"No, Ned," I replied, "but you know I don't have your eyes."
"Take a good look," Ned went on.
"There, ahead to starboard, almost level with the beacon!
Don't you see a mass that seems to be moving around?"
"Right," I said after observing carefully,
"I can make out something like a long, blackish object on the surface of the water."
"A second Nautilus?"
Conseil said.
"No," the Canadian replied, "unless I'm badly mistaken, that's some marine animal."
"Are there whales in the Red Sea?"
Conseil asked.
"Yes, my boy," I replied, "they're sometimes found here."
"That's no whale," continued Ned Land, whose eyes never strayed from the object they had sighted.
"We're old chums, whales and I, and I couldn't mistake their little ways."
"Let's wait and see," Conseil said.
"The Nautilus is heading that direction, and we'll soon know what we're in for."
In fact, that blackish object was soon only a mile away from us.
It looked like a huge reef stranded in midocean.
What was it?
I still couldn't make up my mind.
"Oh, it's moving off!
It's diving!"
Ned Land exclaimed.
"Damnation!
What can that animal be?
It doesn't have a forked tail like baleen whales or sperm whales, and its fins look like sawed–off limbs."
"But in that case—" I put in.
"Good lord," the Canadian went on, "it's rolled over on its back, and it's raising its breasts in the air!"
"It's a siren!"
Conseil exclaimed.
"With all due respect to master, it's an actual mermaid!"
That word "siren" put me back on track, and I realized that the animal belonged to the order Sirenia: marine creatures that legends have turned into mermaids, half woman, half fish.
"No," I told Conseil, "that's no mermaid, it's an unusual creature of which only a few specimens are left in the Red Sea.
That's a dugong."
"Order Sirenia, group Pisciforma, subclass Monodelphia, class Mammalia, branch Vertebrata," Conseil replied.
And when Conseil has spoken, there's nothing else to be said.
Meanwhile Ned Land kept staring.
His eyes were gleaming with desire at the sight of that animal.
His hands were ready to hurl a harpoon.
You would have thought he was waiting for the right moment to jump overboard and attack the creature in its own element.
"Oh, sir," he told me in a voice trembling with excitement,
"I've never killed anything like that!"
His whole being was concentrated in this last word.
Just then Captain Nemo appeared on the platform.
He spotted the dugong.
He understood the Canadian's frame of mind and addressed him directly:
"If you held a harpoon, Mr. Land, wouldn't your hands be itching to put it to work?"
"Positively, sir."
"And just for one day, would it displease you to return to your fisherman's trade and add this cetacean to the list of those you've already hunted down?"
"It wouldn't displease me one bit."