written by the priest, and I keep it until I find a man who can read it to me." Grahame was touched. There was something pathetic in the thought of this untaught exile's patiently carrying the precious letters until he met somebody who could read his language. "Well," he said, "if things go well with us, you will get a bonus besides your wages, which should make it easier for you to go home. But you understand there is danger in what we may have to do." Miguel smiled. "SeƱor, there is always danger on the sea." Grahame turned and saw Walthew standing in the engine-room door. He wore dirty overalls and a singlet torn open at the neck, there was a smear of oil across his face, and his hands were black and scarred. "What on earth have you been doing?" Grahame asked. [Pg 67]"Lying on my back for two hours, trying to put a new packing in the gland of a pump." [Pg 67] "Well, who would have predicted a year ago that you would be amusing yourself this way now!" Walthew laughed. "Do you know where we are?" he asked. "I imagine we're not far off the creek; in fact, we might risk making the signal smoke. It will be dark enough to head inshore in a few hours." "Then we'll get to work with the fires," said Walthew, promptly disappearing below. Soon afterward, a dense black cloud rose from the funnel and, trailing away behind the Enchantress, spread across the sky. Grahame knew that it might be seen by unfriendly watchers, but other steamers sometimes passed the point for which he was steering. After a while he signaled for less steam, and only a faint, widening ripple marked the Enchantress's passage through the water as she closed obliquely with the land. It was still blurred, and in an hour Grahame stopped the engines and took a cast of the lead. Dark would come before long, when, if they had reached the right spot, signals would be made. In the meanwhile it would be imprudent to venture nearer.