<h2><SPAN name="chap23"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
<p>Brave winds, blowing fair, swiftly drove the <i>Ghost</i> northward into the
seal herd. We encountered it well up to the forty-fourth parallel, in a raw and
stormy sea across which the wind harried the fog-banks in eternal flight. For
days at a time we could never see the sun nor take an observation; then the
wind would sweep the face of the ocean clean, the waves would ripple and flash,
and we would learn where we were. A day of clear weather might follow, or three
days or four, and then the fog would settle down upon us, seemingly thicker
than ever.</p>
<p>The hunting was perilous; yet the boats, lowered day after day, were swallowed
up in the grey obscurity, and were seen no more till nightfall, and often not
till long after, when they would creep in like sea-wraiths, one by one, out of
the grey. Wainwright—the hunter whom Wolf Larsen had stolen with boat and
men—took advantage of the veiled sea and escaped. He disappeared one
morning in the encircling fog with his two men, and we never saw them again,
though it was not many days when we learned that they had passed from schooner
to schooner until they finally regained their own.</p>
<p>This was the thing I had set my mind upon doing, but the opportunity never
offered. It was not in the mate’s province to go out in the boats, and
though I manœuvred cunningly for it, Wolf Larsen never granted me the
privilege. Had he done so, I should have managed somehow to carry Miss Brewster
away with me. As it was, the situation was approaching a stage which I was
afraid to consider. I involuntarily shunned the thought of it, and yet the
thought continually arose in my mind like a haunting spectre.</p>
<p>I had read sea-romances in my time, wherein figured, as a matter of course, the
lone woman in the midst of a shipload of men; but I learned, now, that I had
never comprehended the deeper significance of such a situation—the thing
the writers harped upon and exploited so thoroughly. And here it was, now, and
I was face to face with it. That it should be as vital as possible, it required
no more than that the woman should be Maud Brewster, who now charmed me in
person as she had long charmed me through her work.</p>
<p>No one more out of environment could be imagined. She was a delicate, ethereal
creature, swaying and willowy, light and graceful of movement. It never seemed
to me that she walked, or, at least, walked after the ordinary manner of
mortals. Hers was an extreme lithesomeness, and she moved with a certain
indefinable airiness, approaching one as down might float or as a bird on
noiseless wings.</p>
<p>She was like a bit of Dresden china, and I was continually impressed with what
I may call her fragility. As at the time I caught her arm when helping her
below, so at any time I was quite prepared, should stress or rough handling
befall her, to see her crumble away. I have never seen body and spirit in such
perfect accord. Describe her verse, as the critics have described it, as
sublimated and spiritual, and you have described her body. It seemed to partake
of her soul, to have analogous attributes, and to link it to life with the
slenderest of chains. Indeed, she trod the earth lightly, and in her
constitution there was little of the robust clay.</p>
<p>She was in striking contrast to Wolf Larsen. Each was nothing that the other
was, everything that the other was not. I noted them walking the deck together
one morning, and I likened them to the extreme ends of the human ladder of
evolution—the one the culmination of all savagery, the other the finished
product of the finest civilization. True, Wolf Larsen possessed intellect to an
unusual degree, but it was directed solely to the exercise of his savage
instincts and made him but the more formidable a savage. He was splendidly
muscled, a heavy man, and though he strode with the certitude and directness of
the physical man, there was nothing heavy about his stride. The jungle and the
wilderness lurked in the uplift and downput of his feet. He was cat-footed, and
lithe, and strong, always strong. I likened him to some great tiger, a beast of
prowess and prey. He looked it, and the piercing glitter that arose at times in
his eyes was the same piercing glitter I had observed in the eyes of caged
leopards and other preying creatures of the wild.</p>
<p>But this day, as I noted them pacing up and down, I saw that it was she who
terminated the walk. They came up to where I was standing by the entrance to
the companion-way. Though she betrayed it by no outward sign, I felt, somehow,
that she was greatly perturbed. She made some idle remark, looking at me, and
laughed lightly enough; but I saw her eyes return to his, involuntarily, as
though fascinated; then they fell, but not swiftly enough to veil the rush of
terror that filled them.</p>
<p>It was in his eyes that I saw the cause of her perturbation. Ordinarily grey
and cold and harsh, they were now warm and soft and golden, and all a-dance
with tiny lights that dimmed and faded, or welled up till the full orbs were
flooded with a glowing radiance. Perhaps it was to this that the golden colour
was due; but golden his eyes were, enticing and masterful, at the same time
luring and compelling, and speaking a demand and clamour of the blood which no
woman, much less Maud Brewster, could misunderstand.</p>
<p>Her own terror rushed upon me, and in that moment of fear—the most
terrible fear a man can experience—I knew that in inexpressible ways she
was dear to me. The knowledge that I loved her rushed upon me with the terror,
and with both emotions gripping at my heart and causing my blood at the same
time to chill and to leap riotously, I felt myself drawn by a power without me
and beyond me, and found my eyes returning against my will to gaze into the
eyes of Wolf Larsen. But he had recovered himself. The golden colour and the
dancing lights were gone. Cold and grey and glittering they were as he bowed
brusquely and turned away.</p>
<p>“I am afraid,” she whispered, with a shiver. “I am so
afraid.”</p>
<p>I, too, was afraid, and what of my discovery of how much she meant to me my
mind was in a turmoil; but, I succeeded in answering quite calmly:</p>
<p>“All will come right, Miss Brewster. Trust me, it will come right.”</p>
<p>She answered with a grateful little smile that sent my heart pounding, and
started to descend the companion-stairs.</p>
<p>For a long while I remained standing where she had left me. There was
imperative need to adjust myself, to consider the significance of the changed
aspect of things. It had come, at last, love had come, when I least expected it
and under the most forbidding conditions. Of course, my philosophy had always
recognized the inevitableness of the love-call sooner or later; but long years
of bookish silence had made me inattentive and unprepared.</p>
<p>And now it had come! Maud Brewster! My memory flashed back to that first thin
little volume on my desk, and I saw before me, as though in the concrete, the
row of thin little volumes on my library shelf. How I had welcomed each of
them! Each year one had come from the press, and to me each was the advent of
the year. They had voiced a kindred intellect and spirit, and as such I had
received them into a camaraderie of the mind; but now their place was in my
heart.</p>
<p>My heart? A revulsion of feeling came over me. I seemed to stand outside myself
and to look at myself incredulously. Maud Brewster! Humphrey Van Weyden,
“the cold-blooded fish,” the “emotionless monster,” the
“analytical demon,” of Charley Furuseth’s christening, in
love! And then, without rhyme or reason, all sceptical, my mind flew back to a
small biographical note in the red-bound <i>Who’s Who</i>, and I said to
myself, “She was born in Cambridge, and she is twenty-seven years
old.” And then I said, “Twenty-seven years old and still free and
fancy free?” But how did I know she was fancy free? And the pang of
new-born jealousy put all incredulity to flight. There was no doubt about it. I
was jealous; therefore I loved. And the woman I loved was Maud Brewster.</p>
<p>I, Humphrey Van Weyden, was in love! And again the doubt assailed me. Not that
I was afraid of it, however, or reluctant to meet it. On the contrary, idealist
that I was to the most pronounced degree, my philosophy had always recognized
and guerdoned love as the greatest thing in the world, the aim and the summit
of being, the most exquisite pitch of joy and happiness to which life could
thrill, the thing of all things to be hailed and welcomed and taken into the
heart. But now that it had come I could not believe. I could not be so
fortunate. It was too good, too good to be true. Symons’s lines came into
my head:</p>
<p class="poem">
“I wandered all these years among<br/>
A world of women, seeking you.”</p>
<p>And then I had ceased seeking. It was not for me, this greatest thing in the
world, I had decided. Furuseth was right; I was abnormal, an “emotionless
monster,” a strange bookish creature, capable of pleasuring in sensations
only of the mind. And though I had been surrounded by women all my days, my
appreciation of them had been æsthetic and nothing more. I had actually, at
times, considered myself outside the pale, a monkish fellow denied the eternal
or the passing passions I saw and understood so well in others. And now it had
come! Undreamed of and unheralded, it had come. In what could have been no less
than an ecstasy, I left my post at the head of the companion-way and started
along the deck, murmuring to myself those beautiful lines of Mrs. Browning:</p>
<p class="poem">
“I lived with visions for my company<br/>
Instead of men and women years ago,<br/>
And found them gentle mates, nor thought to know<br/>
A sweeter music than they played to me.”</p>
<p>But the sweeter music was playing in my ears, and I was blind and oblivious to
all about me. The sharp voice of Wolf Larsen aroused me.</p>
<p>“What the hell are you up to?” he was demanding.</p>
<p>I had strayed forward where the sailors were painting, and I came to myself to
find my advancing foot on the verge of overturning a paint-pot.</p>
<p>“Sleep-walking, sunstroke,—what?” he barked.</p>
<p>“No; indigestion,” I retorted, and continued my walk as if nothing
untoward had occurred.</p>
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