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For which Asa Worthen pays." Mark smiled sardonically. "You're vastly more virtuous than any sister could be, Joel, my dear." Joel said steadily: "There may be two minds about that. There may be two minds as to--the duty of a captain to his ship and his owner. But--I've shown you my mind in the matter." Mark leaned toward him, eyes half-friendly. "You're wrong, Joel. I'll convince you." "You'll not." "A handful of them," Mark whispered. "Worth anything up to a hundred thousand. Maybe more. I do not know the little things as well as some. All for a little jog out of your way...." Joel shook his head. And Mark, in a sudden surge of anger, stormed to his feet with clenched hand upraised. "By the Lord, Joel, I'd not have believed it. You're mad; plain mad--sister, dear! You...." Joel said quietly: "Your schooner is at Tubuai. I'll set you back there, if you will." Mark mocked him. "Would you throw your own brother off the ship he captained?... Oh hard, hard heart...." "You may stay, or go," Joel told him. "Have your way." Mark's eyes for an instant narrowed; they turned toward the door of the cabin where Priss lay.... And there was a flicker of black hatred in them, but his voice was suave when he replied: "With your permission, captain dear, I'll stay." Joel nodded; he rose. "Young Morrell has given you his bunk," he said. "So--good night, to you." He opened the door into the main cabin; and Mark, his fingers twitching, went out. He turned, spoke over his shoulder. "Good night; and--pleasant dreams," he said. X Even Joel Shore saw the new light in Priscilla's eyes when she met Mark at breakfast in the cabin next morning; and it is said husbands are the last to see such things. That story she had heard the night before, the story Mark told Joel in the after cabin, had made of him something superhuman in her eyes. He was a gigantic, an epic figure; he had lived red life, and fought for his life, and killed.... There was Puritan blood in Priscilla; but overrunning it was a flood of warmer life, a cross-strain from some southern forebear, which sang now in answer to the touch of Mark's words. She watched him, that morning, with wide eyes that were full of wonder and of awe. Mark saw, and was immensely amused. He asked her: "Why do you look at me like that, little sister? I'm not going to bite...." Priscilla caught herself, and smiled, and laughed at him. "How do I look at you?
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