Part 3 (2/2)
”Your baggage ready, sir?” asked Tom.
”Nothing but this bag,” laughed Hilton, stepping back and picking up his hand luggage.
”Come along, then, sir.”
As Tom Halstead pressed his way through the throng of pa.s.sengers gathered on deck, he heard several wondering, and some admiring, remarks relative to the youthfulness of the skipper of so handsome and trim a yacht.
Hilton followed the young skipper down over the side. Tom turned to help him to the deck of the ”Restless,” but Hilton lightly leaped across, holding his bag before him. Tom Halstead, as he turned, got a good look at that bag. It was one that he was likely to remember for many a day. The article was of dark red leather, and on one side the surface for a s.p.a.ce as large as a man's hand had been torn away, probably in some accident.
”Here's the pa.s.sage money, Captain,” said Hilton, pa.s.sing over a ten-dollar bill. Murmuring his thanks, the young skipper crumpled up the bill, shoving it into a trousers pocket, then hurried aft.
Clodis was a short, almost undersized man of perhaps forty-five, stout and well dressed. His head was so bandaged, as he lay in the lower berth of the port stateroom, that not much of his face was visible.
”He's unconscious, and probably will be for hours,” stated Dr. Burke, as Captain Tom appeared in the doorway. ”If he comes to, I've left some medicine with your steward, to be given the patient. Of course you'll get him ash.o.r.e and under medical care as promptly as possible, Captain.”
”Surgeons are on the way from Beaufort to meet us,” the young skipper nodded.
”Then I'll return to my s.h.i.+p,” declared Dr. Burke, rising. ”But I'm glad to know that Mr. Clodis is going to be met by a friend.”
As the doctor hurried over the side, Hilton turned to walk aft.
”Stay forward, if you please, sir,” interposed Captain Tom. ”No one is to go into the cabin until the patient has been removed under a doctor's orders.”
There was a frown on Hilton's face, which, however, almost instantly vanished. Joe brought a deck arm chair and placed it for Mr. Hilton on the bridge deck.
”Good luck for you and your patient, sir,” called down Captain Hampton over the rail, as he prepared to get under headway.
”Thank you, sir,” Tom acknowledged. ”We'll take the best care of Mr.
Clodis that we know how.”
With Hank on duty in the cabin, Tom Halstead had to cast off and make his own start as best he could. He managed the double task neatly, however, and, as he fell away the ”Constant's” engine-room bell could be heard for half-speed-ahead.
The little auto-whistle of the ”Restless” sounded shrilly, to be answered with a long, deep-throated blast from the liner's steam whistle. With this brief interchange of sea courtesies the two craft fell apart, going on their respective ways.
”Full speed on the return?” called Joe, from the doorway of the motor room.
”Yes,” nodded Captain Tom. ”But look out for vibration. Our sick man has had his skull cracked.”
By the time the yacht had gone scooting for more than a mile over the waves, Captain Halstead, left hand on the wheel, turned to Hilton.
”Did you hear how our sick man came to be hurt, sir?”
”I didn't hear of it until a couple of hours after it happened,”
replied Hilton. ”I understand that Mr. Clodis fell down the stairs leading to the main saloon, and was picked up unconscious. That was about all the word that was given out on board.”
Captain Tom nodded, then gave his whole attention to making Lonely Island as speedily as possible. There was no land in sight, and the trip back was a long one. Yet the young skipper had his bearings perfectly.
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