Grahame, and it's a good Scottish name. But I was hoping ye had maybe some difficulty with your watch." "Why did you hope so?" Evelyn asked, laughing. "On no account let him have it," Walthew interposed. "He brought back the last watch a confiding visitor left him with the gold case badly crushed. 'I had to screw her in the vice, but a bit rub with a file will smooth her off,' he told the owner." [Pg 35]"He was a fastidious beast o' a Custom House grafter," Macallister explained. "But if it's no' a watch, what way can I serve ye?" [Pg 35] Grahame took him to the sloop and showed him the gaff, and a few minutes later he came back with the bent jaws. "It's no' a bad piece o' work; your people have an eye for design, but they make things too light," he said. "Noo I'll cut ye a new grip out o' solid brass, but it will take an hour." "I suppose I must wait; there's no other way of getting back," Evelyn answered dubiously. Macallister went below, and Grahame put a deck chair for Evelyn under the awning in the stern, where he sat down on a coil of rope, while Walthew leaned against the rail near by. The girl felt interested in them all. She had heard that Walthew had been to Harvard, and his appearance suggested that he belonged to her own world. If so, what was he doing in the Enchantress's engine room? Then, Macallister's random talk had some piquancy. His manners were not polished, but they were good in their way. "The steamer is yours, I suppose?" she remarked. "Yes," said Grahame. "We bought her cheap, and are getting her ready for sea. As I dare say you have noticed, she needs refitting." "But wouldn't that have been easier at New Orleans or Galveston?" "Perhaps, if we were able to hire professional assistance, but we have to do the work ourselves, and this place is quiet, and clean for painting." "Aren't you painting her an unusual color? White would have been prettier than this dingy gray." [Pg 36]"White's conspicuous," Walthew answered, and Evelyn noticed Grahame's warning glance. "A neutral tint stands better, and doesn't show the dirt. You see, we have to think of our pockets." [Pg