties in her absence, and gently supervising and preparing their victuals even while he carried on an ethnological and political discussion with Mrs. Markham.

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The Crusade of the Excelsior from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.