Part 9 (1/2)
”Then put my name down. How much is the pa.s.sage fare?”
”Fo-a-g-sl two hundred, cabin three hundred pa-o-unds.”
”What!” exclaimed Will.
Captain Brown smiled. ”You see,” said he, ”it c-a-unt be done for less--ha--'Bliged to give fa-bu-lous wages to crew, and only too thankful to get 'em at any price. Provisions cost their weight, a-most, in gold.”
”Will you be here an hour hence?” asked our hero.
”Ya-a-s, two hours hence,” drawled Captain Brown, lighting a fresh cigar at the stump of the old one.
Will Osten linked his arm through that of Captain Dall, and hurried him into the street.
”Now to the agent,” he said. ”If _he_ fails me, all is lost--stay! no; I can offer to work my pa.s.sage. That did not occur to me till now. I shall keep it in reserve.”
A few minutes more and they stood in the presence of Mr Zulino.
”Is it possible,” said Will, with an anxious expression of face, ”to sell the property in Grizzly Bear Gulch _immediately_?”
The dry visage of the agent wrinkled into a sarcastic smile as he replied ”Ha! I see, you are like all the rest--wish to turn everything into gold. Well, it _is_ possible to sell it, I make no doubt, because it is well situated and will increase in value; but what, do you mean by _immediately_?”
”To-night,” said Will.
”Impossible.”
”What's to be done?” cried our hero, turning to Captain Dall with a look of such perplexity and disappointment that even the hard heart of Mr Zulino was touched.
”Why such haste?” he inquired.
”Because business of the most urgent kind requires that I should embark for England in a vessel which sails to-morrow, and I have not money enough to pay for my pa.s.sage.”
”I can lend you some on the property, at a high rate of interest,” said the agent.
”Then do so, my dear sir,” said Will earnestly, ”at any rate of interest you choose, and I will sign any papers you may require. My friend here, Captain Dall, will see that you are regularly paid. I a.s.sure you that I shall _never_ forget the obligation.”
”Follow me,” said Mr Zulino, rising and putting on his hat.
He led them to the office of a man who appeared to be connected with the law, and who drew up a paper which, being duly signed and witnessed, Mr Zulino put in his pocket, at the same time handing Will Osten a cheque for four hundred pounds.
”Now, captain,” said Will, with a deep sigh of relief, as they, once more issued into the street, ”we'll go and enjoy our supper.”
Next morning Will Osten, with a small portmanteau containing his little all in his hand, and accompanied by Captain Dall and Mr Cupples, pushed his way through the crowded streets to the quay, where a boat awaited him.
”Once more, Captain Dall,” he said, turning round and grasping his friend's hand, ”farewell! I am sorry--more so than I can tell--to leave you. May G.o.d prosper you wherever you go. Remember my messages to our friends at the gulch. Tell Larry and Bunco, and the trapper especially, that I feel almost like a criminal for giving them the slip thus. But how can I help it?”
”Of course, of course,” said Captain Dall, returning the hearty squeeze of Will's hand, ”how could you? Love, like necessity, has no law--or, rather, itself is a law which all must obey. Good-bye, lad, and good luck attend ee.”
Silently shaking hands with Mr Cupples, whose lugubrious expression seemed appropriate to the occasion, Will leaped into the boat and was soon rowing over the bay to the spot where the Roving Bess lay with her anchor tripped and her sails loose. On approaching, he saw that Mr Westwood and his wife were pacing the quarterdeck, but Flora was not visible, the reason being that that busy little woman was down in her father's berth putting it to rights--arranging and re-arranging everything, and puzzling her brains with numerous little contrivances which were all meant to add to the comfort and snugness of the place-- wonderfully ingenious contrivances, which could not have emanated from the brain of any woman but one who possessed a warm heart, an earnest soul, a sweet face, and a turned-up nose! She was a good deal dishevelled about the head, in consequence of her exertions, and rather flushed, and her eyes were a little moist. Perhaps she was sad at the thought of leaving San Francisco--but no--she was leaving no friends behind her there. _That_ could not have been the cause!