stakably a sea-faring man. What Drew
especially noted was that the stranger had only one eye--and that set
in a rather forbidding countenance. Ordinarily he might have pitied
him, but in his present mood Drew envied him. The stranger's one
remaining eye had, after all, seen more of the world than his own two
good optics would likely ever see.
From these fruitless and fantastic musings he roused himself with an
effort. A glance at his watch startled him. This would never do. As
long as he took Tyke Grimshaw's money he must do Tyke Grimshaw's work.
"Back to the treadmill," he said to himself, grimly; and it was then,
as he started for the head of the pier, that he first saw the girl.
He slackened his pace instantly, so as to have her the longer in sight,
mentally blessing the bales and boxes that made her progress slow. Not
for the world would he have offended her by staring; but he stole
covert glances at her from time to time; and with each swift glance the
impression she had made upon him grew in strength.
She came on, seemingly unconscious of his presence, until they were
almost opposite each other. One hand held her dress from contact with
the litter of the dock; in the other she carried what appeared to be a
packet of letters. The path she chose led her to the very edge of the
dock.
Drew would have passed the next instant had the girl not stopped
suddenly, a startled expression becoming visible on her face. The
young man turned swiftly. The one-eyed seaman, whose appearance he had
previously marked, stood almost at his elbow and confronted the girl.
She stepped back to avoid the seaman, and her foot caught in a coil of
rope. For a moment she swayed on the verge of the dock--then Drew's
hand shot out, and he caught her arm, steadying her. But the packet
she carried flew from her hand and disappeared beyond the stringpiece
of the pier.
The girl uttered a little cry of distress. Drew shot a belligerent
glance at the one-eyed man.
"What do you want?" he demanded, with truculence. "Isn't the dock
broad enough for you to pass without annoying the lady? Get along with
you!"
The one-eyed man uttered an oath, but moved away, though slowly. Drew
turned to the girl again, hat in hand, a smile chasing the frown from
his face.
CHAPTER II
TYKE GRIMSHAW AND HIS AFFAIRS
"I beg your pardon," Drew said, bowing low, "but can I be of any
further assistance?"
The girl looked up at hi
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