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"Roy Waldon, do you take this woman--" that was the way the parson put it, standing there before them, with his one good hand holding the Book, peering up into Newman's face through his puffed, blackened eyes.
A minister in dungaree! "Mary Swope, do you take this man--" that was how he put it. And though the lady's face was wan and haggard, yet there was a glory in it beyond power to describe.
And then they cast off from the s.h.i.+p, those two who were now one.
Newman stepped the mast, and drew aft the sheet, and the little craft caught the breeze and scudded away from us. We lined the rail, lame men and well men, and cheered our farewell. I wept.
A long time we watched them. The sun leaped up from the sea, and the longboat seemed to sail into its golden heart; and after the sun had risen above it, the boat was visible for a long time as a dwindling, ever dwindling speck. I moved up onto the p.o.o.p, the longer to see. So did Lynch. Side by side, we watched the speck dip over the rim of the sea.
Lynch sighed, and walked away. I heard him exclaim, and turned to observe him picking up something from the deck. He held it out to me, in the palm of his hand.
It was a little wisp of hair, the lady's hair, a relic of the battle.
Lynch stared at it--then he looked out over the sea, into the path of the sun. Aye, and there was that in his eyes which opened mine. I began at last to understand Bucko Lynch--"Captain" Lynch as he was to remain to the end of his days. I knew from that look in his eyes why no parson would now ever say to him, "Do you take this woman?"
Slowly, Lynch put the little wisp of hair into his waistcoat pocket.
He drew a deep breath, and shrugged his shoulders; then he hailed me with seamanly brusqueness.
"Lively, now, Mister--we'll put the s.h.i.+p on her course!"
"Yes, Captain," I answered. And the "Mister" roared his first command along those decks.