<SPAN name="4c"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p>ON THE "SPARTACUS."</p>
<p>The ulster and the felt hat soon came off again, for a head
wind lay<br/>
waiting in the offing, and the "Spartacus" began to pitch and
toss in a<br/>
manner which made all her unseasoned passengers glad to
betake<br/>
themselves to their berths. Mrs. Ashe and Amy were among the
earliest<br/>
victims of sea-sickness; and Katy, after helping them to settle
in their<br/>
staterooms, found herself too dizzy and ill to sit up a moment
longer,<br/>
and thankfully resorted to her own.</p>
<p>As the night came on, the wind grew stronger and the motion
worse. The<br/>
"Spartacus" had the reputation of being a dreadful "roller," and
seemed<br/>
bound to justify it on this particular voyage. Down, down, down
the<br/>
great hull would slide till Katy would hold her breath with fear
lest it<br/>
might never right itself again; then slowly, slowly the turn
would be<br/>
made, and up, up, up it would go, till the cant on the other side
was<br/>
equally alarming. On the whole, Katy preferred to have her own
side of<br/>
the ship, the downward one; for it was less difficult to keep
herself in<br/>
the berth, from which she was in continual danger of being
thrown. The<br/>
night seemed endless, for she was too frightened to sleep except
in<br/>
broken snatches; and when day dawned, and she looked through the
little<br/>
round pane of glass in the port-hole, only gray sky and gray
weltering<br/>
waves and flying spray and rain met her view.</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, why do people ever go to sea, unless they must?"
she thought<br/>
feebly to herself. She wanted to get up and see how Mrs. Ashe had
lived<br/>
through the night, but the attempt to move made her so miserably
ill<br/>
that she was glad to sink again on her pillows.</p>
<p>The stewardess looked in with offers of tea and toast, the
very idea<br/>
of which was simply dreadful, and pronounced the other lady
"'orridly<br/>
ill, worse than you are, Miss," and the little girl "takin'
on<br/>
dreadful in the h'upper berth." Of this fact Katy soon had
audible<br/>
proof; for as her dizzy senses rallied a little, she could hear
Amy in<br/>
the opposite stateroom crying and sobbing pitifully. She seemed
to be<br/>
angry as well as sick, for she was scolding her poor mother in
the<br/>
most vehement fashion.</p>
<p>"I hate being at sea," Katy heard her say. "I won't stay in
this nasty<br/>
old ship. Mamma! Mamma! do you hear me? I won't stay in this
ship! It<br/>
wasn't a bit kind of you to bring me to such a horrid place. It
was very<br/>
unkind; it was cru-el. I want to go back, mamma. Tell the captain
to<br/>
take me back to the land. Mamma, why don't you speak to me? Oh, I
am so<br/>
sick and so very un-happy. Don't you wish you were dead? I
do!"</p>
<p>And then came another storm of sobs, but never a sound from
Mrs. Ashe,<br/>
who, Katy suspected, was too ill to speak. She felt very sorry
for poor<br/>
little Amy, raging there in her high berth like some
imprisoned<br/>
creature, but she was powerless to help her. She could only
resign<br/>
herself to her own discomforts, and try to believe that
somehow,<br/>
sometime, this state of things must mend,—either they should all
get to<br/>
land or all go to the bottom and be drowned, and at that moment
she<br/>
didn't care very much which it turned out to be.</p>
<p>The gale increased as the day wore on, and the vessel
pitched<br/>
dreadfully. Twice Katy was thrown out of her berth on the floor;
then<br/>
the stewardess came and fixed a sort of movable side to the
berth, which<br/>
held her in, but made her feel like a child fastened into a
railed crib.<br/>
At intervals she could still hear Amy crying and scolding her
mother,<br/>
and conjectured that they were having a dreadful time of it in
the other<br/>
stateroom. It was all like a bad dream. "And they call this
travelling<br/>
for pleasure!" thought poor Katy.</p>
<p>One droll thing happened in the course of the second
night,—at least it<br/>
seemed droll afterward; at the time Katy was too uncomfortable to
enjoy<br/>
it. Amid the rush of the wind, the creaking of the ship's
timbers, and<br/>
the shrill buzz of the screw, she heard a sound of queer
little<br/>
footsteps in the entry outside of her open door, hopping and
leaping<br/>
together in an odd irregular way, like a regiment of mice or
toy<br/>
soldiers. Nearer and nearer they came; and Katy opening her eyes
saw a<br/>
procession of boots and shoes of all sizes and shapes, which
had<br/>
evidently been left on the floors or at the doors of various
staterooms,<br/>
and which in obedience to the lurchings of the vessel had
collected in<br/>
the cabin. They now seemed to be acting in concert with one
another, and<br/>
really looked alive as they bumped and trotted side by side, and
two by<br/>
two, in at the door and up close to her bedside. There they
remained for<br/>
several moments executing what looked like a dance; then the
leading<br/>
shoe turned on its heel as if giving a signal to the others, and
they<br/>
all hopped slowly again into the passage-way and disappeared. It
was<br/>
exactly like one of Hans Christian Andersen's fairy-tales, Katy
wrote to<br/>
Clover afterward. She heard them going down the cabin; but how it
ended,<br/>
or whether the owners of the boots and shoes ever got their
own<br/>
particular pairs again, she never knew.</p>
<p>Toward morning the gale abated, the sea became smoother, and
she dropped<br/>
asleep. When she woke the sun was struggling through the clouds,
and she<br/>
felt better.</p>
<p>The stewardess opened the port-hole to freshen the air, and
helped her<br/>
to wash her face and smooth her tangled hair; then she produced a
little<br/>
basin of gruel and a triangular bit of toast, and Katy found that
her<br/>
appetite was come again and she could eat.</p>
<p>"And 'ere's a letter, ma'am, which has come for you by post
this<br/>
morning," said the nice old stewardess, producing an envelope
from her<br/>
pocket, and eying her patient with great satisfaction.</p>
<p>"By post!" cried Katy, in amazement; "why, how can that be?"
Then<br/>
catching sight of Rose's handwriting on the envelope, she
understood,<br/>
and smiled at her own simplicity.</p>
<p>The stewardess beamed at her as she opened it, then saying
again, "Yes,<br/>
'm, by post, m'm," withdrew, and left Katy to enjoy the little
surprise.</p>
<p>The letter was not long, but it was very like its writer. Rose
drew a<br/>
picture of what Katy would probably be doing at the time it
reached<br/>
her,—a picture so near the truth that Katy felt as if Rose must
have<br/>
the spirit of prophecy, especially as she kindly illustrated
the<br/>
situation with a series of pen-and-ink drawings, in which Katy
was<br/>
depicted as prone in her berth, refusing with horror to go to
dinner,<br/>
looking longingly backward toward the quarter where the United
States<br/>
was supposed to be, and fishing out of her port-hole with a
crooked pin<br/>
in hopes of grappling the submarine cable and sending a message
to her<br/>
family to come out at once and take her home. It ended with this
short<br/>
"poem," over which Katy laughed till Mrs. Ashe called feebly
across the<br/>
entry to ask what <i>was</i> the matter?</p>
<p>��"Break, break, break<br/>
����And mis-behave, O sea,<br/>
��And I wish that my tongue could utter<br/>
����The hatred I feel for thee!<br/>
��<br/>
��"Oh, well for the fisherman's child<br/>
����On the sandy beach at his play;<br/>
��Oh, well for all sensible folk<br/>
����Who are safe at home to-day!<br/>
��<br/>
��"But this horrible ship keeps on,<br/>
����And is never a moment still,<br/>
��And I yearn for the touch of the nice dry land,<br/>
����Where I needn't feel so ill!<br/>
��<br/>
��"Break! break! break!<br/>
����There is no good left in me;<br/>
��For the dinner I ate on the shore so late<br/>
����Has vanished into the sea!"</p>
<p>Laughter is very restorative after the forlornity of
sea-sickness; and<br/>
Katy was so stimulated by her letter that she managed to struggle
into<br/>
her dressing-gown and slippers and across the entry to Mrs.
Ashe's<br/>
stateroom. Amy had fallen asleep at last and must not be waked
up, so<br/>
their interview was conducted in whispers. Mrs. Ashe had by no
means got<br/>
to the tea-and-toast stage yet, and was feeling miserable
enough.</p>
<p>"I have had the most dreadful time with Amy," she said. "All
day<br/>
yesterday, when she wasn't sick she was raging at me from the
upper<br/>
berth, and I too ill to say a word in reply. I never knew her
so<br/>
naughty! And it seemed very neglectful not to come to see after
you,<br/>
poor dear child! but really I couldn't raise my head."</p>
<p>"Neither could I, and I felt just as guilty not to be taking
care of<br/>
you," said Katy. "Well, the worst is over with all of us, I hope.
The<br/>
vessel doesn't pitch half so much now, and the stewardess says we
shall<br/>
feel a great deal better as soon as we get on deck. She is
coming<br/>
presently to help me up; and when Amy wakes, won't you let her
be<br/>
dressed, and I will take care of her while Mrs. Barrett attends
to you."</p>
<p>"I don't think I can be dressed," sighed poor Mrs. Ashe. "I
feel as if I<br/>
should just lie here till we get to Liverpool."</p>
<p>"Oh no, h'indeed, mum,—no, you won't," put in Mrs. Barrett,
who at that<br/>
moment appeared, gruel-cup in hand. "I don't never let my ladies
lie in<br/>
their berths a moment longer than there is need of. I h'always
gets them<br/>
on deck as soon as possible to get the h'air. It's the best
medicine you<br/>
can 'ave, ma'am, the fresh h'air; h'indeed it h'is."</p>
<p>Stewardesses are all-powerful on board ship, and Mrs. Barrett
was so<br/>
persuasive as well as positive that it was not possible to resist
her.<br/>
She got Katy into her dress and wraps, and seated her on deck in
a chair<br/>
with a great rug wrapped about her feet, with very little effort
on<br/>
Katy's part. Then she dived down the companion-way again, and in
the<br/>
course of an hour appeared escorting a big burly steward, who
carried<br/>
poor little pale Amy in his arms as easily as though she had been
a<br/>
kitten. Amy gave a scream of joy at the sight of Katy, and
cuddled down<br/>
in her lap under the warm rug with a sigh of relief and
satisfaction.</p>
<p>"I thought I was never going to see you again," she said, with
a little<br/>
squeeze. "Oh, Miss Katy, it has been so horrid! I never thought
that<br/>
going to Europe meant such dreadful things as this!"</p>
<p>"This is only the beginning; we shall get across the sea in a
few days,<br/>
and then we shall find out what going to Europe really means. But
what<br/>
made you behave so, Amy, and cry and scold poor mamma when she
was sick?<br/>
I could hear you all the way across the entry."</p>
<p>"Could you? Then why didn't you come to me?"</p>
<p>"I wanted to; but I was sick too, so sick that I couldn't
move. But why<br/>
were you so naughty?—you didn't tell me."</p>
<p>"I didn't mean to be naughty, but I couldn't help crying. You
would have<br/>
cried too, and so would Johnnie, if you had been cooped up in a
dreadful<br/>
old berth at the top of the wall that you couldn't get out of,
and<br/>
hadn't had anything to eat, and nobody to bring you any water
when you<br/>
wanted some. And mamma wouldn't answer when I called to her."</p>
<p>"She couldn't answer; she was too ill," explained Katy. "Well,
my pet,<br/>
it <i>was</i> pretty hard for you. I hope we sha'n't have any
more such days.<br/>
The sea is a great deal smoother now."</p>
<p>"Mabel looks quite pale; she was sick, too," said Amy,
regarding the<br/>
doll in her arms with an anxious air. "I hope the fresh h'air
will do<br/>
her good."</p>
<p>"Is she going to have any fresh hair?" asked Katy,
wilfully<br/>
misunderstanding.</p>
<p>"That was what that woman called it,—the fat one who made me
come up<br/>
here. But I'm glad she did, for I feel heaps better already; only
I keep<br/>
thinking of poor little Maria Matilda shut up in the trunk in
that dark<br/>
place, and wondering if she's sick. There's nobody to explain to
her<br/>
down there."</p>
<p>"They say that you don't feel the motion half so much in the
bottom of<br/>
the ship," said Katy. "Perhaps she hasn't noticed it at all. Dear
me,<br/>
how good something smells! I wish they would bring us something
to eat."</p>
<p>A good many passengers had come up by this time; and Robert,
the deck<br/>
steward, was going about, tray in hand, taking orders for lunch.
Amy and<br/>
Katy both felt suddenly ravenous; and when Mrs. Ashe awhile later
was<br/>
helped up the stairs, she was amazed to find them eating cold
beef and<br/>
roasted potatoes, with the finest appetites in the world. "They
had<br/>
served out their apprenticeships," the kindly old captain told
them,<br/>
"and were made free of the nautical guild from that time on." So
it<br/>
proved; for after these two bad days none of the party were sick
again<br/>
during the voyage.</p>
<p>Amy had a clamorous appetite for stories as well as for cold
beef; and<br/>
to appease this craving, Katy started a sort of ocean serial,
called<br/>
"The History of Violet and Emma," which she meant to make last
till they<br/>
got to Liverpool, but which in reality lasted much longer. It
might with<br/>
equal propriety have been called "The Adventures of two little
Girls who<br/>
didn't have any Adventures," for nothing in particular happened
to<br/>
either Violet or Emma during the whole course of their
long-drawn-out<br/>
history. Amy, however, found them perfectly enchanting, and was
never<br/>
weary of hearing how they went to school and came home again, how
they<br/>
got into scrapes and got out of them, how they made good
resolutions and<br/>
broke them, about their Christmas presents and birthday treats,
and what<br/>
they said and how they felt. The first instalment of this
un-exciting<br/>
romance was given that first afternoon on deck; and after that,
Amy<br/>
claimed a new CHAPTER daily, and it was a chief ingredient of
her<br/>
pleasure during the voyage.</p>
<p>On the third morning Katy woke and dressed so early, that she
gained the<br/>
deck before the sailors had finished their scrubbing and
holystoning.<br/>
She took refuge within the companion-way, and sat down on the top
step<br/>
of the ladder, to wait till the deck was dry enough to venture
upon it.<br/>
There the Captain found her and drew near for a talk.</p>
<p>Captain Bryce was exactly the kind of sea-captain that is
found in<br/>
story-books, but not always in real life. He was stout and
grizzled and<br/>
brown and kind. He had a bluff weather-beaten face, lit up with a
pair<br/>
of shrewd blue eyes which twinkled when he was pleased; and his
manner,<br/>
though it was full of the habit of command, was quiet and
pleasant. He<br/>
was a Martinet on board his ship. Not a sailor under him would
have<br/>
dared dispute his orders for a moment; but he was very popular
with<br/>
them, notwithstanding; they liked him as much as they feared him,
for<br/>
they knew him to be their best friend if it came to sickness or
trouble<br/>
with any of them.</p>
<p>Katy and he grew quite intimate during their long morning
talk. The<br/>
Captain liked girls. He had one of his own, about Katy's age, and
was<br/>
fond of talking about her. Lucy was his mainstay at home, he told
Katy.<br/>
Her mother had been "weakly" now this long time back, and Bess
and Nanny<br/>
were but children yet, so Lucy had to take command and keep
things<br/>
ship-shape when he was away.</p>
<p>"She'll be on the lookout when the steamer comes in," said the
Captain.<br/>
"There's a signal we've arranged which means 'All's well,' and
when we<br/>
get up the river a little way I always look to see if it's
flying. It's<br/>
a bit of a towel hung from a particular window; and when I see it
I say<br/>
to myself, 'Thank God! another voyage safely done and no harm
come of<br/>
it.' It's a sad kind of work for a man to go off for a
twenty-four days'<br/>
cruise leaving a sick wife on shore behind him. If it wasn't that
I have<br/>
Lucy to look after things, I should have thrown up my command
long ago."</p>
<p>"Indeed, I am glad you have Lucy; she must be a great comfort
to you,"<br/>
said Katy, sympathetically; for the Captain's hearty voice
trembled a<br/>
little as he spoke. She made him tell her the color of Lucy's
hair and<br/>
eyes, and exactly how tall she was, and what she had studied, and
what<br/>
sort of books she liked. She seemed such a very nice girl, and
Katy<br/>
thought she should like to know her.</p>
<p>The deck had dried fast in the fresh sea-wind, and the Captain
had just<br/>
arranged Katy in her chair, and was wrapping the rug about her
feet in a<br/>
fatherly way, when Mrs. Barrett, all smiles, appeared from
below.</p>
<p>"Oh, 'ere you h'are, Miss. I couldn't think what 'ad come to
you so<br/>
early; and you're looking ever so well again, I'm pleased to see;
and<br/>
'ere's a bundle just arrived, Miss, by the Parcels Delivery."</p>
<p>"What!" cried simple Katy. Then she laughed at her own
foolishness, and<br/>
took the "bundle," which was directed in Rose's unmistakable
hand.</p>
<p>It contained a pretty little green-bound copy of Emerson's
Poems, with<br/>
Katy's name and "To be read at sea," written on the flyleaf.
Somehow the<br/>
little gift seemed to bridge the long misty distance which
stretched<br/>
between the vessel's stern and Boston Bay, and to bring home and
friends<br/>
a great deal nearer. With a half-happy, half-tearful pleasure
Katy<br/>
recognized the fact that distance counts for little if people
love one<br/>
another, and that hearts have a telegraph of their own whose
messages<br/>
are as sure and swift as any of those sent over the material
lines which<br/>
link continent to continent and shore with shore.</p>
<p>Later in the morning, Katy, going down to her stateroom for
something,<br/>
came across a pallid, exhausted-looking lady, who lay stretched
on one<br/>
of the long sofas in the cabin, with a baby in her arms and a
little<br/>
girl sitting at her feet, quite still, with a pair of small hands
folded<br/>
in her lap. The little girl did not seem to be more than four
years old.<br/>
She had two pig-tails of thick flaxen hair hanging over her
shoulders,<br/>
and at Katy's approach raised a pair of solemn blue eyes, which
had so<br/>
much appeal in them, though she said nothing, that Katy stopped
at once.</p>
<p>"Can I do anything for you?" she asked. "I am afraid you have
been<br/>
very ill."</p>
<p>At the sound of her voice the lady on the sofa opened her
eyes. She<br/>
tried to speak, but to Katy's dismay began to cry instead; and
when the<br/>
words came they were strangled with sobs.</p>
<p>"You are so kin-d to ask," she said. "If you would give my
little girl<br/>
something to eat! She has had nothing since yesterday, and I have
been<br/>
so ill; and no-nobody has c-ome near us!"</p>
<p>"Oh!" cried Katy, with horror, "nothing to eat since
yesterday! How did<br/>
it happen?"</p>
<p>"Everybody has been sick on our side the ship," explained the
poor lady,<br/>
"and I suppose the stewardess thought, as I had a maid with me,
that I<br/>
needed her less than the others. But my maid has been sick, too;
and oh,<br/>
so selfish! She wouldn't even take the baby into the berth with
her; and<br/>
I have had all I could do to manage with him, when I couldn't
lift up my<br/>
head. Little Gretchen has had to go without anything; and she has
been<br/>
so good and patient!"</p>
<p>Katy lost no time, but ran for Mrs. Barrett, whose indignation
knew no<br/>
bounds when she heard how the helpless party had been
neglected.</p>
<p>"It's a new person that stewardess h'is, ma'am," she
explained, "and<br/>
most h'inefficient! I told the Captain when she come aboard that
I<br/>
didn't 'ave much opinion of her, and now he'll see how it h'is.
I'm<br/>
h'ashamed that such a thing should 'appen on the 'Spartacus,'
ma'am,—I<br/>
h'am, h'indeed. H'it never would 'ave ben so h'under h'Eliza,<br/>
ma'am,—she's the one that went h'off and got herself married the
trip<br/>
before last, when this person came to take her place."</p>
<p>All the time that she talked Mrs. Barrett was busy in making
Mrs.<br/>
Ware—for that, it seemed, was the sick lady's name—more
comfortable;<br/>
and Katy was feeding Gretchen out of a big bowl full of bread and
milk<br/>
which one of the stewards had brought. The little uncomplaining
thing<br/>
was evidently half starved, but with the mouthfuls the pink began
to<br/>
steal back into her cheeks and lips, and the dark circles
lessened under<br/>
the blue eyes. By the time the bottom of the bowl was reached she
could<br/>
smile, but still she said not a word except a whispered <i>Danke
schon</i>.<br/>
Her mother explained that she had been born in Germany, and
always till<br/>
now had been cared for by a German nurse, so that she knew that
language<br/>
better than English.</p>
<SPAN name="90"></SPAN>
<br/><br/>
<ANTIMG alt="illusp90a.jpg (63K)" src="images/illusp90a.jpg" height-obs="730" width-obs="512">
<p>[Katy was feeding Gretchen out of a big bowl
full of bread<br/>
and milk.]</p>
<br/><br/>
<p>Gretchen was a great amusement to Katy and Amy during the rest
of the<br/>
voyage. They kept her on deck with them a great deal, and she
was<br/>
perfectly content with them and very good, though always solemn
and<br/>
quiet. Pleasant people turned up among the passengers, as always
happens<br/>
on an ocean steamship, and others not so pleasant, perhaps, who
were<br/>
rather curious and interesting to watch.</p>
<p>Katy grew to feel as if she knew a great deal about her
fellow<br/>
travellers as time went on. There was the young girl going out to
join<br/>
her parents under the care of a severe governess, whom everybody
on<br/>
board rather pitied. There was the other girl on her way to study
art,<br/>
who was travelling quite alone, and seemed to have nobody to meet
her or<br/>
to go to except a fellow student of her own age, already in
Paris, but<br/>
who seemed quite unconscious of her lonely position and competent
to<br/>
grapple with anything or anybody. There was the queer old
gentleman who<br/>
had "crossed" eleven times before, and had advice and experience
to<br/>
spare for any one who would listen to them; and the other
gentleman, not<br/>
so old but even more queer, who had "frozen his stomach," eight
years<br/>
before, by indulging, on a hot summer's day, in sixteen
successive<br/>
ice-creams, alternated with ten glasses of equally cold
soda-water, and<br/>
who related this exciting experience in turn to everybody on
board.<br/>
There was the bad little boy, whose parents were powerless to
oppose<br/>
him, and who carried terror to the hearts of all beholders
whenever he<br/>
appeared; and the pretty widow who filled the role of reigning
belle;<br/>
and the other widow, not quite so pretty or so much a belle, who
had a<br/>
good deal to say, in a voice made discreetly low, about what a
pity it<br/>
was that dear Mrs. So-and-so should do this or that, and "Doesn't
it<br/>
strike you as very unfortunate that she should not consider" the
other<br/>
thing? A great sea-going steamer is a little world in itself, and
gives<br/>
one a glimpse of all sorts and conditions of people and
characters.</p>
<p>On the whole, there was no one on the "Spartacus" whom Katy
liked so<br/>
well as sedate little Gretchen except the dear old Captain, with
whom<br/>
she was a prime favorite. He gave Mrs. Ashe and herself the seats
next<br/>
to him at table, looked after their comfort in every possible
way, and<br/>
each night at dinner sent Katy one of the apple-dumplings made
specially<br/>
for him by the cook, who had gone many voyages with the Captain
and knew<br/>
his fancies. Katy did not care particularly for the dumpling, but
she<br/>
valued it as a mark of regard, and always ate it when she
could.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, every morning brought a fresh surprise from that
dear,<br/>
painstaking Rose, who had evidently worked hard and thought
harder in<br/>
contriving pleasures for Katy's first voyage at sea. Mrs. Barrett
was<br/>
enlisted in the plot, there could be no doubt of that, and
enjoyed the<br/>
joke as much as any one, as she presented herself each day with
the<br/>
invariable formula, "A letter for you, ma'am," or "A bundle,
Miss, come<br/>
by the Parcels Delivery." On the fourth morning it was a
photograph of<br/>
Baby Rose, in a little flat morocco case. The fifth brought a
wonderful<br/>
epistle, full of startling pieces of news, none of them true. On
the<br/>
sixth appeared a long narrow box containing a fountain pen. Then
came<br/>
Mr. Howells's "A Foregone Conclusion," which Katy had never seen;
then a<br/>
box of quinine pills; then a sachet for her trunk; then
another<br/>
burlesque poem; last of all, a cake of delicious violet soap, "to
wash<br/>
the sea-smell from her hands," the label said. It grew to be one
of the<br/>
little excitements of ship life to watch for the arrival of these
daily<br/>
gifts; and "What did the mail bring for you this time, Miss
Carr?" was a<br/>
question frequently asked. Each arrival Katy thought must be the
final<br/>
one; but Rose's forethought had gone so far even as to provide an
extra<br/>
parcel in case the voyage was a day longer than usual, and "Miss
Carr's<br/>
mail" continued to come in till the very last morning.</p>
<p>Katy never forgot the thrill that went through her when, after
so many<br/>
days of sea, her eyes first caught sight of the dim line of the
Irish<br/>
coast. An exciting and interesting day followed as, after
stopping at<br/>
Queenstown to leave the mails, they sped northeastward between
shores<br/>
which grew more distinct and beautiful with every hour,—on one
side<br/>
Ireland, on the other the bold mountain lines of the Welsh coast.
It was<br/>
late afternoon when they entered the Mersey, and dusk had fallen
before<br/>
the Captain got out his glass to look for the white fluttering
speck in<br/>
his own window which meant so much to him. Long he studied before
he<br/>
made quite sure that it was there. At last he shut the glass with
a<br/>
satisfied air.</p>
<p>"It's all right," he said to Katy, who stood near, almost as
much<br/>
interested as he. "Lucy never forgets, bless her! Well, there's
another<br/>
voyage over and done with, thank God, and my Mary is where she
was. It's<br/>
a load taken from my mind."</p>
<p>The moon had risen and was shining softly on the river as
the<br/>
crowded tender landed the passengers from the "Spartacus" at
the<br/>
Liverpool docks.</p>
<p>"We shall meet again in London or in Paris," said one to
another, and<br/>
cards and addresses were exchanged. Then after a brief delay at
the<br/>
Custom House they separated, each to his own particular
destination;<br/>
and, as a general thing, none of them ever saw any of the others
again.<br/>
It is often thus with those who have been fellow voyagers at sea;
and it<br/>
is always a surprise and perplexity to inexperienced travellers
that it<br/>
can be so, and that those who have been so much to each other for
ten<br/>
days can melt away into space and disappear as though the brief
intimacy<br/>
had never existed.</p>
<p>"Four-wheeler or hansom, ma'am?" said a porter to Mrs.
Ashe.</p>
<p>"Which, Katy?"</p>
<p>"Oh, let us have a hansom! I never saw one, and they look so
nice<br/>
in 'Punch.'"</p>
<p>So a hansom cab was called, the two ladies got in, Amy cuddled
down<br/>
between them, the folding-doors were shut over their knees like
a<br/>
lap-robe, and away they drove up the solidly paved streets to the
hotel<br/>
where they were to pass the night. It was too late to see or do
anything<br/>
but enjoy the sense of being on firm land once more.</p>
<p>"How lovely it will be to sleep in a bed that doesn't tip or
roll from<br/>
side to side!" said Mrs. Ashe.</p>
<p>"Yes, and that is wide enough and long enough and soft enough
to be<br/>
comfortable!" replied Katy. "I feel as if I could sleep for a
fortnight<br/>
to make up for the bad nights at sea."</p>
<p>Everything seemed delightful to her,—the space for
undressing, the<br/>
great tub of fresh water which stood beside the
English-looking<br/>
washstand with its ample basin and ewer, the chintz-curtained
bed, the<br/>
coolness, the silence,—and she closed her eyes with the
pleasant<br/>
thought in her mind, "It is really England and we are really
here!"</p>
<br/><br/>
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