The Wings of the Morning, by
Louis Tracy
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Title: The Wings of the Morning
Author: Louis Tracy
Release Date: February 6, 2005 [eBook #14917]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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THE WINGS OF THE MORNING
by
LOUIS TRACY
Author of A Son of the Immortals, The Stowaways, The Message, The
Wheel o' Fortune, etc.
New York Grosset & Dunlap Publishers
1903.
If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of
the sea; even there shall Thy hand lead me, and Thy right hand shall
hold me. Psalm CXXXIX, 9, 10
[Illustration: INVOLUNTARILY SHE CAUGHT HIS ARM. HE
STEPPED A HALF-PACE IN FRONT OF HER TO WARD OFF
ANY DANGER THAT MIGHT BE HERALDED BY THIS
UNCANNY PHENOMENON. Frontispiece]
CONTENTS
I The Wreck of the Sirdar II The Survivors III Discoveries IV Rainbow
Island V Iris to the Rescue VI Some Explanations VII Surprises VIII
Preparations IX The Secret of the Cave X Reality v. Romance--The
Case for the Plaintiff XI The Fight XII A Truce XIII Reality v.
Romance--The Case for the Defendant XIV The Unexpected Happens
XV The Difficulty of Pleasing Everybody XVI Bargains, Great and
Small XVII Rainbow Island Again--and Afterward
CHAPTER I
THE WRECK OF THE SIRDAR
Lady Tozer adjusted her gold-rimmed eye-glasses with an air of
dignified aggressiveness. She had lived too many years in the Far East.
In Hong Kong she was known as the "Mandarin." Her powers of
merciless inquisition suggested torments long drawn out. The
commander of the Sirdar, homeward bound from Shanghai, knew that
he was about to be stretched on the rack when he took his seat at the
saloon table.
"Is it true, captain, that we are running into a typhoon?" demanded her
ladyship.
"From whom did you learn that, Lady Tozer?" Captain Ross was wary,
though somewhat surprised.
"From Miss Deane. I understood her a moment ago to say that you had
told her."
"I?"
"Didn't you? Some one told me this morning. I couldn't have guessed it,
could I?" Miss Iris Deane's large blue eyes surveyed him with innocent
indifference to strict accuracy. Incidentally, she had obtained the
information from her maid, a nose-tilted coquette who extracted ship's
secrets from a youthful quartermaster.
"Well--er--I had forgotten," explained the tactful sailor.
"Is it true?"
Lady Tozer was unusually abrupt today. But she was annoyed by the
assumption that the captain took a mere girl into his confidence and
passed over the wife of the ex-Chief Justice of Hong Kong.
"Yes, it is," said Captain Ross, equally curt, and silently thanking the
fates that her ladyship was going home for the last time.
"How horrible!" she gasped, in unaffected alarm. This return to
femininity soothed the sailor's ruffled temper.
Sir John, her husband, frowned judicially. That frown constituted his
legal stock-in-trade, yet it passed current for wisdom with the Hong
Kong bar.
"What evidence have you?" he asked.
"Do tell us," chimed in Iris, delightfully unconscious of interrupting the
court. "Did you find out when you squinted at the sun?"
The captain smiled. "You are nearer the mark than possibly you
imagine, Miss Deane," he said. "When we took our observations
yesterday there was a very weird-looking halo around the sun. This
morning you may have noticed several light squalls and a smooth sea
marked occasionally by strong ripples. The barometer is falling rapidly,
and I expect that, as the day wears, we will encounter a heavy swell. If
the sky looks wild tonight, and especially if we observe a heavy bank
of cloud approaching from the north-west, you see the crockery
dancing about the table at dinner. I am afraid you are not a good sailor,
Lady Tozer. Are you, Miss Deane?"
"Capital! I should just love to see a real storm. Now promise me
solemnly that you will take me up into the charthouse when this
typhoon is simply tearing things to pieces."
"Oh dear! I do hope it will not be very bad. Is there no way in which
you can avoid it, captain? Will it last long?"
The politic skipper for once preferred to answer Lady Tozer. "There is
no cause for
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