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Captain Elijah Coe
by
The captain sat on a chair at the forrard end of the house, smoking a cigar, and occasionally searching the woods with his binoculars. There was a stack of loaded rifles beside him, and a keg of dynamite with a loose lid to it. Some of the sticks had touch-and-go fuses to them, ready to throw if they tried boarding; and sometimes he would take out his watch and look at it hard, and every time he looked the people in the waist would set up a kind of a wail. At one o’clock we ran up Filipo, Afiola’s brother, and settled down to another spell of waiting. Somewheres along of three bells we saw them getting a boat out by Pita’s house, and lo and behold! it was Tweedie, with the native pastor and a divinity student named Henry to pull him. When they were close enough to talk, he fell on his knees in the boat, though it was half full of bilge and slopped all over him; and he besought Captain Coe, by all that was holy, to stop murdering the innocent, and rattled on fast and scolding like he was in the pulpit. We was to leave it to God, he said, and went on like we was worse nor Afiola, the pitiful hound, like it wasn’t his own wife we was doing our damnedest to save.
Captain Coe let him have his say, and then he leaned over the ship’s side, holding to the starboard shrouds with one hand and taking the cigar out of his mouth with the other, and told him, with a most deliberate spit, as how he was going on with one every hour till Mrs. Tweedie was brought back safe and sound, and when he used up them he had aboard, how he was going to land for more. He didn’t speak it particular loud, and you might have thought he was talking what a hot day it was; but there was that in his voice I’ve never heard before or since, and you knew he’d live right up to every word he said. I guess the pastor and the student understood a little English, for when Coe finished they laid on to their oars like mad, and headed the old sieve for shore again, Tweedie in the bilge and still protesting.
At two o’clock we turned off Sosofina, Afiola’s aunt. We now had three aloft, and as we rolled gently broadside on to the swell they’d swing together and swing apart till you didn’t care to look at them. That hour from two to three was the very longest I ever spent in my life. It was the hottest time of day and the sun beat down unmerciful, the pitch running in the seams, and the awnings being stripped off to better fight the ship, if need be. The steward passed round sardines and buttered biscuit, and I recollect the Chinaman wolfing his right out of the can and tipping it cornerwise to drink the ile. Bar Coe, he was the coolest customer of the lot, which was the more remarkable, as he was a mild-mannered man ordinarily, given to playing the China fiddle to himself, and very obliging if you wanted fresh yeast or the way he curried pigeon. Rau, the Belgian, with his hairy arms and stubby figure, struck one somehow as being more in his element in so wild a business, and you took his calm for granted, like a soldier serving a gun and doing what he’s told. If Coe had ordered him to set off the dynamite and blow up the ship, he would have said “Aye, aye, sir!” and obeyed, respectful and willing, like the first-class seaman and navigator he was. He had served in the Belgian navy, and the habit had stuck to him. But in all of us, after all–me and Lum and John Rau and the Nieue steward–it was Coe’s spirit that had raised us to this pitch, and he had blown a little of his own breath into every one of us. We were all Elijah Coe’s that day, and it was only afterwards it came over us how different we had acted from our proper selves.