CHAPTER XXVIII
PHIL AND SERGE AS PRISONERS OF WAR

Captain Israel Matthews, commanding the United States revenue-cutter Phoca, and one of the most highly esteemed officers in the service, had cruised in those far northern waters for two years, and during most of that time he had been accompanied by his motherless daughter May, who loved the sea as a sailor’s daughter should. During these years May Matthews had made several long visits in Sitka, where there is always a charming colony of naval families and those of other government officials. Here she had also become well acquainted in the few old Russian households still remaining in that quaint Alaskan town. Of these the Belcofskys were the most prominent; so by this time she and Serge seemed quite like old friends.

On the present occasion, while she was greeting him, and laughing familiarly at his ragged and generally disreputable appearance, Phil edged towards the door in a vain effort to escape an immediate introduction. In this, however, he was frustrated by the captain, who, noting the movement, called out sternly:

“Hello there, prisoner! No dodging! Come back here and be introduced to your jailer, who will be held responsible if you escape. Daughter, allow me to present my friend Mr. Philip Ryder, dressed for his famous impersonation of an Aleut swell, in the Alaskan comedy of ‘Bering Breakers.’”


“‘DAUGHTER, ALLOW ME TO PRESENT MY FRIEND, MR. PHILIP RYDER’”

“Don’t mind him, Mr. Ryder,” laughed Miss May, extending her hand with engaging cordiality to poor embarrassed Phil. “He chaffs every one just that way, and says the most horrid things. You ought to see him in his winter uniform. He looks so exactly like an Eskimo that even the dogs howl and run away at sight of him.”

“Yes, my winter coat really does make them howl with envy,” retorted Captain Matthews. “But come, lads, let us go into the wardroom and see if we can’t provide you with some civilized toggery. After that, as a penalty for your recent acts of piracy, etc., I sentence you both to appear in this cabin and breakfast with Miss May and myself.”

In the wardroom, or officers’ quarters, the captain introduced Phil and Serge to several of the younger officers, who readily undertook to furnish them with an outfit of clothing suitable to an appearance at the cabin breakfast-table.

When, an hour later, after a welcome bath, after that member of the crew who acted as ship’s barber had trimmed their hair, and clad in exceedingly becoming suits of uniform, our lads again presented themselves in the cabin, Captain Matthews insisted that they should introduce each other to him. Otherwise, he declared, he should never believe they were the castaways whom out of pity for their starving condition he had invited to breakfast.

“Just wait, sir, until you see us eat,” remarked Phil, significantly.

Then the captain called them reformed pirates, and imitation lieutenants, and would doubtless have invented many other equally absurd names had not Miss May clapped her hands over his mouth, and declared she would not allow any further abuse of her prisoners.

It is doubtful if ever a merrier party sat down to a breakfast in all Alaska, and certainly no meal was ever more thoroughly appreciated than was that one by Phil and Serge. The former pretended to have forgotten the use of forks and spoons, while the captain ordered the table-boy to serve the sharks’ fins and whalebone as quickly as possible. Phil told how Serge tried to drive away a bear that was breaking into his halibut larder, and Serge in turn told how the master of the Seamew had taught Phil to appreciate Ebenezer’s cooking.

This mention of the Seamew led the lads to inquire for further particulars concerning that vessel, and regarding affairs in Sitka. Therefore Captain Matthews said that, having learned from one of the schooner’s crew of the cache of seal-skins on Oonimak Island, he had only remained in Sitka long enough to turn his prize over to the authorities, and had then hastened back to make a further capture of her hidden cargo.

“I wondered—” murmured Serge.

“Now,” continued the captain, “I propose taking it, and you, too, and Mr. Ipecac Coombs, if I can find him, to Sitka for trial, though I must first run up to the Pribyloff Islands, and then stop in at Oonalaska on my way back.”

“That will be fine!” exclaimed Phil. “Having got so near the seal islands, I hated the thought of leaving Bering Sea without seeing them, for it seems to me that those millions of seals must be one of the sights of the world.”

“So it is, my boy,” responded Captain Matthews, “and I am glad you are to have the opportunity of witnessing it. If it were on anything but an island, though, from which it would be impossible for you to escape, I don’t think I should allow you on shore, except under guard, for I am bound you shall fetch Sitka this time, if it can be managed.”

“I hope you will succeed, sir,” laughed Phil, “though I don’t know exactly what I shall do when I get there, so long as my father has left.”

“I fancy he will be back again by that time. He is certain to find out in Victoria where you have gone, and will probably return to Sitka to await your arrival.”

“So he will,” said Phil, brightening, “for I left a note for him in Victoria, telling him just what I intended to do.”

“Did you inform him that you proposed to become a seal-hunter, and then turn into a pirate, and then get cast away on Oonimak Island, and get lost among the sea-otters, and captured by a revenue-cutter, and be delivered to him in irons?” asked the captain, gravely.

“No, sir, not just that in detail,” laughed Phil. “I left most of it to be understood.”

“Well, I only hope he’ll understand it. By-the-way, Serge, I’ve a bit of news that will interest you to the extent of nearly a thousand dollars. Do you remember showing me once a very curiously carved fur-seal’s tooth that had been presented to your father by a Chilkat chief?”

“Yes, sir, I remember it well.”

“Well, those Indians have been having very bad luck lately with their fishing, trading, and one thing or another, and have decided that it is all owing to the fact that they allowed that magic talisman, as they regard it, to pass out of their possession. So they sent a delegation down to Sitka to try and recover it from your mother. I saw them there last week, and they were terribly in earnest about getting it. They even offered your mother as high as ten of their finest old-time dance-blankets for it, and you know those are now worth anywhere from seventy to one hundred dollars apiece. Your mother told them that you had it, and had taken it with you on a long voyage. She said, though, that she had no doubt you would sell it to them on your return, and that you were expected back every day. So they are waiting for you, and you may look forward to a very savage demonstration of welcome the moment you set foot on Sitka wharf. Have you the tooth with you? I should like to see it again.”

“No,” answered Serge, slowly; “I gave it away.”

“You don’t say so! How could you be so foolish? To whom did you give it?”

“To one who proved my best friend in a strange country,” replied Serge, nodding significantly in Phil’s direction.

“Oh!” exclaimed the captain, in a relieved tone. “So you are the lucky possessor of the magic tooth, are you, Master Phil? Then our Chilkat friends must drive their bargain with you. Would you mind allowing me to have it a moment? I want my daughter to see it; for, on account of its history and associations, I regard it as one of the most interesting of Alaskan curios.”

“I am awfully sorry, sir, but I—”

“Don’t tell me that you have given it away too.”

“No, sir, but I have lost it. You see, I had no idea of its value, and failed to take the care I should of it.”

“I might have known it!” cried the captain, in a tone of vexation. “A chap that can manage to lose himself as often as you have would lose anything. But there, lad, forgive me,” he added, quickly, as he caught the look of mortification that swept over Phil’s face. “I didn’t mean to say rude things, and if you think the trinket has gone beyond hope of recovery we’ll say no more about it.”

Just then a knock came at the cabin door, and Mr. Ramey, the third lieutenant, who had been sent ashore to bring off the seal-skins, reported that he had completed this duty, and that they were all on board.

“Very good,” said Captain Matthews. “You may ask Mr. Nelson to get under way for the Pribyloffs.”

“There is one more thing, sir,” continued the young lieutenant, hesitatingly. “Although not instructed to do so, I took the liberty of examining several other of those ruins on shore, and in one of them I found this, which I trust you will have no objection to my keeping.”

“Certainly not, if”—began the captain, casting a careless glance at the object the lieutenant held out for inspection. It was the skin of some animal turned inside out, so that its real nature could not be determined.

Both Phil and Serge recognized it at once, and before the captain could complete his sentence the former exclaimed, “Why, it is my sea-otter skin that I had forgotten all about. I am ever so much obliged to you, sir, for bringing it off.”

“You may leave it, Mr. Ramey,” said Captain Matthews. “I was about to say that I had no objection to your keeping it provided no owner could be found; but as one has appeared, that of course settles the matter.”

As the disappointed lieutenant walked away, he muttered to himself, “I do believe that this is the very chap who claimed the seal-skins. Now it seems that he owns everything else on the island, and I shouldn’t be surprised if he owned this ship before we got rid of him.”

In the meantime Phil was asking the captain’s permission to present the sea-otter skin to his daughter before he should have a chance to lose it. Though the latter demurred at first, on account of its value, Phil so insisted that he finally consented. Thus, to her great delight, Miss May became possessed of one of the finest pieces of fur in all Alaska, while Phil was happily relieved of a responsibility.

A few minutes later the swift cutter was speeding away over the green waters towards the Pribyloffs. Oonimak Island, with its many memories, was fading from view, and a new field of possible adventure was opening before our young seal-hunters.