<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<br/>
<p>The reversing of the engines had not stopped the momentum of the
ship when Alan reached the open deck. She was fighting, but still
swept slowly ahead against the force struggling to hold her back.
He heard running feet, voices, and the rattle of davit blocks, and
came up as the starboard boat aft began swinging over the smooth
sea. Captain Rifle was ahead of him, half-dressed, and the second
officer was giving swift commands. A dozen passengers had come from
the smoking-room. There was only one woman. She stood a little
back, partly supported in a man's arms, her face buried in her
hands. Alan looked at the man, and he knew from his appearance that
she was the woman who had screamed.</p>
<p>He heard the splash of the boat as it struck water, and the
rattle of oars, but the sound seemed a long distance away. Only one
thing came to him distinctly in the sudden sickness that gripped
him, and that was the terrible sobbing of the woman. He went to
them, and the deck seemed to sway under his feet. He was conscious
of a crowd gathering about the empty davits, but he had eyes only
for these two.</p>
<p>"Was it a man--or a woman?" he asked.</p>
<p>It did not seem to him it was his voice speaking. The words were
forced from his lips. And the other man, with the woman's head
crumpled against his shoulder, looked into a face as emotionless as
stone.</p>
<p>"A woman," he replied. "This is my wife. We were sitting here
when she climbed upon the rail and leaped in. My wife screamed when
she saw her going."</p>
<p>The woman raised her head. She was still sobbing, with no tears
in her eyes, but only horror. Her hands were clenched about her
husband's arm. She struggled to speak and failed, and the man bowed
his head to comfort her. And then Captain Rifle stood at their
side. His face was haggard, and a glance told Alan that he
knew.</p>
<p>"Who was it?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"This lady thinks it was Miss Standish."</p>
<p>Alan did not move or speak. Something seemed to have gone wrong
for a moment in his head. He could not hear distinctly the
excitement behind him, and before him things were a blur. The
sensation came and passed swiftly, with no sign of it in the
immobility of his pale face.</p>
<p>"Yes, the girl at your table. The pretty girl. I saw her
clearly, and then--then--"</p>
<p>It was the woman. The captain broke in, as she caught herself
with a choking breath:</p>
<p>"It is possible you are mistaken. I can not believe Miss
Standish would do that. We shall soon know. Two boats are gone, and
a third lowering." He was hurrying away, throwing the last words
over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Alan made no movement to follow. His brain cleared itself of
shock, and a strange calmness began to possess him. "You are quite
sure it was the girl at my table?" he found himself saying. "Is it
possible you might be mistaken?"</p>
<p>"No," said the woman. "She was so quiet and pretty that I have
noticed her often. I saw her clearly in the starlight. And she saw
me just before she climbed to the rail and jumped. I'm almost sure
she smiled at me and was going to speak. And then--then--she was
gone!"</p>
<p>"I didn't know until my wife screamed," added the man. "I was
seated facing her at the time. I ran to the rail and could see
nothing behind but the wash of the ship. I think she went down
instantly."</p>
<p>Alan turned. He thrust himself silently through a crowd of
excited and questioning people, but he did not hear their questions
and scarcely sensed the presence of their voices. His desire to
make great haste had left him, and he walked calmly and
deliberately to the cabin where Mary Standish would be if the woman
was mistaken, and it was not she who had leaped into the sea. He
knocked at the door only once. Then he opened it. There was no cry
of fear or protest from within, and he knew the room was empty
before he turned on the electric light. He had known it from the
beginning, from the moment he heard the woman's scream. Mary
Standish was gone.</p>
<p>He looked at her bed. There was the depression made by her head
in the pillow. A little handkerchief lay on the coverlet, crumpled
and twisted. Her few possessions were arranged neatly on the
reading table. Then he saw her shoes and her stockings, and a dress
on the bed, and he picked up one of the shoes and held it in a
cold, steady hand. It was a little shoe. His fingers closed about
it until it crushed like paper.</p>
<p>He was holding it when he heard someone behind him, and he
turned slowly to confront Captain Rifle. The little man's face was
like gray wax. For a moment neither of them spoke. Captain Rifle
looked at the shoe crumpled in Alan's hand.</p>
<p>"The boats got away quickly," he said in a husky voice. "We
stopped inside the third-mile. If she can swim--there is a
chance."</p>
<p>"She won't swim," replied Alan. "She didn't jump in for that.
She is gone."</p>
<p>In a vague and detached sort of way he was surprised at the
calmness of his own voice. Captain Rifle saw the veins standing out
on his clenched hands and in his forehead. Through many years he
had witnessed tragedy of one kind and another. It was not strange
to him. But a look of wonderment shot into his eyes at Alan's
words. It took only a few seconds to tell what had happened the
preceding night, without going into details. The captain's hand was
on Alan's arm when he finished, and the flesh under his fingers was
rigid and hard as steel.</p>
<p>"We'll talk with Rossland after the boats return," he said.</p>
<p>He drew Alan from the room and closed the door.</p>
<p>Not until he had reentered his own cabin did Alan realize he
still held the crushed shoe in his hand. He placed it on his bed
and dressed. It took him only a few minutes. Then he went aft and
found the captain. Half an hour later the first boat returned. Five
minutes after that, a second came in. And then a third. Alan stood
back, alone, while the passengers crowded the rail. He knew what to
expect. And the murmur of it came to him--failure! It was like a
sob rising softly out of the throats of many people. He drew away.
He did not want to meet their eyes, or talk with them, or hear the
things they would be saying. And as he went, a moan came to his
lips, a strangled cry filled with an agony which told him he was
breaking down. He dreaded that. It was the first law of his kind to
stand up under blows, and he fought against the desire to reach out
his arms to the sea and entreat Mary Standish to rise up out of it
and forgive him.</p>
<p>He drove himself on like a mechanical thing. His white face was
a mask through which burned no sign of his grief, and in his eyes
was a deadly coldness. Heartless, the woman who had screamed might
have said. And she would have been right. His heart was gone.</p>
<p>Two people were at Rossland's door when he came up. One was
Captain Rifle, the other Marston, the ship's doctor. The captain
was knocking when Alan joined them. He tried the door. It was
locked.</p>
<p>"I can't rouse him," he said. "And I did not see him among the
passengers."</p>
<p>"Nor did I," said Alan.</p>
<p>Captain Rifle fumbled with his master key.</p>
<p>"I think the circumstances permit," he explained. In a moment he
looked up, puzzled. "The door is locked on the inside, and the key
is in the lock."</p>
<p>He pounded with his fist on the panel. He continued to pound
until his knuckles were red. There was still no response.</p>
<p>"Odd," he muttered.</p>
<p>"Very odd," agreed Alan.</p>
<p>His shoulder was against the door. He drew back and with a
single crash sent it in. A pale light filtered into the room from a
corridor lamp, and the men stared. Rossland was in bed. They could
see his face dimly, upturned, as if staring at the ceiling. But
even now he made no movement and spoke no word. Marston entered and
turned on the light.</p>
<p>After that, for ten seconds, no man moved. Then Alan heard
Captain Rifle close the door behind them, and from Marston's lips
came a startled whisper:</p>
<p>"Good God!"</p>
<p>Rossland was not covered. He was undressed and flat on his back.
His arms were stretched out, his head thrown back, his mouth agape.
And the white sheet under him was red with blood. It had trickled
over the edges and to the floor. His eyes were loosely closed.
After the first shock Doctor Marston reacted swiftly. He bent over
Rossland, and in that moment, when his back was toward them,
Captain Rifle's eyes met Alan's. The same thought--and in another
instant disbelief--flashed from one to the other.</p>
<p>Marston was speaking, professionally cool now. "A knife stab,
close to the right lung, if not in it. And an ugly bruise over his
eye. He is not dead. Let him lie as he is until I return with
instruments and dressing."</p>
<p>"The door was locked on the inside," said Alan, as soon as the
doctor was gone. "And the window is closed. It looks like--suicide.
It is possible--there was an understanding between them--and
Rossland chose this way instead of the sea?"</p>
<p>Captain Rifle was on his knees. He looked under the berth,
peered into the corners, and pulled back the blanket and sheet.
"There is no knife," he said stonily. And in a moment he added:
"There are red stains on the window. It was not attempted suicide.
It was--"</p>
<p>"Murder."</p>
<p>"Yes, if Rossland dies. It was done through the open window.
Someone called Rossland to the window, struck him, and then closed
the window. Or it is possible, if he were sitting or standing here,
that a long-armed man might have reached him. It was a man, Alan.
We've got to believe that. It was a <i>man</i>."</p>
<p>"Of course, a man," Alan nodded.</p>
<p>They could hear Marston returning, and he was not alone. Captain
Rifle made a gesture toward the door. "Better go," he advised.
"This is a ship's matter, and you won't want to be unnecessarily
mixed up in it. Come to my cabin in half an hour. I shall want to
see you."</p>
<p>The second officer and the purser were with Doctor Marston when
Alan passed them, and he heard the door of Rossland's room close
behind him. The ship was trembling under his feet again. They were
moving away. He went to Mary Standish's cabin and deliberately
gathered her belongings and put them in the small hand-bag with
which she had come aboard. Without any effort at concealment he
carried the bag to his room and packed his own dunnage. After that
he hunted up Stampede Smith and explained to him that an unexpected
change in his plans compelled them to stop at Cordova. He was five
minutes late in his appointment with the captain.</p>
<p>Captain Rifle was seated at his desk when Alan entered his
cabin. He nodded toward a chair.</p>
<p>"We'll reach Cordova inside of an hour," he said. "Doctor
Marston says Rossland will live, but of course we can not hold the
<i>Nome</i> in port until he is able to talk. He was struck through
the window. I will make oath to that. Have you anything--in
mind?"</p>
<p>"Only one thing," replied Alan, "a determination to go ashore as
soon as I can. If it is possible, I shall recover her body and care
for it. As for Rossland, it is not a matter of importance to me
whether he lives or dies. Mary Standish had nothing to do with the
assault upon him. It was merely coincident with her own act and
nothing more. Will you tell me our location when she leaped into
the sea."</p>
<p>He was fighting to retain his calmness, his resolution not to
let Captain Rifle see clearly what the tragedy of her death had
meant to him.</p>
<p>"We were seven miles off the Eyak River coast, a little south
and west. If her body goes ashore, it will be on the island, or the
mainland east of Eyak River. I am glad you are going to make an
effort. There is a chance. And I hope you will find her."</p>
<p>Captain Rifle rose from his chair and walked nervously back and
forth. "It's a bad blow for the ship--her first trip," he said.
"But I'm not thinking of the <i>Nome</i>. I'm thinking of Mary
Standish. My God, it is terrible! If it had been anyone
else--<i>anyone</i>--" His words seemed to choke him, and he made a
despairing gesture with his hands. "It is hard to believe--almost
impossible to believe she would deliberately kill herself. Tell me
again what happened in your cabin."</p>
<p>Crushing all emotion out of his voice, Alan repeated briefly
certain details of the girl's visit. But a number of things which
she had trusted to his confidence he did not betray. He did not
dwell upon Rossland's influence or her fear of him. Captain Rifle
saw his effort, and when he had finished, he gripped his hand,
understanding in his eyes.</p>
<p>"You're not responsible--not so much as you believe," he said.
"Don't take it too much to heart, Alan. But find her. Find her if
you can, and let me know. You will do that--you will let me
know?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I shall let you know."</p>
<p>"And Rossland. He is a man with many enemies. I am positive his
assailant is still on board."</p>
<p>"Undoubtedly."</p>
<p>The captain hesitated. He did not look at Alan as he said:
"There is nothing in Miss Standish's room. Even her bag is gone. I
thought I saw things in there when I was with you. I thought I saw
something in your hand. But I must have been mistaken. She probably
flung everything into the sea--before she went."</p>
<p>"Such a thought is possible," agreed Alan evasively.</p>
<p>Captain Rifle drummed the top of his desk with his finger-tips.
His face looked haggard and old in the shaded light of the cabin.
"That's all, Alan. God knows I'd give this old life of mine to
bring her back if I could. To me she was much like--someone--a long
time dead. That's why I broke ship's regulations when she came
aboard so strangely at Seattle, without reservation. I'm sorry now.
I should have sent her ashore. But she is gone, and it is best that
you and I keep to ourselves a little of what we guess. I hope you
will find her, and if you do--"</p>
<p>"I shall send you word."</p>
<p>They shook hands, and Captain Rifle's fingers still held to
Alan's as they went to the door and opened it. A swift change had
come in the sky. The stars were gone, and a moaning whisper hovered
over the darkened sea.</p>
<p>"A thunder-storm," said the captain.</p>
<p>His mastery was gone, his shoulders bent, and there was a
tremulous note in his voice that compelled Alan to look straight
out into darkness. And then he said,</p>
<p>"Rossland will be sent to the hospital in Cordova, if he
lives."</p>
<p>Alan made no answer. The door closed softly behind him, and
slowly he went through gloom to the rail of the ship, and stood
there, with the whispered moaning of the sea coming to him out of a
pit of darkness. A vast distance away he heard a low intonation of
thunder.</p>
<p>He struggled to keep hold of himself as he returned to his
cabin. Stampede Smith was waiting for him, his dunnage packed in an
oilskin bag. Alan explained the unexpected change in his plans.
Business in Cordova would make him miss a boat and would delay him
at least a month in reaching the tundras. It was necessary for
Stampede to go on to the range alone. He could make a quick trip by
way of the Government railroad to Tanana. After that he would go to
Allakakat, and thence still farther north into the Endicott
country. It would be easy for a man like Stampede to find the
range. He drew a map, gave him certain written instructions, money,
and a final warning not to lose his head and take up gold-hunting
on the way. While it was necessary for him to go ashore at once, he
advised Stampede not to leave the ship until morning. And Stampede
swore on oath he would not fail him.</p>
<p>Alan did not explain his own haste and was glad Captain Rifle
had not questioned him too closely. He was not analyzing the
reasonableness of his action. He only knew that every muscle in his
body was aching for physical action and that he must have it
immediately or break. The desire was a touch of madness in his
blood, a thing which he was holding back by sheer force of will. He
tried to shut out the vision of a pale face floating in the sea; he
fought to keep a grip on the dispassionate calmness which was a
part of him. But the ship itself was battering down his stoic
resistance. In an hour--since he had heard the scream of the
woman--he had come to hate it. He wanted the feel of solid earth
under his feet. He wanted, with all his soul, to reach that narrow
strip of coast where Mary Standish was drifting in.</p>
<p>But even Stampede saw no sign of the fire that was consuming
him. And not until Alan's feet touched land, and Cordova lay before
him like a great hole in the mountains, did the strain give way
within him. After he had left the wharf, he stood alone in the
darkness, breathing deeply of the mountain smell and getting his
bearings. It was more than darkness about him. An occasional light
burning dimly here and there gave to it the appearance of a sea of
ink threatening to inundate him. The storm had not broken, but it
was close, and the air was filled with a creeping warning. The
moaning of thunder was low, and yet very near, as if smothered by
the hand of a mighty force preparing to take the earth unaware.</p>
<p>Through the pit of gloom Alan made his way. He was not lost.
Three years ago he had walked a score of times to the cabin of old
Olaf Ericksen, half a mile up the shore, and he knew Ericksen would
still be there, where he had squatted for twenty years, and where
he had sworn to stay until the sea itself was ready to claim him.
So he felt his way instinctively, while a crash of thunder broke
over his head. The forces of the night were unleashing. He could
hear a gathering tumult in the mountains hidden beyond the wall of
blackness, and there came a sudden glare of lightning that
illumined his way. It helped him. He saw a white reach of sand
ahead and quickened his steps. And out of the sea he heard more
distinctly an increasing sound. It was as if he walked between two
great armies that were setting earth and sea atremble as they
advanced to deadly combat.</p>
<p>The lightning came again, and after it followed a discharge of
thunder that gave to the ground under his feet a shuddering tremor.
It rolled away, echo upon echo, through the mountains, like the
booming of signal-guns, each more distant than the other. A cold
breath of air struck Alan in the face, and something inside him
rose up to meet the thrill of storm.</p>
<p>He had always loved the rolling echoes of thunder in the
mountains and the fire of lightning among their peaks. On such a
night, with the crash of the elements about his father's cabin and
the roaring voices of the ranges filling the darkness with tumult,
his mother had brought him into the world. Love of it was in his
blood, a part of his soul, and there were times when he yearned for
this "talk of the mountains" as others yearn for the coming of
spring. He welcomed it now as his eyes sought through the darkness
for a glimmer of the light that always burned from dusk until dawn
in Olaf Ericksen's cabin.</p>
<p>He saw it at last, a yellow eye peering at him through a slit in
an inky wall. A moment later the darker shadow of the cabin rose up
in his face, and a flash of lightning showed him the door. In a
moment of silence he could hear the patter of huge raindrops on the
roof as he dropped his bags and began hammering with his fist to
arouse the Swede. Then he flung open the unlocked door and entered,
tossing his dunnage to the floor, and shouted the old greeting that
Ericksen would not have forgotten, though nearly a quarter of a
century had passed since he and Alan's father had tramped the
mountains together.</p>
<SPAN name="332.jpg"></SPAN>
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<b>The long, black launch nosed its way out to sea.</b></p>
<p>He had turned up the wick of the oil lamp on the table when into
the frame of an inner door came Ericksen himself, with his huge,
bent shoulders, his massive head, his fierce eyes, and a great gray
beard streaming over his naked chest. He stared for a moment, and
Alan flung off his hat, and as the storm broke, beating upon the
cabin in a mighty shock of thunder and wind and rain, a bellow of
recognition came from Ericksen. They gripped hands.</p>
<p>The Swede's voice rose above wind and rain and the rattle of
loose windows, and he was saying something about three years ago
and rubbing the sleep from his eyes, when the strange look in
Alan's face made him pause to hear other words than his own.</p>
<p>Five minutes later he opened a door looking out over the black
sea, bracing his arm against it. The wind tore in, beating his
whitening beard over his shoulders, and with it came a deluge of
rain that drenched him as he stood there. He forced the door shut
and faced Alan, a great, gray ghost of a man in the yellow glow of
the oil lamp.</p>
<p>From then until dawn they waited. And in the first break of that
dawn the long, black launch of Olaf, the Swede, nosed its way
steadily out to sea.</p>
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