Cappy Ricks | Page 5

Peter B. Kyne
nearly all
Scandinavians, and Matt had to show them something besides his
documents.
He had failed signally to procure a single opportunity to demonstrate
his fitness for an executive position. After abandoning his plan to ship
as chief mate he had sought a second mate's berth, but failing to find
one, and with each idle day making deeper inroads into his scant
savings, he had at length descended to the ignominy of considering a
job as bosun. Even that was not forthcoming, and now his money was
entirely dissipated.
Now, when a big overgrown kid finds himself penniless three thousand
miles from a friend and minus three meals in succession, the fourth
omission of the daily bread is not likely to pass without violent protest.
Matt was still a growing boy, with a growing boy's appetite;
consequently on the morning of his second day of fasting he came to
the conclusion that, with so much of his life before him, a few months
wasted would, after all, have no material bearing on his future; so he
accepted a two months advance from a crimp and shipped aboard the
American barkentine Retriever as a common A.B.--a most disgraceful
action on the part of a boy, who, since eighteenth birthday, had been
used to having old sailors touch their foretop to him and address him as
"Mr. Peasley, sir."
CHAPTER III
UNDER THE BLUE STAR FLAG
Matt had been attracted to the barkentine Retriever for two very potent
reasons--the first was a delicious odor of stew emanating from her
galley; the second was her house flag, a single large, five-pointed blue
star on a field of white with scarlet trimming. Garnished left and right
with a golden wreath and below with the word Captain, Matt Peasley
knew that house flag, in miniature, would look exceedingly well on the
front of a uniform cap; for he now made up his mind to enter one
service and stick to it until his abilities should receive their inevitable

reward. To ship as a foremast hand and rise to captain would be a proud
record; so Matt throttled his pride and faced the future with confidence,
and a stomach quite filled with very good beef stew.
From the cook he learned that the Retriever carried a million feet of
lumber; that she was owned by Cappy Ricks; that Cappy Ricks was the
president of the Blue Star Navigation Company, and the most
contemptible old scoundrel in all the world; that the skipper was a
blue-nose and a devil and a fine man rolled into one; that the barkentine
could sail like a yacht; and that presently they would up-hook and off
to Grays Harbor, Washington, there to load a cargo of fir lumber for
Cape Town. And would Matt mind slipping ashore and buying the cook
a bottle of whiskey, for which the latter would settle very minute he
could get an advance out of the Old Man. No? Disgusted, the cook
rattled his pans and dismissed Matt as one unworthy of further
confidence.
Just before the tug came alongside to snake her outside the Heads, the
mate came aboard with his leerail pretty well under and was indiscreet
enough to toss a piece of his lip at the Old Man. Five minutes later he
was paid and off and kicked out on the dock, while the cook packed his
sea bag and tossed it overside after him. The captain, thereupon,
bawled for the second mate, who came running. Matt noticed this and
decided that should the Old Man ever bawl for him he would come
running too.
"Mr.Swenson, you have a chief mate's license, have you not?"
"Yes, sir."
"Very well. You're the first mate. Mr. Lindstrom"--turning to the
bosun--"you've waited a year for your chance, and here it is. You're the
second mate. Bosun!" He was looking straight at Matt Peasley as he
spoke. Matt did not stir. "Hey, there," the skipper roared, "you big
mountain of meat, step lively!"
Matt stepped lively.

"I am not the bosun, sir," he explained. "I'm just A.B."
"How dare you contradict me?" the Old Man growled. "I tell you, you
don't know what you are yet, barring the fact that you're an American,
and the only one, with the exception of myself, in the whole damned
Scowegian crew. Do you think you could get away with a bosun's job?"
"I could get away with your job if I had the chance, sir," Matt declared,
almost impudently.
"There she blows!" the Old Man declared. "Bless me, if you're not a
Native Son! Nobody but a Native Son would be that fresh. I suppose
this is your second voyage, you puling baby?"
Matt Peasley's dander was up instantly.
"I'm sailor enough to know my way alow or aloft in any weather,
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