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<h2> XXIV. </h2>
<p>Old Mannanin, the magician, according to his wont, had surrounded his
island with mist that day, and, in the helpless void of things unrevealed,
a steamship bound for Liverpool came with engines slacked some points
north of her course, blowing her fog-horn over the breathless sea with
that unearthly yell which must surely be the sound whereby the devil
summons his legions out of chaos.</p>
<p>Presently something dropping through the dense air settled for a moment on
the damp rope of the companion ladder, and one of the passengers
recognised it.</p>
<p>"My gough! It's a bird, a sparrow," he cried.</p>
<p>At the same moment there was a rustle of wind, the mist lifted, and a
great round shoulder rose through the white gauze, as if it had been the
ghost of a mountain.</p>
<p>"That's the Isle of Man," the passenger shouted, and there was a cry of
incredulity. "It's the Calf, I'm telling you, boys. Lave it to me to
know." And instantly the engines were reversed.</p>
<p>The passenger, a stalwart fellow, with a look as of pallor under a tawny
tan, walked the deck in a fever of excitement, sometimes shouting in a
cracked voice, sometimes laughing huskily, and at last breaking down in a
hoarse gurgle like a sob.</p>
<p>"Can't you put me ashore, capt'n?"</p>
<p>"Sorry I can't, sir, we've lost time already."</p>
<p>There was a dog with him, a little, misshappen, ugly creature, and he
lifted it up in his arms and hugged it, and called it by blusterous swear
names, with noises of inarticulate affection. Then he went down to his
berth in the second cabin and opened a little box of letters, and took
them out one by one, and leaned up to the port to read them. He had read
them before, and he knew them by heart, but he traced the lines with his
broad forefinger, and spelled the words one by one. And as he did so he
laughed aloud, and then cried to himself, and then laughed once more. "She
is well and happy, and looking lovely, and, if she does not write, don't
think she is forgetting you."</p>
<p>"God bless her. And God bless him, too. God bless them both!"</p>
<p>He went up on deck again, for he could not rest in one place long. There
was a breeze now, and he filled his lungs and blew and blew. The island
was dying down over the sea in a pale light of silver grey. An engineman
and a stoker were leaning over the bulwark to cool themselves.</p>
<p>"Happy enough now, sir, eh?"</p>
<p>"Happy as a sand-boy, mate, only mortal hungry. Tiffin you say? Aw, the
heart has its hunger same as anything else, and mine has been on short
commons these five years and better. See that island there, lying like a
salmon gull atop of the water? Looks as if she might dip under it, doesn't
she? That's my home, my native land, as the man says, and only three weeks
ago I wasn't looking to see the thundering ould thing again; but God is
good, you see, and I am middling fit for all. I'm a Manxman myself, mate,
and I've got a lil Manx woman that's waiting for me yonder. It's only an
ould shirt I'm bringing her to patch, as the saying is, but she'll be that
joyful you never seen. It's bad to take a woman by surprise, though—these
nervous creatures—'sterics, you see—I'll send her a tally
graph from the Stage. My sakes! the joy she'll be taking of that boy, too!
He'll be getting sixpence for himself and a drink of butter-milk. It's
always the way of these poor lil things—can't stand no good news at
all—people coming home and the like—not much worth, these
women—crying reglar—can't help it. Well, you see, they're
tender-hearteder than us, and when anybody's been five years... Be gough,
we're making way, though! The island's going under, for sure. Or is it my
eyes that isn't so clear since my bit of a bullet-wound! Aw, God is good,
tremen-jous!"</p>
<p>The breaking voice stopped suddenly, and the engine-men turned about, but
the passenger was stumbling down the cabin stairs.</p>
<p>"If ever a man came back from the dead it's that one," said both men
together.</p>
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<h2> PART III. MAN AND WOMAN </h2>
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