"
"You mustn't look at the black side o' things," said the mate; "perhaps
you won't want to need to worry about that after he's hit you. I'd
sooner be kicked by a horse myself. He was telling them down for'ard the
other night that he killed a chap once."
The skipper turned green. "He ought to have been hung for it," he said
vehemently. "I wonder what juries think they're for in this country. If
I'd been on the jury I'd ha' had my way, if they'd starved me for a
month!"
"Look here!" said the mate suddenly; "I've got an idea. You go down
below and I'll call him up and start rating him. When I'm in the thick
of it you come and stick up for him."
"George," said the skipper, with glistening eyes, "you're a wonder. Lay
it on thick, and if he hits you I'll make it up to you in some way."
He went below, and the mate, after waiting for some time, leaned over
the wheel and shouted for the cook.
"What do you want?" growled the "Bruiser," as he thrust a visage all red
and streaky with his work from the galley.
"Why the devil don't you wash them saucepans up?" demanded the mate,
pointing to a row which stood on the deck. "Do you think we shipped you
becos we wanted a broken-nosed, tenth-rate prize-fighter to look at?"
"Tenth-rate!" roared the "Bruiser," coming out on to the deck.
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