[The Smoky God by Willis George Emerson]@TWC D-Link book
The Smoky God

PART FIVE
9/10

I afterward heard the captain tell the mate that I was as crazy as a March hare, and that I must remain in confinement until I was rational enough to give a truthful account of myself.
Finally, after much pleading and many promises, I was released from irons.

I then and there decided to invent some story that would satisfy the captain, and never again refer to my trip to the land of "The Smoky God," at least until I was safe among friends.
Within a fortnight I was permitted to go about and take my place as one of the seamen.

A little later the captain asked me for an explanation.
I told him that my experience had been so horrible that I was fearful of my memory, and begged him to permit me to leave the question unanswered until some time in the future.

"I think you are recovering considerably," he said, "but you are not sane yet by a good deal." "Permit me to do such work as you may assign," I replied, "and if it does not compensate you sufficiently, I will pay you immediately after I reach Stockholm--to the last penny." Thus the matter rested.
On finally reaching Stockholm, as I have already related, I found that my good mother had gone to her reward more than a year before.

I have also told how, later, the treachery of a relative landed me in a madhouse, where I remained for twenty-eight years--seemingly unending years--and, still later, after my release, how I returned to the life of a fisherman, following it sedulously for twenty-seven years, then how I came to America, and finally to Los Angeles, California.


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