summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 06:47:43 -0800
committernfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-02-04 06:47:43 -0800
commit7213230a85805d51196c3a6bb9d2075fa5d10bc1 (patch)
treed675043de0a01483bd47b13b96bf42361d916515
parent568ce29c8faf95c2032d4093fc9222367e16b52d (diff)
NormalizeHEADmain
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes4
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/63269-0.txt9825
-rw-r--r--old/63269-0.zipbin184541 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/63269-h.zipbin428187 -> 0 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/63269-h/63269-h.htm12027
-rw-r--r--old/63269-h/images/cover.jpgbin238649 -> 0 bytes
8 files changed, 17 insertions, 21852 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d7b82bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,4 @@
+*.txt text eol=lf
+*.htm text eol=lf
+*.html text eol=lf
+*.md text eol=lf
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9116e7b
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63269 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63269)
diff --git a/old/63269-0.txt b/old/63269-0.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index bb524b1..0000000
--- a/old/63269-0.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,9825 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ocean Tramps, by H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Ocean Tramps
-
-Author: H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2020 [EBook #63269]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OCEAN TRAMPS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-OCEAN TRAMPS
-
-
-
-
- The beauty of a flower.
- The beauty of a tune.
- The beauty of the hour
- When dusk embraces June:
- Of all the beauties earthly
- The soul of man may clip,
- On earth there is no beauty
- Like the beauty of a ship.
-
-
-
-
-OCEAN TRAMPS
-
-By H. de VERE STACPOOLE
-
-Author of “The Blue Lagoon,” “The Pearl Fishers,”
-“The Children of the Sea,” Etc., Etc.
-
-
-LONDON: HUTCHINSON & CO.
-
-PATERNOSTER ROW—1924
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-I met Billy Harman on Circular Wharf, Sydney, so many years ago that I
-think he must be dead. He is the chief person in the first six stories
-of this book, which have appeared illustrated in an English, an
-American and a Canadian magazine, in all of which the illustrator
-depicted Billy as a young, rather good-looking man. That he was not.
-Billy, when I met him, was well over forty, big and scrubby-bearded, a
-shell-back with a touch of the Longshoreman, blue far-seeing eyes,
-the eyes of a child—and an innocence none the less delightful because
-streaked with guile.
-
-Only the sea could have produced Billy, and the Islands and the
-Beaches and the life which the Pacific makes possible for an Ocean
-Tramp.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- I. Bud and Billy
- II. Mandelbaum
- III. The Way of a Maid with a Man
- IV. Sunk Without Trace
- V. A Deal with “Plain Sailin’ Jim”
- VI. Pearls of Great Price!
- VII. Beaten on the Post
- VIII. A Case in Point
- IX. The Other One
- X. Iron Law
- XI. The Story of Billy Broke
- XII. The Making of a Millionaire
- XIII. Kiliwakee
- XIV. Under the Flame Trees
- XV. The Abbott Mystery
-
-
-
-
-OCEAN TRAMPS
-
-
-
-
-I—BUD AND BILLY
-
-
- I
-
-The moon was rising over Papaleete, over the Pacific Ocean and the bay
-where the anchor lights were spilling their amber on the water, over
-the palm trees and flame trees and the fragrant town from which, now
-clear, now sheltered by the sea wind, came the voices of girls singing
-to the tune of Hawaiian guitars.
-
-Mixed with the breathing of the tepid wind in the trees, the voices of
-the girls and the tune of the guitars, came the murmur and sigh of the
-beach, the last note wanted, the last touch, to a scene of absolutely
-absurd and impossible loveliness, amidst which, by the water’s edge,
-casting a thirty-foot shadow on the hard white sand, Mr. Harman was
-walking, blind to the Eden around him.
-
-Billy was on the beach in more senses than one. He was down and out,
-without friends, without food, without drinks, and almost without
-tobacco, starving in the midst of plenty, for in Papaleete, if you are
-a cadger, you may live for ever on the fat of the land, and not only
-live, but love, drink, smoke, dream under tree shadows and bathe in a
-sea warm with perpetual summer.
-
-But that was not Billy’s way. This gig, four-square, blue-eyed man out
-of San Francisco could do anything but cadge. It wasn’t a question of
-morals, it was more a question of simplicity.
-
-Billy’s morals had mostly been forgotten by Nature, or maybe they had
-been extracted by San Franciscans and shore-along toughs from
-Valparaiso up, anyhow and however that may be, the resulting vacuum
-seemed to have filled itself up with simplicity, not stupidity, just
-simplicity. The simplicity of a child that allowed him to go into the
-most desperate and questionable deals in ward politics and doubtful
-sea practice, wide-eyed, blue-eyed, and reproaching others for their
-moral lapses with the unchanging formula: “It don’t pay.”
-
-“Crooked dealing don’t pay,” said Mr. Harman after some crooked deal
-had failed—never before.
-
-Yet somehow, in some extraordinary way, Billy was lovable, there was
-nothing mean about him, and that was maybe why he couldn’t cadge, and
-he had behind those blue eyes and that honest-dog looking, tanned
-face, a power of cool, uncalculating daring that might have landed him
-anywhere if he had come on a decent jumping-off place.
-
-As he turned back along the beach, the moonlight struck a figure
-coming towards him. It was Davis. Fate or some strange chance had
-thrown Davis and Harman together on the same beach at the same time,
-and though there was a world of difference between their faces, forms,
-characters and dispositions, they were alike in this—they couldn’t
-cadge.
-
-Davis was a lean slip of a man with a chin tuft and a terrific past
-about which he was quite open. Never satisfied or driven by the craze
-of adventure, he had overrun two or three fortunes and had beached at
-Papaleete from a B.P. boat which had picked him up from a trading
-station down somewhere in the Paumotus, and was glad to get rid of him
-on the terms of a twenty-dollar loan. The captain laughed when Davis
-had entered the loan in a pocket-book, but it would be returned with
-interest some time or another if the borrower lived. That was Davis.
-
-The one remarkable thing about this plain-looking man with the chin
-tuft and the flat cheek-bones was his quietude, nothing hurried or
-flurried him. That was perhaps the secret behind his shooting. He was
-more than a good shot with a revolver. He was inevitable.
-
-“That’s done,” said Davis, coming up with the other. “Penhill and
-Jarvis are highballing it at the club, and their Kanakas are playing
-hopscotch with the hula-hula girls. What’s the matter with you? Don’t
-go saying you’ve got cold feet.”
-
-“It’s not my feet,” said Mr. Harman, “but I’ve never run off with a
-ship before and that’s the fact, it’s not like sinkin’ her or pilin’
-her. I’ve done most things, but I’ve never run off with a ship before,
-that’s a fact. I’ve never——”
-
-“Oh, close up!” said Davis. “Didn’t I tell you that Penhill can’t move
-against us, once I get his ship out, his feet are cut off. I’m the one
-man living that he’s afraid of, because I’m the one man living that
-can put him in quod without hurting myself. This thing isn’t running
-off with a ship. It’s Providence.”
-
-“How do you get at that?” asked Billy doubtfully.
-
-“Well, look at it,” said Davis. “In he comes with the _Araya_, sees
-me, remembers the trick he played me, tries to pal up, gets a snub on
-the nose, puts it in his pocket, and then goes on the jag, him and
-Jarvis, leaving his schooner with a parcel of damn fool Kanakas in
-charge and me layin’ about dangerous. Kanakas, why they’re worse than
-that! Island boys that’ll take any white man’s bidding s’long as he
-feeds them with fried bananas. It’s lovely, that’s what it is,
-lovely——” Linking his arm in that of Harman, he was walking him
-along the sand towards a boat beached and left almost high and dry by
-the ebbing tide. To the right lay the lights of the town, and almost
-on the beach sand the long amber glow of the lit club. Harman, walking
-between the beauty of Papaleete by night and the glory of the moon
-upon the sea, showed no sign of haste to reach the boat.
-
-What bothered him was, not so much the turpitude of the business, as
-the seeming futility and madness of it, for even in those days before
-wireless talked it was next to impossible to steal a ship and make
-good. Every port in the world is a compound eye for scrutiny, the
-character of a ship is inquired into as carefully as her health.
-Harman knew the whole business. There is a cable from Papaleete to
-Suva, and from Suva to ’Frisco and beyond, and to-morrow morning
-Penhill had only to speak and the description of the _Araya_ and the
-two vanished beachcombers would be in the hands of the San Francisco
-authorities before noon; before night all American seaboard ports
-would be closed to the _Araya_, and by next day at noon, the British
-Board of Trade would seal Australia and Hong Kong. Chinese ports would
-be notified in “due course.”
-
-With every bolthole blocked, the _Araya_ might still live free for
-years pottering among the less-known islands, they might even pile her
-on some rock and make their escape in the boats, but what would be the
-use of all that? No, the whole thing would have been futile and
-ridiculous but for the one thing that made it possible—Penhill.
-Penhill daren’t prosecute. The schooner was his, and he was the only
-man who could move, and he was tied. Davis said so. Davis had given
-details which made the matter clear to Harman, yet still he hesitated.
-
-They had reached the boat. It was the _Araya’s_, left confidingly on a
-beach where no man ever stole boats; there were canoes to be had in
-plenty, but Davis preferred the boat, he had reasons.
-
-Harman, resting his hand on the gunnel, looked about him for a moment
-at the deserted beach, still undecided.
-
-His dunnage left at the house of a native woman where he had lodged
-was unprocurable, he owed a bill. As he stood considering this and
-other matters, from the groves by the beach diffusing itself through
-the night, came the voice of a native singing a love song, tender,
-plaintive, old as Papaleete and focussing in itself all the softness
-and beauty that the active soul of Billy Harman had learnt to hate.
-
-He seized the gunnel of the boat and assisted by Davis, shoved her
-off.
-
-Out on the moonlit water, the town showed up fairylike, its lights
-twinkling amidst the moving foliage. Away on Huahine, rising steeply
-like a wall of velvety blackness to the stars, the lights of tiny
-villages showed like fireflies come to rest; fronting and beneath all
-this mystery and loveliness showed the definite amber glow of the club
-where Penhill and Jarvis were drinking themselves blind. That was
-Papaleete.
-
-No port authorities, no harbour police, no sign of life but the anchor
-lights of a brigantine and a bêche-de-mer boat—that also was
-Papaleete. On board the _Araya_ the anchor watch was snoring; kicked
-awake and rubbing its eyes, it jumped to the voice of white authority.
-The returned boat was a certificate that the new white fellow mas’rs
-were representatives of white fellow mas’r Penhill and Penhill’s
-character was an antidote to loving inquiries.
-
-“They’re a sprightly lot,” said Harman as the main boom swung to
-starboard and the great sail filled, tugging at the sheet. “Monkeys to
-jump an’ no tongues to ask questions.”
-
-“That’s Penhill,” said Davis, “he’s milled them into brute beasts, not
-that they wanted much milling, but there you are, he done his best and
-I reckon we’re profiting by it.”
-
-
- II
-
-Four days later they had cut Capricorn, discovered the sailing
-qualities of the _Araya_, and taken stock of ship and cargo. There was
-also Penhill’s gold watch and eighteen hundred dollars of ship’s
-money. Davis calculated it all up and said he reckoned that the
-account between him and Penhill was clear.
-
-He said he reckoned that Penhill had deserved what he got and Harman
-concurred.
-
-They sat in judgment on Penhill and brought him in guilty. Harman
-almost felt virtuous.
-
-“I reckon he’ll learn it don’t pay to run crooked,” said he. “I’ve
-took notice that them sort of chaps always gets scragged in the end.
-What’s this you said he did you out of?”
-
-“Seventy dollars, and left me on the beach,” replied Davis.
-
-“Same as we’ve done him,” said Harman. “No, it don’t pay. It don’t pay
-no-how.”
-
-South at first, then due west they made past St. Felix and heading for
-Caldera on the Chili coast. But Caldera was not Davis’ objective.
-Buenodiaz, with its land-locked harbour, its lazy ways, its pretty
-women and negligent Port authorities, was his idea, and smoking
-Penhill’s cigars under a blazing sun whilst the _Araya_ snored along
-through a Reckitts’-blue sea, he expounded matters to Billy Harman.
-
-“Sell her on the hoof,” said Davis, “innards, outwards, hump, tail and
-all, that’s my idea. There are ten cent mail boats that’ll take us
-anywhere up or down the coast, Valparaiso for choice, once we’ve got
-the dollars in our pockets; there’s big things to be done in Chili
-with a few dollars by fellows that know the ropes.”
-
-Mr. Harman concurred.
-
-“I’ve been done there myself,” said he, “by chaps that hadn’t cents in
-their pockets, let alone dollars. Skinned alive I was of every buck to
-my name in a faro joint at Cubra, and me winning all the time. Hadn’t
-got half-way down the street to my ship with a pocket full of silver
-dollars when I put my hand in my pocket and found nothing but stones,
-filled me up they had with pebbles off the beach, playin’ guitars all
-the time and smokin’ cigarettes and pretendin’ to hasty-manyana.
-
-“Well, I’m not against landin’ this hooker on them, but I tell you,
-Bud, it’s my experience, before we comes to close grips with them
-we’ll be wantin’ to fix our skins on with seccotine.”
-
-“You leave them to me,” said Bud Davis.
-
-“I’ve known the insides and outsides of Chinks,” went on the other,
-“and I’ve had dealin’s with Greeks up Susun way, oyster boat
-Levantines will take your back teeth whiles you’re tellin’ them you
-don’t want buyin’ their dud pearls, but these chaps are in their own
-class. Jim Satan, that’s what they are, and there’s not a ’Frisco Jew
-sellin’ dollar watches can walk round the brim of their sombreros.”
-
-“You leave them to me,” said Bud, and the _Araya_ snored on.
-
-On and on with a gentle roll over the wind-speckled blue of the
-endless swell, lifting nothing but ocean, and over ocean vast dawns
-that turned to torrid noons and died in sunsets like the blaze of
-burning worlds; till one morning the cry of the Kanaka look-out
-answered the cry of a great gull flying with them and there before
-them stood the coast boiling where the sun was breaking above it and
-stretching to north and south of the sun blaze, solid, remote, in
-delicately pencilled hills dying from sight in the blue distance.
-Davis, who knew the coast, altered the helm. They were forty miles or
-so to the north of their right position, and it was not till afternoon
-that the harbour of Buenodiaz lay before them with the flame trees
-showing amidst the flat-topped houses and the blue water lapping the
-deserted mole. The quay by the mole was deserted and La Plazza, the
-public square, distinctly to be seen from the sea, lifted slightly as
-it was by the upward trend of the ground, was empty. Through the glass
-the houses showed, their green shutters tightly shut and not a soul on
-the verandas.
-
-It was almost as though some Pelée had erupted and covered the place
-with the lava of pure desolation clear as glass.
-
-“Taking their siestas,” said Davis. “Keep her as she goes. I know this
-harbour and it’s all good holding ground, beyond that buoy.”
-
-Harman at the wheel nodded, and Davis went forward to superintend the
-fellows getting the anchor ready while the _Araya_, her canvas
-quivering to the last of the dying breeze, stole in past an old rusty
-torpedo boat, past a grain ship that seemed dead, on and on, dropping
-her anchor at least two cable lengths from the mole.
-
-The rattle of the anchor chain made Buenodiaz open one eye. A boat
-slipped out from the mole. It was the Port Doctor.
-
-Buenodiaz flings its slops into the street and its smells are
-traditional, but it has a holy horror of imported diseases and its
-Port Doctor never sleeps—even in siesta time.
-
-With the Doctor came the Customs, smelling of garlic, with whom Davis
-conversed in the language of the natives, while Harman attended to the
-liquor and cigars.
-
-The cargo of the _Araya_ was copra and turtle shell. Davis had figured
-and figured over the business, and reckoned he’d take four thousand
-dollars for the lot.
-
-“Ain’t like cotton,” said he, “don’t know what it’s worth, but I’ll
-put it at four thousand and not a cent under, at four thousand we
-shan’t be losers.”
-
-“Well, I reckon we wouldn’t be losers at four cents,” said Harman,
-“seein’ how we got it, and how about the hooker?”
-
-“Five thousand,” said Davis, “and that’s not half her worth. Nine
-thousand the lot and I’ll throw the chronometer in.”
-
-“Have you fixed what to do with the Kanakas?” asked the other.
-“There’s eight of them and they’ve all mouths.”
-
-“There’s never a Kanaka yet could talk Spanish,” said Davis, “and I
-don’t propose to learn them, but I’ll give them fifty dollars
-apiece—maybe—if I make good. But there’s time enough to think of
-that when we have the dollars.”
-
-It was the second day after their arrival at Buenodiaz, the sun was
-setting and the sound of the band playing on La Plazza came across the
-water; mixed with the faint strains of the band came the sounds of a
-guitar from one of the ships in the anchorage, and in lapses of the
-breeze from the sea the scent of the town stole to them, a bouquet
-co-mingled from drains, flowers, garlic, earth and harbour compounds.
-
-Harman was in one of his meditative fits.
-
-“That chap you brought aboard to-day,” said he, “the big one with the
-whiskers, was he Alonez or was it the little ’un?”
-
-“The big one,” said Davis. “He’s the chap that’ll take the cargo off
-us and the little one will take the ship—I haven’t said a word of the
-price, haven’t said I was particularly wanting to sell, but I’ve given
-them a smell of the toasted cheese, and if I know anything of
-anything, they’re setting on their hind legs now in some café
-smoothing their whiskers and making ready to pounce. They’re partners,
-they own all that block of stores on the Calle San Pedro, and the
-little one does the shipping business. He’s Portuguese, pure.
-Pereira’s his name. I’m going up to his house to-night to talk
-business.”
-
-“Well,” said Harman, “if he’s going to buy, he’s got the
-specifications, he’s been over her from the truck to the lazarette,
-and I thought he’d be pullin’ the nails out of her to see what they
-were like. When are you goin’?”
-
-“Eight,” replied Davis, and at eight o’clock, amidst the usual
-illuminations and fireworks with which Buenodiaz bedecks herself on
-most nights, he went, leaving Harman to keep ship. He returned at
-twelve o’clock and found Harman in his bunk snoring. At breakfast next
-morning he told of his visit. He had done no business in particular
-beyond mentioning the outside price that he could take for the _Araya_
-should he care to sell her. Mrs. Pereira and her daughter had been
-there and the girl was a peach.
-
-Harman absorbed this news without interest, merely reminding the other
-that they weren’t “dealin’ in fruit,” but as two more days added
-themselves together producing nothing but church processions, brass
-bands and fireworks, Mr. Harman fell out of tune with himself and the
-world and the ways of this “dam garlic factory.” Davis was acting
-strangely, nearly always ashore and never returning till midnight. He
-said the deal was going through, but that it took time, that they
-weren’t selling a mustang, that he wouldn’t be hustled and that
-Harman, if he didn’t like waiting, had better go and stick his head in
-the harbour.
-
-Harman closed up, but that night he accompanied Davis ashore, and
-instead of playing roulette at the little gambling shop in La Plazza,
-he hung around the Pereiras’ house in Assumption Street listening and
-watching in the moonlight. He heard the tune of a guitar and a girl’s
-voice singing La Paloma, then came a great silence that lasted an hour
-and a half, and then came Davis. Hidden in a dark corner, Billy saw
-that he was not alone. A girl was with him, come out to bid him
-good-night. She was short, dark and lovely, but the look of adoration
-on her face as she turned it up for a kiss, left Harman quite cold.
-
-Down by-lanes and cut-throat alleys he made his way running, got to
-the mole before the other and was rowed off in the same boat. On board
-he invited the other down below and down below he exploded.
-
-“I ain’t wantin’ to interfere with any man’s diversions,” said Mr.
-Harman. “I ain’t no prude, women is women, and business is business,
-do you get what I’m meanin’? I saw you. I ain’t accusin’ you of
-nuthin’—but bein’ a fool. Us with a stole ship on our backs and
-Penhill feelin’ for us and you playin’ the goat with Pereira’s
-daughter. What kind of deal do you expect to make and a woman hangin’
-on to it with her teeth. You needn’t go denyin’ of it. I saw you.”
-
-The male and female run through all things, even partnerships, and in
-the Harman-Davis syndicate it was Harman who wore the skirts. Davis
-could not get a word in till the other had worked himself free of his
-indignation and the subject. Then said Davis: “If you’ll shut your
-beastly head, I’ll maybe be able to stuff some sense into it. What
-were you talking about, selling the schooner? It’s sold.”
-
-“Well,” said Harman, “that’s news, and what’s the price, may I ask?”
-
-“Five thousand, and five thousand for the trade, ten thousand dollars,
-the whole sum to be paid on Friday next.”
-
-“Have you a bit of writin’?” asked Harman, who possessed the French
-peasant’s instincts for stamped paper.
-
-“I’ve got their cheque,” said Davis, “post dated for next Friday, but
-I’m not bothering about the money, for the ship and cargo, it doesn’t
-matter a hill of beans to me whether they pay ten thousand dollars or
-five. I’ve struck a bigger thing than that. What would you say to half
-a million dollars?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied the ingenuous Harman. “I only know chaps
-generally begin to make asses of themselves when they talk about
-millions of dollars. It’s my opinion no man ever came out of the big
-end of the horn with the million dollars in his hand he’d gone in to
-fetch at the little. Most of the million-dollar men I’ve heard of have
-started as newsies with their toes stickin’ through their boots—but
-go on, what was you sayin’?”
-
-“I’m saying I’ve a big thing in sight,” replied the exasperated Davis,
-“and I’d be a lot surer of it if I felt I hadn’t such a fool partner.
-It’s this, I’m right into the cockles of the heart of that family, and
-I’ve got the news through my left ear that there’s trouble in
-Santiago, that Diaz is going to skip and that a million dollars in
-gold bars are coming down to the coast. Diaz is taking his movables
-with him, and he’s gutted the Treasury unknown to the chaps that are
-moving to shoot him out. He’s about sick of the presidency and wants
-to get away and lead a quiet life.”
-
-“I see,” said Harman. “That’s plain enough, but where do we stand?”
-
-“Well,” said Davis, “there’s a million dollars’ worth of gold bars
-moving down to the coast here and there’s us just come in. Don’t it
-look like Providence? Don’t it look like as if there’s going to be a
-conjunction?”
-
-“It do,” said Mr. Harman meditatively, “but I’m dashed if I see how
-we’re to conjunct on the evidence you’ve handed in—but you’ve got
-more up your sleeve—pull it out.”
-
-“It’s not much,” said Davis, “only the girl. She’s going to keep us
-wise. I told her I might be able to do a deal with Diaz if I knew
-where and when he was shipping off the boodle, and she’s going to let
-me know. The Pereiras are all in the business same as
-furniture-removing chaps, they’re doing the move for Diaz, and he’s
-using one of their ships. D’you see? See where we come in, nothing to
-do but watch and wait with the girl for our eyes and ears—then
-pounce—How? I don’t know, but we’ll do it.”
-
-“That girl,” said Mr. Harman after a moment’s silence, “she seems
-pretty gone on you.”
-
-Davis laughed.
-
-“Ain’t you gone on her?”
-
-Davis laughed again. Then he opened a locker and helped himself to a
-drink.
-
-Harman’s morals, as I have hinted before, were the least conspicuous
-part of his mental make-up, but he was not without sentiment of a
-sort. At sing-songs he had been known to sniff over “The Blind Boy,” a
-favourite song of his, and though his ideal of female beauty leant
-towards sloe-black eyes and apple-red cheeks (shiny or not didn’t
-matter), beauty in distress appealed to him.
-
-The cold-blooded blackguardliness of Davis almost shocked him for a
-moment—making a girl love him like that just to use her as a spy on
-her family! The upright man in the soul of Billy Harman, the upright
-man who had never yet managed somehow to get on his feet, humped his
-back and tried to rise, but he had half a million dollars on top of
-him. He moved in his chair uneasily, and refilled his pipe. But all he
-said was: “Tell us about them gold bars.”
-
-Davis told. A peon runner had come in that afternoon with a chit for
-Pereira saying that the mules, eight in number, bearing the stuff,
-would reach Buenodiaz by night-time of the following day.
-
-“The stuff will be shipped to-morrow night, then?” said Harman.
-
-“Well, you don’t think they’d go leaving it on the beach,” replied
-Davis.
-
-“Didn’t you get out of her what ship they were taking it off on?”
-asked Harman.
-
-“No,” said Davis, “I didn’t, she don’t know herself, but she’s going
-to find out.”
-
-“Bud,” said Harman, “give us the straight tip, I’m not wantin’ to prod
-into your ‘amoors,’ but how far have you nobbled her into this
-business?”
-
-“Well, as you ask me, I’ll tell you,” replied Bud. “She’s fell into it
-head first, and up to the heels of her boots, given me the whole show
-and location all but the name of the hooker which she don’t know yet.”
-
-“You mean to say she’s workin’ for you to collar the stuff?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But where does she come in?”
-
-“She’s coming with us if we can pull off the deal.”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Harman. “A petticut—I knew there must be some fly in
-the ’intment—it was too good to be true. A million dollars rollin’
-round waitin’ to be took and a petticut—I’ve never known one that
-didn’t mess a job it was wrapped up in.”
-
-“It’s a million to one it don’t come off,” said Davis, removing his
-boots before turning in, “but there’s just one chance, and that’s
-her.”
-
-Next morning Mr. Harman did not go ashore. He spent his time fishing
-over the side, fishing and smoking and dreaming of all sorts of
-different ways of spending dollars. Now he was rolling round ’Frisco
-in a carriage, and a boiled shirt with a diamond solitaire in it,
-calling at the Palatial for drinks. Now he was in the train of quality
-eastward bound for N’York, smoking a big cigar. He did not delude
-himself that the deal would come off, but that didn’t matter a bit.
-The essence of dreams is unreality. There was a chance.
-
-Davis went ashore about eleven o’clock, and did not return till two in
-the afternoon. When he came back he was a different man. He seemed
-younger and brighter, and even better dressed, though he had not
-changed his clothes. Harman, watching him row up to the ship, noticed
-the difference in him even before he came on board.
-
-He swept him down to the cabin, and before letting him speak, poured
-out drinks.
-
-“I see it in your mug,” said Harman. “Here, swaller that before
-handin’ out the news. Cock yourself on the bunk side. Well, what’s the
-odds now?”
-
-“Twenty to one on,” said Davis, “or a hundred—it’s all the same. It’s
-as good as done. Bo, we got it.”
-
-“Don’t say!” said Billy.
-
-“Got it, saddle and bridle an’ pedigree and all. She’s given it all in
-and to-night’s the night.”
-
-“Give us the yarn,” said the other.
-
-“There’s nothing to it; simple as shop-lifting. The stuff will be down
-at the coast here about dark; it will be taken off soon as it arrives
-and shipped on board the _Douro_. She’s lying over there, and I’ll
-point her out to you when we go up. Then, when the stuff is aboard,
-she’ll put out, but not till sun up. They don’t like navigating those
-outlying reefs in the dark, moon or no.”
-
-“Yes,” said Harman.
-
-“Well,” said Davis, “our little game is to wait till the stuff is
-aboard, row off, take the Douro, and push out with her. You and me and
-eight Kanakas ought to do it, there’s no guardship, and the fellows on
-the _Douro_ won’t put up much of a fight. You see, they’re not on the
-fighting lay; it’s the steal softly business with them, and I reckon
-they’ll cave at the first shout.”
-
-“Where does the girl come in?” asked Billy, after a moment’s pause.
-
-“There’s a place called Coimbra seven mile south down the coast,” said
-Davis, fetching a chart from the locker. “Here it is. That point. I’ve
-only to put out a blue light and she’ll put off in a boat. Pereira’s
-brother lives down at Coimbra, and she’s going to-night to stay with
-him. She’ll be on the watch out from one on to sunrise, and she’ll
-easy get taken out in one of the night fishermen’s boats.”
-
-To all of which Mr. Harman replied, “Damn petticuts!” He was biting
-his nails. He was no feminist. That is to say, he had an inborn
-conviction that women tended to spoil shows other than tea parties and
-such like. Why couldn’t this rotten girl have kept out of the
-business? What did she want coming along for? Seeing that she was
-letting down her people for the love of Davis, it seemed pretty
-evident that she was coming along also for the love of him, but Harman
-was not in the mood to consider things from the girl’s point of view.
-
-However, there was no use complaining. With the chance of a million
-dollars for nothing, one must expect a few thorns, so he kept his head
-closed whilst Davis, taking him on deck, drew a lightning sketch of
-the plan of campaign.
-
-First they had to shift the _Araya’s_ moorings so as to get closer to
-the _Douro_, then they had to put the Kanakas wise, and more
-especially Taute the cook and leader, then they had just to lay low,
-wait for midnight, and pounce.
-
-“Righto,” said Mr. Harman, “and if we’re shiftin’ moorin’s, let’s
-shift now.”
-
-They did, not drawing too noticeably near the _Douro_, but near enough
-to keep watch on her. Near enough to count the sun-blisters on her
-side with a glass. She was of smaller tonnage than the _Araya_ and
-ketch-rigged. She had never been a beauty, and she wasn’t one now; she
-had no charms to mellow with age.
-
-Night had fallen on Buenodiaz, and the band on La Plazza had ceased
-braying. Eleven o’clock was striking. Cathedral and churches tinkling
-and tankling and clanging the hour; a drunken crew had just put off
-for the grain ship lying farther out, and silence was falling on the
-scene, when, whizz-bang, off went the fireworks.
-
-“Damn the place!” cried Harman, whose nerves were on edge. “It’s
-clangin’ and prayin’ and stinkin’ all day and closes down only to go
-off in your face—some saint’s day or ’nuther, I expect.”
-
-Davis said nothing. He was watching the blue and pink of bursting
-rockets and the fiery, fuzzy worms reflecting themselves in the
-harbour.
-
-They had seen several boats stealthily approaching the _Douro_.
-Everything seemed going to time and the wind was steady.
-
-An hour passed during which Buenodiaz, forgetting saints and
-frivolity, fell asleep, leaving the world to the keeping of the moon.
-
-Convents, churches and cathedral were chiming midnight when the
-Kanakas, having crowded into the boat of the _Araya_, Davis and Harman
-got into the stem sheets and pushed off.
-
-As they drew close, the _Douro_, with her anchor light burning, showed
-no sign of life, bow to the sea on a taut anchor chain, she rode the
-flooding tide, she seemed nodding to them as she pitched gently to the
-heave of the swell, and as they rubbed up alongside and Harman grasped
-the rail, he saw that the deck was clear.
-
-“Down below, every man Jack of them,” he whispered back at Davis. “I
-can hear ’em snoring. Foc’s’le hatch first.”
-
-He led the way to the foc’s’le hatch and closed it gently, turning at
-a stroke the foc’s’le into a prison. Then they came to the saloon
-hatch, stood and listened.
-
-Not a sound.
-
-“They’re all in the foc’s’le,” whispered Harman. “Just like Spaniards,
-ain’t it? No time to waste, we’ve gotta see the stuff’s here; give’s
-your matches.” He stepped down, followed by the other, reached the
-saloon, and struck a light.
-
-Yes, the stuff was there, a sight enough to turn a stronger head than
-Harman’s, boxes and boxes on the floor and on the couch, evidently
-just brought on board and disposed of in a hurry, and all marked with
-the magic name: Juan Diaz.
-
-Harman tried to lift one of them. It was not large, yet he could
-scarcely stir it. Then with eyes aflame and hammering hearts, they
-made up the companion way, closed the hatch, and, while Davis got the
-canvas on her, Harman stood by to knock the shackle off the anchor
-chain.
-
-As town and mole and harbour dropped astern, the _Douro_ close-hauled
-and steered by Davis, Harman standing by the steersman, saw the helm
-going over and found they were heading north.
-
-“And how about pickin’ up that girl?” asked Billy, “Coimbra don’t lay
-this way.”
-
-“Oh, I reckon she’ll wait,” replied Davis.
-
-“You’re givin’ her the good-bye?”
-
-“Seems so,” said Davis.
-
-Hannan chuckled. Then he lit a cigar. If girls chose to fall in love
-and trust chaps like Davis, it wasn’t his affair.
-
-At sunrise he slipped down to see after some food. Davis heard him
-hammering down below, and knew that he was sampling the gold, he
-smiled with the full knowledge that it was there and that Billy
-couldn’t get away with it, when up from the saloon dashed Billy.
-
-Like a man demented, he rushed forward, opened the foc’s’le hatch and
-shouted down it to the imprisoned Spaniards.
-
-“Come up, you blighters,” cried Mr. Harman. Then he dived down, found
-emptiness and returned on deck.
-
-He held on to the rail as he faced Davis.
-
-“Ten thousand dollars’ worth of trade and ship,” said Harman, “that’s
-what we’ve given them for a stinkin’ ketch and a couple o’ hundred
-weight of sand. Sand an’ pebbles that’s what’s in them boxes. You and
-your girls! No, you can’t put back, they’d jug us for stealin’ this
-bum boat. Take your gruel and swaller it! Why, bless your livin’
-innocence, the whole of that garlic factory was in it, it’s my belief,
-from the Port Doctor up, and they’ll be havin’ fireworks to-night to
-celebrate.”
-
-Billy paused, spat into the sea.
-
-“No,” said he, turning his remarks to the universe in general. “It
-don’t pay. Runnin’ crooked don’t pay—nohow.”
-
-
-
-
-II—MANDELBAUM
-
-
-What would you do were you to find yourself on a stolen sixty-ton
-ketch off the middle coast of Chile with a crew of Kanakas, less than
-ten days’ provisions on board, no money to speak of, and a healthy and
-lively dread of touching at a Chile port?
-
-That was the exact position of Mr. William Harman and his friend, Bud
-Davis, one bright morning on board the ketch _Douro_ and thirty miles
-nor’-west of Buenodiaz—about.
-
-The _Douro_ was heading west-nor’-west, the morning was perfect, the
-Pacific calm, and Billy, seated on the hatch cover, was expressing the
-opinion that running straight was the best course to adopt in a world
-where reefs were frequent and sharks abundant.
-
-“No,” said he, “runnin’ crooked don’t pay, nohow. There ain’t enough
-softies about to make it pay, ain’t enough mugs about, as I’ve told
-you more’n once. Happy I was on Papaleete beach and then you comes
-along that night and says, ‘Let’s take Penhill’s ship,’ says you.
-‘There she lays, the _Araya_, sixty-ton schooner, and he drinkin’
-himself blind at the club and he can’t touch us,’ says you, ‘for he’s
-mortal afraid of what I know about him. It’s as safe as cheeses,’ says
-you, and off we put and out we took her—safe as cheeses, seein’
-Penhill couldn’t touch us, weren’t we?”
-
-“Oh, close up,” said Davis.
-
-“I ain’t rubbin’ it in, I’m just tellin’ you. Nobody couldn’t touch
-us, and bold we put into Buenodiaz, reckonin’ to sell her on the hoof,
-cargo and all, and she worth ten thousand dollars if she was worth a
-bean, and then what happens? Pereira offers to buy her, cargo and all,
-and while you were dickerin’ with him, his daughter hands you that
-yarn about the _Douro_ havin’ a million dollars in bar gold on board
-of her, and what does we do?” Mr. Harman’s voice rose a tone or two.
-“We leaves ten thousand dollars’ worth of ship and cargo and rows over
-to this old tub, boards her, lifts the hook, cracks on sail and puts
-out to find nothin’ in them boxes but sand an’ pebbles—half a ton of
-beach, that’s what them darned turkey bustards had landed on us in
-swop for a schooner and cargo worth ten thousand dollars if she was
-piled, let alone ridin’ at her moorings in Buenodiaz harbour.”
-
-“Well,” said Davis, “you needn’t shout it. You were in it as well as
-me. I guess we were both fools, but we haven’t come off
-empty-handed—we’ve got a ship under our feet, though we’re in a bad
-way, I’ll admit. Can’t you see the game that’s been played on us? This
-hooker is worth four thousand dollars any day in the week; they’ve let
-us run off with her, they set her as a trap for us, but they’ll want
-her back. If we put into any Chile port, we’ll be nabbed and put to
-work in the salt mines while these blighters will get their ship
-back.”
-
-“Sure,” said Harman, “but we ain’t goin’ to.”
-
-“How d’ye mean?”
-
-“We ain’t goin’ to put into no Chile port.” Davis sighed, rose, went
-below and fetched up the top of one of the gold-boxes, then with a
-stump of pencil he drew a rough map of South America, indicating the
-appalling coast-line of Chile while the ingenuous Harman looked on
-open-mouthed and open-eyed.
-
-“There you are,” said the map-maker, “a hundred thousand miles long
-and nothing but seaboard and there we are—nothing but the Horn to the
-south and Bolivia to the north, and the Bolivians are hand in fist
-with the Chilians, and, moreover, there’s sure to be gunboats out to
-look for us. That’s why I’m holding on west. We’ve got to get to sea
-and trust in Providence.”
-
-“Well,” said the disgusted Harman, “I reckon if Providence is our
-stand-by and if it made Chile same’s your map shows her, we’re done
-for. There ain’t no sense in it; no, sir, there ain’t no sense in a
-country all foreshore stringed out like that, with scarce room for a
-bathin’ machine, and them yellow-bellied Bolivians at one end of it
-and the Horn at the other. It ain’t playin’ it fair on a man, it ain’t
-more nor less than a trap, that’s what I call it, it ain’t more nor
-less than——”
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “wasting your wind. We’re in it and we’ve
-got to get out. Now I’ve just given you our position: we’re running
-near due west into open sea, with only ten days’ grub, nothing to
-strike but Easter Island and the mail line from ’Frisco to Montevideo.
-We’ve the chance to pick up grub from a ship; failing that, either
-we’ll eat the Kanakas or the Kanakas will eat us. I’m not being funny.
-How do you take it? Shall us hold on or push down to Valparaiso and
-take our gruel?”
-
-“What did you say those mines were?” asked Harman.
-
-“Which mines?”
-
-“Those mines the Chile blighters put chaps like us to work in.”
-
-“Salt mines.”
-
-Mr. Harman meditated for a moment. “Well,” said he at last, “I reckon
-I’ll take my chance on the Kanakas.”
-
-The _Douro_ had nothing about her of any use for navigation but the
-rudder and the compass in the binnacle and the tell-tale compass fixed
-in the roof of the saloon. Pereira, when he had baited her as a trap
-for the unfortunates to run away with, had left nothing of value. He
-and the beauties working with him reckoned to get her back, no doubt,
-as Davis had indicated, but they knew that the fox sometimes manages
-to escape, carrying the trap with him, so they left nothing to grieve
-about except the hull, sticks, strings, canvas, bunk bedding and a few
-tin plates and cooking implements.
-
-So she was sailing pretty blind with nothing to smell at but the North
-Pole, to use Davis’ words as he spat over the side at the leaping blue
-sea, while Harman, leaning beside him on the rail, concurred.
-
-The one bright spot in the whole position was the seventeen hundred
-dollars or so of the _Araya’s_ ship money still safe in Davis’ pocket.
-
-It proved its worth some six days later when, close on the San
-Francisco-Montevideo mail line, they flagged a big freighter and got
-provisions enough to last them for a month, then, “more feeling than
-feet under them,” to use Harman’s expression, they pushed along,
-protected by the gods of Marco Polo, and the early navigators,
-untrusting in a compass that might be untrustable through blazing days
-and nights of stars, smoking—they had got tobacco from the
-freighter—yarning, lazing and putting their faith in luck.
-
-“Anyhow,” said the philosophic Harman, “we ain’t got no dam
-chronometer to be slippin’ cogs or goin’ wrong, nor no glass to be
-floppin’ about and frightenin’ a chap’s gizzard out of him with
-indications of cyclones and such, nor no charts to be thumbin’, nor no
-sextan’ to be squintin’ at the sun with. I tell you, Bud, I ain’t
-never felt freer than this. I reckon it’s the same with money. Come to
-think of it, money’s no catch, when all’s said and done with, what
-between banks bustin’ and sharks laying for a chap, not to speak of
-women and sich, and sore heads an’ brown tongues in the morning. Money
-buys trouble, that’s all I’ve ever seen of it, and it’s the same all
-through.”
-
-“Well, that wasn’t your song on the beach at Papaleete,” said Davis,
-“and seems to me you weren’t backward in making a grab for that gold
-at Buenodiaz.”
-
-“Maybe I wasn’t,” replied the other, and the conversation wilted while
-on the tepid wind from the dark-blue sea came the sound of the bow
-wash answered by the lazy creak of block and cordage.
-
-No longer steering west, but northward towards the line, the _Douro_
-brought them nights of more velvety darkness and more tremendous
-stars, seas more impossibly blue, till, one dawn that looked like a
-flock of red flamingoes escaping across an horizon of boiling gold,
-Bud, on the look-out, cried “Land!” and the great sun leaping up
-astern stripped the curtain away with a laugh and showed them coco-nut
-trees beyond a broken sea, and beyond the coco-nut trees a misty blue
-stillness incredibly wonderful and beautiful, till, in a flash,
-vagueness vanishing, a great lagoon blazed out, with the gulls
-circling above it, gold and rose and marble-flake white.
-
-Before this miracle Harman stood unimpressed.
-
-“We’d have been right into that darned thing in another hour if the
-sun hadn’t lifted,” said he, “unless maybe the noise of the reef would
-have fended us off—hark to it!”
-
-They could hear it coming up against the wind, a long, low rumble like
-the sound of a far-off train, and now, as the _Douro_ drew in, they
-could see the foam spouting as the flood tide raced through the
-passage broad before them, and showing the vast harbour of the lagoon.
-
-“The opening seems all right,” said Davis.
-
-“Deep enough to float a battleship,” replied the other, “and no sign
-of rocks in it. Shove her in.”
-
-The _Douro_ did not require any shoving. Driven by the wind and tide
-she came through the break like a gull, and as the great lagoon spread
-before them they could see the whole vast inner beach with one sweep
-of the eye.
-
-It was an oval-shaped atoll, a pond, maybe, four miles from rim to rim
-at its broadest part, heavy here and there with groves of palm and
-jack-fruit trees, and showing a village of grass-roofed houses by the
-trees on the northern beach, where, on the blinding white sands,
-canoes were lying, and from which a boat was just putting off.
-
-“They’ve sighted us,” said Davis.
-
-“Seems so,” replied Harman, running forward to superintend the fellows
-who were getting the anchor ready, while the _Douro_, shaking the wind
-out of her sails, lost way, and the hook fell in ten-fathom water, the
-rumble of the chain coming back in faintest echoes from the painted
-shore.
-
-The boat drew on. It was manned by Kanakas naked as Noah, and steered
-by a white man. A huge man with a broad and red and bulbous face, who
-came on board leg over rail without a word of greeting, gazed around
-him with a pair of protruding light-blue eyes, and, then, finding his
-voice, addressed Harman:
-
-“Where the blazes have _you_ blown in from?” asked the stranger.
-
-“Gentlemen,” said Clayton, for Clayton was his name, and they were all
-down below sampling a bottle of rum wangled by the genius of Harman
-out of the purser of the freighter, “Gentlemen, I’m not divin’ into
-your business. A ship in ballast without charts or chronometer, not
-knowing where she is, and not willin’ to say where she comes from, may
-be on the square and may be not.”
-
-“We ain’t,” said Harman bluntly.
-
-“That bein’ so,” said Clayton, quite unmoved, “we can deal without
-circumlocuting round the show, and get to the point, which is this:
-I’m wantin’ your ship.”
-
-“Spread yourself,” said Davis, “and tip the bottle.”
-
-Clayton obeyed.
-
-“I’m willin’ to buy her of you,” said he, “lock, stock, barrel and
-Kanakas, no questions asked, no questions answered, only terms.”
-
-“What’s your terms?” asked Harman.
-
-Clayton raised his head. The wind had shifted, and, blowing through
-the open port, it brought with it a faint, awful, subtle, utterly
-indescribable perfume. Far above the vulgar world of stenches, almost
-psychic, it floated around them, while Harman spat and Davis
-considered the stranger attentively and anew.
-
-“Oysters,” said Davis.
-
-“Rotting on the outer beach,” said Clayton. “That’s my meaning and my
-terms. Gentlemen, if you ain’t plum’ fools, the smell of them oysters
-will be as a leadin’ light to bring you a fortune as big as my own.”
-
-“Open the can,” said Harman.
-
-“Which I will,” replied the other. “I’m straight’s a gun barrel I am,
-and I don’t want to beat round no bushes, and it’s just this way,
-gents. The hull of this lagoon is a virgin oyster patch full of virgin
-oysters, pearl breedin’ and sound, with no foot-and-mouth disease to
-them. Oloong-Javal is the Kanaka name of the atoll, and it’s on no
-charts. No, sir, it’s a sealed lagoon, and I struck it two years ago
-runnin’ from Sydney to Valparaiso, master of the _Sea Hawk_, with a
-Chink crew and a cargo of chow truck, put in here for water, spotted
-the oyster shop, and kept my head shut. Found orders at Valparaiso to
-ballast and get on to Callao, but I didn’t go to no Callao. I cut
-loose, fired the mate as a drunk and incapable, which he was, laid out
-the ship’s money on diving dresses and a pump, hawked back here,
-landed the equipment, and started in on the pearling.”
-
-“And the Chinks?” asked Harman.
-
-“Comin’ to them, they curled up and died of eating the lagoon fish in
-the poisonous season, couldn’t keep them off it—you know what Chinks
-are—and as for the hooker, why sinkin’ gets rid of a lot of trouble,
-and I took her outside the reef and drilled her.”
-
-“Well, you are a one,” said Harman, shocked, yet intrigued, and
-vaguely admiring.
-
-“I don’t say that I’m not,” replied Clayton. “I reckon we’re all in
-the same boat, and plain speaking is best among gentlemen, but cuttin’
-all that, let’s get down to tin-tacks. I’ve been working a year and I
-haven’t skinned more than a patch of the beds. All the same, I’ve made
-my pile, and I want to enjoy it, I want to have my fun, and if you’re
-willing I’ll swap the location and the mining rights for this hooker
-and her crew. I want to get home, and home’s Kisai Island, up north in
-the Marshalls—and that’s what’s waitin’ for me and has been waitin’
-for me three years.”
-
-He took a photograph from his pocket and handed it to the others. It
-was the photo of a Kanaka girl under a palm tree on a blazing beach.
-
-“Oh, Lord, a petticut!” said Harman in a doleful voice at this sight
-of ill omen. “A petticut!”
-
-“There ain’t no petticoat about her,” said Clayton—as indeed there
-was not—“unless the missionaries have been gettin’ at her with their
-tomfoolery. Oti is her name, and there she sits waitin’ for me, which
-if she isn’t and has gone and got spliced, I reckon I’ll bust her
-husband. Well, gents, which is it to be for you, floatin’ round loose
-in this cockroach trap or a hundred thousand dollars’ worth of pearls
-to be took for the working?”
-
-“And how are we to get away supposing we stick here and pearl?” asked
-Davis.
-
-“That’s not for me to say,” replied Clayton. “Something will blow
-along most likely and take you off, or you can rig up a canoe and make
-for the Paumotus. I’m just offerin’ the deal, which many a man would
-jump at, more especial as this old ketch of yours seems to smell of
-lost property. I ain’t insinuating. I’m only hintin’.”
-
-Davis swallowed the suggestion without sign of taking offence, then he
-said: “I’ll step on deck with my friend Harman and have a word with
-him. I won’t be more’n five minutes.”
-
-On deck, Harman suddenly clapped himself on the head. “We’ve left that
-ballyhoo alone with the rum-bottle,” said he.
-
-“Never mind,” said Davis, “we’re better dry. Now get your nose down to
-this business while I turn the handle. First of all we want to get rid
-of the ship; second, we want pearls, not for personal adornment, so to
-speak, but for profit; third, I believe the chap’s yarn, and, fourth,
-I vote we close on his offer. What you say?”
-
-“I’m with you on the pearls,” said Harman, “and I’m ready to close on
-two conditions, and the first is that the beds haven’t been stripped.”
-
-“We’ll easily prove that,” said Davis. “I’ve done pearling and I know
-the business.”
-
-“Second is,” continued Harman, “that havin’ hived the stuff, we’ll be
-able to get away with it.”
-
-“Maybe what more you’ll be wanting is a mail boat to ’Frisco and a
-brass band to play us off. Isn’t Luck good enough to trust in? And
-look at the luck that’s brought us here. What you want flying in the
-face of it for?”
-
-“Well, maybe you’re right,” said the other. “The luck’s all right if
-it holds; question is, will it? I don’t like that petticut flyin’ up
-in our face; it’s part of the deal, seems to me, since he’s droppin’
-this place mainly to get to her, and I’ve never seen a deal yet that
-wasn’t crabbed if a woman put as much as the tip of her nose into it.
-I ain’t superstitious. I’m only sayin’ what I know, and all I’m saying
-is that it’s rum him talking of——”
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said the other, “you’re worse than any old woman. I’m
-into this business whether or no, and you can stay out if you want.
-How’s it to be?”
-
-Harman raised his head and sniffed the air tainted with the oysters
-rotting on the coral. Then he turned to the cabin hatch. “Come on,”
-said he, and they went below to close the bargain.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Clayton’s house was grass-thatched like the others and situated close
-to the groves on the right of the village; it had three rooms and a
-veranda, and mats and native-made chairs constituted the chief
-furniture. Beyond the house, farther on the right, was the shed where
-a few trade goods, mostly boxes of tobacco and rolls of print, were
-stored.
-
-“That’s all there’s left of the stuff I brought with me,” said he;
-“it’ll carry you on, and I make you a present of it. The Kanakas
-aren’t used to high wages. A chap will dive all day for the fun of it
-and half a stick of tobacco, but you can do most of the diving
-yourselves and save on the business. There are the diving suits, two
-of them. Good as when I got them, and the pump’s in the boat there;
-she’s in that canoe house, it’s a Clarkson, in good order. Say, boys,
-you’ve no reason to sneeze over this deal. Here’s an island, a living
-larder, pigs and fowl and taro and fish and fruit for nix, a pearl
-lagoon not half worked, diving suits and pump and a bit of trade, and
-all for that frousty old brown boat of yours. Was you ever on your
-feet before?”
-
-“Well, maybe,” said Davis, “we’ve no call to complain if the beds are
-all right. Let’s put out and look at them.”
-
-They took the _Douro’s_ boat and rowed out, Clayton steering and
-piloting them.
-
-The beds ran north, acres of them, and one of the Kanakas Clayton had
-taken with them dived now and then and brought up a pair of shells as
-a sample.
-
-Big molluscs they were, weighing maybe eight hundred to the ton, of
-the white shell like the Tahiti oysters.
-
-Davis, who knew something of the business, reckoned that the shell
-alone was worth five hundred dollars a ton, but he said nothing as the
-boat, impelled by the sculls, passed through the crystal water.
-
-Every lagoon would be a pearl lagoon but for the fact that the oyster
-of all sea creatures is the most difficult to suit with a breeding
-ground. The tides must not be too swift, the floor must be exactly
-right.
-
-Javal Lagoon was ideal, a bar of reef delaying the floor current and
-the coral showing the long coach-whip fucus loved by the pearl-seeker.
-Davis declared himself satisfied, and they rowed back to inspect the
-mounds of shell and oysters rotting on the beach which were to be
-thrown in as part of the goodwill of the business.
-
-That night after supper, Clayton showed his pearls. A few of them. He
-had four tin cash-boxes, and he opened one and disclosed his treasures
-lying between layers of cotton-wool. You have seen chocolate creams in
-boxes—that was the sight that greeted the eyes of Harman and Davis,
-only the chocolate creams were pearls. Some were the size of marrowfat
-peas and some were the size of butter beans, very large, but not of
-very good shape, some were pure white, some gold and some rose.
-
-“Don’t show us no more, or I guess we’ll be robbin’ you,” said Harman.
-
-Next morning the pearl-man began his preparations for departure, the
-water-casks of the _Douro_ were filled, chickens caught and cooped, a
-live pig embarked and the groves raided for nuts, bananas and
-bread-fruit.
-
-“It’s well he’s leavin’ us the trees,” said Harman.
-
-The diving suits were got out and Clayton showed them how they were
-used, also the trick of filling the net bag with oysters in the
-swiftest way and without tangling the air-tube. The beds were shallow
-enough to be worked without diving gear, but a man in a diving dress
-will raise five times as many pairs of shells as a man without in a
-given time, Clayton explained this. He left nothing wanting in the way
-of explanations and advice, and next morning, having filled up with
-provisions and water, he put out, taking the ebb, the _Douro_ heeling
-to a five-knot breeze and followed past the break by a clanging escort
-of gulls.
-
-Then Harman and Davis found themselves alone, all alone, masters of a
-treasure that would have turned the head of Tiffany, and of a hundred
-and fifty Kanakas, men, women, and children, a tribe captained and led
-by one Hoka, a frizzy-headed buck whose only dress and adornment was a
-gee string and the handle of a china utensil slung round his neck as a
-pendant.
-
-The rotted oysters on the coral were useless, they had been worked
-over by Clayton. That was the first surprise, the next was the price
-of labour. Two sticks of tobacco a day was the price of native labour,
-not half a stick as reported by Clayton.
-
-Trade tobacco just then worked out at two cents a stick, so the pay
-was not exorbitant; it was the smallness of the stock in hand that
-bothered our syndicate. But Hoka was adamant. He did not know ten
-words of English, but he knew enough to enforce his claims, and the
-syndicate had to give in.
-
-“I knew there’d be flies in the ’intment somewhere,” said Harman, “but
-this is a bluebottle. We haven’t tobacco enough to work this lagoon a
-month, and what’s to happen then?”
-
-“No use bothering a month ahead,” replied Davis. “If worst comes to
-the worst, we’ll just have to do the diving ourselves. Get into your
-harness and down with you, to see how it works.”
-
-Harman did, and an appalling rush of bubbles followed his descent, the
-suit was faulty. Tropical weather does not improve diving suits, and
-Harman was just got up in time.
-
-“Never again,” said he when his window was unscrewed, and he had done
-cursing Clayton, Clayton’s belongings, his family, his relatives and
-his ancestors.
-
-“Stick her on the beach; darn divin’ suits, let’s take to the water
-natural.”
-
-They did, following the practice of the Kanakas, and at the end of the
-week, when the shells were rotted out, six days’ takings showed three
-large pearls perfect in every point and worth maybe fifteen hundred
-dollars, five small pearls varying in value from ten to forty dollars
-according to Davis’ calculations, several baroques of small and
-uncertain value and a spoonful of seeds.
-
-“Call it two thousand dollars,” said Davis, when they had put the
-takings away in some cotton-wool, left by Clayton, and a small
-soap-box. “Call it two thousand and we’ve had twenty Kanakas diving
-for a week at two sticks a day, that makes two hundred and eighty
-sticks at two cents a stick.”
-
-“Well, it’s cheap enough,” said Harman. “Wonder what the unions would
-say to us and them chaps that’s always spoutin’ about the wages of the
-workin’ classes—not that I’m against fair wages. I reckon if that guy
-Clayton had left us enough tobacco, I wouldn’t mind raisin’ the wage
-bill to eight dollars a week, but we haven’t got it—haven’t got
-enough to last a month as it’s runnin’ now.”
-
-He spoke the truth. Less than a month left them cleared out, and the
-Kanakas struck to a man and ceased to dive, spending their time
-fishing, lazing in the sun and smoking—but their chief amusement was
-watching the white men at work.
-
-There is no penitentiary equal to a pearl lagoon, once it seizes you,
-and no galley slaves under the whip ever worked harder than Harman and
-Bud Davis, stripped to the skin, brown as cobnuts with sun and water,
-long-haired, dishevelled, diving like otters, and bringing up not more
-than a hundred pair of shells a day.
-
-The boat had to be anchored over a certain spot, and as the work went
-on the anchorage had to be shifted; at the end of the day the oysters
-had to be brought ashore and laid out on the coral to rot. Then, too
-tired, almost, to smoke, the Pearl Syndicate would stretch itself
-under the stars to dream of fortune and the various ways of spending
-money.
-
-The imaginative Harman had quite definite views on that
-business—diamonds and dollar Henry Clays, champagne and palatial
-bars, standing drinks to all and sundry and a high time generally,
-that was his idea. Davis, darker and more secretive, had higher
-ambitions roughly formulated in the words, “More money.” Dollars breed
-dollars, and great wealth was enough for him. He would spend his money
-on making more, sure in his mind that if he once got his foot again in
-’Frisco with a pocketful of money, he would find his way out through
-the big end of the horn.
-
-And so they went on till at the end of four months, taking stock of
-their possessions, they found themselves forty thousand dollars up, to
-use Davis’ words.
-
-Taken by the hands of the Kanakas in the first month and by their own
-hands in the three succeeding months, they had safely hived
-forty-seven white and perfect pearls, two golden pearls, one
-defective, some red pearls not worth more than a shilling a grain,
-and, king of the collection, a great black pearl pear-shaped and
-perfect and equal to any Mexican in lustre and value. There were also
-some baroques of extraordinary shapes and a quantity of seeds.
-
-Of the forty-seven white pearls, four were of very large size. Davis
-had no scales, but he reckoned that these four and the black were
-worth all the rest put together.
-
-The general stock-taking brought an end to their luck, and for weeks
-after the take was a joke, to use Davis’ expression. It is always so
-in pearling; a man may make a small fortune out of a fishery in a few
-months, but the take is never consistent, and if he strikes it rich at
-first, it is ten to one he will have to pay for his luck.
-
-One morning, just as the sun was freeing himself from the reef and the
-last of the gulls departing for their deep-sea fishing grounds,
-Harman, who had been to draw water from the well, suddenly dropped the
-bucket he was carrying, shaded his eyes and gave a shout that brought
-Davis from the house.
-
-Davis looked to where the other was pointing, and there far off to the
-north and lit by the newly-risen sun stood a sail.
-
-They had been praying for a ship for the last fortnight, speculating
-on the chances of anything picking them up before they died of hope
-deferred and loneliness and a diet of fish and vegetable truck, yet
-now, before that sail hard on the blue and evidently making towards
-them, they scarcely felt surprised, and were too troubled to be filled
-with joy; for it suddenly occurred to them that pearls were
-pearls—that is to say, wealth in its most liftable form.
-
-“Say, Bud,” cried Harman, “we’ve got to hide them divin’ dresses. If
-these chaps ain’t on the straight and they sniff pearls, we’ll be
-robbed sure and shoved in the lagoon. I never thought of that before.
-We’re sure marks for every tough till we’ve cashed in and banked the
-money.”
-
-“You aren’t far wrong,” replied Davis, still contemplating the sail.
-“Yes, she’s making for here, and she’s all a hundred and fifty tons.
-Inside two hours she’ll be off the reef and we’ve no time to waste.”
-
-Most of the island Kanakas had gone fishing the night before to the
-other side of the atoll, so there were only a few old women and
-children about to mark the actions of the Pearl Syndicate.
-
-First they dealt with the boat that held the pump, sinking it by the
-inner beach in four-fathom water at a point where the trees came down
-right across the sands.
-
-Then, carrying the diving suits, they dumped them in a fish-pool off
-the outer beach. Having done this, they divided the pearls, making two
-parcels of them, and surprisingly small parcels they were considering
-their value.
-
-“Now,” said Harman, when all was done, “we’re shipwrecked chaps blown
-ashore, we don’t know nothing about pearls, and we reckon the house
-and go-down were built by some trader the Kanakas has murdered. How’s
-that for a yarn to sling them; but what’s the name of our ship?”
-
-“The _Mary Ann Smithers_,” replied Davis promptly, “from Tampico to
-’Frisco, cargo of hides and wool, badly battered off the Horn, old
-man’s name Sellers, and driven out of our course by the big gale a
-month ago. There wasn’t any gale a month ago, but it’s a million to
-one they were a thousand miles off then, so how are they to know?”
-
-“You were second officer,” said Harman.
-
-“No, I was bo’sun; second officers are supposed to be in the know of
-the navigation and all such. I was just bo’sun, plain Jim Davis.”
-
-“Well, they won’t dispute you’re plain enough,” said Harman. “But you
-ain’t the cut of a bo’sun, not to my mind, cable length nearer you are
-to the look of a Methodis’ preacher or a card sharp—no need to get
-riled—be a bo’sun and be darned, be anythin’ you like. I’m an A.B.
-hopsacker, British born and—here they are.” The fore canvas of the
-schooner was just showing at the break.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She came in laying the water behind her as though she had a hundred
-square miles of harbour to manœuvre in, then the wind shivered out of
-her canvas and almost on the splash of the anchor a boat was dropped.
-
-Harman and Davis watched it as it came ashore, noted the stroke of the
-broad-backed Kanaka rowers and the sun helmet of the white man in the
-stern and his face under the helmet as he stepped clear of the water
-on to the beach.
-
-Mandelbaum was the name of the newcomer, a dark, small man with a face
-expressionless as a wedge of ice. He wore glasses.
-
-As he stepped on to the sand he looked about him in seeming
-astonishment, first at Harman, then at Davis, then at the house, then
-at the beach.
-
-“Who the devil are you?” asked he.
-
-“Same to yourself,” replied Harman, “we’re derelicks. Hooker bust
-herself on the reef in a big blow more’n a month ago. Who are you?”
-
-“My name is Mandelbaum,” replied the other.
-
-“Well, come up on the verandy and have a drink,” said the hospitable
-Harman, “and we can have a clack before goin’ aboard. You the captain
-of that hooker?”
-
-“I am,” said Mandelbaum.
-
-“Then I reckon you won’t mind givin’ us a lift. We’re not above
-workin’ for our grub—set down till I get some drinkin’ nuts.”
-
-There was a long seat under the veranda, the house door was at the
-westward end of the house and the seat ran from the door to the
-eastern end. It was long enough for, maybe, ten people to sit on
-comfortably, and the three sat down on the seat. Harman having fetched
-the nuts, Mandelbaum threw his right leg over his left knee and
-turning comfortably and in a lazy manner towards the others, said:
-
-“Where’s Clayton?”
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Harman.
-
-Davis said nothing. His mouth fell open, and before he could shut it
-Mandelbaum got in again.
-
-“Don’t go to the trouble of trying any monkey tricks, there’s half a
-dozen fellows with Winchesters on that schooner. Your bluff is called.
-Where’s Clayton, my partner? He and a year’s taking of pearls ought to
-be here. I bring the schooner back with more trade goods and he’s
-gone, and I find you two scowbarkers in his house and serving
-strangers with your damn drinking nuts.” A venomous tang was coming
-into the steady voice, and a long slick Navy revolver came out of his
-left-hand coat pocket into his right hand, with the nozzle resting on
-his right knee.
-
-“Where’s Clayton, dead—but where, where have you planted him, and
-where have you cached the pearls?”
-
-“Cached the pearls?” suddenly cried Harman, finding his voice and
-taking in the whole situation. Then he began to laugh. He laughed as
-though he were watching Charlie Chaplin or something equally funny. He
-was. The picture of Clayton stood before him. Clayton making off with
-his partner’s share of the pearls, and handing the island and the
-fishing rights to him and Davis in return for the ketch, the picture
-of Davis and himself working like galley slaves, doing four months’
-hard labour for the sake of Mandelbaum, for well he knew Mandelbaum
-would make them stump up to the last baroque.
-
-Then he sat with his chin on his fists, spitting on the ground, while
-Davis explained and Harman soliloquised sometimes quite out aloud:
-“No, it ain’t no use; straight’s the only word in the dictionary. No
-darn use at all, ain’t enough mugs—and a petticut on top of all——”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Well, what’s the ‘ultermatum’?” asked Harman, a day later, as he
-stood by a native canoe on the beach.
-
-“It’s either stick here and work for two dollars a day or get out for
-the Paumotus,” replied Davis, coming up from a last interview with
-Mandelbaum. “Which will we do, stick here and work for Mandelbaum for
-two dollars a day sure money, house, grub and everything found, or put
-out for the Paumotus in this blessed canoe which his royal highness
-says we can have in exchange for the ship’s money he’s robbed us of?
-Which is it to be, the society of Mandelbaum or the Paumotus, which is
-hell, sharks, tide races, contr’y winds and starvation, maybe?”
-
-“The Paumotus,” said Harman without a moment’s hesitation.
-
-
-
-
-III—THE WAY OF A MAID WITH A MAN
-
-
-Have you ever tried to manage a South Sea canoe, a thing not much
-wider than a skiff, with mast and sail out of all proportion to the
-beam, yet made possible because of the outrigger?
-
-The outrigger, a long skate-shaped piece of wood, is supposed to
-stabilize the affair; it is always fixed to port and is connected to
-the canoe proper in two chief ways, either by a pole fore and aft or
-by a central bridge of six curved lengths of wood to which the mast
-stays are fixed; there are subsidiary forms with three outrigger
-poles, with two outrigger poles and a bridge, but it was in a canoe of
-the pure bridge type that Bud Davis and William Harman found
-themselves afloat in the Pacific, making west with an unreliable
-compass, a dozen and a half drinking nuts, a breaker of water and food
-for a fortnight.
-
-They had been shot out of a pearl lagoon by the rightful owner and
-robbed of two double handfuls of pearls which they had collected in
-his absence. Given the offer of a canoe to go to the devil in or
-honest work at two dollars a day with board and lodging free, they had
-chosen the canoe.
-
-They could work; they had worked like beavers for months and months
-collecting those pearls, but they weren’t going to work for wages.
-
-“No, sir,” said Harman, “I ain’t come down to that yet. Billy Harman’s
-done signin’ on to be sweated like a gun-mule and hove in the harbour
-when he’s old bones; the beach is good enough for him if it comes to
-bed-rock.”
-
-It had certainly come to bed-rock now this glorious morning, two days
-out and steering into the face of the purple west, the great sun
-behind them just risen and leaning his chin on the sea line.
-
-Harman was at the steering paddle, Davis forward. They had breakfasted
-on cold water and bananas, and Billy was explaining to Davis exactly
-the sort of fools they had been, not in refusing work and good grub
-and pay, but in having failed to scrag Mandelbaum, the pearl man.
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you’re always going back on things, and
-you haven’t it in you to scrag a chicken, anyhow; always serving out
-that parson’s dope about it not paying to run crooked.”
-
-“Nor it don’t,” said the moralist. “There ain’t enough mugs in the
-world, as I’ve told you more than twice. I don’t say there ain’t
-enough, but they’re too spread about—now if you could get them all
-congeriated into one place, I wouldn’t be behind you in waltzing in
-with a clear conscience an’ takin’ their hides—but there ain’t such a
-place—— ’Nother thing that queers the pitch is the way sharps let on
-to be mugs. Look at Clayton.”
-
-“What about Clayton?”
-
-“Well, look at him. In we sails to that pearl shop and there we finds
-him on the beach. Looked like the king of the mugs, didn’t he, with
-his big, round face and them blue-gooseberry eyes. ‘Here’s a sealed
-lagoon for you,’ says he, ‘I’m done with it; got all the pearls I want
-and am only wishful to get away; take it for nix, I only want your
-ship in exchange, and we fall to the deal and off he goes.’
-
-“We didn’t know he’d sailed off with all his pardner’s pearls, did we?
-And when his pardner, Mandelbaum, turns up and collars our takin’s,
-and kicks us out in this durned canoe after we’d been workin’ months
-and months, our pitch wasn’t queered—was it? And all by a sharp got
-up to look like a sucker and be d——d to him. Well, I hopes he’ll fry
-in blazes if he ain’t drowned before he cashes them pearls. I ain’t
-given to cursin’, but I could curse a hole in this dished canoe when I
-thinks of the hand we give him by fallin’ into his trap and the trick
-he served us by settin’ it.”
-
-“MIND!” yelled Davis.
-
-Harman, in his mental upset, had neglected his steering, and the canoe
-paying off before the wind nearly flogged the mast out as Davis let go
-the sheet.
-
-There are two sure ways of capsizing a South Sea canoe—letting the
-outrigger run under too deep and letting it tip into the air. They
-nearly upset her both ways before matters were righted, then pursuing
-again the path of the flying fish, the little canoe retook the wind,
-tepid and sea-scented and blowing out of the blue north-west.
-
-An hour after sunrise next morning Davis, on the look-out, saw a
-golden point in the sky away to the south of west. It was the cloud
-turban of Motul. A moment later Harman saw it too.
-
-“Lord! it’s a high island,” cried he. “I thought there was nuthin’ but
-low islands in these parts. Where have we been driftin’ to?”
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Davis. “Mind your steering, it’s land, that’s
-all I want.”
-
-“Oh, I ain’t grumblin’,” said Harman. He got her a point closer to the
-wind and steered, keeping the far-off speck on the port bow. The
-breeze freshened and the stays of the mast, fastened to the outrigger
-grating, twanged while the spray came inboard now and then in dashes
-from the humps of the swell, yet not a white cap was to be seen in all
-the vast expanse of water, the great sea running with a heave in the
-line of Humboldt’s current from south to north, but without a foam
-gout to break the ruffled blue.
-
-At noon Motul had lost its turban of cloud, but now it stood, a great
-lumping island moulded out of mountains, scarred with gulleys down
-which burst forests and rainbow falls, for Motul was green with the
-recent rains and its perfume met them ten miles across the sea.
-
-There seemed no encircling reef, just a line of reef here and there,
-beyond which lay topaz and aquamarine sheets of water bathing the feet
-of the great black cliffs of Motul.
-
-“Ain’t a place I’d choose for a lee shore,” said Billy, “but this
-canoe don’t draw more than a piedish, and I reckon we can get her in
-most anywhere across the reefs. Question is where do them cliffs
-break?”
-
-They kept a bit more to the south, and there sure enough was the big
-break where the cliffs seem smashed with an axe and where the deep
-water comes in, piercing the land so that you might anchor a
-battleship so close that the wild cliff-hanging convolvulus could
-brush its truck and fighting tops.
-
-“We can’t make it before dark,” said Billy.
-
-“Don’t matter,” said Davis.
-
-It didn’t; although the moon had not risen, the stars lit Motul and
-the great dark harbour that pierces the land like a sword.
-
-The breeze had almost fallen dead as they came in, nothing but the sea
-spoke, breaking on the rocks and lipping up the cliffs, where screw
-pines clung and the great datura trumpets blew in the silver light.
-
-Then as they stole across the water of the harbour, the dying breeze
-laying glittering fans before them, they saw, right ahead on the shore
-where the dark cliffs drew away, lights twinkling and dancing like
-fireflies, lights standing and moveless, lights crawling like
-glowworms. It was Amaho, the chief village of Motul, and the lights
-were the lights of the houses, the fish spearers, the lovers and the
-wayfarers of the chief town of Paradise.
-
-For Motul is Paradise in all things that relate to the senses of
-sight, smell, taste, hearing and touch, and its people are part of
-their environment. Here there are no ugly women and few old people,
-here bathing is perpetual as summer, and summer is never oppressive.
-Here everything grows that is of any use in the tropics.
-
-The pineapples of Motul are as white inside as sawn deal, yet you can
-almost eat them with a spoon, and their flavour beats that of the
-Brazilian pineapple, the English hothouse and the pine of Bourbon;
-they have fig bananas with a delicate golden stripe unobtainable
-elsewhere, and passion fruit with a vanilla flavour only to be found
-at Motul.
-
-Also there are girls.
-
-Harman and his companion, faced with the lights of the town,
-determined not to land till morning. They dropped their stone killick
-in six-fathom water, ate the last of their bananas, turned on their
-sides and fell asleep to be awakened by the dawn, a dawn of many
-colours standing against the far horizon on a carpet of rose and fire.
-Then, all of a sudden, tripping across the sea, she pulled up a
-curtain and the sun hit Amaho, the bay, the beach, and the anchored
-canoes, including the stranger canoe that had arrived during the
-night.
-
-“Look,” said Harman, “they’ve spotted us.” He pointed to the beach,
-where a crowd was gathering, a crowd with faces all turned seaward.
-Children were running along the sands, calling their elders out of
-houses to come and look, and now heads of swimmers began to dot the
-water and girls with flowers in their dark hair came towards the
-canoe, swimming with the effortless ease of fish; girls, young men,
-and boys, the whole population of Amaho seemed to have taken to the
-sea, and with them Davis held converse in broken _bêche de mer_, while
-Harman gloomily considered the “skirts.”
-
-I think Harman’s dislike of womenfolk had less to do with misogyny
-pure and simple than with a feeling, born from experience, that women
-tend to crab deals and interfere with the progress of prosperity, just
-as it is coming along to you by devious, not to say crooked paths.
-
-There was nothing in the way of any possible deal looming before them
-this morning. All the same, the ingenuous Harman did not relax or
-unbend in the least before this vision of friendly mermaids, one of
-whom was boldly now grasping the starboard gunnel with a wet hand
-while another, to port, was engaged in putting a leg over the
-outrigger.
-
-“They’re a friendly lot,” said Davis over his shoulder to the other.
-“Ain’t much to be done here as far as I can see, no shell nor turtle,
-and they’re too lazy to make copra, but it’s a good place to rest in
-and refit.”
-
-“It’ll be a good place to drown in if that piece don’t get off the
-outrigger,” said Harman.
-
-“Well, what’s your opinion, shall we shove her in?”
-
-“Aye, shove her in,” said Harman, and, getting up the anchor, they
-took to the paddles, making for the beach with an escort of swimmers
-ahead, to port, to starboard and astern.
-
-It was the girl on the outrigger that did the business, a wild-eyed,
-elfish-looking, yet beautiful individual, divorced from the humdrum
-civilized scheme of things as Pan or Puck. She only wanted horns and a
-little fur trimming or a small addition of wings to have done for
-either.
-
-As it was, she nearly did for Mr. Harman. In some miraculous way an
-affinity exhibited itself between these two, an attraction drew one
-towards the other, so that at the end of a week if you had seen Billy
-anywhere about by himself, sitting on the beach or lying in the shade
-of the trees, you would ten to one have found Kinie—that was her
-name—not far off.
-
-She had attached herself like a dog to the man, and Billy after a
-while, and towards the end of the first week, found himself drifting
-far from his old moorings.
-
-He and Davis had built themselves a house in forty-eight hours and
-food was on every hand; they had no cares or worries, no taxes,
-eternal summer and the best fishing south of California, bathing,
-boating, yet they were not happy; at least, Davis was not.
-
-Civilization, like savagery, breeds hunters, and your hunter is not
-happy when he is idle; there was nothing to be shot at here in the way
-of money, so Davis was not happy. Harman, dead to the beauty around
-him, might have shared the discontent of the other, only for Kinie.
-She gave him something to think about.
-
-Drowsing one day under a bread-fruit tree, a squashy fruit like a
-custard apple fell on his head, and, looking up, he saw Kinie among
-the leaves looking down at him. Next moment she was gone. Bread-fruit
-trees don’t grow apples like that; she must have carried it there to
-drop it on him, a fact which, having bored itself into Mr. Harman’s
-intelligence, produced a certain complacency. He had been in her
-thoughts.
-
-An hour or two later, sitting by the edge of the beach, she came and
-sat near him, dumb and stringing coloured pieces of coral
-together—anything coloured seemed to fascinate her—and there they
-sat, saying nothing, but seemingly content till Davis hove in sight
-and Kinie, gathering up her treasures, scampered off.
-
-“You and that gal seem mighty thick,” said Davis. “Blest if you aren’t
-a contradiction, always grumbling about petticoats and saying they
-bring you bad luck, and set you ashore—and look at you.”
-
-“I give you to understand, Bud Davis, I won’t be called no names, not
-by no man,” replied the other. “It ain’t my fault if the girl comes
-round and there ain’t no harm in her comin’.”
-
-“Well, you’ve picked the prettiest of the lot, anyhow,” said Davis.
-“Don’t go telling me, girls are girls and men are men; but we’ll leave
-it there. It’s no affair of mine. _I’m_ not grumbling.”
-
-On he walked, leaving the outraged Harman on the sands, speechless
-because unable to explain, unable to explain even to himself the
-something between himself and the wildly beautiful, charming, yet
-not-quite-there Kinie.
-
-The fascination he exercised upon her would have been even more
-difficult to explain. Davis was younger and better-looking. Davis had
-made advances to her which Harman had never done, yet she avoided
-Davis, never dropped custard apples on his head or sat by him
-stringing bits of coral or followed him at a distance through the
-woods.
-
-Nor did she ever try to steal Davis’ pocket-handkerchief.
-
-Harman possessed a blazing parti-coloured bandana handkerchief. It was
-silk, and had cost him half a dollar at Mixon’s at the foot of Third
-Street, which adjoins Long Wharf. It was his main possession. He used
-it not as handkerchiefs are used, but as an adjunct to conversation as
-your old French marquis used his snuff-box. Stumped for words or in
-perplexity, out would come the handkerchief to be mopped across his
-brow.
-
-Kinie from the first had been fascinated by this handkerchief. She
-wanted it. One day he lost it, and an hour later she flashed across
-his vision with it bound around her head. He chased her, recaptured
-it, reduced her to sulks for twenty-four hours, and a few days later
-she boldly tried to steal it again. Then she seemed to forget all
-about it; but do women ever forget?
-
-One morning some two months after they had landed, Davis, coming out
-of the house, found the beach in turmoil. Girls were shading their
-eyes towards the sea, and young fellows getting canoes in order for
-launching, while children raced along the sands screaming the news or
-stood fascinated like the girls, and, like them, gazing far to sea.
-
-A ship had been sighted, and there she was on the far-rippled blue,
-the tepid wind blowing her to life and growth, the sun lighting her
-sails and turning them to a single triangular pearl.
-
-Nothing could be more beautiful than the far ship on the far sea with
-the near sea all broken to flashing sapphire, the whole picture framed
-between the verdurous cliffs of the harbour entrance and lit by the
-entrancing light of morning.
-
-But Davis had no eye for the beauty of the picture, he turned, ran
-back to the house, and fetched out Harman.
-
-“Fore and aft rig, maybe eighty or a hundred ton, maybe a bit less,”
-said Harman, “makin’ dead for the beach. Say, Bud, we been fools.
-Here’s a ship and never a plan to meet her with, nor a story to tell
-her.”
-
-“Well, what’s the odds?” said Davis. “We’re shipwrecked, or, if you
-like it better, we skipped from a whaler. What are you bothering
-about? We’ve nothing to hide, only the _Douro_, and we’ve got rid of
-her. You’ve never thought of that, B. H. You’ve always been going on
-about Clayton getting the better of us by skipping off with those
-pearls in exchange for the _Douro_; hasn’t it ever got into your thick
-head that since we as good as stole the hooker, he did us a good turn
-by taking her? There’s not a port he could bring her into without
-being had, and I’ll bet my back teeth he’s jugged by this, him and his
-pearls.”
-
-“If he is,” said Harman, “I’ll never say a word against the law
-again.”
-
-Then they hung silent and the ship grew. The wind held steady, then it
-faded, great smoke-blue spaces showing on the sea; then it freshened,
-blowing from a new quarter, and the stranger, shifting her helm, payed
-off on the starboard tack. She showed now to be ketch-rigged.
-
-“I’ve always been agin’ the law,” went on Mr. Harman, “but if the law
-puts that blighter in chokee, I’ll take the first lawyer I meet by the
-fist. I will so. I’ll say to him, you’re a man an’ brother, law or no
-law.”
-
-“Oh hang the law!” cried Davis, whose face had turned purple, and
-whose eyes were straining at the ship. “Look at her. Can’t you see
-what she is? She’s the _Douro_!”
-
-Harman’s hand flew up to shade his eyes. He stood for twenty seconds,
-then he gave a whoop and made as if to run to the sea edge, where the
-canoes were preparing to put out.
-
-Davis caught him by the arm and pulled him back.
-
-“Who are you holdin’?” cried Harman. “Let me get at the blighter!
-Leave me loose or I’ll give you the bashin’ I have in me fist for him.
-Leave me loose, you——”
-
-But Davis, undaunted and deaf to all protests, drove him steadily back
-amongst the trees and then made him sit down to hear reason.
-
-“That chap would wipe the deck with you,” said Davis. “There’s more
-ways of killing a dog than by kicking him. What we’ve got to do is lay
-low and wait our chance, get him ashore off his ship, and leave the
-rest to me.”
-
-“Well, if I can get my fists on him, that’s all _I_ want,” said
-Harman. “I don’t want more than that.”
-
-“I do,” replied the other. “I want those pearls. Now skip down to the
-house and fetch up all the grub you can find. We’ve got to keep hid
-till things develop. That’s our strong point: him not knowing we’re
-here.”
-
-“And do you mean to say the Kanakas won’t tell him?” asked Harman.
-
-“Well, suppose they do, suppose they say there are two white men on
-the island, how’s he to know it’s us? The Kanakas don’t know our names
-or where we’ve come from. Now, skip!”
-
-Harman went off, and returned laden. They made their camp under a tree
-by a spring, covering the food over with bread-fruit leaves to keep
-the robber crabs from getting at it, then they settled themselves down
-to watch and listen.
-
-They heard the anchor go down, and Harman, who climbed the tree to a
-point where a view of the harbour could be glimpsed between the
-leaves, reported that the _Douro_ was at anchor two cable-lengths from
-the shore and swinging to the tide, that the canoes were all round
-her, and that a chap in white was leaning over her rail.
-
-“Looks like Clayton,” said he. “Now he’s left the rail, and they’re
-swinging out a boat. He’s comin’ ashore. Now he’s in the boat. Yes,
-that’s him sure enough; know him anywhere by the way he carries
-himself, crawled over into the boat like a cat, he did. Yes, it’s him;
-I can see his face now, all but his b’iled gooseberry eyes. Comin’
-ashore, are you? Well, I’ll be there to meet you.”
-
-He came swarming down only to be received into the arms of Davis, that
-is to say, Reason.
-
-“Coming on for night I don’t say no,” said Davis; “we may be able to
-take the ship and get out with her, but there’s no use in a free fight
-on the beach in the broad light of day with all his boat crew to back
-him. I’ve got an idea—it’s coming into my head bit by bit—and it’s
-this, the crew know us.”
-
-“Well, they ought to, since we captained them once,” said Harman. “But
-what about it?”
-
-“Just this, you know what Kanakas are. If we can knock Clayton on the
-head sudden to-night and get off without too much fuss, we’ve only got
-to step on board and drop the anchor-chain and put out. The Kanakas
-won’t object. Seeing us come on board again, and taking over the ship,
-they’ll think it’s all in the day’s work and done by arrangement with
-Clayton.”
-
-“That ain’t a bad idea if we can do it,” said Harman; “we’ll have to
-scrag him so that he don’t squeal, and do it without fittin’ him out
-for a mortuary. I ain’t a particular man, but I’ve an objection to
-corpses.”
-
-“Oh, rot!” said Davis. “You’ve got to stow that bilge if you want to
-make out in this business. You’ll be going about next with flowers in
-your hair like those Kanaka girls. I ain’t going to hit to kill. If I
-get the chance of hitting at all. I’m going to put him to sleep,
-that’s all; if he never wakes up the world will be none the wiser nor
-the worse. Hullo! What’s that?”
-
-It was Kinie, her face showed peeping at them through the branches
-which her little brown hands were holding back.
-
-“Scat!” cried Harman, shaken out of all other considerations but the
-thought that she had discovered their whereabouts and might give them
-away. “Off with you, and back to the village—and if you let a word
-out of you——”
-
-Before he could finish the branches swayed, and Kinie was gone.
-
-“After her!” cried Davis. “Get hold of her and tell her to spy on the
-chap, and give us news of what’s going on. Hump yourself!”
-
-Harman, getting on his feet, started off in pursuit, and Davis found
-himself alone. He could hear the wash of the beach and the far-off
-voices of the village, and as he sat, putting things together in his
-mind, the main question that kept recurring was whether Clayton would
-put out after taking on fruit and water, or whether he would stay.
-
-After that came the question of the pearls. It was six months now
-since the day he sailed from the atoll, and he was still tinkering
-about amongst the lesser islands; what had he done with the pearls? He
-had evidently been to no port of importance where he might have sold
-them, and if there was reason in anything, there was reason in the
-supposition that they were on board the _Douro_.
-
-Davis chuckled to himself at the thought. The thing was so simple.
-Once Clayton was put out of count nothing could be easier than to row
-off, seize the ketch and put out with her—the Kanaka crew knew both
-him and his companion. Davis chuckled at the thought that these same
-Kanakas had been through the same process before when he and Harman
-had “nicked” the _Araya_.
-
-“And I bet you,” he said to himself as he lay listening to the sounds
-of the beach and village, “I bet you they don’t know they’ve been as
-good as stolen twice, or that me and Billy aren’t part owners in the
-show, turning up now and then to take command, and give the other
-chaps a rest.” He chuckled at the thought, and then Harman came back
-through the trees, having interviewed Kinie.
-
-The wayward one had shown surprising grip of the situation and
-readiness to assist. Yes, she would watch the white man with the red
-face, and find out whether he was taking water on board that day, and
-if not how long he was likely to stay; promising this she had run off.
-
-“And she’ll do it,” said Harman.
-
-They had some food and smoked and drowsed in the warm, dark hot-house
-atmosphere of the woods, now silent as death with noon.
-
-Then somewhere about two o’clock the branches parted and the charming,
-sprite-like face of the girl looked in upon their slumbers.
-
-She had brought news. The big canoe was not taking water that day nor
-fruit. It might stay many days, also the big man had been bidden to a
-banquet by the village, and the feast was to take place on the edge of
-dark. They were preparing the palm toddy now and killing chickens and
-two pigs. Listen! She held up a finger and they could hear the far-off
-clucking of chickens being chased only to be choked. The pigs, clubbed
-senseless, had uttered no complaint.
-
-Then the branches swayed, and she was gone.
-
-“This is good,” said Davis. “That chap is sure to get drunk on the
-palm toddy, and so we’ll be saved the bother of knocking him out.”
-
-“Seems like Providence, don’t it?” said Mr. Harman. “If you tell me
-there ain’t such a thing, I tell you that there is—flat. Look at us,
-brought here and landed as careful as baskets of eggs, and look at
-Clayton sent after us to be skinned, ain’t that Providence?”
-
-“Oh, close up!” said Davis. “You get arguing when a chap ought to be
-thinking. Wait till he is skinned before you talk of Providence. We
-haven’t got the hide yet.”
-
-“No, but we will,” replied the other, settling himself for a snooze.
-
-Towards dark, awakened by Davis, he went off through the trees to
-prospect.
-
-Then blackness came as if turned on with a switch, blackness that
-gradually died to starlight as the eyes grew accustomed to the change.
-Starlight that filled the woods with the eeriest forms made of foliage
-and shadow, while here and there stars and constellations hung
-themselves amidst the branches—the Cross in a tamarisk tree and
-Canopus on the top bough of a screw pine.
-
-To Davis, watching and meditating, suddenly appeared Harman,
-breathless.
-
-“We’re dished,” cried the latter, “dished lovely! The _Douro_ crowd
-are ashore down to the ship’s cat, and they’re all stuffin’ themselves
-and fillin’ up with the drink.”
-
-Davis whistled.
-
-“Haven’t they left an anchor watch on her?”
-
-“Devil a one!” said Harman. “She’s watching herself. Well, what do you
-say to that?”
-
-Davis said nothing for a moment.
-
-It was impossible to take the ketch away without the crew. Of course,
-he and Harman could have taken her out, but he knew better than ever
-to dream of facing the Pacific in a vessel of that tonnage with only
-another pair of hands to help him. He had been through the experience
-years ago; he knew what it was for two men to take on a ten-men’s job.
-No, the canoe was better than that, infinitely.
-
-“Billy,” said he suddenly, “buck up! We aren’t done. Can’t you see,
-the chap is so certain sure there’s no one here to harm or meddle with
-him, he’s let all his crew come ashore? Well, as sure as he’s done
-that, he’s left the pearls on board.”
-
-Harman fell to the idea at once.
-
-“You mean us to skip in the canoe with them?”
-
-“Yep,” said the other.
-
-Harman considered for a bit in silence, while the sounds of the
-festival on the beach came on the new-risen wind from the sea.
-
-He had sworn never to enter a canoe again, the prospect was hateful;
-yet there was one bright spot in it, a spot as big as a sun—Clayton’s
-face on waking next morning to find the pearls gone!
-
-He sprang to his feet.
-
-“Kim on,” said he, “we’ve gotta get water, grub, and nuts aboard her.
-The breaker’s lying back of the house. I’ll attend to the water; you
-can bring this stuff down and c’llect all you can from the
-houses—b’nanas and such-like. Hump yourself!”
-
-Their canoe lay on the beach to the right of the village; it was fit
-and seaworthy for the very good reason that the native boys had been
-using it for sailing and fishing, and when Davis came on to the beach
-he found Harman stowing the water-breaker, the only figure visible,
-for the whole village was congregated where the great feast was going
-on in the break amidst the trees.
-
-They were running no risks. They wanted food for a fortnight, and they
-took it—took it from the deserted houses and from the trees where the
-pandanus drupes hung in the starlight and the great banana clusters
-stood like golden candelabra waiting to be lit.
-
-Then they pushed off, and the harbour took them and the night, against
-which stood the _Douro_, swinging to the outgoing tide on a taut
-anchor-chain.
-
-The ladder was down, and as they came alongside, Harman, who was to
-commit the burglary, clutched it, sprang on deck, and lowering the
-anchor-light vanished with it down the cabin companion-way.
-
-Davis, with his hand on the ladder and rocked by the almost
-imperceptible swell, contemplated the night and the far beach. He
-could see the glow of the fire amidst the trees, and now, just as the
-moon rose above the sea-line, sending its silver across the harbour,
-his keen eye caught a form moving amongst the beached canoes.
-
-A moment later something ruffled the water. A canoe had put off. He
-saw the flash of a paddle, and for a second the idea that Clayton had
-sensed danger and was on the pounce crossed his mind, only to be
-instantly dismissed. It was Kinie. He knew it instinctively and at
-once. Kinie, who never drank palm toddy and who looked as though her
-food were mushrooms and moonbeams, had discovered their canoe gone.
-Very likely had been watching them getting it away and was coming out
-to prospect.
-
-At that moment the light reappeared on deck, and Harman at the rail.
-
-“Bud,” cried Harman, “she’s bustin’ with trade, cabin full, and I’ll
-bet the hold’s full to the hatches! That blighter must have been
-peddlin’ his pearls for trade goods, but I’ve got the balance, a dozen
-big ’uns. I broke his locker open and there they were. Got ’em in me
-pocket. Steady the blistered canoe whiles I get in.”
-
-He dropped into the canoe, and they pushed off. Then he sighted Kinie,
-who was coming up fast, so close now that the water drops showed
-flashing from her paddle.
-
-“It’s that girl,” said Davis, “confound her! We only wanted this to
-kibosh us. I swear by the big horn spoon I’ll flatten her out with a
-paddle if she squeals or gives the show away! I will, b’ gosh!”
-
-But Kinie showed no signs of any desire to give the show away. She
-manœuvred her canoe so that it came gently beside theirs, stem towards
-stern, so that her outrigger did not prevent her from clasping their
-gunnel. Kinie had come to say good-bye. She had watched them
-provisioning without knowing exactly why they were doing so, then they
-had put off, and she had recognized that they were leaving for good.
-
-Seeing them hanging on to the ship, she had taken heart and put off
-herself, and now, patting Harman on the shoulder with her little hand,
-she was looking at him with the eyes of a dog, while he, slipping one
-huge arm round her, was patting her back and telling her to be a good
-girl and to get back to the shore quick.
-
-“_Aroya manu_, Kinie. We’re off—we’re goin’ away. See you again
-maybe, soon. There, don’t be holdin’ me. Well, you’re askin’ for it.”
-
-“Oh, close up or you’ll be capsizing the canoe,” cried Davis. “Shove
-her off—Now paddle for all you’re worth. Mind! the outrigger is
-lifting.”
-
-The canoes parted and the moonlit waving water came between them like
-a river, then, driven by tide and paddle, they passed the shadows of
-the cliffs at the harbour mouth, and Harman, looking back, saw the
-glow of the festival fire like a topaz beyond the silver-satin of the
-harbour water, and against the glow the canoe of Kinie making for the
-shore.
-
-Outside they ran up the sail while astern Motul, with its hills and
-dark forests, lay like a cloud on the water, visible all night,
-dwindling to a speck in the dawn, destroyed utterly by the sun as he
-rose beyond it, flooding the sea with fire.
-
-“Well, here’s another blessed day,” said Harman, as he took his trick
-with the steering paddle, “and that chap will be wakin’ just now with
-a palm-toddy head on him to find we’ve done him, but he won’t never
-know it’s us, worse luck. Anyhow, he’ll have his headache. There ain’t
-nothin’ to beat a palm-toddy head unless maybe samshu, but, samshu or
-palm toddy, drink don’t pay, nor Bourbon, nor Champagne—it don’t pay.
-I’m not sayin’ if a chap could get drunk and stay drunk I wouldn’t be
-the first to jine in, but it’s the wakin’ up—— Oh, _d——n_
-petticuts!”
-
-He had put his hand in his pocket for the handkerchief, at that moment
-flaunting itself on Motul beach around the brows of its proud
-possessor.
-
-“Mind your steering!” cried Davis. “What ails you? Mind your paddle or
-we’ll be over.”
-
-“Me handkerchief’s gone,” cried the distracted Harman. “She’s took it.
-Twice she nicked it from me before, and I ought to ha’ known—she’ll
-have flung them away, for it’s only the rag she wanted—buzzed them
-into the harbour most like. They were tied in the corner of it and
-she’d ha’ thought them stones—ten thousand dollars’ worth of——”
-
-“Pearls!” cried Davis, “you aren’t talking of the pearls!”
-
-Towards sunset, steering into the golden remote and unknown west, the
-dejected Harman, breaking an all-day silence, perked up a bit and
-became almost cheerfully philosophic.
-
-“The only good p’int about all this business,” said he, “the one
-bright p’int——”
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you and your p’ints.”
-
-
-
-
-IV—SUNK WITHOUT TRACE
-
-
- I
-
-The mat sail flapped against the mast and then hung loose while the
-chuckle of bow and outrigger died away. Harman, turning his face to
-the east, all gone watery with the dawn, leant forward and gave his
-sleeping companion a prod with the steering paddle.
-
-Cruising in a South Sea island canoe tries the temper as well as the
-judgment, and two days of this business had considerably shortened the
-temper of Billy Harman.
-
-For two days and two nights, fed on bananas and island truck, and led
-by the pointing of an indifferent compass, they had pursued the west,
-chased by the light of gorgeous dawns, broiled by midday suns, raising
-nothing but endless horizons and consuming sunsets.
-
-“Wind’s gone!” cried Harman. “Flat calm and looks like stayin’ put.”
-
-Davis roused, supported himself with a hand on the outrigger gratings,
-and blinked at the dawn; then he yawned, then he began to get command
-of speech.
-
-“Whach you want digging me in the ribs like that for?” said Davis.
-“You and your flat calms! Where’s the hurry? Are you afraid it’ll run
-away? Blest if you aren’t the——”
-
-“No use quarrellin’,” cut in the other; “fightin’s a mug’s game, and
-words won’t bring no wind. Pass us a drinkin’ nut.”
-
-Davis passed the nut, and then, while the other refreshed himself,
-leant with his elbow on the grating and his eyes fixed lazily on the
-east.
-
-Morning bank there was none, nor colour, nothing but a great crystal
-window showing infinite distance and taking suddenly a reflection of
-fire and a sill of gold: gold that moved and ran north and south and
-then leapt boiling across the swell as the sun burst up, hitting
-Harman in the back and Davis in the face and turning the lingering
-moon to a grey cinder above the azure of the west and the morning sea.
-
-Away to the south, across the sunlit swell, a ship showed becalmed and
-painting the water with the reflection of her canvas, and, wonder of
-wonders, a mile from her and more to the north stood another ship,
-also held in the grip of the calm, and seeming the duplicate of the
-first in rig, tonnage, and design.
-
-They were whalers, two of the last of the old whaling fleet, cruising
-maybe in company or brought together by chance.
-
-Harman was the first to sight them; then Davis turned, and, leaning
-comfortably on the outrigger gratings, looked.
-
-“Whalemen,” said Harman. “Look at ’em, stump topmasts, tryin’-out
-works and all! Look at ’em—damned pair of slush tubs!”
-
-Davis said nothing; he spat into the water and continued to look while
-Harman went on.
-
-“There you are, grumblin’ last night there were no ships about, and
-them things only waitin’ to show themselves, castin’ the canoe in the
-teeth o’ Providence, sayin’ you wanted planks under your feet to walk
-on. Planks, b’gosh! If one of them sight us we’ll be planked! I’ve
-been there and I know.”
-
-“Oh, they won’t bother about us,” said Davis.
-
-“Oh, won’t they?” said Harman. “Shows what you know of whalemen. If
-them chaps sighted the twelve ’postles driftin’ in a canoe, let alone
-us, they’d yank ’em on board and set ’em to work. Hands is what
-they’re always cravin’ for, and our only chance is they’ll take us for
-Kanakas, goin’ by the cut of the canoe.”
-
-“Oh, they won’t bother about us,” said Davis; “and if they do, you
-ain’t a bad imitation of a Kanaka; but it’s cursed luck all the same.
-Planks, yes, I want the feel of a plank under my foot, and the feel
-that there isn’t only ten days’ grub and water between us and
-perdition—curse them!”
-
-“Now you’ve done it!” cried Harman. “Look! They’re comin’!”
-
-Sure enough, as though the last words of Davis had struck life into
-the far-off vessels, the decks of both ships suddenly boiled with
-ant-like figures, boats were dropped, and in a flash were making
-across the sea, two fleets of four boats each, and rowing as if in a
-race.
-
-But they were not making for the canoe. Due north they headed over the
-glassy swell, while Davis, standing erect and holding on to the mast,
-watched with shaded eyes.
-
-“Whales,” said he. “Whales they’re after, not us. Look at them!”
-
-“I can’t see no whales,” said Harman.
-
-“No, but they can,” said Davis. “Look! They’re heading west now,
-they’re on to them.”
-
-A clap of thunder came over the sea and foam spurted amidst the
-distant boats. Then two of the boats detached themselves from the
-rest, skimming through the water without sail or oar, the flash of the
-foam at their bows clear to be seen.
-
-“They’ve got their fish,” cried Harman. “Look, he’s going round to the
-north’ard, and here’s the breeze!”
-
-Up from the south-east it was coming, spreading in great waves like
-fields of barley. The whale-ships had caught it and were trimming
-their yards in pursuit of the boats, and now, the mat sail of the
-canoe filling out and cracking against the mast, Harman seized the
-steering paddle and headed her due north.
-
-“Where are you steering for?” shouted Davis.
-
-“North,” replied the other. “You don’t want to be runnin’ into them
-ships, do you?”
-
-Davis crawled aft, seized the paddle, and pushed the other forward.
-
-“Cuss the ships!” said he. “They’ve got their own business to attend
-to, and I’m not going to put her off her course, not for Jim Satan!
-You don’t mind the ships—they’re busy.”
-
-He was right.
-
-A Swenfoyn gun had put a speedy end to the whale, and as the canoe
-drew along not half a mile away from the nearest ship it was being
-hauled alongside her and the tackles were out. But the remainder of
-the fleet of boats not busy in this work seemed engaged in some affair
-of their own which was not whale fishing; they were all surging
-together, oars were being tossed in the air and the far-away sound of
-shouting came across the water.
-
-“Fightin’!” said Harman, “that’s what they’re at. They’re both
-claimin’ the fish. I know their monkey tricks. Look at them!”
-
-But Davis was not listening to him, his quick eye had caught something
-floating ahead; altering the course a point he called to Harman to let
-go the sheet, then, leaning over, he grabbed the floating mass in both
-hands, yelling to the other to balance the canoe.
-
-“Get out on the gratings and hold her down,” cried Davis, “our
-fortune’s made. Fish! No, you fool, it’s ambergris, what comes from
-whales’ innards, and is worth hundreds of pounds. Lord send they don’t
-see us!”
-
-“Mind!” yelled Harman.
-
-The gunnel lipped the water despite his weight and the outrigger rose
-a foot as Davis strove, then with a mighty effort he brought it
-tumbling on board, the water pouring off it, and there it lay between
-his feet a huge, knobby, putty-coloured mass, with octopus
-sucker-prongs sticking in it like tiger claws, and a two-fathom strip
-of pale green seaweed twined about it as if for ornament. Harman,
-without a word, crawled back across the outrigger grating and trimmed
-the sail while Davis, without a word, resumed the steering paddle.
-
-He did not mind about altering his course now; he put her dead before
-the wind while Harman, half kneeling on the stub of the forward
-outrigger pole, and with his hand on a stay, reported progress.
-
-“No, they ain’t seen us,” said Harman; “they’re all crowdin’ back on
-the ships and the fightin’s over. There’s never no good in fightin’,
-as I said to you this mornin’—not unless you get the other chap’s
-back to you and belt him on the head sudden. Now if those ballyhoos
-had quit arguin’ who’d harpooned first and kept their eyes skinned
-they’d a’ got ambergris instead of sore heads. How much ’s that stuff
-worth, do you reckon, Bud?”
-
-“Mean to say you don’t know and you been on a whale-ship?”
-
-“Never heard tell of the stuff before nor sighted it,” replied the
-other. “Whalemen don’t take stock of nothing but blubber—where does
-it come from, d’ye think?”
-
-“Out of the whale,” said Davis, “and it’s worth twenty dollars an
-ounce.”
-
-Harman laughed. When Bud had worked upon him sufficiently to make him
-see the truth he first took a look to make sure the whale-ships were
-showing only their topsails above the horizon, then he sat down to
-calculate the amount of their fortune.
-
-
- II
-
-Ambergris, though used in the production of scent, has no smell or
-only the faintest trace of odour when warmed; it is the ugliest stuff
-in the world, and as valuable as gold. Harman’s bother was that he did
-not know the weight of the lump. He reckoned, going by comparison with
-pigs of small ballast, that it might be half a hundred-weight, but the
-table of weights and measures barred him. He could not tell the number
-of ounces in a half hundred-weight.
-
-“Well, it don’t much matter,” said he at last. “If you’re not lyin’
-and it’s worth twenty dollars an ounce, then it’s worth twenty times
-its weight in dollars, and that’s good enough for us. Twenty bags of
-dollars as heavy as that lump of muck is good enough for Billy Harman.
-Say, it beats Jonah, don’t it? when you look at that stuff, which
-isn’t more nor less than good dinners by the hundred and bottles of
-fizz and girls by the raft-load. And to think of an old whale coughin’
-it up; makes a chap b’lieve in the Scriptures, don’t it, seein’ what
-it is and seein’ where it come from, and seein’ how Providence shoved
-it right into our hands.”
-
-“We haven’t cashed it yet,” said Davis.
-
-“No, but we will,” replied the other. “I feel it in my bones. I’ve got
-a hunch the luck ain’t runnin’ streaky this time. Somethin’ else is
-comin’ along; you wait and see.”
-
-He was right. Next morning, an hour after sunrise, a stain of smoke
-showed on the south-eastern horizon.
-
-Steamers in those days were fewer in the Pacific even than now, but
-this was a steamer right enough.
-
-“She’s coming dead for us,” said Davis, as the hull showed clear now
-of smoke. “Brail up the sail and stand by to signal her—what you make
-her out to be?”
-
-“Mail boat,” said Harman. “Sydney-bound, I’ll bet a dollar. You’ll be
-hearin’ the passengers linin’ up and cheerin’ when we’re took aboard,
-and then it’ll be drinks and cigars and the best of good livin’ till
-we touch Circular Wharf. But I ain’t goin’ in for hard drinks, not
-till we cash in this ambergris, and not then, only may be a bottle of
-fizz to wet the luck. No, sir, seein’ Providence has dealt with us
-handsome, Billy’s goin’ to do likewise with her. Providence don’t hold
-with the jag, which ain’t more nor less than buyin’ headaches, and
-di’mond studs for bar tenders and sich. Providence is dead against the
-drink, and don’t you forget that.”
-
-“Why, you were talking only last night of buying a saloon in ’Frisco,”
-said Davis.
-
-“That ain’t buyin’ drink,” countered Mr. Harman. “Nor swallerin’ it,
-which is what I’m arguin’ against—— Look at her how she’s liftin’.”
-
-They said no more, watching the oncoming boat, now showing her bridge
-canvas distinct from her hull. Then suddenly Davis spoke.
-
-“That’s no mail boat,” said Davis, “not big enough, stove-pipe funnel,
-and look at that canvas. She’s not even a B.P. boat—some old tub
-carrying copra or trade.”
-
-“Not she,” said Harman. “Steam don’t pay in the copra business,
-bunkers have to be too big, seein’ there’s no coalin’ stations much in
-the islands.”
-
-“We’ll soon see,” said Davis, and they did.
-
-The stranger came shearing along, showing up now as a five or six
-hundred ton squat cargo boat, riding high and evidently in ballast,
-with a rust-red stove-pipe funnel and a general air of neglect that
-shouted across the sea.
-
-Then the thud of the engines ceased, a yoop of her siren cut the air
-like a whiplash, and a string of bunting blew out.
-
-Harman waved his shirt, and as the stranger came gliding on to them he
-got ready to catch the rope that a fellow was preparing to cast from
-the bow.
-
-As they came alongside, lifting and falling with the swell, a big
-red-faced man, leaning over the bridge rail, began shouting
-directions, whilst Davis, seizing the ladder which had been dropped,
-climbed on deck, leaving Harman to manage the canoe.
-
-The _Oskosh_ was the name of the hooker, and Billy Schumways was the
-name of her master and owner. He was the big man on the bridge; seven
-days out from Arafata Lagoon with a crew of Chinks and a Savage Island
-bo’sun, makin’ down for Fuanatafi in a hurry. All of which he roared
-at Davis from the bridge and at Harman from over the bridge side.
-
-“Claw on and kim up,” cried Captain Schumways to the hesitating
-Harman. “Cut that canoe adrift and come on deck, and don’t be wastin’
-my time, or I’ll ring the injins on. What’s that you’re sayin’?
-Ambergris, what’s ambergris? Ain’t got no time to be muckin’
-about—there, bring it if you want to.” He paused whilst Harman,
-having fastened a rope flung by Davis round the precious ambergris,
-came on deck guiding it up. Then, when they were both over the rail,
-Schumways, ringing the engines full speed ahead, came down from the
-bridge.
-
-“Where’d you get that muck?” asked Captain Schumways, after they’d
-given their names and a yarn about having been drifted off an island
-when fishing. “Picked it up, did you? Well, you can shove it in the
-scupper if you’re set on keepin’ it, and now follow me down and I’ll
-show you your quarters. I’m sufferin’ for extra help in the
-engine-room and I reckon you’ve got to work your passage.”
-
-He led the way to the saloon hatch and down to the saloon.
-
-The _Oskosh_ had been a Farsite Enfield boat running from ’Frisco to
-Seattle. Cargo, Klondyke diggers and, lastly, contraband had reduced
-her from respectability and cleanliness to her present state. The
-saloon was a wreck and ruin, the panelling split, the fittings gone,
-bunks filled with raffle and oddments, the table covered with old
-oil-cloth showing the marks of coffee cups, and over all a dank
-throat-catching atmosphere of decay, cockroaches and dirty bunk
-bedding.
-
-Schumways inhabited the cabin aft. He pointed out two bunks to port
-and starboard.
-
-“Them’s yours,” said he, “and there’s beddin’ and to spare. You’ll
-mess here, bein’ whites, and you’ll take your orders from me and
-Sellers; when you’ve cleared out them bunks and got your beddin’ in
-come along up and I’ll show you your job.”
-
-He left them and went on deck, and Bud Davis sat down on the edge of a
-bunk.
-
-“Say, Billy,” said Bud, “how about those passengers lining up and
-cheering? How about those soft drinks you were talking of?—or would
-you sooner have a highball?—and we’re to take our orders from him and
-Sellers. What I’m proposing to do is go up right now, catch him by the
-hoofs, and dump him over side, scrag Sellers, whoever he is, and take
-the ship. That’s how I’m feeling.”
-
-“Ain’t no use,” said Harman. “Fightin’s a mug’s game. That chap’s a
-sure enough tough and we haven’t no guns. Lay low is the word, more
-especial as this packet is contraband and we’ve only to wait to get
-’em by the short hairs. Contraband—look at her, guns or opium, with
-blackbirdin’ maybe thrown in, that’s all there is to her.”
-
-Davis assented. These two old Pacific hands had an eye from which no
-ship could hide her character for sea-unworthiness or
-disrespectability; Schumways matched his ship, and Sellers, when he
-turned up, would be sure to match Schumways; the crew were Chinks, and
-the case was plain. Not that it bothered Bud or Billy; their one
-thought as they worked clearing the bunks and settling the bedding was
-the ambergris.
-
-Schumways knew nothing of ambergris or its value—that fact was quite
-plain—but it would never do to leave it lying in the scupper, and
-Harman having poked his head up through the hatch and found a clear
-deck, they got it down, stowed it in a spare bunk occupied by a filthy
-rug, a suit of oilskins and a paraffin tin, covering it with the rug.
-
-Then they came on deck, and the captain of the _Oskosh_, coming down
-from the bridge, introduced them to the engine-room and Sellers, a
-wire-drawn Yankee, six feet two, who introduced them to the engines
-and the stokehold.
-
-“Chinks are firin’ her now,” said Sellers, “but you’ll hold yourself
-ready to take a hand at the shovellin’ if wanted. I’ll larn you how to
-shoot the stuff; that’s a pressure gauge—you’ll get to know it before
-you’ve done—and that’s an ile can—you’ll get to know her too.” He
-led the way down a passage four foot broad to a transverse passage
-eight foot broad, where, under a swinging oil lamp, Chinks, naked to
-the waist, were firing up. He opened the door of a long blazing tunnel
-and seized a shovel, the coal came down a chute right on to the floor,
-and taking a shovelful he demonstrated.
-
-“Stokin’s not shootin’ coal into a fu’nace, it’s knowin’ where to
-shoot it. Every fu’nace has hungry places: there’s one, that dull
-patch up there, and there’s the food for it.” A shovelful of coal went
-flying into the gehenna right on to the dull patch, and, dropping the
-shovel, he seized an eight-foot bar of steel. “M’r’over, it’s not all
-shovellin’, it’s rakin’. Here’s your rake and how to use it. Then
-you’ve got to tend the ashlift, and when you’ve larnt not to stick
-your head in the fire when she’s pitchin’ hard you’ll be a stoker;
-ain’t nothin’ to it but the work an’ the will.”
-
-“But see here, cully,” said Mr. Harman. “We ain’t signed on for
-stokin’ in this packet; engine-room fiddlin’ is stretchin’ a point
-with A.B.’s, but stokin’s outside the regulations. Clear, and by Board
-o’ Trade rules——”
-
-“That’s them on board the _Oskosh_,” said Sellers, producing a
-revolver, which he exhibited lying flat in the palm of his huge hand
-as though he were showing a curiosity. “Six rules an’ regulations,
-soft-nosed—and don’t you forget it, son!”
-
-Through days of blazing azure and nights of phosphorescent seas the
-_Oskosh_ plugged steadily along on her course. She was square-rigged
-on the foremast, and used sail-power to assist the engines when the
-wind held, and always and ever, despite her dirt, her disorder, and
-the general slovenliness of her handling, she kept a bright eye out
-for strangers. When Schumways was not on the bridge using the
-binoculars, they were in the hands of the Savage Island bo’sun—a fact
-noted by Billy and Bud when those unfortunates had time to note
-anything in the midst of their multitudinous occupations.
-
-They were not always put to stoking in this horrible ship, where
-things went anyhow and work was doubled for want of method. They would
-be oiling in the engine-room under command of Sellers when, maybe, the
-voice of Schumways would come ordering “them roustabouts” up to handle
-the sails: sail-handling, greasing, emptying slush tubs, helping in
-engine-room repairs, “lendin’ a hand in the stoke’old”—it was a mixed
-meal of work that did not please the appetites of Billy or Bud. Yet
-they had to swallow it. Kicking was no use. Harman tried it, and was
-kicked by Sellers, and took the injury and insult without retaliating.
-Fighting was a mug’s game, but deep in his soul Billy Harman
-formulated an oath of revenge, swearing that somehow, somewhere, and
-somewhen he would be even with the _Oskoshites_ to the ultimate limit
-of their back teeth and the last short hairs of their persons.
-
-He communicated this darkly to his fellow-sufferer, who laughed.
-
-They were seated at breakfast feasting on the leavings of Schumways
-and Sellers and Davis told him to close up.
-
-“You give me the mullygrubs with your talk,” said Davis. “Whenever you
-open your fool-mouth something happens wrong way about. This was a
-passenger packet, wasn’t it, and we were to sit in the saloon bein’
-admired by the passengers, weren’t we? And was it Fourth Street or
-Fifth Street you were goin’ to open that whisky joint? And fighting is
-a mug’s game, according to you, whereas if we’d wiped the engine-room
-floor with Sellers first day instead of knuckling down to him we’d
-have stood on this ship as men, instead of being a hog-driven pair of
-roustabouts begging for scraps and emptying slush tubs. Too late now;
-they’ve got the better of us and know our make, which is putty, owing
-to you. Even with them! Why, I’ll bet twenty dollars to a nickel if
-you try any of your home-made tricks they’ll be even with us. Talking
-is all you’re good for—fighting’s a mug’s game!”
-
-“So it is,” replied Mr. Harman. “Fool fightin’s no use; hittin’ out
-and gettin’ belted’s one thing, but stragety’s another, and that’s
-what I’m after, and if I don’t get my knife in these chaps’ ribs
-behind their backs and unknownst to them, you can take me home and
-bury me—and it won’t be long either!”
-
-He was right.
-
-That very evening they lifted Fuanatafi, their destination, a purple
-cloud in the sunset glow and a cloud of ebony by night as they lay off
-and on, listening to the far sound of the breakers till dawn revealed
-the great island in all its splendour and isolation; for Fuanatafi,
-like Nauru, has no harbour, just a landing beach to westward where
-boats can put in, razor-backed reefs keep ships a mile from the shore
-and make the place pretty useless for trade.
-
-As the light broke full on the island Billy Harman, who had come on
-deck and was standing with Davis by the lee rail, saw away to
-southward another island with a peak-like summit, and to westward of
-that two small islets circled with moving clouds—gulls.
-
-“Why, Lord bless my soul,” said he, “I’ve been here before, six years
-ago it was, and we took off a raft of turtle-shell for six cases of
-gin. Christopher Island was the other name they give it, and it’s head
-centre for all sorts of black doin’s. That island to suthard is
-Levisca, and it’s been blackbirded till there ain’t scarcely no
-Kanakas left on it. Now, I wonder what Schumways is landin’ here.”
-
-As if in answer to his question two Chinks came aft carrying a long
-deal box between them, which they dumped close by the foremast.
-
-The main hatch was open, and they could see more boxes being brought
-up, six in all, and each one, as it came on deck, was carried forward,
-the whole being stacked in one pile and covered with a tarpaulin. The
-engines ceased their dead-slow tramp: then came an order from the
-bridge and the roar and rasp of the anchor chain filled the morning
-air, echoing across the water and lifting the reef gulls in clanging
-spirals.
-
-Schumways dropped down from the bridge and Sellers rose from the
-engine-room, wiping his hands with a piece of cotton waste; he had put
-on his coat and wore an old panama on his head ready for shore. Then
-at an order from Schumways the starboard quarter-boat was lowered,
-Harman and Davis were ordered into it, and the Captain of the _Oskosh_
-and his engineer took their places in the stern sheets.
-
-Nothing could be more lovely than the morning light on the streets of
-blue water between the reefs or the view of the great island washed by
-the calm, ponded sea and waiting for the approaching boat, loveliness
-that left no trace, however, on the minds of Bud and Billy labouring
-at the oars, or of Schumways and Sellers smoking in the stern.
-
-As they ran the boat’s nose on to the beach, out from the groves to
-right and left stepped a dozen Kanakas armed with spears. Casting
-their spears on the sand, they trod on them whilst Sellers and his
-companion, walking up the beach with hands outstretched, greeted the
-chief man, bright with palm oil, absolutely naked, and adorned simply
-with half a willow-pattern soup plate worn as a pendant.
-
-The Kanakas and the two whites seemed old friends, and the whole lot,
-after a moment’s chatter, disappeared into the groves, leaving Bud and
-Billy on the beach by the stranded boat.
-
-“They’re off to the village,” said Harman. “Wonder what they’re up
-to? Bargainin’ most like over them guns.”
-
-“What guns?” asked Davis.
-
-“Them cases we left on deck, them’s guns, or my name’s not Billy
-Harman. There’s six guns in each of them cases, that’s thirty-six for
-the lot, and I expect Schumways will be askin’ old Catch-em-alive-o
-ten pound apiece for them in coin or shell—maybe in bêche-de-mer, for
-that’s as good as bank notes. That’s three hundred and sixty pounds
-and the durned things didn’t cost him sixty. I’ll bet——” He turned.
-Someone came breaking through the trees; it was Sellers.
-
-“Hike off back to the ship and bring them cases,” cried Sellers, “the
-ones we’ve left on deck. If you can’t bring the whole six, bring four,
-and you can go back for the other two. Now then, you lazy sweeps,
-grease yourselves and get goin’.”
-
-“Blast him!” said Davis as they pushed off across the inner lagoon
-towards the reef break leading to the outer reef channels sparkling
-blue in the sun.
-
-“No use swearin’,” said Hannan, “it don’t cut no ice—— Bud, I’ve got
-them.”
-
-“What do you mean?” asked Davis.
-
-“Got ’em all in the fryin’ pan, b’gosh. It’s only jumped into my head
-this minute. Told you I’d get even with them at last, and now I’ve as
-good as done it.”
-
-“What’s your plan?” asked Bud.
-
-“You never mind,” replied Billy, “you do as I’m askin’ you and I’ll
-show you. Lay into your strokes now, and that’s all you have to do at
-the present minit.”
-
-He seemed delighted with himself as he rowed, chuckling and chortling
-as though he already had the _Oskoshites_ down and out. Bud, who knew
-Billy’s mentality from long practice and use, was not so elated. He
-knew that Harman, amongst his other mental qualities, was likely to go
-blind of one eye when seeing red or when ambition was at fever heat,
-and Billy was undoubtedly seeing red. Full of the thirst for revenge
-at having been made to work, at having been kicked and spoken to with
-contumely, he was fit for anything just now.
-
-“What is it that’s in your mind, Billy?” asked the other as they drew
-up to the _Oskosh_.
-
-“You wait and see,” said Harman; “say nuthin’ and follow my lead
-prompt and we’ve got them on a split stick.”
-
-The Chinks stood by the ladder as Harman went up it, leaving Davis to
-mind the boat; then on deck he gave the Kanaka bo’sun his orders, and,
-while the cases were being got into the boat, stepped below.
-
-He came up in a few minutes and helped with the last case, then,
-dropping into the boat beside Davis, he pushed off and they began
-rowing towards the shore.
-
-“Go slow,” said Harman, “and don’t pull hard. The breeze is backin’
-into the north and I’ll have the mast up in a minute, then we can run
-for Levisca. We could row there quick enough, but it’s easier to sail.
-After we’ve taken on grub and water there we can push farther south.”
-
-“What the blue blazes are you talking of?” said Davis. “You mean
-running away in this boat?”
-
-“Yep,” replied Harman.
-
-“But, you fool, they’ll up steam and be after us before we’ve got
-half-way there.”
-
-“Not they,” replied the strategist, “you wait an’ see. You keep your
-eye on the old _Oskosh_ and you’ll see somethin’ funny in a minute.”
-
-He ceased rowing, so did Davis, and the boat rocked on the swell,
-then, as he got the mast stepped and the sail shaken out, Davis, whose
-eyes were fixed on the far-off ship, gave an exclamation of surprise.
-
-“Why, she’s lying awfully low in the water.”
-
-“Yes,” said Harman quite simply. “I’ve opened the sea-cocks.”
-
-“You’ve _what_?” cried the other.
-
-“Opened the sea-cocks when I went below. The Chinks haven’t twigged
-yet that she’s sinkin’, she’s goin’ peaceful as a dyin’ Christian.
-Look”—a column of steam was rising from the funnel of the sinking
-ship—“they’ve twigged it now, but they don’t know what’s sinkin’ her,
-and if they did they haven’t enough sense to know what to do. B’sides,
-it’s too late. Look, they’re gettin’ out the boats; now help me to
-dump these durned cases and bring the sheet aft.”
-
-Davis did as he was told, then as the boat lay over, making a long
-board for Levisca, he suddenly leant forward towards Harman, his face
-injected with blood.
-
-“You’ve done it, haven’t you?” shouted Davis.
-
-“Yes, b’gosh I have,” said Harman complacently, his eyes fixed on the
-_Oskosh_ sinking by the head and with her stem high in the air.
-
-“Wouldn’t tell me your plans, would you? So full of hitting Schumways
-you had no thought of anything else, weren’t you? Well, you sainted
-fool, what about that ambergris?”
-
-“What ambergris? Oh, Lord! the ambergris,” said the wretched Harman,
-suddenly remembering. “We’ve left it behind!”
-
-“You’ve left it, you mean. What would it have cost to have taken two
-Chinks down and fetched it up and stowed it in the boat? Not a
-nickel—and it was worth twenty thousand dollars.”
-
-Harman said nothing. The _Oskosh_ was making her last plunge and the
-over-loaded boats were making for shore, then his face slowly
-brightened as the face of Sellers and the face of Schumways rose
-before him—the two men who had forcibly introduced him to work. “It
-was worth it,” said he; “if it was five hundred dollars an ounce, it
-was worth it.”
-
-“What was worth it?” asked Davis.
-
-“Losin’ that ambergris,” replied Mr. Harman.
-
-
-
-
-V—A DEAL WITH “PLAIN SAILIN’ JIM”
-
-
-He was the only blot on the scenery, also he was fishing, fishing from
-a rock washed by water forty feet deep in which the coloured bream
-passed like jewels through a world of crystal.
-
-Matadore Island clings to its old Spanish name, though it is French,
-lying west of Vavitu in the great French sea territory born of the
-League of Nations that stretches now from the Marquesas to Rapa and
-from Bellinghausen to Gambier.
-
-It is a tiny island, too small for trade, horned with dangerous reefs,
-but beautiful with the green of Jack-fruit tree and coco palm, the
-blue of sea and the white of foam and coral.
-
-Gulls make their home on the reefs, laughing gulls and cormorants and
-great predatory gulls, sailing to seaward in the dawn and clanging
-home at night after a sweep of hundreds of miles to where the swimmer
-rocks show white manes, or the Skagways their teeth. The gulls were
-jeering now as the fisherman hauled in his line, coiled it on the
-coral and stood up, shading his eyes.
-
-Away over the sparkling blue to s’uth’ard stood something that was
-either the fin of a sail-fish or the sail of a boat, something sharp
-and triangular, clear now to the sight and now half gone as the
-sea-dazzle affected the eyes of the gazer.
-
-He was a tall, thin man, bronzed to the colour of a cobnut, tattooed
-on the left hand in such a way that he seemed to wear a mitt, and his
-face as he stood straining his eyes seaward was the face of Uncle Sam,
-goatee beard and all.
-
-As he watched, the jaws of this individual worked slowly and
-methodically like the jaws of a cow chewing the cud, then as the
-boat’s hull showed close in and making for the clear passage through
-the reefs, he flung up his arms, turned, and came scrambling down over
-the coral to the salt white beach, towards which the boat was coming
-now, the sail furled, and oars out and straight for destruction on a
-rock in the fairway. There were only two men in her.
-
-“Sta’board your helm, you —— fools!” yelled Uncle Sam. “Cayn’t you
-see the sunk reef before your noses? _Sta_’board—that’s right.” Then
-a tone lower: “B——y tailors!”
-
-He rushed out as the boat came barging on to the beach and seized the
-starboard gunnel, whilst the bow oar, tumbling over, seized the port,
-and the stern oar, taking to the water, clapped on; then, having
-dragged her nose well above tide-mark, they turned one to another for
-speech.
-
-“Well, I’ve been here three months and maybe more,” said the tall man,
-as they sat on the coral by the beach watching the boat and the
-strutting gulls and half-a-dozen stray Kanakas who had come down to
-take a peep at the strangers. “Wrecked?—nuthin’—did a bunk from a
-hooker that shoved in here for water an’ nuts, and here I’ve stuck,
-snug as Moses in the bulrushes, nuthin’ to pay for board an’ bunk, no
-use for a n’umbrella, place crawlin’ with girls, and every pa’m tree a
-pub, if you know how to make pa’m toddy—name’s Keller, and what might
-your’n be?”
-
-“Mine’s Harman,” said the bigger and broader of the strangers, “and
-this is Bud Davis. Reckon we’ve run more’n three hundred miles in that
-boat, steerin’ by our noses and blind as ballyhoos—and as to where
-we’ve come from—well, that’s a matter of——”
-
-“Oh, I ain’t askin’ no questions!” cut in the tall man. “It’s nuthin’
-to me if you stole your boat or had her give you, or whether you come
-from Noumea or the Noo Jerusalem. I’m ‘Plain Sailin’ Jim,’ I am,
-straight with them that’s straight with me, hungerin’ for the sight of
-a white mug, and fed up with chocolate biscuits. ‘Plain Sailin’ Jim,’
-that’s me, and smilin’ I am to welcome gentlemen like yourselves to
-this virgin home of palm toddy and polygamy.”
-
-“What sort of truck is that?” asked the ingenuous Harman.
-
-But Keller did not hear him, he had risen to chase some Kanaka
-children away from the boat; then, hitching up his trousers, he led
-the way through the trees to the grass-thatched village where the
-little houses stood bowered with yellow cassi and blue-blazing
-convolvulus, and where at the door of the biggest and newest house his
-chief wife sat preparing kava in a bowl of stone.
-
-They dined off baked pig, taro, palm salad, and palm toddy in a
-twilight through which rays from the thatch pierced like golden
-needles, and as they ate they could see through the door space the
-village with its tree-ferns and thatched houses, the children playing
-in the sun, and the men lazing in the shade.
-
-“Ain’t no use for work and ain’t no use for fightin’,” said Keller,
-referring to the men of the village. “Chawin’ bananas and fishin’ is
-all they’re good for, bone-lazy lot. I’ll larn them!”
-
-Two or three of his wives served the dinner and prepared the palm
-toddy; then, after the dishes had been removed, Keller, the toddy
-mounting to his head, beat another wife who had dared to poke a hole
-in the wall to peep at the strangers, kicked a dog that got in his
-way, raised Cain all down the street with a four-foot length of
-bamboo, and fell like a log dead asleep under the shade of a
-Jack-fruit tree.
-
-“There ain’t no flies on old man Keller,” said Billy Harman to Bud
-Davis, as they walked next morning in the sun on the beach. “I tell
-you I like that chap.”
-
-“Meaning Keller?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Jumping Moses!—and what do you like about him?” asked the astonished
-Davis.
-
-“Well,” said Harman, “takin’ him by and large, he seems to me a
-trustable chap—goin’ by what he says. It’s straight out and have done
-with it when he’s talkin’, same as when he’s kickin’ a Kanaka. I likes
-him because there ain’t nothin’ hidden about him—look at all them
-wives of his and he ownin’ up to them without a wink. ‘“Plain Sailin’
-Jim,” that’s my name,’ says he, ‘straight with them that’s straight
-and crooked with them that’s crooked.’ You heard him—and that’s his
-label or I’m a digger Injin. No, there ain’t no flies on Keller.”
-
-“Yes, I heard him,” said Davis, “and taking him by and large I’d label
-him the king of the yeggmen, hot from yeggtown. No, sir, you don’t
-take in Bud Davis with artificial flies and that chap may ‘Plain
-Sailin’ Jim’ himself to the last holoo of the last trumpet, but he
-won’t put the hood on chaps that have eyes in their heads, nor noses
-to sniff a rotten character.”
-
-“There you go,” said Harman, “startin’ out after your own ideas and
-chasin’ them till they look like a man. Think bad of a chap and he’ll
-look bad—that’s my motto, and I’m not goin’ to think bad of Keller.”
-
-But Davis had lost interest in Keller. Something out at sea had caught
-his eye, and taking Harman by the arm, he pointed over the dead calm
-water.
-
-“Look there,” said he.
-
-Harman, shading his eyes, looked in the direction indicated.
-
-“It ain’t the pa’m toddy, is it?” asked Harman.
-
-“No,” said the other, “it’s a craft of some sort or another; what do
-you make of her?”
-
-“Nuthin’, she ain’t nacheral—looks like a cross between Noah’s ark
-an’ a floatin’ hayrick rigged with a double set of masts and a——
-Why, Lord bless my soul if she ain’t a junk, a junk and a schooner
-lashed together, that’s what she is, derelick and driftin’.”
-
-“Sure,” said Davis, his mind jumping at once to the truth. “Call
-Keller—run and roust him out. Here he comes. Keller, hi, Keller! Ship
-drifting out beyond the reefs. Look sharp!” He had no need to give
-directions. Like a vulture scenting a carcass, Keller came swooping,
-shaded his eyes and stood.
-
-“It’s a junk and schooner,” said Harman.
-
-“_Bêche-de-mer_ boat or opium smuggler,” said Keller, “and they’re
-both abandoned and driftin’. There’s pickin’s here, boys. After me!”
-He raced down to the beach, followed by the others, to where the boat
-was hauled up, they pushed her out and, Keller steering, made through
-the fairway, past the submerged rock towards the open sea.
-
-Not a breath of wind stirred the swell to break the shimmering
-reflections of the spars and sails of the locked ships. Stem to stern
-they lay, the junk spars locked in the rigging of the schooner, the
-two great eyes painted on the Chinaman’s bows staring straight at the
-oncoming boat. Round and about the deserted ships fins moved and grey
-forms glided in the green—sharks. On the smooth water, the letters on
-the counter repainted the name of the schooner, _Haliotis_.
-
-Keller gave the order to lay in the oars, and they came duddering
-along the schooner’s side, Harman standing up. He seized one of the
-stanchions of the rail and was about to hoist himself on deck when
-Keller bade him stop.
-
-“A minit,” said Keller, “who’s to tell it’s not a trap. Claw on and
-listen.”
-
-The cry of a far-off gull on the reefs came, and the creak and grind
-of the ships’ sides as the swell lifted them. No other sound but the
-occasional click of the rudder chain as the rudder of the schooner
-shifted with the heave and fall of the hull.
-
-Then, sure of themselves, with the cry of predatory animals, they
-tumbled on board, fastened up and scattered, Bud and Billy over the
-decks of the schooner, Keller, led by some vulturous instinct, on to
-the junk.
-
-“Here’s a stiff,” shouted Harman as Davis followed him forward towards
-a bundle lying by the galley. “Lord, _ain’t_ he a stiff? Head split
-with a hatchet. Here’s two more.” He pointed to a foot protruding from
-the galley, where lay a Chink and a white man, both very stiff indeed.
-
-Then, turning and quite unconcerned, they came racing aft and down
-through the companion-way to the little cabin.
-
-Here everything was quiet and trim; on the table under the swinging
-lamp lay a soap dish and shaving brush and razor. Someone had been
-shaving himself before the little mirror on the after bulkhead when
-whatever happened had begun to happen. In the after cabin, presumably
-the captain’s, the bunk bedding showed just as the sleeper had left it
-when he turned out. Then they set to and rooted round, the instinct
-for plunder so strong on them that they forgot Keller, the stiffs, the
-tragedy and the very place where they were.
-
-They found a gold watch and chain which Harman put in his pocket, and
-a gold ring and fountain pen which Davis promptly annexed, they found
-the log, which, being written in Spanish, was useless to them, and the
-ship’s money, a big chamois leather chinking bag of Australian
-sovereigns. This glorious find recalled Keller.
-
-“Bud,” said Billy, “this h’ain’t nothing to do with _him_; hide them,
-swaller them; here, give me your handkerchief and take half, tie them
-up tight so’s they won’t chink. I’ll keep my lot in the bag. He won’t
-guess nothin’, he’ll think the chows have cleared the place—ain’t
-nothin’ more to take, is there? Then come ’long and have a squint at
-the lazarette.”
-
-The lazarette was full of food, all sorts of canned things; then,
-hearing Keller’s voice above, up they came demure as cats out of a
-dairy to find the long man waving his arms like a windmill. His goatee
-beard was sticking out like a brush and his eyes flaming.
-
-“Dope!” cried Keller. “Boys, our fortunes is made. Canton opium, blue
-label tins and worth two thousand dollars if it’s worth a jitney. Kim
-along down and howk them out.” He led the way on to the junk’s deck
-and below to the awful interior smelling of opium, joss sticks, stale
-fish and shark oil; there on the floor in the dismal twilight lay the
-tins arranged by Keller in a heap.
-
-“I reckon,” said Keller, “the schooner either went for the chows or
-the chows for the schooner. Maybe they all killed each other, or maybe
-the chaps that were left took fright seein’ a cruiser or fancyin’
-one—reckon that was the way, for there ain’t no boats left, but the
-dinghy. Well, it’s all a durn sea mystery, and I’ve seen queerer—but
-there’s the dope, come along and hoist it.”
-
-They brought the tins up and over to the schooner’s deck, got a
-tarpaulin and tied them up in it, and then, and not till then, took
-stock of their position. The drift of the current had left the island
-a good way to the south, but there it lay green, lovely and inviting,
-the glassy swell pearling round the coral.
-
-Keller, turning from the opium tins to this picture, gazed for a
-moment, his jaws working in contemplation. Then he turned to the
-others.
-
-“Boys,” said Keller, “it’s either go back or stick. I’m for sticking,
-if there’s water and grub enough on board. You see, if we take this
-dope back ashore, we won’t never be able to realise on it; any ship
-takin’ us off will say, ‘What’s in that bundle?’ and there won’t be no
-use sayin’ it’s bibles. Whereas if we can make a port in this hooker
-we can claim salvage, and leavin’ that alone we can ten to one get rid
-of the dope.”
-
-“There’s grub enough,” said Davis, “to judge by the lazarette, and
-there’s pretty sure to be enough water—two minutes will tell, but
-first, let’s get those stiffs overboard. No use putting sinkers to
-them, the sharks will finish them before they’ve sunk a fathom.”
-
-Twenty minutes later the decision was come to and the boat got on
-board.
-
-They had found water and food enough for months, it only wanted a
-breeze to break the ships apart, and Keller reckoned that the three of
-them would be able to manage the schooner. Davis was a fair navigator,
-the charts and compass had not been damaged or removed, and with
-Matadore for a point of departure they ought to be able to reach the
-Fijis. So it was settled.
-
-Harman, leaning on the rail when the decision was come to, fancied
-that he could hear a whisper from the beach of the far-away island,
-the whisper of the swell breaking on the coral where the wives of
-Keller were no doubt congregated, abandoned—chucked away for the
-prospect of a fistful of dollars.
-
-The drift of the current was so strong that before sunset Matadore had
-all but vanished, washed away in the blue that stretched from infinity
-to infinity, terrific in its calm.
-
-The Pacific slept, and the slumber of this giant when sleep takes it
-in deadly earnest is more trying to the imagination than its fury and
-storm, an effect produced perhaps by the heave of the endless swell
-flooding up from nowhere passing to nowhere, through space and time.
-
-But the crew of the _Haliotis_ were not imaginative men, and they had
-other calls upon their consideration. It was at the first meal on
-board that the junk began to whisper of its presence. Harman had
-brewed some tea, and they were seated round the table in the saloon
-when Davis, looking up from his plate to the open skylight, sniffed
-the air.
-
-“That junk whiffs,” said Davis.
-
-It was enough. Harman for a moment turned his head as though he was
-straining to listen, and Keller glanced towards the door, then they
-went on with their food, but the mischief was done and from that on
-the junk was with them.
-
-It was not so much the badness of the smell as the faintness and the
-Chinese nature of it that produced the psychological effect—it was a
-scent, a perfume of which shark liver oil was the vehicle and the
-occupants joss-sticks, opium and the musk of Chinks. It haunted their
-sleep that night and was only dispelled when next morning Keller, who
-had gone on deck, came shouting down the hatch that the wind was
-coming.
-
-They had taken the sails off the junk the night before, finding a
-hatchet—it was stained with something that was not red paint—they
-hacked off the entangling spar, then, the wind coming, fortunately, on
-the junk’s side, the sails of the _Haliotis_ trembled, the main boom
-lashed out to port and Davis springing to the wheel turned the spokes.
-
-For a moment the Chinaman seemed to cling to its departing companion,
-wallowed, slobbered, groaned, and with a last roll dunched in ten feet
-of the starboard rail, then it drew away as the great sail pressure of
-the _Haliotis_ heeled the schooner to port.
-
-“We’re free,” shouted Harman.
-
-“Hr—good riddance!” cried Keller, raising his fist as if to strike at
-the departing one, now well astern, and spitting into the water as if
-to get the taste of her from his mouth.
-
-Then, as Davis steered and the foam fled astern, the wind, taking the
-high poop of the junk, slewed her round bow towards them, and showing
-the great staring, malignant eyes. It was actually as if she had
-turned to watch them.
-
-“Look at her!” cried Billy, “turnin’ her snout to watch us; she’ll
-follow us now sure as certain, we won’t have no luck now, we’ll be had
-somehow or ’nuther, and maybe over that dope! Bud, where was your
-brains you didn’t think of holin’ and sinkin’ her? Why, if it ain’t
-anything else we can be had for leavin’ her a-floatin’ derelick and a
-danger to navigation.”
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you and your derelicts.”
-
-The _Haliotis_ was a schooner of some hundred and twenty tons, and
-three men can work a schooner of a hundred and twenty tons across big
-tracts of ocean if they have fine weather, if they have no fear, if
-they don’t bother to keep a look-out or attend to the hundred and
-twenty little duties of ordinary ship life. Harman, Bud and Keller
-filled this bill admirably. The wind changing and blowing from the
-sou’-east, they ran before it, ran with no man at the wheel, wheel
-lashed, head sheets taut, mainboom guyed to port, and never a mishap.
-
-They ought to have gone to the bottom, you say; they ought, but they
-didn’t. The wind changed instead, for the Paumotus, though far to the
-eastward, still reached them with their disturbing spell breeding
-unaccountable influence on wind and weather.
-
-Harman had counted up the sovereigns in the chamois leather bag—there
-were a hundred and twelve. In a private conference with Davis below,
-Keller taking the deck and the wheel, he settled up with Davis.
-
-“Better split the money now,” said Harman, “hundred and twelve I’ve
-got, what’s your?”
-
-“Ninety,” said Davis promptly.
-
-Harman was shocked. He’d reckoned that Davis’s share was bigger than
-his own or he wouldn’t have been so eager to settle up.
-
-“Count ’em,” said he.
-
-Davis produced the knotted handkerchief and counted the contents.
-There were only ninety unless he had subtracted and hidden some, as
-seemed probable, for at the rough division when they had split the
-coins into two supposedly equal shares, Davis’s had seemed the bigger.
-
-Harman, pretty sure of this, felt sore; certain of coming out equal in
-the deal he had run straight. However, he settled up without a murmur
-and pocketed the bag in a hurry, hearing Keller’s voice calling for
-Davis to take the wheel.
-
-Though it was a Spanish ship, to judge by the log, not a single
-Spanish or French coin was included in the ship’s money, indicating
-that her trade had been British; papers other than the log there were
-none; perhaps the skipper had them on his person when the Chinks had
-killed him and hove him to the sharks—no one could tell, and the
-Harman syndicate didn’t bother.
-
-They had other things to think of. One morning when all three were on
-deck, Keller having come up to relieve Harman at the wheel, the
-latter, who had been turning things over in his mind, gave it as his
-opinion that the position might be pretty rocky if on striking the
-Fijis “one of them d——d British brass-bound Port Authority chaps”
-were to turn rusty on the business. “Suppose we run for Suva,” said
-he, “and suppose they say we don’t believe your yarn? That’s what’s
-got into my head. Would anyone believe it? I ask you that, would
-anyone believe it?”
-
-The others, suddenly struck by this point of view, ruminated for a
-moment. No. The thing was true enough, but it didn’t sound true. They
-had lifted the hatch during the calm and found the cargo to be copra.
-What was a copra schooner doing seized on to a Chinaman, everyone dead
-and all the rest of it? Stranger happenings had occurred at sea, ships
-found derelict with not a soul on board, yet in perfect order—but
-that was no explanation or support for a yarn that seemed too tough
-for an alligator to swallow.
-
-Then there was the opium—suspicion meant search, and those cans of
-opium would not help them any; on top of all there was the money in
-the pockets of Bud and Billy, money that even Keller knew nothing
-about, but sure to be found on search.
-
-“We ain’t nothing to show,” said Harman. “We should have kept one of
-them Chinks for evidence.”
-
-“And how’d we have kept him?” said Davis, “put him in your bunk
-maybe—Why haven’t you more sense?”
-
-“I’ve got it, boys,” said Keller, turning suddenly from the lee rail
-where he had been leaning. “Suva—nothin’. Opalu’s our port of call,
-ain’t more than four hundred miles to the north if our reckonin’s
-right. Big German island where the pearl chaps come for doing business
-and the Chinks and Malays fr’m as far as Java and beyond there. _Rao
-Laut’s_ the name the Malays give it. Faked pearls and poached pearls
-and dope, it’s all the same to them—they’d buy the huffs an’ horns
-off Satan and sell ’em as goat’s. There’s nothin’ you couldn’t sell
-them but bibles, and there’s nothin’ you could sell them they can’t
-pass on through some ring or another. I tell you it’s a place, must
-have been plum crazy not to have thought of it before.”
-
-“And suppose they ask questions?” said Billy.
-
-“They never ask questions at Rao Laut,” said Keller. “If there happens
-to be a doctor there, he comes aboard to see you haven’t smallpox. If
-there isn’t, he doesn’t.”
-
-Keller was right, the big German island was the spot of spots for
-them. They wanted no seaboard ports, no big island ports where English
-was talked and questions were sure to be asked. Salving a derelict in
-the Pacific means months and maybe years waiting for your salvage
-money, especially if she is a foreigner, that is to say anything that
-hails from anywhere that is not the British Empire or America. They
-did not want to wait months or years, their lives were spent in the
-grip of events, and in even a month it was hard to say where any one
-of them might be from Hull to Hakodate. No, they did not reckon on
-salvage money, and they did not want inquiries. They would have piled
-her on the Bishop, that great rock right in their track and south of
-Laut, only for the dope. It was impossible to bring those tins into
-any port in an open boat.
-
-At Laut it would be easy to get the stuff landed in one of the canoes
-or sampans always plying in the bay—the only question was a buyer,
-and Keller said he would easily find that.
-
-The first they knew of the island was a perfume of cassi coming
-through a dawn that having lazily snuffed out a star or two, simply
-leapt on the sea; a crimson and old gold dawn trailed with a smoke
-cloud like the fume of joss-sticks, cloud that broke to form flying
-flamingoes that were shot to pieces by sunrays from a sun bursting up
-into a world of stainless azure.
-
-The island lay right before them, a high island with broken reefs to
-east and west and clear water all to the south, where beyond the
-anchorage and the beach lay the town wherein the four copra traders of
-Laut carried on their trade and the Japanese and Chinese pearl
-merchants and the Australian and Californian turtle shell buyers
-foregathered at the so-called club kept by Hans Reichtbaum.
-
-In the bay were two schooners, a brigantine and some small craft at
-moorings, and somewhere about nine o’clock the _Haliotis_, moving like
-a swan across the breeze-ruffled blue, dropped her anchor in twenty
-fathoms, a far faint echo from the woods following the rasp of her
-chain.
-
-That was all the welcome Rao Laut gave her when Reichtbaum, in
-pyjamas, shading his eyes on the club veranda, watched her swing to
-her moorings and returned to his breakfast wondering what sort of
-customers the newcomers would turn out.
-
-It was their second night at Laut, and Bud and Billy leaning on the
-after rail of the _Haliotis_ were contemplating the lights on shore. A
-tepid wind from the sea fanned their cheeks and against the wind the
-island breathed at them like a bouquet.
-
-In two days they had taken the measure of the place and plumbed its
-resources, and the brain of Keller working swiftly and true to form
-had rejected all possible avenues for opium trade but one—Reichtbaum.
-
-At the first sight of the German, Keller’s instinct had told him that
-here was his man.
-
-Keller had no money to spend on drinks at the club, and it was
-Harman’s torture that, with his pocket bulging with gold, he could not
-lay out a cent, but Reichtbaum had stood drinks yesterday, scenting
-business from a few words dropped by Keller.
-
-This evening at sundown Keller had gone alone, taking a single can of
-opium with him and rowing himself ashore in the dinghy. Bud and Billy
-were waiting for his return. They saw the lights of the club and the
-lights of the village winking and blinking, as the intervening foliage
-stirred in the wind, then on the starlit water they saw a streak like
-the trail of a water-rat. It was the dinghy.
-
-Keller came on board triumphant and without the tin. Not a word would
-he say till they were down below, then, taking his seat at the saloon
-table, he let himself go.
-
-“Look at me,” said he, “sober, ain’t I? Fit to thread a needle or say
-‘J’rus’lem artichoke,’ don’t you think? And he fired the stuff at me,
-rum an’ gum and coloured drinks and fizz at the last, but I wasn’t
-havin’ any, bisness is bisness, I says, and I ain’t playin’ a lone
-hand, I’ve pardners to think of, ‘Plain Sailin’ Jim’s’ my name, and if
-you don’t pay two hundred dollars a tin I’ll plain sail off an’ dump
-the stuff out.”
-
-“Two hundred dollars!” said the others in admiration. “You had the
-cheek to ask him that?”
-
-“That’s so,” replied Keller, “and I got it.” He produced notes for two
-hundred dollars and spread them on the table.
-
-“He opened the stuff and sampled it and planked the money down, and
-two hundred dollars he’ll pay for every can, and there’s fourteen of
-them left, that’s three thousand dollars for the lot. We’ve only to
-take them ashore to get the money. Well now, seems to me since that’s
-fixed, we have to think what to do with the schooner. We don’t want to
-sit here in this b’nighted hole twiddlin’ our thumbs and waitin’ to be
-took off, more especial as I don’t trust Reichtbaum any too much, and
-it seems to me our plan is to stick to the hooker and take her right
-to a Dutch port and sell the cargo, copra prices are rangin’ high——”
-
-“Steady on,” suddenly cut in Harman. “Why, you said yourself we
-couldn’t take her to any port, seein’ we have no papers but what’s
-made out in Spanish, and no crew.”
-
-“Just so,” said Keller. “It was the crew that was botherin’ me more
-than the papers, but how about a crew of Kanakas now we have the money
-to pay for them?”
-
-Davis hit the table with his fist. “By Gosh, there’s something in
-that,” said he.
-
-“M’r’over,” said Keller, “I can get six chaps for five dollars ahead
-advance. There’s more’n half a dozen schooner Kanakas kickin’ their
-heels on the beach waitin’ for a job. I can get them on board
-to-morrow, and all the fruit and water we want for ten dollars to the
-chaps that bring it on board. Then, you see, a copra schooner comin’
-into a Dutch port manned by Kanakas there won’t be no bother. Dutchmen
-don’t know Spanish, nor they won’t care, we’re in from the islands,
-and we’ve left our Spanish chaps sick at Laut—if there’s any
-questions, which there won’t be.”
-
-“When can we be off?” asked Harman.
-
-“To-morrow afternoon, if we’re slick about gettin’ the water and
-bananas on board,” said Keller. “Then when we’re all ready for sailin’
-we’ll take the dope cans to Reichtbaum and get the money. We won’t do
-that till last thing, for fear he’d play us some trick or another. I’m
-none too sure of Germans.”
-
-Next morning at six the work began, Davis and Harman going ashore to
-hire the Kanakas and see about the water and provisions, Keller
-remaining on board to clear up the ship and get the fo’c’sle in order.
-
-Boat-loads of fruit were brought off, the newly hired Kanakas helping,
-enough bananas to feed them for a month, taro, bread-fruit and a dozen
-fowl in a crate, price three dollars. The water casks were filled, and
-by four o’clock, with the promise of a steady wind off shore, the
-_Haliotis_, with canvas raised, was ready to sail and the crew on
-board.
-
-Keller had brought up the opium tins in their tarpaulin wrapper.
-
-“Be sure and count over the dollars,” said he to Davis, as the cans
-were lowered into the dinghy, “and don’t take no drinks from him—if
-he gets you on the booze, we’re done.”
-
-“Him and his booze,” said Harman, as they shoved off. “Same as if
-we’re childer——. Lay into it, Bud.”
-
-The nose of the dinghy grounded on the soft sand, some native boys
-helped to run her up, and getting the cans out, they started up the
-beach towards the club.
-
-It was a heavy load, but they managed the journey without stopping;
-Reichtbaum was waiting for them on the veranda and, lending a hand,
-they brought the treasure through the bar into a private room at the
-back, a room furnished with native made chairs and tables, a roll-top
-desk and a portrait of the German Emperor on the wall opposite the
-window.
-
-“So,” said Reichtbaum, “that is accomplished. And now, gentlemen, what
-will you have to drink?”
-
-“Highball for me,” said Harman, “if it’s all the same to you. What’s
-yours, Bud?”
-
-“Same as yours,” said Davis, wiping his mouth with the back of his
-hand, and then these worthies sat whilst Reichtbaum went into the bar
-and returned with a syphon of soda and a whisky bottle and then went
-out again and returned with three glasses, and then fishing a
-cigar-box from a shelf, handed out cigars.
-
-The syphon whizzed and the fumes of tobacco rose.
-
-Two highballs vanished, and nearly half an hour of precious time sped
-with conversation, ranging from the German Emperor to the morals of
-the ladies of Laut.
-
-Then Davis turned to reality. “S’pose we get on with this business of
-the dope,” said he. “Three thousand dollars it was, Mr. Keller was
-saying—and we ought to be going.”
-
-He rose from his chair.
-
-“To be sure,” said Reichtbaum, rising also. “Three thousand dollars
-vas agreed. Now for der dope.”
-
-He took a clasp-knife from his pocket, knelt down and cut the rope
-binding the tarpaulin, rooted it open, put in his hand and produced a
-tin of bully beef. He flung the tarpaulin wide and tins tumbled out on
-the floor, canned tomatoes mostly—there was a large stock of them on
-the _Haliotis_. Bud and Billy, petrified with amazement as Reichtbaum
-himself, stood without a word, till Harman found speech.
-
-“Boys, we’re done,” cried Harman. “Fried and dished by Keller.” He
-turned, made for the door and rushed through the bar on to the
-veranda.
-
-The _Haliotis_ with swelled sails and steered by “Plain Sailin’ Jim”
-and his new Kanaka crew was not only at sea, but far at sea; she had
-dropped her anchor chain most likely directly they had vanished into
-the club, or maybe even she had taken the anchor in, Keller cynically
-sure that falling to drinks, they would hear nothing of the winch.
-
-“Well, it might have been worse,” said Bud that night as they sat
-smoking on the beach. “He’s got the dope and the cargo and the ship
-and the crew, but we ain’t destitute. We’ve got the sovereigns. But
-what gets me is the fact that he’ll net all of ten thousand dollars
-when he’s sold off that copra and the opium, to say nothing of the
-hull. Maybe twenty thousand. Oh, he’ll do it and strand those poor
-devils of Kanakas Lord knows where.”
-
-Harman took out the watch belonging to the captain of the _Haliotis_
-from his pocket, and looked at it gloomily. Then as a child comforts
-itself with its toys, he took the chamois leather bag of sovereigns
-from his pocket and began to count over the coins.
-
-“I’m not botherin’ about that,” said he, “what gets me, is the fac’
-that he’s run crooked with us.”
-
-Davis, looking at the coins and remembering the watch and fountain
-pen, to say nothing of the coins in his own pocket, smiled darkly. He
-was about to remark that if Keller had run crooked with them, they had
-run pretty crooked with Keller, but knowing the mentality of his
-companion, he saved his breath and lit his pipe.
-
-“That’s what gets me,” said Billy, serious as a deacon and evidently
-brooding over the sins of the other and shovelling the sovereigns back
-into the bag, “it ain’t the dope he’s diddled us out of, nor the
-schooner, which I hopes he’ll bust on a rock, him and his Kanakas,
-it’s the fac’ that he’s took me in, in my opinions. I reckoned that
-chap was a white man, I’d a trusted that man with my second last
-dollar and wouldn’t have wanted to tie no string to it, neither.
-Outspoken and free he was with his conversation and hidin’ and holin’
-in his ways—’nough to make a chap bank for the rest of his natural on
-hearses an’ deaf mutes. That’s how I’m feelin’. No, sir, it ain’t the
-dope he’s diddled us out of, nor the——”
-
-“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, and turning on his side and lighting his
-pipe, he led the conversation towards the club, the excellence of its
-whisky and the morals of the ladies of Laut.
-
-
-
-
-VI—PEARLS OF GREAT PRICE!
-
-
-Mambaya is a French island.
-
-Fancy a white French gunboat in a blue, blue bay, surf creaming on a
-new moon beach, and a coloured town tufted with flame trees and gum
-trees and rocketing palms. Purple mountains in the dazzling azure and
-a perfume of red earth and roses mixed with the perfume of the sea.
-
-Paumotuan pearl getters haunt Mambaya, brown-skinned men who have been
-diving half a year or have captured in half a day the wherewithal for
-a spree, and on the beach when a ship comes in you will find the
-Chinese pearl buyers waiting for the pearl men, cigar coloured girls
-with liquid brown eyes, the keeper of the roulette table in Mossena
-Street and Fouqui, the seller of oranges, pines, bananas and custard
-fruit.
-
-But Mambaya does not exist entirely on pearls. The island is rich in
-produce and it is a beauty spot. Great white yachts drop in and
-anchor, steamers bring tourists, and on this same lovely beach where
-they used to boil local missionaries in the old days, you can hear the
-band playing at night in the Place Canrobert, where the two hotels are
-situated and where at marble-topped tables the tourists are taking
-their coffee and liqueurs.
-
-From the island of Laut away down south where the bad men live, came
-one day to the beach of Mambaya two men of the sea, ragged and tanned,
-with their pockets stuffed with gold and hungering for pleasure—Bud
-Davis and Billy Harman, no less.
-
-A big Moonbeam copra boat had given them the lift for the sum of four
-pounds each, paid in bright Australian sovereigns, but she could not
-supply them with clothes. However, a Jew who came on board as soon as
-the anchor was dropped, saved them the indignity of being fired off
-the beach by the French authorities, and, landing in spotless white
-ducks, they strung for the nearest bar, swallowed two highballs, lit
-two cigars and came out wiping their mouths with the backs of their
-hands.
-
-“By golly,” said Billy, “ain’t this prime, Bud? Look at the place, why
-it’s half as big as ’Frisco, innocent lookin’ as Mary Ann and only
-sufferin’ to be scooped or painted red.”
-
-They were in the Place Canrobert where the flame trees grow, where the
-Kanaka children play naked in the sun and the shops expose faked
-Island headdresses and curios, imitation jewellery from Paris, canned
-salmon and Paris hats. The natives of Mambaya are well-to-do and spend
-their money freely; they are paid in dollars, not trade goods, and
-have a lively fancy and catholic taste.
-
-“If you’re starting on the painting business,” said Bud, “then give me
-notice and I’ll take myself off to the woods till you’re done, but
-I’ll warn you this is no place for painters and decorators. It’s a
-French Island and you’ll end your jag with a month in the cells or
-road-making.”
-
-“What you wants is a tub and a prayer book,” said the other, taking
-his seat at a table in front of the Café Continental and calling for
-lime juice.
-
-“Who was talkin’ of jags, and can’t a chap use a figure of speech
-without your jumpin’ down his throat? No, sir, scoopin’ is my idea.
-Here we are with our pockets full and our teeth sharp, and if we don’t
-pull off a coup in this smilin’ town where the folks are only standin’
-about waitin’ to be took in, why we’d better take to knittin’ for a
-livin’, that’s my opinion.”
-
-A pretty native girl, all chocolate and foulard, passed, trailing her
-eyes over the pair at the table; she wore bangles on her arms and was
-carrying a basket of fruit.
-
-“There you are,” said Harman, “if the native ‘Marys’ can dress like
-that, what price the top folk? I tell you the place is rotten with
-money only waitin’ to be took. Question is, how?”
-
-Davis did not answer for a moment, he was watching an opulent looking
-American tourist in white drill who had just left the Island
-headdress shop across the way. The tourist opened a white umbrella
-with a green inside and passed away towards the sea.
-
-“No-how,” said Davis, “unless you set to work and open a shop or
-something, you can’t skin a town like this same as a pearl lagoon. If
-you want money here, you’ll have to work blame hard for it buying and
-selling against chaps that are bred to the business better than
-you—that’s civilisation.”
-
-“Dam civilisation!” said Harman.
-
-“Unless,” continued Davis, “you can fake up some swindle or
-another——”
-
-“Nothin’——” said Harman, “I’m agin that sort of game as you ought to
-know, seein’ you know me. No, sir, I don’t want no first class ticket
-to Noumea. Straight as a gun barrel is what I want to run, but I’ve no
-objections to putting a few slugs in the gun. It’s just crawlin’ into
-my head that a syndicate is what we want.”
-
-“And what the devil do you want a syndicate for?” asked Davis.
-
-“Well, it’s this way,” said Billy. “A matter of ten years or so ago in
-the ’Frisco elections, I was in with Haffernan, Slungshot Haffernan,
-the chap that was tried for the killin’ of Duffy Stevens at San
-Leandro which he did, but got off owin’ to an alibi. Well, I’m tellin’
-you. My job was fillin’ the ’lectors with gin an’ gettin’ them to the
-polls before they’d lost the use of their pins and swearin’ false
-evidence and such on, which wasn’t what a chap would do only in
-’lection times.
-
-“Well, a month or so after, Haffernan he got up a syndicate to run a
-guano island he’d got the location of and which wasn’t there, and I
-put fifty dollars into it and fifty other mugs did ditto and Haff
-pouched the coin and turned it over to his wife and went bankrupt or
-somethin’, anyhow he had the coin and we were left blowin’ our
-fingers. Now you listen to me. How about that pearl island Mandelbaum
-kicked us off? We’ve got the location. How about sellin’ it to a
-syndicate?”
-
-“Where’s your syndicate?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Billy, “but it seems to me it’s to be found for
-lookin’ in a place like this where you see chaps like that guy with
-the white umbrella. I saw his Siamese twin on the beach when we landed
-with a diamond the size of a decanter stopper in his shirt front and
-that Jew chap that sold us the clothes told me there’s no end of
-Americans come here rotten with money, to say nothing of Britishers.”
-
-“Well,” said Davis, “even supposing you get your syndicate, what about
-Mandelbaum? He’s got a lease of the island and would hoof you and your
-syndicate into the sea if you showed a nose in the lagoon.”
-
-“He said he had a lease,” replied Harman, “but he never showed a line
-of writin’ and I believe he was a liar, but I wasn’t proposin’ to go
-there, only to sell the location; if he hoofs the syndicate into the
-sea, why, it’s their look-out. If they ain’t fools they’ll hoof him in
-first, lease or no lease, and collar the pearls he’s been takin’.”
-
-“What I like about you is your consistency,” said Davis.
-
-“What’s that?” asked Harman.
-
-“The way you stick to your guns. You’re always preaching that it’s
-best to run straight and then you turn up an idea like that. Nice
-straight sort of business, isn’t it?”
-
-“As straight as a gun barrel,” said Harman enthusiastically. “You
-can’t be had no how, not by all the lawyers from here to Oskosh.
-Y’see, if chaps are mugs enough to pay coin down for a location you’re
-free to take their coin. That’s good United States law. I had it from
-Lawyer Burstall when we got stung over the Haffernan business. He’s a
-toughs’ lawyer, long thin chap, not enough fat on him to grease the
-hinges of a pair of scissors, and cute enough to skin Jim Satan if he
-got a fair grip of his tail.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Davis, “anyhow before you start in on any of your games,
-we’ve got to get lodgings. I’m not going to fling my coin away on one
-of these hotel sharps and we’ve got to get some dunnage to show up
-with. That Jew chap told me where we could get rooms cheap, last house
-end of town on right-hand side and with a big tree fern in the
-garden.”
-
-Living is cheap in Mambaya, where people mostly subsist on coco-nut
-milk and fried bananas, where you can get a hundred eggs for half a
-dollar and a chicken for a quarter. If you are an æsthete you can
-almost live on the scenery alone, on the sun, on the unutterably blue
-sky that roofs you between the rains. But Billy and his companion had
-little use for scenery, and after a week of lounging on the beach,
-wandering about the town and watching the natives surf bathing off
-Cape Huane, life began to pall on them.
-
-They were not fools enough to drink, and if they had been, the bar of
-the Café Continental, white-painted, cold, correct, served by a
-white-coated bar tender who could talk nothing but Bêche-de-mer
-French, would have choked them off. There was not the ghost of a sign
-of a syndicate to be developed, nor of trade of any sort to be done.
-
-They visited the roulette shop, where the keeper of the table allowed
-them to win some forty dollars which they promptly departed with,
-never to return.
-
-“We’ve skinned the cream off that,” said Davis next morning as they
-lay smoking and kicking their heels on the sand, “and there’s not
-another pan of milk about. You see, we’re handicapped not talking
-French. Like cats in a larder with muzzles on—that’s about the size
-of it.”
-
-Harman assented. He took from his pocket the bag that held his money,
-nearly a hundred bright brass-yellow Australian sovereigns. They were
-on a secluded part of the beach with no one within eye-shot, and he
-amused himself by counting the coins and stacking them in little piles
-on the sand.
-
-Then he swept the coins back into the bag and sat up as Davis pointed
-seaward to where, rounding Cape Huane, came a white-painted steamer,
-the mail boat for Papeete and beyond.
-
-The whoop of her siren lashed the sleepy air and brought echoes from
-the woods and a quarter of a minute later a far-off whoop from the
-echoes in the hills, then down from the town and groves the beach
-began to stream with people. Kanaka children racing for the sea edge
-and fruit sellers with their baskets, girls fluttering foulard to the
-breeze and Kanaka bucks, naked but for a loin-cloth; then came white
-folk, Aaronson, the Jew, and the keeper of the Hôtel Continental,
-officials and a stray Chinaman or two.
-
-Neither Bud nor Billy stirred a limb till the rasp of the anchor chain
-came over the water, then getting up, they strolled down to the
-water’s edge and stood, hands in pockets, watching the shore boats
-putting out, boats laden with fruit, and canoes with naked Kanaka
-children ready to dive for coppers.
-
-Then the ship’s boat came ashore with mails and passengers.
-
-“Ain’t much sign of a syndicate here, neither,” said Harman, as he
-stood criticising the latter, mostly male tourists of the heavy
-globe-trotting type and American women with blue veils and guide
-books. “It’s the old mail-boat crowd that’s been savin’ up for a
-holiday for the last seven year an’s got so in the habit of savin’,
-it’s forgot how to spend. I know them. Been on a mail boat once;
-haven’t you ever been on a mail boat, Bud? Then you don’t know nothin’
-about nothin’. Half the crew is stewards and half the officers is
-dancin’ masters to judge by the side of them, and the blessed cargo is
-duds like them things landin’ now.”
-
-He turned on his heel and led the way back towards the town.
-
-As they drew along towards it, one of the passengers, a young, smart
-and natty individual carrying an imitation crocodile-skin handbag,
-overtook them, and Harman, greatly exercised in his mind by the bag,
-struck up a conversation.
-
-“Air you goin’ to reside in this town, stranger?” asked Mr. Harman.
-
-“Eight hours,” replied the stranger, “boat starts at eight p.m.
-Smart’s my name, and smart’s my nature, and not being Methuselah, I
-find time an object in life. What, may I ask, is the population of
-this town, air there any opportunities on this island and what’s the
-condition, in your experience, of the luxury trades—may I ask?”
-
-“Dunno,” said Harman, “ain’t been here long enough to find out.”
-
-“I got landed to prospect,” went on the other, “I’m trading—trading
-in pearls. O.K. pearls. Wiseman and Philips is our house and our
-turnover is a million dollars in a year. Yes, sir, one million
-dollars. From Athabasca to Mexico City the females of forty-two states
-and two territories cough up one million dollars a year for personal
-adornment, and Wiseman and Philips does the adorning. I’m travelling
-the islands now. Well, here’s a hotel—and good day to you,
-gentlemen.”
-
-He dived into the Continental and Harman and Davis walked on.
-
-“Well,” said the intrigued Harman, “it sorter makes one feel alive,
-comin’ in touch with chaps like that—notice the bag he was carryin’,
-looked as if the hide’d been taken off a cow that’d been skeered to
-death. I’ve seen them sort of bags before on passenger ships, and they
-always belonged to nobs. That was a sure enough panama he was wearin’,
-and did you notice the di’mond ring on his finger?”
-
-“He’s a damn fish-scale jewellery drummer,” said Davis, “out to sell
-dud pearls and save five dollars a week out of his travelling
-allowance, notice he never offered to stand drinks? The earth’s
-crawling with the likes of him, selling servant girls everything from
-dud watches to dummy gramophones.”
-
-But Harman was not listening, the million-dollar turnover, the
-imitation crocodile skin bag and the sure enough panama hat had seized
-on his imagination.
-
-It suddenly seemed to him that he had missed his chance, that here was
-the nucleus of the syndicate he wanted, a sharp, sure-enough American
-with a big company behind him and lots of money to burn. He said so,
-and Davis laughed.
-
-“Now get it into your head you won’t do more than waste your time with
-chaps like those,” said he. “Of course, they’ve got the money, but
-even if you could get to their offices and deal with them instead of
-their two-cent drummer, where’d you be? Do you mean to say you’d have
-any chance with these sharps, trying to sell a dud proposition to
-them? Why, when they’d took out your back teeth to see if there was
-any gold in them and stripped you to your pants, you wouldn’t have
-done with them, you’d be stuck for an atlas of the world, or maybe a
-piano organ on the instalment plan, givin’ them sixty per cent. on the
-takings and a mortgage on the monkey. You get me? Sometimes you’re
-sharp enough, but once your wits get loose, it’s away with you. This
-chap isn’t any use—forget him.”
-
-But Harman scarcely heard.
-
-If they had turned on their tracks they might have seen Smart, who,
-after a drink at the bar of the hotel, had started out to visit the
-shops, more especially those likely to push the sale of O.K. pearls
-and North Pole diamonds—a side line.
-
-At half-past four that afternoon Harman—Davis having gone
-fishing—found himself in the Continental bar. The place was empty,
-and Billy was in the act of paying and taking his departure when in
-came Smart.
-
-“Hullo,” said Harman. “Have a drink?”
-
-They drank. Highballs first of all, and then, at the suggestion of
-Billy, who paid for drinks the whole of that afternoon, hopscotches,
-which are compounded of Bourbon, crushed ice, lemon peel, _parfait
-amour_ and a crystallised cherry.
-
-At the second hopscotch the tongue of Smart was loosened and his words
-began to flow.
-
-“Well, I reckon there’s not much to the town,” said Smart, “but it’s
-an oleograph for scenery and pictooresqueness; with a pier for landing
-and a bathing beach where all that fishermen’s truck and those canoes
-are, it would beat a good many places on the islands that don’t think
-five cents of themselves. I’ve been pushing the name of Wiseman and
-Philips into the ears of all and sundry that has got ears to hear
-with, but all such places as these is only seeds by the way. Chicago
-is our main crop an’ Noo York, after that Pittsburg, and we’re feeling
-for London, England.
-
-“We’ve agents in Paris and Madrid that aren’t asleep, and Wiseman says
-before he dies he’ll put a rope of pearls round Mother Earth, and a
-North Pole di’mond tiara on her old head. Yes, sir. (Third hopscotch.)
-That’s what Wiseman says in his office and my hearing, and Philips, he
-helps run the luxury and fake leather sundry department, he said he’d
-fit her out with O de Nile coloured croc leather boots and a vanity
-bag of stamped lizard skin if the sales went on jumping as they were
-going, which was more like Klondike stuffed with the Arabian nights
-than any sales proposition he had ever heard, seen, dreamt or read of.
-Sales! (_hic_) as sure as there’s two cherries in this glass I’m
-holding, my orders booked in Chicago for pearls ending Christmas Day
-last was over one hundred thousand dollars. One hundred thousand
-dollars. But you haven’t seen our projuce.”
-
-He bent, picked up his bag, fumbled in it and produced a box and from
-the box a gorgeous pearl necklace.
-
-“Feel of those,” said Smart, “weigh them, look at ’em, look at the
-grading, look at the style, look at the lustre and brilliancy. Could
-Tiffany beat them for twenty thousand dollars? No, sir, he couldn’t;
-they leave him way behind.”
-
-The dazzled Harman weighed the rope in his hand and returned it.
-
-“Don’t be showin’ them sort of things in bars,” said he, as the other
-closed the box with a hiccup and replaced it in the bag, “but now
-you’ve showed me yours, I’ll show you mine.”
-
-“Pull ’em out,” said the other, picking up his hat, which he had
-dropped in stooping.
-
-“They ain’t here,” said Harman, “it’s only the knowledge of them I’ve
-got. Stranger, ’s sure as I’m lightin’ this cigar, I know a lagoon in
-an island down south where you can dredge up pearls same as them by
-the fist full.”
-
-“It must be a dam’ funny lagoon,” said the other, with a cynical
-laugh.
-
-Harman agreed. It was the funniest place he’d ever struck, he told the
-story of it at length and at large, and how Mandelbaum had kicked him
-and Davis off the atoll and how it only wanted a few bright chaps to
-hire a schooner and go down and do the same to Mandelbaum and take his
-pearls. He assured Smart that he—Harman—was his best friend, and
-wrote the latitude and longitude of the pearl island down on the back
-of a glossy business card of the drummer’s, but it did not much
-matter, as he wrote it all wrong.
-
-Then, all of a sudden, he was out of the bar and walking with Smart
-among palm trees. Then he was in the native village which lies at the
-back of the town, and they were drinking kava at the house of old
-Nadub, the kava seller, who was once a cannibal and boasted of the
-fact—kava after hopscotches!—and Smart was seated with his arm round
-the waist of Maiala, Nadub’s daughter, and they were both smoking the
-same cigar alternately and laughing. Nadub was laughing, the whole
-world was laughing.
-
-Then Mr. Harman found himself home, trying to explain to Davis that he
-had sold the pearl location to Smart, who was going to marry Nadub’s
-daughter, also the beauty of true love, and the fact that he could not
-unlace his boots.
-
-“A nice object _you_ made of yourself last night,” said Davis next
-morning, standing by the mat bed where Harman was stretched, a jar of
-water beside him. “You and that two-cent drummer! What were you up to,
-anyway?”
-
-Harman took a pull at the jar, put his hand under his pillow and made
-sure that his money was safe, and then lay back.
-
-“Up to—where?” asked Harman, feebly.
-
-“Where? Why, back in the native town. You left that chap there, and
-the purser of the mail boat had to beat the place for him and get four
-roustabouts ashore to frog-march him to the ship.”
-
-“I dunno,” said Harman, “I got along with him in a bar, and we sat
-havin’ drinks, them drinks they serve at the Continental—Lord, Bud, I
-never want to see another cherry again, nor sniff another drop of
-Bourbon. I’m on the water-wagon for good and all. It ain’t worth it;
-I’m feelin’ worse than a Methodis’ parson. I’m no boozer, but if I do
-strike the jagg by accident, my proper feelin’s pay me out. It’s not a
-headache, it’s the feelin’ as if a chapel minister was sittin’ on my
-chest, and I’d never get him off. Give’s my pants.”
-
-He rose, dressed, and went out. Down on the beach the sea breeze
-refreshed Mr. Harman, and life began to take a rosier colour. He sat
-on the sand, and taking the chamois leather bag from his pocket,
-counted the coins in it.
-
-The fun of the day before had cost him ten pounds!
-
-Ten pounds—fifty dollars—for what? Three or four drinks, it did not
-seem more, and a tongue like an old brown shoe. He moralised on these
-matters for a while, and then returning the coins to the bag and the
-bag to his pocket, he rose up and strolled back through the town,
-buying a drinking nut from the old woman at the corner of the Place
-Canrobert and refreshing himself with its contents.
-
-Then he wandered in the groves near the native village, and two hours
-later, Davis, seated under the trees of the Place Canrobert and
-reading a San Francisco paper, which the purser of the mail boat had
-left behind in the bar of the Continental, saw Harman approaching.
-
-Harman had evidently got the chapel minister off his chest, his chin
-was up, and his eyes bright. He sat down beside the other, laughed,
-slapped himself on the right knee and expectorated.
-
-“What’s up?” said Davis.
-
-“Nothin’,” said Harman. “Nothin’ I can tell you about at the minute.
-Say, Bud, ain’t you feelin’ it’s time we took the hook up and pushed?
-Ain’t nothin’ more to be done here, seems to me, and I’ve got a plan.”
-
-“What’s your plan?” asked Davis.
-
-“Well, it’s more’n a plan. I’ve been thinkin’ quick and come to the
-conclusion that we’ve got to get out of here, pronto, get me? More’n
-that, we’ve got to make for Rarotambu, that’s the German island
-between here and Papeete.”
-
-“Why the deuce d’you want to go there?” asked Davis.
-
-“There’s money waitin’ for us there,” replied Harman, “and I don’t
-want to touch at no French island.”
-
-Davis put his paper behind him and filled a pipe. He knew that when
-Harman had one of his mysterious fits on, there was sure to be
-something behind it, some rotten scheme or another too precious to be
-disclosed till ripe. But he was willing enough to leave Mambaya and
-made no objections.
-
-“How are you going to get down to Rarotambu,” he asked, “s’posing we
-decide to go?”
-
-“I’ve worked out that,” said Harman. “You know that copra schooner
-that’s been filling up in the bay? She’s off to ’Frisco, touching at
-Papeete, leavin’ to-night. Wayzegoose, he’s her skipper, I met him ten
-minutes ago when I was workin’ out my plans, and he’ll turn aside for
-us and drop us at Rarotambu for two hundred dollars, passage money.”
-
-“Not me,” said Davis. “Him and his old cockroach trap, why, I’d get a
-passage on the mail boat for a hundred dollars.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Harman, “but I don’t want no mail boats nor no Papeetes,
-neither. What are you kickin’ at? I’ll pay.”
-
-“Well, I’ll come along if you’re set on it,” said Bud, “but I’m hanged
-if I see your drift. What’s the hurry, anyhow?”
-
-“Never you mind that,” replied Harman, “there’s hurry enough if you
-knew. There’s a cable from here to Papeete, ain’t there?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Well never you mind the hurry till we’re clear of this place. Put
-your trust in your Uncle Billy, and he’ll pull you through. You’ve
-laughed at me before for messin’ deals, said I’d no sort of headpiece
-to work a traverse by myself, didn’t you? Well, wait and you’ll see,
-and if it’s not ‘God bless you, Billy, and give us a share of the
-luck’ when we get to Rarotambu, my name’s not Harman.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Davis, “and maybe not. I’m not likely to forget that
-ambergris you fooled me out of with your plans, nor the dozen times
-you’ve let me down one way or another, but I tell you this, Billy
-Harman, it’s six cuts with a rope’s end over your sternpost I’ll hand
-you if you yank me out of this place on any wild goose chase.”
-
-“I’ll take ’em,” chuckled Harman. “Joyful, but there ain’t no geese in
-this proposition, nothin’ but good German money, and when you’re down
-on your knees thankin’ me, you’ll remember your words.”
-
-“Oh, get on,” said Davis, and taking the newspaper again, he began to
-read, Harman making over for the Continental and a gin and bitters.
-
-The _Manahangi_ was a schooner of two hundred tons, built in 1874 for
-the sandal wood trade and looking her age. Wayzegoose fitted his ship.
-His scarecrow figure appeared at the port rail as the boat containing
-Billy and Bud came alongside and he dropped the ladder himself for
-them.
-
-They had scarcely touched the deck when the Kanakas clapped on to the
-winch, the anchor chain was hove short, the sails set and then, as the
-anchor came home, the _Manahangi_, in the gorgeous light of late
-afternoon, leant over to the breeze, the blue water widened to the
-shore and the old schooner, ageworn but tight as a cobnut, lifted to
-the swell of the Pacific.
-
-Harman at the after rail gazed on the island scenery as it fell
-astern, heaved a sigh of relief and turned to Davis.
-
-“Well, there ain’t no cables can catch us now,” said he. “We’re out
-and clear with money left in our pockets and twenty thousand dollars
-to pick up right in front of us like corn before chickens.”
-
-Wayzegoose, having got his ship out, went down below for a drink,
-leaving the deck to the Kanaka bo’sun and the fellow at the wheel, and
-finding themselves practically alone, Harman lifted up his voice and
-chortled.
-
-“I’ll tell you now,” he said, “I’ll tell you, now we’re out—that chap
-was robbed by the Kanakas. You remember sayin’ that he was shoutin’ he
-was robbed as they was frog-marchin’ him to the ship—he spoke the
-truth.”
-
-“Did you rob him, then?” asked Davis suspiciously.
-
-“Now I’ll tell you. Him and me was sittin’ drinkin’ at that bar most
-of the afternoon when out he pulls pearls from that bag of his, pearls
-maybe worth thirty thousand dollars.”
-
-“Where the blazes did he get them from?” asked Davis.
-
-“Out of that bag, I’m tellin’ you, and right in front of the Kanaka
-bar-tender. ‘Put them things away,’ I says, ‘and don’t be showin’ them
-in bars,’ but not he, he was too full of Bourbon and buck to listen
-and then when I left him after, in the native town, they must have
-robbed him. _For_,” said Mr. Harman, “between you and me and the
-mizzen mast, them pearls are in my pocket now.
-
-“No, sir, I didn’t pinch them, but that piece Maiala did, as sure as
-Moses wasn’t Aaron, for this morning I met her carryin’ stuff for old
-Nadub to make his drinks with and there round her neck was the pearls.
-Stole.
-
-“I follows her home and with sign langwidge and showin’ the dollars, I
-made them hand over them pearls, forty dollars I paid for twenty
-thousand dollars worth of stuff and what do you think of that?”
-
-Billy put his hand in his pocket and produced a handkerchief carefully
-knotted, and from the handkerchief, a gorgeous pearl necklace.
-
-Davis looked at it, took it in his hands and looked at it again.
-
-“Why you double damned idiot,” cried Davis, “you mean to say you’ve
-yanked me off in this swill tub because you’ve give forty dollars for
-a dud necklace, and you’re afraid of the police?—Smart—why that
-chap’s pearls weren’t worth forty dollars the whole bag full. Ten
-dollars a hundred-weight’s what the factories charge—I told you he
-was a dud and his stuff junk—and look at you, look at you!”
-
-“You’ll be takin’ off your shirt next,” said Harman, “you’re talkin’
-through the hole in your hat. Them pearls is genuine and if they
-ain’t, I’ll eat them.”
-
-But Davis, turning over the things, had come upon something that
-Harman had overlooked, a teeny-weeny docket near the hasp, on which
-could be made out some figures—
-
- $4.50
-
-“Four dollars fifty,” said Davis, and Harman looked.
-
-There was no mistaking the figures on the ticket.
-
-“And what was it you gave for them to that girl, thinking they’d been
-stolen?” asked Davis.
-
-“Damn petticuts!” cried the other, taking in everything all at once.
-
-“Six cuts of a rope’s end it was to be,” said Davis, “but a boat
-stretcher will do.” He put the trash in his pocket and seized a boat
-stretcher that was lying on the deck, and Wayzegoose coming on deck
-and wiping his mouth, saw Harman bent double and meekly receiving six
-strokes of the birch from Davis without a murmur.
-
-And thinking that what he saw was an optical illusion due to gin, he
-held off from the bottle for the rest of that cruise.
-
-So Billy did some good in his life for once in a way, even though he
-managed to do it by accident.
-
-
-
-
-VII—BEATEN ON THE POST
-
-
- I
-
-Captain Brent came down to the Karolin as she was lying by Circular
-Wharf, on some business connected with some gadget or another he was
-trying to sell on commission. Some patent dodge in connection with a
-main sheet buffer, I think it was—anyhow, Dolbrush, the owner and
-master of the _Karolin_, though an old friend, refused to speculate;
-the thing to his mind “wasn’t no use to him,” and he said so without
-offence to the salesman.
-
-Brent really carried on this sort of business more for amusement than
-profit; he had retired from the sea with enough to live on, and it
-gave him something to do of a morning, pottering round the wharves,
-boarding ships and boring master mariners, mostly known to him, with
-plans and specifications of all sorts of labour and life saving
-devices—he worked for Harvey and Matheson—which they might use or
-recommend to owners.
-
-He had been, in his time, the finest schooner captain that ever sailed
-out of Sydney Harbour, a vast man, weather-beaten and
-indestructible-looking as the Solander Rock, slow of speech but full
-of knowledge, and, once started on a story, unstoppable unless by an
-earthquake. He had been partner with Slane, Buck Slane of the
-Paramatta business; he was Slane’s Boswell, and start him on any
-subject he was pretty sure to fetch up on Slane. He and Slane had made
-three or four fortunes between them and lost them.
-
-Putting the main sheet buffer in his pocket, so to speak, he accepted
-a cigar, and the conversation moved to other matters till it struck
-Chinks—Chinks and their ways, clean and unclean, and their
-extraordinary methods of money-making; sham pearls, faked birds——
-
-“There’s nothing the Almighty’s ever made that a Chink won’t make
-money out of,” said Dolbrush. “Give ’m a worked-out mine or an old
-tomato tin and he’ll do _something_ with it—and as for gratitude——”
-
-“I’ll tell you something about that,” cut in Brent. “I’ve been to
-school with them, there’s nothing about them you can tell me right
-from Chow coffins to imitation chutney. Why me and Slane hit up
-against them in our first traverse and that was forty years ago.
-Sixty-one I was yesterday and I was twenty-one when I fell in with
-Buck. It don’t seem more than yesterday. We’d put in to ’Frisco Bay
-and were lying at Long Wharf, foot of Third and Fourth Streets. Buck
-was Irish, as you’ll remember, a fine strapping chap in those days,
-with blue eyes and black hair, and we’d come from Liverpool round the
-Horn and we didn’t want to see the ocean again for a fortnight, I tell
-you. Buck had skipped from Tralee or somewhere or another, and he had
-forty pounds in his pocket, maybe he’d got it from robbing a bank or
-something, I never asked, but there it was, and no sooner was the old
-hooker tied up than he proposed we’d skip, him and me, and try our
-luck ashore. I hadn’t a magg, but he said he had enough for both, that
-was Buck all over, and we skipped, never bothering about our dunnage.
-
-“Buck had an uncle in ’Frisco, well to do and a big man in Ward
-politics. O’Brien was his name if I remember right, and he was
-reckoned to be worth over a hundred thousand pounds, so Buck said, but
-he fixed to let him lie, not being a cadger; and we got a room with a
-widow woman who kept lodgers in Tallis Street and set out to beat up
-the town and see the sights. There were sights to be seen in ’Frisco,
-those days, more especial round the dock sides, and the place was all
-traps, the crimps were getting from fifty to seventy dollars a head
-for able seamen, and most of the bars and such places were hand in
-fist with them, but we steered clear of all that, not being given to
-drink, and got home early and sober with our money safe and our heads
-straight.
-
-“We’d come to the conclusion that ’Frisco was a bit too crowded for
-us, and we fixed to try for the Islands. Those days there was money
-out there. Why, in those days the guano deposits hadn’t been spotted
-on Sophia Island, and there it was lying, a fortune shouting to be
-took; copra was beginning to bud, and blackbirding was having the
-time of its life; China was eating all the sharks’ fins and _bêche de
-mer_ she could stuff, and then you had the shell lagoons, shell and
-pearl. ’Frisco was crazy over them, and we heard yarns of chaps turned
-millionaires in a night by striking an atoll and ripping the floor
-out. They were true yarns. In those days the Admiralty charts and the
-Pacific Directory were years behind the times, and there were islands
-being struck time and again that had never been heard of before.
-
-“We tried round the wharves for a likely ship, but from Long Wharf to
-Meiggs’ there was nothing but grain carriers cleaning their bilges and
-Oregon timber schooners unloading pine.
-
-“One day, Buck, who’d been out up town by himself, came home halooing.
-‘Mate,’ says he, ‘our fortunes are made.’ Then he gave his yarn. He’d
-been poking round by China Town when, coming along a street—Alta
-Street it was—he saw a bunch of Chinks at a corner, two young chaps
-and an old father Abraham of a Chink with horn spectacles on him. They
-were standing on the loaf when Buck sighted them, talking, and then
-they began quarrelling, and the two young chaps set on father Abraham
-and began pulling him about and kicking him, till Buck sent them
-flying and rescued the old chap, who was near done in. Then he helped
-him home. Fong Yen was his name, and he had a little hole of a bird
-shop just inside China Town by a Chow restaurant. He was real bad,
-knocked about by those brutes, and full of gratitude; he offered Buck
-his pick of the birds, but Buck was no bird fancier. Then says Fong:
-‘I’ll give you something better than birds,’ and he goes to a drawer
-in a lacquer box and hunts about and finds a bit of paper. ‘It was
-given me by my son,’ says he, ‘to keep. He was killed in the riots
-down at the docks last month; you have been as good as a son to me,
-take it, it’s a fortune.’ Then he explained. It was the latitude and
-longitude of a virgin shell island written down by his son who’d been
-a sailor on one of the Chinese _bêche de mer_ boats. The boat was
-wrecked and all hands lost with the exception of this chap, who had
-kept the secret and had been saving up money to go and skin the island
-when he was killed. Poor old Fong couldn’t work the thing himself; he
-had no relations, and to give or sell that paper to any of the China
-Town lot would simply be getting his throat cut, maybe, to keep his
-head shut on the matter and get the purchase money back. He was quite
-straight with Buck on this, and told him he was giving him something
-that was no use to himself now his son was dead, but if Buck chose to
-give him a few dollars to buy opium with, he wouldn’t be above taking
-it. Buck takes out his roll and peels off two ten-dollar bills and
-promises him a pull out of the profits.
-
-“Buck showed me the paper. There was nothing on it but the latitude
-and longitude of the place and a spot that looked to me like a blood
-mark. We got hold of a chart from a ship master we’d chummed in with
-and found the position north-east of Clermont Tonnerre in the Low
-Archipelago. I said to Buck, ‘It’s all very well—but how are we going
-to get there? It’s about as much use to us as to the Chink. S’pose we
-pull some guy in to put up the dollars for a ship, do you think he
-won’t want the profits? If I know anything of ’Frisco, he’ll want our
-skins as well. That old Chink was on the right side of the fence, he
-knew ’Frisco and knew he hadn’t a dog’s chance of getting a cent out
-of it.’ Buck hears me out, then he says, ‘Do you suppose,’ he says,
-‘that when I paid out good money for this thing I had no idea how to
-work it, do you suppose I have no man to back me?’
-
-“‘Who’s your man?’ says I.
-
-“‘My uncle,’ says he.
-
-“I’d clean forgot the rich uncle. Then I began to see that Buck wasn’t
-such a fool as I thought him. I knew the way the Irish stick together,
-and old Pat O’Brien being one of the biggest bugs in the town I began
-to see the light, as the parsons say, and Buck asking me to go with
-him that night and lay for the old chap, I agreed.
-
-
- II
-
-“Pat lived on Nobs Hill, and we fixed nine o’clock as the time to call
-on him, reckoning he’d be in then and maybe in a good humour after his
-dinner. We easy found the place, for everyone knew Pat, but the size
-of it put us off, till Buck took courage at last and pushed the bell.
-
-“A darkie in a white shirt front opened and showed us across a big
-hall into a room all hung with pictures, and there we sat shuffling
-our feet till the door opened again and in come Pat, a little old,
-bald-headed chap in slippers with the butt of a cigar stuck up in the
-corner of his mouth, more like Mr. Jiggs in the comic papers than
-anyone else I’ve seen.
-
-“He never said a word whilst Buck gave his credentials. Then:
-
-“‘You’re Mary’s son,’ said he. ‘You’ve got her eyes. How long have you
-been in this town?’
-
-“‘A fortnight,’ says the other.
-
-“‘Why didn’t you call before?’ asks Pat.
-
-“‘Didn’t like to,’ said Buck. ‘I was hard up and I didn’t want to
-cadge on you.’
-
-“‘Why did you call to-night?’ he asks.
-
-“Buck tells him and shows the paper. Pat ordered in cigars—we weren’t
-having drinks—then he put on a pair of old spectacles and looks at
-the paper back and front.
-
-“Buck puts him wise on the business, and when the old man had tumbled
-to it, he asked Buck right out whether he was crazy to think that a
-Chink would give away an oyster shell let alone a shell lagoon, but
-when he heard the facts of the matter, and how Buck had risked being
-knifed to save Fong being kicked to death, he came round a bit in his
-opinions.
-
-“‘Maybe I’m wrong,’ he says, ‘and here’s a spot of blood on the paper.
-You haven’t noticed that, have you? Looks as if the thing had been
-through the wars. Well, leave it with me for the night to sleep on and
-call again in the morning, and now let’s talk about the old country.’
-
-“Then the old man sticks the paper in a drawer and begins to put Buck
-through his paces. Pat hadn’t been in Tralee for forty years, but
-there wasn’t a street he’d forgotten or a name, and he took Buck
-through that town by the scruff of his neck, cross-questioning him
-about the shops and the people and the places, and as he sat there
-with his old monkey face screwed up and his eyes like steel gimlets
-boring holes in us, I began to understand how he’d come to be a
-millionaire; then he got on family matters, and by the end of the talk
-he’d come to understand that Buck was his nephew all right and we lit,
-promising to call on him in the morning.
-
-“‘Our fortunes are made,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘Wait a bit,’ says I.
-
-“Next morning we were on the doorstep to the tick and the darkie
-showed us in.
-
-“‘Well, boys,’ says Pat, coming into the room dressed to go out, with
-a plug hat stuck on the back of his head and the butt of another cigar
-in the corner of his mouth. ‘Well, boys,’ says he, ‘you’re up to time
-and I’m waiting to meet you on this proposition; it’s not that I want
-to be into it,’ he says, ‘but for the sake of me sister Mary—God rest
-her soul—I’m going to give you a chance in life. I’m a bit in the
-shipping way myself, and I’ve got a schooner lying off Tiburon waiting
-for cargo, and I’ll give you the use of her to run down to the
-Islands, and,’ says he, ‘if you get the better of that Chink I’ll give
-you the schooner for keeps.’
-
-“‘What do you mean by getting the better of him?’ asks Buck.
-
-“‘Well,’ says Pat, ‘it’s in my mind, thinking things over, that he’s
-maybe got the better of you. Maybe I’m wrong—but there it is, and how
-do you like the proposition?’
-
-“We liked it all right, but he hadn’t finished and goes on:
-
-“‘Whilst you’re on the job,’ he says, ‘you can take a cargo for me
-down to Malakā to Sanderson, a chap I deal with, and bring back a
-cargo of copra; you won’t want any cargo space for pearls, and Malakā
-is on your way there or back.’
-
-“We didn’t mind that and said so.
-
-“I’d told Pat I was pretty well up in navigation, and we all starts
-out together to look at the schooner, taking the ferry boat over to
-Tiburon and Pat giving us his ideas as we went.
-
-“Us two would be the afterguard, with five or six Kanakas for crew.
-
-“The _Greyhound_ was the name of the schooner, and she was lying a bit
-out from the wharf, and Pat has the hellnation of a fight with a
-waterman as to the fare for rowing us off and back, beats him down
-from two dollars to one dollar fifty, and asked Buck to pay as he
-hadn’t any change.
-
-“I was thinking it was easy to see how Pat had become a millionaire
-till we stepped on the deck of the Greyhound, and then I had no time
-to think of anything but the dirt. It wasn’t dirt you could sweep off
-her, it was ground in, if you get me; all the deck-bears and
-holystones from here to Hoboken wouldn’t have made those decks look
-respectable; it was like a woman with a bad complexion, even skinning
-would be no use.
-
-“‘She’s been in the oil business,’ says Pat.
-
-“‘I can smell it,’ says I, and we goes below after prodding the sticks
-and taking notice of the condition of the standing rigging. Down below
-it was dirtier, and the smell rose up like a fist and punched us in
-the nose. I don’t know if you’ve ever been below decks in one of them
-old Island schooners fitted with Honolulu cockroaches, and the
-effulgences of generations of buck Kanakas and Chinks, to say nothing
-of mixed cargoes—sort of dark brown smell—but we weren’t out to
-grumble, and Pat having showed us over, we all went ashore and put
-back for ’Frisco, Buck paying the fare.
-
-“We parted from Pat on the landing stage, and next morning the
-_Greyhound_ was brought over to Long Wharf for her cargo. It took a
-fortnight getting the stuff aboard and hiring the Kanakas. Pat gave us
-a diving dress and pump that could be rigged in any boat; he borrowed
-them, or got them somewhere cheap, and then he gave us his blessing
-and twenty dollars for ship’s money, and we signed on, me as master,
-Buck as mate—seeing I was the navigator at a dollar a month, nominal
-pay—and six Kanakas as hands.
-
-“Day before we started we were sitting in the cabin going over the
-list of stores when a long, thin chap by name of Gadgett came on
-board. He was a ship’s chandler and when he found no orders he opened
-out about Pat, not knowing he was Buck’s uncle, asking us what screws
-we were getting and didn’t we know the _Greyhound_ was condemned, or
-ought to be, but that she was certain to be insured for twice her
-value, and then he lit.
-
-“When he’d gone I said to Buck: ‘Look here,’ I said, ‘I’m not
-grumbling, but it seems to me your uncle doesn’t stand to lose over
-this game. He’s got a captain and first officer for nothing. He’s dead
-certain we’re on a mug’s game, and he’s used our cupidity after pearls
-so’s to make us work for him, and he not paying us a jitney.’
-
-“‘How do you make that out?’ he asks.
-
-“‘Well,’ I said, ‘look at him. I reckon, without disrespect to you,
-that if there was an incorporated society of mean men he’d be the
-President. Did he even pay you back those dollars he borrowed from
-you? Not he. Well, now, do you think if he had any idea we were going
-to pull this thing off he wouldn’t have asked for a share? Course he
-would. He didn’t ask, even on the off chance, for if he had we might
-have asked for our screws as master and mate. Another thing. It’s on
-the charter that we can call at Malakā on the way out or back; if he
-had any idea of us touching this pearl island it’s my opinion he’d
-have bound us to call there on the way out.’
-
-“‘Why?’ asks Buck.
-
-“‘Because,’ I says, ‘this cargo of stuff we’ve got aboard is a darned
-sight more perishable than the cargo of copra we’re to bring home; if
-we strike that island we’ll be there months and months diving and
-rotting oysters with this stuff lying aboard with the rats and the
-roaches and weevils working over it. Do you see? If he had the
-faintest idea we had a million to one chance he’d have bound us to
-call at Malakā on the out trip. No, he’s just took us for a pair of
-chump fools and is working us as such.’
-
-“‘Well, if he has I’ll be even with him,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘Another thing,’ I went on, ‘do you remember he said he’d give you
-the schooner if you got the better of that Chink? Those words jumped
-out of him that first morning, showing how little he thought of the
-business. He never repeated them; afraid of putting us off. Buck, I’m
-not saying anything against your relations, but this old chap gives me
-the shivers, him with a million of money in the Bank of California and
-you with nothing, and him using you. It’s not me I’m thinking of, but
-you, Buck.’
-
-“‘Never mind me,’ says Buck.”
-
-
- III
-
-Dolbrush produced drinks and Brent, having refreshed himself and lit a
-new cigar, proceeded.
-
-“Well, I was telling you—next morning we howked out and by noon that
-day we were clear of the bar, taking the sea with the Farallones on
-the starboard beam and all plain sail set. The _Greyhound_ was no
-tortoise, and for all her dirt she was a dry ship, but that day when
-we came to tackle the first of the ship’s stores we’d have swapped her
-for a mud barge and penitentiary rations. Pat must have got the lot as
-a present, I should think, to take it away. I never did see such junk;
-it wasn’t what you might call bad, but it was faded, if you get me;
-not so much stinkin’ as without smell to it—or taste.
-
-“‘All shipowners are bad, and Pat’s a shipowner,’ I says, ‘but there’s
-no doubt he’s given you a chance in life for the sake of his sister
-Mary—God rest her soul—the chance of getting ptomaine poisoning if
-you don’t die first of jaw disease breaking your teeth over this damn
-bread.’
-
-“‘I’ll be even with him yet,’ says Buck.
-
-“We did some fishing, for we had tackle on board, and that helped us
-along over the line, and one morning twenty-seven days out from
-’Frisco we raised an outlier of the Marqueses. Coming along a week
-later we raised the spot where pearl island ought to have been—we’d
-labelled it Pearl Island before sighting it, and that was maybe
-unlucky—anyhow, there was no island to meet us at noon that day and
-no sign of one inside or outside the horizon.
-
-“‘That Chink sold you a pup,’ says I to Buck.
-
-“‘Maybe it’s your navigation is at fault,’ says he.
-
-“‘Maybe,’ says I, wishing to let him down gentle, but feeling pretty
-sure the navigator wasn’t born that could find that island.
-
-“We stood a bit more to the south with a Kanaka in the crosstrees
-under a reward of ten dollars if he spotted land that day, and towards
-evening the wind dropped to a dead calm and we lay drifting all that
-night, the wind coming again at sun up and breezing strong from the
-south west.
-
-“We put her before it, both of us pretty sick at thinking how Pat was
-right and how he’d landed us and used us for his purpose. We weren’t
-mean enough dogs to think of spoiling the cargo or piling the
-schooner; we just took our gruel, fixing to lay for him with our
-tongues when we got back, and as for the Chink, well. Buck said he’d
-skin that Chink if he had to bust up China Town single-handed to do
-it.
-
-“He was talking like that and it was getting along for eight bells,
-noon, when the Kanaka look-out signals land, and there it was right
-ahead, but nothing to be seen only a white thumb-mark in the sky from
-the mirror blaze of a lagoon.
-
-“Then the heads of cocoanut trees poked up all in a row, and I turns
-to Buck and we gripped hands.
-
-“‘It’s a hundred and more miles out,’ said I, ‘but I reckon it’s not
-the island that’s out but me and my navigation; that old Chink was no
-liar. It’s the Island. Must be, for there’s nothing on the chart for
-five hundred miles all round here.’
-
-“Well, we’ll see,” said Buck.
-
-“We held on steady, and then the reef began to show, and coming along
-presently we could hear the boom of it. We couldn’t see a break in it,
-and getting up close we shifted our helm a bit and came running along
-the north side, the gulls chasing and shouting at us, the reef foam
-dashing away only a hundred yards to starboard, and the wind that was
-filling our sails bending the cocoanut trees.
-
-“I felt like shouting. We could see the lagoon, flat as a
-looking-glass over beyond the reef that was racing by us; then we came
-on the break, and putting out a bit we came in close hauled with no
-tumble at the opening seeing it was slack water.
-
-“It was a fairish big lagoon, maybe four miles by six or so, and since
-the Almighty put the world together you’d have said we were the first
-men into it. It had that look. Not a sign of a native house; nothing
-but gulls. It was fifty-fathom water at the break—made deep by the
-scouring of the tides; then it shoaled up to twenty and ten, and we
-dropped the hook in seven-fathom water close on to the northern beach.
-Not a sign of an oyster. The floor just there was like a coloured
-carpet with coral, and the water was so clear that every coloured fish
-that passed had a black fish going along with it—which was its
-shadow.
-
-“We dropped the boat and pulled off, and we hadn’t got two cable
-lengths to the west of where the _Greyhound_ was lying when we struck
-the beds, acres of them.
-
-“I’ve seen the Sooloo fisheries and the Australian, but I reckon the
-Pearl Island oysters could have given them points as to size.
-Somewhere about six hundred pairs to the ton they ran, and that’s a
-big oyster.
-
-“‘Well,’ said Buck, ‘here we are and here we stick. We’ve anchored on
-top of a fortune and if it takes ten years we’ll hive it.’ That was
-all very well saying, but we’d got the question of grub to consider,
-but we soon found we needn’t worry about that; there was fish and
-turtle and _béche de mer_ and cocoanuts, bread-fruit on the south side
-and taro, to say nothing of oysters. Having fixed that matter, we set
-to work. Those Kanakas hadn’t signed on for diving after oysters, but
-stick a Kanaka in the water and it’s all he wants; besides, we gave
-them extra pay in the way of stick tobacco, axing open a lot of old
-Pat’s tobacco cases, sure of being able to pay him out of the pearl
-money; then we worked like grigs in vinegar, and at the end of the
-first week’s work we hadn’t found one pearl. The way we did was to put
-each day’s takings out on the beach in the sun; the sun opened them
-better than an oyster knife.
-
-“‘Well, this is bright,’ says Buck one day as we were going over the
-heap. ‘Luck’s clean against us,’ he says, and no sooner had he spoke
-the words, a whopper of a pearl ’s big as a pistol bullet jumped into
-his fist out of an oyster he was handling. It wasn’t a big oyster
-neither. My, that pearl was a beauty; it turned the scale at forty
-grains I reckon, and it wasn’t the last.
-
-“We were six to seven months on that job, and I never want to strike
-another pearl lagoon. Me and Slane had at last to do most of the
-diving, for the Kanakas got sick of it. We looked like Guy Fawkes.
-When we sailed into that lagoon we were spry young chaps clean-shaved
-and decently dressed; when it had done with us we were bearded men,
-men black with the sun and salt water and ragged as Billy be Dam. I
-tell you we were spectacles. Satan never fixed up such a factory as a
-pearl lagoon when you have to work it short-handed and on the secret.
-You can’t stop, not if you only get a pearl in a thousand oysters, you
-can’t stop. It’s always the one pearl more that does you. It’s like
-the gambling rooms. Till one day I says to Buck: ‘I’m done.’
-
-“‘I was only waiting for you to say it,’ said Buck. ‘I’ve been done
-this last week only I wouldn’t give in.’
-
-“We’d got together two hundred and thirty-two pearls and some
-seeds—the king of the lot was a roseleaf pink pearl; there were two
-golden pearls that were a perfect match pair, half a dozen blacks, a
-few yellow that weren’t no use, and the balance white. We’d been
-looking up prices before we started and got some tips from a man who
-was in the know, and we reckoned our haul was thirty or forty thousand
-dollars. You see it was virgin ground, and the things had time to grow
-to size without being disturbed.
-
-“I ought to have told you the diving dress was no use. Pat had got it
-from some old junk shop or another, and the pump was as bad, but the
-water being shallow it didn’t matter much, though if the thing had
-been in order we’d have got the job through a couple of months
-earlier.
-
-
- IV
-
-“We lit from that place never wanting to see an oyster again, and
-leaving tons of shell on the beach worth, maybe, five to six hundred
-dollars a ton. We didn’t want it. We laid our course for Malakā and
-raised it ten days later, a big brute of a copra island with Sanderson
-in pyjamas on the beach and a schooner loading up in the lagoon. He
-didn’t want Pat’s cargo, said it was four months overdue, and he had
-cleared the last of his copra and had enough trade to carry on with.
-We didn’t mind, seeing our contract was to call there out or back with
-no time limit specified, and we were mighty glad Pat had been done in
-the eye, seeing how he’d served us. There was nothing to do but cart
-the stuff back to ’Frisco, and dropping Malakā, we made a straight run
-of it, raising the Farallones in twenty-eight days and laying the old
-hooker off Tiburon without a spar lost or a scratch on her.
-
-“I said to Buck: ‘What are you going to give that Chink? You promised
-him a suck of the orange, didn’t you?’
-
-“‘I’m going to give him a thousand dollars,’ said Buck, ‘when I’ve
-cashed the pearls and settled with Pat. I’m a man of my word, and
-there’s no luck in breaking a promise.’
-
-“I was with him there.
-
-“We landed with the stuff in a handkerchief and made straight for
-Patrick O’Brien’s business office. We’d cleaned ourselves a bit, but
-we still looked pretty much scarecrows, but when we’d shown that
-handkerchief of pearls to the old man he didn’t bother about our
-looks.
-
-“I told him how, through my bad navigation, we’d missed the island at
-first, and then struck it by chance.
-
-“‘Well,’ says Pat, ‘you’re the only men in ’Frisco that’s ever got the
-better of a Chink so far as to get something out of him for nothing,
-for twenty dollars is nothing against that hatful of pearls. The
-schooner is yours, Buck, and from what I hear of the cargo you can
-dump it in the harbour or sell it for junk.’
-
-“Then when we’d cleaned ourselves and got some decent clothes, he took
-us off to the Palatial and gave us a big dinner. Now that chap was the
-meanest guy in small things you could find in California, yet he’d
-lost a cargo and a schooner and instead of cutting up rough he seemed
-to enjoy it. Buck being his nephew, I suppose he was proud of being
-done by him and seeing him successful.
-
-“The next day, having cashed in half the pearls. Buck says to me:
-‘Come on,’ he says, ‘and we’ll settle up with father Abraham.’
-
-“Off we starts and gets to the place, and there was the bird shop sure
-enough beside a Chow restaurant, but there was no father Abraham.
-
-“A young Chink was in charge, and when Buck asks for Fong Yen he said
-there was no such person. Then he seemed to remember, and said that
-Fong had sold the shop and gone back to China.
-
-“‘Why, that’s him inside there,’ said Buck, and makes a dive into the
-shop, but there was no one there. Fong must have done a bunk through a
-back door or something—anyhow he was gone.
-
-“Then all of a sudden there comes up a big master mariner looking man
-along the street, drops anchor before the bird shop and calls out
-asking for Ming Lu. The young Chink came out and asks what he wants,
-saying there was no such person as Ming Lu.
-
-“‘Say, brother,’ says Buck, jumping at the truth, ‘was Ming Lu, by any
-chance, an old gendarme in spectacles?’
-
-“‘He was,’ says the crab, and then he spun his story. He’d been
-walking along Alta Street three months ago when he saw three Chinks at
-a corner, an old boob in spectacles and two young ones. As he came up
-with them they started quarrelling, pulling the old chap about and
-kicking him cruel, and Blake, that was the guy’s name, started in like
-a whole-souled American to save the antiquity from ruin.
-
-“He helped Ming back to his bird shop, and the old chap near drowned
-him in gratitude, and gave him a chart of a pearl island his son, that
-had been murdered in a tong dust-up the month before, had discovered
-when a sailor in one of the Chinese _bêche de mer_ boats, that had
-been wrecked, with all hands lost but his precious son.
-
-“Blake gave him ten dollars to buy opium with, and being a schooner
-owner, lost three months hunting for that island which wasn’t there.
-
-“It was the same island that had been wished on us—Buck pulled out
-his chart and they compared—exactly the same, spot of blood and all.
-The things must have been lithographed by the dozen and Lord knows how
-many mugs had fallen to the gratitude trap; which no one but a Chink
-could ever have invented, if you think over the inwards and outwards
-of it.
-
-“Then Buck told out loud so that Fong, if he was listening, could
-hear, how we had fallen on a pearl island, by chance, and how,
-thinking it was bad navigation that had made us out in our reckonings,
-he was bringing a thousand dollars to Fong as a present out of the
-takings according to promise. Then he pulls out his roll and gives the
-thousand dollars to Blake as a make up. The young Chink ran in at the
-sight of this, and, as we walked off arm in arm for drinks, I heard
-sounds from the upper room of that bird shop as if Fong was holdin’ on
-to something and trying not to be sick.
-
-“Then as we were having drinks the question came up in Buck’s head as
-to whether he was entitled to that schooner seeing that Fong had
-managed to get the better of him at the go off. He put it to Blake,
-and Blake, who was a great chap for backing horses when ashore, says:
-‘Go off be damned,’ he says. ‘It’s the finish that matters. You did
-him on the post,’ he says—and we concluded to leave it at that.”
-
-
-
-
-VIII—A CASE IN POINT
-
-
- I
-
-There is good fishing to be had round Sydney way, yellow-tail and
-schnapper and green backed sea bream; jew-fish and mullet and
-trevalli. You can fish at low tide in the pools or you can fish from a
-boat, beaching her for the night in one of the coves and camping out
-under the stars, with the scent of the gums mingling with the scent of
-the sea, and the song of the waves for lullaby.
-
-Over Dead Man’s Cove and its beach of hard sand the cliff stands bluff
-and humped like a crouching lion, and there one night the year before
-last old Captain Brent and I were kicking our heels and smoking after
-supper and passing in review the day’s work and the tribes of the sea.
-
-Brent was a keen fisherman, and there were few waters he did not know,
-and few fish he hadn’t taken one time or another. He had always
-travelled with his eyes open, and his natural history was first hand
-and his views fresh as originality itself. He said crabs could think,
-instancing certain hermit crabs that always chose protective-coloured
-shells, and that not only did sword-fish fight duels—I knew that, for
-I had seen it myself—but that there were tribal wars carried on in
-the sea, international struggles so to speak, between the nations of
-the fishes.
-
-“If fish didn’t kill fish,” said the Captain, “the sea would be solid
-with mackerel inside two years, to say nothing of herring. Haven’t you
-ever thought of what keeps them down? It’s the Almighty, of course,
-but how does He work it? Lots of folk think He works it by making the
-fish eat the fish just because they are hungry. That’s one of His
-ways, but another is just war for war’s sake, or for the sake of the
-grouch one tribe keeps up against another. You see, it’s a bit
-unfortunate, seeing that if the herring once got above a certain
-number all the eating in the world wouldn’t stop them from turning the
-sea solid with herring, so the Almighty has fixed His killing machine
-with two blades, one that kills for the sake of food and the other for
-the sake of killing.
-
-“It’s the same with the tribes of men, I reckon, only with them
-there’s only one blade left, since they don’t kill each other nowadays
-for the sake of food.
-
-“There’s something in one tribe that makes for war against another
-tribe. You may boil them but you won’t get it out of them. I’ve seen
-it. You’d have seen it too if you’d traded among the Islands in the
-old days, selling Winchesters to the natives to prosecute their wars
-with, and I’ll give you a case in point.
-
-“I’ve told you how me and Slane pulled off that pearling job, but I
-never told you what we did with the money. Most chaps would have bust
-it, we just stuck it in the bank and, after a run to the Yosemite,
-back we come to ’Frisco on the look out for more larks. We weren’t set
-on money for the sake of money so much as for the fun of getting it,
-for I tell you as a mortal truth there’s no hunting to beat the
-hunting of a dollar, more especial when you’ve got a herd of twenty or
-thirty thousand of them with their tails up and you after them. We’d
-had enough of pearling, we had no taste for blackbirding and we were
-turning copra over in our minds when, sitting having our luncheon one
-day in Martin’s restaurant, a slab-sided Yank, six foot and over and
-thin as a Jackstaff, comes along up to us.
-
-“‘You’re Mr. Slane?’ says he.
-
-“‘That’s me,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘I’ve heard tell of you,’ says the chap, ‘and I’ve got a
-double-barrelled proposition to put before you. May I take a seat at
-your table? Scudder’s my name, and Martin will tell you I’m a straight
-man.’
-
-“Down he sits. We’d finished feeding and so had he; the place was
-pretty empty and no one by to hear, and he begins.
-
-“‘First barrel of the prop,’ he says, ‘is a dodge for killing fish.
-You know how they fish out in the Islands? Well, they do a good deal
-of spearin’ and hookin’ and sometimes they poison the fish pools with
-soap, but the king way is dynamite.’ He pulls a stick of something out
-of his pocket and goes on. ‘Here’s a stick of dynamite. You can fire
-it by electricity or you can shove a match on one end and light it and
-throw the durned thing into the water. It goes bang and a minute after
-every fish in that vicinity come to the surface stunned dead. That’s
-so, but the bother is the stuff goes off sometimes premature and the
-Kanakas are always losing hands and legs and things, which don’t make
-for its popularity. Being out there last year at Taleka Island I set
-my invention trap working to hit a device. I’ve always took notice
-that a man who fills a want fills his pockets, and a patent safety
-explosive fish killer is a want with a capital “W” right from ’Frisco
-to Guam. Well, here it is,’ he says, and out of his other pocket he
-takes the great-grandfather of a Mills bomb, same as the Allies have
-been pasting the Germans with. It wasn’t bigger than a tangerine
-orange and rough made, but it had all the essentials. You didn’t pull
-a pin out, it was just two caps of metal screwed together. The thing
-was dead as mutton when it was lightly screwed, but screwed tight it
-exposed its horns and was live as Satan. Just one turn of the wrist
-tightened it up and then if you flung it against anything, even water,
-it would go bang. It was a working model, and he showed us the whole
-thing and the cost of manufacture. His factory was a back bedroom in
-Polk Street, but he reckoned with a shed and a lathe and a couple of
-Chink artisans to help he could turn out fifty Scudder Fish
-Crackers—that’s the name he gave them—a day. He said the Bassingtons
-had a share in the patent and would give him the material for nothing
-so as to have the thing tried out. He wanted five hundred dollars to
-start his factory, then he wanted us to give him an order for two
-thousand crackers at fifty cents each.
-
-“‘You don’t want no more cargo than that,’ said he, ‘once the Kanakas
-get the hang of this thing they’ll trade you their back teeth for
-them; you see it’s new. It’s like millinery. If I could invent a new
-sort of hat and start a store in Market Street every woman from here
-to St. Jo would be on it in a cluster. You could scrape them off with
-a spoon. Kanakas are just the same as women, for two thousand of them
-crackers you can fill up to your hatches in copra.
-
-“‘Well, now,’ he goes on, ‘on top of that I’ll make you a present of
-three thousand dollars, if you’ll take the proposition up. Sru, the
-chief chap at Taleka, wants Winchester rifles and ammunition and he’s
-got the money in gold coin to pay for them. He wants six thousand
-dollars’ worth and I can get the lot from Bassingtons for three
-thousand dollars, boxed and laded on board your ship. The crackers
-won’t take no room for stowage and the guns and cartridges won’t eat
-half your cargo space, so you can take some cheap trade goods that’ll
-give you a deck cargo of turtle shell and _bêche de mer_. Get me? You
-make money on the crackers, you make money on the guns and you make a
-bit out of the shell. It’s a golden goose layin’ eggs at both ends and
-the middle, and I’ll give you a writing promising to pay the five
-hundred dollars for the factory in one year with twenty per cent, for
-the loan.’
-
-“I could see Slane was sniffing at it so I didn’t interfere, and the
-upshot was we made an appointment with Scudder to meet us next day and
-take a boat out in the harbour to test a couple of his crackers. We
-did, and he was no liar, the things went off like guns and dead fish
-were still coming up when a police boat nailed us and rushed us ashore
-and we had to pay ten dollars fine for illegal behaviour. That’s what
-the Yanks called it—anyhow the dead fish settled the business and
-Slane took up the proposition and put his hand in his pocket and
-fetched out the money to start the factory and gave Scudder his order
-for two thousand crackers.
-
-“Slane hadn’t disposed of the _Greyhound_. We ran her into dock and
-had the barnacles scraped off her, gave her some new spars and a new
-mainsail and finished up with a lick of paint. It took six weeks and
-by that time Scudder had finished his job and had the crackers ready
-boxed and all and the Bassington company were waiting to deliver the
-Winchesters and ammunition. We took the old hooker over to Long Wharf
-for the stowing and the stuff came down in boxes marked eggs and
-crockery ware.
-
-“They were pretty sharp after gun-runners in those days, but Scudder
-fixed everything somehow so that none of the cases were opened. We got
-the cracker boxes on first and then stowed the guns and cartridges
-over that, and on top of the guns some trade goods, stick tobacco and
-rolls of print and such, six Chinks we took for a crew and a Kanaka by
-name of Taute who could speak the patter of most of the Islands, and
-off we started.
-
-
- II
-
-“Taleka is an outlier of the New Hebrides, a long run from ’Frisco,
-but we never bothered about time in those days. We never bothered
-about anything much. We hadn’t been out a week when I said one night
-to Slane, ‘Buck,’ said I, ‘s’pose one of those crackers took it into
-its head to go off, being screwed too tight?’ ‘If it did,’ said Buck,
-‘the whole two thousand would go bang and the cartridges would follow
-soot; if one of them crackers fructified before its time next minute
-you’d be sitting on a cloud playing a harp, or helping stoke Gehenna,
-don’t make any mistake about that.’ We left it so. We never bothered
-about anything those days as long as the grub was up to time and not
-spoiled in the cooking.
-
-“We touched at Honolulu and had a look round and then we let out,
-passing Howland and the Ellices, raising Taleka forty-five days out
-from ’Frisco.
-
-“It’s a big brute of a high island and away to s’uth’ard of it you can
-see Mauriri, another big island forty-five or fifty miles away.
-
-“There’s no reef round Taleka, but there are reefs enough to north and
-west and a big line of rock to s’uth’ard that doesn’t show in calm
-weather, only now and again when the swell gets too steep and then
-you’ll see an acre of foam show up all at once. Rotten coast, all but
-the east side, where a bay runs in between the cliffs and you get a
-beach of hard sand.
-
-“We dropped anchor in twenty-five fathoms close to the beach. There
-were canoes on the beach, but not a sign of a native; the cliffs ran
-up to the sky either side, with the trees growing smaller and smaller,
-and out from near the top of the cliff to starboard a waterfall came
-dancing down like the tail of a white horse and that was all; there
-was no wind scarcely ever there and the water between the cliffs was
-like a black lake. I tell you that place was enough to give you the
-jim-jams, more especial when you knew that you were being watched all
-the time by hundreds of black devils ready to do you in.
-
-“We fired a gun and the echoes blazed out like a big battle going on
-and then fizzled off among the hills where you’d think chaps were
-pot-shotting each other. Then the silence went on just as if it hadn’t
-been broken, and Slane, who’d got a pretty short temper when he was
-crossed, spat into the harbour and swore at Sru.
-
-“Then he ordered up a case of guns and a box of ammunition, and he and
-me and Taute rowed ashore with them, beaching the boat and dumping the
-guns and ammunition on the sand.
-
-“We took the guns out of the case and laid them out side by side same
-as if they’d been in a shop window, then we opened the ammunition box
-and exposed the cartridges.
-
-“It was a sight no murder-loving Kanaka could stand and presently out
-from a valley a bit up beyond the anchorage comes a chap with the
-biggest belly I’ve ever seen on one man. He had slits in his ears and
-a tobacco pipe stuck through one of the slits, nothing on him but a
-gee string and eyes that looked like gimlet holes into hell. I never
-did see such a chap before or since. It was Sru himself, and he was
-followed by half a hundred of his tribe, every man armed with an old
-Snider or a spear, or sometimes both.
-
-“I saw Taute shivering as he looked at Sru, then he bucked up and took
-heart, seeing that Sru wasn’t armed and was coming for guns, not
-fighting.
-
-“Then the palaver began, the Kanakas squatting before the gun cases
-and Slane showing them the Winchesters whilst Taute did the talking.
-Scudder had been there all right the year before and had measured up
-Sru and his wants and his paying capacity to a T. He had the gold,
-brass-yellow Australian sovereigns and British sovereigns got from God
-knows where, but sovereigns right enough with Victoria’s head on them,
-for he showed us a fistful, and it was only a question of whether Sru
-would pay six thousand dollars for our cargo. He wanted to make it
-four, then he gave in, and we put back in the boat to have the stuff
-broken out of the hold.
-
-“Knowing the sort of chap Sru was we ought to have made him bring the
-money on board before a single case was landed, but we were young to
-the trade and too straight to think another chap crooked, so we
-didn’t. We let the canoes come alongside and there we hung watching
-naked Kanakas all shiny with sweat handing overboard the boxes, six
-guns to a box, to say nothing of the cartridge cases.
-
-“We put off with the last case and then we sat waiting on the beach
-for our money.
-
-“The Kanakas with the last of the cases turned up into the valley, and
-when they were gone you couldn’t hear a sound in that place but the
-noise of the waterfall up among the trees and now and then the sea
-moving on the beach.
-
-“The water came into that bay as I’ve never seen it come anywhere
-else. It would be a flat calm, and then, for no reason at all, it
-would heave up and sigh on the sand and fall quiet again like the
-bosom of a pious woman in a church.
-
-“There we sat waiting for our money and watching the _Greyhound_ as
-she swung to her moorings with a Chink fishing over the rail.
-
-“‘What do you think of Sru,’ says Buck at last.
-
-“‘Well, I don’t think he’s a beauty,’ I says, and then talk fizzled
-out and there we sat waiting for our money and chucking stones in the
-water.
-
-“I’ve told you there were canoes on the beach when we came in, but
-after the guns had been brought ashore the canoes had been taken round
-the bend of the bay, and as we sat there waiting for our money there
-was no one on that flat beach but our two selves and the Chink who’d
-helped us to row ashore, the boat was beached close to us and only
-waiting to be shoved off.
-
-“I says to Buck, ‘Say, Buck,’ I says, ‘suppose old Johnny Sru takes it
-into his woolly head to stick to the dollars as well as the guns, what
-are you going to do then?’
-
-“‘Don’t be supposing things,’ says Buck. ‘Sru’s no beauty, maybe, but
-he’s a gentleman. All savages are gentlemen if you treat them square.’
-
-“‘Where did you get that dope from?’ I asks him.
-
-“‘Oh,’ he says, ‘I don’t know,’ he says, ‘one place or another, but
-mainly from books.’
-
-“‘Well,’ I says, ‘I’m not much given to book reading, but I hope
-you’re right, anyway.’
-
-“No sooner were the words out of my mouth than the Chink by the boat
-gives a yell. I looked up and saw a big rock skipping down hill to
-meet us. It wasn’t as big as a church, but it seemed to me, looking
-up, there was many a Methodist chapel smaller; shows you how the eyes
-magnify things when a chap’s frightened, for it wasn’t more than ten
-ton all told judging by its size when it hit the target.
-
-“It missed us by six foot and hit the Chink. We couldn’t get him out
-from under it seeing he was flattened as flat as a sheet of paper and
-we hadn’t more than got the boat pushed off when down came another and
-hit the place where we’d been sitting waiting for our money and
-talking of all savages being gentlemen if you treated them square.
-
-“The chaps above have got the range, but they weren’t wasting
-ammunition, for as soon as we lit the firing ceased.
-
-“I never did see a chap in a bigger temper than Buck. He went white,
-and when an Irishman goes white, look out for what’s coming.
-
-“We got aboard and got the boat in, and then we took our seats on the
-hatch combing and had Taute along for a council of war.
-
-“Taute had chummed up with Sru’s men and a couple of the Marys whilst
-the unloading was going on, and he’d found out that Sru wanted the
-guns for an attack on Mauriri, the big island to the s’uth’ard.
-
-“Tiaki was the chief man on Mauriri, and he and Sru had been at it for
-years, the two islands hitting each other whenever they could, sinking
-fishing canoes and so on, but never a big battle. They were too evenly
-matched and knew it. But those Winchesters would make all the
-difference, so Taute said and we didn’t doubt him.
-
-“Buck, when he’d sucked this in, sits biting his nails. The sun had
-set by now and the stars were thick overhead and it came to the
-question of getting out against the breeze and tide or sticking till
-the morning when the land wind would give us a lift. Taute gave it as
-his opinion we’d be safe enough for the night. Sru didn’t want our
-ship, and the Kanakas had got it into their thick heads that when a
-ship was raided and the crew murdered in those parts, somehow or
-another, a British cruiser would turn up maybe months later and make
-trouble, which was the truth. So we let the anchor lie in the mud and
-we sat down to supper that night as calm as if we weren’t sitting on a
-hive of hornets that any minute might let out with their stings.
-
-“Middle of supper, Buck hits the table a welt with his fist.
-
-“‘I’ve got the blighter,’ says he.
-
-“‘Who?’ says I.
-
-“‘Sru,’ says he. ‘I’ve got him by the short hairs and if I don’t make
-him squeal, my name’s not Buck Slane.’
-
-“I didn’t see his meaning, and said so, telling him straight out that
-we’d better take our gruel and let Sru alone, that we’d been fools to
-let him have the stuff without the cash brought on to the beach and
-that we’d only get broken heads by trying to fight him.
-
-“‘I ain’t going to fight him,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘Who is, then?’ says I.
-
-“‘Tiaki,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘That chap over at Mauriri?’ I questions.
-
-“‘The same,’ says him.
-
-“‘But look here,’ I says, ‘how in the nation are you going to ginger
-him up to fight Sru seeing that he’s been holding off for years and
-seeing that Sru has got those Winchesters? What would he fight him
-with?’
-
-“‘Fish crackers,’ says Buck.
-
-“That hit me on the head like an apple. I’d got the durned things so
-connected with fish in my mind that I’d clean forgot to think that
-they could be used against humans, more especial by Kanakas used to
-throwing spears and things all their lives. Then Buck opens up his
-plan which was simple enough. It would take Tiaki’s men eight or ten
-hours paddling in their canoes to reach Taleka. If they started at
-four o’clock in the afternoon they’d make the island by two next
-morning, then, crawling up that valley they could fall on Sru’s
-village and bomb it to pieces before daybreak. Bloodthirsty, wasn’t
-it? But Buck was out for blood, the Irish was raised in him and he
-didn’t care a cent what happened or what he paid so long as Sru got
-his gruel.
-
-“‘But look here,’ I said, ‘it’s all very well talking, but Winchesters
-are Winchesters. Do you propose to start Tiaki on this stunt and not
-tell him what he’s up against?’
-
-“‘Oh, Lord, no,’ says Buck. ‘Hope I’m a gentleman—besides, that’s
-what will make him fight. When he knows Sru has got the arms to attack
-him, he’ll do the attacking first, unless he’s a fool.’
-
-“‘All right,’ says I, and we left it at that.
-
-
- III
-
-“We slept on deck that night for fear of an attack, me keeping first
-watch, but nothing came, and just at daybreak we put out, towing her
-till we caught the land wind and then cracking on all sail for
-Mauriri.
-
-“We were making ten knots and all that morning Mauriri bloomed up
-against us, getting bigger and bigger till the foam on the big
-half-moon reef that lies to northward showed up. There’s a break in
-the middle of that reef and good anchorage once you’re through, and we
-pushed right in, dropping our anchor in twenty-fathom water close to
-the beach.
-
-“Mauriri is a lot more open-faced than Taleka, and the chief village
-is close to the beach, not hid up a valley.
-
-“It was a white beach, but near black with Kanakas when we dropped the
-anchor, and there were canoe houses, but not a canoe put off. The
-crowd ashore didn’t look unfriendly, but they seemed standing on one
-foot, so to speak, not knowing how to take us or whether we meant
-fighting or trade.
-
-“Buck ordered the boat to be lowered and whilst the Chinks were
-getting it over I got him by the arm and took him to the after rail
-and tried to punch sense into his head.
-
-“‘Look here,’ I says, ‘what’s the good of revenge? it’s
-unchristianlike and it’s not business, anyway. Forget Sru and trade
-those crackers for copra, if they’ve got any here, if they haven’t,
-put out along for some other island.’
-
-“‘He killed my Chink’ says Buck. ‘Blow copra, I want his blood, and
-I’m going to have it, if it costs me my last nickel.’
-
-“‘All right, all right,’ I says, ‘come along,’ and off we put with
-Taute to do the talking and a box of stick tobacco to help Tiaki
-swallow the crackers.
-
-“It was easy to pick him out from the crowd on the beach, he was over
-six foot, with the half of an old willow pattern plate on his chest
-dangling from a necklace of sharks’ teeth, he had an underlip like an
-apron, one eye gone in some gouging match or another, and he stood two
-foot in front of the rest as if he wasn’t ashamed of himself.
-
-“Taute started the talk whilst Buck opened the tobacco case, and as I
-watched Tiaki’s face as the yarn went on, I thought to myself, God
-help Sru.
-
-“Then, when the palaver was over, Taute showed him one of the crackers
-we’d brought with us and how it worked, explaining we’d got a cargo of
-them and how he could do Sru in.
-
-“There was a dog walking on the beach twenty yards off, and Tiaki
-cocking his eye at it took aim and let fly with the cracker, and there
-wasn’t any dog left after the thing had burst, only a hole in the
-sand.
-
-“You could have heard them shouting at Taleka. Those chaps ran about
-clean bughouse, and Buck, he stood by mighty pleased with himself till
-all of a sudden Tiaki quiets them and gives an order and the crowd
-broke and made a run for the canoe houses.
-
-
- IV
-
-“‘What’s up now?’ says Buck. He wasn’t long waiting to know. Four big
-war canoes pushed out full of men, and making straight for the
-Greyhound, and Taute, who was talking to Tiaki turns and tells us we
-were prisoners. Tiaki, for all his underlip, was no fool, and when
-Taute had done translating what he had to say to us his meaning leapt
-up at us like luminous paint.
-
-“You see Tiaki had always been used to look on traders as hard
-bargainers who’d ask a tooth for a tenpenny nail, and here we were, us
-two, blowing in and offering him a cargo of ammunition for nothing, so
-long as he’d go and bomb Sru with it. It seemed too good to be true,
-and he suspected a trap. Said so, right out. He was going to hold us
-till the business was over and everything turned out satisfactory.
-
-“I had to swallow twice to keep that news down. A moment before we’d
-been free men, and there we were now like rats in a barrel, but there
-was no use kicking, so we sat down on the sand and watched the canoe
-men swarming over the _Greyhound_ and breaking out the cargo. They
-didn’t touch the Chinks nor loot the ship, just went for the cracker
-cases, bringing them off load after load and dumping them on the sand.
-
-“Tiaki has a case opened and takes out a cracker; he’d tumbled to the
-mechanism, and there he stood with the thing in his hand explaining it
-to the population, talking away and flinging out his arms towards
-Taleka, evidently gingering them up for the attack on Sru. Then he
-gives an order sharp as the crack of a whip, and all the Marys and
-children and old chaps scattered off back to the village, and over a
-hundred of the fighting men took their seats on the beach in a big
-circle, whilst crackers were handed round to them and they examined
-the hang of the things, each man for himself.
-
-“They were a fine lot, but differently coloured, some as dark as
-bar-chocolate and some the colour of coffee with milk in it, and as
-they sat there the women and children and old men came down from the
-village bringing bundles of mat baskets with them, and down they
-squatted by the edge of the trees going over the baskets and mending
-them and putting them in order.
-
-“‘What are they up to?’ says Buck.
-
-“‘Can’t you see?’ says I. ‘They’re going to carry the crackers in
-those baskets. They mean business right enough. Lord! Buck,’ I says,
-‘I wish we were out of this; look at the fix we’re in. If them chaps
-are beaten by Sru, we’ll be done in as sure as paint—makes me sick,
-sitting here, and there’s our boat right before us. S’pose we make a
-dash right now, shove her off and get on board——’
-
-“‘Not a bit of use,’ says Buck. ‘They’d let after us in the canoes
-before we’d pushed off—we’ve just got to stick and see it out. I’m
-sorry,’ he says; ‘it’s my fault; you were right, and if I ever get out
-of this I’ll steer clear of mixing up in other folks’ quarrels. I
-wouldn’t have done it only for the Chink.’
-
-“‘Oh, it don’t matter,’ I says; ‘we’re in it and there’s no use in
-kicking.’
-
-“I called Taute, who was standing watching the basket work and
-jabbering with Tiaki, and asked him for news and what he thought they
-were going to do with us in case things went wrong. He went to Tiaki
-and had a jabber, and came back to us looking pretty grey about the
-gills.
-
-“Tiaki was going to attack Sru right away, starting that night and
-reaching Taleka next morning early; with the current the big war
-canoes would do the journey in seven hours. He couldn’t make a night
-attack because of the difficulty of getting in, but he reckoned to
-reach the bay just at daybreak. Then came the news that we were to go
-with them and lead the attack. Tiaki said as we had sold Sru the guns
-to attack Tiaki, it was only fair that we should lead Tiaki’s men
-against the guns, besides, he wanted to make sure we weren’t leading
-him into a trap; besides, he had often noticed white men feared
-nothing and were splendid fighters. He also said if we failed him
-facing the guns of Sru we’d have fish crackers flung at our backs.
-
-“You see the way that durn cargo served us; the guns in front of us,
-the crackers at our back—we couldn’t say anything—couldn’t do
-anything but curse Scudder and the day we met him, and sit there
-watching the preparations. Women were bringing down provisions for the
-canoes, and the baskets were ready and being distributed. They weren’t
-so much baskets as bags such as the natives use for carting every sort
-of thing in; each fighting man had one, and then the crackers were
-handed round about twenty to a man. They’d place them between their
-legs in the canoes as they paddled; every man had a spear as well, and
-as they stood there getting on for sundown, each man with his basket
-of bombs and a spear, I’d have been proud to lead them only I was so
-frightened.
-
-
- V
-
-“Now the funniest thing happened.
-
-“All that crowd of fighting men full up of pride and devilment began
-shouting and chanting a war song. That was all right as far as it
-went, but after it was over a chocolate-coloured son of a gun began
-making a speech, shouting and pointing towards Taleka as if to say
-what he wouldn’t do to Sru.
-
-“Then a coffee-coloured devil cut in and seemed to carry on the
-argument.
-
-“Taute said the chocolate men and the coffee grinders were two
-different races, though joined in the one tribe, and they were arguing
-which was the bravest.
-
-“Other chaps cut in, and then all of a sudden they began running
-about, and before you could say ‘knife’ they split, the chocolate men
-on one side, the coffee crowd on the other, with Tiaki running about
-half bughouse, trying to keep order, and the row growing bigger all
-the time till suddenly a coffee man remembered his bag of bombs and
-fetches out a cracker, gives it a twist, and lets fly at the chocolate
-man opposite him, sending his head to glory.
-
-“Did you ever see schoolboys snowballing each other? All over the
-sands they were, one chap chasing another, stooping to pick crackers
-from their bags and screw them tight and then letting fly, heads and
-arms and legs being blown away—not that we stopped to watch; we were
-running for the boat. Next moment we had her off, and we didn’t wait
-to pick up the anchor when we got aboard; we dropped the chain and
-shoved, leaving Sru to come over to shovel up the remains, and pleased
-to think that the Winchesters he’d diddled out of us wouldn’t be much
-use to him since the crackers had spoiled his target.
-
-“I expect there wasn’t a dozen fighting men on that island left whole
-and sound, but that’s neither here or there. I was just telling you it
-as a case in point. There’s something in one tribe that makes for war
-against another tribe even if they’ve been living happily together for
-years. It shows clearer in savages than civilised folk, but it’s in
-both and it’s got to be reckoned with by anyone who wants to do away
-with war for good and all.”
-
-He tapped his pipe out, and we sat watching the Pacific coming
-creaming in on the sands and round the rocks, the Pacific, that storm
-centre or Lake of Peace for the whole world, according to the way men
-may arrange their tribal differences and call upon intellect to
-balance instinct.
-
-
-
-
-IX—THE OTHER ONE
-
-
- I
-
-Sydney is one of the finest towns in the world and it has the finest
-harbour, unless you call San Francisco Bay a harbour, it has the most
-hospitable people and a gaiety and push all its own, also, in the
-matter of temperature, when it chooses it can beat any other town
-except maybe Calcutta.
-
-“A hot shop,” said Brent. He was seated at a bar adorned with coloured
-bottles, and a girl with peroxide of hydrogen tinted hair had just
-handed him a lemon squash with a hummock of ice in it.
-
-“You aren’t looking yourself, Captain,” said the girl.
-
-“No, my dear, I aren’t,” replied Brent, “not if I look as I feel.” He
-relapsed into gloom and I offered him a cigarette which he refused.
-
-“I’m going to a funeral,” he explained.
-
-“Sorry,” said I. “Not a near relation, I hope?”
-
-“Well, it might be a relation, by the way I feel, but I’ve none. When
-a man gets to my age he leaves a lot of things astern.” He sighed,
-finished the last half of his drink in one mighty gulp, wiped his
-mouth and got off his chair.
-
-“Walk down with me a bit of the way,” said he.
-
-We left the bar and entered the blaze of the street. It was eleven
-o’clock in the morning.
-
-“It ought to be raining,” said the Captain as we wended our way along
-King Street towards the wharves. “Happy is the corpse that the rain
-rains on, is the old saying, and she’s a corpse if ever there was one,
-but rain or shine, if there’s happiness for such things as corpses,
-she’s happy—she’s done her duty.”
-
-“What did she die of?” I asked, by way of making conversation.
-
-“Old age,” replied Brent. He had a black tie on, but his garb was
-otherwise unchanged, his mourning was chiefly expressed by his voice
-and manner, and as we drew closer to the whiff of the harbour and the
-scent of shipping he took off his panama and mopped his bald head now
-and then with a huge red handkerchief.
-
-That handkerchief was always the signal of worry or perplexity with
-Brent, and now, right on the wharves and feeling for his state of
-mind, I halted to say good-bye.
-
-“Wouldn’t you care to see her?” he asked.
-
-“No thanks,” I replied. “I ought to meet a man at twelve and it’s
-after eleven now—and——”
-
-“He’ll wait,” replied the Captain. “It’s only a step from here and
-she’s _worth_ seeing. Kim on.”
-
-He took me by the arm and led me along, reluctantly enough, towards
-some mean-looking buildings, the relics of old days; under the
-bowsprit of a full rigged ship, over hawsers, and then on to a decayed
-slip of a wharf beside which an old schooner lay moored.
-
-“That’s her,” said Brent.
-
-On her counter in letters almost vanished stood the word _Greyhound_.
-
-“The _Greyhound_,” said I, “is this the old schooner you and Slane
-owned?”
-
-“The same,” said Brent. “She’s to be towed to the breakers’ yard eight
-bells—noon, they gave me word so that I might have a last look at
-her.”
-
-So this was the funeral he was to attend. He mopped his face with the
-red handkerchief, contemplated the deck beneath him, heaved a sigh and
-then, “Come down,” said he. “I’ve told Jimmy Scott to leave me
-something in the cabin.”
-
-He dropped on to the deck and I followed him. There was no watchman to
-guard the corpse. I looked at the standing rigging all gone to ruin
-and the sticks that had survived many a gale, the grimy decks that
-once had been white, then I dropped down to the cabin after Brent.
-
-The ports were open and water shimmers from the harbour water danced
-on the maple panelling, the upholstery had been eaten by rats or
-roaches and a faint smell filled the place like the ghost of the odour
-of corruption, but there was a bottle of whisky on the table, a couple
-of glasses and a syphon.
-
-“If I hadn’t met you, I’d ’a brought someone else,” said Brent, taking
-his seat before the funeral refreshments, “but there’s not many I’d
-have sooner had than you to give her a send off. You remember I told
-you, Buck had her from Pat O’Brien who didn’t know her qualities, no
-one did in those days; why, a chap by name of Gadgett come aboard
-first day we had her and said she ought to be condemned, said she
-wasn’t seaworthy and that’s many years ago.” He took the cork from the
-bottle and poured “Many years ago and now I’m having my last drink and
-smoke here where Buck and me have often sat, and him in the cemetery.
-Well, here’s to you, Buck—and here’s to her.” We drank and lit up.
-
-“Well, she’s had her day,” said I, trying to say something cheerful.
-“It’s like a wife that has done her duty——”
-
-The Captain snorted.
-
-“Wives,” said he, “a ship’s all the wife I’ve ever had and I don’t
-want no other, it’s all the wife a sailor-man wants and if she’s
-decently found and run, she never lets him down. I told that to Buck
-once. I told him the _Greyhound_ was his lawful wife and he’d come a
-mucker if he took another. He wouldn’t believe me, but he found it
-out. You’ve never seen him. He died only four years ago and he hadn’t
-lost a tooth, he hadn’t got a grey hair on his head, six foot he stood
-and he’d only to look at a girl and she’d follow him, but he wasn’t
-given that way after his marriage.”
-
-“Oh, he got married, did he?” said I. “I always fancied from what you
-told me of him that he was a single man.—Did she die?”
-
-“I expect she’s dead by this,” said the Captain. “No knowing, but if
-she ain’t she ought to be. We fell in with her, me and Slane, the year
-after that dust up with Sru I told you of. We’d lost money on that
-job, but we’d pulled up over a deal in silver that had come our way
-through Pat O’Brien and Buck had thirty thousand dollars in the Bank
-of California, and I’d got near ten in my pocket. I didn’t trust
-banks. For all that money we lived quiet, not being given to drink,
-and we were fitting the _Greyhound_ out for a new job, when one night
-at a sociable we met in with Mrs. Slade. That was the name she gave
-herself, a fine, fresh-faced young woman, not thirty, with eyes like
-Cape mulberries, they had that red look in the black of them, and a
-laundry of her own they said was bringing in five hundred a week
-profit. She harpooned Buck. Clean through the gizzard. You’ve seen a
-chicken running about with a woman after it till she catches it and
-wrings its neck, that was Buck. He was no more good after she’d got
-the irons into him.
-
-“One night I had it out with him. I said: ‘The Lord Almighty has given
-you a ship to tend and take care of, she’s been true to you and
-brought you in the dollars, and look at the way you’re usin’ her, why,
-we ought to have had her out of dock by this and the cargo half on
-board her, she over there at Oakland and you foolandering after a
-widow woman.’
-
-“‘She’s a girl,’ says he.
-
-“‘Well, woman or girl don’t matter,’ I says, ‘you ain’t the age for
-marrying, nor the sort of chap to make good at the game.’ We went at
-it hammer and tongs, me trying to pump sense into him like a chap
-trying to pump up a burst bicycle tyre, but at last, somehow or
-another, I began to get the better of the business and bring him to
-reason and by two in the morning I’d brought him to own he was a damn
-fool and marriage a mug’s game. I went to bed happy, and next day he
-turned up at noon with a flower in his coat and looking as if he’d
-gone queer in his head.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?” I says.
-
-“‘I’ve just been married,’ says he.
-
-
- II
-
-“That’s the sort of chap a woman had made of him. I’ve heard it said a
-woman is the making of a chap, it’s true, if she’s a good woman she’ll
-make a man of a fool, and if she’s bad she’ll make a fool of any man,
-seems to me. Jinny Slade was bad. I’ve got instincts about things and
-maybe that’s what made me so down on the business from the first—them
-mulberry eyes of hers rose my bristles, somehow or another, but now
-she’d fixed him there was no use talking.
-
-“They took up housekeeping in Francis Street over the laundry, and not
-wishing to mix up in their hymeneal bliss, I didn’t see much of Buck
-for a month or more. The _Greyhound_ was out of dock and I brought her
-over to her moorings at Tiburon, and I’d sit here just as I’m sitting
-now, time and again, thinking of old times and the fool Buck was
-making of himself, for we’d lost the cargo a trader had promised us
-and our business was going to smash.
-
-“One day I was leaning on the rail fishing with a hand line for want
-of something better to do when a guy comes along in a boat—Newall was
-his name—he’d known us for a couple of years, casual, and he’d just
-put off from an Oregon boat that lay anchored a bit out.
-
-“‘How’s Buck?’ says he, resting on his oars.
-
-“‘Buck’s married,’ I says. ‘Married this month and more.’
-
-“‘Well, I wish him luck,’ says Newall, ‘and who’s the lady?’”
-
-I tells him.
-
-“‘Holy Mike,’ he says. ‘Jinny Slade—what made him do it?’
-
-“I told him I didn’t know unless it was the devil, and then I asked
-what he knew about the party.
-
-“‘Well,’ says Newall, ‘I’m a cautious man and I’m not going to lay
-myself open to no law court actions for deffination of character. I’m
-not going to say nothing about the woman except that she oughta been
-flung into the bay two years ago with a sinker tied to her middle, and
-then you wouldn’t have saved her first husband which she poisoned as
-sure as my name’s Dan Newall, no, nor the men she ruined in that
-gambling joint she run in Caird Street with a loaded r’lette wheel
-that’d stay put wherever you wanted by the pressin’ of a button under
-the table, run by a Chink it was with her money.
-
-“‘In with the crimps she was, and if I had a dollar for every
-sailor-man she’s helped to shanghai I’d buy a fishin’ boat and make my
-fortune out of catchin’ the crabs that are feedin’ on the corpses of
-the men that’s drowned themselves because of her.
-
-“‘Laundry,’ he says, ‘a laundry s’big as from here to Porte Costa,
-with every Chink in California workin’ overtime for a month wouldn’t
-wash the edges of her repitation—and Buck’s married her; strewth, but
-he’s got himself up to the eyes. What sort of blinkers were you
-wearin’ to let him do it?’
-
-“‘I don’t know,’ I says, ‘alligator hide I should think was the sort
-he was wearing, anyhow. Question is what am I to do now?’
-
-“‘Take a gun and shoot him,’ says Newall, ‘if you want to be kind to
-him.—Has she got any money out of him?’
-
-“‘I don’t know,’ I says.
-
-“‘Been married to him a month,’ he goes on. ‘She’ll have every jitney
-by this—well, if you’re set on trying to do somethin’ for him, get
-the last of his money from him if he’s got any and hide it in a hole
-for him before she kicks him out plucked naked.’”
-
-Off he rowed, and pulling up my line I left the _Greyhound_ to the
-Kanaka watchman and took the ferry over to ’Frisco.
-
-The laundry was banging away, the Chinks all hard at work, Mrs. Slade
-wasn’t home, over at St. Jo for the day, so the forewoman said, but
-Buck was in and upstairs, and up I went.
-
-They’d got a fine sitting-room on the first floor with plush-covered
-chairs and brand new old-fashioned looking furniture and a bowl of
-goldfish in the window and pictures in big gold frames on the walls.
-
-Buck was sitting in an easy chair reading a paper and smoking a cigar.
-
-“Hullo,” he says, “here’s a coincidence, for I was just coming over to
-Tiburon to see you.”
-
-“Oh, were you?” says I. “Wits jump sometimes and here I am on the same
-job. How’s the world using you, Buck?”
-
-I tried to be as light-hearted as I could, but it was hard work. Buck
-had gone off in looks, and it was plain to see things weren’t going
-easy with him, you can always tell when a chap has something on his
-mind, and whilst he was getting out drinks I sat putting my thoughts
-together and only waiting to begin. I’d fixed to do a big grab, and
-get ten thousand dollars out of him as a loan to hide away for him
-against the time he got the kick out, plucked naked, as Newall had
-said.
-
-He pours the whisky.
-
-“Buck,” I says, taking the glass. “I’ve come to ask a favour of you. I
-want a loan.”
-
-“How much?” asks Buck.
-
-“Well,” I said, “I’ve ten thousand dollars of my own, as you know, and
-I’ve been offered a big opportunity of making a hundred thousand. Safe
-as houses. I want ten thousand to put with mine, I wouldn’t ask you to
-risk yours if I wasn’t risking mine.”
-
-“What’s the spec.?” he asks.
-
-“Can’t tell you that,” I said—“I’m under promise, but you know me and
-I give you my word of honour your money is as safe as if it was in
-your pocket—safer.”
-
-“Well, I’d do it if I could,” he says, “you know me and that I’m not
-lying when I speak, but I can’t, haven’t got it.”
-
-“But, Buck,” I says, “why, only a month ago you had thirty thousand
-dollars in the bank.”
-
-Buck nods and goes on. “I haven’t got it to put my hand on,” he says.
-“My wife is keeping it for me. She says what with those New York banks
-going bust last spring and one thing and another, banks aren’t safe
-and she wants to invest it, she’s over at St. Jo to-day looking at
-some property.”
-
-“Where’s she got the money?” I asks.
-
-“In that safe,” says he.
-
-Sure enough there was a big iron safe in the corner of the room half
-hid by a screen.
-
-Seeing how the land lay, I said no more, and he changed the subject,
-going back to what he was saying when I first came in, how that he had
-been coming to see me that afternoon about a matter of business.
-
-He wouldn’t say what the business was, but he wanted my help and he
-wanted it that night. He also wanted the boat of the _Greyhound_
-brought over to Long Wharf.
-
-“Just bring her over yourself,” said he. “No, we don’t want help, just
-you and me will manage it, and bring the mast and sail and some grub,
-never mind what I want her for, I’ll tell you later, it’s a paying
-business, as you’ll find.”
-
-With that I took my leave of him and hiked off back to Tiburon, for
-the day was getting on and I had none too much time to get things
-together.
-
-I was bothered and that’s the truth; Buck had gone off, wasn’t the
-same chap, and by his manner when he asked me to meet him with the
-boat, I knew it wasn’t pleasure sailing he was after. I near scratched
-the top off my head thinking what he could be wanting with that boat,
-but it was beyond me and I gave it up. Taute was the name of the
-Kanaka, same chap we had with us when we did that gun-running job down
-at Taleka, and when I got back to the _Greyhound_ I set Taute to work,
-getting some grub together and a new spar for a mast as the old one
-was sprung. Then, getting along for evening, I rowed over to Long
-Wharf. Long Wharf was pretty busy just then, what with wheat ships
-cleaning up before towing to Berkley for cargo and Oregon timber ships
-and such. There was a schooner lying there belonging to a chap I knew,
-so I just tied up to her channel-plates and crossed over on to the
-wharf where I sits on a bollard kicking my heels and waiting for Buck.
-
-Along he comes just on dark, and without a word he follows me across
-the deck of the schooner into the boat.
-
-Tell you I felt queer. We’d sailed pretty close to the wind together
-me and him, gun-running and what not, but this job seemed different,
-sort of back-door business with the harbour police or the Fish Patrol
-waiting to lay for us if we hitched up on it anywhere. I’d been used
-to blue water doings and big things and it got my goat to feel we were
-after something small and shady. It wasn’t small by any means, but,
-anyhow, that’s how I felt. But I said nothing, taking the oars and
-Buck taking his place in the stern sheets. Then we pushed off, Buck
-steering and making as if he was layin’ a course for Oakland. A few
-cable lengths out we took the wind and put up the mast, and, Buck
-taking the sheet, off we set still laying as if we were bound for
-Oakland. I’d sooner be out anywhere than in the lower bay after dark,
-what between them dam screeching ferry boats and the motor launches
-and such. Every monkey in ’Frisco with brass enough seems to have some
-sort or another of a launch or yacht and to spend his natural trying
-to run folks down. We were near cut into twice, seeing we had no
-light, but after a while, getting off the main track and Buck shifting
-his helm, we got along better.
-
-He was steering now laying straight for Angel Island. We passed Racoon
-Straits and kept on, the breeze freshening hard and the boat laying
-over to it. The sky was clear and a big moon was coming over the
-hills. Wonderful fine the bay is a night like that, with all the
-lights round showing yellow against the moon and ’Frisco showing up
-against Oakland.
-
-However, we weren’t out to admire the view and we held on, at least
-Buck did, till we were near level, as far as I could make out, with
-Reeds and aiming for Red Rock, the wind holding well. We passed a
-Stockton boat and an old brig coming down from Benicia or somewhere up
-there. Then away ahead and coming along square as a haystack I sighted
-a Chinese junk. Buck let go the sheet and, lighting a lantern he’d
-brought with us, ran it up.
-
-“What are you doing that for?” I asked him.
-
-“Show you in a minute,” says Buck. “Give us the boat-hook.”
-
-I handed it along and he told me to have the oars handy and then we
-sat whilst the junk came along at a six-knot clip, boosting the water
-and the great eyes in the bow of her showing in the moonlight as if
-they were staring at us, but not a soul to be seen or a light on deck.
-
-She snored along to starboard of us not more than ten yards away,
-black as thunder against the moon, and she was showing us her stern
-when something went splash over her side, followed by something else
-as if two chaps had gone a dive, one after the other.
-
-On top of that and almost at once a Holmes light was thrown over and
-went floating along, blazing and smoking and showing a man’s head
-squatting beside it.
-
-“Man overboard,” I says.
-
-“Row,” says Buck.
-
-I turned my head as I rowed and saw the junk going along as if nothing
-had happened, and then I saw the thing in the water wasn’t a man’s
-head but a buoy. We closed with the buoy and Buck grabs it with the
-boat-hook and brings it on board. It had a rope tied to it and he
-hauls it in, hand over hand, till up came a bundle done round with
-sacking. He hooks it over the gunnel and into the boat.
-
-“That’s done,” said he.
-
-“It is,” said I.
-
-I didn’t say a word more. We got the sail on her and put her on the
-starboard tack, heading straight for Angel Island.
-
-Then we shoved through Racoon Straits. It was getting along for
-morning now and I felt stiff and beat, with no heart in me or tongue
-to tell Buck what I was thinking of him for dragging me into a
-business like this, only praying we might get out of it without being
-overhauled.
-
-We had Tiburon lights to starboard now and a bit to port the riding
-light of the old _Greyhound_, when, all of a sudden, we see a light
-running along towards us and heard the noise of a propeller like a
-sewing machine in a hurry.
-
-“Police boat,” says Buck.
-
-My heart rose up and got jammed in my throat, and I hadn’t more than
-swallowed it down when they were alongside of us, and there was Buck
-sitting in the stern sheets with the bundle under his legs, and a chap
-in the police boat playing a lantern on him.
-
-Then the chap laughed.
-
-“Oh, it’s only you, Buck,” says he. “What are you out for this time of
-night?”
-
-“Smuggling opium,” says Buck.
-
-The chap laughed. He was Dennis, well known to us both, and he shut
-his lantern and gave us the news that he was after some Chink
-smugglers who had their quarters at Valego and, fearing their shop was
-to be raided, were due to run some stuff into Tiburon that night
-according to his information.
-
-“Well, we’ve just come down from San Quenton,” says Buck, “and I
-didn’t sight anything, only a big junk that passed us, making as if
-she was going to Oakland—Good luck to you.”
-
-Off they went and five minutes after we were tying up to the
-_Greyhound_.
-
-
- III
-
-We got the stuff on board, right down here where we are sitting now,
-and he undoes the sacking and there stood six cans of Canton opium,
-worth Lord knows what a can.
-
-I got the whisky out and had a big drink before I could get my hind
-legs under me to go for him.
-
-“Well,” I said, “this is a nice night’s work. S’pose Dennis hadn’t
-been in that police boat? Aren’t you ashamed of yourself? Don’t you
-see you’ve been trading on your good name, for if Dennis hadn’t
-believed in you, we’d both be in quad now with the shackles on us—And
-look what you’ve done to the _Greyhound_.”
-
-“What have I done to her?” he fires.
-
-“Done to her,” I says. “Why, you’ve made her disrespectable, that’s
-what you’ve done to her.”
-
-“Lord, is this the first shady job she’s been in?” says he. “Why, look
-at those guns we run—what’s the difference?”
-
-“Guns aren’t dope,” I says, “and whites aren’t Chinks. You’ve been
-hand in fist with Chinks over this, but there’s no use talking. It’s
-done.”
-
-I knew it was the wife at the back of him. That was the cause of it
-all, so I didn’t rub it in any more. I remembered Newall’s words about
-her and the men she’d done in, and I saw as plain as paint that
-laundry of hers was only a blind for the Lord knows what. I just had
-another drink, and then I asked him what he was going to do with the
-stuff now he had it on board. He said he was going to stick it in the
-lazarette for a few days till things were quiet and then he’d get it
-ashore, can by can, and he’d do it all himself and not ask me to help
-him.
-
-Then we got the stuff into the lazarette and had a snooze, and
-somewhere about noon next day he goes ashore, leaving me on board.
-
-I couldn’t eat nor sit still, couldn’t do anything but smoke and walk
-the deck. I reckon when a man’s in trouble there’s nothing better than
-tobacco, it gives him better advice than all the friends in the world.
-
-There I was with that stuff in the lazarette and who knew what moment
-some gink or another would give the show away and the police would be
-aboard. I wasn’t thinking of myself so much as Buck, and after him I
-was thinking of his wife and wishing I had her aboard to drown her.
-
-But worry as much as I liked, I couldn’t see a way out; the only way
-was to break him off from her and get him away, for this was only the
-beginning of things and I knew it would end in perdition for him.
-She’d managed to get some power over him with those mulberry eyes of
-hers, and how to loose it was beyond me.
-
-I slept aboard that night and somewhere getting along for morning, I
-sat up in my bunk with a plan full made in my head. I must have been
-thinking it out in my sleep, or maybe it was the Almighty put it into
-my mind, but it was a peach. Question was, could I work it?
-
-First thing I did was to make a dive for the lazarette and get those
-opium tins out; getting them on deck I dumped them one by one, and
-every splash I said to myself: “There goes a bit of that damn woman.”
-It was just before sun up and there was nobody to see.
-
-“Now,” I says to myself, “the old _Greyhound’s_ a clean ship again and
-Buck will be a clean man before dark if I have to break the laundry up
-and her on top of it.”
-
-Getting on for breakfast time I sent Taute ashore for some things and
-did the cooking myself, then, towards noon, I rowed ashore and took
-the ferry for ’Frisco.
-
-I was as full of nerves as a barber’s cat. It wasn’t what I was going
-to do that rattled me, but the knowing that if I didn’t pull it off,
-Buck would be ruined for life.
-
-When I got to the laundry I couldn’t go in. I walked up and down the
-street saying to myself: “Bill, you’ve gotta do it; no use hanging in
-irons, you’ve got old Buck to think of. Make yourself think what
-you’re going to say is true, now or never, in you go, give her the
-harpoon.”
-
-In I goes. The head woman said they were upstairs, and up I went.
-
-They’d finished their dinner and Buck was smoking a cigar, the woman
-was still at the table, peeling an apple.
-
-“Buck,” I says, “it’s up, the police are after you. I’ve run all the
-way to tell you. Dennis has given me word and you’ve still time to
-save yourself if you’re quick.”
-
-The woman gives a squeal and flings the apple on the table.
-
-“Great Scott!” says Buck.
-
-Then I turns on his wife and gives her the length of my tongue for
-leading him into the business, and she ups and gives me the lie,
-saying she had nothing to do with it, winking at him to back her,
-which the fool did, but so half-hearted you could see he wasn’t
-telling the truth.
-
-“Well,” I said, “it doesn’t matter, the question is now to get him out
-of ’Frisco. Dennis has given me three hours to get the _Greyhound_ out
-with him on board her and save him from the penitentiary. Has he any
-money?”
-
-“I’ve got his money,” says she. “Buck, stir yourself,” she says. “I’ll
-pack a bag for you and here’s the notes you give me to keep.” She goes
-to the safe and unlocks it and takes out a bundle done up in brown
-paper, and he stuffs it in his pocket, and she packs his bag and off I
-drags him.
-
-Out in the street I told him to wait a minute, and ran back, and there
-she was in the room locking the safe.
-
-“I ought to have told you,” said I, “they’re after you too; clear out
-of ’Frisco, git by the next train or they’ll have you.”
-
-“Who’s give me away?” she cries.
-
-“The Chinks,” says I; and at that she let a yelp out of her, and falls
-on the sofa in a dead faint. I opened the safe and there I sees a
-parcel the identical of the one she’d given Buck, and I put it in my
-pocket after a squint at the contents. Then I put her feet up, and lit
-out to where Buck was waiting for me in the street, and catching him
-by the arm I dragged him along down to the wharves where Taute was
-waiting with the boat. We got over to the _Greyhound_, and then the
-three of us set to work to get that schooner out of the bay, a six
-men’s job, but we done it.
-
-All the time we were handling her and getting across the bar I was
-thinking hard enough to split my head open. Outside I came to a
-conclusion.
-
-“Buck,” I said, “you’re free of her now.”
-
-“Who?” says he.
-
-“Your wife,” says I.
-
-Then I told him all I’d done. I thought he’d have knifed me. He was
-for putting back right away till I played my last card. I was only
-working on suspicion but I was right.
-
-“Put your hand in your pocket,” I said, “and pull out that bundle of
-notes your wife gave you. If the tally is right, I’ll go straight back
-with you and apologise to her.”
-
-He pulls out the parcel and opens it. It was full of bits of newspaper
-and old washing bills. Then I pulls out the other parcel I’d nicked
-and there were his notes.
-
-Brent relit his pipe.
-
-“He never saw her again,” said Brent. “When we put back to ’Frisco,
-the laundry was shut and she gone. He didn’t want to see her either.
-The old _Greyhound_ was enough for him after his experience of
-women—and now she’s going too.”
-
-We sat for a while in silence and tobacco smoke, then Brent looked up.
-The coughing and churning of a tug came through the open skylight and
-the hot hazy atmosphere of the cabin.
-
-“That’s them,” said Brent.
-
-We came on deck. Then we climbed on to the wharf whilst Scott’s men
-went aboard, true undertakers’ assistants, callous, jovial, red-faced,
-gin-breathing. We watched the tow rope passed and the mooring ropes
-cast off, the tow rope tighten and the bowsprit of the _Greyhound_
-turning for the last time from land. We watched the smashed-up water
-of the harbour streaming like a millrace under the bat-bat-bat of the
-tug paddles and the stern of the Greyhound with the faded old
-lettering turned towards a wharf for the last time.
-
-As the vision faded, Brent heaved a deep sigh, thinking maybe of his
-partner and old times.
-
-“Well,” he said, turning away, “that’s the end of her. What gets me is
-that the other one may be alive and kicking her heels and enjoying
-herself—no knowing, it’s those sort that live longest, seems to me.”
-
-
-
-
-X—IRON LAW or THE QUEEN OF UTIALI
-
-
- I
-
-If you want to study psychology go to the wilds. The minds of
-civilised men and women are so covered with embroidery that the true
-texture is almost hidden; their faces have been used so long for masks
-that form and expression cannot be relied on. Amongst savages you come
-sometimes upon the strangest facts bearing upon the structure of mind,
-facts that lose half their significance in the atmosphere of London,
-yet which, all the same, are not unconnected with our processes of
-reasoning and conduct.
-
-I was sitting with Brent in the house of Ibanez, the agent of the
-Southern Islands Soap Syndicate, an institution that turns cocoanut
-trees and native labour into soap, mats, margarine, dollars and
-dividends, beats up the blue Pacific with the propellers of filthy
-steamboats and has its offices in San Francisco, London and New York.
-We were sitting, to speak more strictly, in the verandah, the southern
-night lay before us and a million stars were lighting the sea.
-
-Tahori, a native boy, and one of Ibanez’s servants, had just brought
-along a big tray with cigars and drinks and placed it on a table by
-us. I noticed that he wore white cotton gloves. Brent had also noticed
-the fact.
-
-“What’s wrong with that chap’s hands?” asked Brent.
-
-“Tahori’s?” replied our host. “Nothing—only he must not touch glass.”
-
-“Tabu?”
-
-“Yes. He only helps occasionally in household work when Mauri is away.
-I got over the difficulty of his waiting upon me by giving him gloves
-in case he accidentally touched a tumbler or bottle; even with the
-gloves on he will not handle anything in the way of glass knowingly;
-the cook puts the things on that tray, and when he takes it back to
-the kitchen she will clear it.”
-
-“I thought all that was dying out,” said Brent.
-
-“So it is, but it still hangs about. Tahori is a South Island boy. I
-don’t know why the tabu about glass came about, makes it awkward for
-him as a servant.”
-
-“No one knows,” said Brent. “I’ve seen chaps that were under tabu
-preventing them from eating oysters and others that daren’t touch the
-skin of a shark or the wood of such and such a tree, no one knows
-why.”
-
-“What do they suppose would happen to them if they broke the tabu?” I
-asked.
-
-“They couldn’t,” said Brent.
-
-“Couldn’t?”
-
-“No, they couldn’t. I’m talking of the real old Islanders whose minds
-haven’t been loosened up by missionaries and such, though I’m not so
-sure it wouldn’t hold good for the present-day ones too, and I’m
-saying that a chap like that couldn’t break his tabu not if he wanted
-to, not if his life depended on it; beliefs are pretty strong things,
-but this is something stronger even than a belief; maybe it’s the
-mixture of a custom and a belief, and that makes it have such a hold
-on the mind, but there it is—I’ve seen it.”
-
-“Seen a man unable to break his tabu?”
-
-“Seen the effects, anyhow, same as you might see the wreck of a ship
-lying on a beach. I doubt if you’d see the same thing these days,
-though there’s no telling; anyhow, it was away back in the early
-nineties and I’d just come up from the Tongas to Tahiti, getting a
-lift in the _Mason Gower_, she was an old trading schooner the
-missionaries had collared and turned into a Bible ship, and I lent my
-hand with the cooking to pay for my passage.
-
-“I’d had a quarrel with Slane and parted from him, taking my share of
-the money we had in common, and I hadn’t seen him for six months and
-more. I hadn’t prospered either, losing nearly every buck in a
-blackbirding venture I ought never to have gone in for.
-
-“I hadn’t more than ten dollars in my belt when I landed at Papeete,
-but I’d saved my dunnage and had some decent clothes and the luck to
-fall in with Billy Heffernan at the club. Billy was one of the Sydney
-boys; he wasn’t more than twenty-five, but he’d seen more of the world
-than most and lost two fortunes which he’d made with his own hands.
-That was the sort Billy was, and when I struck him at Papeete he was
-recovering from his last bust-up and had got the money together for
-another venture.
-
-“His first fortune had been made over Sing Yang opium, which isn’t
-opium no more than Sam Shu is honest drink; then he’d done a deal in
-shell and pulled it off and lost the money in copra, and now he was
-after precious coral.
-
-“When I met him in the bar I said: ‘Hello, Heff—what are you after
-down here,’ and he says, ‘Coral.’
-
-“‘Well, you’ll find lots of it,’ says I, thinking he was joking, and
-then I found it was precious coral he was talking of. You see there’s
-about a hundred different sorts of coral. Coral’s made by worms. If
-you go on any reef and knock a chunk off between tide marks you’ll
-find your chunk has got worms hanging out of it. I’ve done it often in
-different parts, and I’ve been surprised to find the difference in
-those worms. Some are a foot long and as thin as a hair, and some are
-an inch thick and as long as your finger; some are like snails and
-some are like lobsters and prawns in shape; some are yellow and some
-blue. Above tide marks you don’t find anything, just solid rock. Well,
-there’s just as many different sorts of coral as there is worms, and
-there’s only one sort of precious coral and it’s a pale pink, the
-colour of a rose leaf, and that’s what Heffernan was after. He’d heard
-of an island in the Paumotus which isn’t very far from Tahiti, and by
-all accounts it was a good fishing ground for pink coral, and more
-than that, it was said the Queen of the place—for it was run by a
-woman—had a lot of the stuff for sale—Tawela was her name.
-
-“Ships keep clear of the Paumotus on account of the currents that run
-every which way and the winds that aren’t dependable. Heff had his
-information from a whaling captain who’d struck the place the year
-before and had talk with the Kanakas. He was on the beach broken down
-with drink, and gave the location for twenty dollars. He said he
-didn’t think they were a dependable lot, but they had the stuff, and
-if Heffernan didn’t mind taking risks he might make a fortune. Heff
-asked the old chap why he hadn’t gone in for the business himself, and
-he answered that he would have done so only he had no trade goods;
-nothing but whale oil, and the Kanakas didn’t want that, they wanted
-knives and tobacco and any sort of old guns and print calico and so
-on. Heft didn’t know where to get any such things as these, and hadn’t
-the money if he had known, nor a ship to lade them into, but next day,
-by good luck, came blowing in the _Mary Waters_, owned and captained
-by Matt Sellers, a Boston chap who’d come round to the Pacific in a
-whaler out of Martha’s Vineyard, skipped at the Society Islands not
-liking the society on board, and risen from roustabout to recruiter
-and recruiter to captain and owner. He’d brought a mixed cargo from
-’Frisco on spec to the Marquesas, couldn’t find a market and had come
-on to Papeete, couldn’t find a market and came into the club for a
-drink, fell into the arms, as you may say, of Heffernan, and that did
-him. He hadn’t been talking half an hour with Heff when he sees
-clearly that the hand of the Almighty was in the business, and that a
-sure fortune was waiting for him if he’d only take the trouble to pick
-it up. His trade goods were just the things wanted to buy the stuff,
-and he only had to put out for the Paumotus to get it. That was the
-way Heff mesmerised him. Then they had a talk as to the profits, and
-Sellers agreed to give Heff twenty-five per cent. commission on the
-deal.
-
-“I blew into the business, as I was saying, by meeting Heffernan a few
-days later—day before the _Mary Waters_ was due to sail—and, seeing
-no chance of doing much in Papeete, I joined in with them at second
-officer’s pay, but without any duty, only to lend a hand if there
-should be a dust-up.
-
-“Next day we started, steering a course almost due east. We weren’t
-long in finding out we’d struck the Paumotus, tide rips everywhere and
-reefs, then you’d see cocoanut trees growing out of the sea ahead and
-presently you’d be skimming by a beach of coral not ten feet above the
-sea level with cocoanut trees blowing in the wind and Kanaka children
-shouting at you. Very low free board those atoll islands have, and
-I’ve heard of ships being blown right over the beaches into the
-lagoons. We passed a big island like that, and then, two days after,
-we raised Utiali; that was the name of the island the whaler captain
-had given to Heffernan with the latitude and longitude. It wasn’t down
-in the South Pacific Directory. They’ve got it there now, but in those
-days there was no mention of Utiali, though the whaler captains knew
-it well enough, but a whaler captain would never bother to report an
-island; if he’d struck the New Jerusalem he wouldn’t have done more
-than log it as a place where you could take on milk and honey. Whales
-was all they cared for, and blubber.
-
-“We came along up and found the place answering to all descriptions,
-lagoon about a mile wide, break to the east, good show of cocoanut
-trees and deep soundings all to north-east and south, with another
-island not bigger than the palm of your hand to west running out from
-a line of reef that joined with the beach of Utiali.
-
-“If the place had been painted blue with the name in red on it, it
-couldn’t have been plainer.
-
-“We came along to the eastward till we saw the opening, and got
-through without any bother just on the slack.
-
-“It was a pretty place to look at. I’ve never seen a stretch of water
-that pleased me more than that lagoon; maybe it was the depth or
-something to do with the water itself, but it was more forget-me-not
-colour than sea blue, and where it was green in the shallows or the
-ship shadow, that green was brighter and different from any green I’ve
-ever seen.
-
-“Maybe that’s why precious coral grew there, since the water colours
-were so clear and bright, the coral colours following suit would hit
-on new ideas, so to speak, but however that may have been, there was
-no denying the fact that Utiali was a garden, and the native houses on
-shore seemed the gardeners’ cottages—had that sort of innocent look.
-
-“We dropped the hook close in shore on to a flower bed where you could
-see the sea anemones and the walking shells as clear as if there
-wasn’t more than two foot of water over them, and before the schooner
-had settled to the first drag of the ebb that was beginning to set,
-canoes began to come off with Kanakas in them.
-
-
- II
-
-“They came along paddling under the counter, waving their paddles to
-us, and then, having gone round us, like as if they were making a tour
-of inspection, they tied up and came on board, led by a big Kanaka
-Mary—a beauty to look at, with lovely eyes—Lord, I remember those
-eyes—who gave herself a bang on the chest with her fist and said
-‘Tawela.’ That was how she presented her visiting card.
-
-“We had a Kanaka with us who could talk most of the island tongues,
-and we put him on to Tawela to extract information from her and it
-came up in chunks.
-
-“Tawela, by her own accounts, was anxious to trade anything from
-cocoanuts to her back teeth. She wanted guns and rum, which we hadn’t
-got, but she said she’d try to make out with tobacco and beads. She
-said she had plenty of pink coral, and would we come on shore and look
-at it, also would we come to dinner and she would give us the time of
-our lives.
-
-“Then she went off ashore, us promising to follow on in an hour or so.
-
-“I was talking to Sellers after she’d left, when Sellers says to me:
-‘Look over there, what’s that?’ I looks where he was pointing and I
-sees something black sticking from the water away out in the lagoon.
-The tide was ebbing, as I’ve told you, and the thing, whatever it was,
-had been uncovered by the ebb; it didn’t look like the top of a rock,
-it didn’t look like anything you could put a name to unless maybe the
-top of an old stake sticking from the water. ‘Go over and have a
-look,’ says Sellers, ‘and find what it is.’ I took the boat which had
-been lowered ready to take us ashore, and me and Heffernan pulls out.
-
-“‘It’s the mast of a ship,’ says Heff, who was steering, and no sooner
-had he given it its name than I saw plain enough it couldn’t be
-anything else.
-
-“It was, and as we brought the boat along careful, the ship bloomed up
-at us, the fish playing round the standing rigging and a big green
-turtle sinking from sight of us into her shadow.
-
-“She lay as trigg as if she was on the stocks, with scarcely a list
-and her bow pointing to the break in the reef. Her anchor was in the
-coral, and you could see the slack of the chain running to her bow.
-She’d been a brig. The top masts had been hacked off for some reason
-or another, and pieces of canvas, yards long some of them, showed
-waving from her foreyard, and it was plain to be seen she’d been sunk
-with the foresail on her and the canvas had got slashed by fish and
-the wear of the tides bellying it this way and that till there was
-nothing left but just them rags.
-
-“I’d never seen a ship murdered before and said so.
-
-“‘Yes,’ says Heffernan, ‘it’s plain enough, she’s been sunk at her
-moorings; look at the way she’s lying, and look at that anchor chain.
-Well, I never did think to see a sunk ship at anchor, but I’ve seen it
-now.’
-
-“‘It’s the chaps ashore that have done this,’ said I.
-
-“‘Sure,’ said Heffernan. ‘Done in the ship and done in the crew. We’ve
-got to go careful.’
-
-“We put back to the _Mary Waters_ and reported to Sellers.
-
-“‘Skunks!’ said Sellers. ‘Tawela’s Queen Bee of a proper hive. Well,
-we must be careful, that’s all. Keep our guns handy and give word to
-the Kanakas to be on the look-out.’
-
-“The _Mary Waters_ had a Kanaka crew as I’ve said, and having given
-the bo’sun the tip to be on the look-out for squalls, we got rowed
-ashore, sending the boat back to the schooner.
-
-“Tawela’s house was the first of the line of houses that ran east and
-west along the beach; it was the biggest, too, and there was only her
-and her son at the dinner; the rest of the tribe had gone off in the
-canoes right across the lagoon to the opposite shore to gather
-shell-fish on the outer beach. Our Kanaka boy that acted as
-interpreter got this news from Tawela, and it lightened our minds a
-lot, for if any killing had been meant the tribe wouldn’t have gone
-off like that.
-
-“It wasn’t a bad dinner, take it all round. Baked pig and oysters, and
-sweet potatoes and so on, with a palm salad that Tawela never invented
-herself, that I’ll lay a dollar, and said so.
-
-“‘Oh, she’s probably made the cook of that brig show her how to do
-things white man style before she murdered him,’ says Sellers.
-
-“‘Damn her,’ says Heffernan, and there those two sat talking away, she
-listening but not understanding; it was better than a pantomime.
-
-“Then the son gets up and brings in some palm toddy, best I ever
-struck, and Sellers opens a box of cigars he’d brought with him, and
-we all lit up, Tawela included.
-
-“I remember, as plain as if it was only ten minutes ago, sitting there
-looking at the sunlight coming in through the door behind Sellers and
-striking through the blue smoke of the cigars, and then the next thing
-I remember is waking up with my hands tied and my feet roped together,
-lying on my back in a shack with the morning light coming through the
-cracks in the wall, Heffernan and Sellers beside me.
-
-“It was plain enough what had happened; we’d been doped. I heard
-Sellers give a groan and called out to him, then Heffernan woke, and
-there we lay admiring ourselves for the fools we’d been in falling
-into that mug trap. We’d each landed with a revolver strapped to his
-belt, but the revolvers were gone.
-
-
- III
-
-“We hadn’t been lying there cursing ourselves more than half an hour
-when, the sun having got over the reef, a chap comes in, catches
-Sellers by the heels and drags him out just as if he’d been a dead
-carcase.
-
-“‘Good-bye, boys,’ cries Sellers, as he’s dragged along the ground,
-and good-bye it was, for a few minutes after we heard him scream.
-
-“He went on screaming for fifteen minutes, maybe more, and I was
-fifteen years older when he let off and the silence came up again with
-nothing but the sound of the reef and the jabbering of those cursed
-Kanakas.
-
-“‘If I had a knife I’d stick it into myself,’ says Heffernan. ‘Lord!
-what have they been doing to him?’
-
-“I couldn’t answer, more than just by spitting, and there we lay
-waiting our turn and watching the sun striking fuller on the lagoon
-through the door space.
-
-“I could see the schooner lying there at anchor, but not a soul could
-I see on board her; the crew were either down below or had been
-murdered. As I was looking at her I heard Heffernan give a grunt, then
-I saw that he was sitting up and that his hands were free. He’d been
-working away, saying nothing, and he’d managed to get the cocoanut
-fibre rope free of his wrists; a minute after, he’d got his feet
-loose, and then he turned to me and it didn’t take more than five
-minutes to make me a free man like himself.
-
-“That being done we set to work on the back wall of the shack, pulling
-aside the wattles and tearing out the grass binding till we were free
-at last and out into the thick growth, which was mostly mammee apple
-and cassia mixed up with pandanus and cocoanut trees.
-
-“What made us bother to break free from the shack, Lord only knows.
-There was no use getting free, seeing we were on an atoll and would be
-hunted down like rats once Tawela and her crowd got wind that we were
-loose; anyhow, we’d worked like niggers and just as if our lives had
-depended on it, and now in the bushes we were crawling along on our
-bellies to put as big a distance as we could between ourselves and
-that crowd—as if it mattered!
-
-“We worked along, taking the line of bushes towards the reef opening,
-and all the time to the left of us we could hear the breaking of the
-swell on the outer beach, whilst to the right of us we could see bits
-of the lagoon now and then through the branches.
-
-“The strangest feeling I’ve ever felt was being stuck like that
-between the free sea and that locked-in lagoon.
-
-“Prison on one side, so to say, and an open road on the other.
-
-“Well, there we were, the sun getting higher in the sky, and the
-Kanakas sure to be beating the bushes after us as soon as they found
-we’d broke loose, but we didn’t say a word on the matter, only went on
-crawling till we’d reached the last of the trees and thick stuff. From
-there the coral ran naked to the break in the reef.
-
-“We hadn’t more than reached so far when the hellnation of a
-hullabaloo broke out behind us, and we thought they’d found we’d
-escaped, but that wasn’t so, as we discovered in a minute, for
-chancing to look towards the opening, we saw the top canvas of a
-schooner away beyond the northernmost pierhead. We reckoned she was
-two or three mile off, and, crawling along the coral on our bellies
-till we’d got a clear view of the sea, there she was, right enough,
-making for the break, the light wind spilling and filling her canvas.
-She hadn’t much more than steerage way.
-
-“Then we looked back. We couldn’t see the village because of the
-trees, but we could see the _Mary Waters_ lying there at anchor out in
-the lagoon, and canoes all about her and chaps swarming on board of
-her.
-
-“‘See that,’ said Heffernan, ‘all that hullabaloo wasn’t about us. I
-doubt if they’ve found we’ve escaped yet.’
-
-“‘What are they doing round the schooner?’ says I.
-
-“‘Lord knows,’ says he, ‘but we’ll soon see.’
-
-“We did. Those devils were used to the game of sinking ships and
-slaughtering sailor men; they’d most likely got all the trade goods
-they wanted off the schooner by this, and now we saw them passing a
-tow rope from the bow to one of the canoes and we heard the noise of
-the winch picking up the anchor chain.
-
-“‘They’re not going to sink her at her moorings,’ said Heffernan, ‘too
-shallow. Look, they’re towing her to a deeper part of the lagoon.’
-
-“That was so, and as we watched we saw she was getting deeper in the
-water even as she was towed; they must have begun the job of sinking
-her the minute the schooner was sighted, forgetting like fools that
-the chaps coming up would have been sure to sight her spars, or maybe
-risking even that rather than have the newcomers see the bloody work
-that had been done on deck.
-
-“You can sink a ship quicker than clean her sometimes. Well, there it
-was, and suddenly the old _Mary Waters_ gave a dive, and dipped her
-bowsprit under. I saw her shiver like a dog, and then the stern went,
-the main hatch cover blowing off from air pressure as soon as the
-decks were awash. After that she went like a stone till there was
-nothing left of her but a case or two floating about and a bit of
-grating.
-
-“Then we crawled back among the trees and held a council of war, as
-you might say, but we couldn’t fix on anything to do but lay still and
-wait our chances. We reckoned the fellows in the schooner were sure to
-come ashore armed, and we’d have time to warn them before they were
-set on. Our worst chance was that the Kanakas might find us before the
-schooner was in or the chaps come ashore, but there was no use
-bothering about that, and there we lay waiting and listening till the
-fore canvas of the schooner showed at the break, and in she came
-riding the full flood, every sail drawing to the wind that was
-freshening up.
-
-“When I saw her full view I nearly leapt out of my skin. She was the
-_Greyhound_. Buck, as I found afterwards, had put into Papeete, heard
-of our expedition and me being with it, and, the old whaling chap
-offering to give him our port of destination for two bottles of
-whisky, closed on the offer and lit after us. He was anxious to pick
-up with me and make friends, and maybe he was anxious to have a hand
-in the coral business as well, no knowing; anyhow, here he was bulling
-along across the lagoon and evidently making to drop his anchor close
-to the village.
-
-“‘Come on,’ I says to Heffernan, ‘follow me.’ We made back through the
-thick stuff, taking the track we’d come by, and we hadn’t more’n
-reached the sight of Tawela’s house through the trees when we heard
-the anchor chain go.
-
-“I reckon the damn fool Kanakas had been so busy with the sinking of
-the schooner and then the _Greyhound_ coming in, that they’d forgot to
-look to see if we were still safely tied up. Anyhow, the whole crowd
-were down on the beach to meet the boat that was coming off, and
-making sure of that, I took a peep into Tawela’s house to see if there
-was any clubs or spears handy for arming ourselves, and there I see
-Tawela’s son hiding a long knife under some matting. We went in; he
-was too scared to yell, and shoving him in a corner, we stripped up
-the matting, and there were our revolvers, a couple of knives and half
-a dozen short stabbing spears, all bloody with the blood of Sellers.
-
-“We kicked him out before us, and, with the guns in our hands, down we
-marched to the beach.
-
-
- IV
-
-“Buck Slane had landed, he and four of his men, and every man with a
-Winchester.
-
-“Tawela and her crowd were round them, all friendly as pie and wagging
-their tails, and so busy pretending to be innocent and God-fearing
-Kanakas they didn’t notice us till we were almost on them; for a
-moment I thought they were going to show fight, but when they saw the
-guns in our hands they boiled down.
-
-“I clapped my gun to Tawela’s head, and called Buck to tie her hands
-behind her—we hadn’t time to say good-day to each other, just
-that—and Buck, tumbling to the truth of the matter, whips a big
-pocket handkerchief from his pocket, and one of his men does the
-binding. As he was binding her he says, ‘Look at her hands,’ and
-there, sure enough, was blood dried on her hands, the blood of Sellers
-calling out for revenge.
-
-“Then, whilst the crowd stood quiet, I gave Buck the facts in four
-words. He made a signal with his arms to the schooner, and off comes
-another boat with the mate and four more Kanakas, all armed.
-
-“Then Buck took command, and leaving Tawela with a chap and orders to
-blow her brains out if she so much as sneezed, we drove that whole
-crowd along the beach right to the break of the lagoon and left them
-there with four gunmen covering them. Then we came back.
-
-“We searched round and found what was left of Sellers among the
-bushes, then we set to.
-
-“‘They’re unfortunate heathens,’ says Buck, ‘but they’ve got to be
-taught,’ and with that he set fire to Tawela’s house with his own
-hands. We burnt every house, we smashed everything we could smash, and
-we broke the canoes to flinders, fishing gear and spears and
-everything went, so there was nothing left of that population but the
-people.
-
-“That will learn them,’ says Buck. Then he collected his men, and
-bundling Tawela into a boat with a parcel of pink coral we found in a
-shack back of her house, we pushed off. Ridley, the mate, was for
-shooting her—seeing the evidence on her hands—and slinging the body
-in the lagoon, but Buck said he was going to give her a decent trial
-when our minds were cool, and there was lots of time, anyway, after
-we’d put out. Buck, ever since his business with Sru, had been against
-doing things in a hurry, specially when it came to killing, so she was
-had on board and given in charge of two of the Kanaka crew. Then we
-got the hook up and out we put.
-
-“The Kanakas were still herded at the end near the break, and as we
-passed through, knowing we’d got their Queen on board, they all set up
-a shout, ‘Tawela, Tawela’ like the crying of sea gulls, and that was
-the last we heard of them.
-
-“Then, with the ship on her course, and the Kanaka bo’sun in charge of
-the deck, we got down to the cabin and started our court-martial.
-
-“She deserved hanging, there were no two words about that. And I
-reckon it was more superstition about killing a woman than humanity,
-but maybe I’m wrong; anyhow, Buck brought out his idea, which was to
-take her to Sydney and have her tried there.
-
-“We’d been going at it for an hour or so, when the mate was called on
-deck and comes back in a minute or two in a tearing rage.
-
-“‘That wild cat,’ says he, ‘has been asking for food and won’t eat
-bully beef; says anything that comes out of a shell is tabu to her,
-turtle or oysters or shell fish, and she reckons canned stuff is the
-same since it’s in a tin shell. I expect she’s had lots of experience
-in canned stuff seeing all the ships she’s wrecked. What’s to be done
-with her?’
-
-“‘Give her biscuits,’ says Buck, ‘and there’s lots of bananas on
-board.’
-
-“Off the mate goes and back he comes to the conference, but we could
-fix up nothing that night, Buck still holding out for a proper trial
-at Sydney, and we pointing out that English or American law would be
-sure to let a woman escape. It stood like that till next morning, when
-Buck, coming down to breakfast, says: ‘Boys, I’ve got an idea.’
-
-
- V
-
-“He’d struck an idea in the night of how to dispose of Tawela. Buck
-had a fine knowledge of the Kanaka mind, and when he’d explained his
-idea to us I allowed it was a peach, if what he said was true.
-
-“Have you ever heard tell of the Swatchway—the Scours some call it?
-It’s an island, or more truly speaking a big lump of reef with half a
-dozen cocoanut trees on it lying south of the Australs about four
-hundred and fifty miles from the steamer track between Auckland and
-Tahiti. It’s got reefs round it all spouting like whales, and ships’
-captains give it a big wide berth.
-
-“Well, Buck’s plan was to land Tawela on the Scours; there’s water
-there according to the Pacific Directory, and Buck said he wasn’t
-going to maroon her without grub. He’d give her six months’
-grub—canned. Bully beef and so on with biscuits in tins. If she
-starved herself to death in the middle of plenty then it wouldn’t be
-our fault. He said he’d come back in six months, and if she was alive
-he’d take her back home, said she was only an ignorant Kanaka and he
-reckoned six months’ punishment would fill the bill, and if she chose
-to kill herself, why, then it would be Providence not us that did the
-business.
-
-“Ridley, at first go off, flew out against this till Buck quieted him,
-asking who was master of the schooner, and whether he wanted to be
-logged for insubordination; the course was changed to sou’-sou’-west
-and two days later we raised the Scours.
-
-“There were six cocoanut trees there, all bearing, so we cut them down
-and brought the nuts on board, then we landed Tawela and her
-provisions with a can opener, showing her how to use it. There was a
-fresh water pond in the coral, so she couldn’t want for water, and
-there we left her.
-
-“We made for Suva and sold that coral, not getting near the price we
-thought to, and then we ran a cargo to Auckland.
-
-“I’d noticed for some time Buck wasn’t the man he used to be, and one
-night it come out. ‘I’ve got something on my mind,’ he says, ‘it’s
-that dam Kanaka. Can’t help thinking about her. My conscience is clear
-enough,’ he says, ‘for she deserved her gruel, but I can’t help
-thinking of her—wonder if she’s dead.’
-
-“‘Oh, it’s ten to one she’s either broke her tabu or some ship has
-taken her off by this,’ I says to ease him, for I saw that being a
-good-hearted chap, and imaginative as most Irishmen are, the thing was
-hitting him as it never hit me.
-
-“Buck shakes his head and falls back into himself and says no more,
-and time goes on, till one day when we were on the run to Papeete with
-a mixed cargo, seeing that the chap was making an old man of himself
-over the business, I says, ‘S’pose we run down to the Scours now
-instead of on the voyage back as you’d fixed, and see what’s become of
-that woman?’
-
-“His face lit up, but he pretended to hang off for a while; then he
-falls in with the idea, and we shifted the helm, raising the place
-four days later and dropping anchor outside the reefs four months and
-eight days from the time we’d left it.
-
-“There wasn’t a sign to be seen of anyone on the island, so Buck tells
-me to take a boat and look; he hadn’t the heart to go himself and said
-so, plump, and off I put, leaving the boat’s crew with the boat on the
-beach and tramping across the coral on the look-out for signs.
-
-“I found the canned stuff. There had evidently been a big wind and
-blown the stuff about, and I found it here and there, but not one
-empty can could I find or one that had been opened, then, in a dip of
-the coral I found a skull, the black hair still sticking to it, and a
-backbone and ribs—the birds make a skeleton of a corpse in no time on
-a place like that; I reckon I could have found the whole skeleton if
-I’d hunted, but I didn’t. I put back for the schooner and came on
-board laughing.
-
-“‘Well,’ I said, ‘she’s done us. You and your talk of Kanakas not
-breaking their tabu; why, half the tins are opened and empty, and
-she’s gone, took off by some ship.’
-
-“‘Thank God,’ says Buck.
-
-“That lie of mine lifted the black dog right off his back, and to his
-dying day he never knew he’d killed that woman as sure as if he’d shot
-her with a gun. He was as cheerful as a magpie all the rest of that
-voyage, and so was I. You see I’d heard Sellers screaming whilst those
-brutes were doing him in and Buck hadn’t.
-
-“That’s all I know about tabu, but it’s first-hand knowledge, personal
-experience as you might say.”
-
-He ceased, and through the night came the voices of fish spearers from
-the reef and the far rumble of the surf, and from the back premises
-the voice of Tahori singing some old song of an Island world whose
-brilliancy breaks sometimes to reveal the strangest phantoms from the
-Past.
-
-
-
-
-XI—THE STORY OF BILLY BROKE
-
-
- I
-
-Do you know that fiction, without side-tracking interest, can often
-teach a man what he will never learn in a class-room or from a
-text-book? It can, and the lesson sticks, because the human mind is so
-constituted that it will retain and assimilate a moral wrapped up in a
-story, whereas the moral naked and unadorned would be forgotten in
-fifteen minutes or rejected at once.
-
-I wonder how many men have been saved from selling old lamps for new
-by the story of Aladdin!
-
-I, like hosts of other men, am a nervy and imaginative individual, and
-the devil of the thing is that with us our imagination is our worst
-enemy, keeps us awake at night counting up our losses instead of our
-profits, fills us with fantastic fears of the future, and, should any
-of us ever find ourselves in an incriminating position—which God
-forbid—would, were we innocent, ten to one make us look or act like
-criminals.
-
-Here is the story of a man who acted like an ass, a highly moral
-married man whose imagination betrayed him, the story of Billy Broke
-of Los Angeles, told me by Brent.
-
-Brent had a little fishing boat he kept at a slip near Circular Wharf
-and he and I used often to go out fishing in Sydney Harbour. One day
-we were out late, fishing off Farm Cove, so late that on our return a
-huge moon was rising, flooding the harbour and city with its light. We
-left the boat tied up in charge of the wharf keeper and tramped off
-with our fish. Coming up along Halkin Street we saw something like a
-bundle of old clothes lying in the moonlight right before us, and when
-we got to it we found it was a dead Chink.
-
-It was a narrow street of tenement houses and not a soul to be seen.
-There was a big Labour demonstration on that night, so I suppose the
-inhabitants were all off demonstrating and that accounted for the
-desolation of the place.
-
-Brent knelt down to inspect. Then he rose up:
-
-“Stabbed,” said he, “and as dead as mutton.”
-
-“What are we to do?” I asked.
-
-“Well,” said Brent, “we can’t be of any use to him, and we don’t want
-to be mixed up in the business—come along.”
-
-He took me by the arm and led me off. He was a practical man and right
-enough, I suppose, we could give no clue, the murderer, whoever he
-might be, was well away, a thousand to one he was a brother Chink and
-we knew all the bother there would be over the inquest,—still I felt
-a qualm, but it was so slight I easily drowned it in a whisky and soda
-at a bar we stopped at. Then I went home and went to bed and put out
-the light, and with the darkness the moonlit street showed up before
-my mind’s eye—and the Chink.
-
-“Suppose,” I thought, “suppose someone saw us leaving that street,
-suppose by any chance we got connected with the business—what would
-people say? Might they say we had committed the murder?” Absolute
-nonsense, but there you are, my imagination had got away with me. I
-couldn’t sleep, and next morning when I met Brent he asked me what was
-wrong with me and I told him. He took me out for a sail in the harbour
-where we spent the day cruising about, and after luncheon Brent
-tackled me over the stupidity of “fancying things.”
-
-“What’s the use of fancying things?” said Brent, “ain’t there enough
-troubles in the world without breeding them. Suppose you _were_ had
-over that Chink, where’s the damage, you didn’t kill him—and you
-ain’t going to be. Forget it. Lord o’ mercy, I’ve seen more guys
-fooled by their fancies than I can remember the names of. Did I ever
-tell you of Billy Broke? Brooke was the real name, only some fool of
-an English ancestor or another left out one of the o’s, so the poor
-chap was saddled with a nameplate only fit for a hoodoo. Nature not to
-be behind in the business, fitted him with a set of nerves and an
-imagination worse than yours and then turned him out into the cold
-world to make his living. On top of everything he was pious beyond the
-ordinary, bashful beyond believing and trusting in every man, which
-isn’t a quality which makes for success in American business circles.
-
-“He’d gone bankrupt four or five times when the Almighty, thinking
-maybe it was a shame that one of his creatures should be used like
-that, married him to a common-sense woman with a bit of money and they
-started a dry goods store in Los Angeles and would have done well
-enough only for Billy’s nerves and imagination.
-
-“He wouldn’t speculate a bit in his business for fear of ruining
-himself, an’ his fear of what was going to happen in the future took
-all the pep and energy out of him. Worst of it was he would be boss of
-the show and not leave things to his wife. I’m not meaning anything
-personal, but chaps with high-geared nerves and X-ray imaginations
-generally have a pretty good opinion of themselves in private. Billy
-had, and the result was that he’d near brought the dry goods store to
-bankruptcy when one day a wholesale firm in ’Frisco began to give
-trouble over a bill that was owing and Billy determined to go and
-interview them.
-
-“Mrs. B. wanted to go, but he wouldn’t let her, and the unfortunate
-woman, knowing the fool he was, got in such a temper, she wouldn’t
-even pack his grip. The hired girl did the packing. She was Irish and
-given to mistakes, one of them dreamy, acushla sort of red-headed
-Irishwomen with her heart on her sleeve and her head in the clouds,
-regular at attending mass and smashing china and dependable to shove
-anything that came handy into the pie she was making or the bag she
-was packing.
-
-“The Irish girl did the packing and Billy with the grip in his hand
-kissed the back of his wife’s neck, for she wouldn’t give him her
-lips, and started off for the station. He got to ’Frisco without
-losing himself and put up at the ‘Paris.’
-
-“Now that day me and Slane were at Long Wharf, ’Frisco, on board the
-_Greyhound_ ready to put out. We’d got five thousand dollars’ worth of
-trade under the hatch, and we were bound for Nanuti in the Gilberts,
-that’s to say right under the Line.
-
-“We were due out next morning at sun up, and that night, under a
-blazing big moon we were sitting on deck having a smoke and talking
-things over. Long Wharf was pretty quiet and you couldn’t more’n hear
-the drunks and such yelling in Third and Fourth Streets. There was a
-timber schooner outside of us and we could hear a fellow snoring in
-her cabin and a big clock somewhere striking eleven. The strokes were
-all equally loud, which showed there was no wind to speak of, and Buck
-was wondering if we’d get enough in the morning to take us out when
-along the wharfside comes running a chap, and, seeing us there on deck
-in the moonlight and the sparks of our cigars, he comes bounding down
-the gang plank and lands on the deck on his hands and knees without
-losing grip of a parcel he was carrying.
-
-“‘Save me,’ cries the chap. ‘Get me out of ’Frisco, the police are
-after me.’ Then he goes limp and Buck bends down and stirs him up.
-
-“‘Drunk,’ says Buck.
-
-“He was, and battered at that. His coat was torn up the back, he was
-mud all over and his hat was gone, and yet, for all that, he looked to
-have been respectable. You can’t batter the respectability out of a
-man in five minutes, not even if you roll him in the gutter and fill
-him with drink, this chap’s hands were clean where they weren’t dirty,
-and I could see his nails had been attended to, his pants were muddy
-and had a tear in them, but they weren’t frayed at the heels and the
-cloth was good.
-
-“‘What are we going to do with him?’ I asks.
-
-“Buck scratches his head for a minute, then he says:
-
-“‘Get him below.’
-
-“I was none too anxious for extra cargo of that sort, but I knew by
-Buck’s voice he wasn’t in the humour for arguing, and, fearing that
-maybe the police might come along and find the chap and hold us up
-maybe next morning as witnesses of Lord knows what, I grabbed the guy
-by the heels whilst Buck took the head and between us we slithered him
-down below and shoved him in a spare bunk, putting his parcel beside
-him.
-
-“We reckoned that maybe he’d have slept his liquor off before morning,
-and we could give him a wash up and shove him ashore.
-
-
- II
-
-“I got into my own bunk and slept like a dead policeman till Buck
-dragged me out.
-
-“‘Tug’s along,’ says he, ‘and there’s a good wind, but I can’t wake
-that blighter. He’s still in the arms of Bacchus and I’m just going to
-take him along, Bacchus and all.’
-
-“I came on deck and there was a little tinpot tug hauling the timber
-schooner out so’s to free us, with the dawn breaking over the bay.
-
-“‘But Lord, Buck!’ I says. ‘What are you going to do with him if you
-take him along, he’s no mascot by the look of him, and no sailor-man
-neither. What are you going to do with him?’
-
-“‘Save him from the police,’ says he, ‘and from liquor and make a man
-of him or kill him, he’s no tough, by his face, just a softy that’s
-got into bad hands maybe, or just run crooked because of the drink.
-Curse the drink,’ says Buck, ‘I’ve seen its black work in my family
-and that’s why I’ve always steered clear of it, and if it was only to
-spite John Barleycorn I’d take a dozen guys like that, let alone one.’
-
-“I didn’t argue. I had my hands full directing the crew, and I had it
-in my mind that Buck was as keen of cheating the Penitentiary as he
-was of spiting John Barleycorn. Like most Irishmen he had a mortal
-hatred of policemen and prisons, and I don’t blame him, neither.
-
-“We were kept on deck till we were clear of the bar and running on a
-sou’-west course, doing seven knots, with the sea piling up and more
-wind coming, then I dropped below for a cup of coffee and a bite of
-food, and looking at the chap in the bunk saw he was still snoring.
-
-“The parcel had dropped out of the bunk owing to the rolling in
-crossing the bar, and the brown paper covering had got a bit loose and
-I couldn’t for the life of me help poking round with my finger and
-loosening it a bit more so’s to have a look at what might be inside. I
-was thinking it might be banknotes or boodle of some sort, but what I
-come on was a female’s silk petticoat. I was more shook up than if I’d
-hit on a rattlesnake, and, calling Buck down, I says to him, ‘Buck,
-this sleeping beauty of yours has been murdering a female.’ That’s how
-the business struck me first. Why else should he have been running
-away with the thing and the police after him?
-
-“Buck takes one squint, then he begins the Sherlock Holmes business,
-looking for dagger marks and bloodstains, but there weren’t none, the
-article looked pretty new, with nothing a Sherlock Holmes could lay
-hold of but the letters J.B. worked in black thread very small on the
-band of it, and no doubt the initials of the party owning the concern.
-Buck puts the thing away in a locker and we sits down to breakfast,
-arguing and talking all the time, the professor of somnology snoring
-away in his bunk, the schooner getting further to sea and the sea
-piling bigger behind her, with the wind rising to a tearing gale.
-
-“I was kept on deck all that morning, at the wheel most of the time,
-for we were running before it and if she’d broached to we’d have gone
-truck over keel to perdition.
-
-“Buck comes up at eight bells, saying the petticoat man had woke up
-wanting to know where he was and asking to be taken to Los Angeles. I
-didn’t bother about the chap, didn’t see him till next morning, when I
-turned out to find the gale gone into a six-knot breeze and Buck and
-him sitting at breakfast.
-
-“He’d washed and brushed and looked more like a human being, and he’d
-given up wantin’ to be taken to Los Angeles and he’d settled down to
-his gruel.
-
-“We were keen to have his story out of him and know what the crime
-was, but we had no time for tale-telling with the damage on deck, for
-we’d lost several spars in the blow, so we just left him to smoke and
-think over his sins and didn’t tackle him till two days later, when he
-told us the whole yarn right off, and without winking, so’s that we
-couldn’t help believing him.
-
-“This is it, as far as I can remember, with nothing left out that
-matters.
-
-
- III
-
-“Billy Broke was his name and he’d left Los Angeles as I’ve told you
-on a visit to ’Frisco to see a wholesale firm on some business. He put
-up at the ‘Paris’ and went to his room to change his necktie and brush
-his hair, and when he opened his grip to fetch out the tie and the
-hairbrush, he come on a woman’s red silk petticoat rolled up and stuck
-in anyhow. At first he thought it was his wife’s, but he couldn’t
-remember ever seeing her in possession of such a garment, she being a
-woman of quiet tastes and not given to violent colours. Then he
-thought the thing must have been shoved in for fun by some joking
-young chaps that had been on the train. The more he considered this,
-the more he was sure of it, and down he sits to think things over.
-
-“First of all he says to himself that if the thing was shoved in by
-them guys for fun it must have been stolen, then it came to him that
-maybe they didn’t put it in for fun but to get rid of it as evidence
-against them of some crime they’d committed. That made him sweat, but
-he got a clutch on himself, telling himself it was only in magazine
-stories things like that happened and that the chances were it
-belonged to his wife. Then he told himself that no matter who it
-belonged to or who put it there, he’d got to get rid of it.
-
-“He wouldn’t risk bringing it back home, not much, and he wouldn’t
-risk keeping it an instant longer in his possession for fear of
-detectives arriving whilst it was still in his possession, so down he
-goes to the office and begs, borrows or steals a piece of brown paper
-and a yard and a half of string and back he comes to his room and
-wraps the evidence up and ties the string round it.
-
-“‘There,’ says Billy to himself, ‘that’s done. Now the only thing I’ve
-got to do is take it out and lose it. Just throw it away. Some poor
-woman will pick it up and grateful she’ll be for it.’
-
-“He comes down and goes out with the parcel under his arm and then he
-finds himself in the street. He’d thought to drop the parcel in the
-street casually as he walked along, it seemed the easiest thing in the
-world to do, but no sooner had he left the hotel with the parcel under
-his arm than he felt that everyone was watching him. That wasn’t
-stupidity either. Everyone was watching him. Everyone in every street
-is watching everyone else, doing it unbeknown to themselves most of
-the time, but doing it; it’s maybe a habit that has come down to us
-from the time we were hunters, and our lives depended on our eyes, but
-it’s there and if you fall down in any street half a dozen people will
-see you fall who otherwise would never have known of your existence,
-passing you without seeing you, consciously.
-
-“That truth hit Billy between the eyes. He felt if he were to drop
-that parcel, not only would some guy see him drop it, but he’d know
-he’d dropped it purposefully, so he walks along with it under his arm
-trying to find an empty street, and somehow or another failing, till
-he comes on a narrow lane, and ‘Here’s my chance,’ says he and dives
-down it. Half way down, with no one in front or behind, he drops the
-parcel and walks on, but he couldn’t help turning his head like a
-fool, and there behind him, just come into the lane, was a man. The
-parcel was between Billy and the man, and Billy in a flash saw that
-the man would know he’d dropped it seeing Billy was walking away from
-it, not towards it. So, having turned his head, he had to complete the
-business and turn back and pick up the durned thing and walk on with
-it. He was in Market Street now and beginning to set his teeth. There
-was a good few people going and coming and they all seemed so busy and
-full of themselves that Billy took heart, and, walking along close to
-the houses, dropped the thing again. He didn’t turn his head this
-time, but just walked on, stopping here and there to look in at the
-shop windows and feeling he’d done the trick this time. He’d gone a
-good way and was looking in at a jeweller’s thinking which of the
-rings he’d buy for his wife if he had the money, when an old chap
-comes panting up to him with the parcel.
-
-“‘I saw you drop it,’ says the old guy, and I ran after you with it,
-but you walk so quick I couldn’t catch you.’ Then he has a fit of
-coughing and Billy sees he’s nearly in rags and hands out a quarter
-and takes the parcel. Billy was beginning to find out the truth that
-if you want to lose a thing that’s of no value to you, you can’t, not
-in a city anyhow, but he was only beginning, else he’d have quitted
-the business right there and have knuckled under to that petticoat.
-
-“Instead of that what does he do but go on with his peregrinations and
-his fool attempts to get rid of the thing, he makes it a present to a
-beggar woman and when she’d seen what was in it, she runs after him
-saying she’s taking no stolen goods and suggesting a dollar commission
-for not showing it to the police.
-
-“Then getting along for four in the afternoon, Billy, feeling he’s
-married to the thing, begins to celebrate his connubial state with
-drinks. He wasn’t used to the stuff and he goes from saloon to saloon,
-warming up as he went and making more attempts at divorce till he
-strikes a bar tender notorious for his married unblessedness, offers
-the thing as a present for the B.T.’s wife and gets kicked flying into
-the street when a policeman picks him and his parcel up and starts
-them off again on their ambulations.
-
-“The drink was working in him now strong—you see, he’d always been an
-abstemious man and you never know what whisky will do with a guy like
-that till it’s done with him. Billy cruises into another bar, planks
-down a quarter, swallows a high ball, gets a clutch on himself and
-starts on the king of all jags. He wasn’t trying to lose the parcel
-now. He was proud of it. He remembered in one saloon undoing it and
-showing the petticoat to an admiring audience. He remembered in
-another saloon saying the thing was full of bonds and banknotes. Then
-he was down in the dock area tumbling into gutters and singing songs.
-Chaps tried to rob him of the thing and he fought them like a wild
-cat. He’d begun the day with the parcel sticking to him, and he was
-ending the day by sticking to the parcel and resisting all attempts on
-it by armed force, so to speak. Then he believed he had a dust up with
-some Chinks who tried to nab the thing and there seemed to be police
-mixed up with it, for it ended with him running to escape policemen.
-Then he couldn’t remember anything more, and we told him how he had
-come running along the dockside till he struck the _Greyhound_ and
-came bounding on board, as per invoice.
-
-
- IV
-
-“That was the yarn Billy spun, and there he sat when he’d finished
-asking us what he was to do.
-
-“‘Well, I says to him, ‘you’re asking that question a bit too late; to
-begin with, you should never have trusted yourself alone in ’Frisco
-with them nerves of yours. Second, you went the wrong way about
-getting rid of the thing.’
-
-“‘Oh, did I?’ said Billy. ‘And how would you have done—put yourself
-in my position, and what would you have done to get rid of it?’
-
-“That flummoxed me.
-
-“‘Well,’ I said, ‘to begin with, I wouldn’t have been such an ass as
-to want to get rid of it.’
-
-“‘S’posing you were,’ said he, ‘and I allow I was an ass to fancy all
-them things, but supposing you were, will you tell me where I went
-wrong? Wouldn’t you have done everything I did just as I did it? Of
-course you would. I tell you I was fixed to that thing by bad luck and
-I only got rid of it after it had done me in with the drink.’
-
-“‘But you haven’t got rid of it,’ says Buck.
-
-“‘Whach you mean?’ asks Billy, his hair standing on end.
-
-“‘You brought it on board,’ says Buck, and he goes to the locker and
-takes the parcel out. Billy looked at it, took it in his hands and
-turned it over.
-
-“‘Then he says: ‘That does me.’ He says no more than that. The life
-seemed to go out of him for a bit as if the hunch had come on him that
-it wasn’t no use to fight any more.
-
-“‘I says to Buck: ‘Come on up on deck and leave him with the durned
-thing,’ and up we went and there we saw a big freighter pounding along
-and coming up from south’ard, ’Frisco bound and making to pass us
-close.
-
-“‘There’s his chance,’ says Buck; ‘run down and fetch him up and we’ll
-flag her to stop, it’s better than taking him off to hell or
-Timbuctoo, seeing he’s a married man.’
-
-“Down I went and up I brought him. There was a fair sea still running,
-but nothing to make a bother about, and we could easy have got him off
-in a boat. But do you think that chap would go, not he; he said he’d
-sure be drowned if he put off in a boat in that sea, said the thing
-was out to drown him if it could. Then he went below and got into his
-bunk with his inamorata, and we let the freighter pass, and that was
-his last chance of getting to Los Angeles for many a long day.
-
-“I was pretty sick with him, so was Buck. It wasn’t so much because he
-was afraid of drowning as because he was afraid of being drowned by
-that rotten parcel, but we weren’t so free of superstitions ourselves
-as to be too hard on the poor chap, so we didn’t do more than make his
-life a hell till he was ashamed of himself to the soles of his boots
-and taking a hand in the working of the ship. We wanted to shy parcel
-and petticoat overboard, but he wouldn’t let us. We’d shown him the
-initials on the belt of the thing and he said they were his wife’s and
-it was plain now that some mistake had been made in packing it among
-his things by the servant maid he gave us the specification of. He
-said he reckoned he’d keep it to bring back to her, so she might know
-his story was true.
-
-“But it was many a day before he was likely to see Los Angeles again
-and so we told him.
-
-
- V
-
-“From the day we passed that freighter till the day we lifted Howland
-Island, which lies nor’-west of Nanuti, we only sighted three ships
-hull down and beyond signalling.
-
-“After passing Howland we passed a brig bound for Java and a freighter
-from Rangoon bound for South American ports—Nothing for anywhere near
-’Frisco.
-
-“Billy like a good many landsmen seemed to fancy that ships were all
-over the sea close as plums in a pudding. He got to know different by
-the time we reached Nanuti and, more than that, he got to know that
-every ship wasn’t bound for ’Frisco.
-
-“‘Why,’ he says one day, ‘if I’ve got to wait for a ship back,’ he
-says, ‘I’m thinking it’s an old man I’ll be before we sight one.’
-
-“‘And you’re thinking right,’ says Buck. ‘You had your chance and you
-missed it because the sea was a bit rough and your head was stuffed
-with that blessed petticoat and the idea it was going to drown you.
-You’ll just have to stick to the old _Greyhound_ till she fetches up
-again at Long Wharf and that’s God knows when, for we don’t run by
-time-table.’
-
-“And that was the fact; we touched at Nanuti and discharged cargo and
-took on copra. Then we came along down by the New Hebrides and shaving
-New Caledonia put into Sydney and discharged and took a cargo along to
-Auckland, and then from North Island we took a cargo down for Dunedin.
-The only way to make money with ships is to know where to go for your
-cargoes. Buck had some sort of instinct that way and he was backed
-with friends in the shipping trade, but it wasn’t for eight months
-from starting that he got the chance of a cargo to ’Frisco, and it
-wasn’t till two months later that we passed the whistling buoy and saw
-the tumble of the bar.
-
-“I looked at Billy that morning and I thought to myself that it was
-worth it to him. He looked twice the man he was when he fetched on
-board and, more than that, he could handle sails and steer and take an
-observation as good as me or Buck, besides which Buck had treated him
-well about payment and he’d have a good few dollars waiting for him
-when we tied up at the wharf.
-
-“Which was that day. I’d business which kept me running about all the
-day after and it wasn’t till the day after that Billy took heart and
-come to me and asked me to go with him to Los Angeles so’s to break
-him to his wife, so to speak.
-
-“I’d got to like the chap and I agreed. I won’t say that I wasn’t
-anxious to see how he’d make out when he got back and what Mrs. Billy
-would say to him, but however that may be, I packed a bag and Billy
-shouldered his dunnage and off we started by the night train, getting
-into Los Angeles next morning.
-
-“It wasn’t as big a place in those days as it is now. We left our
-traps at the station and set off on foot to find Mrs. B., Billy back
-in his old nervous state and almost afraid to ask questions as to how
-his wife and the shop had been doing in his absence. The shop was on
-Pine Tree Avenue, and half way along to it Billy’s nerves got so bad
-we stopped at a restaurant for some breakfast, fixing it that I should
-go off after the meal and hunt up Mrs. B. and find out what had become
-of her. Billy could scarcely eat his food for talking of what might
-have happened to her, fearing maybe she might have committed suicide
-or gone bankrupt or starved to death or gone out of her mind at the
-loss of him. The woman that ran the restaurant served us at table and
-it came to me sudden to ask her did she know anything of a Mrs. Broke
-of Pine Tree Avenue who had a dry goods store.
-
-“‘Burstall, you mean?’ said she. ‘She’s married again since Broke ran
-off and left her. He was a little no good chap and skipped with all
-the money they had, which wasn’t much, and she got a divorce against
-him for illegally deserting her or incompatibility of temper or
-something and ran the store herself and made it pay. Y’ see, he’d been
-boss of the thing up to that, and near made it bankrupt, but once she
-took charge, she made it pay. I’ve never seen Broke, I only came to
-the town six months ago, but I’ve seen Burstall often. He’s a fine man
-and between them they’re making that store hum.’
-
-“I got Billy on his feet and out of that place and wanted to get him
-to the station to see about the next train for ’Frisco, but he said he
-wanted to see things for himself and make sure; so the funeral
-procession started for Pine Tree Avenue.
-
-“‘That’s the place,’ said Billy, pointing to a big shop with J.
-Burstall and Co. painted along the front in gold letters. ‘There’s my
-old home—Well, I wish her happiness.
-
-“That seemed to me a pretty weak thing to do, and I says to him:
-‘Ain’t you going to kick Burstall?’
-
-“He didn’t hear me, he was so occupied looking at his old home, till a
-big fellow in his shirt-sleeves comes out and begins looking at the
-contents of the shop window to see how they showed.
-
-“Billy goes up to him.
-
-“‘You belong to this store?’ says Billy.
-
-“‘Yep,’ says the chap.
-
-“‘Then will you give Mrs. Broke, I mean Burstall, this parcel,’ says
-Billy, ‘and ask her to see me about it, there’s been a big mistake.’
-
-“‘No use troubling her,’ says the big chap. ‘I’m Burstall and running
-this store. What’s this you’ve brought back—we don’t change no goods
-once bought.’
-
-“‘It’s a petticoat,’ says Billy.
-
-“‘Well, what’s wrong with it?’ asks the other, taking the goods.
-
-“‘What’s wrong with it!’ cries Billy, then he begins to laugh like a
-crazy man, till I thought Burstall would have gone for the both of us.
-
-“‘Come on, Billy,’ I says, catching him by the arm, then I turns to
-Burstall: ‘You big stiff,’ I says, for all my bristles were up at the
-beefy look of the chap and the carried on. ‘You big stiff,’ I says,
-‘for two pins,’ I says, ‘I’d kick you from here to Santa Barbara.’
-
-“Burstall drops the parcel to go for me, when along comes a policeman,
-and explanations begins; Burstall saying how we’d been trying to land
-him some old goods we’d never bought in his shop and the policeman
-asking us for our address.
-
-“‘We don’t belong here,’ I says. ‘We’ve come from ’Frisco.’
-
-“‘Well,’ says the bull, ‘if I find you about town trying any more of
-your dodges by noon to-day. I’ll run you in, sure as my name’s Bill
-Adams. Pick up your parcel and off with you.’
-
-“I picked the damned thing up and stuffed it in the side pocket of
-Billy’s coat and led him off, the bull following us two or three
-blocks to make sure we were moving.
-
-“We found a train was starting at the station, and I got Billy in, all
-broke down. Getting towards ’Frisco he pulled himself together, he’d
-been thinking a lot on the journey, and I got the surprise of my life
-to find him cheerful all of a sudden.
-
-“‘Do you know what I’m thinking?’ says he. ‘I’m thinking this thing is
-my mascot, and I’ve been trying to get rid of my luck all this time.
-It got me free of that woman, for we never pulled together proper, it
-got me in with you and Slane, and you’ve made a man of me. Every time
-I tried to lose it, bad luck came to me, and look at the luck she’s
-had since she lost it, married to that brute of a Burstall. It’s my
-luck I’ve been trying to get rid of, and now I know, I’m going to do
-big things.’
-
-“I left him at the station, and met him a year later all broke down
-and half in rags.
-
-“‘Why, Billy.’ I said, ‘what ails you?’
-
-“‘I lost my mascot,’ says he. ‘I was getting on fine and making money
-hand over fist when a damn landlady pinched it out of my wardrobe,
-though I never could bring it home to her. It took all the heart out
-of me and things went wrong all round.’
-
-“I gave him a dollar and never saw him again,” finished Brent, “and
-I’ve just told you about him to show you what nerves and fancies and
-such like may bring a man to.—Now as to that dead Chink.”
-
-But I wasn’t bothering any more about the Chink, maybe because of the
-fresh air of the harbour, maybe because of the awful warning contained
-in the story of Billy Broke.
-
-
-
-
-XII—THE MAKING OF A MILLIONAIRE
-
-
- I
-
-I’ve told you, said Brent, that Slane had an old uncle in San
-Francisco, Pat O’Brien, worth over two million dollars they said he
-was and I don’t doubt them. Pat had landed in New York somewhere in
-the ’fifties or ’sixties without a jitney, then he’d come along to
-’Frisco; he hadn’t struck gold, he hadn’t struck oil, nor Luck in any
-special way as far as we could make out, he’d just become a
-millionaire, and one day when we were on the trip back to ’Frisco with
-a full cargo, I said to Buck: “Look here, Buck,” I says, “you and me
-has been trading together the last ten years. We’re up to every game
-on the Pacific coast, we aren’t simple sailors no more than a mule is
-all an ass. Well, we’ve got sixty thousand dollars between us put by,
-but four years ago we had forty thousand. We make our money hard and
-earn it slow, seems to me. Look at Pat, he’s none of our natural
-advantages; the chap can’t more than read and write his name, he’s
-only one brain and we’ve got two, but look at him, rolling in dollars.
-How’s it done?”
-
-“Search me,” says Buck. “It’s the way they all do it. Seems to me it’s
-the start. If you’re American-born you start selling newspapers, if
-you’re only a blistered alien you land without a cent in your pocket,
-whereas we’d got a few dollars, but there’s no going back.”
-
-We left it at that and got into ’Frisco next day and went to the
-lodgings we had in Tallis Street. We’d always lived small considering
-that we could have cut a bigger dash if we’d chosen, but the fact of
-the matter is, living big for the likes of us would have meant soaking
-in bars and all the trimmings that go with that. It’s God’s truth that
-a plain sailor man who isn’t what the damn fools who run the world
-call a “gentleman” is clean out of it in the big towns—unless he’s a
-millionaire. So, not being able to sit on the top of the pyramid, we
-just sat on the sand waiting for some big strike, and stuck to our
-rooms in Tallis Street in a house kept by a Mrs. Murphy.
-
-Well, as I was saying, we went to our lodgings, and a couple of days
-after, old Pat O’Brien, hearing we were back, called on us. Pat,
-though he was near eighty, was an early bird, and though he was worth
-two millions he always footed it about the town; he was the spit and
-image of Mr. Jiggs in the comic papers, and as we were sitting at
-breakfast in he came with a cigar butt stuck in the corner of his
-mouth.
-
-“Lord love me,” says Pat. “Nine o’clock and you at breakfast. No,” he
-says, “I won’t have no coffee, a glass of hot water is all I take till
-one o’clock in the day, and then I have a porterhouse-steak and a pint
-of claret, and that’s why I have all my teeth though I’m close on
-eighty—and how’s the old Greyhound been doing this trip?”
-
-I’ve told you before how Buck got the Greyhound out of Pat at our
-first go off, and he made it a habit always to call on us when we were
-in from a trip to ask after her. He didn’t care a dump about her, he
-just wanted to pick up Island news that might be useful to him in his
-business—but we never pretended we knew that.
-
-“Doing fine,” says Buck.
-
-Then Pat sits down and borrows a match to light his cigar stump, and
-in half an hour he’d got to know all he wanted; then, when we’d given
-him a cigar to get rid of him, off he goes stumping down the stairs,
-and a minute after, the window being open owing to the hot weather, we
-heard him talking to Micky Murphy, the landlady’s little boy, who was
-playing in the street. Couldn’t hear what he was saying at first till
-a bit of a breeze came in and we heard him say to the child: “So Micky
-is your name,” he says. “Well, come along, and bring your play toy
-with you and I’ll buy you some candy.”
-
-I stuck my head out of the window, and there was the old chap and the
-child hand-in-hand going off down the street towards the candy shop at
-the corner.
-
-“Well,” I says, “Buck, we’ve misjudged him; he’s got a heart somewhere
-and he’s not as mean as he advertises himself.”
-
-Buck was as much taken aback as myself. You see, we’d had a lot of
-dealings with the old man and he’d always forgot his purse if a tram
-fare was to be paid, and I’ve seen him pick up a match in the street
-to light his cigar, which he was always letting go out to save
-tobacco—and there he was going off to buy a child candy.
-
-But that was only the beginning of things, for two days later we had a
-note from him asking us to dinner.
-
-He had only asked us to dinner once before, years ago, and that was
-when he was shook out of himself by a deal we’d done over pearls, and
-it was at a restaurant. This time he was asking us to his house.
-
-“What’s he after?” says Buck, turning the letter over. “Day before
-yesterday he was giving Micky Murphy candy, and now he’s asking us to
-dinner. He’ll bust himself with generosity if he doesn’t mind out.
-Will you go?”
-
-“Sure,” said I, and we went.
-
-Pat was married, as perhaps I haven’t told you, and when the darkie
-let us in, there was Mrs. Pat waiting to receive us in the big room
-hung with pictures opening from the hall, and a minute after in come
-Pat’s daughter Sadie with her hair frizzed out, and when Pat toddled
-in after, if it wasn’t McMorrows Jiggs family to the life, call me a
-nigger.
-
-We didn’t feel comfortable by no means, not being used to female
-society done up in diamonds, but they were anxious to please, though I
-could see plain enough that behind everything those two women looked
-on us as plated goods, but Pat kept the ball rolling, chatting away,
-and at dinner, after the champagne had gone round, the girl suddenly
-turns to Buck, and, “Tell us about your last voyage, Mr. Slane?” says
-she.
-
-“Oh,” says Buck, “there’s nothing much to tell; we went to Levua.
-We’ve been there three trips; there’s several German traders we’re in
-with and they give us a lot of business. We’re off there again in a
-month.”
-
-“Is it a long way?” she questions.
-
-“Yes, it’s a good bit of a way,” he answers, “and it would be longer
-only the _Greyhound_ is no tortoise.”
-
-“How interesting,” she says, “and I suppose you see plenty of other
-islands on the way there and back. Are they as pretty as people say?”
-
-“Well,” says Buck, “as a matter of fact we stop nowhere but a place we
-call Palm Island. We put in there for water and fruit; it’s not on the
-charts and there’s no trade to be done there, but it’s pretty enough.”
-
-He describes the place, and then she tackles him on Levua again, and
-the manners of the natives, and then Mrs. Pat cuts in and talks of the
-opera and the theatres and such.
-
-Dinner over, we go to the drawing-room, where the women squall at the
-piano for a bit, and then we go to Pat’s den for cigars.
-
-I remember Buck, who was livened up a bit with the champagne, asking
-Pat how to become a millionaire.
-
-“Why,” says Pat, cocking his eye at the other, “you just pick a
-million up and stick to it. It’s not the picking it up that’s the
-bother, it’s the sticking to it,” he says. Then we went home thinking
-that Pat had been joking with us. But he hadn’t.
-
-
- II
-
-Levenstein was the name of the chief German trader at Levua. We had
-big dealings with him amounting to a share in his business, and we
-were going out this time with a cargo of trade goods and with some
-agricultural stuff for a man by name of Marks who had started a
-plantation on the north of the island. Our hands were pretty full, for
-we were our own stevedores, not trusting the longshore Johnnies over
-much, and one day, as we were on deck, the both of us, who should come
-along the wharf but Pat. Pat looked down in the mouth and as if
-something was troubling him. He gave us good-day and asked us how we
-were doing, and then he told us his bother. Sadie wasn’t well, the
-doctors thought she was going into a consumption.
-
-“There’s nothing but trouble in this world,” said Pat. “First I lost
-my partner six months ago, then I lost a cargo which wasn’t full
-insured by a mistake of a damn clerk, and now Sadie is took bad. Well,
-good-day to you, boys, and better luck than is attending me.”
-
-“Now I wonder why he came along the wharf to tell us that,” says Buck.
-“Blessed if I can make the old man out. His compasses are wrong, he
-ain’t sailing true; he’s doing things he’s never done before. Maybe
-he’s breaking up with old age and that’s what’s the matter with him.”
-
-“He seems to have taken a fancy to us anyhow,” I says, “and if he’s
-breaking up let’s hope he won’t forget you in his will.”
-
-Then we went on with our work, thinking no more about him till two
-days later up he turns again, comes down to the cabin of the
-_Greyhound_, pulls out a big handkerchief, blows his nose and wipes
-his eyes and starts his batteries.
-
-“Me child’s going to die,” says he. “Oh, it’s the cruel disease as has
-caught hold of her; it’s only trotting now, but once it begins to
-gallop Dr. Hennassy says he won’t give her a fortnight. Nothing will
-save her, he says, but a long sea voyage away from excitement with the
-good God’s ozone round her. Steamships is no good, and there’s nothing
-in ’Frisco but Cape Horners and timber ships. Buck, you’re me nephew,
-and by the same token you had the old _Greyhound_ out of me for next
-to nothing, though I’m not worryin’ about that. Take her for a trip
-and I’ll pay the expenses; she can take the old Kanaka mammy with her,
-that brought her up, to look after her. If it’s ten thousand dollars
-you can have it, but get her out into God’s good ozone, away off to
-Honolulu and away round that way for a six months’ trip; fling your
-cargo in the harbour,” he says, “and I’ll pay, for it’s me house is on
-fire and me child is burnin’, and what do I care for money where her
-life is concerned.”
-
-“Sure,” said Buck, “I’d take her jumping, but well you know I’m under
-contract, and as for throwing the cargo in the harbour, barring what
-the Port Authorities would say, it’s not mine to throw.”
-
-“Well,” says the old man, “take her along with you, cargo and all;
-you’ve got an after cabin you don’t use with two bunks in it, that
-will do for them. You two bunk here in the main cabin, don’t you?
-Well, there you are, and I’ll pay you a thousand dollars for the
-trip.”
-
-“Not a cent,” says Buck. “I don’t eat my relations when they’re in
-trouble. If I take her she goes free—and, sure, how am I to refuse to
-take her seeing what you say?”
-
-“That’s me brave boy,” says Pat, “the true son of me sister Mary, God
-rest her soul.”
-
-Then when we’d done some more talk he goes off.
-
-“Well,” I says to Buck, “here’s a nice cargo.”
-
-I’ve told you Buck was married to a woman who had run away from him.
-He’d never bothered to get divorced from her, fearing if he got
-amongst lawyers, he’d be sure to be robbed, and feeling that, as he
-didn’t ever want to get married again, buying a divorce would be like
-a chap with no heart for music buying a concertina.
-
-“Well,” I says, rubbing it into him, “here’s a nice cargo. I’m no
-marrying man, and you’re hitched, so what’s the good of her; a
-thousand dollars won’t pay us for freightage, and if there’s a scratch
-on her when we get back, there’ll be hell to pay with Pat. S’pose she
-dies on us?” I says.
-
-“And what would she die of?” asks he.
-
-“Why, what but consumption?” says I.
-
-Buck laughed.
-
-“Consumption of victuals is all that’s wrong with her,” he says, and
-then he says no more, but goes on deck leaving me harpooned.
-
-I’d taken in this consumption business as honest coin, and now, by
-Buck’s manner and words, I saw that Pat had been lying to us.
-
-The skylight was open, and seeing Buck’s shadow across it, I called
-him down and, “For the love of God,” I says, “don’t tell me that the
-old man has been stuffing us. What’s his meaning?”
-
-“It’s a family affair,” says Buck, “and I’d sooner leave it at that
-till we get to the end of it, but if you ask his meaning, why I’ll
-tell you straight that Pat has only one meaning in everything he does,
-and that’s robbery. He’s making to best me. I can’t see his game yet
-or what he is playing for, I can only say the stake’s big or he
-wouldn’t be pulling the girl into it.”
-
-“But where’s the meaning of it?” I says, “unless he’s sending the girl
-to queer our pitch with Levenstein, and that wouldn’t be worth his
-trouble; there’s not enough business doing at Levua to make it worth
-his while, considering the big deals he’s always after.”
-
-“Well,” says Buck, “I don’t know what’s his game, but I’m going to
-find out.”
-
-
- III
-
-Day before we sailed, down came two trunks and a hat box, and the next
-day down came the girl herself with the old Kanaka mammy and Pat.
-
-He stood on the wharfside and waved to us as we were tugged out, and
-Sadie stood and waved back to him. She had a lot of good points that
-girl, though straight dealing wasn’t one of them, and she didn’t seem
-to mind, no more than if she was going on a picnic. She took the
-tumble at the bar as if she was used to it, and she settled to the
-life of the ship same as a man might have done.
-
-She was always wanting to know things—names of the ropes and all
-such, and she hadn’t been a week on board before she began to poke her
-nose into the navigating and charts. She used to cough sometimes at
-first, but after a while she dropped all that, saying the sea air had
-taken her cough away.
-
-Now you wouldn’t believe unless you’d been there, the down we took on
-that piece before a week had gone.
-
-It wasn’t anything she said or anything she did, it was just the way
-she carried on. She was civil and she gave no more trouble than
-another might have done, but we weren’t her style, and she made us
-feel it. Only a woman can make a strong and straight man feel like a
-worm. It wasn’t even that she despised us for being below her class,
-she didn’t; she never thought of us, and she made us feel we weren’t
-men but just things—get me?
-
-“Buck,” I says to him one day, “if you could hollow that piece out,
-stick her on a pivot and put a lid on her, she’d make an A 1 freezing
-machine.”
-
-“She would,” said Buck, “and if you were to plate her with gold and
-set her with diamonds, you couldn’t make a lady out of her.”
-
-“That’s so,” said I, “but all the same she’ll be an A 1 navigator
-before she’s done with us.”
-
-One evening, somewhere north of Palmyra—we’d been blown a bit south
-of our course—I was on deck. Buck was below and a Kanaka was at the
-wheel, and a moon like a frying pan was rising up and lighting the
-deck so’s you could count the dowels. I’d turned to have a look over
-the after rail, and when I turned again there was Buck just come on
-deck and an hour before his time.
-
-He came up and took me by the arm and walked me forward a bit.
-
-“I’ve found it out,” he says.
-
-“What?” I asks.
-
-“Why Pat O’Brien took Mrs. Murphy’s child off to buy it candy,” he
-says.
-
-I thought he’d gone off his head for the moment.
-
-“I’ve been thinking and thinking ever since we left ’Frisco,” he goes
-on, “thinking and thinking, and there it was under my nose all the
-time.”
-
-“What?” I questions.
-
-“The reason of the whole of this business,” says he, “why Pat O’Brien,
-the brother of my mother Mary—God rest her soul—parted with five
-cents to buy a kid candy, why he asked us to dinner, why he pretended
-that freezing mixture down below had consumption, why he shipped her
-on board the _Greyhound_, and what it is she’s after. It’s all as
-plain as day, and there’s more to it than that. Brent, we’re
-millionaires.”
-
-“Look here,” I says, “like a good chap, will you take your mind off
-the business and pull yourself together—you’ve been thinking too much
-over this business; forget it.”
-
-Buck was a queer devil. You never knew how he’d take things. Seeing I
-thought his head had gone wrong, instead of explaining like a sensible
-chap, he cut the thing off short.
-
-“Maybe you’re right,” he says. “Maybe I’m crazy, maybe I’m not. I’ll
-say nothing more. We’ll see.”
-
-I left it at that, not wanting to stir up trouble in his head, and we
-didn’t talk of the thing again—not for a long time, anyhow.
-
-But a change had come over Buck. He’d got to be as cheerful as a
-cricket, and I’d see him sometimes at table sitting staring in front
-of himself as if he was looking at the New Jerusalem, instead of the
-bird’s-eye panelling of the after bulkhead; then, by his talk I could
-tell his head was travelling on the same old track; when a man talks
-of the building price of steam yachts you can tell how his mind is
-running, same as when he talks of rents on Pacific Avenue and such
-places. But I said nothing, just kept my head shut and let him talk,
-and glad I was the morning we raised Levua.
-
-It’s a big island—if you’ve never been down that way—mountainous and
-with no proper reef only to the west, for east the sea comes smack up
-to the cliffs—but it’s pretty, what with the trees and all, and
-there’s a big waterfall comes down on the south from the hills that’s
-reckoned one of the sights of the island.
-
-Levenstein’s house was on the beach to the west; a run of reef, broken
-here and there, kept the sea pretty smooth on the beach, and there was
-ten fathoms close up to the sand. A lot of scouring goes on there with
-the tides, and the fishings the best I’ve seen anywhere, just in that
-bit of water.
-
-Old Pat O’Brien hadn’t asked to see a photograph of Levenstein, else
-maybe he wouldn’t have been so keen on shipping Sadie off on her
-travels; I’d forgot the fellow’s good looks, but when he boarded us
-after we’d dropped the hook, I remembered the fact and I saw he’d
-taken Sadie’s eye.
-
-Levenstein wasn’t unlike Kaiser Bill, only younger and better-looking;
-he was the sort women like, and he could coo like a damn turtle dove
-when he was in the mind, but he had the reputation of having whipped a
-Kanaka to death. I’d just as soon have given a girl’s happiness to
-that chap as I’d have given a rump steak to a tiger cat trustin’ in it
-to honour it. No, sir, that build don’t make for happiness, not much,
-and if Sadie had been my girl when I saw her setting her eyes on him
-like that, I’d have put the _Greyhound_ to sea again, even if I’d had
-to shove her over the reef to get out.
-
-But I wasn’t bothering about Sadie’s happiness; I reckoned a little
-unhappiness mightn’t help to do her much harm by unsticking her glue a
-bit, and I reckon Buck felt the same, so, having business in the trade
-room and ashore enough to last us for days, we let things rip and
-didn’t bother.
-
-Sadie and the old Mammy were given the overseer’s house on shore, and
-the girl settled down to enjoy herself. She was awfully keen on
-exploring the island and seeing the natives, and she and the old
-Kanaka woman would make excursions, taking their grub with them, and
-having picnics all over the place, and Levenstein would go with her
-sometimes, and Marks, from the north of the island, would come over
-sometimes, and it made my blood fair boil to see her carrying on with
-those two Germans because she thought them gentlemen, and at the same
-time cold-shouldering us as if we weren’t more than the dirt she
-walked on.
-
-I said the same to Buck, and Buck he only says: “Leave her to me,” he
-says, “she’s come out to get what she won’t get, but she’ll get what
-she little expects if she marries uncle Lev,” says Buck. “Leave her to
-me,” he says, “I’ll l’arn her before I’ve done with her,” he says.
-“Damn her!” says he—which wasn’t the language to use about a girl,
-but then Sadie wasn’t so much a girl as a china figure all prickles,
-no use to hold or carry and not the ornament you’d care to stick on
-your chimney-piece if you wanted to be happy in your home.
-
-One day Buck says to me: “Come on over to the north of the island,” he
-says, “I want to have a talk to Marks.”
-
-“What about?” I asks.
-
-“The beauty of the scenery,” he replies.
-
-Off we started. Germans are some good, they can make roads—if I
-haven’t told you Levua was a German island, I’ll tell you now. I’m
-saying Germans can make roads, and if you doubt me, go and see the
-twelve-mile coral road they’ve made round Nauru or what they’ve done
-in German New Guinea, and the road to Marks’ plantation was as good as
-those.
-
-Coming along for late afternoon we hit the place, and found Marks in.
-Marks was like one of those Dutchmen you see in the comic papers, long
-china pipe and all, but he was the most level-headed man in the
-Islands, and I soon found that Buck had come to him for information
-and not to talk about the beauty of the scenery.
-
-We had drinks and cigars, and presently Buck says to Marks, “Look
-here,” he says, “you’re a man that knows everything about the West
-Pacific, s’pose I found an island that wasn’t on the charts and didn’t
-belong to anybody, which of the blessed nations would make a claim to
-it; would it be the one whose territory was closest to it?”
-
-Marks leans back in his chair and lights his pipe again, then he says:
-“If you find an unknown island, it would belong to England or Germany,
-all depends on where it lies in the West Pacific.”
-
-“How’s that?” says Buck. “Why wouldn’t the French or Dutch have a look
-in?”
-
-“It’s this way,” says Marks, “Germany in old days wasn’t a sea-going
-nation much, and so the English and French and Dutch took up nearly
-all the islands of the Pacific, leaving Germany in the cold till 1865,
-when she began to want things and show that she could get them. She
-took a big bite of New Guinea, then she came to an arrangement with
-England that she and England would take all the lands and islands in
-the West Pacific no one else had seized and divide them between them.
-Get me?”
-
-“Yes,” says Buck.
-
-“The line starts from New Guinea,” says Marks, “then goes east, then
-north to fifteen degrees north latitude, and 173 degrees, 30 seconds
-east longitude; anything new found west of that would be German,
-anything to the east, British.”
-
-“Show us the line on a map,” says Buck, and Marks gets up and fetches
-down a map and draws the line with a pencil.
-
-Buck gives a great sigh and thanks him, and then we started off back
-home with the rising moon to show us our way and a three hours’ tramp
-before us.
-
-On the way I tried to get out of him what his meaning was in asking
-those questions, but he wouldn’t tell.
-
-“You thought I was mad when I tried to tell you first,” he said, “and
-now you’ll have to wait till I’ve landed the business, but I’ll tell
-you one thing——”
-
-“What?” I asks.
-
-“Never mind,” he says, “shut heads are best where a word might spoil
-everything.”
-
-
- IV
-
-Three weeks at Levua got the cargo out and the cargo in, and the
-morning came when we were due to start. Sadie and Levenstein had been
-getting thicker and thicker; she was one of those girls that take the
-bit between the teeth, and it didn’t knock us down with surprise when,
-coming on board with her trunks, she said she’d been married that
-morning to Mr. Levenstein by the native parson and that Levenstein was
-going to follow her on to ’Frisco by the next boat he could catch.
-
-Did you ever hear of such a tomfool arrangement? For she could just as
-well have waited till he got to ’Frisco, and then she’d have had time
-to change her mind; that’s what Buck told her as we put out with
-Levenstein waving to us from the shore.
-
-Buck rubbed it into her proper, he being a relative and all that, but
-I doubt if he wasn’t as glad as myself to think of the face Pat would
-pull when he found his daughter had married herself to a small island
-trader and a German at that. She took his lip without saying a word,
-and a day or two after she made inquiries as to when we should reach
-Palm Island.
-
-“Oh, in a day or two,” says Buck.
-
-Now we weren’t due to touch at that place for fourteen days if the
-wind held good, and when I got him alone a few minutes later I asked
-him why he had told her that lie.
-
-“And what would you have had me say?” he asked.
-
-“Why, that we wouldn’t be there for a fortnight,” I answered.
-
-“Well,” said he, “that would have been as big a lie, for we aren’t
-going to touch there at all. I’ve got extra water casks from that
-cooper chap at Levua and an extra supply of bananas.”
-
-“What’s your reason?” I asks.
-
-“I’ll tell you when this deal is through,” he answers, and knowing it
-was useless to ask any more, I didn’t.
-
-A few days later. Buck told us that we’d passed the location of the
-island and that it wasn’t there; must have sunk in the sea, he said,
-same as these small islands sometimes do.
-
-When he sprung this on us you might have thought by the way Sadie went
-on she’d lost a relative; said that she wanted to see it more than the
-New Jerusalem, owing to Buck’s description of it, and asked couldn’t
-we poke round and make sure it was gone and that we weren’t being
-deceived owing to some error of the compass.
-
-Buck says: “All right,” and we spent the better part of two days
-fooling about pretending to look for that damn island and then we lit
-for ’Frisco.
-
-No sooner had we got there and landed the cargo, Sadie included, than
-Buck says to me one morning: “Clutch on here,” he says, “whilst I’m
-away. I’m going to London.”
-
-“London, Ontario?” I asks.
-
-“No, London, England,” he says.
-
-“And what are you going there for?” I questions.
-
-“To see the Tower,” says he.
-
-Off he goes and in two months he returns.
-
-
- V
-
-I was sitting at breakfast when he comes in, having arrived by the
-early morning train.
-
-Down he sits and has a cup of coffee.
-
-“How’s Pat?” says he.
-
-“You’re even with Pat,” I says. “Levenstein got here a week ago and
-Pat don’t like his new son-in-law. There’s been the devil to pay.”
-
-“I’m better even with him than that,” says Buck. “Brent, we’re
-millionaires.”
-
-“Spit yer meaning out,” I says.
-
-“Do you remember,” says he, “my saying to you last time we touched at
-Palm Island that the place seemed built of a sort of rock I’d never
-seen before, and my bringing a chunk of it away in my pocket? Well,
-what do you think that rock is but phosphate of lime.”
-
-“What’s that?” I queries.
-
-“Seagull guano mixed with the lime of coral,” he says, “the finest
-fertiliser in the world and worth thirteen to fourteen dollars a ton.
-How many tons would Palm Island weigh, do you think, and it’s most all
-phosphate of lime?”
-
-I begins to sweat in the palms of my hands, but I says nothing and he
-goes on:
-
-“Palm Island being a British possession, since an Irishman has
-discovered it and it lies to eastward of the German British line, I
-went to London, and I’ve got not only the fishing rights but the
-mining rights for ninety-nine years. I didn’t say nothing about the
-mining rights, said I wanted to start a cannery there since the
-fishing was so good, and an old cockatoo in white whiskers did the
-rest and dropped the mining rights in gratis like an extra strawberry.
-Then, coming through N’ York I got a syndicate together that’ll buy
-the proposition when they’ve inspected it. I’ll take a million or
-nothing,” says he.
-
-“But, look here,” I says, “how in the nation did it all happen; how
-did you know?”
-
-“Well,” says he, “it was this way. That chunk of rock I was telling
-you of, I stuck in my sea chest, and unpacking when I got back I gave
-it to little Micky Murphy who was in the room pretending to help me.
-He used it for a play toy.
-
-“Now do you remember Pat O’Brien that morning he left us, talking to
-Micky outside and taking him off to buy candy? Well, next day Mrs.
-Murphy said to me that the old gentleman was very free with his money,
-but she didn’t think he was quite right as he’d offered Micky a dollar
-for the stone he was playing with. I didn’t think anything of it at
-the time, but later on, you remember that night on board ship, the
-thing hit me like a belt on the head.
-
-“Micky had told the old chap I’d given him the stone when I came back
-from that trip and Pat had recognised it for what it was. The only
-question that bothered him was where I’d picked it up. He knew I
-traded regular with Levua, and when he found we stopped nowhere but
-Levua and Palm Island he knew it was at one of those two places.
-Phosphate of lime was to be found, enough maybe to double his fortune.
-He sent the girl to prospect, and she’d have done me in only that
-night I suddenly remembered a chap telling me about the phosphate
-business and saying the stuff was like rock, striped in places; I’d
-never thought of it till then, and what made me think of it was that
-I’d been worrying a lot since I’d left ’Frisco over Pat and all his
-doings. Seems to me the mind does a lot of thinking we don’t know of.”
-
-“Well,” I says, “when he sent the girl to prospect he didn’t bargain
-she was going to prospect Levenstein.”
-
-“No,” says Buck, “seems to me we’ve got the double bulge on him.”
-
-But we hadn’t.
-
-Buck got a million for his phosphate rights and gave me a share, and,
-as much will have more, we flew high and lost every buck in the Eagle
-Consolidated Gold and Silver Mining Corporation, Inc.
-
-Pat met us the day after the burst and we asked him how the
-Levensteins were doing.
-
-“Fine,” says he. “He asked me how to become a millionaire last night
-and I told him it was quite easy, you only had to pick up a million
-and stick to it, but mind you,” I said, “it’s not the picking it up’s
-the bother, but the sticking to it. Now look at that Eagle
-Consolidated business,” I says, “many’s the fine boy has put his money
-in tripe stock like that, tumbling balmy after working for years like
-a sensible man. You know the stock I mean,” he finishes. “The Eagle
-Consolidated Gold and Silver Mining Corporation, Inc.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” says Buck.
-
-We didn’t want to have no last words or let the old boy rub it in any
-more; we hiked off, Buck and me, resuming our way to the wharf and the
-same old life we’d always been living but for the three months we’d
-been million dollar men.
-
-“Pat seemed to have the joke on us,” said Brent, “but looking back on
-those three months and the worries and dyspepsias and late hours that
-make a millionaire’s life, I’m not so sure we hadn’t the bulge on him
-over the whole transaction, specially considering that Levenstein went
-bust, forged cheques and let him in for forty thousand or so to save
-the name of the family.
-
-“That’s the last transaction we ever had with Pat,” finished Brent.
-“He dropped calling on us to tell us how to become millionaires,
-seeing we’d given instructions to Mrs. Murphy always to tell him we
-were out.”
-
-
-
-
-XIII—KILIWAKEE
-
-
- I
-
-The longest answer to a short question I ever heard given was
-delivered by Captain Tom Bowlby, master mariner, in the back parlour
-of Jack Rounds’ saloon away back in 1903.
-
-Bowlby still lingers as a memory in Island bars; a large
-mahogany-coloured man, Bristol born and owned by the Pacific; he had
-seen sandalwood wane and copra wax, had known Bully Hayes and the
-ruffian Pease and Colonel Steinberger; and as to the ocean of his
-fancy, there was scarcely a sounding from the Kermadecs to French
-Frigate Island he could not have given you.
-
-An illiterate man, maybe, as far as book reading goes, but a full man
-by reason of experience and knowledge of Life—which is Literature in
-the raw.
-
-“And so, usin’ a figure of speech, she’d stuck the blister on the
-wrong chap,” said the Captain finishing a statement.
-
-“I beg your pardon, Cap’,” came a voice through the blue haze of
-tobacco smoke, “but what was you meanin’ by a figure of speech?”
-
-The Cap’, re-loading his pipe, allowed his eyes to travel from the
-window and its view of the blue bay and the Chinese shrimp boats to
-the island headdresses and paddles on the wall and from thence to the
-speaker.
-
-“What was I meanin’ by a figure of speech?—why, where was you born?”
-He snorted, lit up, and accepted another drink and seemed to pass the
-question by, but I saw his trouble. He couldn’t explain, couldn’t give
-a clear definition off-hand of the term whose meaning he knew quite
-well. Can you?
-
-“Well, I was just asking to know,” said the voice.
-
-Then, like a strong man armed, his vast experience of men and matters
-came to the aid of Captain Tom:
-
-“And know you shall,” said he, “if it’s in my power to put you wise.
-When you gets travelling about in Languige you bumps across big facts.
-You wouldn’t think words was any use except to talk them, would you?
-You wouldn’t think you could belt a chap over the head with a couple
-of words strung together same as with a slung shot, would you? Well,
-you can. You was askin’ me what a figure of speech is—well, it’s a
-thing that can kill a man sure as a shot gun, and Jack Bone, a friend
-of mine, seen it done.
-
-“Ever heard of Logan? He’d be before your time, but he’s well
-remembered yet down Rapa way, a tall, soft-spoken chap, never drank,
-blue-eyed chap as gentle as a woman and your own brother till he’d
-skinned you and tanned your hide and sold it for sixpence. He had
-offices in Sydney to start with and three or four schooners in the
-trade, _bêche de mer_, turtle shell and copra, with side interests in
-drinkin’ bars and such, till all of a sudden he went bust and had to
-skip, leaving his partner to blow his brains out, and a wife he wasn’t
-married to with six children to fend for. What bust him? Lord only
-knows; it wasn’t his love of straight dealin’ anyhow. Then he came
-right down on the beach, with his toes through his boots, till he
-managed to pick a living somehow at Vavao and chummed in with a trader
-by name of Cartwright, who’d chucked everything owing to a woman and
-taken to the Islands and a native wife—one of them soft-shelled chaps
-that can’t stand Luck, nohow, unless it’s with them. Logan got to be
-sort of partner with Cartwright, who died six months after, and they
-said Logan had poisoned him to scoop the business. Some said it was
-the native wife who did the killing, being in love with Logan, who
-took her on with the goodwill and fixtures. If she did, she got her
-gruel, for he sold out to a German after he’d been there less than a
-year, and skipped again. I reckon that chap must have been born with a
-skippin’ rope in his fist by the way he went through life. They say
-wickedness don’t prosper; well, in my experience it prospers well
-enough up to a point; anyhow Logan after he left Vavao didn’t do bad,
-by all accounts; he struck here and there, pearling in the Paumotus
-and what not, and laying by money all the time, got half shares in a
-schooner and bought the other chap out, took her blackbirding in the
-Solomons, did a bit of opium smuggling, salved a derelict and brought
-her right into ’Frisco, turned the coin into real estate at San
-Lorenz, and sold out for double six months after; then he went
-partners with a chap called Buck Johnstone in a saloon by the water
-side close on to Rafferty’s landin’ stage, a regular Shanghai and dope
-shop with ward politics thrown in, and a place in the wrecking ring,
-and him going about ’Frisco with a half-dollar Henry Clay in his face
-and a diamond as big as a decanter stopper for a scarf pin.
-
-“He didn’t drink, as I was saying, and that gave him the bulge on the
-others. He had a bottle of his own behind the bar with coloured water
-in it, and when asked to have a drink he’d fill up out of it, leaving
-the others to poison themselves with whisky.
-
-“Then one night James Appleby blew into the bar.
-
-
- II
-
-“Appleby was a chap with a fresh red face on him, a Britisher, hailing
-from Devonshire and just in from the Islands. He’d been supercargo on
-a schooner trading in the Marshalls or somewhere that’d got piled on a
-reef by a drunken skipper and sea battered till there wasn’t a stick
-of her standing and everyone drowned but Appleby and the Kanaka
-bo’sun. He was keen to tell of his troubles and had a thirst on him,
-and there he stood lowering the bilge Johnstone passed over to him and
-trying to interest strangers in his family history and sea doings.
-Logan was behind the bar with Johnstone, and Logan, listening to the
-chap clacking with a half-drunk bummer, suddenly pricks his ears. Then
-he comes round to the front of the bar and listens to his story, and
-takes him by the arm and walks him out of the place on to the wharf
-and sits him on a bollard, Appleby clacking away all the time and so
-full of himself and his story, and so glad to have a chap listening to
-him, and so mixed up with the whisky that he scarce noticed that he’d
-left the bar.
-
-“Then, when he’d finished, he seen where he was, and was going back
-for more drinks, but Logan stopped him.
-
-“‘One moment,’ says Logan, ‘what was that you were saying about pearls
-to that chap I heard you talking to. Talking about a pearl island, you
-were, and him sucking it in; don’t you know better than to give shows
-like that away in bars to promiscuous strangers?’
-
-“‘I didn’t give him the location,’ hiccups the other chap, ‘and I
-don’t remember mentioning pearls in particular, but they’re there sure
-enough and gold-tipped shell; say, I’m thirsty, let’s get back for
-more drinks.’
-
-“Now that chap hadn’t said a word about pearls, but he’d let out in
-his talk to the bummer that down in the Southern Pacific they’d struck
-an island not on the charts, and he had the location in his head and
-wasn’t going to forget it, and more talk like that, till Logan, sober
-and listening, made sure in his mind that the guy had struck
-phosphates or pearls, and played his cards according.
-
-“‘One moment,’ says Logan. ‘You’ve landed fresh with that news in your
-head and you’re in ’Frisco, lettin’ it out in the first bar you drop
-into—ain’t you got more sense?’
-
-“‘It’s not in my head,’ says the other, ‘it’s in my pocket.’
-
-“‘What are you getting at?’ says Logan.
-
-“‘It’s wrote down,’ says Appleby. ‘Latitude and longitude on my
-notebook, and the book’s in my pocket. Ain’t you got no understanding?
-Keeping me here talking till I’m dry as an old boot. Come along back
-to the bar.’
-
-“Back they went, and Logan calls for two highballs, giving Johnstone
-the wink, and he takes Appleby into the back parlour and Johnstone
-served them the highballs with a cough drop in Appleby’s, and two
-minutes after that guy was blind as Pharaoh on his back on the old
-couch—doped.
-
-
- III
-
-“There was a stairs leading down from that parlour to a landing stage,
-and when they’d stripped the guy of his pocket-book and loose money,
-they gave him a row off to a whaler that was due out with the morning
-tide and got ten dollars for the carcase. Jack Bone was the boatman
-they always used, and it was Jack Bone told most of the story I’m
-telling you now.
-
-“Then they comes back and closes up the bar, and sits down to
-investigate the notebook, and there, sure enough, was the indications,
-the latitude and longitude, with notes such as ‘big bed to west of the
-break in the reef,’ and so on.
-
-“‘That does it,’ says Johnstone; ‘we’re made men, sure; this beats
-ward politics by a mile and a half,’ says he. ‘It’s only a question of
-a schooner and hands to work her and diving dresses; we don’t want no
-labour; see here what the blighter says, “native labour sufficient.”
-Lord love me! what a swab, writing all that down; hadn’t he no memory
-to carry it in?’
-
-“He’d struck the truth. There’s some chaps never easy unless they’re
-putting things on paper. I’ve seen chaps keeping diaries, sort of
-logs, and putting down every time they’d scratched their heads or
-sneezed, blame fools same as Appleby.
-
-“Well, Logan sits thinking things over, and says he: ‘We’re both in
-this thing, though it’s my find. Still I’m not grumbling. What’s the
-shares to be?’
-
-“‘Half shares,’ says Johnstone, prompt. Logan does another think:
-
-“‘Right,’ says he, ‘and we each pays our shot in the fitting out of
-the expedition.’
-
-“‘I’m agreeable,’ says the other, with a grin on his face, which maybe
-wouldn’t have been there if he’d known what was going on in Logan’s
-mind.
-
-“Next morning they starts to work to look for a likely schooner;
-Johnstone keeping the bar and Logan doing the prospecting. It wasn’t
-an easy job, for they had to keep things secret. They knew enough of
-the Law to be afraid of it, and though this island of Appleby’s was
-uncharted, they weren’t going to lay no claims to it with the
-Britishers popping up, maybe, or the French or the Yanks with priority
-claims, and every dam liar from Vancouver to Panama swearing he’d done
-the discovering of it first. No, their plan was to sneak out and grab
-what they could, working double shifts and skimming the hull lagoon in
-one big coop that’d take them maybe a year. Then when they’d got their
-pearls and stored their shell, they reckoned to bring the pearls back
-to ’Frisco, where Johnstone had the McGaffery syndicate behind him,
-who’d help him to dispose of them, and after that he reckoned if
-things went well, to go back and fetch the shell. Pearl shell runs
-from three hundred to a thousand dollars a ton depending on quality,
-and gold-tipped being second quality the stuff would be worth carting.
-
-“Well, Logan had luck and he managed to buy Pat Ginnell’s old
-schooner, the _Heart of Ireland_, for two thousand dollars, Pat having
-struck it rich in the fruit business and disposing of his sea
-interests; they paid twelve hundred dollars for diving gear and a
-thousand for trade goods to pay the workers, stick tobacco and all
-such; then they had to provision her, reckoning the island would give
-them all the fish and island truck they’d want, and, to cap the
-business, they had to get a crew that wouldn’t talk, Kanakas or
-Chinks—they shipped Chinks. Logan knew enough navigating to take her
-there, and Johnstone was used to the sea, so they were their own
-afterguard.
-
-“Then one day, when all was ready, Johnstone sold out his interest in
-the saloon, and the next day, or maybe the day after, out they put.
-
-
- IV
-
-“I’d forgot to say they took Bone with them. They’d used the chap so
-much in the outfitting that they thought it was better to take him
-along than leave him behind to talk, maybe; and they’d no sooner
-cleared the Gate and left the Farallones behind them than the weather
-set up its fist against them, and the old _Heart_ with a beam sea
-showed them how she could roll; she could beat a barrel any day in the
-week on that game; it was an old saying on the front that she could
-beat Ginnell when he was drunk, and Bone said the rolling took it out
-of them so that it was a sick and quarrelling ship right from the
-start to the line. All but Logan. He never quarrelled with no one, he
-wasn’t that sort; always smooth spoken and give and take, he held that
-show together, smilin’ all the time.
-
-“Then ten degrees south of the line and somewhere between the Paumotus
-and Bolivia they began to keep their eyes skinned for the island,
-struck the spot given by Appleby and went right over it.
-
-“There wasn’t no island.
-
-“About noon it was on the day they ought to have hit the place, an’
-you can picture that flummoxed lot standin’ on the deck of the old
-_Heart;_ thousands of dollars gone on a schooner and trade and all,
-and then left.
-
-“The sails were drawing and they were still heading south, and
-Johnstone up and spoke:
-
-“‘Appleby’s done us,’ says he, ‘and there’s no use in crying over
-spilt milk. There’s nothing for it but to go back and sell off at a
-loss. I’m done worse than you, seein’ I’ve sold the saloon. Tell you
-what, I’ll give you fifteen hundred dollars for your share in the ship
-and fixin’s; maybe I’ll lose when I come to realise,’ says he, ‘for
-there’s no knowing what she and the truck will fetch when it comes to
-auction.’
-
-“He was one of them lightning calculators, and he reckoned to clear a
-few hundred dollars on the deal.
-
-“Logan was likewise, and he thinks for a moment, and he says, ‘Make it
-sixteen hundred and I’ll sell you my share in the dam show right out.’
-
-“Done,” says Johnstone.
-
-“The words were scarce out of his mouth when the Chink stuck in the
-crosstree cries out ‘Ki, hi.’
-
-“The whole bundle of them was in the rigging next minute lookin’
-ahead, and then, right to s’uth’ard, there was a white stain on the
-sky no bigger than a window.
-
-“Logan laughs.
-
-“‘That’s her,’ says he.
-
-“Then they see the pa’m tops like heads of pins, and they came down.
-
-“If that was the island, then Appleby’s position was near fifty miles
-out, and again, if it was the island, Logan was done, seeing he’d sold
-his interest in the show to Johnstone. Bone said he didn’t turn a
-hair, just laughed like the good-natured chap he was, whiles they
-cracked everything on and raised the place, coming into the lagoon
-near sundown.
-
-“But Bone had begun to have his suspicions of Logan by the way he took
-the business, and determined to keep his weather eye lifting.
-
-“It was a big atoll, near a mile broad at its narrowest and running
-north and south, with the reef break to north just as given in
-Appleby’s notebook. They ran her to the west a bit when they got in,
-and dropped anchor near the beach, where there was a Kanaka village
-with canoe houses and all, and the Kanakas watching them. They didn’t
-bother about no Kanakas; it was out boat as soon as the killick had
-took the coral, and hunt for oysters. And there they were, sure
-enough, a bit more up by the western beach as Appleby had noted in his
-book, square acres of them, virgin oysters if ever oysters were
-virgins, and a dead sure fortune.
-
-“The chaps came back and went down below to have a clack, and
-Johnstone turns generous, which he couldn’t well help, seeing that
-Logan might turn on him and blow the gaff, and says he: ‘You’ve stood
-out and sold your share in the venture, but I’m no shyster, and, if
-you’re willing, you shall have quarter share in the takings and half a
-share in the shell.’
-
-“‘Right,’ says Logan.
-
-“‘You helping to work the beds,’ said Johnstone.
-
-“‘I’m with you,’ says the other.
-
-“Old Jack Bone, who was listening, cocked his ear at this.
-
-“It seemed to him more than ever that Logan was too much of a
-Christian angel over the hull of this business. He knew the chap by
-instinc’ to be a dam thief, or maybe worse, but he said nothing, and
-then a noise brought them up on deck, and they found the island
-Kanakas had all put off in canoes with fruit and live chickens and was
-wanting to trade.
-
-“It was just after sundown, but that didn’t matter to them; they lit
-up torches and the place was like a regatta round the old _Heart_.
-
-“Two of the chiefs came aboard and brought their goods with them and
-squatted on their hams, Johnstone doing the bargaining, and, when the
-bazaar was over, Johnstone turns to Logan, and says he: ‘Lord love
-me,’ says he, ‘where did these chaps learn their business instinc’s?
-Chicago I shud think. Where in the nation will we be when it comes to
-paying them for the diving work? They’ll clear us out of goods before
-a month is over, and that knocks the bottom out of the proposition.
-It’s the Labour problem over again,’ says he, ‘and we’re up against
-it.’
-
-“‘We are,’ says Logan, ‘sure. These chaps aren’t Kanakas; they’re
-Rockfellers, virgin ones, maybe, but just as hard shelled. I’ll have
-to do a think.’
-
-“The Chinks had all congregated down into the fo’c’sle to smoke their
-opium pipes, and Logan, he lit a cigar and sat down on deck in the
-light of the moon that had just risen up, and there he sits like an
-image smoking and thinking whiles the others went below.
-
-“It was a tough proposition.
-
-“The Chinks were no use for diving. They’d been questioned on that
-subject and risen against it to a man. The island Kanakas were the
-only labour, and, taking the rate of exchange, the pearls would have
-had to be as big as turnips to make the game pay.
-
-“But this scamp Logan wasn’t the chap to be bested by Kanakas, and
-having done his think, he went below and turned in.
-
-
- V
-
-“Next morning bright and early he tells Johnstone to get the diving
-boat out, and he sends Bone ashore in the dinghy with word for the
-natives to come out and see the fun. Bone could talk their lingo. He’d
-been potting about forty years in these seas, before he’d taken up the
-Shanghai job in ’Frisco, and he could talk most all the Island patter.
-Off he goes, and then the Chinks get the diving boat out, pump and
-all, and two sets of dresses, and they rowed her off and anchored her
-convenient to the bed, and they hadn’t more’n got the anchor down when
-the canoes came out, and Logan, talking to the Kanakas by means of
-Bone, told them he was going down to walk about on the lagoon floor,
-dry.
-
-“Then he gets into a dress and has the headpiece screwed on, and down
-he goes, the Kanakas all hanging their heads over the canoe sides and
-watching him. They see him walking about and picking up oysters and
-making a grab at a passing fish’s tail and cutting all sorts of
-antics, and there he stuck twenty minutes, and they laughing and
-shouting, till the place sounded more like Coney Island than a
-lonesome lagoon, God knows where, south of the line.
-
-“Then up he comes, having sent up half a dozen bags full of oysters,
-and steps out of his diving gear—dry.
-
-“They felt him, to make sure he was dry, and then the row began.
-
-“The chief of the crowd, Maurini by name, wanted to go down and play
-about, but Logan held off, asked him what he’d give to be let down,
-and the chap offered half a dozen fowl. Logan closed, and the chap was
-rigged up and got his instructions from Bone of what he was to do, and
-how he wasn’t to let the air pipe be tangled, and so on, and how he
-was to pick up oysters and send them up in the bag nets. Down the chap
-goes, and gets the hang of the business in two minutes, after he’d
-done a trip up or two and nearly strangled himself. After that the
-whole of the other chaps were wild to have a hand in the business, and
-Logan let them, asking no payment, only the oysters.
-
-“In a week’s time he had all the labour he wanted. Those Kanakas were
-always ready for the fun, and when any of them tired off there was
-always green hands to take their places; the work was nothing to them;
-it was something new, and it never lost colour, not for six months.
-Then the pumps began to suck and they’d had enough. Wouldn’t go down
-unless under pay, and didn’t do the work half as well.
-
-“Meanwhile, Logan and Johnstone had built a house ashore and hived
-half a hat full of pearls, and about this time the feeling came on
-Bone strong that Logan was going to jump. He didn’t know how, but he
-was sure in his mind that Logan was going to do Johnstone in for his
-share, seeing the amount of stuff they’d collected.
-
-“He got Johnstone aside and warned him.
-
-“‘You look out,’ says he, ‘never you be alone with that chap when no
-one’s looking, for it’s in my mind he’s going to scrag you.’
-
-“Johnstone laughed.
-
-“‘There ain’t no harm in Logan,’ says he, ‘there’s not the kick of a
-flea in him; you mind your business,’ says he, ‘and I’ll tend to mine.
-Whach you want putting suspicions in chaps’ heads for?’ says he.
-
-“‘Well, I’ve said what I’ve said,’ says Bone, ‘and I’m not going to
-say no more.’
-
-“Then he goes off.
-
-“Meanwhile, those island bucks had got to fitting things together in
-their minds, and they’d got to connecting pearls with sticks of
-tobacco and trade goods, and they’d got to recognise Johnstone as boss
-and owner of the pearls and goods. They’d named Johnstone ‘the fat
-one’ and they’d labelled Logan ‘the one with teeth,’ and the
-specifications fitted, for Johnstone weighed all two hundred and
-fifty, and Logan was a dentist’s sign when the grin was on his face,
-which was frequent.
-
-“And so things goes on, the Kanakas diving and bringing up shell and
-the trade goods sinking till soon there was scarcely none left to pay
-the divers, and level with that was the fac’ that they’d collared
-enough pearls to satisfy reasonable chaps.
-
-“One day Bone comes back from the diving and there wasn’t any
-Johnstone.
-
-
- VI
-
-“He wasn’t in the house nor anywhere in sight, and Logan was sitting
-mending a bag net by the door.
-
-“‘Where’s Johnstone?’ says Bone.
-
-“‘How the —— do I know?’ says Logan. He was a most civil spoken chap
-as a rule, and as soon as he’d let that out of his head, Bone didn’t
-look round no more for Johnstone.
-
-“He sat down and smoked a pipe, and fell to wondering when his turn
-would come. He had one thing fixed in his head, and that was the fact
-that if he let on to be suspicious old smiler would do him in. He’d be
-wanted to help work the schooner back to ’Frisco, and it was quite on
-the cards if he pretended to know nothing and suspec’ nothing he might
-get off with his life, but he was in a stew. My hat! that chap was in
-a stew. Living with a man-eating tiger at his elbow wouldn’t be worse,
-and that night, when no Johnstone turned up, he could no more sleep
-than a runnin’ dynamo driven by a ten thousand horse-power injin
-stoked by Satan.
-
-“Logan said a wave must have taken Johnstone off the outer beach of
-the reef, or he’d tumbled in and a shark had took him, and Bone
-agreed.
-
-“Next day, however, when Bone was taking a walk away to the north of
-the house, he saw a lot of big seagulls among the mammee apple bushes
-that grew thick just there, and making his way through the thick stuff
-and driving off the birds, he found old man Johnstone on his face with
-his head bashed in and etceteras.
-
-“Bone was a man, notwithstandin’ the fact that he’d helped to Shanghai
-poor sailor chaps, and when he seen Logan’s work he forgot his fright
-of Logan, and swore he’d be even with him.
-
-“There wasn’t no law on that island, nor anyone to help him to hang
-old toothy; so he fixed it in his mind to do him in, get him by
-himself and bash him on the head same as he’d bashed Johnstone.
-
-“But Logan never gave him a chance, and the work went on till all the
-trade goods were used up and there was no more to pay for the divers.
-
-“‘That’s the end,’ said Logan to Bone, ‘but it doesn’t matter; we’ve
-pretty well skinned the lagoon, and we’ll push out day after to-morrow
-when we get water and fruit aboard.’
-
-“‘Where for?’ says Bone.
-
-“‘Sydney,’ says the other; ‘I’m not going back to ’Frisco, and seeing
-Johnstone is drowned, the show is mine; he’s got no relatives. We’ll
-make for Sydney, and to make you keep your head shut, I’ll give you
-the old schooner for keeps; she’ll fetch you a good price in Sydney,
-more than you’d make in ten dozen years long-shoring in ’Frisco. I
-only want the pearls.’
-
-“‘All right,’ says Bone, ‘I’ll keep my head shut and help you work
-her,’ having in his mind to tell the whole story soon as he landed,
-for he’d given up the notion of killing the other chap, not being able
-to get him alone. But they never put out for Sydney, and here’s the
-reason why.
-
-“There was a Kanaka on that island by name of Kiliwakee, a chap with a
-head all frizzled out like a furze bush. He was a looney, though a
-good enough workman, and he’d got no end of tobacco and fish scale
-jewellery and such rubbish from Johnstone for his work, and now that
-supplies had dried up he was pretty much down in the mouth; he’d got
-to connect pearls and tobacco in his woolly head, and now the lagoon
-was skinned and there were no more pearls, he saw there was to be no
-more tobacco, nor jewellery, nor canned salmon.
-
-“Well, that night there was a big Kanaka pow-wow on the beach; the
-chaps were sitting in a ring and talking and talking, and Bone,
-catching sight of them, crawled through the bushes to listen.
-
-“He heard the chief chap talking.
-
-“He couldn’t make out at first what he was jabbering about; then at
-last he got sense of what he was saying.
-
-“‘There’ll be no more good things,’ says he, ‘sticks of tobacco, nor
-fish in cans, nor knives, nor print calico to make breeches of, nor
-nothing, for,’ says he, using a figure of speech, ‘the man with the
-teeth has killed the fat one and swallowed his pearls.’
-
-“Then the meeting closed and the congressmen took their ways home, all
-but Kiliwakee, the half-lunatic chap, who sits in the moonlight
-wagging his fuzzy head, which was his way of thinking.
-
-“Then he fetches a knife out of his loin cloth and looks at it, then
-he lays on his back and begins to strop it on his heel, same as a chap
-strops a razor.
-
-“Bone said he’d never seen anything funnier than that chap lying in
-the moonlight stropping away at that knife. It give him a shiver, too,
-somehow.
-
-“Well, Kiliwakee sits up again and does another brood, feeling the
-sharp edge of the knife. Then, with the knife between his teeth, he
-makes off on all fours like a land crab, for the house.
-
-“Bone follows.
-
-“Kiliwakee listens at the house door and hears someone snoring
-inside—Logan, no less; then he crawls through the door, and Bone
-guessed that looney was after the pearls. If Bone had run he’d have
-been in time to save Logan, but he didn’t. He just listened. He heard
-a noise like a yelp. Then, five minutes after, out comes Kiliwakee.
-He’d done Logan in and cut his stomach open, but he hadn’t found no
-pearls, not knowing the chief chap had been usin’ a figure of speech.
-
-“Now you know what a figure of speech is, and don’t you forget it, and
-if you want to know any more about it go and buy a grammar book.
-Bone—Oh, he never got away with the schooner, nor the boodle neither.
-A Chile gunboat looked into that lagoon next week and collared the
-fishin’ rights and produce in the name of Chile, and told Bone to go
-fight it in the courts if he wanted to put in a claim. Said the place
-had been charted and claimed by Chile two years before, which was a
-lie.
-
-“But Bone wasn’t up for fighting. Too much afraid of questions being
-asked and the doing in of Logan put down to him by the Kanakas.
-
-“So he took a passage in the gunboat to Valdivia. He’d six big pearls
-stolen from the takings and hid in the lining of his waistcoat, and he
-sold them for two hundred dollars to a Jew, and that got him back to
-’Frisco.
-
-“Thank you, I don’t mind; whisky with a dash, if it’s all the same to
-you.”
-
-
-
-
-XIV—UNDER THE FLAME TREES
-
-
- I
-
-I was sitting in front of Thibaud’s Café one evening when I saw
-Lewishon, whom I had not met for years.
-
-Thibaud’s Café I must tell you first, is situated on Coconut Square,
-Noumea. Noumea has a bad name, but it is not at all a bad place if you
-are not a convict, neither is New Caledonia, take it altogether, and
-that evening, sitting and smoking and listening to the band, and
-watching the crowd and the dusk taking the flame trees, it seemed to
-me for a moment that Tragedy had withdrawn, that there was no such
-place as the Isle Nou out there in the harbour, and that the musicians
-making the echoes ring to the “Sambre et Meuse” were primarily
-musicians, not convicts.
-
-Then I saw Lewishon crossing the Square by the Liberty Statue, and
-attracted his attention. He came and sat by me, and we smoked and
-talked whilst I tried to realise that it was fifteen years since I had
-seen him last, and that he hadn’t altered in the least—in the dusk.
-
-“I’ve been living here for years,” said he. “When I saw you last in
-’Frisco, I was about to take up a proposition in Oregon. I didn’t,
-owing to a telegram going wrong. That little fact changed my whole
-life. I came to the Islands instead and started trading, then I came
-to live in New Caledonia—I’m married.”
-
-“Oh,” I said, “is that so?”
-
-Something in the tone of those two words, “I’m married,” struck me as
-strange.
-
-We talked on indifferent subjects, and before we parted I promised to
-come over and see him next day at his place, a few miles from the
-town. I did, and I was astonished at what I saw.
-
-New Caledonia, pleasant as the climate may be, is not the place one
-would live in by choice. At all events it wasn’t in those days when
-the convicts were still coming there from France. The gangs of
-prisoners shepherded by warders armed to the teeth, the great barges
-filled with prisoners that ply every evening when work is over between
-the harbour quay and the Isle Nou, the military air of the place and
-the fretting regulations, all these things and more robbed it of its
-appeal as a residential neighbourhood. Yet the Lewishons lived there,
-and what astonished me was the evidence of their wealth and the fact
-that they had no apparent interests at all to bind them to the place.
-
-Mrs. Lewishon was a woman of forty-five or so, yet her beauty had
-scarcely begun to fade. I was introduced to her by Lewishon on the
-broad verandah of their house, which stood in the midst of gardens
-more wonderful than the gardens of La Mortola.
-
-A week or so later, after dining with me in the town, he told me the
-story of his marriage, one of the strangest stories I ever heard, and
-this is it, just as he told it:
-
-“The Pacific is the finest place in the world to drop money in. You
-see it’s so big and full of holes that look like safe investments. I
-started, after I parted with you, growing cocoanut trees in the Fijis.
-It takes five years for a cocoanut palm to grow, but when it’s grown
-it will bring you in an income of eighteen pence or so a year,
-according as the copra prices range. I planted forty thousand young
-trees, and at the end of the fourth year a hurricane took the lot.
-That’s the Pacific. I was down and out, and then I struck luck. That’s
-the Pacific again. I got to be agent for a big English firm here in
-Noumea, and in a short time I was friends with everyone from Chardin
-the governor right down. Chardin was a good sort, but very severe. The
-former governor had been lax, so the people said, letting rules fall
-into abeyance like the rule about cropping the convicts’ hair and
-beards to the same pattern. However that may have been, Chardin had
-just come as governor, and I had not been here more than a few months
-when one day a big white yacht from France came and dropped anchor in
-the harbour, and a day or two after a lady appeared at my office and
-asked for an interview.
-
-“She had heard of me through a friend, she said, and she sought my
-assistance in a most difficult matter. In plain English she wanted me
-to help in the escape of a convict.
-
-“I was aghast. I was about to order her out of the office, when
-something—something—something, I don’t know what, held my tongue and
-kept me from rising for a moment, whilst with the cunning, which
-amounts to magic, of a desperate woman in love, she managed to calm my
-anger. ‘I understand,’ she said, ‘and I should have been surprised if
-you had taken the matter calmly, but will you listen to me, and when
-you have heard me out, tell me if you would not have done what I have
-done to-day?’
-
-“I could not stop her, and this is what she told me:
-
-“Her name was Madame Armand Duplessis, her maiden name had been
-Alexandre. She was the only child of Alexandre, the big sugar refiner,
-and at his death she found herself a handsome young girl with a
-fortune of about twenty million francs and nothing between her and the
-rogues of the world but an old maiden aunt given to piety and
-guileless as a rabbit. However, she managed to escape the sharks and
-married an excellent man, a Captain in the Cavalry and attached to St.
-Cyr. He died shortly after the marriage, and the young widow, left
-desolate and without a child to console her, took up living again with
-her aunt, or rather the aunt came to live with her in the big house
-she occupied on the Avenue de la Grande Armée.
-
-“About six months after she met Duplessis. I don’t know how she met
-him, she didn’t say, but anyhow he wasn’t quite in the same circle as
-herself. He was a clerk in La Fontaine’s Bank, and only drawing a few
-thousand francs a year, but he was handsome and attractive and young,
-and the upshot of it was they got married.
-
-“She did not know anything of his past history and he had no family in
-evidence, nothing to stand on at all but his position at the bank; but
-she did not mind, she was in love and she took him on trust and they
-got married. A few months after marriage a change came over Duplessis;
-he had always been given rather to melancholy, but now an acute
-depression of spirits came on him for no reason apparently; he could
-not sleep, his appetite failed, and the doctors, fearing consumption,
-ordered him a sea voyage. When he heard this prescription he laughed
-in such a strange way that Madame Duplessis, who had been full of
-anxiety as to his bodily condition, became for a moment apprehensive
-as to this mental state. However, she said nothing, keeping her fears
-hidden and busying herself in preparations for the voyage.
-
-“It chanced that just at that moment a friend had a yacht to dispose
-of, an eight hundred ton auxiliary-engined schooner, _La Gaudriole_.
-It was going cheap, and Madame Duplessis, who was a good business
-woman, bought it, reckoning to sell it again when the voyage was over.
-
-“A month later they left Marseilles.
-
-“They visited Greece and the Islands; then, having touched at
-Alexandria, they passed through the Canal, came down the Red Sea and
-crossed the Indian Ocean. They touched at Ceylon, and whilst there
-Madame Duplessis suggested that instead of going to Madras, as they
-had intended, they should go into the Pacific by way of the Straits of
-Malacca. Duplessis opposed this suggestion at first, then he fell in
-with it. More than that, he became enthusiastic about it. A weight
-seemed suddenly to have been lifted from his mind, his eyes grew
-bright and the melancholy that all the breezes of the Indian Ocean had
-not blown away suddenly vanished.
-
-“Two days later they left Ceylon, came through the Straits of Malacca
-and by way of the Arafura Sea and Torres Straits into the Pacific. The
-Captain of the yacht had suggested the Santa Cruz islands as their
-first stopping place, but one night Duplessis took his wife aside and
-asked her would she mind their making for New Caledonia instead. Then
-he gave his reason.
-
-“He said to her: ‘When you married me I told you I had no family; that
-was not quite the truth. I have a brother. He is a convict serving
-sentence in Noumea. I did not tell you because the thing was painful
-to me as death.’
-
-“You can fancy her feelings, struck by a bombshell like that, but she
-says nothing and he goes on telling her the yarn he ought to have told
-her before they were married.
-
-“This brother, Charles Duplessis, had been rather a wild young scamp;
-he lived in the Rue du Mont Thabor, a little street behind the Rue St.
-Honoré in Paris, and he made his money on the Stock Exchange. Then he
-got into terrible trouble. He was accused of a forgery committed by
-another man, but could not prove his innocence. Armand was certain of
-his innocence but could do nothing, and Charles was convicted and sent
-to New Caledonia.
-
-“Well, Madame Duplessis sat swallowing that fact, and when he’d done
-speaking, she sat swallowing some more as if her throat was dry. Then
-she says to Armand:
-
-“‘Your brother is innocent, then,’ she says.
-
-“‘As innocent as yourself,’ he answers her, ‘and it is the knowledge
-of all this that has caused my illness and depression.
-
-“‘Before I was married I was forgetting it all, but married to the
-woman I love, rich, happy, with enviable surroundings, Charles came
-and knocked at my door, saying: “Remember me in your happiness.”’
-
-“‘But can we do nothing for him?’ asked Madame Duplessis.
-
-“‘Nothing,’ replied Armand, ‘unless we can help him to escape.’
-
-“Then he went on to tell her how he had not wanted to come on this
-long voyage at first, feeling that there was some fate in the
-business, and that it would surely bring him somehow or another to
-Noumea; then, how the idea had come to him at Ceylon that he might be
-able to help Charles to escape.
-
-“She asked him had he any plan, and he replied that he had not and
-that it was impossible to make any plan till he reached Noumea and
-studied the place and its possibilities.
-
-“Well, there was the position the woman found herself in, and a nice
-position it was. Think of it, married only a short time and now
-condemned to help a prisoner to escape from New Caledonia, for, though
-she could easily have refused, she felt compelled to the business both
-for the sake of her husband and the sake of his brother, an innocent
-man wrongfully convicted.
-
-“She agreed to help in the attempt like the high spirited woman she
-was, and a few days later they raised the New Caledonia reef and the
-Noumea lighthouse that marks the entrance to the harbour.
-
-“Madame Duplessis had a big acquaintance in Paris, especially among
-the political and military people, and no sooner had the yacht berthed
-than the Governor and chief people who knew her name, began to show
-their attentions, tumbling over themselves with invitations to dinners
-and parties.
-
-“That, again, was a nice position for her, having to accept the
-hospitality of the people she had come to betray, so to speak, but she
-had to do it: it was the only way to help her husband along in his
-scheme, and leaving the yacht, she took up her residence in a house
-she rented on the sea road; you may have seen it, a big white place
-with green verandahs, and there she and her husband spent their time
-whilst the yacht was being overhauled.
-
-“They gave dinners and parties and went to picnics; they regularly
-laid themselves out to please, and then, one night, Armand came to his
-wife and said that he had been studying all means of escape from
-Noumea, and he had found only one. He would not say what it was, and
-she was content not to poke into the business, leaving him to do the
-plotting and planning till the time came when she could help.
-
-“Armand said that before he could do anything in the affair he must
-first have an interview with Charles. They were hand in glove with the
-Governor, and it was easy enough to ask to see a prisoner, but the
-bother was the name of Duplessis, for Charles had been convicted and
-exported under that name. The Governor had never noticed Charles, and
-the name of Duplessis was in the prison books and forgotten. It would
-mean raking the whole business up and claiming connection with a
-convict, still it had to be done.
-
-“Next day Armand called at the Governor’s house and had an interview.
-He told the Governor that a relation named Charles Duplessis was
-amongst the convicts and that he very much wanted to have an interview
-with him.
-
-“Now the laws at that time were very strict, and the Governor, though
-pretty lax in some things as I’ve said, found himself up against a
-stiff proposition, and that proposition was how to tell Armand there
-was nothing doing.
-
-“‘I am sorry,’ said the Governor, ‘but what you ask is impossible,
-Monsieur Duplessis; a year ago it would have been easy enough, but
-since the escape of Benonini and that Englishman Travers, the orders
-from Paris have forbidden visitors: any message you would like me to
-send to your relation shall be sent, but an interview—no.’
-
-“Then Armand played his ace of trumps. He confessed, swearing the
-Governor to secrecy, that Charles was his brother; he said that
-Charles had in his possession a family secret that it was vital to
-obtain. He talked and talked, and the upshot was that the Governor
-gave in.
-
-“Charles would be brought by two warders to the house on the Sea Road
-after dark on the following day, the interview was to take place in a
-room with a single door and single window. One warder was to guard the
-door on the outside, the other would stand below the window. The whole
-interview was not to last longer than half an hour.
-
-
- II
-
-“Next evening after dark steps sounded on the path up to the house
-with the green verandahs. Madame Duplessis had retired to her room;
-she had dismissed the servants for the evening, and Armand himself
-opened the door. One of those little ten-cent whale oil lamps was the
-only light in the passage, but it was enough for Armand to see the
-forms of the warders and another form, that of his brother.
-
-“The warders, unlike the Governor, weren’t particular about trifles;
-they didn’t bother about guarding doors and windows, sure of being
-able to pot anyone who made an attempt to leave the house, they sat on
-the fence in the moonlight counting the money Armand had given them,
-ten napoleons apiece.
-
-“Half an hour passed, during which Madame Duplessis heard voices in
-argument from the room below, and then she heard the hall door open as
-Charles went out. Charles shaded his eyes against the moon, saw the
-warders approaching him from the fence, and walked off with them back
-to the prison he had come from.
-
-“Then Madame Duplessis, hearing the front door close, came from her
-room, and found her husband in the passage.
-
-“He seemed overcome by the interview with his brother.
-
-“She asked him had he made plans for Charles’ escape, and he answered:
-‘No.’ Then he went on to say that escape was impossible. They had
-talked the whole thing over and had come to that decision. She stood
-there in the hall listening to him, wondering dimly what had happened,
-for only a few hours before he had been full of plans and energy and
-now this interview seemed to have crushed all the life out of him.
-
-“Then she said: ‘If that is so there is no use in our remaining any
-longer at Noumea.’ He agreed with her and went off to his room,
-leaving her there wondering more than ever what could have happened to
-throw everything out of gear in that way.
-
-“She was a high-spirited woman and she had thought little of the
-danger of the business; pitying Charles, she did not mind risking her
-liberty to set him free, and the thought that her husband had funked
-the business came to her suddenly as she stood there, like a stab in
-the heart.
-
-“She went off to her room and went to bed, but she could not sleep for
-thinking, and the more she thought the clearer it seemed to her that
-her husband brought up to scratch had got cold feet as the Yankees
-say, and had backed out of the show, leaving Charles to his fate.
-
-“She was more sure next morning, for he kept away from her, had
-breakfast early and went off into the town shopping. But the shock of
-her life came to her at dinner time, for when he turned up for the
-meal, it was plain to be seen he had been drinking more than was good
-for him—trying to drown the recollections of his own weakness, it
-seemed to her.
-
-“She had never seen him under the influence before, and she was
-shocked at the change it made in him. She left the table.
-
-“Afterwards she was sorry that she did that, for it was like the blow
-of an axe between them. Next morning he would scarcely speak to her,
-and the day after they were due to leave for France.
-
-“They were due out at midday, and at eleven Duplessis, who had
-lingered in the town to make some purchases, had not come on board. He
-did not turn up till half an hour after the time they were due to
-sail, and when he did it was plain to be seen that all his purchases
-had been made in cafés.
-
-“He was flushed, and laughing and joking with the boatman who brought
-him off, and his wife, seeing his condition, went below and left the
-deck to him—a nice position for a woman on board a yacht like that
-with all the sailors looking on, to say nothing of the captain and
-officers. However, there was nothing to be done, and she had to make
-the best of it, which she did by avoiding her husband as much as she
-could right from that on, for the chap had gone clean off the handle;
-it was as if his failure to be man enough to rescue his brother had
-pulled a linch-pin out of one of his wheels, and the drink which he
-flew to for consolation finished the business.
-
-“They stopped at Colombo and he went ashore, and they were three days
-getting him back, and when he came he looked like a sack of meal in
-the stern sheets of the pinnace. They stopped at Port Said and he got
-ashore again without any money, but that was nothing, for a chap
-coming off a yacht like that gets all the tick he wants for anything
-in Port Said. He was a week there, and was only got away by the
-captain of the yacht knocking seven bells out of him with his fists,
-and then handing the carcase to two quartermasters to take on board
-ship.
-
-“They stopped nowhere else till they reached Marseilles, and there
-they found Madame Duplessis’ lawyer waiting for them, having been
-notified by cable from Port Said.
-
-“A doctor was had in and he straightened Armand up with strychnine and
-bromide, and they brushed his hair and shaved him and stuck him in a
-chair for a family conference, consisting of Madame Duplessis, the old
-maiden aunt, Armand and the lawyer.
-
-“Armand had no fight in him; he looked mighty sorry for himself, but
-offered no explanations or excuses, beyond saying that the drink had
-got into his head. Madame Duplessis, on the other hand, was out for
-scalps—Do you wonder? Fancy that voyage all the way back with a
-husband worse than drunk. When I say worse than drunk, I mean that
-this chap wasn’t content to take his booze and carry on as a decent
-man would have done. No, sir. He embroidered on the business without
-the slightest thought of his wife. An ordinary man full up with liquor
-and with a wife towing round would have tried to have hidden his
-condition as far as he could, but this blighter carried on regardless,
-and, when the whisky was in, wasn’t to hold or bind.
-
-“Of course she recognised that something in his brain had given way,
-and she took into account that he was plainly trying to drown the
-recollection of his cowardice in not helping Charles to escape; all
-the same she was out for scalps and said so.
-
-“She said she would live with him no more, that she had been a fool to
-marry a man whom she had only known for a few months and of whose
-family she knew nothing. She said she would give him an allowance of a
-thousand francs a month if he would sheer off and get out of her sight
-and never let her see him again.
-
-“He sat listening to all this without a sign of shame, and when she’d
-finished he flattened her out by calmly asking for fifteen hundred a
-month instead of a thousand. Never said he was sorry; just asked for a
-bigger allowance as if he was talking to a business man he was doing a
-deal with instead of a wife he had injured and outraged. Even the old
-lawyer was sick, and it takes a lot to sicken a French lawyer. I can
-tell you that.
-
-“What does she do? She says: ‘I’ll allow you two thousand a month on
-the condition I never see your face or hear from you again. If you
-show yourself before me,’ she says, ‘or write to me, I’ll stop the
-allowance—if you try to move the law to make us live together, I’ll
-turn all my money into gold coin and throw it in the sea and myself
-after it, you beast,’ she says.
-
-“And he says: ‘All right, all right, don’t fly away with things,’ he
-says. ‘Give me my allowance and you’ll never see me again.’
-
-“Then he signs a paper to that effect, and she leaves him at
-Marseilles and goes back to Paris to take up her life as if she had
-never been married.
-
-“Back in Paris she felt as if she’d been through a nightmare. You see
-she’d loved the chap, that was the bother. And the rum part of the
-thing was she couldn’t unlove him. That’s to say she couldn’t forget
-him. She couldn’t forget the man he’d been. Seemed to her as if some
-frightful accident had turned his nature and that it wasn’t altogether
-his fault, and she guessed that it wasn’t only his funking his duty
-that had changed him, but that Charles, away out there in New
-Caledonia, was haunting him.
-
-“Then, after a while, being a rich woman, she managed, unknown to
-anyone, to get news of what he was doing and how he was carrying on,
-and what she found out didn’t comfort her any. He was up in Montmartre
-with another woman and going to pieces fast, what with living all his
-time in cafés and drinking and so on. She reckoned she wouldn’t be
-paying his allowance long, and she was right.
-
-“One day an old woman turned up at her house asking her to come at
-once to where he was living as he was mortally ill and couldn’t hold
-out more than a few hours.
-
-“She didn’t think twice, but came, taking a cab and being landed in a
-little old back street at the door of a house that stood between a
-thieves’ café and a rag shop.
-
-“Up the stairs she went, following the old woman, and into a room
-where his royal highness was lying with a jug of whisky on the floor
-beside him and a hectic blush on his cheeks.
-
-“‘I’m dying,’ he says, ‘and I want to tell you something you ought to
-know. I was sent to New Caledonia,’ he says, ‘for a robbery committed
-by another man.’
-
-“She thought he was raving, but she says, ‘Go on.’
-
-“‘Armand and I were twins,’ he says, ‘as like as two peas. Armand
-could do nothing. He stayed in Paris whilst poor Charles, that’s me,
-went making roads on Noumea. Then you married him.’
-
-“‘But you are Armand,’ she cries, ‘you are my husband, or am I mad?’
-
-“‘Not a bit,’ says he, ‘I’m Charles, his twin brother.’
-
-“Then she recollected how from the first she thought Armand had
-changed. She sat down on the side of the bed because her limbs were
-giving, and he goes on.
-
-“‘A year ago, you and him came in a big yacht to Noumea, and the
-Governor sent me one night to have a talk with him. When we were
-alone, he told me how his heart had been burning a hole in him for
-years, how he had married a rich woman—that’s you—and how, when he
-was happy and rich his heart had burned him worse, so that the doctors
-not knowing what was wrong with him had ordered him a sea voyage.’
-Then Charles goes on to tell how Armand had come to the conclusion
-that even if he helped Charles to escape, this likeness between them
-would lead surely to the giving away of the whole show, make trouble
-among the crew of the yacht, and so on—besides the fact that it was
-next to impossible for a man to escape from Noumea in the ordinary
-way, but said Armand, ‘We can change places, and no one will know.
-Strip and change here and now,’ he says; ‘the guards are outside. I’ll
-take your place and go to prison, and you’ll be free. I’ve got a
-scissors here and two snips will make our hair the same, and by good
-luck we are both clean shaven. You’ve done half your sentence of ten
-years, and I’ll do the other half,’ he says; ‘the only bargain I’ll
-make is that you’ll respect my wife and live apart from her, and,
-after a while, you’ll break the news to her, and, maybe, when I’m free
-in five years she’ll forgive me.’
-
-“Charles finishes up by excusing himself for the drink, saying if
-she’d served five years without the chance of a decent wet all that
-time, she’d maybe have done as he’d done.
-
-“He died an hour after, and there was that woman left with lots to
-think about. First of all her husband wasn’t the drunkard that had
-disgraced her, but he was a convict serving his time and serving it
-wrongfully for a robbery he had not committed and for the sake of his
-brother.
-
-“The thundering great fact stood up like a shot tower before her that
-Armand wasn’t the drunkard that had disgraced her in two ports and
-before a ship’s company, wasn’t the swine that took her allowance and
-asked for more. That he was a saint, if ever a man was a saint.
-
-“She rushed home, telegraphed to Marseilles and re-commissioned the
-_Gaudriole_, that was still lying at the wharves. A week later she
-sailed again for Noumea.
-
-“On the voyage, she plotted and planned. She had determined to save
-him from the four years or so of the remains of his sentence at all
-costs and hazards, and when the yacht put in here she had a plan fixed
-on, but it was kiboshed by the fact that the Governor, as I have said,
-was changed. However, she took up residence for awhile in the town,
-people she had known before called on her, and she gave out that her
-husband was dead.
-
-“You can fancy how a rich widow was run after by all and sundry,
-myself included, not that I had any idea about her money. I only cared
-for herself. She knew this as women know such things by instinct, and
-one day when she was alone with me and I was going to tell her my mind
-about her, she dropped a bombshell on my head by telling me her whole
-story, capped by the fact that she had come to help her husband to
-escape. She asked for my help. I’m a queer chap in some ways. I told
-her I loved her enough to ruin myself for her by risking everything to
-give her husband back to her, and between us we worked out a plan that
-was a pippin.
-
-“It would have freed Armand, only that we found on inquiring about him
-that he had already escaped—he was dead. Died of fever two months
-before she came.
-
-“I heard once of a Japanese child that said her doll was alive because
-she loved it so much, adding that if you loved anything enough it
-lived. Well, in my experience, if you love anything enough you can
-make it love you.
-
-“That woman stayed on in Noumea, and I made her love me at last. I
-married her, you know her, she is my wife. She loves Armand still, as
-a memory, and for the sake of his memory we live here. It’s as good a
-place to live in as anywhere else, especially now that they have
-settled to send no more convicts from France.”
-
-
-
-
-XV—THE ABBOTT MYSTERY
-
-
- I
-
-A man may live all his days without finding his true vocation, and it
-is often accident that reveals it to him. Herschel might have ended
-his days a music master only for chance, and Du Maurier towards the
-finish of his life found that he had been all his life a novelist
-without knowing it.
-
-Some years ago my friend John Sargenson found on the beach near Dover
-an old red satin shoe that had been washed ashore tied to a bundle of
-papers. I have told the story elsewhere and how, brooding over these
-things, and by powers of analysis and synthesis rarely linked in one
-brain, he solved the riddle and brought a murderer to justice.
-
-He didn’t continue in the business. He is a very rich man, and God’s
-beautiful world offers him better objects of pursuit than the crook
-and criminal; all the same, a year after the shoe business, accident
-brought him again in touch with a problem. He took the thing up,
-followed it to its solution and now he wishes he hadn’t. This is the
-story as he told me it.
-
-
- II
-
-I don’t know what it is about travelling that palls on one so much if
-one is travelling alone, maybe it’s the fact that the perfectly
-friendly people one meets are dead strangers to one, for all their
-conversation and close propinquity; a sea and land journey round the
-world is, in this respect, nothing more than a magnified bus ride,
-passengers getting in and out, talking together and so forth, but dead
-to one another once the destination is reached.
-
-It was at Rangoon that this great fact hit me, and incidentally laid
-the keel of the yarn I promised to tell you. I was suddenly fed up
-with boats, trains, hotels and strangers, homesick down to the heels
-of my boots, and wanting some place of my own to hide in; anything,
-even a shack in the jungle. It was the queerest feeling, and one day
-when it was gripping me hard, I fell in talk in the hotel bar with an
-old saltwater chap by name of Boston, who owned boats on the Irawadi
-and a couple of deep-sea schooners. I told him what was in my mind and
-he understood. He took me by the arm and led me off down to the river,
-and pointing out a schooner tied up to the wharf:
-
-“There you are,” said he, “that’s what you want; she’s in ballast and
-ready for sea. She’s mine. Buy her, or rent her. She’s a hundred and
-ten tons and nothing can break her, best sea boat in these waters;
-she’ll take you to Europe safer than the mails, and I’ll get you a
-skipper and crew inside the week.”
-
-An hour after I had closed, and the _Itang_—that was her name—was
-mine. I’d found a home. A week later I was off, slipping down the
-Irawadi with the land breeze into the Gulf of Martaban, bound for
-Europe?—oh Lord, no! I was homesick no longer; Europe might have gone
-off the map as far as I was concerned, for the Pacific was calling me.
-
-We sailed south down by the Andamans and through the Straits of
-Malacca, past Java and Flores, into the Banda Sea, tinkered about
-amongst the islands and then came through Torres Straits; it was May
-and the south-east monsoon was blowing—you can’t get through that
-place when the north-west is on, because of the fogs—then steering
-north by the Louisiades, we passed the Solomons, touched at several of
-the Carolines and pushed on till we were about half-way between the
-Ladrones and Wake Island just under 20° North.
-
-That’s where the happening took place.
-
-One blazing hot morning just as I was turning out of my bunk
-Mallinson, the skipper, came down to report a boat sighted drifting
-and derelict away ahead on the port bow.
-
-I came up in my pyjamas, and there she was, sure enough, a ship’s
-boat, with no sign of life and evidently no dead bodies in her, for
-she was riding high and dancing to the sea like a walnut-shell, but
-stuck up in the bow of her there was something like a bit of white
-board fixed to a spar of some sort.
-
-Through the glass Mallinson made out something on the board that he
-said was writing. I couldn’t; it looked like black lines to me, but he
-was right.
-
-We closed up with her, dropped a boat, and I put off with Hogg the
-mate, the _Itang_ keeping to windward on the off-chance of infection.
-Mallinson had it in his head that the notice on the board might be a
-warning of smallpox or plague, or something like that, and he’d once
-been had badly by picking up a plague boat off the Maldives. But it
-wasn’t.
-
-The notice had nothing to do with disease or infection, and I’ll give
-you a hundred guesses as to what some old ship master, maybe dying and
-half crazy with the loss of his ship, and a secret on his conscience
-had written up for some passing ship to read.
-
-This was it:
-
- “The heir of William Abbott will be found
- at 11 Churles Street, Shanghai.”
-
-I don’t mind saying that no sailor man has ever struck anything at
-sea stranger than that. You must remember where we were: a thousand
-miles of blue ocean all around and that piece of writing staring us in
-the face; the affairs of William Abbott and his heir, whoever they
-might be, contrasted with God’s immensities—an advertisement, almost,
-you might say, written on that desolation.
-
-It struck me clean between the eyes, it was like meeting a man in a
-top hat in the middle of the Sahara desert. We closed up with the
-boat; she was clean swept of everything down to the bailer, no ship’s
-name on her, and worth maybe a hundred dollars; so we towed her to the
-_Itang_ and got her on board, notice and all.
-
-It was lashed to a boat-hook, which was lashed to the forward thwart,
-and we cut it loose and brought it down to the cabin, where we hung it
-up as a trophy.
-
-After the word “Shanghai” there was the indication of a letter that
-looked like “L,” faint as if the paint had run out or the fellow who
-was writing had given up the job, dying maybe, before he could finish
-it; the board itself was an old piece of white enamelled stuff, torn
-evidently from some part of a ship’s make-up, the whole thing was
-roughly done, but the chap, whoever he was, had some education, for
-there was a punctuation mark after the word “Street.”
-
-We stuck it up on the after bulkhead, and there it hung, giving us
-food for talk every meal time, and on and off for days. Mallinson said
-it was the work of some chap who had died and left no will, he was a
-bit of a sea lawyer and he held that if William Abbott was a sailor
-and it could be proved he was lost at sea and if some relation of his
-was to be found at 11 Churles Street, Shanghai, the Law, under the
-circumstance, would regard the thing as a will.
-
-This seemed to me rubbish, but it gave us something to argue about,
-and so it went on till the thing dropped from our talk as we raised
-our latitude, looking in at Los Jardines and then steering for
-Formosa.
-
-I’d determined to have a look at Japan, so we left Formosa, steering
-north, and then one day, it was off the Riu Kiu islands, the helm went
-over and we steered for Shanghai.
-
-The fact of the matter was that beastly board had obsessed me. Though
-we had ceased talking of it, I hadn’t ceased thinking of it. You know
-the way a problem gets hold of me. Lying in my bunk at night, I worked
-that riddle backwards and forwards, and up and down. If William Abbott
-had written it, what had become of him? Why wasn’t his corpse in the
-boat? What was the use of writing it? As a legal document, it was
-useless. The whole thing was a tangle, but one fact stood out, it was
-a message. Well, to whom? Not to the seagulls or the world at large,
-but to the first person who should pick it up, and the message was:
-
-“The heir of William Abbott lives at such and such an address.” That
-was quite plain. Also it was evident that the writer meant that the
-finder of the message should make use of it by bringing it to or
-sending it to 11 Churles Street.
-
-Whether some man at the address given could benefit by the message or
-not was another matter—evidently it was in the mind of the writer
-that he could.
-
-You see how reasoning had brought me to a point where conscience was
-awakened. I began to say to myself: “It’s your duty to take that
-message; here you are a well-to-do idler bound for no port in
-particular, but just following your own pleasure, you are going to
-Japan for no earthly reason, just for a whim, Shanghai lies almost on
-your way and your duty is to stop there,” but I didn’t want to go to
-Shanghai, I had nothing against the place or the Chinese—I just
-didn’t want to go; however, that didn’t matter, conscience had taken
-the wheel and I went.
-
-
- III
-
-We got to the river before noon one day and picked up a pilot. You
-don’t know Shanghai? Well, you’re saved the knowledge of the shoals
-and buoys and lightships and the currents, and the five-mile-long
-anchorage, to say nothing of the freighters going up and down and the
-junks out of control. I cursed William Abbott and his heirs before we
-were berthed, and then, leaving Mallinson in charge, I went ashore to
-hunt for my man.
-
-I knew Lockhart, the silk man, and found him out, and he made me stop
-with him at his place all the time I was there, which was only three
-days.
-
-It’s an interesting place, Shanghai, but the thing that intrigued me
-most was the fact that there was no Churles Street. Thinking the
-Johnnie who wrote the notice might have meant Charles Street, I asked
-for that; there was no such place in the European quarter. The
-European quarter lies east of the Chinese town. There was no such
-place in the Chinese town, there was the street of a Thousand Delights
-and the street of the Seven Dead Dogs, and the street of the Lanterns,
-and so forth, but they were no use, so, feeling that I was done and
-shaking the dried mud of Shanghai off my shoes, we put out for
-Nagasaki.
-
-I sent the notice board flying over the after rail as we dropped the
-land and dismissed the matter from my mind—from my conscious mind. My
-subliminal mind had it still in hand, and two days after landing at
-Nagasaki it asked me this question: “Could that faintly written ‘L’
-have been the first letter of the word ‘lost’?”
-
-I went straight to the shipping office and, looking over the list of
-overdue ships, I found a notice that the steamship _Shanghai_, bound
-from London to Canton was eight weeks overdue. You can imagine how the
-hound in me woke to life and wagged its tail at that discovery. I sat
-down and wrote out on a sheet of paper the message, amended into this:
-“The heir of William Abbott lives at 11 Churles Street. Shanghai
-lost.” If the writer had possessed the time and paint and space he
-might have given the full strange history of the case and how the boat
-had been drifted off and about the seas with that message.
-
-Maybe the chap had jumped to the sharks, driven by hunger or thirst as
-many a man has done, maybe he had painted his message on that bit of
-board before leaving some slowly sinking ship and taken it in the
-boat—no knowing, the fact remained, and seemed clear enough, that
-some desperate urgency of soul had made him, in face of death and with
-a steady hand, take a paint brush and write that screed on the bare
-chance of someone picking it up.
-
-You know my make-up and how, having gone so far on an inquiry of this
-sort, I was bound to go on. It’s different now. I’ll never touch a
-thing like that again, but that day I stripped for action, determining
-to see the business through and find out every bit of meaning there
-was to it.
-
-I started by sending a cable to the Board of Trade, London Docks. Next
-day at noon I had an answer which read: “_Shanghai_ sixteen hundred
-tons, Master’s name Richard Abbott.”
-
-That name Abbott coming over the wires all the way from murky London,
-in answer, you might say, to the name Abbott written on that board
-away in the blue Pacific, gave me a thrill such as I have never felt
-before. I knew now the writer of the message, and at the same time I
-knew that it was not his own money that he was bothering about simply
-because he wasn’t William Abbott. I knew that it was highly probable
-that he was a close relation of William Abbott, brother maybe, or son;
-that might be placed among the high probabilities owing to the
-similarity of name and intimate knowledge of family affairs. Just so,
-and I could go a step further; it was pretty certain that Richard
-Abbott, the master of the _Shanghai_, was the sole possessor of the
-knowledge he had given to the world, and, from the urge that drove him
-in the face of death to tell what he knew, it was possible that the
-thing weighed on his mind, possible, in fact, that he had kept the
-thing hidden.
-
-In other words, that he was trying to remedy an injustice committed
-either by himself or someone else.
-
-I wrote all these probabilities and possibilities down on a sheet of
-paper, with an account of the finding of the message, sealed the lot
-up in an envelope and gave it in charge of the manager of the bank I
-dealt with in Nagasaki, so that in the case of death or accident the
-heir of William Abbott might have some chance of coming to his due.
-Then I proceeded to enjoy myself in Japan, determined to think no more
-of the matter till I got back to London.
-
-I spent a month in Japan, sold the old _Itang_ for more than I had
-given for her and paid off captain and crew.
-
-
- IV
-
-I made up my mind that the Churles Street referred to in the message
-lay in London. London was the home town evidently of the master of the
-_Shanghai_, and he would refer to Churles Street—perhaps a well-known
-place in the dock quarter—just as one might speak of Cromwell Road or
-Regent Street.
-
-On getting in to Southampton, the first thing I did at the hotel was
-to consult a Kelly’s directory, and sure enough, there was Churles
-Street, E.C., the only street of that name, a short street of twenty
-houses or so with the name J. Robertson against No. 11. The street
-opened off the West India Dock Road, and two days later, when I had
-disposed of my private business in London, I took a walk in the East
-End. The Dock Road is a fascinating place if you are in good health
-and spirits, and if the day is fine, but there is no fascination about
-Churles Street, a gloomy, evil looking cul-de-sac, not rowdy, but
-quiet with the quietude of vice reduced to misery and crouching in a
-corner.
-
-It was a horrible place.
-
-A thin woman nursing a baby was standing at the door of No. 11. I
-asked her was anyone of the name of Abbott living there and she
-glanced me up and down.
-
-“Have you come from his brother?” asked she.
-
-“Yes,” I said, “I’ve come from Captain Richard Abbott.”
-
-She led the way into the passage, opened a door, and showed me into a
-room where a man, fully dressed, was lying on a bed smoking a pipe and
-reading a sporting paper.
-
-A typical lounger and ne’er-do-well, unshaved, and with his collar and
-tie on the chair beside him, this chap gave me pause, I can assure
-you.
-
-“Well,” he said to the woman, “what’s he want?”
-
-“You’re his brother?” I said.
-
-“Yes,” he replied, “I’m his brother, and who might you be?”
-
-“Met him abroad,” I replied, “and he asked me to call in and see how
-you were doing.” I was clean cut off from the business I had in mind,
-some instinct told me to halt right there and show nothing that was in
-my hand. The man repulsed me.
-
-“Well, you see how I am doing,” replied he, “hasn’t he sent me
-anything but his kind inquiries?”
-
-“Yes,” I said, “he asked me to give you a sovereign from him.”
-
-I brought out the money and he took it and laid it on the chair by the
-collar and tie, then he filled his pipe again and we talked. I had
-taken a chair which the woman had dusted. I talked but I could get
-nothing much out of him, to ask questions I would have had to explain,
-and to explain might have meant bringing this unshaven waster on top
-of me to help him to prosecute his claims. If I did anything further
-in the matter, I would do it through an agent, but upon my word I felt
-I had paid any debt I might owe to the master of the _Shanghai_ by the
-trouble I had taken already and the sovereign I had handed over in his
-name.
-
-As we talked a pretty little girl of ten or twelve ran into the room;
-she was dirty and neglected, and as she stood at the end of the bed
-with her great eyes fixed on me, I could have kicked the loafer lying
-there, his pipe in his mouth and his sporting paper by his side.
-
-It seemed that he had four children altogether, and as I took my leave
-and the woman showed me out, I put another sovereign into her hand for
-the children.
-
-There I was in the West India Dock Road again feeling that I could
-have kicked myself. It was not so much the trouble I had taken over
-the business that worried me as the wind up. I’d put into Shanghai,
-sent cables from Japan, altered my plans, spent no end of money to
-bring news to that rotten chap, news of a fortune that if secured
-would certainly be burst on racing and drink.
-
-I said to myself that this came of mixing in other folks’ business and
-I took an oath never to do it again—I didn’t know I was only at the
-beginning of things.
-
-Murchison was the agent I determined to employ to finish up the
-affair. Murchison is less a detective than an inquiry agent, his game
-is to find out facts relative to people, he lives in Old Serjeants’
-Inn, and knowing him to be secrecy itself and not caring to employ my
-lawyer, I determined to go to him next day and place the matter in his
-hands, telling him to do what he could with the business, but to keep
-my name out of it. He need mention nothing about the finding of the
-message, but he could give it as coming from some unknown source—the
-message was the main thing, anyhow.
-
-I called at his office next morning. Murchison is a thin old chap, dry
-as a stick. I told him the whole story and it made no more impression
-on him than if I’d been telling it to a pump. He made a note or two,
-and when I had finished, he told me in effect that he wasn’t a
-District Messenger, but an inquiry agent, and that I had better take
-the thing to my lawyer. He seemed put out; I had evidently raised his
-tracking instincts by my story and ended simply by asking him to take
-a message.
-
-I apologised, told him the truth, that my lawyer was an old-fashioned
-family solicitor, gone in years, touchy as Lucifer, the last man in
-London to set hinting of possible fortunes to beggars in slums. “If
-you won’t do it yourself,” I finished, “tell me of a man who will.”
-
-“I can tell you of plenty,” he replied, “but if you take my advice you
-will let me make an inquiry into the business before you move further
-in the matter; there’s more in it than meets the eye and you may be
-doing injury to other parties by stirring up the mud, for this man you
-tell me of seems mud.”
-
-“A jolly good name for him,” said I. “Well, go ahead and make your
-inquiries; it’s only a few pounds more thrown after the rest, and it
-will be interesting to hear the result.” Then I left him.
-
-A month later I got a letter asking me to call upon him, and I went.
-
-When I took my seat he sent the clerk for the Abbott documents, and
-the clerk brought a sheaf of all sorts of papers, laid them on the
-table and went out. Murchison put on his glasses, took a glance
-through the papers and started his yarn.
-
-Beautifully concise it was, and I’ll give you it almost in his own
-words.
-
-
- V
-
-William Abbott, of Sydney, N.S.W., was a wool broker who came to
-England in the year 1906 and died worth some hundred and fifty
-thousand pounds. He had three sons, John, Alexander and Richard.
-
-The Will was simple and direct. Murchison laid a copy of it before me,
-taken by permission of Abbott’s lawyer’s, whom he had found, and it
-ran something like this.
-
-“Owing to the conduct of my eldest son, John Abbott, I hereby revoke
-my Will of June 7th, 1902, by which I bequeathed him the whole of my
-property, with the exception of the sum of twenty thousand pounds to
-be equally divided between my sons Alexander and Richard. I hereby
-bequeath the whole of my property to my son Alexander Abbott. Signed:
-William Abbott, July 10th, 1904. Witnesses: John Brooke, Jane
-Summers.”
-
-“Well,” said Murchison, as I handed the paper back, “that signature is
-a forgery; the body of the document is written as if by a clerk in
-almost print character, but though I have never seen the handwriting
-of William Abbott, I will bet my reputation that the signature is
-forged.”
-
-“How can you tell?” I asked.
-
-“Because the signatures of the witnesses are forged; they have both
-been written by the same hand. The signature ‘William Abbott’ has
-evidently been carefully copied from an original, there is a
-constraint about it that tells me that, but the witnesses’ signatures,
-where the forger had nothing to copy and had to invent imaginary
-names, simply shout. The fool never thought of that; leaving the point
-of similarity aside, the woman’s signature is as masculine as a
-Grenadier. The body of the document, though almost in print, is also
-the work of the forger.”
-
-“Are you sure?” I asked.
-
-“Absolutely,” said he, “handwriting with me is not only a science
-which I have studied for fifty years; it is something that has
-developed in me an instinct. Now to go on. Alexander Abbott lives in a
-big house down in Kent. Richard, at the time of his father’s death,
-was a captain in the Black Bird Line, evidently working for his bread.
-A year after his father’s death he bought the steamer _Shanghai_,
-paying a large sum for it spot cash. He was an unmarried man, and when
-ashore occupied a flat in Bayswater. Alexander is a widower with one
-daughter.—That’s all. The case is complete.”
-
-“How do you read it?” I asked. The old chap fetched a snuff box out of
-a drawer in the desk, took a pinch and put the box back without
-offering it.
-
-“I read it,” he said, “in this way. John, the eldest son, was a bad
-lot; the father may have intended to disinherit him, and make a second
-will; anyhow, he didn’t; put it off as men do. When the father died,
-Alexander boldly did the trick. Richard may have been party to the
-business, at first—who knows? Anyhow, it seems that he was later on,
-since he was able to plank that big sum down for the ship, and since
-he was left nothing in the will, and since, as you say, he put up that
-notice you took off the boat and which told the truth.”
-
-I said nothing for a while, thinking this thing over. I was sure
-Murchison was right.
-
-This thing would have been weighing in the sailor’s mind for years;
-from what I could make out at Churles Street he had evidently been
-making John some sort of allowance; one could fancy the long watches
-of the night, the pacing of the deck under the stars, and the mind of
-the sailor always teased by the fact that he was party to this
-business, a forgery that had kept a brother, however bad, out of his
-inheritance. Then the last frantic attempt to put things right in the
-face of death, the agonised thought that to write the thing on paper
-was useless, paper that would be washed away by the rain or blown away
-by the wind.
-
-“Well,” said I to Murchison, “it seems plain enough, and now, on the
-face of it, what would you advise me to do?”
-
-“If I were in your place,” said he, “I would do nothing. You say this
-elder brother is a scamp; Alexander, on the other hand, is a rogue; if
-you mix yourself up in the business you may have trouble. Why should
-you worry yourself about a bad lot of strangers?—turn it down.”
-
-That seemed sensible enough, but you see Murchison knew only the bare
-facts of the case; he had not seen that notice board tossing about in
-the desolation of the Pacific.
-
-I left him without having made up my mind as to what I should do, half
-determined to do nothing.
-
-The bother was that the facts Murchison had put before me gave a new
-complexion to the whole business, a new urgency to that message which
-I had not delivered. I felt as if the captain of the _Shanghai_ had
-suddenly come to my elbow, him and his uneasy conscience craving to be
-put at rest. Just so, but on the other hand there was John Abbott, and
-I can’t tell you the grue that chap had given me. It wasn’t that he
-was a boozer, or a waster; he was bad; bad right through and rotten.
-There is a sixth sense, it has to do with morals and the difference
-between good and evil; it told me this chap was evil, and the thought
-of helping to hand him a fortune made my soul revolt.
-
-Still, there you are, I didn’t make the chap, and the fact remained
-that in doing nothing I was holding him out of his rights.
-
-All that evening the thing worried me and most of that night. Next
-morning I couldn’t stand it any longer. I took the train for Oakslot
-in Kent. I had determined to go straight to Alexander Abbott, beard
-him, tell him of the notice I had found and see what he had to say.
-The idea came to me that he might make restitution in some way without
-handing all the fortune over to John—anyhow, it would be doing
-something, and I determined to use all my knowledge and power if
-necessary.
-
-Ever been to Oakslot? It is the quaintest and quietest place, and it
-wasn’t till I got out of the train and found myself on the platform
-that the terrible nature of the business I was on took me by the arm.
-
-I had no difficulty in finding Alexander Abbott’s residence; the
-Waterings was the name it went by, an old Georgian house set in a
-small park; one of those small, rook-haunted, sleepy, sunlit
-pleasaunces found only in England and best in Sussex or Kent.
-
-I was shown into the drawing-room by an old manservant, who took my
-card, on which I had pencilled: “From Captain Richard Abbott.”
-
-A few moments passed and the door opened and a girl came in, a girl of
-sixteen or so, pretty as a picture and charming as a rose; one of
-those sweet, whole, fresh, candid creatures, almost sexless as yet,
-but made to love and be loved.
-
-I stood before her. I was Tragedy, but she only saw a man. She told me
-her father was unwell but would see me. Would I follow her?
-
-She led me to a library, and there, seated by the window which gave
-upon the sunlit park, sat the criminal, a man of forty or so, a man
-with seemingly a good and kindly face, a man I would have trusted on
-sight. He was evidently far gone in consumption, this forger of
-documents, and it was pretty evident that anxiety had helped in the
-business; a weight on the conscience is a big handicap if one is
-trying to fight disease.
-
-I sat down near him and started right in; the quicker you get a
-surgical operation over the better, and so he seemed to think, for
-when I told him of the finding of the notice and went on to say that
-it might be necessary to inquire into the will and that I had reason
-to believe there was something wrong about it, he saw I knew nearly
-everything and stopped me right off.
-
-“Everything is wrong about it,” said he, “and thank God that this
-matter has fallen into the hands of a straight and honest man like
-you—you will understand. This thing has tormented me for years, but
-when you have heard what I have to say you will know I did wrong only
-to do right. There is no greater scoundrel in this world than my
-brother John Abbott; a terrible thing to say but the truth. My father
-had made a will leaving him everything. He placed that will in the
-hands of James Anderson of Sydney, our lawyer. Anderson knew John’s
-character better than my father and was averse from the business, but
-he could do nothing. My father was a very headstrong man and blind to
-John’s doings, which the scamp somehow managed to partly conceal from
-him. He thought John was sowing his wild oats and that he would be all
-the better for it. John could do no wrong in his eyes, but a few days
-before his death he had a terrible awakening with a forged bill of
-exchange—forgery seems to run in the family. It cost him five
-thousand pounds to stifle the matter, and the day after the business
-was settled my father died; slipped coming downstairs, fell, and broke
-his back.
-
-“I was there and he died in my arms, and his last words were: ‘Get
-that will from Anderson and destroy it.’ He had no power to write a
-new will, no strength even to write his signature, and when he was
-dead there was I with those words ringing in my ears.
-
-“I knew my father intended to revoke his first will, would have done
-it that day; maybe, ought to have done it days ago, but his mind was
-in a turmoil and he was a strong, hearty man with never a thought of
-death. Well, there I was, not only with that knowledge but the
-knowledge that if the property fell to John it would be the end of the
-family’s good name; that beast was only possible when he was kept
-short of money—then there was the lower consideration of my own
-position, penniless and at John’s mercy.
-
-“I made a will and put my father’s name to it, sure that Anderson
-would make no trouble, sure that John would not inquire into it, for
-the forgery of the bill of exchange had drawn his teeth, and the fact
-of that forgery would account to him for the change in the disposition
-of the property.
-
-“I dated the will, it is true, some years back, and in the time my
-father lived in Sydney. I did that because I had to forge the names of
-the two witnesses; had I dated it recently someone might ask who are
-these witnesses? As it was there was no one to put that question to,
-for I was not in Sydney at the time indicated in the will—they might
-have been hotel servants—anyone.
-
-“I left myself the whole property, not from greed but simply because
-my brother Richard was at sea. I knew his temperament and character,
-and it was possible that, had I made him part heir, he would have
-revolted and disclosed all—for I had determined to tell him
-everything.
-
-“I placed the forged will among my father’s papers; it was proved and
-there was no trouble. Anderson, whose clients are largely wool brokers
-and Australian merchants, has a branch office in London; they were my
-father’s solicitors in England as well as Australia, and the whole
-thing went through their hands. They had all the less reason to cast
-any suspicious eye on the document in as much as they had dealt with
-the forgery of the bill of exchange.
-
-“Then Richard came back from sea and I told him all. He was horrified,
-yet he saw that what I had done had been simply to carry out my
-father’s wish. It was impossible to destroy the old will as he had
-directed, or possible only in one way—by the creation of a new will.
-
-“After a while he cooled on the matter and even accepted a large sum
-for the purchase of a ship, the _Shanghai_, now lost. But the thing
-weighed on his mind as it has on mine, only more so. He was of a
-different temperament. He did not dread detection, with him it was
-entirely a matter of conscience: he felt he had defrauded John by
-being partner to the business, and accepting that sum of money. He
-seemed to think in his sailor way it would bring him bad luck; no
-doubt when the end came and he lost his ship he had that in mind, and
-lest the bad luck might follow him into the next world wrote that
-notice you found. I have only a few more months to live—now tell me,
-was I right or wrong in doing what I did?”
-
-“I don’t know,” I said. “I am not your judge, but all I can say is
-this: from what I know of the business, I will move no further in the
-matter, if for no other reason than that, should John Abbott get word
-of the business, your daughter would be rendered penniless after your
-death.”
-
-“Absolutely,” said he.
-
-I asked him was John receiving an allowance, and he said yes. He was
-receiving two pounds a week for life.
-
-Then I left him and took the train for London, and from that day to
-this I have heard nothing of any of the lot of them. I expect he’s
-dead and his daughter an heiress—I don’t know, but I’ll never touch a
-thing like that again. Even still I’m bothered to know if I was right
-or wrong in holding my hand and tongue. What would you have done in
-similar circumstances?
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ocean Tramps, by H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OCEAN TRAMPS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 63269-0.txt or 63269-0.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/3/2/6/63269/
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
-http://gutenberg.org/license).
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
-http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
-809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
-business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
-information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
-page at http://pglaf.org
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit http://pglaf.org
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- http://www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/old/63269-0.zip b/old/63269-0.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 350b1c8..0000000
--- a/old/63269-0.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/63269-h.zip b/old/63269-h.zip
deleted file mode 100644
index 58d1a6c..0000000
--- a/old/63269-h.zip
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/63269-h/63269-h.htm b/old/63269-h/63269-h.htm
deleted file mode 100644
index 87223bd..0000000
--- a/old/63269-h/63269-h.htm
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,12027 +0,0 @@
-<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
-"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
-<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
-<head>
- <meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" />
- <title>Ocean Tramps, by H. de Vere Stacpoole—A Project Gutenberg eBook</title>
- <link rel='coverpage' href='images/cover.jpg' />
- <meta name='cover' content='images/cover.jpg' />
- <style type="text/css">
- body { margin-left:8%; margin-right:8%; }
- p { text-indent:1.15em; margin-top:0.1em; margin-bottom:0.1em; text-align:justify; }
- h1 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; font-size:1.4em; margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:1em; }
- h2 { text-align:center; font-weight:normal; font-size:1.0em; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1em; }
- h2.nobreak { page-break-before: avoid; }
- div.section { page-break-before:always; margin-top:4em; margin-bottom:4em; }
- div.chapter { page-break-before:always; margin-top:4em; margin-bottom:4em; }
- .secn { font-size:1.2em; text-align:center; margin-top:1.4em; margin-bottom:1em; }
- p.ni { text-indent:0; }
- hr.tb { border:none; border-bottom:1px solid black;
- margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:25%; width:50% }
- table.toc {}
- table { page-break-inside: avoid; width:100%; }
- table.tcenter { border-collapse:collapse; padding:3px;
- margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em;
- margin-left:2em; }
- td { vertical-align:top; }
- td.c1 { text-align:right; padding-right:0.7em; }
- td.c2 { font-variant:small-caps; }
- </style>
-</head>
-<body>
-
-
-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Ocean Tramps, by H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Ocean Tramps
-
-Author: H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-Release Date: September 22, 2020 [EBook #63269]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OCEAN TRAMPS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<h1>OCEAN TRAMPS</h1>
-
-<div class='section' style='margin-left:25%'>
-The beauty of a flower.<br />
-The beauty of a tune.<br />
-The beauty of the hour<br />
-When dusk embraces June:<br />
-Of all the beauties earthly<br />
-The soul of man may clip,<br />
-On earth there is no beauty<br />
-Like the beauty of a ship.<br />
-</div>
-
-<div class='section' style='text-align:center'>
-<div style='font-size:1.6em; font-style:italic; margin-bottom:0.7em;'>OCEAN TRAMPS</div>
-<div style='font-size:1.2em; font-style:italic; margin-bottom:0.7em;'>By H. de VERE STACPOOLE</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em; font-style:italic;'>Author of “The Blue Lagoon,” “The Pearl</div>
-<div style='font-size:0.8em; font-style:italic; margin-bottom:4em;'>Fishers,” “The Children of the Sea,” Etc., Etc.</div>
-<div style='font-size:1em;'>LONDON: HUTCHINSON &amp; CO.</div>
-<div style='font-size:1em;'>PATERNOSTER ROW&nbsp;&middot;&nbsp;&middot;&nbsp;1924</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section' style='margin-left:15%; margin-right:15%;'>
-<p style='text-indent:0; text-align:center; font-size:larger;margin-bottom:0.5em;'>FOREWORD</p>
-
-<p class='ni'>I met Billy Harman on Circular Wharf, Sydney,
-so many years ago that I think he must be dead.
-He is the chief person in the first six stories of this
-book, which have appeared illustrated in an
-English, an American and a Canadian magazine,
-in all of which the illustrator depicted Billy as
-a young, rather good-looking man. That he
-was not. Billy, when I met him, was well over
-forty, big and scrubby-bearded, a shell-back
-with a touch of the Longshoreman, blue far-seeing
-eyes, the eyes of a child&mdash;and an innocence
-none the less delightful because streaked with
-guile.</p>
-
-<p>Only the sea could have produced Billy, and
-the Islands and the Beaches and the life which
-the Pacific makes possible for an Ocean Tramp.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class='section'>
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:larger;'>CONTENTS</div>
-<table class='toc tcenter' summary="" style='margin-bottom:3em'>
-<tbody>
- <tr><td class='c1'>I.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chI'>Bud and Billy</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>II.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chII'>Mandelbaum</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>III.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIII'>The Way of a Maid with a Man</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>IV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIV'>Sunk Without Trace</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>V.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chV'>A Deal with “Plain Sailin’ Jim”</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVI'>Pearls of Great Price!</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVII'>Beaten on the Post</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>VIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chVIII'>A Case in Point</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>IX.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chIX'>The Other One</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>X.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chX'>Iron Law</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XI.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXI'>The Story of Billy Broke</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXII'>The Making of a Millionaire</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XIII.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIII'>Kiliwakee</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XIV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXIV'>Under the Flame Trees</a></td></tr>
- <tr><td class='c1'>XV.</td><td class='c2'><a href='#chXV'>The Abbott Mystery</a></td></tr>
-</tbody>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<div style='text-align:center; text-indent:0; margin-top:0; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto; '>
- <div style='font-size:1.4em;margin-top:4em;'>OCEAN TRAMPS</div>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak' id='chI' title='I: Bud and Billy'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER I.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>BUD AND BILLY</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>The moon was rising over Papaleete, over the
-Pacific Ocean and the bay where the anchor
-lights were spilling their amber on the water, over the
-palm trees and flame trees and the fragrant town
-from which, now clear, now sheltered by the sea wind,
-came the voices of girls singing to the tune of Hawaiian
-guitars.</p>
-
-<p>Mixed with the breathing of the tepid wind in the
-trees, the voices of the girls and the tune of the guitars,
-came the murmur and sigh of the beach, the last note
-wanted, the last touch, to a scene of absolutely absurd
-and impossible loveliness, amidst which, by the water’s
-edge, casting a thirty-foot shadow on the hard white
-sand, Mr. Harman was walking, blind to the Eden
-around him.</p>
-
-<p>Billy was on the beach in more senses than one.
-He was down and out, without friends, without food,
-without drinks, and almost without tobacco, starving
-in the midst of plenty, for in Papaleete, if you are a
-cadger, you may live for ever on the fat of the land,
-and not only live, but love, drink, smoke, dream
-under tree shadows and bathe in a sea warm with
-perpetual summer.</p>
-
-<p>But that was not Billy’s way. This gig, four-square,
-blue-eyed man out of San Francisco could do
-anything but cadge. It wasn’t a question of morals,
-it was more a question of simplicity.</p>
-
-<p>Billy’s morals had mostly been forgotten by Nature,
-or maybe they had been extracted by San Franciscans
-and shore-along toughs from Valparaiso up, anyhow
-and however that may be, the resulting vacuum seemed
-to have filled itself up with simplicity, not stupidity,
-just simplicity. The simplicity of a child that allowed
-him to go into the most desperate and questionable
-deals in ward politics and doubtful sea practice, wide-eyed,
-blue-eyed, and reproaching others for their moral
-lapses with the unchanging formula: “It don’t pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Crooked dealing don’t pay,” said Mr. Harman
-after some crooked deal had failed&mdash;never before.</p>
-
-<p>Yet somehow, in some extraordinary way, Billy
-was lovable, there was nothing mean about him,
-and that was maybe why he couldn’t cadge, and he had
-behind those blue eyes and that honest-dog looking,
-tanned face, a power of cool, uncalculating daring
-that might have landed him anywhere if he had come
-on a decent jumping-off place.</p>
-
-<p>As he turned back along the beach, the moonlight
-struck a figure coming towards him. It was Davis.
-Fate or some strange chance had thrown Davis and
-Harman together on the same beach at the same
-time, and though there was a world of difference
-between their faces, forms, characters and dispositions,
-they were alike in this&mdash;they couldn’t cadge.</p>
-
-<p>Davis was a lean slip of a man with a chin tuft
-and a terrific past about which he was quite open.
-Never satisfied or driven by the craze of adventure,
-he had overrun two or three fortunes and had beached
-at Papaleete from a B.P. boat which had picked him
-up from a trading station down somewhere in the
-Paumotus, and was glad to get rid of him on the
-terms of a twenty-dollar loan. The captain laughed
-when Davis had entered the loan in a pocket-book,
-but it would be returned with interest some time
-or another if the borrower lived. That was Davis.</p>
-
-<p>The one remarkable thing about this plain-looking
-man with the chin tuft and the flat cheek-bones was his
-quietude, nothing hurried or flurried him. That was
-perhaps the secret behind his shooting. He was more
-than a good shot with a revolver. He was inevitable.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s done,” said Davis, coming up with the
-other. “Penhill and Jarvis are highballing it at the
-club, and their Kanakas are playing hopscotch with
-the hula-hula girls. What’s the matter with you?
-Don’t go saying you’ve got cold feet.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not my feet,” said Mr. Harman, “but I’ve
-never run off with a ship before and that’s the fact,
-it’s not like sinkin’ her or pilin’ her. I’ve done most
-things, but I’ve never run off with a ship before, that’s
-a fact. I’ve never&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close up!” said Davis. “Didn’t I tell you
-that Penhill can’t move against us, once I get his
-ship out, his feet are cut off. I’m the one man living
-that he’s afraid of, because I’m the one man living
-that can put him in quod without hurting myself.
-This thing isn’t running off with a ship. It’s Providence.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you get at that?” asked Billy doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, look at it,” said Davis. “In he comes
-with the <i>Araya</i>, sees me, remembers the trick he played
-me, tries to pal up, gets a snub on the nose, puts it in
-his pocket, and then goes on the jag, him and Jarvis,
-leaving his schooner with a parcel of damn fool Kanakas
-in charge and me layin’ about dangerous. Kanakas,
-why they’re worse than that! Island boys that’ll
-take any white man’s bidding s’long as he feeds them
-with fried bananas. It’s lovely, that’s what it is,
-lovely&mdash;&mdash;” Linking his arm in that of Harman, he
-was walking him along the sand towards a boat
-beached and left almost high and dry by the ebbing
-tide. To the right lay the lights of the town, and
-almost on the beach sand the long amber glow of the
-lit club. Harman, walking between the beauty of
-Papaleete by night and the glory of the moon upon
-the sea, showed no sign of haste to reach the boat.</p>
-
-<p>What bothered him was, not so much the turpitude
-of the business, as the seeming futility and madness
-of it, for even in those days before wireless talked
-it was next to impossible to steal a ship and make
-good. Every port in the world is a compound eye for
-scrutiny, the character of a ship is inquired into as
-carefully as her health. Harman knew the whole
-business. There is a cable from Papaleete to Suva,
-and from Suva to ’Frisco and beyond, and to-morrow
-morning Penhill had only to speak and the description
-of the <i>Araya</i> and the two vanished beachcombers
-would be in the hands of the San Francisco authorities
-before noon; before night all American seaboard ports
-would be closed to the <i>Araya</i>, and by next day at noon,
-the British Board of Trade would seal Australia and
-Hong Kong. Chinese ports would be notified in
-“due course.”</p>
-
-<p>With every bolthole blocked, the <i>Araya</i> might
-still live free for years pottering among the less-known
-islands, they might even pile her on some rock and
-make their escape in the boats, but what would be
-the use of all that? No, the whole thing would have
-been futile and ridiculous but for the one thing that
-made it possible&mdash;Penhill. Penhill daren’t prosecute.
-The schooner was his, and he was the only man who
-could move, and he was tied. Davis said so. Davis
-had given details which made the matter clear to Harman,
-yet still he hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the boat. It was the <i>Araya’s</i>,
-left confidingly on a beach where no man ever stole
-boats; there were canoes to be had in plenty, but
-Davis preferred the boat, he had reasons.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, resting his hand on the gunnel, looked
-about him for a moment at the deserted beach, still
-undecided.</p>
-
-<p>His dunnage left at the house of a native woman
-where he had lodged was unprocurable, he owed a bill.
-As he stood considering this and other matters, from
-the groves by the beach diffusing itself through the
-night, came the voice of a native singing a love song,
-tender, plaintive, old as Papaleete and focussing in
-itself all the softness and beauty that the active soul
-of Billy Harman had learnt to hate.</p>
-
-<p>He seized the gunnel of the boat and assisted by
-Davis, shoved her off.</p>
-
-<p>Out on the moonlit water, the town showed up
-fairylike, its lights twinkling amidst the moving
-foliage. Away on Huahine, rising steeply like a wall
-of velvety blackness to the stars, the lights of tiny
-villages showed like fireflies come to rest; fronting
-and beneath all this mystery and loveliness showed
-the definite amber glow of the club where Penhill and
-Jarvis were drinking themselves blind. That was
-Papaleete.</p>
-
-<p>No port authorities, no harbour police, no sign of
-life but the anchor lights of a brigantine and a bêche-de-mer
-boat&mdash;that also was Papaleete. On board the
-<i>Araya</i> the anchor watch was snoring; kicked awake
-and rubbing its eyes, it jumped to the voice of white
-authority. The returned boat was a certificate that
-the new white fellow mas’rs were representatives of
-white fellow mas’r Penhill and Penhill’s character was
-an antidote to loving inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re a sprightly lot,” said Harman as the
-main boom swung to starboard and the great sail
-filled, tugging at the sheet. “Monkeys to jump an’
-no tongues to ask questions.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Penhill,” said Davis, “he’s milled them
-into brute beasts, not that they wanted much milling,
-but there you are, he done his best and I reckon we’re
-profiting by it.”</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>Four days later they had cut Capricorn, discovered
-the sailing qualities of the <i>Araya</i>, and taken stock
-of ship and cargo. There was also Penhill’s gold
-watch and eighteen hundred dollars of ship’s money.
-Davis calculated it all up and said he reckoned
-that the account between him and Penhill was
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>He said he reckoned that Penhill had deserved
-what he got and Harman concurred.</p>
-
-<p>They sat in judgment on Penhill and brought him
-in guilty. Harman almost felt virtuous.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he’ll learn it don’t pay to run crooked,”
-said he. “I’ve took notice that them sort of chaps
-always gets scragged in the end. What’s this you
-said he did you out of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seventy dollars, and left me on the beach,” replied
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Same as we’ve done him,” said Harman. “No, it
-don’t pay. It don’t pay no-how.”</p>
-
-<p>South at first, then due west they made past St.
-Felix and heading for Caldera on the Chili coast.
-But Caldera was not Davis’ objective. Buenodiaz,
-with its land-locked harbour, its lazy ways, its pretty
-women and negligent Port authorities, was his idea,
-and smoking Penhill’s cigars under a blazing sun
-whilst the <i>Araya</i> snored along through a Reckitts’-blue
-sea, he expounded matters to Billy Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Sell her on the hoof,” said Davis, “innards,
-outwards, hump, tail and all, that’s my idea. There
-are ten cent mail boats that’ll take us anywhere up or
-down the coast, Valparaiso for choice, once we’ve got
-the dollars in our pockets; there’s big things to be
-done in Chili with a few dollars by fellows that know
-the ropes.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Harman concurred.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been done there myself,” said he, “by chaps
-that hadn’t cents in their pockets, let alone dollars.
-Skinned alive I was of every buck to my name in a
-faro joint at Cubra, and me winning all the time.
-Hadn’t got half-way down the street to my ship with
-a pocket full of silver dollars when I put my hand in
-my pocket and found nothing but stones, filled me up
-they had with pebbles off the beach, playin’ guitars
-all the time and smokin’ cigarettes and pretendin’
-to hasty-manyana.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not against landin’ this hooker on them,
-but I tell you, Bud, it’s my experience, before we
-comes to close grips with them we’ll be wantin’ to fix
-our skins on with seccotine.”</p>
-
-<p>“You leave them to me,” said Bud Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve known the insides and outsides of Chinks,”
-went on the other, “and I’ve had dealin’s with Greeks
-up Susun way, oyster boat Levantines will take your
-back teeth whiles you’re tellin’ them you don’t want
-buyin’ their dud pearls, but these chaps are in their
-own class. Jim Satan, that’s what they are, and there’s
-not a ’Frisco Jew sellin’ dollar watches can walk round
-the brim of their sombreros.”</p>
-
-<p>“You leave them to me,” said Bud, and the <i>Araya</i>
-snored on.</p>
-
-<p>On and on with a gentle roll over the wind-speckled
-blue of the endless swell, lifting nothing but ocean,
-and over ocean vast dawns that turned to torrid noons
-and died in sunsets like the blaze of burning worlds;
-till one morning the cry of the Kanaka look-out
-answered the cry of a great gull flying with them and
-there before them stood the coast boiling where the
-sun was breaking above it and stretching to north and
-south of the sun blaze, solid, remote, in delicately
-pencilled hills dying from sight in the blue distance.
-Davis, who knew the coast, altered the helm. They
-were forty miles or so to the north of their right
-position, and it was not till afternoon that the harbour
-of Buenodiaz lay before them with the flame trees
-showing amidst the flat-topped houses and the blue
-water lapping the deserted mole. The quay by the
-mole was deserted and La Plazza, the public square,
-distinctly to be seen from the sea, lifted slightly as it
-was by the upward trend of the ground, was empty.
-Through the glass the houses showed, their green
-shutters tightly shut and not a soul on the verandas.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost as though some Pelée had erupted
-and covered the place with the lava of pure desolation
-clear as glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Taking their siestas,” said Davis. “Keep her
-as she goes. I know this harbour and it’s all good
-holding ground, beyond that buoy.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman at the wheel nodded, and Davis went forward
-to superintend the fellows getting the anchor
-ready while the <i>Araya</i>, her canvas quivering to the last
-of the dying breeze, stole in past an old rusty torpedo
-boat, past a grain ship that seemed dead, on and on,
-dropping her anchor at least two cable lengths from the
-mole.</p>
-
-<p>The rattle of the anchor chain made Buenodiaz
-open one eye. A boat slipped out from the mole.
-It was the Port Doctor.</p>
-
-<p>Buenodiaz flings its slops into the street and its smells
-are traditional, but it has a holy horror of imported
-diseases and its Port Doctor never sleeps&mdash;even in
-siesta time.</p>
-
-<p>With the Doctor came the Customs, smelling of
-garlic, with whom Davis conversed in the language of
-the natives, while Harman attended to the liquor and
-cigars.</p>
-
-<p>The cargo of the <i>Araya</i> was copra and turtle shell.
-Davis had figured and figured over the business, and
-reckoned he’d take four thousand dollars for the lot.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t like cotton,” said he, “don’t know what it’s
-worth, but I’ll put it at four thousand and not a
-cent under, at four thousand we shan’t be losers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon we wouldn’t be losers at four cents,”
-said Harman, “seein’ how we got it, and how about
-the hooker?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five thousand,” said Davis, “and that’s not half
-her worth. Nine thousand the lot and I’ll throw the
-chronometer in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you fixed what to do with the Kanakas?”
-asked the other. “There’s eight of them and they’ve
-all mouths.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s never a Kanaka yet could talk Spanish,”
-said Davis, “and I don’t propose to learn them, but
-I’ll give them fifty dollars apiece&mdash;maybe&mdash;if I make
-good. But there’s time enough to think of that when
-we have the dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>It was the second day after their arrival at Buenodiaz,
-the sun was setting and the sound of the band playing
-on La Plazza came across the water; mixed with the
-faint strains of the band came the sounds of a guitar
-from one of the ships in the anchorage, and in lapses
-of the breeze from the sea the scent of the town stole
-to them, a bouquet co-mingled from drains, flowers,
-garlic, earth and harbour compounds.</p>
-
-<p>Harman was in one of his meditative fits.</p>
-
-<p>“That chap you brought aboard to-day,” said he,
-“the big one with the whiskers, was he Alonez or was
-it the little ’un?”</p>
-
-<p>“The big one,” said Davis. “He’s the chap
-that’ll take the cargo off us and the little one will take
-the ship&mdash;I haven’t said a word of the price, haven’t
-said I was particularly wanting to sell, but I’ve given
-them a smell of the toasted cheese, and if I know
-anything of anything, they’re setting on their hind
-legs now in some café smoothing their whiskers and
-making ready to pounce. They’re partners, they own
-all that block of stores on the Calle San Pedro, and the
-little one does the shipping business. He’s Portuguese,
-pure. Pereira’s his name. I’m going up to his house
-to-night to talk business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Harman, “if he’s going to buy, he’s
-got the specifications, he’s been over her from the
-truck to the lazarette, and I thought he’d be pullin’
-the nails out of her to see what they were like. When
-are you goin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Eight,” replied Davis, and at eight o’clock, amidst
-the usual illuminations and fireworks with which
-Buenodiaz bedecks herself on most nights, he went,
-leaving Harman to keep ship. He returned at twelve
-o’clock and found Harman in his bunk snoring. At
-breakfast next morning he told of his visit. He had
-done no business in particular beyond mentioning
-the outside price that he could take for the <i>Araya</i>
-should he care to sell her. Mrs. Pereira and her
-daughter had been there and the girl was a peach.</p>
-
-<p>Harman absorbed this news without interest, merely
-reminding the other that they weren’t “dealin’ in
-fruit,” but as two more days added themselves together
-producing nothing but church processions, brass bands
-and fireworks, Mr. Harman fell out of tune with himself
-and the world and the ways of this “dam garlic
-factory.” Davis was acting strangely, nearly always
-ashore and never returning till midnight. He said
-the deal was going through, but that it took time,
-that they weren’t selling a mustang, that he wouldn’t be
-hustled and that Harman, if he didn’t like waiting,
-had better go and stick his head in the harbour.</p>
-
-<p>Harman closed up, but that night he accompanied
-Davis ashore, and instead of playing roulette at the
-little gambling shop in La Plazza, he hung around the
-Pereiras’ house in Assumption Street listening and
-watching in the moonlight. He heard the tune of a
-guitar and a girl’s voice singing La Paloma, then came
-a great silence that lasted an hour and a half, and then
-came Davis. Hidden in a dark corner, Billy saw that
-he was not alone. A girl was with him, come out to
-bid him good-night. She was short, dark and lovely,
-but the look of adoration on her face as she turned
-it up for a kiss, left Harman quite cold.</p>
-
-<p>Down by-lanes and cut-throat alleys he made his
-way running, got to the mole before the other and was
-rowed off in the same boat. On board he invited the
-other down below and down below he exploded.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t wantin’ to interfere with any man’s diversions,”
-said Mr. Harman. “I ain’t no prude, women is
-women, and business is business, do you get what
-I’m meanin’? I saw you. I ain’t accusin’ you of
-nuthin’&mdash;but bein’ a fool. Us with a stole ship on our
-backs and Penhill feelin’ for us and you playin’ the
-goat with Pereira’s daughter. What kind of deal do
-you expect to make and a woman hangin’ on to it
-with her teeth. You needn’t go denyin’ of it. I saw
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>The male and female run through all things, even
-partnerships, and in the Harman-Davis syndicate it
-was Harman who wore the skirts. Davis could not
-get a word in till the other had worked himself free
-of his indignation and the subject. Then said Davis:
-“If you’ll shut your beastly head, I’ll maybe be able
-to stuff some sense into it. What were you talking
-about, selling the schooner? It’s sold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Harman, “that’s news, and what’s
-the price, may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Five thousand, and five thousand for the trade,
-ten thousand dollars, the whole sum to be paid on
-Friday next.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you a bit of writin’?” asked Harman, who
-possessed the French peasant’s instincts for stamped
-paper.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got their cheque,” said Davis, “post dated
-for next Friday, but I’m not bothering about the
-money, for the ship and cargo, it doesn’t matter a
-hill of beans to me whether they pay ten thousand
-dollars or five. I’ve struck a bigger thing than that.
-What would you say to half a million dollars?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied the ingenuous Harman.
-“I only know chaps generally begin to make asses
-of themselves when they talk about millions of dollars.
-It’s my opinion no man ever came out of the big end
-of the horn with the million dollars in his hand he’d
-gone in to fetch at the little. Most of the million-dollar
-men I’ve heard of have started as newsies with
-their toes stickin’ through their boots&mdash;but go on,
-what was you sayin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m saying I’ve a big thing in sight,” replied the
-exasperated Davis, “and I’d be a lot surer of it if I
-felt I hadn’t such a fool partner. It’s this, I’m right
-into the cockles of the heart of that family, and I’ve
-got the news through my left ear that there’s trouble
-in Santiago, that Diaz is going to skip and that a
-million dollars in gold bars are coming down to the
-coast. Diaz is taking his movables with him, and he’s
-gutted the Treasury unknown to the chaps that are
-moving to shoot him out. He’s about sick of the
-presidency and wants to get away and lead a quiet
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said Harman. “That’s plain enough, but
-where do we stand?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Davis, “there’s a million dollars’
-worth of gold bars moving down to the coast here
-and there’s us just come in. Don’t it look like Providence?
-Don’t it look like as if there’s going to be a
-conjunction?”</p>
-
-<p>“It do,” said Mr. Harman meditatively, “but
-I’m dashed if I see how we’re to conjunct on the
-evidence you’ve handed in&mdash;but you’ve got more up
-your sleeve&mdash;pull it out.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not much,” said Davis, “only the girl. She’s
-going to keep us wise. I told her I might be able to
-do a deal with Diaz if I knew where and when he was
-shipping off the boodle, and she’s going to let me know.
-The Pereiras are all in the business same as furniture-removing
-chaps, they’re doing the move for Diaz, and
-he’s using one of their ships. D’you see? See where
-we come in, nothing to do but watch and wait with
-the girl for our eyes and ears&mdash;then pounce&mdash;How?
-I don’t know, but we’ll do it.”</p>
-
-<p>“That girl,” said Mr. Harman after a moment’s
-silence, “she seems pretty gone on you.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you gone on her?”</p>
-
-<p>Davis laughed again. Then he opened a locker and
-helped himself to a drink.</p>
-
-<p>Harman’s morals, as I have hinted before, were the
-least conspicuous part of his mental make-up, but he
-was not without sentiment of a sort. At sing-songs
-he had been known to sniff over “The Blind Boy,” a
-favourite song of his, and though his ideal of female
-beauty leant towards sloe-black eyes and apple-red
-cheeks (shiny or not didn’t matter), beauty in distress
-appealed to him.</p>
-
-<p>The cold-blooded blackguardliness of Davis almost
-shocked him for a moment&mdash;making a girl love him
-like that just to use her as a spy on her family! The
-upright man in the soul of Billy Harman, the upright
-man who had never yet managed somehow to get on
-his feet, humped his back and tried to rise, but he had
-half a million dollars on top of him. He moved in
-his chair uneasily, and refilled his pipe. But all he
-said was: “Tell us about them gold bars.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis told. A peon runner had come in that afternoon
-with a chit for Pereira saying that the mules,
-eight in number, bearing the stuff, would reach Buenodiaz
-by night-time of the following day.</p>
-
-<p>“The stuff will be shipped to-morrow night, then?”
-said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you don’t think they’d go leaving it on the
-beach,” replied Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t you get out of her what ship they were
-taking it off on?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Davis, “I didn’t, she don’t know herself,
-but she’s going to find out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bud,” said Harman, “give us the straight tip,
-I’m not wantin’ to prod into your ‘amoors,’ but how
-far have you nobbled her into this business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, as you ask me, I’ll tell you,” replied Bud.
-“She’s fell into it head first, and up to the heels of her
-boots, given me the whole show and location all but
-the name of the hooker which she don’t know yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to say she’s workin’ for you to collar
-the stuff?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where does she come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s coming with us if we can pull off the deal.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Harman. “A petticut&mdash;I knew
-there must be some fly in the ’intment&mdash;it was too
-good to be true. A million dollars rollin’ round
-waitin’ to be took and a petticut&mdash;I’ve never known
-one that didn’t mess a job it was wrapped up in.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a million to one it don’t come off,” said Davis,
-removing his boots before turning in, “but there’s
-just one chance, and that’s her.”</p>
-
-<p>Next morning Mr. Harman did not go ashore.
-He spent his time fishing over the side, fishing and
-smoking and dreaming of all sorts of different ways of
-spending dollars. Now he was rolling round ’Frisco
-in a carriage, and a boiled shirt with a diamond solitaire
-in it, calling at the Palatial for drinks. Now he
-was in the train of quality eastward bound for N’York,
-smoking a big cigar. He did not delude himself that
-the deal would come off, but that didn’t matter a bit.
-The essence of dreams is unreality. There was a
-chance.</p>
-
-<p>Davis went ashore about eleven o’clock, and did
-not return till two in the afternoon. When he came
-back he was a different man. He seemed younger
-and brighter, and even better dressed, though he had
-not changed his clothes. Harman, watching him row
-up to the ship, noticed the difference in him even before
-he came on board.</p>
-
-<p>He swept him down to the cabin, and before letting
-him speak, poured out drinks.</p>
-
-<p>“I see it in your mug,” said Harman. “Here,
-swaller that before handin’ out the news. Cock
-yourself on the bunk side. Well, what’s the odds
-now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Twenty to one on,” said Davis, “or a hundred&mdash;it’s
-all the same. It’s as good as done. Bo, we got
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t say!” said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>“Got it, saddle and bridle an’ pedigree and all.
-She’s given it all in and to-night’s the night.”</p>
-
-<p>“Give us the yarn,” said the other.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing to it; simple as shop-lifting.
-The stuff will be down at the coast here about dark;
-it will be taken off soon as it arrives and shipped on
-board the <i>Douro</i>. She’s lying over there, and I’ll
-point her out to you when we go up. Then, when the
-stuff is aboard, she’ll put out, but not till sun up.
-They don’t like navigating those outlying reefs in the
-dark, moon or no.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Davis, “our little game is to wait till
-the stuff is aboard, row off, take the Douro, and push
-out with her. You and me and eight Kanakas ought
-to do it, there’s no guardship, and the fellows on the
-<i>Douro</i> won’t put up much of a fight. You see, they’re
-not on the fighting lay; it’s the steal softly business
-with them, and I reckon they’ll cave at the first
-shout.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where does the girl come in?” asked Billy, after
-a moment’s pause.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a place called Coimbra seven mile south
-down the coast,” said Davis, fetching a chart from the
-locker. “Here it is. That point. I’ve only to
-put out a blue light and she’ll put off in a boat.
-Pereira’s brother lives down at Coimbra, and she’s
-going to-night to stay with him. She’ll be on the
-watch out from one on to sunrise, and she’ll easy get
-taken out in one of the night fishermen’s boats.”</p>
-
-<p>To all of which Mr. Harman replied, “Damn
-petticuts!” He was biting his nails. He was no
-feminist. That is to say, he had an inborn conviction
-that women tended to spoil shows other than tea
-parties and such like. Why couldn’t this rotten girl
-have kept out of the business? What did she want
-coming along for? Seeing that she was letting down
-her people for the love of Davis, it seemed pretty
-evident that she was coming along also for the love
-of him, but Harman was not in the mood to consider
-things from the girl’s point of view.</p>
-
-<p>However, there was no use complaining. With
-the chance of a million dollars for nothing, one must
-expect a few thorns, so he kept his head closed whilst
-Davis, taking him on deck, drew a lightning sketch
-of the plan of campaign.</p>
-
-<p>First they had to shift the <i>Araya’s</i> moorings so as
-to get closer to the <i>Douro</i>, then they had to put the
-Kanakas wise, and more especially Taute the cook and
-leader, then they had just to lay low, wait for midnight,
-and pounce.</p>
-
-<p>“Righto,” said Mr. Harman, “and if we’re shiftin’
-moorin’s, let’s shift now.”</p>
-
-<p>They did, not drawing too noticeably near the
-<i>Douro</i>, but near enough to keep watch on her. Near
-enough to count the sun-blisters on her side with a
-glass. She was of smaller tonnage than the <i>Araya</i>
-and ketch-rigged. She had never been a beauty, and
-she wasn’t one now; she had no charms to mellow
-with age.</p>
-
-<p>Night had fallen on Buenodiaz, and the band on
-La Plazza had ceased braying. Eleven o’clock was
-striking. Cathedral and churches tinkling and tankling
-and clanging the hour; a drunken crew had just
-put off for the grain ship lying farther out, and silence
-was falling on the scene, when, whizz-bang, off went
-the fireworks.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn the place!” cried Harman, whose nerves
-were on edge. “It’s clangin’ and prayin’ and stinkin’
-all day and closes down only to go off in your face&mdash;some
-saint’s day or ’nuther, I expect.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis said nothing. He was watching the blue and
-pink of bursting rockets and the fiery, fuzzy worms
-reflecting themselves in the harbour.</p>
-
-<p>They had seen several boats stealthily approaching
-the <i>Douro</i>. Everything seemed going to time and
-the wind was steady.</p>
-
-<p>An hour passed during which Buenodiaz, forgetting
-saints and frivolity, fell asleep, leaving the world to
-the keeping of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>Convents, churches and cathedral were chiming
-midnight when the Kanakas, having crowded into
-the boat of the <i>Araya</i>, Davis and Harman got into
-the stem sheets and pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>As they drew close, the <i>Douro</i>, with her anchor
-light burning, showed no sign of life, bow to the sea
-on a taut anchor chain, she rode the flooding tide, she
-seemed nodding to them as she pitched gently to the
-heave of the swell, and as they rubbed up alongside
-and Harman grasped the rail, he saw that the deck was
-clear.</p>
-
-<p>“Down below, every man Jack of them,” he whispered
-back at Davis. “I can hear ’em snoring.
-Foc’s’le hatch first.”</p>
-
-<p>He led the way to the foc’s’le hatch and closed it
-gently, turning at a stroke the foc’s’le into a prison.
-Then they came to the saloon hatch, stood and listened.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sound.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re all in the foc’s’le,” whispered Harman.
-“Just like Spaniards, ain’t it? No time to waste,
-we’ve gotta see the stuff’s here; give’s your matches.”
-He stepped down, followed by the other, reached the
-saloon, and struck a light.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the stuff was there, a sight enough to turn a
-stronger head than Harman’s, boxes and boxes on the
-floor and on the couch, evidently just brought on
-board and disposed of in a hurry, and all marked with
-the magic name: Juan Diaz.</p>
-
-<p>Harman tried to lift one of them. It was not large,
-yet he could scarcely stir it. Then with eyes aflame
-and hammering hearts, they made up the companion
-way, closed the hatch, and, while Davis got the canvas
-on her, Harman stood by to knock the shackle off the
-anchor chain.</p>
-
-<p>As town and mole and harbour dropped astern,
-the <i>Douro</i> close-hauled and steered by Davis, Harman
-standing by the steersman, saw the helm going over
-and found they were heading north.</p>
-
-<p>“And how about pickin’ up that girl?” asked
-Billy, “Coimbra don’t lay this way.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I reckon she’ll wait,” replied Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re givin’ her the good-bye?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems so,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>Hannan chuckled. Then he lit a cigar. If girls
-chose to fall in love and trust chaps like Davis, it
-wasn’t his affair.</p>
-
-<p>At sunrise he slipped down to see after some food.
-Davis heard him hammering down below, and knew
-that he was sampling the gold, he smiled with the full
-knowledge that it was there and that Billy couldn’t
-get away with it, when up from the saloon dashed
-Billy.</p>
-
-<p>Like a man demented, he rushed forward, opened
-the foc’s’le hatch and shouted down it to the imprisoned
-Spaniards.</p>
-
-<p>“Come up, you blighters,” cried Mr. Harman.
-Then he dived down, found emptiness and returned
-on deck.</p>
-
-<p>He held on to the rail as he faced Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Ten thousand dollars’ worth of trade and ship,”
-said Harman, “that’s what we’ve given them for a
-stinkin’ ketch and a couple o’ hundred weight of sand.
-Sand an’ pebbles that’s what’s in them boxes. You
-and your girls! No, you can’t put back, they’d jug
-us for stealin’ this bum boat. Take your gruel and
-swaller it! Why, bless your livin’ innocence, the
-whole of that garlic factory was in it, it’s my belief,
-from the Port Doctor up, and they’ll be havin’ fireworks
-to-night to celebrate.”</p>
-
-<p>Billy paused, spat into the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said he, turning his remarks to the universe
-in general. “It don’t pay. Runnin’ crooked don’t
-pay&mdash;nohow.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chII' title='II: Mandelbaum'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER II.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>MANDELBAUM</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p class='ni'>What would you do were you to find yourself
-on a stolen sixty-ton ketch off the middle coast
-of Chile with a crew of Kanakas, less than ten
-days’ provisions on board, no money to speak of,
-and a healthy and lively dread of touching at a Chile
-port?</p>
-
-<p>That was the exact position of Mr. William Harman
-and his friend, Bud Davis, one bright morning on
-board the ketch <i>Douro</i> and thirty miles nor’-west of
-Buenodiaz&mdash;about.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Douro</i> was heading west-nor’-west, the morning
-was perfect, the Pacific calm, and Billy, seated on the
-hatch cover, was expressing the opinion that running
-straight was the best course to adopt in a world where
-reefs were frequent and sharks abundant.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said he, “runnin’ crooked don’t pay, nohow.
-There ain’t enough softies about to make it pay, ain’t
-enough mugs about, as I’ve told you more’n once.
-Happy I was on Papaleete beach and then you comes
-along that night and says, ‘Let’s take Penhill’s
-ship,’ says you. ‘There she lays, the <i>Araya</i>, sixty-ton
-schooner, and he drinkin’ himself blind at the
-club and he can’t touch us,’ says you, ‘for he’s mortal
-afraid of what I know about him. It’s as safe as
-cheeses,’ says you, and off we put and out we took
-her&mdash;safe as cheeses, seein’ Penhill couldn’t touch
-us, weren’t we?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close up,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“I ain’t rubbin’ it in, I’m just tellin’ you. Nobody
-couldn’t touch us, and bold we put into Buenodiaz,
-reckonin’ to sell her on the hoof, cargo and all, and
-she worth ten thousand dollars if she was worth a bean,
-and then what happens? Pereira offers to buy her,
-cargo and all, and while you were dickerin’ with
-him, his daughter hands you that yarn about the
-<i>Douro</i> havin’ a million dollars in bar gold on board of
-her, and what does we do?” Mr. Harman’s voice
-rose a tone or two. “We leaves ten thousand dollars’
-worth of ship and cargo and rows over to this old
-tub, boards her, lifts the hook, cracks on sail and puts
-out to find nothin’ in them boxes but sand an’ pebbles&mdash;half
-a ton of beach, that’s what them darned turkey
-bustards had landed on us in swop for a schooner
-and cargo worth ten thousand dollars if she was piled,
-let alone ridin’ at her moorings in Buenodiaz harbour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Davis, “you needn’t shout it. You
-were in it as well as me. I guess we were both fools,
-but we haven’t come off empty-handed&mdash;we’ve got
-a ship under our feet, though we’re in a bad way,
-I’ll admit. Can’t you see the game that’s been played
-on us? This hooker is worth four thousand dollars
-any day in the week; they’ve let us run off with her,
-they set her as a trap for us, but they’ll want her
-back. If we put into any Chile port, we’ll be nabbed
-and put to work in the salt mines while these blighters
-will get their ship back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Harman, “but we ain’t goin’ to.”</p>
-
-<p>“How d’ye mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t goin’ to put into no Chile port.” Davis
-sighed, rose, went below and fetched up the top of
-one of the gold-boxes, then with a stump of pencil
-he drew a rough map of South America, indicating
-the appalling coast-line of Chile while the ingenuous
-Harman looked on open-mouthed and open-eyed.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are,” said the map-maker, “a hundred
-thousand miles long and nothing but seaboard and
-there we are&mdash;nothing but the Horn to the south
-and Bolivia to the north, and the Bolivians are hand
-in fist with the Chilians, and, moreover, there’s sure
-to be gunboats out to look for us. That’s why I’m
-holding on west. We’ve got to get to sea and trust
-in Providence.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the disgusted Harman, “I reckon if
-Providence is our stand-by and if it made Chile same’s
-your map shows her, we’re done for. There ain’t
-no sense in it; no, sir, there ain’t no sense in a country
-all foreshore stringed out like that, with scarce room
-for a bathin’ machine, and them yellow-bellied Bolivians
-at one end of it and the Horn at the other. It
-ain’t playin’ it fair on a man, it ain’t more nor less
-than a trap, that’s what I call it, it ain’t more nor
-less than&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “wasting your wind.
-We’re in it and we’ve got to get out. Now I’ve
-just given you our position: we’re running near due
-west into open sea, with only ten days’ grub, nothing
-to strike but Easter Island and the mail line from
-’Frisco to Montevideo. We’ve the chance to pick
-up grub from a ship; failing that, either we’ll eat
-the Kanakas or the Kanakas will eat us. I’m not
-being funny. How do you take it? Shall us hold
-on or push down to Valparaiso and take our gruel?”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say those mines were?” asked
-Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Which mines?”</p>
-
-<p>“Those mines the Chile blighters put chaps like
-us to work in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Salt mines.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Harman meditated for a moment. “Well,”
-said he at last, “I reckon I’ll take my chance on the
-Kanakas.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Douro</i> had nothing about her of any use for
-navigation but the rudder and the compass in the
-binnacle and the tell-tale compass fixed in the roof
-of the saloon. Pereira, when he had baited her as
-a trap for the unfortunates to run away with, had
-left nothing of value. He and the beauties working
-with him reckoned to get her back, no doubt, as Davis
-had indicated, but they knew that the fox sometimes
-manages to escape, carrying the trap with him, so
-they left nothing to grieve about except the hull,
-sticks, strings, canvas, bunk bedding and a few tin
-plates and cooking implements.</p>
-
-<p>So she was sailing pretty blind with nothing to
-smell at but the North Pole, to use Davis’ words as
-he spat over the side at the leaping blue sea, while
-Harman, leaning beside him on the rail, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>The one bright spot in the whole position was the
-seventeen hundred dollars or so of the <i>Araya’s</i> ship
-money still safe in Davis’ pocket.</p>
-
-<p>It proved its worth some six days later when, close
-on the San Francisco-Montevideo mail line, they
-flagged a big freighter and got provisions enough to
-last them for a month, then, “more feeling than
-feet under them,” to use Harman’s expression, they
-pushed along, protected by the gods of Marco Polo,
-and the early navigators, untrusting in a compass
-that might be untrustable through blazing days
-and nights of stars, smoking&mdash;they had got tobacco
-from the freighter&mdash;yarning, lazing and putting their
-faith in luck.</p>
-
-<p>“Anyhow,” said the philosophic Harman, “we
-ain’t got no dam chronometer to be slippin’ cogs or
-goin’ wrong, nor no glass to be floppin’ about
-and frightenin’ a chap’s gizzard out of him with
-indications of cyclones and such, nor no charts to be
-thumbin’, nor no sextan’ to be squintin’ at the sun
-with. I tell you, Bud, I ain’t never felt freer than
-this. I reckon it’s the same with money. Come to
-think of it, money’s no catch, when all’s said and
-done with, what between banks bustin’ and sharks
-laying for a chap, not to speak of women and sich,
-and sore heads an’ brown tongues in the morning.
-Money buys trouble, that’s all I’ve ever seen of it,
-and it’s the same all through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that wasn’t your song on the beach at
-Papaleete,” said Davis, “and seems to me you weren’t
-backward in making a grab for that gold at Buenodiaz.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I wasn’t,” replied the other, and the
-conversation wilted while on the tepid wind from the
-dark-blue sea came the sound of the bow wash answered
-by the lazy creak of block and cordage.</p>
-
-<p>No longer steering west, but northward towards
-the line, the <i>Douro</i> brought them nights of more
-velvety darkness and more tremendous stars, seas
-more impossibly blue, till, one dawn that looked like
-a flock of red flamingoes escaping across an horizon
-of boiling gold, Bud, on the look-out, cried “Land!”
-and the great sun leaping up astern stripped the
-curtain away with a laugh and showed them coco-nut
-trees beyond a broken sea, and beyond the
-coco-nut trees a misty blue stillness incredibly wonderful
-and beautiful, till, in a flash, vagueness vanishing,
-a great lagoon blazed out, with the gulls circling above
-it, gold and rose and marble-flake white.</p>
-
-<p>Before this miracle Harman stood unimpressed.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d have been right into that darned thing
-in another hour if the sun hadn’t lifted,” said he,
-“unless maybe the noise of the reef would have fended
-us off&mdash;hark to it!”</p>
-
-<p>They could hear it coming up against the wind,
-a long, low rumble like the sound of a far-off train,
-and now, as the <i>Douro</i> drew in, they could see the
-foam spouting as the flood tide raced through the
-passage broad before them, and showing the vast
-harbour of the lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>“The opening seems all right,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Deep enough to float a battleship,” replied the
-other, “and no sign of rocks in it. Shove her in.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Douro</i> did not require any shoving. Driven
-by the wind and tide she came through the break
-like a gull, and as the great lagoon spread before
-them they could see the whole vast inner beach with
-one sweep of the eye.</p>
-
-<p>It was an oval-shaped atoll, a pond, maybe, four
-miles from rim to rim at its broadest part, heavy
-here and there with groves of palm and jack-fruit
-trees, and showing a village of grass-roofed houses
-by the trees on the northern beach, where, on the
-blinding white sands, canoes were lying, and from
-which a boat was just putting off.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve sighted us,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems so,” replied Harman, running forward to
-superintend the fellows who were getting the anchor
-ready, while the <i>Douro</i>, shaking the wind out of her
-sails, lost way, and the hook fell in ten-fathom water,
-the rumble of the chain coming back in faintest echoes
-from the painted shore.</p>
-
-<p>The boat drew on. It was manned by Kanakas
-naked as Noah, and steered by a white man. A
-huge man with a broad and red and bulbous face,
-who came on board leg over rail without a word
-of greeting, gazed around him with a pair of protruding
-light-blue eyes, and, then, finding his voice,
-addressed Harman:</p>
-
-<p>“Where the blazes have <i>you</i> blown in from?”
-asked the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen,” said Clayton, for Clayton was his
-name, and they were all down below sampling a
-bottle of rum wangled by the genius of Harman
-out of the purser of the freighter, “Gentlemen, I’m
-not divin’ into your business. A ship in ballast
-without charts or chronometer, not knowing where
-she is, and not willin’ to say where she comes from,
-may be on the square and may be not.”</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t,” said Harman bluntly.</p>
-
-<p>“That bein’ so,” said Clayton, quite unmoved,
-“we can deal without circumlocuting round the
-show, and get to the point, which is this: I’m wantin’
-your ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spread yourself,” said Davis, “and tip the
-bottle.”</p>
-
-<p>Clayton obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willin’ to buy her of you,” said he, “lock,
-stock, barrel and Kanakas, no questions asked, no
-questions answered, only terms.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your terms?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>Clayton raised his head. The wind had shifted,
-and, blowing through the open port, it brought with
-it a faint, awful, subtle, utterly indescribable perfume.
-Far above the vulgar world of stenches, almost
-psychic, it floated around them, while Harman spat
-and Davis considered the stranger attentively and
-anew.</p>
-
-<p>“Oysters,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Rotting on the outer beach,” said Clayton.
-“That’s my meaning and my terms. Gentlemen, if
-you ain’t plum’ fools, the smell of them oysters will
-be as a leadin’ light to bring you a fortune as big
-as my own.”</p>
-
-<p>“Open the can,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Which I will,” replied the other. “I’m straight’s
-a gun barrel I am, and I don’t want to beat round
-no bushes, and it’s just this way, gents. The hull
-of this lagoon is a virgin oyster patch full of virgin
-oysters, pearl breedin’ and sound, with no foot-and-mouth
-disease to them. Oloong-Javal is the Kanaka
-name of the atoll, and it’s on no charts. No, sir, it’s a
-sealed lagoon, and I struck it two years ago runnin’
-from Sydney to Valparaiso, master of the <i>Sea Hawk</i>,
-with a Chink crew and a cargo of chow truck, put
-in here for water, spotted the oyster shop, and kept
-my head shut. Found orders at Valparaiso to
-ballast and get on to Callao, but I didn’t go to no
-Callao. I cut loose, fired the mate as a drunk and
-incapable, which he was, laid out the ship’s money
-on diving dresses and a pump, hawked back here,
-landed the equipment, and started in on the pearling.”</p>
-
-<p>“And the Chinks?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Comin’ to them, they curled up and died of
-eating the lagoon fish in the poisonous season, couldn’t
-keep them off it&mdash;you know what Chinks are&mdash;and
-as for the hooker, why sinkin’ gets rid of a lot of
-trouble, and I took her outside the reef and drilled
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you are a one,” said Harman, shocked,
-yet intrigued, and vaguely admiring.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t say that I’m not,” replied Clayton. “I
-reckon we’re all in the same boat, and plain speaking
-is best among gentlemen, but cuttin’ all that, let’s
-get down to tin-tacks. I’ve been working a year
-and I haven’t skinned more than a patch of the
-beds. All the same, I’ve made my pile, and I want
-to enjoy it, I want to have my fun, and if you’re willing
-I’ll swap the location and the mining rights for this
-hooker and her crew. I want to get home, and
-home’s Kisai Island, up north in the Marshalls&mdash;and
-that’s what’s waitin’ for me and has been waitin’
-for me three years.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a photograph from his pocket and handed
-it to the others. It was the photo of a Kanaka girl
-under a palm tree on a blazing beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, a petticut!” said Harman in a doleful
-voice at this sight of ill omen. “A petticut!”</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t no petticoat about her,” said Clayton&mdash;as
-indeed there was not&mdash;“unless the missionaries
-have been gettin’ at her with their tomfoolery. Oti
-is her name, and there she sits waitin’ for me, which
-if she isn’t and has gone and got spliced, I reckon
-I’ll bust her husband. Well, gents, which is it to
-be for you, floatin’ round loose in this cockroach
-trap or a hundred thousand dollars’ worth of pearls
-to be took for the working?”</p>
-
-<p>“And how are we to get away supposing we stick
-here and pearl?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s not for me to say,” replied Clayton.
-“Something will blow along most likely and take you
-off, or you can rig up a canoe and make for the
-Paumotus. I’m just offerin’ the deal, which many
-a man would jump at, more especial as this old ketch
-of yours seems to smell of lost property. I ain’t
-insinuating. I’m only hintin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis swallowed the suggestion without sign of
-taking offence, then he said: “I’ll step on deck with
-my friend Harman and have a word with him. I
-won’t be more’n five minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>On deck, Harman suddenly clapped himself on
-the head. “We’ve left that ballyhoo alone with the
-rum-bottle,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Davis, “we’re better dry.
-Now get your nose down to this business while I turn
-the handle. First of all we want to get rid of the
-ship; second, we want pearls, not for personal adornment,
-so to speak, but for profit; third, I believe
-the chap’s yarn, and, fourth, I vote we close on his
-offer. What you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m with you on the pearls,” said Harman, “and
-I’m ready to close on two conditions, and the first is
-that the beds haven’t been stripped.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll easily prove that,” said Davis. “I’ve done
-pearling and I know the business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Second is,” continued Harman, “that havin’
-hived the stuff, we’ll be able to get away with it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe what more you’ll be wanting is a mail
-boat to ’Frisco and a brass band to play us off. Isn’t
-Luck good enough to trust in? And look at the luck
-that’s brought us here. What you want flying in
-the face of it for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe you’re right,” said the other. “The
-luck’s all right if it holds; question is, will it? I
-don’t like that petticut flyin’ up in our face; it’s
-part of the deal, seems to me, since he’s droppin’ this
-place mainly to get to her, and I’ve never seen a deal
-yet that wasn’t crabbed if a woman put as much as
-the tip of her nose into it. I ain’t superstitious. I’m
-only sayin’ what I know, and all I’m saying is that it’s
-rum him talking of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said the other, “you’re worse than
-any old woman. I’m into this business whether or
-no, and you can stay out if you want. How’s it to
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>Harman raised his head and sniffed the air tainted
-with the oysters rotting on the coral. Then he turned
-to the cabin hatch. “Come on,” said he, and they
-went below to close the bargain.</p>
-
-<hr class='tb' />
-
-<p>Clayton’s house was grass-thatched like the others
-and situated close to the groves on the right of the
-village; it had three rooms and a veranda, and mats
-and native-made chairs constituted the chief furniture.
-Beyond the house, farther on the right, was the shed
-where a few trade goods, mostly boxes of tobacco and
-rolls of print, were stored.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all there’s left of the stuff I brought with
-me,” said he; “it’ll carry you on, and I make you a
-present of it. The Kanakas aren’t used to high wages.
-A chap will dive all day for the fun of it and half a
-stick of tobacco, but you can do most of the diving
-yourselves and save on the business. There are the
-diving suits, two of them. Good as when I got them,
-and the pump’s in the boat there; she’s in that canoe
-house, it’s a Clarkson, in good order. Say, boys, you’ve
-no reason to sneeze over this deal. Here’s an island,
-a living larder, pigs and fowl and taro and fish and
-fruit for nix, a pearl lagoon not half worked, diving
-suits and pump and a bit of trade, and all for that
-frousty old brown boat of yours. Was you ever on
-your feet before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe,” said Davis, “we’ve no call to
-complain if the beds are all right. Let’s put out and
-look at them.”</p>
-
-<p>They took the <i>Douro’s</i> boat and rowed out, Clayton
-steering and piloting them.</p>
-
-<p>The beds ran north, acres of them, and one of the
-Kanakas Clayton had taken with them dived now and
-then and brought up a pair of shells as a sample.</p>
-
-<p>Big molluscs they were, weighing maybe eight
-hundred to the ton, of the white shell like the Tahiti
-oysters.</p>
-
-<p>Davis, who knew something of the business, reckoned
-that the shell alone was worth five hundred dollars
-a ton, but he said nothing as the boat, impelled by the
-sculls, passed through the crystal water.</p>
-
-<p>Every lagoon would be a pearl lagoon but for the
-fact that the oyster of all sea creatures is the most
-difficult to suit with a breeding ground. The tides
-must not be too swift, the floor must be exactly right.</p>
-
-<p>Javal Lagoon was ideal, a bar of reef delaying the
-floor current and the coral showing the long coach-whip
-fucus loved by the pearl-seeker. Davis declared
-himself satisfied, and they rowed back to inspect
-the mounds of shell and oysters rotting on the beach
-which were to be thrown in as part of the goodwill
-of the business.</p>
-
-<p>That night after supper, Clayton showed his pearls.
-A few of them. He had four tin cash-boxes, and he
-opened one and disclosed his treasures lying between
-layers of cotton-wool. You have seen chocolate
-creams in boxes&mdash;that was the sight that greeted the
-eyes of Harman and Davis, only the chocolate creams
-were pearls. Some were the size of marrowfat peas
-and some were the size of butter beans, very large,
-but not of very good shape, some were pure white,
-some gold and some rose.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t show us no more, or I guess we’ll be robbin’
-you,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning the pearl-man began his preparations
-for departure, the water-casks of the <i>Douro</i> were
-filled, chickens caught and cooped, a live pig embarked
-and the groves raided for nuts, bananas and bread-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s well he’s leavin’ us the trees,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>The diving suits were got out and Clayton showed
-them how they were used, also the trick of filling the
-net bag with oysters in the swiftest way and without
-tangling the air-tube. The beds were shallow enough
-to be worked without diving gear, but a man in a
-diving dress will raise five times as many pairs of shells
-as a man without in a given time, Clayton explained
-this. He left nothing wanting in the way of explanations
-and advice, and next morning, having filled up
-with provisions and water, he put out, taking the ebb,
-the <i>Douro</i> heeling to a five-knot breeze and followed
-past the break by a clanging escort of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>Then Harman and Davis found themselves alone,
-all alone, masters of a treasure that would have
-turned the head of Tiffany, and of a hundred and fifty
-Kanakas, men, women, and children, a tribe captained
-and led by one Hoka, a frizzy-headed buck whose
-only dress and adornment was a gee string and the
-handle of a china utensil slung round his neck as a
-pendant.</p>
-
-<p>The rotted oysters on the coral were useless, they
-had been worked over by Clayton. That was the
-first surprise, the next was the price of labour. Two
-sticks of tobacco a day was the price of native labour,
-not half a stick as reported by Clayton.</p>
-
-<p>Trade tobacco just then worked out at two cents a
-stick, so the pay was not exorbitant; it was the smallness
-of the stock in hand that bothered our syndicate.
-But Hoka was adamant. He did not know ten words
-of English, but he knew enough to enforce his claims,
-and the syndicate had to give in.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew there’d be flies in the ’intment somewhere,”
-said Harman, “but this is a bluebottle. We haven’t
-tobacco enough to work this lagoon a month, and what’s
-to happen then?”</p>
-
-<p>“No use bothering a month ahead,” replied Davis.
-“If worst comes to the worst, we’ll just have to do
-the diving ourselves. Get into your harness and down
-with you, to see how it works.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman did, and an appalling rush of bubbles
-followed his descent, the suit was faulty. Tropical
-weather does not improve diving suits, and Harman
-was just got up in time.</p>
-
-<p>“Never again,” said he when his window was unscrewed,
-and he had done cursing Clayton, Clayton’s
-belongings, his family, his relatives and his ancestors.</p>
-
-<p>“Stick her on the beach; darn divin’ suits, let’s
-take to the water natural.”</p>
-
-<p>They did, following the practice of the Kanakas,
-and at the end of the week, when the shells were rotted
-out, six days’ takings showed three large pearls perfect
-in every point and worth maybe fifteen hundred
-dollars, five small pearls varying in value from ten to
-forty dollars according to Davis’ calculations, several
-baroques of small and uncertain value and a spoonful
-of seeds.</p>
-
-<p>“Call it two thousand dollars,” said Davis, when
-they had put the takings away in some cotton-wool,
-left by Clayton, and a small soap-box. “Call it two
-thousand and we’ve had twenty Kanakas diving for
-a week at two sticks a day, that makes two hundred
-and eighty sticks at two cents a stick.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s cheap enough,” said Harman. “Wonder
-what the unions would say to us and them chaps that’s
-always spoutin’ about the wages of the workin’ classes&mdash;not
-that I’m against fair wages. I reckon if that
-guy Clayton had left us enough tobacco, I wouldn’t
-mind raisin’ the wage bill to eight dollars a week, but
-we haven’t got it&mdash;haven’t got enough to last a month
-as it’s runnin’ now.”</p>
-
-<p>He spoke the truth. Less than a month left them
-cleared out, and the Kanakas struck to a man and
-ceased to dive, spending their time fishing, lazing in
-the sun and smoking&mdash;but their chief amusement was
-watching the white men at work.</p>
-
-<p>There is no penitentiary equal to a pearl lagoon,
-once it seizes you, and no galley slaves under the
-whip ever worked harder than Harman and Bud Davis,
-stripped to the skin, brown as cobnuts with sun and
-water, long-haired, dishevelled, diving like otters,
-and bringing up not more than a hundred pair of shells
-a day.</p>
-
-<p>The boat had to be anchored over a certain spot,
-and as the work went on the anchorage had to be
-shifted; at the end of the day the oysters had to be
-brought ashore and laid out on the coral to rot. Then,
-too tired, almost, to smoke, the Pearl Syndicate would
-stretch itself under the stars to dream of fortune
-and the various ways of spending money.</p>
-
-<p>The imaginative Harman had quite definite views
-on that business&mdash;diamonds and dollar Henry Clays,
-champagne and palatial bars, standing drinks to all
-and sundry and a high time generally, that was his
-idea. Davis, darker and more secretive, had higher
-ambitions roughly formulated in the words, “More
-money.” Dollars breed dollars, and great wealth
-was enough for him. He would spend his money on
-making more, sure in his mind that if he once got his
-foot again in ’Frisco with a pocketful of money, he
-would find his way out through the big end of the
-horn.</p>
-
-<p>And so they went on till at the end of four months,
-taking stock of their possessions, they found themselves
-forty thousand dollars up, to use Davis’ words.</p>
-
-<p>Taken by the hands of the Kanakas in the first
-month and by their own hands in the three succeeding
-months, they had safely hived forty-seven white and
-perfect pearls, two golden pearls, one defective, some
-red pearls not worth more than a shilling a grain, and,
-king of the collection, a great black pearl pear-shaped
-and perfect and equal to any Mexican in lustre and
-value. There were also some baroques of extraordinary
-shapes and a quantity of seeds.</p>
-
-<p>Of the forty-seven white pearls, four were of very
-large size. Davis had no scales, but he reckoned that
-these four and the black were worth all the rest put
-together.</p>
-
-<p>The general stock-taking brought an end to their
-luck, and for weeks after the take was a joke, to use
-Davis’ expression. It is always so in pearling; a
-man may make a small fortune out of a fishery in a
-few months, but the take is never consistent, and if
-he strikes it rich at first, it is ten to one he will have to
-pay for his luck.</p>
-
-<p>One morning, just as the sun was freeing himself
-from the reef and the last of the gulls departing for
-their deep-sea fishing grounds, Harman, who had been
-to draw water from the well, suddenly dropped the
-bucket he was carrying, shaded his eyes and gave a
-shout that brought Davis from the house.</p>
-
-<p>Davis looked to where the other was pointing, and
-there far off to the north and lit by the newly-risen
-sun stood a sail.</p>
-
-<p>They had been praying for a ship for the last fortnight,
-speculating on the chances of anything picking
-them up before they died of hope deferred and loneliness
-and a diet of fish and vegetable truck, yet now,
-before that sail hard on the blue and evidently making
-towards them, they scarcely felt surprised, and were
-too troubled to be filled with joy; for it suddenly
-occurred to them that pearls were pearls&mdash;that is to
-say, wealth in its most liftable form.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Bud,” cried Harman, “we’ve got to hide
-them divin’ dresses. If these chaps ain’t on the
-straight and they sniff pearls, we’ll be robbed sure
-and shoved in the lagoon. I never thought of that
-before. We’re sure marks for every tough till we’ve
-cashed in and banked the money.”</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t far wrong,” replied Davis, still contemplating
-the sail. “Yes, she’s making for here,
-and she’s all a hundred and fifty tons. Inside two
-hours she’ll be off the reef and we’ve no time to waste.”</p>
-
-<p>Most of the island Kanakas had gone fishing the
-night before to the other side of the atoll, so there were
-only a few old women and children about to mark the
-actions of the Pearl Syndicate.</p>
-
-<p>First they dealt with the boat that held the pump,
-sinking it by the inner beach in four-fathom water at a
-point where the trees came down right across the sands.</p>
-
-<p>Then, carrying the diving suits, they dumped them
-in a fish-pool off the outer beach. Having done this,
-they divided the pearls, making two parcels of them,
-and surprisingly small parcels they were considering
-their value.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Harman, when all was done, “we’re
-shipwrecked chaps blown ashore, we don’t know
-nothing about pearls, and we reckon the house and go-down
-were built by some trader the Kanakas has
-murdered. How’s that for a yarn to sling them;
-but what’s the name of our ship?”</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Mary Ann Smithers</i>,” replied Davis promptly,
-“from Tampico to ’Frisco, cargo of hides and wool,
-badly battered off the Horn, old man’s name Sellers,
-and driven out of our course by the big gale a month
-ago. There wasn’t any gale a month ago, but it’s a
-million to one they were a thousand miles off then,
-so how are they to know?”</p>
-
-<p>“You were second officer,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I was bo’sun; second officers are supposed to
-be in the know of the navigation and all such. I
-was just bo’sun, plain Jim Davis.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they won’t dispute you’re plain enough,”
-said Harman. “But you ain’t the cut of a bo’sun,
-not to my mind, cable length nearer you are to the look
-of a Methodis’ preacher or a card sharp&mdash;no need to
-get riled&mdash;be a bo’sun and be darned, be anythin’
-you like. I’m an A.B. hopsacker, British born and&mdash;here
-they are.” The fore canvas of the schooner was
-just showing at the break.</p>
-
-<hr class='tb' />
-
-<p>She came in laying the water behind her as though
-she had a hundred square miles of harbour to manœuvre
-in, then the wind shivered out of her canvas
-and almost on the splash of the anchor a boat was
-dropped.</p>
-
-<p>Harman and Davis watched it as it came ashore,
-noted the stroke of the broad-backed Kanaka rowers
-and the sun helmet of the white man in the stern and
-his face under the helmet as he stepped clear of the
-water on to the beach.</p>
-
-<p>Mandelbaum was the name of the newcomer, a
-dark, small man with a face expressionless as a wedge
-of ice. He wore glasses.</p>
-
-<p>As he stepped on to the sand he looked about him
-in seeming astonishment, first at Harman, then at
-Davis, then at the house, then at the beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Who the devil are you?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Same to yourself,” replied Harman, “we’re derelicks.
-Hooker bust herself on the reef in a big blow
-more’n a month ago. Who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“My name is Mandelbaum,” replied the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, come up on the verandy and have a drink,”
-said the hospitable Harman, “and we can have a
-clack before goin’ aboard. You the captain of that
-hooker?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” said Mandelbaum.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I reckon you won’t mind givin’ us a lift.
-We’re not above workin’ for our grub&mdash;set down till
-I get some drinkin’ nuts.”</p>
-
-<p>There was a long seat under the veranda, the house
-door was at the westward end of the house and the
-seat ran from the door to the eastern end. It was long
-enough for, maybe, ten people to sit on comfortably,
-and the three sat down on the seat. Harman having
-fetched the nuts, Mandelbaum threw his right leg
-over his left knee and turning comfortably and in a
-lazy manner towards the others, said:</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Clayton?”</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>Davis said nothing. His mouth fell open, and
-before he could shut it Mandelbaum got in again.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t go to the trouble of trying any monkey tricks,
-there’s half a dozen fellows with Winchesters on that
-schooner. Your bluff is called. Where’s Clayton,
-my partner? He and a year’s taking of pearls ought
-to be here. I bring the schooner back with more
-trade goods and he’s gone, and I find you two scowbarkers
-in his house and serving strangers with your
-damn drinking nuts.” A venomous tang was coming
-into the steady voice, and a long slick Navy revolver
-came out of his left-hand coat pocket into his right
-hand, with the nozzle resting on his right knee.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Clayton, dead&mdash;but where, where have
-you planted him, and where have you cached the
-pearls?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cached the pearls?” suddenly cried Harman,
-finding his voice and taking in the whole situation.
-Then he began to laugh. He laughed as though
-he were watching Charlie Chaplin or something
-equally funny. He was. The picture of Clayton
-stood before him. Clayton making off with his partner’s
-share of the pearls, and handing the island and the
-fishing rights to him and Davis in return for the ketch,
-the picture of Davis and himself working like galley
-slaves, doing four months’ hard labour for the sake
-of Mandelbaum, for well he knew Mandelbaum would
-make them stump up to the last baroque.</p>
-
-<p>Then he sat with his chin on his fists, spitting on
-the ground, while Davis explained and Harman
-soliloquised sometimes quite out aloud: “No, it
-ain’t no use; straight’s the only word in the dictionary.
-No darn use at all, ain’t enough mugs&mdash;and
-a petticut on top of all&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<hr class='tb' />
-
-<p>“Well, what’s the ‘ultermatum’?” asked Harman,
-a day later, as he stood by a native canoe on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s either stick here and work for two dollars a
-day or get out for the Paumotus,” replied Davis,
-coming up from a last interview with Mandelbaum.
-“Which will we do, stick here and work for Mandelbaum
-for two dollars a day sure money, house, grub
-and everything found, or put out for the Paumotus
-in this blessed canoe which his royal highness says we
-can have in exchange for the ship’s money he’s robbed
-us of? Which is it to be, the society of Mandelbaum
-or the Paumotus, which is hell, sharks, tide races,
-contr’y winds and starvation, maybe?”</p>
-
-<p>“The Paumotus,” said Harman without a moment’s
-hesitation.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chIII' title='III: The Way of a Maid With a Man'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER III.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE WAY OF A MAID WITH A MAN</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p class='ni'>Have you ever tried to manage a South Sea canoe,
-a thing not much wider than a skiff, with mast
-and sail out of all proportion to the beam, yet made
-possible because of the outrigger?</p>
-
-<p>The outrigger, a long skate-shaped piece of wood,
-is supposed to stabilize the affair; it is always fixed
-to port and is connected to the canoe proper in two
-chief ways, either by a pole fore and aft or by a central
-bridge of six curved lengths of wood to which the mast
-stays are fixed; there are subsidiary forms with three
-outrigger poles, with two outrigger poles and a bridge,
-but it was in a canoe of the pure bridge type that Bud
-Davis and William Harman found themselves afloat
-in the Pacific, making west with an unreliable compass,
-a dozen and a half drinking nuts, a breaker of water
-and food for a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p>They had been shot out of a pearl lagoon by the
-rightful owner and robbed of two double handfuls of
-pearls which they had collected in his absence. Given
-the offer of a canoe to go to the devil in or honest
-work at two dollars a day with board and lodging free,
-they had chosen the canoe.</p>
-
-<p>They could work; they had worked like beavers
-for months and months collecting those pearls, but
-they weren’t going to work for wages.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said Harman, “I ain’t come down to
-that yet. Billy Harman’s done signin’ on to be sweated
-like a gun-mule and hove in the harbour when he’s
-old bones; the beach is good enough for him if it comes
-to bed-rock.”</p>
-
-<p>It had certainly come to bed-rock now this glorious
-morning, two days out and steering into the face of
-the purple west, the great sun behind them just risen
-and leaning his chin on the sea line.</p>
-
-<p>Harman was at the steering paddle, Davis forward.
-They had breakfasted on cold water and bananas, and
-Billy was explaining to Davis exactly the sort of
-fools they had been, not in refusing work and good
-grub and pay, but in having failed to scrag Mandelbaum,
-the pearl man.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you’re always going
-back on things, and you haven’t it in you to scrag
-a chicken, anyhow; always serving out that parson’s
-dope about it not paying to run crooked.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nor it don’t,” said the moralist. “There ain’t
-enough mugs in the world, as I’ve told you more than
-twice. I don’t say there ain’t enough, but they’re too
-spread about&mdash;now if you could get them all congeriated
-into one place, I wouldn’t be behind you in
-waltzing in with a clear conscience an’ takin’ their
-hides&mdash;but there ain’t such a place&mdash;&mdash; ’Nother thing
-that queers the pitch is the way sharps let on to be
-mugs. Look at Clayton.”</p>
-
-<p>“What about Clayton?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, look at him. In we sails to that pearl shop
-and there we finds him on the beach. Looked like
-the king of the mugs, didn’t he, with his big, round
-face and them blue-gooseberry eyes. ‘Here’s a sealed
-lagoon for you,’ says he, ‘I’m done with it; got all
-the pearls I want and am only wishful to get away;
-take it for nix, I only want your ship in exchange,
-and we fall to the deal and off he goes.’</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t know he’d sailed off with all his pardner’s
-pearls, did we? And when his pardner, Mandelbaum,
-turns up and collars our takin’s, and kicks us out in
-this durned canoe after we’d been workin’ months
-and months, our pitch wasn’t queered&mdash;was it? And
-all by a sharp got up to look like a sucker and be d&mdash;&mdash;d
-to him. Well, I hopes he’ll fry in blazes if he ain’t
-drowned before he cashes them pearls. I ain’t given
-to cursin’, but I could curse a hole in this dished canoe
-when I thinks of the hand we give him by fallin’ into
-his trap and the trick he served us by settin’ it.”</p>
-
-<p>“MIND!” yelled Davis.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, in his mental upset, had neglected his
-steering, and the canoe paying off before the wind
-nearly flogged the mast out as Davis let go the sheet.</p>
-
-<p>There are two sure ways of capsizing a South Sea
-canoe&mdash;letting the outrigger run under too deep and
-letting it tip into the air. They nearly upset her both
-ways before matters were righted, then pursuing
-again the path of the flying fish, the little canoe retook
-the wind, tepid and sea-scented and blowing out of
-the blue north-west.</p>
-
-<p>An hour after sunrise next morning Davis, on the
-look-out, saw a golden point in the sky away to the
-south of west. It was the cloud turban of Motul.
-A moment later Harman saw it too.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! it’s a high island,” cried he. “I thought
-there was nuthin’ but low islands in these parts. Where
-have we been driftin’ to?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Davis. “Mind your
-steering, it’s land, that’s all I want.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I ain’t grumblin’,” said Harman. He got
-her a point closer to the wind and steered, keeping
-the far-off speck on the port bow. The breeze freshened
-and the stays of the mast, fastened to the outrigger
-grating, twanged while the spray came inboard now
-and then in dashes from the humps of the swell, yet
-not a white cap was to be seen in all the vast expanse
-of water, the great sea running with a heave in the
-line of Humboldt’s current from south to north, but
-without a foam gout to break the ruffled blue.</p>
-
-<p>At noon Motul had lost its turban of cloud, but
-now it stood, a great lumping island moulded out of
-mountains, scarred with gulleys down which burst
-forests and rainbow falls, for Motul was green with the
-recent rains and its perfume met them ten miles across
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>There seemed no encircling reef, just a line of reef
-here and there, beyond which lay topaz and aquamarine
-sheets of water bathing the feet of the great black
-cliffs of Motul.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t a place I’d choose for a lee shore,” said
-Billy, “but this canoe don’t draw more than a
-piedish, and I reckon we can get her in most anywhere
-across the reefs. Question is where do them cliffs
-break?”</p>
-
-<p>They kept a bit more to the south, and there sure
-enough was the big break where the cliffs seem smashed
-with an axe and where the deep water comes in,
-piercing the land so that you might anchor a battleship
-so close that the wild cliff-hanging convolvulus could
-brush its truck and fighting tops.</p>
-
-<p>“We can’t make it before dark,” said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t matter,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>It didn’t; although the moon had not risen, the
-stars lit Motul and the great dark harbour that pierces
-the land like a sword.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze had almost fallen dead as they came in,
-nothing but the sea spoke, breaking on the rocks and
-lipping up the cliffs, where screw pines clung and the
-great datura trumpets blew in the silver light.</p>
-
-<p>Then as they stole across the water of the harbour,
-the dying breeze laying glittering fans before them,
-they saw, right ahead on the shore where the dark
-cliffs drew away, lights twinkling and dancing like
-fireflies, lights standing and moveless, lights crawling
-like glowworms. It was Amaho, the chief village of
-Motul, and the lights were the lights of the houses,
-the fish spearers, the lovers and the wayfarers of the
-chief town of Paradise.</p>
-
-<p>For Motul is Paradise in all things that relate to the
-senses of sight, smell, taste, hearing and touch, and its
-people are part of their environment. Here there
-are no ugly women and few old people, here bathing
-is perpetual as summer, and summer is never oppressive.
-Here everything grows that is of any use
-in the tropics.</p>
-
-<p>The pineapples of Motul are as white inside as sawn
-deal, yet you can almost eat them with a spoon, and
-their flavour beats that of the Brazilian pineapple,
-the English hothouse and the pine of Bourbon; they
-have fig bananas with a delicate golden stripe unobtainable
-elsewhere, and passion fruit with a vanilla
-flavour only to be found at Motul.</p>
-
-<p>Also there are girls.</p>
-
-<p>Harman and his companion, faced with the lights
-of the town, determined not to land till morning.
-They dropped their stone killick in six-fathom water,
-ate the last of their bananas, turned on their sides and
-fell asleep to be awakened by the dawn, a dawn of
-many colours standing against the far horizon on a
-carpet of rose and fire. Then, all of a sudden, tripping
-across the sea, she pulled up a curtain and the sun hit
-Amaho, the bay, the beach, and the anchored canoes,
-including the stranger canoe that had arrived during
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>“Look,” said Harman, “they’ve spotted us.” He
-pointed to the beach, where a crowd was gathering, a
-crowd with faces all turned seaward. Children were
-running along the sands, calling their elders out of
-houses to come and look, and now heads of swimmers
-began to dot the water and girls with flowers in their
-dark hair came towards the canoe, swimming with the
-effortless ease of fish; girls, young men, and boys,
-the whole population of Amaho seemed to have taken
-to the sea, and with them Davis held converse in broken
-<i>bêche de mer</i>, while Harman gloomily considered the
-“skirts.”</p>
-
-<p>I think Harman’s dislike of womenfolk had less
-to do with misogyny pure and simple than with a
-feeling, born from experience, that women tend to
-crab deals and interfere with the progress of prosperity,
-just as it is coming along to you by devious, not to say
-crooked paths.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing in the way of any possible deal
-looming before them this morning. All the same,
-the ingenuous Harman did not relax or unbend in
-the least before this vision of friendly mermaids, one
-of whom was boldly now grasping the starboard gunnel
-with a wet hand while another, to port, was engaged
-in putting a leg over the outrigger.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re a friendly lot,” said Davis over his shoulder
-to the other. “Ain’t much to be done here as far as
-I can see, no shell nor turtle, and they’re too lazy to
-make copra, but it’s a good place to rest in and refit.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll be a good place to drown in if that piece don’t
-get off the outrigger,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s your opinion, shall we shove her in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Aye, shove her in,” said Harman, and, getting
-up the anchor, they took to the paddles, making for
-the beach with an escort of swimmers ahead, to port,
-to starboard and astern.</p>
-
-<p>It was the girl on the outrigger that did the business,
-a wild-eyed, elfish-looking, yet beautiful individual,
-divorced from the humdrum civilized scheme of things
-as Pan or Puck. She only wanted horns and a little
-fur trimming or a small addition of wings to have done
-for either.</p>
-
-<p>As it was, she nearly did for Mr. Harman. In some
-miraculous way an affinity exhibited itself between
-these two, an attraction drew one towards the other,
-so that at the end of a week if you had seen Billy
-anywhere about by himself, sitting on the beach or
-lying in the shade of the trees, you would ten to
-one have found Kinie&mdash;that was her name&mdash;not far off.</p>
-
-<p>She had attached herself like a dog to the man,
-and Billy after a while, and towards the end of the
-first week, found himself drifting far from his old
-moorings.</p>
-
-<p>He and Davis had built themselves a house in forty-eight
-hours and food was on every hand; they had
-no cares or worries, no taxes, eternal summer and the
-best fishing south of California, bathing, boating, yet
-they were not happy; at least, Davis was not.</p>
-
-<p>Civilization, like savagery, breeds hunters, and your
-hunter is not happy when he is idle; there was nothing
-to be shot at here in the way of money, so Davis
-was not happy. Harman, dead to the beauty around
-him, might have shared the discontent of the other,
-only for Kinie. She gave him something to think
-about.</p>
-
-<p>Drowsing one day under a bread-fruit tree, a squashy
-fruit like a custard apple fell on his head, and, looking
-up, he saw Kinie among the leaves looking down at
-him. Next moment she was gone. Bread-fruit trees
-don’t grow apples like that; she must have carried
-it there to drop it on him, a fact which, having bored
-itself into Mr. Harman’s intelligence, produced a
-certain complacency. He had been in her thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>An hour or two later, sitting by the edge of the beach,
-she came and sat near him, dumb and stringing coloured
-pieces of coral together&mdash;anything coloured seemed
-to fascinate her&mdash;and there they sat, saying nothing,
-but seemingly content till Davis hove in sight and
-Kinie, gathering up her treasures, scampered off.</p>
-
-<p>“You and that gal seem mighty thick,” said Davis.
-“Blest if you aren’t a contradiction, always grumbling
-about petticoats and saying they bring you bad luck,
-and set you ashore&mdash;and look at you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I give you to understand, Bud Davis, I won’t
-be called no names, not by no man,” replied the other.
-“It ain’t my fault if the girl comes round and there
-ain’t no harm in her comin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve picked the prettiest of the lot, anyhow,”
-said Davis. “Don’t go telling me, girls are
-girls and men are men; but we’ll leave it there. It’s
-no affair of mine. <i>I’m</i> not grumbling.”</p>
-
-<p>On he walked, leaving the outraged Harman on
-the sands, speechless because unable to explain, unable
-to explain even to himself the something between
-himself and the wildly beautiful, charming, yet not-quite-there
-Kinie.</p>
-
-<p>The fascination he exercised upon her would have
-been even more difficult to explain. Davis was younger
-and better-looking. Davis had made advances to her
-which Harman had never done, yet she avoided Davis,
-never dropped custard apples on his head or sat by
-him stringing bits of coral or followed him at a distance
-through the woods.</p>
-
-<p>Nor did she ever try to steal Davis’ pocket-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>Harman possessed a blazing parti-coloured bandana
-handkerchief. It was silk, and had cost him half a
-dollar at Mixon’s at the foot of Third Street, which
-adjoins Long Wharf. It was his main possession.
-He used it not as handkerchiefs are used, but as an
-adjunct to conversation as your old French marquis
-used his snuff-box. Stumped for words or in perplexity,
-out would come the handkerchief to be mopped
-across his brow.</p>
-
-<p>Kinie from the first had been fascinated by this
-handkerchief. She wanted it. One day he lost it,
-and an hour later she flashed across his vision with it
-bound around her head. He chased her, recaptured
-it, reduced her to sulks for twenty-four hours, and a
-few days later she boldly tried to steal it again. Then
-she seemed to forget all about it; but do women ever
-forget?</p>
-
-<p>One morning some two months after they had landed,
-Davis, coming out of the house, found the beach in
-turmoil. Girls were shading their eyes towards the
-sea, and young fellows getting canoes in order for
-launching, while children raced along the sands screaming
-the news or stood fascinated like the girls, and, like
-them, gazing far to sea.</p>
-
-<p>A ship had been sighted, and there she was on the
-far-rippled blue, the tepid wind blowing her to life
-and growth, the sun lighting her sails and turning
-them to a single triangular pearl.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be more beautiful than the far ship
-on the far sea with the near sea all broken to flashing
-sapphire, the whole picture framed between the verdurous
-cliffs of the harbour entrance and lit by the
-entrancing light of morning.</p>
-
-<p>But Davis had no eye for the beauty of the picture,
-he turned, ran back to the house, and fetched out
-Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Fore and aft rig, maybe eighty or a hundred ton,
-maybe a bit less,” said Harman, “makin’ dead for
-the beach. Say, Bud, we been fools. Here’s a ship
-and never a plan to meet her with, nor a story to tell
-her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s the odds?” said Davis. “We’re
-shipwrecked, or, if you like it better, we skipped from
-a whaler. What are you bothering about? We’ve
-nothing to hide, only the <i>Douro</i>, and we’ve got rid
-of her. You’ve never thought of that, B. H. You’ve
-always been going on about Clayton getting the better
-of us by skipping off with those pearls in exchange
-for the <i>Douro</i>; hasn’t it ever got into your thick
-head that since we as good as stole the hooker, he did
-us a good turn by taking her? There’s not a port
-he could bring her into without being had, and I’ll
-bet my back teeth he’s jugged by this, him and his
-pearls.”</p>
-
-<p>“If he is,” said Harman, “I’ll never say a word
-against the law again.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they hung silent and the ship grew. The wind
-held steady, then it faded, great smoke-blue spaces
-showing on the sea; then it freshened, blowing from
-a new quarter, and the stranger, shifting her helm,
-payed off on the starboard tack. She showed now to
-be ketch-rigged.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve always been agin’ the law,” went on Mr.
-Harman, “but if the law puts that blighter in chokee,
-I’ll take the first lawyer I meet by the fist. I will so.
-I’ll say to him, you’re a man an’ brother, law or no
-law.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh hang the law!” cried Davis, whose face had
-turned purple, and whose eyes were straining at the
-ship. “Look at her. Can’t you see what she is?
-She’s the <i>Douro</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>Harman’s hand flew up to shade his eyes. He stood
-for twenty seconds, then he gave a whoop and made
-as if to run to the sea edge, where the canoes were
-preparing to put out.</p>
-
-<p>Davis caught him by the arm and pulled him back.</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you holdin’?” cried Harman. “Let
-me get at the blighter! Leave me loose or I’ll give
-you the bashin’ I have in me fist for him. Leave me
-loose, you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>But Davis, undaunted and deaf to all protests, drove
-him steadily back amongst the trees and then made
-him sit down to hear reason.</p>
-
-<p>“That chap would wipe the deck with you,” said
-Davis. “There’s more ways of killing a dog than by
-kicking him. What we’ve got to do is lay low and wait
-our chance, get him ashore off his ship, and leave the
-rest to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if I can get my fists on him, that’s all <i>I</i>
-want,” said Harman. “I don’t want more than that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” replied the other. “I want those pearls.
-Now skip down to the house and fetch up all the grub
-you can find. We’ve got to keep hid till things develop.
-That’s our strong point: him not knowing we’re here.”</p>
-
-<p>“And do you mean to say the Kanakas won’t tell
-him?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, suppose they do, suppose they say there
-are two white men on the island, how’s he to know it’s
-us? The Kanakas don’t know our names or where
-we’ve come from. Now, skip!”</p>
-
-<p>Harman went off, and returned laden. They made
-their camp under a tree by a spring, covering the food
-over with bread-fruit leaves to keep the robber crabs
-from getting at it, then they settled themselves down
-to watch and listen.</p>
-
-<p>They heard the anchor go down, and Harman, who
-climbed the tree to a point where a view of the harbour
-could be glimpsed between the leaves, reported that
-the <i>Douro</i> was at anchor two cable-lengths from the
-shore and swinging to the tide, that the canoes were
-all round her, and that a chap in white was leaning
-over her rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like Clayton,” said he. “Now he’s left
-the rail, and they’re swinging out a boat. He’s comin’
-ashore. Now he’s in the boat. Yes, that’s him sure
-enough; know him anywhere by the way he carries
-himself, crawled over into the boat like a cat, he did.
-Yes, it’s him; I can see his face now, all but his
-b’iled gooseberry eyes. Comin’ ashore, are you?
-Well, I’ll be there to meet you.”</p>
-
-<p>He came swarming down only to be received into
-the arms of Davis, that is to say, Reason.</p>
-
-<p>“Coming on for night I don’t say no,” said Davis;
-“we may be able to take the ship and get out with her,
-but there’s no use in a free fight on the beach in the
-broad light of day with all his boat crew to back
-him. I’ve got an idea&mdash;it’s coming into my head bit
-by bit&mdash;and it’s this, the crew know us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they ought to, since we captained them once,”
-said Harman. “But what about it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Just this, you know what Kanakas are. If we
-can knock Clayton on the head sudden to-night and
-get off without too much fuss, we’ve only got to step
-on board and drop the anchor-chain and put out.
-The Kanakas won’t object. Seeing us come on board
-again, and taking over the ship, they’ll think it’s
-all in the day’s work and done by arrangement with
-Clayton.”</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t a bad idea if we can do it,” said Harman;
-“we’ll have to scrag him so that he don’t squeal, and
-do it without fittin’ him out for a mortuary. I ain’t
-a particular man, but I’ve an objection to corpses.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rot!” said Davis. “You’ve got to stow
-that bilge if you want to make out in this business.
-You’ll be going about next with flowers in your hair
-like those Kanaka girls. I ain’t going to hit to kill.
-If I get the chance of hitting at all. I’m going to put
-him to sleep, that’s all; if he never wakes up the
-world will be none the wiser nor the worse. Hullo!
-What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>It was Kinie, her face showed peeping at them
-through the branches which her little brown hands
-were holding back.</p>
-
-<p>“Scat!” cried Harman, shaken out of all other
-considerations but the thought that she had discovered
-their whereabouts and might give them away.
-“Off with you, and back to the village&mdash;and if you
-let a word out of you&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Before he could finish the branches swayed, and
-Kinie was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“After her!” cried Davis. “Get hold of her and
-tell her to spy on the chap, and give us news of what’s
-going on. Hump yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Harman, getting on his feet, started off in pursuit,
-and Davis found himself alone. He could hear the
-wash of the beach and the far-off voices of the village,
-and as he sat, putting things together in his mind,
-the main question that kept recurring was whether
-Clayton would put out after taking on fruit and water,
-or whether he would stay.</p>
-
-<p>After that came the question of the pearls. It
-was six months now since the day he sailed from the
-atoll, and he was still tinkering about amongst the
-lesser islands; what had he done with the pearls?
-He had evidently been to no port of importance
-where he might have sold them, and if there was reason
-in anything, there was reason in the supposition that
-they were on board the <i>Douro</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Davis chuckled to himself at the thought. The
-thing was so simple. Once Clayton was put out of
-count nothing could be easier than to row off, seize
-the ketch and put out with her&mdash;the Kanaka crew
-knew both him and his companion. Davis chuckled
-at the thought that these same Kanakas had been
-through the same process before when he and Harman
-had “nicked” the <i>Araya</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“And I bet you,” he said to himself as he lay listening
-to the sounds of the beach and village, “I bet
-you they don’t know they’ve been as good as stolen
-twice, or that me and Billy aren’t part owners in the
-show, turning up now and then to take command,
-and give the other chaps a rest.” He chuckled at the
-thought, and then Harman came back through the
-trees, having interviewed Kinie.</p>
-
-<p>The wayward one had shown surprising grip of
-the situation and readiness to assist. Yes, she would
-watch the white man with the red face, and find out
-whether he was taking water on board that day, and
-if not how long he was likely to stay; promising this
-she had run off.</p>
-
-<p>“And she’ll do it,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>They had some food and smoked and drowsed
-in the warm, dark hot-house atmosphere of the woods,
-now silent as death with noon.</p>
-
-<p>Then somewhere about two o’clock the branches
-parted and the charming, sprite-like face of the girl
-looked in upon their slumbers.</p>
-
-<p>She had brought news. The big canoe was not
-taking water that day nor fruit. It might stay many
-days, also the big man had been bidden to a banquet
-by the village, and the feast was to take place on the
-edge of dark. They were preparing the palm toddy
-now and killing chickens and two pigs. Listen!
-She held up a finger and they could hear the far-off
-clucking of chickens being chased only to be
-choked. The pigs, clubbed senseless, had uttered no
-complaint.</p>
-
-<p>Then the branches swayed, and she was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“This is good,” said Davis. “That chap is sure
-to get drunk on the palm toddy, and so we’ll be saved
-the bother of knocking him out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like Providence, don’t it?” said Mr.
-Harman. “If you tell me there ain’t such a thing,
-I tell you that there is&mdash;flat. Look at us, brought
-here and landed as careful as baskets of eggs, and look
-at Clayton sent after us to be skinned, ain’t that
-Providence?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close up!” said Davis. “You get arguing
-when a chap ought to be thinking. Wait till he is
-skinned before you talk of Providence. We haven’t
-got the hide yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but we will,” replied the other, settling
-himself for a snooze.</p>
-
-<p>Towards dark, awakened by Davis, he went off
-through the trees to prospect.</p>
-
-<p>Then blackness came as if turned on with a switch,
-blackness that gradually died to starlight as the
-eyes grew accustomed to the change. Starlight that
-filled the woods with the eeriest forms made of foliage
-and shadow, while here and there stars and constellations
-hung themselves amidst the branches&mdash;the Cross
-in a tamarisk tree and Canopus on the top bough of a
-screw pine.</p>
-
-<p>To Davis, watching and meditating, suddenly
-appeared Harman, breathless.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re dished,” cried the latter, “dished lovely!
-The <i>Douro</i> crowd are ashore down to the ship’s cat,
-and they’re all stuffin’ themselves and fillin’ up with
-the drink.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis whistled.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t they left an anchor watch on her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Devil a one!” said Harman. “She’s watching
-herself. Well, what do you say to that?”</p>
-
-<p>Davis said nothing for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible to take the ketch away without
-the crew. Of course, he and Harman could have
-taken her out, but he knew better than ever to dream
-of facing the Pacific in a vessel of that tonnage with
-only another pair of hands to help him. He had been
-through the experience years ago; he knew what it
-was for two men to take on a ten-men’s job. No, the
-canoe was better than that, infinitely.</p>
-
-<p>“Billy,” said he suddenly, “buck up! We aren’t
-done. Can’t you see, the chap is so certain sure there’s
-no one here to harm or meddle with him, he’s let all
-his crew come ashore? Well, as sure as he’s done
-that, he’s left the pearls on board.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman fell to the idea at once.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean us to skip in the canoe with them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep,” said the other.</p>
-
-<p>Harman considered for a bit in silence, while the
-sounds of the festival on the beach came on the new-risen
-wind from the sea.</p>
-
-<p>He had sworn never to enter a canoe again, the
-prospect was hateful; yet there was one bright spot
-in it, a spot as big as a sun&mdash;Clayton’s face on waking
-next morning to find the pearls gone!</p>
-
-<p>He sprang to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Kim on,” said he, “we’ve gotta get water, grub,
-and nuts aboard her. The breaker’s lying back of the
-house. I’ll attend to the water; you can bring this
-stuff down and c’llect all you can from the houses&mdash;b’nanas
-and such-like. Hump yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Their canoe lay on the beach to the right of the
-village; it was fit and seaworthy for the very good
-reason that the native boys had been using it for
-sailing and fishing, and when Davis came on to the
-beach he found Harman stowing the water-breaker, the
-only figure visible, for the whole village was congregated
-where the great feast was going on in the break
-amidst the trees.</p>
-
-<p>They were running no risks. They wanted food
-for a fortnight, and they took it&mdash;took it from the
-deserted houses and from the trees where the pandanus
-drupes hung in the starlight and the great
-banana clusters stood like golden candelabra waiting
-to be lit.</p>
-
-<p>Then they pushed off, and the harbour took them
-and the night, against which stood the <i>Douro</i>, swinging
-to the outgoing tide on a taut anchor-chain.</p>
-
-<p>The ladder was down, and as they came alongside,
-Harman, who was to commit the burglary, clutched
-it, sprang on deck, and lowering the anchor-light
-vanished with it down the cabin companion-way.</p>
-
-<p>Davis, with his hand on the ladder and rocked by
-the almost imperceptible swell, contemplated the
-night and the far beach. He could see the glow of the
-fire amidst the trees, and now, just as the moon rose
-above the sea-line, sending its silver across the harbour,
-his keen eye caught a form moving amongst the
-beached canoes.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later something ruffled the water. A
-canoe had put off. He saw the flash of a paddle, and
-for a second the idea that Clayton had sensed danger
-and was on the pounce crossed his mind, only to be
-instantly dismissed. It was Kinie. He knew it
-instinctively and at once. Kinie, who never drank
-palm toddy and who looked as though her food were
-mushrooms and moonbeams, had discovered their
-canoe gone. Very likely had been watching them
-getting it away and was coming out to prospect.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the light reappeared on deck,
-and Harman at the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Bud,” cried Harman, “she’s bustin’ with trade,
-cabin full, and I’ll bet the hold’s full to the hatches!
-That blighter must have been peddlin’ his pearls for
-trade goods, but I’ve got the balance, a dozen big ’uns.
-I broke his locker open and there they were. Got ’em
-in me pocket. Steady the blistered canoe whiles I
-get in.”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped into the canoe, and they pushed off.
-Then he sighted Kinie, who was coming up fast, so
-close now that the water drops showed flashing from
-her paddle.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s that girl,” said Davis, “confound her! We
-only wanted this to kibosh us. I swear by the big
-horn spoon I’ll flatten her out with a paddle if she
-squeals or gives the show away! I will, b’ gosh!”</p>
-
-<p>But Kinie showed no signs of any desire to give
-the show away. She manœuvred her canoe so that
-it came gently beside theirs, stem towards stern,
-so that her outrigger did not prevent her from clasping
-their gunnel. Kinie had come to say good-bye.
-She had watched them provisioning without knowing
-exactly why they were doing so, then they had put off,
-and she had recognized that they were leaving for good.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing them hanging on to the ship, she had taken
-heart and put off herself, and now, patting Harman
-on the shoulder with her little hand, she was looking
-at him with the eyes of a dog, while he, slipping one
-huge arm round her, was patting her back and telling
-her to be a good girl and to get back to the shore
-quick.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Aroya manu</i>, Kinie. We’re off&mdash;we’re goin’ away.
-See you again maybe, soon. There, don’t be holdin’
-me. Well, you’re askin’ for it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close up or you’ll be capsizing the canoe,”
-cried Davis. “Shove her off&mdash;Now paddle for all
-you’re worth. Mind! the outrigger is lifting.”</p>
-
-<p>The canoes parted and the moonlit waving water
-came between them like a river, then, driven by tide
-and paddle, they passed the shadows of the cliffs at
-the harbour mouth, and Harman, looking back, saw the
-glow of the festival fire like a topaz beyond the silver-satin
-of the harbour water, and against the glow the
-canoe of Kinie making for the shore.</p>
-
-<p>Outside they ran up the sail while astern Motul,
-with its hills and dark forests, lay like a cloud on the
-water, visible all night, dwindling to a speck in the
-dawn, destroyed utterly by the sun as he rose beyond it,
-flooding the sea with fire.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, here’s another blessed day,” said Harman,
-as he took his trick with the steering paddle, “and
-that chap will be wakin’ just now with a palm-toddy
-head on him to find we’ve done him, but he won’t never
-know it’s us, worse luck. Anyhow, he’ll have his
-headache. There ain’t nothin’ to beat a palm-toddy
-head unless maybe samshu, but, samshu or palm toddy,
-drink don’t pay, nor Bourbon, nor Champagne&mdash;it
-don’t pay. I’m not sayin’ if a chap could get drunk
-and stay drunk I wouldn’t be the first to jine in, but
-it’s the wakin’ up&mdash;&mdash;Oh, <i>d&mdash;&mdash;n</i> petticuts!”</p>
-
-<p>He had put his hand in his pocket for the
-handkerchief, at that moment flaunting itself on Motul
-beach around the brows of its proud possessor.</p>
-
-<p>“Mind your steering!” cried Davis. “What ails
-you? Mind your paddle or we’ll be over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me handkerchief’s gone,” cried the distracted
-Harman. “She’s took it. Twice she nicked it from
-me before, and I ought to ha’ known&mdash;she’ll have
-flung them away, for it’s only the rag she wanted&mdash;buzzed
-them into the harbour most like. They were
-tied in the corner of it and she’d ha’ thought them
-stones&mdash;ten thousand dollars’ worth of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Pearls!” cried Davis, “you aren’t talking of the
-pearls!”</p>
-
-<p>Towards sunset, steering into the golden remote
-and unknown west, the dejected Harman, breaking an
-all-day silence, perked up a bit and became almost
-cheerfully philosophic.</p>
-
-<p>“The only good p’int about all this business,”
-said he, “the one bright p’int&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you and your p’ints.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chIV' title='IV: Sunk Without Trace'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IV.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>SUNK WITHOUT TRACE</span>
-</h2>
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>The mat sail flapped against the mast and then
-hung loose while the chuckle of bow and
-outrigger died away. Harman, turning his face
-to the east, all gone watery with the dawn, leant
-forward and gave his sleeping companion a prod
-with the steering paddle.</p>
-
-<p>Cruising in a South Sea island canoe tries the temper
-as well as the judgment, and two days of this business
-had considerably shortened the temper of Billy
-Harman.</p>
-
-<p>For two days and two nights, fed on bananas and
-island truck, and led by the pointing of an indifferent
-compass, they had pursued the west, chased by the
-light of gorgeous dawns, broiled by midday suns,
-raising nothing but endless horizons and consuming
-sunsets.</p>
-
-<p>“Wind’s gone!” cried Harman. “Flat calm and
-looks like stayin’ put.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis roused, supported himself with a hand on
-the outrigger gratings, and blinked at the dawn;
-then he yawned, then he began to get command of
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Whach you want digging me in the ribs like that
-for?” said Davis. “You and your flat calms!
-Where’s the hurry? Are you afraid it’ll run away?
-Blest if you aren’t the&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“No use quarrellin’,” cut in the other; “fightin’s
-a mug’s game, and words won’t bring no wind. Pass
-us a drinkin’ nut.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis passed the nut, and then, while the other
-refreshed himself, leant with his elbow on the grating
-and his eyes fixed lazily on the east.</p>
-
-<p>Morning bank there was none, nor colour, nothing
-but a great crystal window showing infinite distance
-and taking suddenly a reflection of fire and a sill of
-gold: gold that moved and ran north and south
-and then leapt boiling across the swell as the sun
-burst up, hitting Harman in the back and Davis in
-the face and turning the lingering moon to a grey
-cinder above the azure of the west and the morning
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Away to the south, across the sunlit swell, a ship
-showed becalmed and painting the water with the
-reflection of her canvas, and, wonder of wonders, a
-mile from her and more to the north stood another
-ship, also held in the grip of the calm, and seeming
-the duplicate of the first in rig, tonnage, and
-design.</p>
-
-<p>They were whalers, two of the last of the old
-whaling fleet, cruising maybe in company or brought
-together by chance.</p>
-
-<p>Harman was the first to sight them; then Davis
-turned, and, leaning comfortably on the outrigger
-gratings, looked.</p>
-
-<p>“Whalemen,” said Harman. “Look at ’em, stump
-topmasts, tryin’-out works and all! Look at ’em&mdash;damned
-pair of slush tubs!”</p>
-
-<p>Davis said nothing; he spat into the water and
-continued to look while Harman went on.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are, grumblin’ last night there were
-no ships about, and them things only waitin’ to show
-themselves, castin’ the canoe in the teeth o’ Providence,
-sayin’ you wanted planks under your feet to walk
-on. Planks, b’gosh! If one of them sight us we’ll
-be planked! I’ve been there and I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they won’t bother about us,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, won’t they?” said Harman. “Shows what
-you know of whalemen. If them chaps sighted the
-twelve ’postles driftin’ in a canoe, let alone us, they’d
-yank ’em on board and set ’em to work. Hands is
-what they’re always cravin’ for, and our only chance
-is they’ll take us for Kanakas, goin’ by the cut of
-the canoe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they won’t bother about us,” said Davis;
-“and if they do, you ain’t a bad imitation of a Kanaka;
-but it’s cursed luck all the same. Planks, yes, I want
-the feel of a plank under my foot, and the feel that
-there isn’t only ten days’ grub and water between
-us and perdition&mdash;curse them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’ve done it!” cried Harman. “Look!
-They’re comin’!”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, as though the last words of Davis
-had struck life into the far-off vessels, the decks of
-both ships suddenly boiled with ant-like figures,
-boats were dropped, and in a flash were making across
-the sea, two fleets of four boats each, and rowing as
-if in a race.</p>
-
-<p>But they were not making for the canoe. Due
-north they headed over the glassy swell, while Davis,
-standing erect and holding on to the mast, watched
-with shaded eyes.</p>
-
-<p>“Whales,” said he. “Whales they’re after, not
-us. Look at them!”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see no whales,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“No, but they can,” said Davis. “Look! They’re
-heading west now, they’re on to them.”</p>
-
-<p>A clap of thunder came over the sea and foam
-spurted amidst the distant boats. Then two of the
-boats detached themselves from the rest, skimming
-through the water without sail or oar, the flash of
-the foam at their bows clear to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got their fish,” cried Harman. “Look,
-he’s going round to the north’ard, and here’s the
-breeze!”</p>
-
-<p>Up from the south-east it was coming, spreading
-in great waves like fields of barley. The whale-ships
-had caught it and were trimming their yards in pursuit
-of the boats, and now, the mat sail of the canoe
-filling out and cracking against the mast, Harman
-seized the steering paddle and headed her due north.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you steering for?” shouted Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“North,” replied the other. “You don’t want to
-be runnin’ into them ships, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>Davis crawled aft, seized the paddle, and pushed
-the other forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Cuss the ships!” said he. “They’ve got their
-own business to attend to, and I’m not going to put
-her off her course, not for Jim Satan! You don’t
-mind the ships&mdash;they’re busy.”</p>
-
-<p>He was right.</p>
-
-<p>A Swenfoyn gun had put a speedy end to the whale,
-and as the canoe drew along not half a mile away
-from the nearest ship it was being hauled alongside
-her and the tackles were out. But the remainder
-of the fleet of boats not busy in this work seemed
-engaged in some affair of their own which was
-not whale fishing; they were all surging together,
-oars were being tossed in the air and the far-away
-sound of shouting came across the water.</p>
-
-<p>“Fightin’!” said Harman, “that’s what they’re
-at. They’re both claimin’ the fish. I know their
-monkey tricks. Look at them!”</p>
-
-<p>But Davis was not listening to him, his quick eye
-had caught something floating ahead; altering the
-course a point he called to Harman to let go the sheet,
-then, leaning over, he grabbed the floating mass in
-both hands, yelling to the other to balance the canoe.</p>
-
-<p>“Get out on the gratings and hold her down,” cried
-Davis, “our fortune’s made. Fish! No, you fool,
-it’s ambergris, what comes from whales’ innards,
-and is worth hundreds of pounds. Lord send they
-don’t see us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Mind!” yelled Harman.</p>
-
-<p>The gunnel lipped the water despite his weight
-and the outrigger rose a foot as Davis strove, then
-with a mighty effort he brought it tumbling on board,
-the water pouring off it, and there it lay between his
-feet a huge, knobby, putty-coloured mass, with
-octopus sucker-prongs sticking in it like tiger claws,
-and a two-fathom strip of pale green seaweed twined
-about it as if for ornament. Harman, without a word,
-crawled back across the outrigger grating and trimmed
-the sail while Davis, without a word, resumed the
-steering paddle.</p>
-
-<p>He did not mind about altering his course now;
-he put her dead before the wind while Harman, half
-kneeling on the stub of the forward outrigger pole,
-and with his hand on a stay, reported progress.</p>
-
-<p>“No, they ain’t seen us,” said Harman; “they’re
-all crowdin’ back on the ships and the fightin’s over.
-There’s never no good in fightin’, as I said to you
-this mornin’&mdash;not unless you get the other chap’s
-back to you and belt him on the head sudden. Now
-if those ballyhoos had quit arguin’ who’d harpooned
-first and kept their eyes skinned they’d a’ got ambergris
-instead of sore heads. How much ’s that stuff
-worth, do you reckon, Bud?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mean to say you don’t know and you been on
-a whale-ship?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never heard tell of the stuff before nor sighted
-it,” replied the other. “Whalemen don’t take
-stock of nothing but blubber&mdash;where does it come
-from, d’ye think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Out of the whale,” said Davis, “and it’s worth
-twenty dollars an ounce.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman laughed. When Bud had worked upon
-him sufficiently to make him see the truth he first
-took a look to make sure the whale-ships were showing
-only their topsails above the horizon, then he
-sat down to calculate the amount of their fortune.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>Ambergris, though used in the production of scent,
-has no smell or only the faintest trace of odour when
-warmed; it is the ugliest stuff in the world, and as
-valuable as gold. Harman’s bother was that he did
-not know the weight of the lump. He reckoned,
-going by comparison with pigs of small ballast, that
-it might be half a hundred-weight, but the table of
-weights and measures barred him. He could not
-tell the number of ounces in a half hundred-weight.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it don’t much matter,” said he at last.
-“If you’re not lyin’ and it’s worth twenty dollars
-an ounce, then it’s worth twenty times its weight
-in dollars, and that’s good enough for us. Twenty
-bags of dollars as heavy as that lump of muck is
-good enough for Billy Harman. Say, it beats Jonah,
-don’t it? when you look at that stuff, which isn’t
-more nor less than good dinners by the hundred
-and bottles of fizz and girls by the raft-load. And
-to think of an old whale coughin’ it up; makes a
-chap b’lieve in the Scriptures, don’t it, seein’ what
-it is and seein’ where it come from, and seein’ how
-Providence shoved it right into our hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“We haven’t cashed it yet,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“No, but we will,” replied the other. “I feel it
-in my bones. I’ve got a hunch the luck ain’t runnin’
-streaky this time. Somethin’ else is comin’ along;
-you wait and see.”</p>
-
-<p>He was right. Next morning, an hour after sunrise,
-a stain of smoke showed on the south-eastern
-horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Steamers in those days were fewer in the Pacific
-even than now, but this was a steamer right enough.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s coming dead for us,” said Davis, as the
-hull showed clear now of smoke. “Brail up the sail
-and stand by to signal her&mdash;what you make her out
-to be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mail boat,” said Harman. “Sydney-bound, I’ll
-bet a dollar. You’ll be hearin’ the passengers linin’
-up and cheerin’ when we’re took aboard, and then
-it’ll be drinks and cigars and the best of good livin’
-till we touch Circular Wharf. But I ain’t goin’ in
-for hard drinks, not till we cash in this ambergris,
-and not then, only may be a bottle of fizz to wet the
-luck. No, sir, seein’ Providence has dealt with us
-handsome, Billy’s goin’ to do likewise with her.
-Providence don’t hold with the jag, which ain’t
-more nor less than buyin’ headaches, and di’mond
-studs for bar tenders and sich. Providence is dead
-against the drink, and don’t you forget that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you were talking only last night of buying
-a saloon in ’Frisco,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“That ain’t buyin’ drink,” countered Mr. Harman.
-“Nor swallerin’ it, which is what I’m arguin’
-against&mdash;&mdash;Look at her how she’s liftin’.”</p>
-
-<p>They said no more, watching the oncoming boat,
-now showing her bridge canvas distinct from her
-hull. Then suddenly Davis spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s no mail boat,” said Davis, “not big enough,
-stove-pipe funnel, and look at that canvas. She’s
-not even a B.P. boat&mdash;some old tub carrying copra
-or trade.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not she,” said Harman. “Steam don’t pay in
-the copra business, bunkers have to be too big, seein’
-there’s no coalin’ stations much in the islands.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll soon see,” said Davis, and they did.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger came shearing along, showing up now
-as a five or six hundred ton squat cargo boat, riding
-high and evidently in ballast, with a rust-red stove-pipe
-funnel and a general air of neglect that shouted
-across the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Then the thud of the engines ceased, a yoop of her
-siren cut the air like a whiplash, and a string of
-bunting blew out.</p>
-
-<p>Harman waved his shirt, and as the stranger came
-gliding on to them he got ready to catch the rope
-that a fellow was preparing to cast from the bow.</p>
-
-<p>As they came alongside, lifting and falling with
-the swell, a big red-faced man, leaning over the bridge
-rail, began shouting directions, whilst Davis, seizing
-the ladder which had been dropped, climbed on deck,
-leaving Harman to manage the canoe.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Oskosh</i> was the name of the hooker, and Billy
-Schumways was the name of her master and owner.
-He was the big man on the bridge; seven days out
-from Arafata Lagoon with a crew of Chinks and a
-Savage Island bo’sun, makin’ down for Fuanatafi in
-a hurry. All of which he roared at Davis from the
-bridge and at Harman from over the bridge side.</p>
-
-<p>“Claw on and kim up,” cried Captain Schumways
-to the hesitating Harman. “Cut that canoe adrift
-and come on deck, and don’t be wastin’ my time, or
-I’ll ring the injins on. What’s that you’re sayin’?
-Ambergris, what’s ambergris? Ain’t got no time to
-be muckin’ about&mdash;there, bring it if you want to.”
-He paused whilst Harman, having fastened a rope
-flung by Davis round the precious ambergris, came
-on deck guiding it up. Then, when they were both
-over the rail, Schumways, ringing the engines full
-speed ahead, came down from the bridge.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’d you get that muck?” asked Captain
-Schumways, after they’d given their names and a
-yarn about having been drifted off an island when
-fishing. “Picked it up, did you? Well, you can
-shove it in the scupper if you’re set on keepin’ it,
-and now follow me down and I’ll show you your
-quarters. I’m sufferin’ for extra help in the engine-room
-and I reckon you’ve got to work your passage.”</p>
-
-<p>He led the way to the saloon hatch and down to the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Oskosh</i> had been a Farsite Enfield boat running
-from ’Frisco to Seattle. Cargo, Klondyke diggers
-and, lastly, contraband had reduced her from respectability
-and cleanliness to her present state. The
-saloon was a wreck and ruin, the panelling split, the
-fittings gone, bunks filled with raffle and oddments,
-the table covered with old oil-cloth showing the
-marks of coffee cups, and over all a dank throat-catching
-atmosphere of decay, cockroaches and dirty
-bunk bedding.</p>
-
-<p>Schumways inhabited the cabin aft. He pointed
-out two bunks to port and starboard.</p>
-
-<p>“Them’s yours,” said he, “and there’s beddin’
-and to spare. You’ll mess here, bein’ whites, and
-you’ll take your orders from me and Sellers; when
-you’ve cleared out them bunks and got your beddin’
-in come along up and I’ll show you your job.”</p>
-
-<p>He left them and went on deck, and Bud Davis
-sat down on the edge of a bunk.</p>
-
-<p>“Say, Billy,” said Bud, “how about those passengers
-lining up and cheering? How about those
-soft drinks you were talking of?&mdash;or would you sooner
-have a highball?&mdash;and we’re to take our orders from
-him and Sellers. What I’m proposing to do is go up
-right now, catch him by the hoofs, and dump him
-over side, scrag Sellers, whoever he is, and take the
-ship. That’s how I’m feeling.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t no use,” said Harman. “Fightin’s a mug’s
-game. That chap’s a sure enough tough and we
-haven’t no guns. Lay low is the word, more especial
-as this packet is contraband and we’ve only to wait
-to get ’em by the short hairs. Contraband&mdash;look
-at her, guns or opium, with blackbirdin’ maybe
-thrown in, that’s all there is to her.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis assented. These two old Pacific hands had
-an eye from which no ship could hide her character
-for sea-unworthiness or disrespectability; Schumways
-matched his ship, and Sellers, when he turned
-up, would be sure to match Schumways; the crew
-were Chinks, and the case was plain. Not that it
-bothered Bud or Billy; their one thought as they
-worked clearing the bunks and settling the bedding
-was the ambergris.</p>
-
-<p>Schumways knew nothing of ambergris or its value&mdash;that
-fact was quite plain&mdash;but it would never do to
-leave it lying in the scupper, and Harman having
-poked his head up through the hatch and found a
-clear deck, they got it down, stowed it in a spare
-bunk occupied by a filthy rug, a suit of oilskins and a
-paraffin tin, covering it with the rug.</p>
-
-<p>Then they came on deck, and the captain of the
-<i>Oskosh</i>, coming down from the bridge, introduced
-them to the engine-room and Sellers, a wire-drawn
-Yankee, six feet two, who introduced them to the
-engines and the stokehold.</p>
-
-<p>“Chinks are firin’ her now,” said Sellers, “but
-you’ll hold yourself ready to take a hand at the
-shovellin’ if wanted. I’ll larn you how to shoot the
-stuff; that’s a pressure gauge&mdash;you’ll get to know it
-before you’ve done&mdash;and that’s an ile can&mdash;you’ll
-get to know her too.” He led the way down a passage
-four foot broad to a transverse passage eight foot
-broad, where, under a swinging oil lamp, Chinks,
-naked to the waist, were firing up. He opened the
-door of a long blazing tunnel and seized a shovel,
-the coal came down a chute right on to the floor, and
-taking a shovelful he demonstrated.</p>
-
-<p>“Stokin’s not shootin’ coal into a fu’nace, it’s
-knowin’ where to shoot it. Every fu’nace has hungry
-places: there’s one, that dull patch up there, and
-there’s the food for it.” A shovelful of coal went
-flying into the gehenna right on to the dull patch, and,
-dropping the shovel, he seized an eight-foot bar of
-steel. “M’r’over, it’s not all shovellin’, it’s rakin’.
-Here’s your rake and how to use it. Then you’ve got
-to tend the ashlift, and when you’ve larnt not to stick
-your head in the fire when she’s pitchin’ hard you’ll
-be a stoker; ain’t nothin’ to it but the work an’ the
-will.”</p>
-
-<p>“But see here, cully,” said Mr. Harman. “We
-ain’t signed on for stokin’ in this packet; engine-room
-fiddlin’ is stretchin’ a point with A.B.’s, but stokin’s
-outside the regulations. Clear, and by Board o’ Trade
-rules&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s them on board the <i>Oskosh</i>,” said Sellers,
-producing a revolver, which he exhibited lying flat
-in the palm of his huge hand as though he were showing
-a curiosity. “Six rules an’ regulations, soft-nosed&mdash;and
-don’t you forget it, son!”</p>
-
-<p>Through days of blazing azure and nights of phosphorescent
-seas the <i>Oskosh</i> plugged steadily along on
-her course. She was square-rigged on the foremast,
-and used sail-power to assist the engines when the wind
-held, and always and ever, despite her dirt, her disorder,
-and the general slovenliness of her handling,
-she kept a bright eye out for strangers. When Schumways
-was not on the bridge using the binoculars,
-they were in the hands of the Savage Island bo’sun&mdash;a
-fact noted by Billy and Bud when those unfortunates
-had time to note anything in the midst of their
-multitudinous occupations.</p>
-
-<p>They were not always put to stoking in this horrible
-ship, where things went anyhow and work was doubled
-for want of method. They would be oiling in the
-engine-room under command of Sellers when, maybe,
-the voice of Schumways would come ordering “them
-roustabouts” up to handle the sails: sail-handling,
-greasing, emptying slush tubs, helping in engine-room
-repairs, “lendin’ a hand in the stoke’old”&mdash;it was a
-mixed meal of work that did not please the appetites
-of Billy or Bud. Yet they had to swallow it. Kicking
-was no use. Harman tried it, and was kicked by Sellers,
-and took the injury and insult without retaliating.
-Fighting was a mug’s game, but deep in his soul Billy
-Harman formulated an oath of revenge, swearing that
-somehow, somewhere, and somewhen he would be
-even with the <i>Oskoshites</i> to the ultimate limit of
-their back teeth and the last short hairs of their
-persons.</p>
-
-<p>He communicated this darkly to his fellow-sufferer,
-who laughed.</p>
-
-<p>They were seated at breakfast feasting on the
-leavings of Schumways and Sellers and Davis told him
-to close up.</p>
-
-<p>“You give me the mullygrubs with your talk,”
-said Davis. “Whenever you open your fool-mouth
-something happens wrong way about. This was a
-passenger packet, wasn’t it, and we were to sit in the
-saloon bein’ admired by the passengers, weren’t we?
-And was it Fourth Street or Fifth Street you were goin’
-to open that whisky joint? And fighting is a mug’s
-game, according to you, whereas if we’d wiped the
-engine-room floor with Sellers first day instead of
-knuckling down to him we’d have stood on this ship
-as men, instead of being a hog-driven pair of roustabouts
-begging for scraps and emptying slush tubs.
-Too late now; they’ve got the better of us and know
-our make, which is putty, owing to you. Even with
-them! Why, I’ll bet twenty dollars to a nickel if
-you try any of your home-made tricks they’ll be
-even with us. Talking is all you’re good for&mdash;fighting’s
-a mug’s game!”</p>
-
-<p>“So it is,” replied Mr. Harman. “Fool fightin’s
-no use; hittin’ out and gettin’ belted’s one thing,
-but stragety’s another, and that’s what I’m after,
-and if I don’t get my knife in these chaps’ ribs behind
-their backs and unknownst to them, you can take
-me home and bury me&mdash;and it won’t be long either!”</p>
-
-<p>He was right.</p>
-
-<p>That very evening they lifted Fuanatafi, their
-destination, a purple cloud in the sunset glow and a
-cloud of ebony by night as they lay off and on, listening
-to the far sound of the breakers till dawn revealed
-the great island in all its splendour and isolation;
-for Fuanatafi, like Nauru, has no harbour, just a
-landing beach to westward where boats can put in,
-razor-backed reefs keep ships a mile from the shore
-and make the place pretty useless for trade.</p>
-
-<p>As the light broke full on the island Billy Harman,
-who had come on deck and was standing with Davis
-by the lee rail, saw away to southward another island
-with a peak-like summit, and to westward of that two
-small islets circled with moving clouds&mdash;gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Lord bless my soul,” said he, “I’ve been
-here before, six years ago it was, and we took off a raft
-of turtle-shell for six cases of gin. Christopher Island
-was the other name they give it, and it’s head centre
-for all sorts of black doin’s. That island to suthard is
-Levisca, and it’s been blackbirded till there ain’t
-scarcely no Kanakas left on it. Now, I wonder what
-Schumways is landin’ here.”</p>
-
-<p>As if in answer to his question two Chinks came
-aft carrying a long deal box between them, which
-they dumped close by the foremast.</p>
-
-<p>The main hatch was open, and they could see more
-boxes being brought up, six in all, and each one, as it
-came on deck, was carried forward, the whole being
-stacked in one pile and covered with a tarpaulin. The
-engines ceased their dead-slow tramp: then came an
-order from the bridge and the roar and rasp of the
-anchor chain filled the morning air, echoing across
-the water and lifting the reef gulls in clanging
-spirals.</p>
-
-<p>Schumways dropped down from the bridge and
-Sellers rose from the engine-room, wiping his hands
-with a piece of cotton waste; he had put on his coat
-and wore an old panama on his head ready for shore.
-Then at an order from Schumways the starboard
-quarter-boat was lowered, Harman and Davis were
-ordered into it, and the Captain of the <i>Oskosh</i> and his
-engineer took their places in the stern sheets.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be more lovely than the morning
-light on the streets of blue water between the reefs
-or the view of the great island washed by the calm,
-ponded sea and waiting for the approaching boat,
-loveliness that left no trace, however, on the minds
-of Bud and Billy labouring at the oars, or of Schumways
-and Sellers smoking in the stern.</p>
-
-<p>As they ran the boat’s nose on to the beach, out
-from the groves to right and left stepped a dozen
-Kanakas armed with spears. Casting their spears on
-the sand, they trod on them whilst Sellers and his
-companion, walking up the beach with hands outstretched,
-greeted the chief man, bright with palm oil,
-absolutely naked, and adorned simply with half a
-willow-pattern soup plate worn as a pendant.</p>
-
-<p>The Kanakas and the two whites seemed old friends,
-and the whole lot, after a moment’s chatter, disappeared
-into the groves, leaving Bud and Billy on the beach
-by the stranded boat.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re off to the village,” said Harman.
-“Wonder what they’re up to? Bargainin’ most like
-over them guns.”</p>
-
-<p>“What guns?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Them cases we left on deck, them’s guns, or my
-name’s not Billy Harman. There’s six guns in each
-of them cases, that’s thirty-six for the lot, and I
-expect Schumways will be askin’ old Catch-em-alive-o
-ten pound apiece for them in coin or shell&mdash;maybe in
-bêche-de-mer, for that’s as good as bank notes. That’s
-three hundred and sixty pounds and the durned things
-didn’t cost him sixty. I’ll bet&mdash;&mdash;” He turned.
-Someone came breaking through the trees; it was
-Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Hike off back to the ship and bring them cases,”
-cried Sellers, “the ones we’ve left on deck. If you
-can’t bring the whole six, bring four, and you can go
-back for the other two. Now then, you lazy sweeps,
-grease yourselves and get goin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Blast him!” said Davis as they pushed off across
-the inner lagoon towards the reef break leading to the
-outer reef channels sparkling blue in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“No use swearin’,” said Hannan, “it don’t cut
-no ice&mdash;&mdash; Bud, I’ve got them.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Got ’em all in the fryin’ pan, b’gosh. It’s only
-jumped into my head this minute. Told you I’d
-get even with them at last, and now I’ve as good as
-done it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your plan?” asked Bud.</p>
-
-<p>“You never mind,” replied Billy, “you do as I’m
-askin’ you and I’ll show you. Lay into your strokes
-now, and that’s all you have to do at the present
-minit.”</p>
-
-<p>He seemed delighted with himself as he rowed,
-chuckling and chortling as though he already had the
-<i>Oskoshites</i> down and out. Bud, who knew Billy’s
-mentality from long practice and use, was not so
-elated. He knew that Harman, amongst his other
-mental qualities, was likely to go blind of one eye
-when seeing red or when ambition was at fever heat,
-and Billy was undoubtedly seeing red. Full of the
-thirst for revenge at having been made to work, at
-having been kicked and spoken to with contumely,
-he was fit for anything just now.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it that’s in your mind, Billy?” asked the
-other as they drew up to the <i>Oskosh</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You wait and see,” said Harman; “say nuthin’
-and follow my lead prompt and we’ve got them on a
-split stick.”</p>
-
-<p>The Chinks stood by the ladder as Harman went
-up it, leaving Davis to mind the boat; then on deck
-he gave the Kanaka bo’sun his orders, and, while the
-cases were being got into the boat, stepped below.</p>
-
-<p>He came up in a few minutes and helped with the
-last case, then, dropping into the boat beside Davis,
-he pushed off and they began rowing towards the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p>“Go slow,” said Harman, “and don’t pull hard.
-The breeze is backin’ into the north and I’ll have the
-mast up in a minute, then we can run for Levisca.
-We could row there quick enough, but it’s easier to
-sail. After we’ve taken on grub and water there we
-can push farther south.”</p>
-
-<p>“What the blue blazes are you talking of?” said
-Davis. “You mean running away in this boat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep,” replied Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“But, you fool, they’ll up steam and be after us
-before we’ve got half-way there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not they,” replied the strategist, “you wait an’
-see. You keep your eye on the old <i>Oskosh</i> and you’ll
-see somethin’ funny in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>He ceased rowing, so did Davis, and the boat rocked
-on the swell, then, as he got the mast stepped and the
-sail shaken out, Davis, whose eyes were fixed on the
-far-off ship, gave an exclamation of surprise.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, she’s lying awfully low in the water.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Harman quite simply. “I’ve opened
-the sea-cocks.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve <i>what</i>?” cried the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Opened the sea-cocks when I went below. The
-Chinks haven’t twigged yet that she’s sinkin’, she’s
-goin’ peaceful as a dyin’ Christian. Look”&mdash;a
-column of steam was rising from the funnel of the
-sinking ship&mdash;“they’ve twigged it now, but they don’t
-know what’s sinkin’ her, and if they did they haven’t
-enough sense to know what to do. B’sides, it’s too
-late. Look, they’re gettin’ out the boats; now help
-me to dump these durned cases and bring the sheet aft.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis did as he was told, then as the boat lay over,
-making a long board for Levisca, he suddenly leant
-forward towards Harman, his face injected with blood.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve done it, haven’t you?” shouted Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, b’gosh I have,” said Harman complacently,
-his eyes fixed on the <i>Oskosh</i> sinking by the head and
-with her stem high in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t tell me your plans, would you? So full
-of hitting Schumways you had no thought of anything
-else, weren’t you? Well, you sainted fool, what about
-that ambergris?”</p>
-
-<p>“What ambergris? Oh, Lord! the ambergris,”
-said the wretched Harman, suddenly remembering.
-“We’ve left it behind!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve left it, you mean. What would it have
-cost to have taken two Chinks down and fetched it up
-and stowed it in the boat? Not a nickel&mdash;and it
-was worth twenty thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman said nothing. The <i>Oskosh</i> was making
-her last plunge and the over-loaded boats were making
-for shore, then his face slowly brightened as the face
-of Sellers and the face of Schumways rose before him&mdash;the
-two men who had forcibly introduced him to work.
-“It was worth it,” said he; “if it was five hundred
-dollars an ounce, it was worth it.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was worth it?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Losin’ that ambergris,” replied Mr. Harman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chV' title='V: A Deal With “Plain Sailin’ Jim”'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER V.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>A DEAL WITH “PLAIN SAILIN’ JIM”</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p class='ni'>He was the only blot on the scenery, also he was
-fishing, fishing from a rock washed by water
-forty feet deep in which the coloured bream passed
-like jewels through a world of crystal.</p>
-
-<p>Matadore Island clings to its old Spanish name,
-though it is French, lying west of Vavitu in the great
-French sea territory born of the League of Nations
-that stretches now from the Marquesas to Rapa and
-from Bellinghausen to Gambier.</p>
-
-<p>It is a tiny island, too small for trade, horned
-with dangerous reefs, but beautiful with the green
-of Jack-fruit tree and coco palm, the blue of sea and
-the white of foam and coral.</p>
-
-<p>Gulls make their home on the reefs, laughing gulls
-and cormorants and great predatory gulls, sailing
-to seaward in the dawn and clanging home at night
-after a sweep of hundreds of miles to where the
-swimmer rocks show white manes, or the Skagways
-their teeth. The gulls were jeering now as the fisherman
-hauled in his line, coiled it on the coral and stood
-up, shading his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Away over the sparkling blue to s’uth’ard stood
-something that was either the fin of a sail-fish or the
-sail of a boat, something sharp and triangular, clear
-now to the sight and now half gone as the sea-dazzle
-affected the eyes of the gazer.</p>
-
-<p>He was a tall, thin man, bronzed to the colour
-of a cobnut, tattooed on the left hand in such a way
-that he seemed to wear a mitt, and his face as he
-stood straining his eyes seaward was the face of Uncle
-Sam, goatee beard and all.</p>
-
-<p>As he watched, the jaws of this individual worked
-slowly and methodically like the jaws of a cow chewing
-the cud, then as the boat’s hull showed close in and
-making for the clear passage through the reefs, he flung
-up his arms, turned, and came scrambling down over
-the coral to the salt white beach, towards which the
-boat was coming now, the sail furled, and oars out and
-straight for destruction on a rock in the fairway.
-There were only two men in her.</p>
-
-<p>“Sta’board your helm, you &mdash;&mdash; fools!” yelled
-Uncle Sam. “Cayn’t you see the sunk reef before
-your noses? <i>Sta</i>’board&mdash;that’s right.” Then a tone
-lower: “B&mdash;&mdash;y tailors!”</p>
-
-<p>He rushed out as the boat came barging on to the
-beach and seized the starboard gunnel, whilst the
-bow oar, tumbling over, seized the port, and the stern
-oar, taking to the water, clapped on; then, having
-dragged her nose well above tide-mark, they turned
-one to another for speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve been here three months and maybe
-more,” said the tall man, as they sat on the coral by
-the beach watching the boat and the strutting gulls
-and half-a-dozen stray Kanakas who had come down
-to take a peep at the strangers. “Wrecked?&mdash;nuthin’&mdash;did
-a bunk from a hooker that shoved in
-here for water an’ nuts, and here I’ve stuck, snug
-as Moses in the bulrushes, nuthin’ to pay for board
-an’ bunk, no use for a n’umbrella, place crawlin’ with
-girls, and every pa’m tree a pub, if you know how
-to make pa’m toddy&mdash;name’s Keller, and what might
-your’n be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mine’s Harman,” said the bigger and broader of
-the strangers, “and this is Bud Davis. Reckon
-we’ve run more’n three hundred miles in that boat,
-steerin’ by our noses and blind as ballyhoos&mdash;and as to
-where we’ve come from&mdash;well, that’s a matter of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I ain’t askin’ no questions!” cut in the
-tall man. “It’s nuthin’ to me if you stole your boat
-or had her give you, or whether you come from Noumea
-or the Noo Jerusalem. I’m ‘Plain Sailin’ Jim,’ I
-am, straight with them that’s straight with me, hungerin’
-for the sight of a white mug, and fed up with
-chocolate biscuits. ‘Plain Sailin’ Jim,’ that’s me,
-and smilin’ I am to welcome gentlemen like yourselves
-to this virgin home of palm toddy and polygamy.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of truck is that?” asked the ingenuous
-Harman.</p>
-
-<p>But Keller did not hear him, he had risen to chase
-some Kanaka children away from the boat; then,
-hitching up his trousers, he led the way through the
-trees to the grass-thatched village where the little
-houses stood bowered with yellow cassi and blue-blazing
-convolvulus, and where at the door of the
-biggest and newest house his chief wife sat preparing
-kava in a bowl of stone.</p>
-
-<p>They dined off baked pig, taro, palm salad, and palm
-toddy in a twilight through which rays from the
-thatch pierced like golden needles, and as they ate
-they could see through the door space the village
-with its tree-ferns and thatched houses, the children
-playing in the sun, and the men lazing in the shade.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t no use for work and ain’t no use for fightin’,”
-said Keller, referring to the men of the village.
-“Chawin’ bananas and fishin’ is all they’re good for,
-bone-lazy lot. I’ll larn them!”</p>
-
-<p>Two or three of his wives served the dinner and
-prepared the palm toddy; then, after the dishes had
-been removed, Keller, the toddy mounting to his head,
-beat another wife who had dared to poke a hole in
-the wall to peep at the strangers, kicked a dog that
-got in his way, raised Cain all down the street with a
-four-foot length of bamboo, and fell like a log dead
-asleep under the shade of a Jack-fruit tree.</p>
-
-<p>“There ain’t no flies on old man Keller,” said Billy
-Harman to Bud Davis, as they walked next morning
-in the sun on the beach. “I tell you I like that
-chap.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meaning Keller?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jumping Moses!&mdash;and what do you like about
-him?” asked the astonished Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Harman, “takin’ him by and large,
-he seems to me a trustable chap&mdash;goin’ by what he
-says. It’s straight out and have done with it when
-he’s talkin’, same as when he’s kickin’ a Kanaka. I
-likes him because there ain’t nothin’ hidden about
-him&mdash;look at all them wives of his and he ownin’ up
-to them without a wink. ‘“Plain Sailin’ Jim,”
-that’s my name,’ says he, ‘straight with them that’s
-straight and crooked with them that’s crooked.’ You
-heard him&mdash;and that’s his label or I’m a digger Injin.
-No, there ain’t no flies on Keller.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I heard him,” said Davis, “and taking him
-by and large I’d label him the king of the yeggmen,
-hot from yeggtown. No, sir, you don’t take in Bud
-Davis with artificial flies and that chap may ‘Plain
-Sailin’ Jim’ himself to the last holoo of the last trumpet,
-but he won’t put the hood on chaps that have eyes
-in their heads, nor noses to sniff a rotten character.”</p>
-
-<p>“There you go,” said Harman, “startin’ out after
-your own ideas and chasin’ them till they look like
-a man. Think bad of a chap and he’ll look bad&mdash;that’s
-my motto, and I’m not goin’ to think bad of
-Keller.”</p>
-
-<p>But Davis had lost interest in Keller. Something
-out at sea had caught his eye, and taking Harman
-by the arm, he pointed over the dead calm water.</p>
-
-<p>“Look there,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, shading his eyes, looked in the direction
-indicated.</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t the pa’m toddy, is it?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said the other, “it’s a craft of some sort or
-another; what do you make of her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nuthin’, she ain’t nacheral&mdash;looks like a cross
-between Noah’s ark an’ a floatin’ hayrick rigged with
-a double set of masts and a&mdash;&mdash; Why, Lord bless
-my soul if she ain’t a junk, a junk and a schooner lashed
-together, that’s what she is, derelick and driftin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Davis, his mind jumping at once to
-the truth. “Call Keller&mdash;run and roust him out.
-Here he comes. Keller, hi, Keller! Ship drifting
-out beyond the reefs. Look sharp!” He had no
-need to give directions. Like a vulture scenting a
-carcass, Keller came swooping, shaded his eyes and
-stood.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a junk and schooner,” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“<i>Bêche-de-mer</i> boat or opium smuggler,” said
-Keller, “and they’re both abandoned and driftin’.
-There’s pickin’s here, boys. After me!” He raced
-down to the beach, followed by the others, to where
-the boat was hauled up, they pushed her out and, Keller
-steering, made through the fairway, past the submerged
-rock towards the open sea.</p>
-
-<p>Not a breath of wind stirred the swell to break
-the shimmering reflections of the spars and sails of
-the locked ships. Stem to stern they lay, the junk
-spars locked in the rigging of the schooner, the two
-great eyes painted on the Chinaman’s bows staring
-straight at the oncoming boat. Round and about the
-deserted ships fins moved and grey forms glided in the
-green&mdash;sharks. On the smooth water, the letters
-on the counter repainted the name of the schooner,
-<i>Haliotis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Keller gave the order to lay in the oars, and they
-came duddering along the schooner’s side, Harman
-standing up. He seized one of the stanchions of the
-rail and was about to hoist himself on deck when
-Keller bade him stop.</p>
-
-<p>“A minit,” said Keller, “who’s to tell it’s not a
-trap. Claw on and listen.”</p>
-
-<p>The cry of a far-off gull on the reefs came, and the
-creak and grind of the ships’ sides as the swell lifted
-them. No other sound but the occasional click of
-the rudder chain as the rudder of the schooner shifted
-with the heave and fall of the hull.</p>
-
-<p>Then, sure of themselves, with the cry of predatory
-animals, they tumbled on board, fastened up and
-scattered, Bud and Billy over the decks of the schooner,
-Keller, led by some vulturous instinct, on to the junk.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s a stiff,” shouted Harman as Davis followed
-him forward towards a bundle lying by the galley.
-“Lord, <i>ain’t</i> he a stiff? Head split with a hatchet.
-Here’s two more.” He pointed to a foot protruding
-from the galley, where lay a Chink and a white man,
-both very stiff indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, turning and quite unconcerned, they came
-racing aft and down through the companion-way to
-the little cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Here everything was quiet and trim; on the table
-under the swinging lamp lay a soap dish and shaving
-brush and razor. Someone had been shaving himself
-before the little mirror on the after bulkhead when
-whatever happened had begun to happen. In the
-after cabin, presumably the captain’s, the bunk bedding
-showed just as the sleeper had left it when he turned
-out. Then they set to and rooted round, the instinct
-for plunder so strong on them that they forgot Keller,
-the stiffs, the tragedy and the very place where they
-were.</p>
-
-<p>They found a gold watch and chain which Harman
-put in his pocket, and a gold ring and fountain pen
-which Davis promptly annexed, they found the log,
-which, being written in Spanish, was useless to them,
-and the ship’s money, a big chamois leather chinking
-bag of Australian sovereigns. This glorious find
-recalled Keller.</p>
-
-<p>“Bud,” said Billy, “this h’ain’t nothing to do with
-<i>him</i>; hide them, swaller them; here, give me your
-handkerchief and take half, tie them up tight so’s
-they won’t chink. I’ll keep my lot in the bag. He
-won’t guess nothin’, he’ll think the chows have cleared
-the place&mdash;ain’t nothin’ more to take, is there? Then
-come ’long and have a squint at the lazarette.”</p>
-
-<p>The lazarette was full of food, all sorts of canned
-things; then, hearing Keller’s voice above, up they
-came demure as cats out of a dairy to find the long man
-waving his arms like a windmill. His goatee beard
-was sticking out like a brush and his eyes flaming.</p>
-
-<p>“Dope!” cried Keller. “Boys, our fortunes is
-made. Canton opium, blue label tins and worth two
-thousand dollars if it’s worth a jitney. Kim along
-down and howk them out.” He led the way on to the
-junk’s deck and below to the awful interior smelling
-of opium, joss sticks, stale fish and shark oil; there on
-the floor in the dismal twilight lay the tins arranged
-by Keller in a heap.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon,” said Keller, “the schooner either went
-for the chows or the chows for the schooner. Maybe
-they all killed each other, or maybe the chaps that
-were left took fright seein’ a cruiser or fancyin’ one&mdash;reckon
-that was the way, for there ain’t no boats left,
-but the dinghy. Well, it’s all a durn sea mystery,
-and I’ve seen queerer&mdash;but there’s the dope, come
-along and hoist it.”</p>
-
-<p>They brought the tins up and over to the schooner’s
-deck, got a tarpaulin and tied them up in it, and
-then, and not till then, took stock of their position.
-The drift of the current had left the island a good way
-to the south, but there it lay green, lovely and inviting,
-the glassy swell pearling round the coral.</p>
-
-<p>Keller, turning from the opium tins to this picture,
-gazed for a moment, his jaws working in contemplation.
-Then he turned to the others.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys,” said Keller, “it’s either go back or stick.
-I’m for sticking, if there’s water and grub enough
-on board. You see, if we take this dope back ashore,
-we won’t never be able to realise on it; any ship takin’
-us off will say, ‘What’s in that bundle?’ and there
-won’t be no use sayin’ it’s bibles. Whereas if we can
-make a port in this hooker we can claim salvage, and
-leavin’ that alone we can ten to one get rid of the
-dope.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s grub enough,” said Davis, “to judge by
-the lazarette, and there’s pretty sure to be enough
-water&mdash;two minutes will tell, but first, let’s get those
-stiffs overboard. No use putting sinkers to them, the
-sharks will finish them before they’ve sunk a fathom.”</p>
-
-<p>Twenty minutes later the decision was come to and
-the boat got on board.</p>
-
-<p>They had found water and food enough for months,
-it only wanted a breeze to break the ships apart,
-and Keller reckoned that the three of them would be
-able to manage the schooner. Davis was a fair navigator,
-the charts and compass had not been damaged
-or removed, and with Matadore for a point of departure
-they ought to be able to reach the Fijis. So it was
-settled.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, leaning on the rail when the decision was
-come to, fancied that he could hear a whisper from
-the beach of the far-away island, the whisper of the
-swell breaking on the coral where the wives of Keller
-were no doubt congregated, abandoned&mdash;chucked away
-for the prospect of a fistful of dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The drift of the current was so strong that before
-sunset Matadore had all but vanished, washed away
-in the blue that stretched from infinity to infinity,
-terrific in its calm.</p>
-
-<p>The Pacific slept, and the slumber of this giant
-when sleep takes it in deadly earnest is more trying
-to the imagination than its fury and storm, an effect
-produced perhaps by the heave of the endless swell
-flooding up from nowhere passing to nowhere, through
-space and time.</p>
-
-<p>But the crew of the <i>Haliotis</i> were not imaginative
-men, and they had other calls upon their consideration.
-It was at the first meal on board that the junk began
-to whisper of its presence. Harman had brewed
-some tea, and they were seated round the table in the
-saloon when Davis, looking up from his plate to the
-open skylight, sniffed the air.</p>
-
-<p>“That junk whiffs,” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>It was enough. Harman for a moment turned his
-head as though he was straining to listen, and Keller
-glanced towards the door, then they went on with
-their food, but the mischief was done and from that
-on the junk was with them.</p>
-
-<p>It was not so much the badness of the smell as the
-faintness and the Chinese nature of it that produced
-the psychological effect&mdash;it was a scent, a perfume of
-which shark liver oil was the vehicle and the occupants
-joss-sticks, opium and the musk of Chinks. It haunted
-their sleep that night and was only dispelled when
-next morning Keller, who had gone on deck, came
-shouting down the hatch that the wind was coming.</p>
-
-<p>They had taken the sails off the junk the night
-before, finding a hatchet&mdash;it was stained with something
-that was not red paint&mdash;they hacked off the
-entangling spar, then, the wind coming, fortunately,
-on the junk’s side, the sails of the <i>Haliotis</i> trembled,
-the main boom lashed out to port and Davis springing
-to the wheel turned the spokes.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the Chinaman seemed to cling to its
-departing companion, wallowed, slobbered, groaned,
-and with a last roll dunched in ten feet of the starboard
-rail, then it drew away as the great sail pressure
-of the <i>Haliotis</i> heeled the schooner to port.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re free,” shouted Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Hr&mdash;good riddance!” cried Keller, raising his
-fist as if to strike at the departing one, now well astern,
-and spitting into the water as if to get the taste of her
-from his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as Davis steered and the foam fled astern,
-the wind, taking the high poop of the junk, slewed her
-round bow towards them, and showing the great
-staring, malignant eyes. It was actually as if she
-had turned to watch them.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at her!” cried Billy, “turnin’ her snout to
-watch us; she’ll follow us now sure as certain, we won’t
-have no luck now, we’ll be had somehow or ’nuther,
-and maybe over that dope! Bud, where was your
-brains you didn’t think of holin’ and sinkin’ her?
-Why, if it ain’t anything else we can be had for leavin’
-her a-floatin’ derelick and a danger to navigation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, “you and your derelicts.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Haliotis</i> was a schooner of some hundred and
-twenty tons, and three men can work a schooner of a
-hundred and twenty tons across big tracts of ocean if
-they have fine weather, if they have no fear, if they
-don’t bother to keep a look-out or attend to the hundred
-and twenty little duties of ordinary ship life. Harman,
-Bud and Keller filled this bill admirably. The wind
-changing and blowing from the sou’-east, they ran
-before it, ran with no man at the wheel, wheel lashed,
-head sheets taut, mainboom guyed to port, and never
-a mishap.</p>
-
-<p>They ought to have gone to the bottom, you say;
-they ought, but they didn’t. The wind changed
-instead, for the Paumotus, though far to the eastward,
-still reached them with their disturbing spell breeding
-unaccountable influence on wind and weather.</p>
-
-<p>Harman had counted up the sovereigns in the
-chamois leather bag&mdash;there were a hundred and twelve.
-In a private conference with Davis below, Keller
-taking the deck and the wheel, he settled up with
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Better split the money now,” said Harman,
-“hundred and twelve I’ve got, what’s your?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ninety,” said Davis promptly.</p>
-
-<p>Harman was shocked. He’d reckoned that Davis’s
-share was bigger than his own or he wouldn’t have been
-so eager to settle up.</p>
-
-<p>“Count ’em,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Davis produced the knotted handkerchief and
-counted the contents. There were only ninety unless
-he had subtracted and hidden some, as seemed probable,
-for at the rough division when they had split the
-coins into two supposedly equal shares, Davis’s had
-seemed the bigger.</p>
-
-<p>Harman, pretty sure of this, felt sore; certain of
-coming out equal in the deal he had run straight.
-However, he settled up without a murmur and
-pocketed the bag in a hurry, hearing Keller’s voice
-calling for Davis to take the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>Though it was a Spanish ship, to judge by the log,
-not a single Spanish or French coin was included in
-the ship’s money, indicating that her trade had been
-British; papers other than the log there were none;
-perhaps the skipper had them on his person when the
-Chinks had killed him and hove him to the sharks&mdash;no
-one could tell, and the Harman syndicate didn’t
-bother.</p>
-
-<p>They had other things to think of. One morning
-when all three were on deck, Keller having come up to
-relieve Harman at the wheel, the latter, who had been
-turning things over in his mind, gave it as his opinion
-that the position might be pretty rocky if on striking
-the Fijis “one of them d&mdash;&mdash;d British brass-bound
-Port Authority chaps” were to turn rusty on the
-business. “Suppose we run for Suva,” said he,
-“and suppose they say we don’t believe your yarn?
-That’s what’s got into my head. Would anyone
-believe it? I ask you that, would anyone believe it?”</p>
-
-<p>The others, suddenly struck by this point of view,
-ruminated for a moment. No. The thing was true
-enough, but it didn’t sound true. They had lifted
-the hatch during the calm and found the cargo to be
-copra. What was a copra schooner doing seized on
-to a Chinaman, everyone dead and all the rest of it?
-Stranger happenings had occurred at sea, ships found
-derelict with not a soul on board, yet in perfect order&mdash;but
-that was no explanation or support for a yarn
-that seemed too tough for an alligator to swallow.</p>
-
-<p>Then there was the opium&mdash;suspicion meant search,
-and those cans of opium would not help them any;
-on top of all there was the money in the pockets of
-Bud and Billy, money that even Keller knew nothing
-about, but sure to be found on search.</p>
-
-<p>“We ain’t nothing to show,” said Harman. “We
-should have kept one of them Chinks for evidence.”</p>
-
-<p>“And how’d we have kept him?” said Davis,
-“put him in your bunk maybe&mdash;Why haven’t you
-more sense?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got it, boys,” said Keller, turning suddenly
-from the lee rail where he had been leaning. “Suva&mdash;nothin’.
-Opalu’s our port of call, ain’t more than
-four hundred miles to the north if our reckonin’s
-right. Big German island where the pearl chaps come
-for doing business and the Chinks and Malays fr’m
-as far as Java and beyond there. <i>Rao Laut’s</i> the name
-the Malays give it. Faked pearls and poached pearls
-and dope, it’s all the same to them&mdash;they’d buy the
-huffs an’ horns off Satan and sell ’em as goat’s. There’s
-nothin’ you couldn’t sell them but bibles, and there’s
-nothin’ you could sell them they can’t pass on through
-some ring or another. I tell you it’s a place, must have
-been plum crazy not to have thought of it before.”</p>
-
-<p>“And suppose they ask questions?” said Billy.</p>
-
-<p>“They never ask questions at Rao Laut,” said
-Keller. “If there happens to be a doctor there, he
-comes aboard to see you haven’t smallpox. If there
-isn’t, he doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Keller was right, the big German island was the
-spot of spots for them. They wanted no seaboard
-ports, no big island ports where English was talked
-and questions were sure to be asked. Salving a
-derelict in the Pacific means months and maybe
-years waiting for your salvage money, especially if
-she is a foreigner, that is to say anything that hails from
-anywhere that is not the British Empire or America.
-They did not want to wait months or years, their lives
-were spent in the grip of events, and in even a month
-it was hard to say where any one of them might be
-from Hull to Hakodate. No, they did not reckon on
-salvage money, and they did not want inquiries.
-They would have piled her on the Bishop, that great
-rock right in their track and south of Laut, only for the
-dope. It was impossible to bring those tins into any
-port in an open boat.</p>
-
-<p>At Laut it would be easy to get the stuff landed in
-one of the canoes or sampans always plying in the
-bay&mdash;the only question was a buyer, and Keller said
-he would easily find that.</p>
-
-<p>The first they knew of the island was a perfume
-of cassi coming through a dawn that having lazily
-snuffed out a star or two, simply leapt on the sea;
-a crimson and old gold dawn trailed with a smoke
-cloud like the fume of joss-sticks, cloud that broke to
-form flying flamingoes that were shot to pieces by
-sunrays from a sun bursting up into a world of stainless
-azure.</p>
-
-<p>The island lay right before them, a high island with
-broken reefs to east and west and clear water all to the
-south, where beyond the anchorage and the beach lay
-the town wherein the four copra traders of Laut
-carried on their trade and the Japanese and Chinese
-pearl merchants and the Australian and Californian
-turtle shell buyers foregathered at the so-called club
-kept by Hans Reichtbaum.</p>
-
-<p>In the bay were two schooners, a brigantine and
-some small craft at moorings, and somewhere about
-nine o’clock the <i>Haliotis</i>, moving like a swan across
-the breeze-ruffled blue, dropped her anchor in twenty
-fathoms, a far faint echo from the woods following
-the rasp of her chain.</p>
-
-<p>That was all the welcome Rao Laut gave her when
-Reichtbaum, in pyjamas, shading his eyes on the
-club veranda, watched her swing to her moorings and
-returned to his breakfast wondering what sort of
-customers the newcomers would turn out.</p>
-
-<p>It was their second night at Laut, and Bud and
-Billy leaning on the after rail of the <i>Haliotis</i> were
-contemplating the lights on shore. A tepid wind
-from the sea fanned their cheeks and against the wind
-the island breathed at them like a bouquet.</p>
-
-<p>In two days they had taken the measure of the place
-and plumbed its resources, and the brain of Keller
-working swiftly and true to form had rejected all
-possible avenues for opium trade but one&mdash;Reichtbaum.</p>
-
-<p>At the first sight of the German, Keller’s instinct
-had told him that here was his man.</p>
-
-<p>Keller had no money to spend on drinks at the club,
-and it was Harman’s torture that, with his pocket
-bulging with gold, he could not lay out a cent, but
-Reichtbaum had stood drinks yesterday, scenting
-business from a few words dropped by Keller.</p>
-
-<p>This evening at sundown Keller had gone alone,
-taking a single can of opium with him and rowing
-himself ashore in the dinghy. Bud and Billy were
-waiting for his return. They saw the lights of the
-club and the lights of the village winking and blinking,
-as the intervening foliage stirred in the wind, then on
-the starlit water they saw a streak like the trail of a
-water-rat. It was the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>Keller came on board triumphant and without the
-tin. Not a word would he say till they were down
-below, then, taking his seat at the saloon table, he let
-himself go.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at me,” said he, “sober, ain’t I? Fit to
-thread a needle or say ‘J’rus’lem artichoke,’ don’t
-you think? And he fired the stuff at me, rum an’
-gum and coloured drinks and fizz at the last, but I
-wasn’t havin’ any, bisness is bisness, I says, and I
-ain’t playin’ a lone hand, I’ve pardners to think of,
-‘Plain Sailin’ Jim’s’ my name, and if you don’t pay
-two hundred dollars a tin I’ll plain sail off an’ dump
-the stuff out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Two hundred dollars!” said the others in admiration.
-“You had the cheek to ask him that?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” replied Keller, “and I got it.” He
-produced notes for two hundred dollars and spread
-them on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“He opened the stuff and sampled it and planked
-the money down, and two hundred dollars he’ll pay
-for every can, and there’s fourteen of them left, that’s
-three thousand dollars for the lot. We’ve only to
-take them ashore to get the money. Well now, seems
-to me since that’s fixed, we have to think what to do
-with the schooner. We don’t want to sit here in this
-b’nighted hole twiddlin’ our thumbs and waitin’ to be
-took off, more especial as I don’t trust Reichtbaum
-any too much, and it seems to me our plan is to stick
-to the hooker and take her right to a Dutch port and
-sell the cargo, copra prices are rangin’ high&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Steady on,” suddenly cut in Harman. “Why,
-you said yourself we couldn’t take her to any port,
-seein’ we have no papers but what’s made out in
-Spanish, and no crew.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just so,” said Keller. “It was the crew that was
-botherin’ me more than the papers, but how about
-a crew of Kanakas now we have the money to pay for
-them?”</p>
-
-<p>Davis hit the table with his fist. “By Gosh, there’s
-something in that,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“M’r’over,” said Keller, “I can get six chaps for
-five dollars ahead advance. There’s more’n half a
-dozen schooner Kanakas kickin’ their heels on the beach
-waitin’ for a job. I can get them on board to-morrow,
-and all the fruit and water we want for ten dollars to
-the chaps that bring it on board. Then, you see, a
-copra schooner comin’ into a Dutch port manned by
-Kanakas there won’t be no bother. Dutchmen don’t
-know Spanish, nor they won’t care, we’re in from the
-islands, and we’ve left our Spanish chaps sick at Laut&mdash;if
-there’s any questions, which there won’t be.”</p>
-
-<p>“When can we be off?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“To-morrow afternoon, if we’re slick about gettin’
-the water and bananas on board,” said Keller. “Then
-when we’re all ready for sailin’ we’ll take the dope
-cans to Reichtbaum and get the money. We won’t
-do that till last thing, for fear he’d play us some trick
-or another. I’m none too sure of Germans.”</p>
-
-<p>Next morning at six the work began, Davis and
-Harman going ashore to hire the Kanakas and see
-about the water and provisions, Keller remaining on
-board to clear up the ship and get the fo’c’sle in order.</p>
-
-<p>Boat-loads of fruit were brought off, the newly hired
-Kanakas helping, enough bananas to feed them for a
-month, taro, bread-fruit and a dozen fowl in a crate,
-price three dollars. The water casks were filled, and
-by four o’clock, with the promise of a steady wind off
-shore, the <i>Haliotis</i>, with canvas raised, was ready to
-sail and the crew on board.</p>
-
-<p>Keller had brought up the opium tins in their tarpaulin
-wrapper.</p>
-
-<p>“Be sure and count over the dollars,” said he to
-Davis, as the cans were lowered into the dinghy, “and
-don’t take no drinks from him&mdash;if he gets you on the
-booze, we’re done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Him and his booze,” said Harman, as they shoved
-off. “Same as if we’re childer&mdash;&mdash;. Lay into it,
-Bud.”</p>
-
-<p>The nose of the dinghy grounded on the soft sand,
-some native boys helped to run her up, and getting
-the cans out, they started up the beach towards the
-club.</p>
-
-<p>It was a heavy load, but they managed the journey
-without stopping; Reichtbaum was waiting for them
-on the veranda and, lending a hand, they brought the
-treasure through the bar into a private room at the
-back, a room furnished with native made chairs and
-tables, a roll-top desk and a portrait of the German
-Emperor on the wall opposite the window.</p>
-
-<p>“So,” said Reichtbaum, “that is accomplished.
-And now, gentlemen, what will you have to drink?”</p>
-
-<p>“Highball for me,” said Harman, “if it’s all the
-same to you. What’s yours, Bud?”</p>
-
-<p>“Same as yours,” said Davis, wiping his mouth
-with the back of his hand, and then these worthies
-sat whilst Reichtbaum went into the bar and returned
-with a syphon of soda and a whisky bottle and then
-went out again and returned with three glasses, and
-then fishing a cigar-box from a shelf, handed out
-cigars.</p>
-
-<p>The syphon whizzed and the fumes of tobacco rose.</p>
-
-<p>Two highballs vanished, and nearly half an hour of
-precious time sped with conversation, ranging from
-the German Emperor to the morals of the ladies of Laut.</p>
-
-<p>Then Davis turned to reality. “S’pose we get on
-with this business of the dope,” said he. “Three
-thousand dollars it was, Mr. Keller was saying&mdash;and
-we ought to be going.”</p>
-
-<p>He rose from his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“To be sure,” said Reichtbaum, rising also.
-“Three thousand dollars vas agreed. Now for der
-dope.”</p>
-
-<p>He took a clasp-knife from his pocket, knelt down
-and cut the rope binding the tarpaulin, rooted it open,
-put in his hand and produced a tin of bully beef. He
-flung the tarpaulin wide and tins tumbled out on the
-floor, canned tomatoes mostly&mdash;there was a large
-stock of them on the <i>Haliotis</i>. Bud and Billy, petrified
-with amazement as Reichtbaum himself, stood without
-a word, till Harman found speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, we’re done,” cried Harman. “Fried and
-dished by Keller.” He turned, made for the door and
-rushed through the bar on to the veranda.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Haliotis</i> with swelled sails and steered by
-“Plain Sailin’ Jim” and his new Kanaka crew was not
-only at sea, but far at sea; she had dropped her
-anchor chain most likely directly they had vanished
-into the club, or maybe even she had taken the anchor
-in, Keller cynically sure that falling to drinks, they
-would hear nothing of the winch.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it might have been worse,” said Bud that
-night as they sat smoking on the beach. “He’s got
-the dope and the cargo and the ship and the crew, but
-we ain’t destitute. We’ve got the sovereigns. But
-what gets me is the fact that he’ll net all of ten thousand
-dollars when he’s sold off that copra and the opium,
-to say nothing of the hull. Maybe twenty thousand.
-Oh, he’ll do it and strand those poor devils of Kanakas
-Lord knows where.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman took out the watch belonging to the captain
-of the <i>Haliotis</i> from his pocket, and looked at it
-gloomily. Then as a child comforts itself with its
-toys, he took the chamois leather bag of sovereigns
-from his pocket and began to count over the coins.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not botherin’ about that,” said he, “what gets
-me, is the fac’ that he’s run crooked with us.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis, looking at the coins and remembering the
-watch and fountain pen, to say nothing of the coins
-in his own pocket, smiled darkly. He was about to
-remark that if Keller had run crooked with them,
-they had run pretty crooked with Keller, but knowing
-the mentality of his companion, he saved his breath
-and lit his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what gets me,” said Billy, serious as a
-deacon and evidently brooding over the sins of the
-other and shovelling the sovereigns back into the bag,
-“it ain’t the dope he’s diddled us out of, nor the
-schooner, which I hopes he’ll bust on a rock, him and
-his Kanakas, it’s the fac’ that he’s took me in, in my
-opinions. I reckoned that chap was a white man, I’d
-a trusted that man with my second last dollar and
-wouldn’t have wanted to tie no string to it, neither.
-Outspoken and free he was with his conversation and
-hidin’ and holin’ in his ways&mdash;’nough to make a chap
-bank for the rest of his natural on hearses an’ deaf
-mutes. That’s how I’m feelin’. No, sir, it ain’t the
-dope he’s diddled us out of, nor the&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shut up,” said Davis, and turning on his side
-and lighting his pipe, he led the conversation towards
-the club, the excellence of its whisky and the morals
-of the ladies of Laut.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chVI' title='VI: Pearls of Great Price!'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VI.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>PEARLS OF GREAT PRICE!</span>
-</h2>
-
-<p class='ni'>Mambaya is a French island.</p>
-
-<p>Fancy a white French gunboat in a blue,
-blue bay, surf creaming on a new moon beach, and a
-coloured town tufted with flame trees and gum trees
-and rocketing palms. Purple mountains in the
-dazzling azure and a perfume of red earth and roses
-mixed with the perfume of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Paumotuan pearl getters haunt Mambaya, brown-skinned
-men who have been diving half a year or have
-captured in half a day the wherewithal for a spree,
-and on the beach when a ship comes in you will find
-the Chinese pearl buyers waiting for the pearl men,
-cigar coloured girls with liquid brown eyes, the keeper
-of the roulette table in Mossena Street and Fouqui,
-the seller of oranges, pines, bananas and custard
-fruit.</p>
-
-<p>But Mambaya does not exist entirely on pearls.
-The island is rich in produce and it is a beauty spot.
-Great white yachts drop in and anchor, steamers
-bring tourists, and on this same lovely beach where
-they used to boil local missionaries in the old days,
-you can hear the band playing at night in the Place
-Canrobert, where the two hotels are situated and where
-at marble-topped tables the tourists are taking their
-coffee and liqueurs.</p>
-
-<p>From the island of Laut away down south where
-the bad men live, came one day to the beach of Mambaya
-two men of the sea, ragged and tanned, with
-their pockets stuffed with gold and hungering for
-pleasure&mdash;Bud Davis and Billy Harman, no less.</p>
-
-<p>A big Moonbeam copra boat had given them the
-lift for the sum of four pounds each, paid in bright
-Australian sovereigns, but she could not supply them
-with clothes. However, a Jew who came on board
-as soon as the anchor was dropped, saved them the
-indignity of being fired off the beach by the French
-authorities, and, landing in spotless white ducks, they
-strung for the nearest bar, swallowed two highballs,
-lit two cigars and came out wiping their mouths with
-the backs of their hands.</p>
-
-<p>“By golly,” said Billy, “ain’t this prime, Bud?
-Look at the place, why it’s half as big as ’Frisco,
-innocent lookin’ as Mary Ann and only sufferin’ to be
-scooped or painted red.”</p>
-
-<p>They were in the Place Canrobert where the flame
-trees grow, where the Kanaka children play naked
-in the sun and the shops expose faked Island headdresses
-and curios, imitation jewellery from Paris,
-canned salmon and Paris hats. The natives of Mambaya
-are well-to-do and spend their money freely;
-they are paid in dollars, not trade goods, and have a
-lively fancy and catholic taste.</p>
-
-<p>“If you’re starting on the painting business,”
-said Bud, “then give me notice and I’ll take myself
-off to the woods till you’re done, but I’ll warn you this
-is no place for painters and decorators. It’s a French
-Island and you’ll end your jag with a month in the cells
-or road-making.”</p>
-
-<p>“What you wants is a tub and a prayer book,”
-said the other, taking his seat at a table in front of
-the Café Continental and calling for lime juice.</p>
-
-<p>“Who was talkin’ of jags, and can’t a chap use
-a figure of speech without your jumpin’ down his
-throat? No, sir, scoopin’ is my idea. Here we are
-with our pockets full and our teeth sharp, and if we
-don’t pull off a coup in this smilin’ town where the
-folks are only standin’ about waitin’ to be took in,
-why we’d better take to knittin’ for a livin’, that’s
-my opinion.”</p>
-
-<p>A pretty native girl, all chocolate and foulard,
-passed, trailing her eyes over the pair at the table;
-she wore bangles on her arms and was carrying a
-basket of fruit.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are,” said Harman, “if the native
-‘Marys’ can dress like that, what price the top folk?
-I tell you the place is rotten with money only waitin’
-to be took. Question is, how?”</p>
-
-<p>Davis did not answer for a moment, he was watching
-an opulent looking American tourist in white drill
-who had just left the Island headdress shop across the
-way. The tourist opened a white umbrella with a
-green inside and passed away towards the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“No-how,” said Davis, “unless you set to work
-and open a shop or something, you can’t skin a town
-like this same as a pearl lagoon. If you want money
-here, you’ll have to work blame hard for it buying
-and selling against chaps that are bred to the business
-better than you&mdash;that’s civilisation.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dam civilisation!” said Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Unless,” continued Davis, “you can fake up some
-swindle or another&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’&mdash;&mdash;” said Harman, “I’m agin that sort
-of game as you ought to know, seein’ you know me.
-No, sir, I don’t want no first class ticket to Noumea.
-Straight as a gun barrel is what I want to run, but I’ve
-no objections to putting a few slugs in the gun. It’s
-just crawlin’ into my head that a syndicate is what
-we want.”</p>
-
-<p>“And what the devil do you want a syndicate
-for?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s this way,” said Billy. “A matter
-of ten years or so ago in the ’Frisco elections, I was
-in with Haffernan, Slungshot Haffernan, the chap
-that was tried for the killin’ of Duffy Stevens at San
-Leandro which he did, but got off owin’ to an alibi.
-Well, I’m tellin’ you. My job was fillin’ the ’lectors
-with gin an’ gettin’ them to the polls before they’d
-lost the use of their pins and swearin’ false evidence
-and such on, which wasn’t what a chap would do only
-in ’lection times.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, a month or so after, Haffernan he got
-up a syndicate to run a guano island he’d got the
-location of and which wasn’t there, and I put fifty
-dollars into it and fifty other mugs did ditto and
-Haff pouched the coin and turned it over to his wife
-and went bankrupt or somethin’, anyhow he had
-the coin and we were left blowin’ our fingers. Now
-you listen to me. How about that pearl island Mandelbaum
-kicked us off? We’ve got the location. How
-about sellin’ it to a syndicate?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your syndicate?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said Billy, “but it seems to me
-it’s to be found for lookin’ in a place like this where
-you see chaps like that guy with the white umbrella.
-I saw his Siamese twin on the beach when we landed
-with a diamond the size of a decanter stopper in his
-shirt front and that Jew chap that sold us the clothes
-told me there’s no end of Americans come here rotten
-with money, to say nothing of Britishers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Davis, “even supposing you get your
-syndicate, what about Mandelbaum? He’s got a
-lease of the island and would hoof you and your
-syndicate into the sea if you showed a nose in the
-lagoon.”</p>
-
-<p>“He said he had a lease,” replied Harman, “but
-he never showed a line of writin’ and I believe he was
-a liar, but I wasn’t proposin’ to go there, only to sell
-the location; if he hoofs the syndicate into the sea,
-why, it’s their look-out. If they ain’t fools they’ll
-hoof him in first, lease or no lease, and collar the pearls
-he’s been takin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“What I like about you is your consistency,” said
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” asked Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“The way you stick to your guns. You’re always
-preaching that it’s best to run straight and then
-you turn up an idea like that. Nice straight sort of
-business, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“As straight as a gun barrel,” said Harman enthusiastically.
-“You can’t be had no how, not by all
-the lawyers from here to Oskosh. Y’see, if chaps
-are mugs enough to pay coin down for a location you’re
-free to take their coin. That’s good United States
-law. I had it from Lawyer Burstall when we got
-stung over the Haffernan business. He’s a toughs’
-lawyer, long thin chap, not enough fat on him to
-grease the hinges of a pair of scissors, and cute enough to
-skin Jim Satan if he got a fair grip of his tail.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Davis, “anyhow before you start
-in on any of your games, we’ve got to get lodgings.
-I’m not going to fling my coin away on one of these
-hotel sharps and we’ve got to get some dunnage to
-show up with. That Jew chap told me where we could
-get rooms cheap, last house end of town on right-hand
-side and with a big tree fern in the garden.”</p>
-
-<p>Living is cheap in Mambaya, where people mostly
-subsist on coco-nut milk and fried bananas, where you
-can get a hundred eggs for half a dollar and a chicken
-for a quarter. If you are an æsthete you can almost
-live on the scenery alone, on the sun, on the unutterably
-blue sky that roofs you between the rains. But Billy
-and his companion had little use for scenery, and after
-a week of lounging on the beach, wandering about the
-town and watching the natives surf bathing off Cape
-Huane, life began to pall on them.</p>
-
-<p>They were not fools enough to drink, and if they
-had been, the bar of the Café Continental, white-painted,
-cold, correct, served by a white-coated bar
-tender who could talk nothing but Bêche-de-mer
-French, would have choked them off. There was
-not the ghost of a sign of a syndicate to be developed,
-nor of trade of any sort to be done.</p>
-
-<p>They visited the roulette shop, where the keeper
-of the table allowed them to win some forty dollars
-which they promptly departed with, never to return.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve skinned the cream off that,” said Davis
-next morning as they lay smoking and kicking their
-heels on the sand, “and there’s not another pan of
-milk about. You see, we’re handicapped not talking
-French. Like cats in a larder with muzzles on&mdash;that’s
-about the size of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Harman assented. He took from his pocket the
-bag that held his money, nearly a hundred bright
-brass-yellow Australian sovereigns. They were on a
-secluded part of the beach with no one within eye-shot,
-and he amused himself by counting the coins and
-stacking them in little piles on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>Then he swept the coins back into the bag and
-sat up as Davis pointed seaward to where, rounding
-Cape Huane, came a white-painted steamer, the mail
-boat for Papeete and beyond.</p>
-
-<p>The whoop of her siren lashed the sleepy air and
-brought echoes from the woods and a quarter of a
-minute later a far-off whoop from the echoes in the
-hills, then down from the town and groves the beach
-began to stream with people. Kanaka children racing
-for the sea edge and fruit sellers with their baskets,
-girls fluttering foulard to the breeze and Kanaka
-bucks, naked but for a loin-cloth; then came white
-folk, Aaronson, the Jew, and the keeper of the
-Hôtel Continental, officials and a stray Chinaman or
-two.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Bud nor Billy stirred a limb till the rasp of
-the anchor chain came over the water, then getting up,
-they strolled down to the water’s edge and stood, hands
-in pockets, watching the shore boats putting out,
-boats laden with fruit, and canoes with naked Kanaka
-children ready to dive for coppers.</p>
-
-<p>Then the ship’s boat came ashore with mails and
-passengers.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t much sign of a syndicate here, neither,”
-said Harman, as he stood criticising the latter, mostly
-male tourists of the heavy globe-trotting type and
-American women with blue veils and guide books.
-“It’s the old mail-boat crowd that’s been savin’
-up for a holiday for the last seven year an’s got so in
-the habit of savin’, it’s forgot how to spend. I know
-them. Been on a mail boat once; haven’t you ever
-been on a mail boat, Bud? Then you don’t know
-nothin’ about nothin’. Half the crew is stewards
-and half the officers is dancin’ masters to judge by the
-side of them, and the blessed cargo is duds like them
-things landin’ now.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned on his heel and led the way back towards
-the town.</p>
-
-<p>As they drew along towards it, one of the passengers,
-a young, smart and natty individual carrying an
-imitation crocodile-skin handbag, overtook them,
-and Harman, greatly exercised in his mind by the bag,
-struck up a conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Air you goin’ to reside in this town, stranger?”
-asked Mr. Harman.</p>
-
-<p>“Eight hours,” replied the stranger, “boat starts
-at eight p.m. Smart’s my name, and smart’s my
-nature, and not being Methuselah, I find time an object
-in life. What, may I ask, is the population of this
-town, air there any opportunities on this island and
-what’s the condition, in your experience, of the luxury
-trades&mdash;may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dunno,” said Harman, “ain’t been here long
-enough to find out.”</p>
-
-<p>“I got landed to prospect,” went on the other,
-“I’m trading&mdash;trading in pearls. O.K. pearls. Wiseman
-and Philips is our house and our turnover is a
-million dollars in a year. Yes, sir, one million dollars.
-From Athabasca to Mexico City the females of forty-two
-states and two territories cough up one million
-dollars a year for personal adornment, and Wiseman
-and Philips does the adorning. I’m travelling the
-islands now. Well, here’s a hotel&mdash;and good day to
-you, gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p>He dived into the Continental and Harman and
-Davis walked on.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said the intrigued Harman, “it sorter
-makes one feel alive, comin’ in touch with chaps like
-that&mdash;notice the bag he was carryin’, looked as if the
-hide’d been taken off a cow that’d been skeered to
-death. I’ve seen them sort of bags before on passenger
-ships, and they always belonged to nobs. That was a
-sure enough panama he was wearin’, and did you notice
-the di’mond ring on his finger?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a damn fish-scale jewellery drummer,”
-said Davis, “out to sell dud pearls and save five dollars
-a week out of his travelling allowance, notice he never
-offered to stand drinks? The earth’s crawling with
-the likes of him, selling servant girls everything from
-dud watches to dummy gramophones.”</p>
-
-<p>But Harman was not listening, the million-dollar
-turnover, the imitation crocodile skin bag and the
-sure enough panama hat had seized on his imagination.</p>
-
-<p>It suddenly seemed to him that he had missed
-his chance, that here was the nucleus of the syndicate
-he wanted, a sharp, sure-enough American with a big
-company behind him and lots of money to burn. He
-said so, and Davis laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now get it into your head you won’t do more
-than waste your time with chaps like those,” said he.
-“Of course, they’ve got the money, but even if you
-could get to their offices and deal with them instead
-of their two-cent drummer, where’d you be? Do you
-mean to say you’d have any chance with these sharps,
-trying to sell a dud proposition to them? Why,
-when they’d took out your back teeth to see if there
-was any gold in them and stripped you to your pants,
-you wouldn’t have done with them, you’d be stuck
-for an atlas of the world, or maybe a piano organ
-on the instalment plan, givin’ them sixty per cent.
-on the takings and a mortgage on the monkey. You
-get me? Sometimes you’re sharp enough, but once
-your wits get loose, it’s away with you. This chap
-isn’t any use&mdash;forget him.”</p>
-
-<p>But Harman scarcely heard.</p>
-
-<p>If they had turned on their tracks they might have
-seen Smart, who, after a drink at the bar of the hotel,
-had started out to visit the shops, more especially
-those likely to push the sale of O.K. pearls and North
-Pole diamonds&mdash;a side line.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past four that afternoon Harman&mdash;Davis
-having gone fishing&mdash;found himself in the Continental
-bar. The place was empty, and Billy was in the act
-of paying and taking his departure when in came
-Smart.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo,” said Harman. “Have a drink?”</p>
-
-<p>They drank. Highballs first of all, and then,
-at the suggestion of Billy, who paid for drinks the
-whole of that afternoon, hopscotches, which are compounded
-of Bourbon, crushed ice, lemon peel, <i>parfait
-amour</i> and a crystallised cherry.</p>
-
-<p>At the second hopscotch the tongue of Smart was
-loosened and his words began to flow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon there’s not much to the town,”
-said Smart, “but it’s an oleograph for scenery and
-pictooresqueness; with a pier for landing and a
-bathing beach where all that fishermen’s truck and
-those canoes are, it would beat a good many places
-on the islands that don’t think five cents of themselves.
-I’ve been pushing the name of Wiseman and
-Philips into the ears of all and sundry that has got
-ears to hear with, but all such places as these is only
-seeds by the way. Chicago is our main crop an’
-Noo York, after that Pittsburg, and we’re feeling for
-London, England.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ve agents in Paris and Madrid that aren’t
-asleep, and Wiseman says before he dies he’ll put a
-rope of pearls round Mother Earth, and a North Pole
-di’mond tiara on her old head. Yes, sir. (Third
-hopscotch.) That’s what Wiseman says in his office
-and my hearing, and Philips, he helps run the luxury
-and fake leather sundry department, he said he’d fit
-her out with O de Nile coloured croc leather boots and
-a vanity bag of stamped lizard skin if the sales went
-on jumping as they were going, which was more like
-Klondike stuffed with the Arabian nights than any
-sales proposition he had ever heard, seen, dreamt or
-read of. Sales! (<i>hic</i>) as sure as there’s two cherries in
-this glass I’m holding, my orders booked in Chicago
-for pearls ending Christmas Day last was over one
-hundred thousand dollars. One hundred thousand
-dollars. But you haven’t seen our projuce.”</p>
-
-<p>He bent, picked up his bag, fumbled in it and produced
-a box and from the box a gorgeous pearl necklace.</p>
-
-<p>“Feel of those,” said Smart, “weigh them, look at
-’em, look at the grading, look at the style, look at the
-lustre and brilliancy. Could Tiffany beat them for
-twenty thousand dollars? No, sir, he couldn’t;
-they leave him way behind.”</p>
-
-<p>The dazzled Harman weighed the rope in his hand
-and returned it.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t be showin’ them sort of things in bars,”
-said he, as the other closed the box with a hiccup and
-replaced it in the bag, “but now you’ve showed me
-yours, I’ll show you mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pull ’em out,” said the other, picking up his hat,
-which he had dropped in stooping.</p>
-
-<p>“They ain’t here,” said Harman, “it’s only the
-knowledge of them I’ve got. Stranger, ’s sure as I’m
-lightin’ this cigar, I know a lagoon in an island down
-south where you can dredge up pearls same as them
-by the fist full.”</p>
-
-<p>“It must be a dam’ funny lagoon,” said the other,
-with a cynical laugh.</p>
-
-<p>Harman agreed. It was the funniest place he’d
-ever struck, he told the story of it at length and at
-large, and how Mandelbaum had kicked him and
-Davis off the atoll and how it only wanted a few bright
-chaps to hire a schooner and go down and do the same
-to Mandelbaum and take his pearls. He assured
-Smart that he&mdash;Harman&mdash;was his best friend, and
-wrote the latitude and longitude of the pearl island
-down on the back of a glossy business card of the
-drummer’s, but it did not much matter, as he wrote it
-all wrong.</p>
-
-<p>Then, all of a sudden, he was out of the bar and
-walking with Smart among palm trees. Then he was
-in the native village which lies at the back of the town,
-and they were drinking kava at the house of old
-Nadub, the kava seller, who was once a cannibal and
-boasted of the fact&mdash;kava after hopscotches!&mdash;and
-Smart was seated with his arm round the waist of
-Maiala, Nadub’s daughter, and they were both smoking
-the same cigar alternately and laughing. Nadub
-was laughing, the whole world was laughing.</p>
-
-<p>Then Mr. Harman found himself home, trying to
-explain to Davis that he had sold the pearl location to
-Smart, who was going to marry Nadub’s daughter,
-also the beauty of true love, and the fact that he could
-not unlace his boots.</p>
-
-<p>“A nice object <i>you</i> made of yourself last night,”
-said Davis next morning, standing by the mat bed
-where Harman was stretched, a jar of water beside
-him. “You and that two-cent drummer! What
-were you up to, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Harman took a pull at the jar, put his hand under
-his pillow and made sure that his money was safe, and
-then lay back.</p>
-
-<p>“Up to&mdash;where?” asked Harman, feebly.</p>
-
-<p>“Where? Why, back in the native town. You
-left that chap there, and the purser of the mail boat
-had to beat the place for him and get four roustabouts
-ashore to frog-march him to the ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Harman, “I got along with him in
-a bar, and we sat havin’ drinks, them drinks they serve
-at the Continental&mdash;Lord, Bud, I never want to see
-another cherry again, nor sniff another drop of Bourbon.
-I’m on the water-wagon for good and all.
-It ain’t worth it; I’m feelin’ worse than a Methodis’
-parson. I’m no boozer, but if I do strike the jagg by
-accident, my proper feelin’s pay me out. It’s not a
-headache, it’s the feelin’ as if a chapel minister was
-sittin’ on my chest, and I’d never get him off. Give’s
-my pants.”</p>
-
-<p>He rose, dressed, and went out. Down on the
-beach the sea breeze refreshed Mr. Harman, and life
-began to take a rosier colour. He sat on the sand,
-and taking the chamois leather bag from his pocket,
-counted the coins in it.</p>
-
-<p>The fun of the day before had cost him ten pounds!</p>
-
-<p>Ten pounds&mdash;fifty dollars&mdash;for what? Three or
-four drinks, it did not seem more, and a tongue like
-an old brown shoe. He moralised on these matters
-for a while, and then returning the coins to the bag
-and the bag to his pocket, he rose up and strolled back
-through the town, buying a drinking nut from the
-old woman at the corner of the Place Canrobert and
-refreshing himself with its contents.</p>
-
-<p>Then he wandered in the groves near the native
-village, and two hours later, Davis, seated under the
-trees of the Place Canrobert and reading a San
-Francisco paper, which the purser of the mail boat
-had left behind in the bar of the Continental, saw
-Harman approaching.</p>
-
-<p>Harman had evidently got the chapel minister off
-his chest, his chin was up, and his eyes bright. He
-sat down beside the other, laughed, slapped himself
-on the right knee and expectorated.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” said Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’,” said Harman. “Nothin’ I can tell you
-about at the minute. Say, Bud, ain’t you feelin’ it’s
-time we took the hook up and pushed? Ain’t nothin’
-more to be done here, seems to me, and I’ve got a
-plan.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your plan?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s more’n a plan. I’ve been thinkin’ quick
-and come to the conclusion that we’ve got to get out
-of here, pronto, get me? More’n that, we’ve got to
-make for Rarotambu, that’s the German island between
-here and Papeete.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why the deuce d’you want to go there?” asked
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s money waitin’ for us there,” replied
-Harman, “and I don’t want to touch at no French
-island.”</p>
-
-<p>Davis put his paper behind him and filled a pipe.
-He knew that when Harman had one of his mysterious
-fits on, there was sure to be something behind it, some
-rotten scheme or another too precious to be disclosed
-till ripe. But he was willing enough to leave Mambaya
-and made no objections.</p>
-
-<p>“How are you going to get down to Rarotambu,”
-he asked, “s’posing we decide to go?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve worked out that,” said Harman. “You know
-that copra schooner that’s been filling up in the bay?
-She’s off to ’Frisco, touching at Papeete, leavin’ to-night.
-Wayzegoose, he’s her skipper, I met him ten
-minutes ago when I was workin’ out my plans, and
-he’ll turn aside for us and drop us at Rarotambu for
-two hundred dollars, passage money.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Davis. “Him and his old cockroach
-trap, why, I’d get a passage on the mail boat
-for a hundred dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Harman, “but I don’t want no mail
-boats nor no Papeetes, neither. What are you kickin’
-at? I’ll pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll come along if you’re set on it,” said Bud,
-“but I’m hanged if I see your drift. What’s the
-hurry, anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind that,” replied Harman, “there’s
-hurry enough if you knew. There’s a cable from here
-to Papeete, ain’t there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well never you mind the hurry till we’re clear of
-this place. Put your trust in your Uncle Billy, and
-he’ll pull you through. You’ve laughed at me before
-for messin’ deals, said I’d no sort of headpiece to
-work a traverse by myself, didn’t you? Well, wait
-and you’ll see, and if it’s not ‘God bless you, Billy,
-and give us a share of the luck’ when we get to Rarotambu,
-my name’s not Harman.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Davis, “and maybe not. I’m not
-likely to forget that ambergris you fooled me out of
-with your plans, nor the dozen times you’ve let me
-down one way or another, but I tell you this, Billy
-Harman, it’s six cuts with a rope’s end over your
-sternpost I’ll hand you if you yank me out of this
-place on any wild goose chase.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll take ’em,” chuckled Harman. “Joyful, but
-there ain’t no geese in this proposition, nothin’ but
-good German money, and when you’re down on your
-knees thankin’ me, you’ll remember your words.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, get on,” said Davis, and taking the newspaper
-again, he began to read, Harman making over for the
-Continental and a gin and bitters.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Manahangi</i> was a schooner of two hundred
-tons, built in 1874 for the sandal wood trade and
-looking her age. Wayzegoose fitted his ship. His
-scarecrow figure appeared at the port rail as the boat
-containing Billy and Bud came alongside and he
-dropped the ladder himself for them.</p>
-
-<p>They had scarcely touched the deck when the
-Kanakas clapped on to the winch, the anchor chain
-was hove short, the sails set and then, as the anchor
-came home, the <i>Manahangi</i>, in the gorgeous light of
-late afternoon, leant over to the breeze, the blue water
-widened to the shore and the old schooner, ageworn
-but tight as a cobnut, lifted to the swell of the
-Pacific.</p>
-
-<p>Harman at the after rail gazed on the island scenery
-as it fell astern, heaved a sigh of relief and turned to
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there ain’t no cables can catch us now,”
-said he. “We’re out and clear with money left in
-our pockets and twenty thousand dollars to pick up
-right in front of us like corn before chickens.”</p>
-
-<p>Wayzegoose, having got his ship out, went down
-below for a drink, leaving the deck to the Kanaka
-bo’sun and the fellow at the wheel, and finding themselves
-practically alone, Harman lifted up his voice
-and chortled.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you now,” he said, “I’ll tell you, now
-we’re out&mdash;that chap was robbed by the Kanakas.
-You remember sayin’ that he was shoutin’ he was
-robbed as they was frog-marchin’ him to the ship&mdash;he
-spoke the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you rob him, then?” asked Davis suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>“Now I’ll tell you. Him and me was sittin’ drinkin’
-at that bar most of the afternoon when out he pulls
-pearls from that bag of his, pearls maybe worth
-thirty thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where the blazes did he get them from?” asked
-Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Out of that bag, I’m tellin’ you, and right in front
-of the Kanaka bar-tender. ‘Put them things away,’
-I says, ‘and don’t be showin’ them in bars,’ but not
-he, he was too full of Bourbon and buck to listen and
-then when I left him after, in the native town, they
-must have robbed him. <i>For</i>,” said Mr. Harman,
-“between you and me and the mizzen mast, them
-pearls are in my pocket now.</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir, I didn’t pinch them, but that piece Maiala
-did, as sure as Moses wasn’t Aaron, for this morning
-I met her carryin’ stuff for old Nadub to make his
-drinks with and there round her neck was the pearls.
-Stole.</p>
-
-<p>“I follows her home and with sign langwidge and
-showin’ the dollars, I made them hand over them
-pearls, forty dollars I paid for twenty thousand dollars
-worth of stuff and what do you think of that?”</p>
-
-<p>Billy put his hand in his pocket and produced a
-handkerchief carefully knotted, and from the handkerchief,
-a gorgeous pearl necklace.</p>
-
-<p>Davis looked at it, took it in his hands and looked
-at it again.</p>
-
-<p>“Why you double damned idiot,” cried Davis,
-“you mean to say you’ve yanked me off in this swill
-tub because you’ve give forty dollars for a dud necklace,
-and you’re afraid of the police?&mdash;Smart&mdash;why
-that chap’s pearls weren’t worth forty dollars the
-whole bag full. Ten dollars a hundred-weight’s what
-the factories charge&mdash;I told you he was a dud and his
-stuff junk&mdash;and look at you, look at you!”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be takin’ off your shirt next,” said Harman,
-“you’re talkin’ through the hole in your hat. Them
-pearls is genuine and if they ain’t, I’ll eat them.”</p>
-
-<p>But Davis, turning over the things, had come
-upon something that Harman had overlooked, a
-teeny-weeny docket near the hasp, on which could be
-made out some figures&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class='ni' style='text-align:center'>$4.50</p>
-
-<p>“Four dollars fifty,” said Davis, and Harman looked.</p>
-
-<p>There was no mistaking the figures on the ticket.</p>
-
-<p>“And what was it you gave for them to that girl,
-thinking they’d been stolen?” asked Davis.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn petticuts!” cried the other, taking in
-everything all at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Six cuts of a rope’s end it was to be,” said Davis,
-“but a boat stretcher will do.” He put the trash in
-his pocket and seized a boat stretcher that was lying
-on the deck, and Wayzegoose coming on deck and
-wiping his mouth, saw Harman bent double and meekly
-receiving six strokes of the birch from Davis without
-a murmur.</p>
-
-<p>And thinking that what he saw was an optical
-illusion due to gin, he held off from the bottle for the
-rest of that cruise.</p>
-
-<p>So Billy did some good in his life for once in a way,
-even though he managed to do it by accident.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chVII' title='VII: Beaten on the Post'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VII.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>BEATEN ON THE POST</span>
-</h2>
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>Captain Brent came down to the Karolin as
-she was lying by Circular Wharf, on some
-business connected with some gadget or another he
-was trying to sell on commission. Some patent dodge
-in connection with a main sheet buffer, I think it was&mdash;anyhow,
-Dolbrush, the owner and master of the
-<i>Karolin</i>, though an old friend, refused to speculate;
-the thing to his mind “wasn’t no use to him,” and he
-said so without offence to the salesman.</p>
-
-<p>Brent really carried on this sort of business more
-for amusement than profit; he had retired from the
-sea with enough to live on, and it gave him something
-to do of a morning, pottering round the wharves,
-boarding ships and boring master mariners, mostly
-known to him, with plans and specifications of all
-sorts of labour and life saving devices&mdash;he worked for
-Harvey and Matheson&mdash;which they might use or
-recommend to owners.</p>
-
-<p>He had been, in his time, the finest schooner captain
-that ever sailed out of Sydney Harbour, a vast man,
-weather-beaten and indestructible-looking as the
-Solander Rock, slow of speech but full of knowledge,
-and, once started on a story, unstoppable unless by
-an earthquake. He had been partner with Slane,
-Buck Slane of the Paramatta business; he was Slane’s
-Boswell, and start him on any subject he was pretty
-sure to fetch up on Slane. He and Slane had made
-three or four fortunes between them and lost them.</p>
-
-<p>Putting the main sheet buffer in his pocket, so to
-speak, he accepted a cigar, and the conversation moved
-to other matters till it struck Chinks&mdash;Chinks and
-their ways, clean and unclean, and their extraordinary
-methods of money-making; sham pearls, faked
-birds&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing the Almighty’s ever made that a
-Chink won’t make money out of,” said Dolbrush.
-“Give ’m a worked-out mine or an old tomato tin and
-he’ll do <i>something</i> with it&mdash;and as for gratitude&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you something about that,” cut in Brent.
-“I’ve been to school with them, there’s nothing about
-them you can tell me right from Chow coffins to imitation
-chutney. Why me and Slane hit up against
-them in our first traverse and that was forty years
-ago. Sixty-one I was yesterday and I was twenty-one
-when I fell in with Buck. It don’t seem more than
-yesterday. We’d put in to ’Frisco Bay and were lying
-at Long Wharf, foot of Third and Fourth Streets.
-Buck was Irish, as you’ll remember, a fine strapping
-chap in those days, with blue eyes and black hair, and
-we’d come from Liverpool round the Horn and we
-didn’t want to see the ocean again for a fortnight,
-I tell you. Buck had skipped from Tralee or somewhere
-or another, and he had forty pounds in his
-pocket, maybe he’d got it from robbing a bank
-or something, I never asked, but there it was, and
-no sooner was the old hooker tied up than he proposed
-we’d skip, him and me, and try our luck ashore. I
-hadn’t a magg, but he said he had enough for both,
-that was Buck all over, and we skipped, never bothering
-about our dunnage.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck had an uncle in ’Frisco, well to do and a big
-man in Ward politics. O’Brien was his name if I
-remember right, and he was reckoned to be worth over
-a hundred thousand pounds, so Buck said, but he fixed
-to let him lie, not being a cadger; and we got a room
-with a widow woman who kept lodgers in Tallis Street
-and set out to beat up the town and see the sights.
-There were sights to be seen in ’Frisco, those days,
-more especial round the dock sides, and the place
-was all traps, the crimps were getting from fifty to
-seventy dollars a head for able seamen, and most of
-the bars and such places were hand in fist with them,
-but we steered clear of all that, not being given to
-drink, and got home early and sober with our money
-safe and our heads straight.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d come to the conclusion that ’Frisco was a
-bit too crowded for us, and we fixed to try for the
-Islands. Those days there was money out there.
-Why, in those days the guano deposits hadn’t been
-spotted on Sophia Island, and there it was lying, a
-fortune shouting to be took; copra was beginning to
-bud, and blackbirding was having the time of its life;
-China was eating all the sharks’ fins and <i>bêche de mer</i> she
-could stuff, and then you had the shell lagoons, shell
-and pearl. ’Frisco was crazy over them, and we
-heard yarns of chaps turned millionaires in a night by
-striking an atoll and ripping the floor out. They were
-true yarns. In those days the Admiralty charts and
-the Pacific Directory were years behind the times,
-and there were islands being struck time and again
-that had never been heard of before.</p>
-
-<p>“We tried round the wharves for a likely ship, but
-from Long Wharf to Meiggs’ there was nothing but
-grain carriers cleaning their bilges and Oregon timber
-schooners unloading pine.</p>
-
-<p>“One day, Buck, who’d been out up town by himself,
-came home halooing. ‘Mate,’ says he, ‘our fortunes
-are made.’ Then he gave his yarn. He’d been poking
-round by China Town when, coming along a street&mdash;Alta
-Street it was&mdash;he saw a bunch of Chinks at
-a corner, two young chaps and an old father Abraham
-of a Chink with horn spectacles on him. They were
-standing on the loaf when Buck sighted them, talking,
-and then they began quarrelling, and the two young
-chaps set on father Abraham and began pulling him
-about and kicking him, till Buck sent them flying and
-rescued the old chap, who was near done in. Then he
-helped him home. Fong Yen was his name, and he
-had a little hole of a bird shop just inside China Town
-by a Chow restaurant. He was real bad, knocked
-about by those brutes, and full of gratitude; he
-offered Buck his pick of the birds, but Buck was no
-bird fancier. Then says Fong: ‘I’ll give you something
-better than birds,’ and he goes to a drawer in
-a lacquer box and hunts about and finds a bit of paper.
-‘It was given me by my son,’ says he, ‘to keep. He
-was killed in the riots down at the docks last month;
-you have been as good as a son to me, take it, it’s a
-fortune.’ Then he explained. It was the latitude
-and longitude of a virgin shell island written down
-by his son who’d been a sailor on one of the Chinese
-<i>bêche de mer</i> boats. The boat was wrecked and all
-hands lost with the exception of this chap, who had
-kept the secret and had been saving up money to go
-and skin the island when he was killed. Poor old
-Fong couldn’t work the thing himself; he had no
-relations, and to give or sell that paper to any of the
-China Town lot would simply be getting his throat
-cut, maybe, to keep his head shut on the matter and
-get the purchase money back. He was quite straight
-with Buck on this, and told him he was giving him
-something that was no use to himself now his son was
-dead, but if Buck chose to give him a few dollars to
-buy opium with, he wouldn’t be above taking it.
-Buck takes out his roll and peels off two ten-dollar
-bills and promises him a pull out of the profits.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck showed me the paper. There was nothing
-on it but the latitude and longitude of the place and
-a spot that looked to me like a blood mark. We got
-hold of a chart from a ship master we’d chummed in
-with and found the position north-east of Clermont
-Tonnerre in the Low Archipelago. I said to Buck,
-‘It’s all very well&mdash;but how are we going to get there?
-It’s about as much use to us as to the Chink. S’pose
-we pull some guy in to put up the dollars for a ship,
-do you think he won’t want the profits? If I know
-anything of ’Frisco, he’ll want our skins as well. That
-old Chink was on the right side of the fence, he knew
-’Frisco and knew he hadn’t a dog’s chance of getting
-a cent out of it.’ Buck hears me out, then he says,
-‘Do you suppose,’ he says, ‘that when I paid out good
-money for this thing I had no idea how to work it, do
-you suppose I have no man to back me?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who’s your man?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘My uncle,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d clean forgot the rich uncle. Then I began to
-see that Buck wasn’t such a fool as I thought him.
-I knew the way the Irish stick together, and old Pat
-O’Brien being one of the biggest bugs in the town
-I began to see the light, as the parsons say, and Buck
-asking me to go with him that night and lay for the
-old chap, I agreed.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“Pat lived on Nobs Hill, and we fixed nine o’clock
-as the time to call on him, reckoning he’d be in then
-and maybe in a good humour after his dinner. We
-easy found the place, for everyone knew Pat, but the
-size of it put us off, till Buck took courage at last and
-pushed the bell.</p>
-
-<p>“A darkie in a white shirt front opened and showed
-us across a big hall into a room all hung with pictures,
-and there we sat shuffling our feet till the door opened
-again and in come Pat, a little old, bald-headed chap
-in slippers with the butt of a cigar stuck up in the corner
-of his mouth, more like Mr. Jiggs in the comic papers
-than anyone else I’ve seen.</p>
-
-<p>“He never said a word whilst Buck gave his credentials.
-Then:</p>
-
-<p>“‘You’re Mary’s son,’ said he. ‘You’ve got her
-eyes. How long have you been in this town?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘A fortnight,’ says the other.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why didn’t you call before?’ asks Pat.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Didn’t like to,’ said Buck. ‘I was hard up and I
-didn’t want to cadge on you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why did you call to-night?’ he asks.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck tells him and shows the paper. Pat ordered
-in cigars&mdash;we weren’t having drinks&mdash;then he put on
-a pair of old spectacles and looks at the paper back
-and front.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck puts him wise on the business, and when
-the old man had tumbled to it, he asked Buck right
-out whether he was crazy to think that a Chink would
-give away an oyster shell let alone a shell lagoon,
-but when he heard the facts of the matter, and how
-Buck had risked being knifed to save Fong being
-kicked to death, he came round a bit in his opinions.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Maybe I’m wrong,’ he says, ‘and here’s a spot
-of blood on the paper. You haven’t noticed that,
-have you? Looks as if the thing had been through
-the wars. Well, leave it with me for the night to sleep
-on and call again in the morning, and now let’s talk
-about the old country.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then the old man sticks the paper in a drawer
-and begins to put Buck through his paces. Pat
-hadn’t been in Tralee for forty years, but there wasn’t
-a street he’d forgotten or a name, and he took Buck
-through that town by the scruff of his neck, cross-questioning
-him about the shops and the people and
-the places, and as he sat there with his old monkey
-face screwed up and his eyes like steel gimlets boring
-holes in us, I began to understand how he’d come
-to be a millionaire; then he got on family matters,
-and by the end of the talk he’d come to understand
-that Buck was his nephew all right and we lit, promising
-to call on him in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Our fortunes are made,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Wait a bit,’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“Next morning we were on the doorstep to the
-tick and the darkie showed us in.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, boys,’ says Pat, coming into the room
-dressed to go out, with a plug hat stuck on the back
-of his head and the butt of another cigar in the corner
-of his mouth. ‘Well, boys,’ says he, ‘you’re up to
-time and I’m waiting to meet you on this proposition;
-it’s not that I want to be into it,’ he says, ‘but for
-the sake of me sister Mary&mdash;God rest her soul&mdash;I’m
-going to give you a chance in life. I’m a bit in
-the shipping way myself, and I’ve got a schooner
-lying off Tiburon waiting for cargo, and I’ll give
-you the use of her to run down to the Islands, and,’
-says he, ‘if you get the better of that Chink I’ll give
-you the schooner for keeps.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What do you mean by getting the better of
-him?’ asks Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ says Pat, ‘it’s in my mind, thinking things
-over, that he’s maybe got the better of you. Maybe
-I’m wrong&mdash;but there it is, and how do you like the
-proposition?’</p>
-
-<p>“We liked it all right, but he hadn’t finished and
-goes on:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Whilst you’re on the job,’ he says, ‘you can take
-a cargo for me down to Malakā to Sanderson, a chap
-I deal with, and bring back a cargo of copra; you
-won’t want any cargo space for pearls, and Malakā
-is on your way there or back.’</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t mind that and said so.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d told Pat I was pretty well up in navigation,
-and we all starts out together to look at the schooner,
-taking the ferry boat over to Tiburon and Pat giving
-us his ideas as we went.</p>
-
-<p>“Us two would be the afterguard, with five or six
-Kanakas for crew.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Greyhound</i> was the name of the schooner,
-and she was lying a bit out from the wharf, and Pat
-has the hellnation of a fight with a waterman as to
-the fare for rowing us off and back, beats him down
-from two dollars to one dollar fifty, and asked Buck
-to pay as he hadn’t any change.</p>
-
-<p>“I was thinking it was easy to see how Pat had
-become a millionaire till we stepped on the deck of
-the Greyhound, and then I had no time to think of
-anything but the dirt. It wasn’t dirt you could
-sweep off her, it was ground in, if you get me; all the
-deck-bears and holystones from here to Hoboken
-wouldn’t have made those decks look respectable; it
-was like a woman with a bad complexion, even skinning
-would be no use.</p>
-
-<p>“‘She’s been in the oil business,’ says Pat.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I can smell it,’ says I, and we goes below after
-prodding the sticks and taking notice of the condition
-of the standing rigging. Down below it was dirtier,
-and the smell rose up like a fist and punched us in
-the nose. I don’t know if you’ve ever been below
-decks in one of them old Island schooners fitted with
-Honolulu cockroaches, and the effulgences of generations
-of buck Kanakas and Chinks, to say nothing
-of mixed cargoes&mdash;sort of dark brown smell&mdash;but we
-weren’t out to grumble, and Pat having showed us
-over, we all went ashore and put back for ’Frisco,
-Buck paying the fare.</p>
-
-<p>“We parted from Pat on the landing stage, and next
-morning the <i>Greyhound</i> was brought over to Long
-Wharf for her cargo. It took a fortnight getting the
-stuff aboard and hiring the Kanakas. Pat gave us
-a diving dress and pump that could be rigged in any
-boat; he borrowed them, or got them somewhere
-cheap, and then he gave us his blessing and twenty
-dollars for ship’s money, and we signed on, me as
-master, Buck as mate&mdash;seeing I was the navigator at
-a dollar a month, nominal pay&mdash;and six Kanakas as
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Day before we started we were sitting in the
-cabin going over the list of stores when a long, thin
-chap by name of Gadgett came on board. He was a
-ship’s chandler and when he found no orders he opened
-out about Pat, not knowing he was Buck’s uncle,
-asking us what screws we were getting and didn’t we
-know the <i>Greyhound</i> was condemned, or ought to be,
-but that she was certain to be insured for twice her
-value, and then he lit.</p>
-
-<p>“When he’d gone I said to Buck: ‘Look here,’
-I said, ‘I’m not grumbling, but it seems to me your
-uncle doesn’t stand to lose over this game. He’s got
-a captain and first officer for nothing. He’s dead
-certain we’re on a mug’s game, and he’s used our
-cupidity after pearls so’s to make us work for him,
-and he not paying us a jitney.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘How do you make that out?’ he asks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ I said, ‘look at him. I reckon, without
-disrespect to you, that if there was an incorporated
-society of mean men he’d be the President. Did he
-even pay you back those dollars he borrowed from
-you? Not he. Well, now, do you think if he had
-any idea we were going to pull this thing off he wouldn’t
-have asked for a share? Course he would. He
-didn’t ask, even on the off chance, for if he had we
-might have asked for our screws as master and mate.
-Another thing. It’s on the charter that we can call
-at Malakā on the way out or back; if he had any idea
-of us touching this pearl island it’s my opinion he’d
-have bound us to call there on the way out.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why?’ asks Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Because,’ I says, ‘this cargo of stuff we’ve got
-aboard is a darned sight more perishable than the
-cargo of copra we’re to bring home; if we strike that
-island we’ll be there months and months diving and
-rotting oysters with this stuff lying aboard with the
-rats and the roaches and weevils working over it.
-Do you see? If he had the faintest idea we had a
-million to one chance he’d have bound us to call at
-Malakā on the out trip. No, he’s just took us for a
-pair of chump fools and is working us as such.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, if he has I’ll be even with him,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Another thing,’ I went on, ‘do you remember
-he said he’d give you the schooner if you got the better
-of that Chink? Those words jumped out of him that
-first morning, showing how little he thought of the
-business. He never repeated them; afraid of putting
-us off. Buck, I’m not saying anything against your
-relations, but this old chap gives me the shivers,
-him with a million of money in the Bank of California
-and you with nothing, and him using you. It’s not
-me I’m thinking of, but you, Buck.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Never mind me,’ says Buck.”</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>Dolbrush produced drinks and Brent, having refreshed
-himself and lit a new cigar, proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was telling you&mdash;next morning we howked
-out and by noon that day we were clear of the bar,
-taking the sea with the Farallones on the starboard
-beam and all plain sail set. The <i>Greyhound</i> was no
-tortoise, and for all her dirt she was a dry ship, but that
-day when we came to tackle the first of the ship’s
-stores we’d have swapped her for a mud barge and
-penitentiary rations. Pat must have got the lot
-as a present, I should think, to take it away. I never
-did see such junk; it wasn’t what you might call
-bad, but it was faded, if you get me; not so much
-stinkin’ as without smell to it&mdash;or taste.</p>
-
-<p>“‘All shipowners are bad, and Pat’s a shipowner,’
-I says, ‘but there’s no doubt he’s given you a chance
-in life for the sake of his sister Mary&mdash;God rest her
-soul&mdash;the chance of getting ptomaine poisoning if
-you don’t die first of jaw disease breaking your teeth
-over this damn bread.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ll be even with him yet,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“We did some fishing, for we had tackle on board,
-and that helped us along over the line, and one morning
-twenty-seven days out from ’Frisco we raised an
-outlier of the Marqueses. Coming along a week later
-we raised the spot where pearl island ought to have
-been&mdash;we’d labelled it Pearl Island before sighting it,
-and that was maybe unlucky&mdash;anyhow, there was no
-island to meet us at noon that day and no sign of one
-inside or outside the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That Chink sold you a pup,’ says I to Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Maybe it’s your navigation is at fault,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Maybe,’ says I, wishing to let him down gentle,
-but feeling pretty sure the navigator wasn’t born
-that could find that island.</p>
-
-<p>“We stood a bit more to the south with a Kanaka
-in the crosstrees under a reward of ten dollars if he
-spotted land that day, and towards evening the wind
-dropped to a dead calm and we lay drifting all that
-night, the wind coming again at sun up and breezing
-strong from the south west.</p>
-
-<p>“We put her before it, both of us pretty sick at
-thinking how Pat was right and how he’d landed us and
-used us for his purpose. We weren’t mean enough dogs
-to think of spoiling the cargo or piling the schooner;
-we just took our gruel, fixing to lay for him with our
-tongues when we got back, and as for the Chink, well.
-Buck said he’d skin that Chink if he had to bust up
-China Town single-handed to do it.</p>
-
-<p>“He was talking like that and it was getting along
-for eight bells, noon, when the Kanaka look-out
-signals land, and there it was right ahead, but nothing
-to be seen only a white thumb-mark in the sky from
-the mirror blaze of a lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the heads of cocoanut trees poked up all
-in a row, and I turns to Buck and we gripped hands.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s a hundred and more miles out,’ said I,
-‘but I reckon it’s not the island that’s out but me and
-my navigation; that old Chink was no liar. It’s the
-Island. Must be, for there’s nothing on the chart
-for five hundred miles all round here.’</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll see,” said Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“We held on steady, and then the reef began to show,
-and coming along presently we could hear the boom
-of it. We couldn’t see a break in it, and getting up
-close we shifted our helm a bit and came running along
-the north side, the gulls chasing and shouting at us,
-the reef foam dashing away only a hundred yards
-to starboard, and the wind that was filling our sails
-bending the cocoanut trees.</p>
-
-<p>“I felt like shouting. We could see the lagoon,
-flat as a looking-glass over beyond the reef that was
-racing by us; then we came on the break, and putting
-out a bit we came in close hauled with no tumble
-at the opening seeing it was slack water.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a fairish big lagoon, maybe four miles by
-six or so, and since the Almighty put the world together
-you’d have said we were the first men into it. It
-had that look. Not a sign of a native house; nothing
-but gulls. It was fifty-fathom water at the break&mdash;made
-deep by the scouring of the tides; then it
-shoaled up to twenty and ten, and we dropped the hook
-in seven-fathom water close on to the northern beach.
-Not a sign of an oyster. The floor just there was like
-a coloured carpet with coral, and the water was so
-clear that every coloured fish that passed had a black
-fish going along with it&mdash;which was its shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“We dropped the boat and pulled off, and we hadn’t
-got two cable lengths to the west of where the <i>Greyhound</i>
-was lying when we struck the beds, acres of
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve seen the Sooloo fisheries and the Australian,
-but I reckon the Pearl Island oysters could have
-given them points as to size. Somewhere about six
-hundred pairs to the ton they ran, and that’s a big
-oyster.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ said Buck, ‘here we are and here we
-stick. We’ve anchored on top of a fortune and if it
-takes ten years we’ll hive it.’ That was all very well
-saying, but we’d got the question of grub to consider,
-but we soon found we needn’t worry about that;
-there was fish and turtle and <i>béche de mer</i> and cocoanuts,
-bread-fruit on the south side and taro, to say
-nothing of oysters. Having fixed that matter, we set
-to work. Those Kanakas hadn’t signed on for diving
-after oysters, but stick a Kanaka in the water and it’s
-all he wants; besides, we gave them extra pay in the
-way of stick tobacco, axing open a lot of old Pat’s
-tobacco cases, sure of being able to pay him out of the
-pearl money; then we worked like grigs in vinegar,
-and at the end of the first week’s work we hadn’t found
-one pearl. The way we did was to put each day’s
-takings out on the beach in the sun; the sun opened
-them better than an oyster knife.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, this is bright,’ says Buck one day as we
-were going over the heap. ‘Luck’s clean against us,’
-he says, and no sooner had he spoke the words, a
-whopper of a pearl ’s big as a pistol bullet jumped
-into his fist out of an oyster he was handling. It
-wasn’t a big oyster neither. My, that pearl was a
-beauty; it turned the scale at forty grains I reckon,
-and it wasn’t the last.</p>
-
-<p>“We were six to seven months on that job, and I
-never want to strike another pearl lagoon. Me and
-Slane had at last to do most of the diving, for the
-Kanakas got sick of it. We looked like Guy Fawkes.
-When we sailed into that lagoon we were spry young
-chaps clean-shaved and decently dressed; when it
-had done with us we were bearded men, men black with
-the sun and salt water and ragged as Billy be Dam.
-I tell you we were spectacles. Satan never fixed up
-such a factory as a pearl lagoon when you have to
-work it short-handed and on the secret. You can’t
-stop, not if you only get a pearl in a thousand oysters,
-you can’t stop. It’s always the one pearl more that
-does you. It’s like the gambling rooms. Till one day
-I says to Buck: ‘I’m done.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I was only waiting for you to say it,’ said Buck.
-‘I’ve been done this last week only I wouldn’t give in.’</p>
-
-<p>“We’d got together two hundred and thirty-two
-pearls and some seeds&mdash;the king of the lot was a roseleaf
-pink pearl; there were two golden pearls that were
-a perfect match pair, half a dozen blacks, a few
-yellow that weren’t no use, and the balance white.
-We’d been looking up prices before we started and
-got some tips from a man who was in the know, and
-we reckoned our haul was thirty or forty thousand
-dollars. You see it was virgin ground, and the things
-had time to grow to size without being disturbed.</p>
-
-<p>“I ought to have told you the diving dress was no
-use. Pat had got it from some old junk shop or
-another, and the pump was as bad, but the water
-being shallow it didn’t matter much, though if the
-thing had been in order we’d have got the job through
-a couple of months earlier.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>“We lit from that place never wanting to see an
-oyster again, and leaving tons of shell on the beach
-worth, maybe, five to six hundred dollars a ton.
-We didn’t want it. We laid our course for Malakā
-and raised it ten days later, a big brute of a copra
-island with Sanderson in pyjamas on the beach and
-a schooner loading up in the lagoon. He didn’t want
-Pat’s cargo, said it was four months overdue, and
-he had cleared the last of his copra and had enough
-trade to carry on with. We didn’t mind, seeing our
-contract was to call there out or back with no time
-limit specified, and we were mighty glad Pat had been
-done in the eye, seeing how he’d served us. There
-was nothing to do but cart the stuff back to ’Frisco,
-and dropping Malakā, we made a straight run of it,
-raising the Farallones in twenty-eight days and laying
-the old hooker off Tiburon without a spar lost or a
-scratch on her.</p>
-
-<p>“I said to Buck: ‘What are you going to give
-that Chink? You promised him a suck of the orange,
-didn’t you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m going to give him a thousand dollars,’ said
-Buck, ‘when I’ve cashed the pearls and settled with
-Pat. I’m a man of my word, and there’s no luck in
-breaking a promise.’</p>
-
-<p>“I was with him there.</p>
-
-<p>“We landed with the stuff in a handkerchief and
-made straight for Patrick O’Brien’s business office.
-We’d cleaned ourselves a bit, but we still looked pretty
-much scarecrows, but when we’d shown that handkerchief
-of pearls to the old man he didn’t bother
-about our looks.</p>
-
-<p>“I told him how, through my bad navigation, we’d
-missed the island at first, and then struck it by chance.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ says Pat, ‘you’re the only men in ’Frisco
-that’s ever got the better of a Chink so far as to get
-something out of him for nothing, for twenty dollars
-is nothing against that hatful of pearls. The schooner
-is yours, Buck, and from what I hear of the cargo
-you can dump it in the harbour or sell it for junk.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then when we’d cleaned ourselves and got some
-decent clothes, he took us off to the Palatial and gave
-us a big dinner. Now that chap was the meanest
-guy in small things you could find in California, yet
-he’d lost a cargo and a schooner and instead of cutting
-up rough he seemed to enjoy it. Buck being his
-nephew, I suppose he was proud of being done by him
-and seeing him successful.</p>
-
-<p>“The next day, having cashed in half the pearls.
-Buck says to me: ‘Come on,’ he says, ‘and we’ll
-settle up with father Abraham.’</p>
-
-<p>“Off we starts and gets to the place, and there was
-the bird shop sure enough beside a Chow restaurant,
-but there was no father Abraham.</p>
-
-<p>“A young Chink was in charge, and when Buck
-asks for Fong Yen he said there was no such person.
-Then he seemed to remember, and said that Fong had
-sold the shop and gone back to China.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, that’s him inside there,’ said Buck, and
-makes a dive into the shop, but there was no one
-there. Fong must have done a bunk through a back
-door or something&mdash;anyhow he was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Then all of a sudden there comes up a big master
-mariner looking man along the street, drops anchor
-before the bird shop and calls out asking for Ming
-Lu. The young Chink came out and asks what he
-wants, saying there was no such person as Ming Lu.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Say, brother,’ says Buck, jumping at the truth,
-‘was Ming Lu, by any chance, an old gendarme in
-spectacles?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘He was,’ says the crab, and then he spun his
-story. He’d been walking along Alta Street three
-months ago when he saw three Chinks at a corner,
-an old boob in spectacles and two young ones. As
-he came up with them they started quarrelling, pulling
-the old chap about and kicking him cruel, and Blake,
-that was the guy’s name, started in like a whole-souled
-American to save the antiquity from ruin.</p>
-
-<p>“He helped Ming back to his bird shop, and the old
-chap near drowned him in gratitude, and gave him a
-chart of a pearl island his son, that had been murdered
-in a tong dust-up the month before, had discovered
-when a sailor in one of the Chinese <i>bêche de mer</i>
-boats, that had been wrecked, with all hands lost but
-his precious son.</p>
-
-<p>“Blake gave him ten dollars to buy opium with,
-and being a schooner owner, lost three months hunting
-for that island which wasn’t there.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the same island that had been wished on
-us&mdash;Buck pulled out his chart and they compared&mdash;exactly
-the same, spot of blood and all. The things
-must have been lithographed by the dozen and Lord
-knows how many mugs had fallen to the gratitude trap;
-which no one but a Chink could ever have invented,
-if you think over the inwards and outwards of it.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Buck told out loud so that Fong, if he was
-listening, could hear, how we had fallen on a pearl
-island, by chance, and how, thinking it was bad navigation
-that had made us out in our reckonings, he was
-bringing a thousand dollars to Fong as a present out
-of the takings according to promise. Then he pulls
-out his roll and gives the thousand dollars to Blake
-as a make up. The young Chink ran in at the sight
-of this, and, as we walked off arm in arm for drinks,
-I heard sounds from the upper room of that bird shop
-as if Fong was holdin’ on to something and trying not
-to be sick.</p>
-
-<p>“Then as we were having drinks the question came
-up in Buck’s head as to whether he was entitled to
-that schooner seeing that Fong had managed to get
-the better of him at the go off. He put it to Blake,
-and Blake, who was a great chap for backing horses
-when ashore, says: ‘Go off be damned,’ he says.
-‘It’s the finish that matters. You did him on the post,’
-he says&mdash;and we concluded to leave it at that.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chVIII' title='VIII: A Case in Point'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER VIII.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>A CASE IN POINT</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>There is good fishing to be had round Sydney
-way, yellow-tail and schnapper and green
-backed sea bream; jew-fish and mullet and trevalli.
-You can fish at low tide in the pools or you can fish
-from a boat, beaching her for the night in one of the
-coves and camping out under the stars, with the
-scent of the gums mingling with the scent of the
-sea, and the song of the waves for lullaby.</p>
-
-<p>Over Dead Man’s Cove and its beach of hard sand
-the cliff stands bluff and humped like a crouching
-lion, and there one night the year before last old
-Captain Brent and I were kicking our heels and
-smoking after supper and passing in review the
-day’s work and the tribes of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Brent was a keen fisherman, and there were few
-waters he did not know, and few fish he hadn’t taken
-one time or another. He had always travelled with
-his eyes open, and his natural history was first hand
-and his views fresh as originality itself. He said
-crabs could think, instancing certain hermit crabs
-that always chose protective-coloured shells, and
-that not only did sword-fish fight duels&mdash;I knew
-that, for I had seen it myself&mdash;but that there were
-tribal wars carried on in the sea, international
-struggles so to speak, between the nations of the fishes.</p>
-
-<p>“If fish didn’t kill fish,” said the Captain, “the
-sea would be solid with mackerel inside two years,
-to say nothing of herring. Haven’t you ever thought
-of what keeps them down? It’s the Almighty,
-of course, but how does He work it? Lots of folk
-think He works it by making the fish eat the fish just
-because they are hungry. That’s one of His ways,
-but another is just war for war’s sake, or for the
-sake of the grouch one tribe keeps up against another.
-You see, it’s a bit unfortunate, seeing that if the
-herring once got above a certain number all the
-eating in the world wouldn’t stop them from turning
-the sea solid with herring, so the Almighty has fixed
-His killing machine with two blades, one that kills
-for the sake of food and the other for the sake of
-killing.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the same with the tribes of men, I reckon,
-only with them there’s only one blade left, since they
-don’t kill each other nowadays for the sake of
-food.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s something in one tribe that makes for
-war against another tribe. You may boil them
-but you won’t get it out of them. I’ve seen it. You’d
-have seen it too if you’d traded among the Islands
-in the old days, selling Winchesters to the natives
-to prosecute their wars with, and I’ll give you a
-case in point.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you how me and Slane pulled off that
-pearling job, but I never told you what we did with
-the money. Most chaps would have bust it, we
-just stuck it in the bank and, after a run to the
-Yosemite, back we come to ’Frisco on the look out
-for more larks. We weren’t set on money for the
-sake of money so much as for the fun of getting it,
-for I tell you as a mortal truth there’s no hunting to
-beat the hunting of a dollar, more especial when
-you’ve got a herd of twenty or thirty thousand of
-them with their tails up and you after them. We’d
-had enough of pearling, we had no taste for blackbirding
-and we were turning copra over in our minds
-when, sitting having our luncheon one day in Martin’s
-restaurant, a slab-sided Yank, six foot and over
-and thin as a Jackstaff, comes along up to us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You’re Mr. Slane?’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s me,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve heard tell of you,’ says the chap, ‘and
-I’ve got a double-barrelled proposition to put before
-you. May I take a seat at your table? Scudder’s
-my name, and Martin will tell you I’m a straight
-man.’</p>
-
-<p>“Down he sits. We’d finished feeding and so had
-he; the place was pretty empty and no one by to
-hear, and he begins.</p>
-
-<p>“‘First barrel of the prop,’ he says, ‘is a dodge
-for killing fish. You know how they fish out in the
-Islands? Well, they do a good deal of spearin’ and
-hookin’ and sometimes they poison the fish pools
-with soap, but the king way is dynamite.’ He pulls
-a stick of something out of his pocket and goes on.
-‘Here’s a stick of dynamite. You can fire it by
-electricity or you can shove a match on one end and
-light it and throw the durned thing into the water.
-It goes bang and a minute after every fish in that
-vicinity come to the surface stunned dead. That’s
-so, but the bother is the stuff goes off sometimes
-premature and the Kanakas are always losing hands
-and legs and things, which don’t make for its
-popularity. Being out there last year at Taleka
-Island I set my invention trap working to hit a device.
-I’ve always took notice that a man who fills a want
-fills his pockets, and a patent safety explosive fish
-killer is a want with a capital “W” right from ’Frisco
-to Guam. Well, here it is,’ he says, and out of his
-other pocket he takes the great-grandfather of a
-Mills bomb, same as the Allies have been pasting the
-Germans with. It wasn’t bigger than a tangerine
-orange and rough made, but it had all the essentials.
-You didn’t pull a pin out, it was just two caps of
-metal screwed together. The thing was dead as
-mutton when it was lightly screwed, but screwed
-tight it exposed its horns and was live as Satan.
-Just one turn of the wrist tightened it up and then
-if you flung it against anything, even water, it would
-go bang. It was a working model, and he showed us
-the whole thing and the cost of manufacture. His
-factory was a back bedroom in Polk Street, but he
-reckoned with a shed and a lathe and a couple of
-Chink artisans to help he could turn out fifty Scudder
-Fish Crackers&mdash;that’s the name he gave them&mdash;a
-day. He said the Bassingtons had a share in the
-patent and would give him the material for nothing
-so as to have the thing tried out. He wanted five
-hundred dollars to start his factory, then he wanted
-us to give him an order for two thousand crackers
-at fifty cents each.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You don’t want no more cargo than that,’ said
-he, ‘once the Kanakas get the hang of this thing
-they’ll trade you their back teeth for them; you
-see it’s new. It’s like millinery. If I could invent
-a new sort of hat and start a store in Market Street
-every woman from here to St. Jo would be on it in
-a cluster. You could scrape them off with a spoon.
-Kanakas are just the same as women, for two thousand
-of them crackers you can fill up to your hatches
-in copra.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, now,’ he goes on, ‘on top of that I’ll make
-you a present of three thousand dollars, if you’ll
-take the proposition up. Sru, the chief chap at
-Taleka, wants Winchester rifles and ammunition
-and he’s got the money in gold coin to pay for them.
-He wants six thousand dollars’ worth and I can get
-the lot from Bassingtons for three thousand dollars,
-boxed and laded on board your ship. The crackers
-won’t take no room for stowage and the guns and
-cartridges won’t eat half your cargo space, so you
-can take some cheap trade goods that’ll give you a
-deck cargo of turtle shell and <i>bêche de mer</i>. Get me?
-You make money on the crackers, you make money
-on the guns and you make a bit out of the shell.
-It’s a golden goose layin’ eggs at both ends and the
-middle, and I’ll give you a writing promising to pay
-the five hundred dollars for the factory in one year
-with twenty per cent, for the loan.’</p>
-
-<p>“I could see Slane was sniffing at it so I didn’t
-interfere, and the upshot was we made an appointment
-with Scudder to meet us next day and take
-a boat out in the harbour to test a couple of his
-crackers. We did, and he was no liar, the things
-went off like guns and dead fish were still coming
-up when a police boat nailed us and rushed us ashore
-and we had to pay ten dollars fine for illegal behaviour.
-That’s what the Yanks called it&mdash;anyhow the dead
-fish settled the business and Slane took up the proposition
-and put his hand in his pocket and fetched
-out the money to start the factory and gave Scudder
-his order for two thousand crackers.</p>
-
-<p>“Slane hadn’t disposed of the <i>Greyhound</i>. We
-ran her into dock and had the barnacles scraped
-off her, gave her some new spars and a new mainsail
-and finished up with a lick of paint. It took
-six weeks and by that time Scudder had finished his
-job and had the crackers ready boxed and all and
-the Bassington company were waiting to deliver
-the Winchesters and ammunition. We took the
-old hooker over to Long Wharf for the stowing and
-the stuff came down in boxes marked eggs and
-crockery ware.</p>
-
-<p>“They were pretty sharp after gun-runners in those
-days, but Scudder fixed everything somehow so that
-none of the cases were opened. We got the cracker
-boxes on first and then stowed the guns and cartridges
-over that, and on top of the guns some trade goods,
-stick tobacco and rolls of print and such, six Chinks
-we took for a crew and a Kanaka by name of Taute
-who could speak the patter of most of the Islands,
-and off we started.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“Taleka is an outlier of the New Hebrides, a long
-run from ’Frisco, but we never bothered about time
-in those days. We never bothered about anything
-much. We hadn’t been out a week when I said one
-night to Slane, ‘Buck,’ said I, ‘s’pose one of those
-crackers took it into its head to go off, being screwed
-too tight?’ ‘If it did,’ said Buck, ‘the whole
-two thousand would go bang and the cartridges would
-follow soot; if one of them crackers fructified before
-its time next minute you’d be sitting on a cloud
-playing a harp, or helping stoke Gehenna, don’t
-make any mistake about that.’ We left it so. We
-never bothered about anything those days as long
-as the grub was up to time and not spoiled in the
-cooking.</p>
-
-<p>“We touched at Honolulu and had a look round
-and then we let out, passing Howland and the Ellices,
-raising Taleka forty-five days out from ’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a big brute of a high island and away to
-s’uth’ard of it you can see Mauriri, another big island
-forty-five or fifty miles away.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no reef round Taleka, but there are reefs
-enough to north and west and a big line of rock
-to s’uth’ard that doesn’t show in calm weather, only
-now and again when the swell gets too steep and then
-you’ll see an acre of foam show up all at once.
-Rotten coast, all but the east side, where a bay runs
-in between the cliffs and you get a beach of hard sand.</p>
-
-<p>“We dropped anchor in twenty-five fathoms close
-to the beach. There were canoes on the beach, but
-not a sign of a native; the cliffs ran up to the sky either
-side, with the trees growing smaller and smaller, and
-out from near the top of the cliff to starboard a
-waterfall came dancing down like the tail of a white
-horse and that was all; there was no wind scarcely
-ever there and the water between the cliffs was like
-a black lake. I tell you that place was enough to
-give you the jim-jams, more especial when you knew
-that you were being watched all the time by hundreds
-of black devils ready to do you in.</p>
-
-<p>“We fired a gun and the echoes blazed out like a
-big battle going on and then fizzled off among the
-hills where you’d think chaps were pot-shotting
-each other. Then the silence went on just as if it
-hadn’t been broken, and Slane, who’d got a pretty
-short temper when he was crossed, spat into the
-harbour and swore at Sru.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he ordered up a case of guns and a box
-of ammunition, and he and me and Taute rowed
-ashore with them, beaching the boat and dumping
-the guns and ammunition on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“We took the guns out of the case and laid them
-out side by side same as if they’d been in a shop
-window, then we opened the ammunition box and
-exposed the cartridges.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a sight no murder-loving Kanaka could
-stand and presently out from a valley a bit up beyond
-the anchorage comes a chap with the biggest belly
-I’ve ever seen on one man. He had slits in his
-ears and a tobacco pipe stuck through one of the
-slits, nothing on him but a gee string and eyes that
-looked like gimlet holes into hell. I never did see
-such a chap before or since. It was Sru himself, and
-he was followed by half a hundred of his tribe, every
-man armed with an old Snider or a spear, or sometimes
-both.</p>
-
-<p>“I saw Taute shivering as he looked at Sru, then
-he bucked up and took heart, seeing that Sru wasn’t
-armed and was coming for guns, not fighting.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the palaver began, the Kanakas squatting
-before the gun cases and Slane showing them the Winchesters
-whilst Taute did the talking. Scudder had been
-there all right the year before and had measured up
-Sru and his wants and his paying capacity to a T.
-He had the gold, brass-yellow Australian sovereigns
-and British sovereigns got from God knows where,
-but sovereigns right enough with Victoria’s head
-on them, for he showed us a fistful, and it was only
-a question of whether Sru would pay six thousand
-dollars for our cargo. He wanted to make it four,
-then he gave in, and we put back in the boat to have
-the stuff broken out of the hold.</p>
-
-<p>“Knowing the sort of chap Sru was we ought to
-have made him bring the money on board before a
-single case was landed, but we were young to the
-trade and too straight to think another chap crooked,
-so we didn’t. We let the canoes come alongside and
-there we hung watching naked Kanakas all shiny
-with sweat handing overboard the boxes, six guns
-to a box, to say nothing of the cartridge cases.</p>
-
-<p>“We put off with the last case and then we sat
-waiting on the beach for our money.</p>
-
-<p>“The Kanakas with the last of the cases turned
-up into the valley, and when they were gone you
-couldn’t hear a sound in that place but the noise of
-the waterfall up among the trees and now and then
-the sea moving on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>“The water came into that bay as I’ve never seen
-it come anywhere else. It would be a flat calm,
-and then, for no reason at all, it would heave up and
-sigh on the sand and fall quiet again like the bosom
-of a pious woman in a church.</p>
-
-<p>“There we sat waiting for our money and watching
-the <i>Greyhound</i> as she swung to her moorings with
-a Chink fishing over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What do you think of Sru,’ says Buck at last.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I don’t think he’s a beauty,’ I says,
-and then talk fizzled out and there we sat waiting for
-our money and chucking stones in the water.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve told you there were canoes on the beach
-when we came in, but after the guns had been brought
-ashore the canoes had been taken round the bend of
-the bay, and as we sat there waiting for our money
-there was no one on that flat beach but our two
-selves and the Chink who’d helped us to row ashore,
-the boat was beached close to us and only waiting to
-be shoved off.</p>
-
-<p>“I says to Buck, ‘Say, Buck,’ I says, ‘suppose
-old Johnny Sru takes it into his woolly head to stick
-to the dollars as well as the guns, what are you going
-to do then?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Don’t be supposing things,’ says Buck. ‘Sru’s
-no beauty, maybe, but he’s a gentleman. All savages
-are gentlemen if you treat them square.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where did you get that dope from?’ I asks
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh,’ he says, ‘I don’t know,’ he says, ‘one place
-or another, but mainly from books.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ I says, ‘I’m not much given to book reading,
-but I hope you’re right, anyway.’</p>
-
-<p>“No sooner were the words out of my mouth
-than the Chink by the boat gives a yell. I looked
-up and saw a big rock skipping down hill to meet
-us. It wasn’t as big as a church, but it seemed to
-me, looking up, there was many a Methodist chapel
-smaller; shows you how the eyes magnify things
-when a chap’s frightened, for it wasn’t more than
-ten ton all told judging by its size when it hit the
-target.</p>
-
-<p>“It missed us by six foot and hit the Chink. We
-couldn’t get him out from under it seeing he was
-flattened as flat as a sheet of paper and we hadn’t
-more than got the boat pushed off when down came
-another and hit the place where we’d been sitting
-waiting for our money and talking of all savages
-being gentlemen if you treated them square.</p>
-
-<p>“The chaps above have got the range, but they
-weren’t wasting ammunition, for as soon as we lit
-the firing ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“I never did see a chap in a bigger temper than
-Buck. He went white, and when an Irishman goes
-white, look out for what’s coming.</p>
-
-<p>“We got aboard and got the boat in, and then we
-took our seats on the hatch combing and had Taute
-along for a council of war.</p>
-
-<p>“Taute had chummed up with Sru’s men and a
-couple of the Marys whilst the unloading was going
-on, and he’d found out that Sru wanted the guns
-for an attack on Mauriri, the big island to the s’uth’ard.</p>
-
-<p>“Tiaki was the chief man on Mauriri, and he
-and Sru had been at it for years, the two islands
-hitting each other whenever they could, sinking
-fishing canoes and so on, but never a big battle.
-They were too evenly matched and knew it. But
-those Winchesters would make all the difference, so
-Taute said and we didn’t doubt him.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck, when he’d sucked this in, sits biting his
-nails. The sun had set by now and the stars were
-thick overhead and it came to the question of getting
-out against the breeze and tide or sticking till the
-morning when the land wind would give us a lift.
-Taute gave it as his opinion we’d be safe enough for
-the night. Sru didn’t want our ship, and the Kanakas
-had got it into their thick heads that when a ship
-was raided and the crew murdered in those parts,
-somehow or another, a British cruiser would turn
-up maybe months later and make trouble, which was
-the truth. So we let the anchor lie in the mud and
-we sat down to supper that night as calm as if we
-weren’t sitting on a hive of hornets that any minute
-might let out with their stings.</p>
-
-<p>“Middle of supper, Buck hits the table a welt
-with his fist.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve got the blighter,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sru,’ says he. ‘I’ve got him by the short hairs
-and if I don’t make him squeal, my name’s not Buck
-Slane.’</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t see his meaning, and said so, telling him
-straight out that we’d better take our gruel and let
-Sru alone, that we’d been fools to let him have the
-stuff without the cash brought on to the beach and
-that we’d only get broken heads by trying to fight
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I ain’t going to fight him,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Who is, then?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tiaki,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That chap over at Mauriri?’ I questions.</p>
-
-<p>“‘The same,’ says him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But look here,’ I says, ‘how in the nation are
-you going to ginger him up to fight Sru seeing that he’s
-been holding off for years and seeing that Sru has
-got those Winchesters? What would he fight him
-with?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Fish crackers,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“That hit me on the head like an apple. I’d
-got the durned things so connected with fish in my
-mind that I’d clean forgot to think that they could
-be used against humans, more especial by Kanakas
-used to throwing spears and things all their lives.
-Then Buck opens up his plan which was simple
-enough. It would take Tiaki’s men eight or ten
-hours paddling in their canoes to reach Taleka. If
-they started at four o’clock in the afternoon they’d
-make the island by two next morning, then, crawling
-up that valley they could fall on Sru’s village and
-bomb it to pieces before daybreak. Bloodthirsty,
-wasn’t it? But Buck was out for blood, the Irish
-was raised in him and he didn’t care a cent what
-happened or what he paid so long as Sru got his gruel.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But look here,’ I said, ‘it’s all very well talking,
-but Winchesters are Winchesters. Do you propose
-to start Tiaki on this stunt and not tell him what
-he’s up against?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, Lord, no,’ says Buck. ‘Hope I’m a gentleman&mdash;besides,
-that’s what will make him fight. When
-he knows Sru has got the arms to attack him, he’ll
-do the attacking first, unless he’s a fool.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘All right,’ says I, and we left it at that.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>“We slept on deck that night for fear of an attack,
-me keeping first watch, but nothing came, and just
-at daybreak we put out, towing her till we caught the
-land wind and then cracking on all sail for Mauriri.</p>
-
-<p>“We were making ten knots and all that morning
-Mauriri bloomed up against us, getting bigger and
-bigger till the foam on the big half-moon reef that
-lies to northward showed up. There’s a break in
-the middle of that reef and good anchorage once
-you’re through, and we pushed right in, dropping our
-anchor in twenty-fathom water close to the beach.</p>
-
-<p>“Mauriri is a lot more open-faced than Taleka, and
-the chief village is close to the beach, not hid up a
-valley.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a white beach, but near black with Kanakas
-when we dropped the anchor, and there were canoe
-houses, but not a canoe put off. The crowd ashore
-didn’t look unfriendly, but they seemed standing on
-one foot, so to speak, not knowing how to take us
-or whether we meant fighting or trade.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck ordered the boat to be lowered and whilst
-the Chinks were getting it over I got him by the arm
-and took him to the after rail and tried to punch sense
-into his head.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Look here,’ I says, ‘what’s the good of revenge?
-it’s unchristianlike and it’s not business, anyway.
-Forget Sru and trade those crackers for copra, if they’ve
-got any here, if they haven’t, put out along for some
-other island.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘He killed my Chink’ says Buck. ‘Blow copra,
-I want his blood, and I’m going to have it, if it costs
-me my last nickel.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘All right, all right,’ I says, ‘come along,’ and
-off we put with Taute to do the talking and a box
-of stick tobacco to help Tiaki swallow the crackers.</p>
-
-<p>“It was easy to pick him out from the crowd on
-the beach, he was over six foot, with the half of an
-old willow pattern plate on his chest dangling from
-a necklace of sharks’ teeth, he had an underlip like
-an apron, one eye gone in some gouging match or
-another, and he stood two foot in front of the rest
-as if he wasn’t ashamed of himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Taute started the talk whilst Buck opened the
-tobacco case, and as I watched Tiaki’s face as the yarn
-went on, I thought to myself, God help Sru.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, when the palaver was over, Taute showed
-him one of the crackers we’d brought with us and how
-it worked, explaining we’d got a cargo of them and how
-he could do Sru in.</p>
-
-<p>“There was a dog walking on the beach twenty
-yards off, and Tiaki cocking his eye at it took aim and
-let fly with the cracker, and there wasn’t any dog left
-after the thing had burst, only a hole in the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“You could have heard them shouting at Taleka.
-Those chaps ran about clean bughouse, and Buck,
-he stood by mighty pleased with himself till all of a
-sudden Tiaki quiets them and gives an order and the
-crowd broke and made a run for the canoe houses.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>“‘What’s up now?’ says Buck. He wasn’t long
-waiting to know. Four big war canoes pushed out
-full of men, and making straight for the Greyhound,
-and Taute, who was talking to Tiaki turns and tells
-us we were prisoners. Tiaki, for all his underlip, was
-no fool, and when Taute had done translating what
-he had to say to us his meaning leapt up at us like
-luminous paint.</p>
-
-<p>“You see Tiaki had always been used to look on
-traders as hard bargainers who’d ask a tooth for a
-tenpenny nail, and here we were, us two, blowing in
-and offering him a cargo of ammunition for nothing,
-so long as he’d go and bomb Sru with it. It seemed
-too good to be true, and he suspected a trap. Said
-so, right out. He was going to hold us till the business
-was over and everything turned out satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p>“I had to swallow twice to keep that news down.
-A moment before we’d been free men, and there we
-were now like rats in a barrel, but there was no use
-kicking, so we sat down on the sand and watched the
-canoe men swarming over the <i>Greyhound</i> and breaking
-out the cargo. They didn’t touch the Chinks nor loot
-the ship, just went for the cracker cases, bringing them
-off load after load and dumping them on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Tiaki has a case opened and takes out a cracker;
-he’d tumbled to the mechanism, and there he stood
-with the thing in his hand explaining it to the population,
-talking away and flinging out his arms towards
-Taleka, evidently gingering them up for the attack
-on Sru. Then he gives an order sharp as the crack of
-a whip, and all the Marys and children and old chaps
-scattered off back to the village, and over a hundred
-of the fighting men took their seats on the beach in a
-big circle, whilst crackers were handed round to them
-and they examined the hang of the things, each man
-for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“They were a fine lot, but differently coloured,
-some as dark as bar-chocolate and some the colour of
-coffee with milk in it, and as they sat there the women
-and children and old men came down from the village
-bringing bundles of mat baskets with them, and down
-they squatted by the edge of the trees going over the
-baskets and mending them and putting them in order.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are they up to?’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Can’t you see?’ says I. ‘They’re going to
-carry the crackers in those baskets. They mean
-business right enough. Lord! Buck,’ I says, ‘I
-wish we were out of this; look at the fix we’re in.
-If them chaps are beaten by Sru, we’ll be done in as
-sure as paint&mdash;makes me sick, sitting here, and there’s
-our boat right before us. S’pose we make a dash
-right now, shove her off and get on board&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not a bit of use,’ says Buck. ‘They’d let after
-us in the canoes before we’d pushed off&mdash;we’ve just
-got to stick and see it out. I’m sorry,’ he says; ‘it’s
-my fault; you were right, and if I ever get out of this
-I’ll steer clear of mixing up in other folks’ quarrels. I
-wouldn’t have done it only for the Chink.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, it don’t matter,’ I says; ‘we’re in it and there’s
-no use in kicking.’</p>
-
-<p>“I called Taute, who was standing watching the
-basket work and jabbering with Tiaki, and asked him
-for news and what he thought they were going to do
-with us in case things went wrong. He went to Tiaki
-and had a jabber, and came back to us looking pretty
-grey about the gills.</p>
-
-<p>“Tiaki was going to attack Sru right away, starting
-that night and reaching Taleka next morning early;
-with the current the big war canoes would do the
-journey in seven hours. He couldn’t make a night
-attack because of the difficulty of getting in, but he
-reckoned to reach the bay just at daybreak. Then
-came the news that we were to go with them and lead
-the attack. Tiaki said as we had sold Sru the guns
-to attack Tiaki, it was only fair that we should lead
-Tiaki’s men against the guns, besides, he wanted to
-make sure we weren’t leading him into a trap; besides,
-he had often noticed white men feared nothing
-and were splendid fighters. He also said if we failed
-him facing the guns of Sru we’d have fish crackers
-flung at our backs.</p>
-
-<p>“You see the way that durn cargo served us;
-the guns in front of us, the crackers at our back&mdash;we
-couldn’t say anything&mdash;couldn’t do anything but
-curse Scudder and the day we met him, and sit there
-watching the preparations. Women were bringing
-down provisions for the canoes, and the baskets were
-ready and being distributed. They weren’t so much
-baskets as bags such as the natives use for carting
-every sort of thing in; each fighting man had one,
-and then the crackers were handed round about twenty
-to a man. They’d place them between their legs
-in the canoes as they paddled; every man had a spear
-as well, and as they stood there getting on for sundown,
-each man with his basket of bombs and a spear,
-I’d have been proud to lead them only I was
-so frightened.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>“Now the funniest thing happened.</p>
-
-<p>“All that crowd of fighting men full up of pride
-and devilment began shouting and chanting a war
-song. That was all right as far as it went, but after
-it was over a chocolate-coloured son of a gun began
-making a speech, shouting and pointing towards
-Taleka as if to say what he wouldn’t do to Sru.</p>
-
-<p>“Then a coffee-coloured devil cut in and seemed to
-carry on the argument.</p>
-
-<p>“Taute said the chocolate men and the coffee
-grinders were two different races, though joined in
-the one tribe, and they were arguing which was the
-bravest.</p>
-
-<p>“Other chaps cut in, and then all of a sudden they
-began running about, and before you could say
-‘knife’ they split, the chocolate men on one side, the
-coffee crowd on the other, with Tiaki running about
-half bughouse, trying to keep order, and the row growing
-bigger all the time till suddenly a coffee man
-remembered his bag of bombs and fetches out a cracker,
-gives it a twist, and lets fly at the chocolate man
-opposite him, sending his head to glory.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you ever see schoolboys snowballing each
-other? All over the sands they were, one chap chasing
-another, stooping to pick crackers from their bags
-and screw them tight and then letting fly, heads and
-arms and legs being blown away&mdash;not that we stopped
-to watch; we were running for the boat. Next
-moment we had her off, and we didn’t wait to pick
-up the anchor when we got aboard; we dropped the
-chain and shoved, leaving Sru to come over to shovel
-up the remains, and pleased to think that the Winchesters
-he’d diddled out of us wouldn’t be much use
-to him since the crackers had spoiled his target.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect there wasn’t a dozen fighting men on
-that island left whole and sound, but that’s neither
-here or there. I was just telling you it as a case in
-point. There’s something in one tribe that makes
-for war against another tribe even if they’ve been
-living happily together for years. It shows clearer
-in savages than civilised folk, but it’s in both and it’s
-got to be reckoned with by anyone who wants to do
-away with war for good and all.”</p>
-
-<p>He tapped his pipe out, and we sat watching the
-Pacific coming creaming in on the sands and round
-the rocks, the Pacific, that storm centre or Lake of
-Peace for the whole world, according to the way men
-may arrange their tribal differences and call upon
-intellect to balance instinct.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chIX' title='IX: The Other One'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER IX.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE OTHER ONE</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>Sydney is one of the finest towns in the world
-and it has the finest harbour, unless you call
-San Francisco Bay a harbour, it has the most hospitable
-people and a gaiety and push all its own, also,
-in the matter of temperature, when it chooses it can
-beat any other town except maybe Calcutta.</p>
-
-<p>“A hot shop,” said Brent. He was seated at a
-bar adorned with coloured bottles, and a girl with
-peroxide of hydrogen tinted hair had just handed
-him a lemon squash with a hummock of ice in it.</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t looking yourself, Captain,” said the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>“No, my dear, I aren’t,” replied Brent, “not if I
-look as I feel.” He relapsed into gloom and I offered
-him a cigarette which he refused.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going to a funeral,” he explained.</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry,” said I. “Not a near relation, I hope?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it might be a relation, by the way I feel,
-but I’ve none. When a man gets to my age he leaves
-a lot of things astern.” He sighed, finished the last
-half of his drink in one mighty gulp, wiped his mouth
-and got off his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“Walk down with me a bit of the way,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>We left the bar and entered the blaze of the street.
-It was eleven o’clock in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“It ought to be raining,” said the Captain as we
-wended our way along King Street towards the
-wharves. “Happy is the corpse that the rain rains
-on, is the old saying, and she’s a corpse if ever there
-was one, but rain or shine, if there’s happiness for
-such things as corpses, she’s happy&mdash;she’s done her
-duty.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did she die of?” I asked, by way of making
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p>“Old age,” replied Brent. He had a black tie on,
-but his garb was otherwise unchanged, his mourning
-was chiefly expressed by his voice and manner, and
-as we drew closer to the whiff of the harbour and the
-scent of shipping he took off his panama and mopped
-his bald head now and then with a huge red handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>That handkerchief was always the signal of worry
-or perplexity with Brent, and now, right on the
-wharves and feeling for his state of mind, I halted to
-say good-bye.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t you care to see her?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No thanks,” I replied. “I ought to meet a man
-at twelve and it’s after eleven now&mdash;and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll wait,” replied the Captain. “It’s only a
-step from here and she’s <i>worth</i> seeing. Kim on.”</p>
-
-<p>He took me by the arm and led me along, reluctantly
-enough, towards some mean-looking buildings, the
-relics of old days; under the bowsprit of a full rigged
-ship, over hawsers, and then on to a decayed slip of a
-wharf beside which an old schooner lay moored.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s her,” said Brent.</p>
-
-<p>On her counter in letters almost vanished stood the
-word <i>Greyhound</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Greyhound</i>,” said I, “is this the old schooner
-you and Slane owned?”</p>
-
-<p>“The same,” said Brent. “She’s to be towed to
-the breakers’ yard eight bells&mdash;noon, they gave me
-word so that I might have a last look at her.”</p>
-
-<p>So this was the funeral he was to attend. He
-mopped his face with the red handkerchief, contemplated
-the deck beneath him, heaved a sigh and
-then, “Come down,” said he. “I’ve told Jimmy
-Scott to leave me something in the cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>He dropped on to the deck and I followed him.
-There was no watchman to guard the corpse. I
-looked at the standing rigging all gone to ruin and the
-sticks that had survived many a gale, the grimy
-decks that once had been white, then I dropped
-down to the cabin after Brent.</p>
-
-<p>The ports were open and water shimmers from the
-harbour water danced on the maple panelling, the
-upholstery had been eaten by rats or roaches and a
-faint smell filled the place like the ghost of the odour
-of corruption, but there was a bottle of whisky on
-the table, a couple of glasses and a syphon.</p>
-
-<p>“If I hadn’t met you, I’d ’a brought someone
-else,” said Brent, taking his seat before the funeral
-refreshments, “but there’s not many I’d have sooner
-had than you to give her a send off. You remember
-I told you, Buck had her from Pat O’Brien who didn’t
-know her qualities, no one did in those days; why,
-a chap by name of Gadgett come aboard first day we
-had her and said she ought to be condemned, said
-she wasn’t seaworthy and that’s many years ago.”
-He took the cork from the bottle and poured
-“Many years ago and now I’m having my last
-drink and smoke here where Buck and me have often
-sat, and him in the cemetery. Well, here’s to you,
-Buck&mdash;and here’s to her.” We drank and lit up.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, she’s had her day,” said I, trying to say
-something cheerful. “It’s like a wife that has done
-her duty&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>The Captain snorted.</p>
-
-<p>“Wives,” said he, “a ship’s all the wife I’ve ever
-had and I don’t want no other, it’s all the wife a
-sailor-man wants and if she’s decently found and run,
-she never lets him down. I told that to Buck once.
-I told him the <i>Greyhound</i> was his lawful wife and he’d
-come a mucker if he took another. He wouldn’t
-believe me, but he found it out. You’ve never seen
-him. He died only four years ago and he hadn’t
-lost a tooth, he hadn’t got a grey hair on his head,
-six foot he stood and he’d only to look at a girl and
-she’d follow him, but he wasn’t given that way after
-his marriage.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he got married, did he?” said I. “I always
-fancied from what you told me of him that he was a
-single man.&mdash;Did she die?”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect she’s dead by this,” said the Captain.
-“No knowing, but if she ain’t she ought to be. We
-fell in with her, me and Slane, the year after that dust
-up with Sru I told you of. We’d lost money on that
-job, but we’d pulled up over a deal in silver that had
-come our way through Pat O’Brien and Buck had
-thirty thousand dollars in the Bank of California,
-and I’d got near ten in my pocket. I didn’t trust
-banks. For all that money we lived quiet, not being
-given to drink, and we were fitting the <i>Greyhound</i>
-out for a new job, when one night at a sociable we
-met in with Mrs. Slade. That was the name she
-gave herself, a fine, fresh-faced young woman, not
-thirty, with eyes like Cape mulberries, they had that
-red look in the black of them, and a laundry of her
-own they said was bringing in five hundred a week
-profit. She harpooned Buck. Clean through the
-gizzard. You’ve seen a chicken running about with
-a woman after it till she catches it and wrings its neck,
-that was Buck. He was no more good after she’d got
-the irons into him.</p>
-
-<p>“One night I had it out with him. I said: ‘The
-Lord Almighty has given you a ship to tend and take
-care of, she’s been true to you and brought you in
-the dollars, and look at the way you’re usin’ her, why,
-we ought to have had her out of dock by this and the
-cargo half on board her, she over there at Oakland
-and you foolandering after a widow woman.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘She’s a girl,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, woman or girl don’t matter,’ I says, ‘you
-ain’t the age for marrying, nor the sort of chap to
-make good at the game.’ We went at it hammer and
-tongs, me trying to pump sense into him like a chap
-trying to pump up a burst bicycle tyre, but at last,
-somehow or another, I began to get the better of the
-business and bring him to reason and by two in the
-morning I’d brought him to own he was a damn fool
-and marriage a mug’s game. I went to bed happy,
-and next day he turned up at noon with a flower in his
-coat and looking as if he’d gone queer in his head.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?” I says.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve just been married,’ says he.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“That’s the sort of chap a woman had made of him.
-I’ve heard it said a woman is the making of a chap,
-it’s true, if she’s a good woman she’ll make a man of
-a fool, and if she’s bad she’ll make a fool of any man,
-seems to me. Jinny Slade was bad. I’ve got instincts
-about things and maybe that’s what made
-me so down on the business from the first&mdash;them
-mulberry eyes of hers rose my bristles, somehow or
-another, but now she’d fixed him there was no use
-talking.</p>
-
-<p>“They took up housekeeping in Francis Street
-over the laundry, and not wishing to mix up in their
-hymeneal bliss, I didn’t see much of Buck for a
-month or more. The <i>Greyhound</i> was out of dock
-and I brought her over to her moorings at Tiburon,
-and I’d sit here just as I’m sitting now, time and
-again, thinking of old times and the fool Buck was
-making of himself, for we’d lost the cargo a trader
-had promised us and our business was going to smash.</p>
-
-<p>“One day I was leaning on the rail fishing with a
-hand line for want of something better to do when a
-guy comes along in a boat&mdash;Newall was his name&mdash;he’d
-known us for a couple of years, casual, and he’d
-just put off from an Oregon boat that lay anchored a
-bit out.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How’s Buck?’ says he, resting on his oars.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Buck’s married,’ I says. ‘Married this month
-and more.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I wish him luck,’ says Newall, ‘and who’s
-the lady?’”</p>
-
-<p>I tells him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Holy Mike,’ he says. ‘Jinny Slade&mdash;what made
-him do it?’</p>
-
-<p>“I told him I didn’t know unless it was the devil,
-and then I asked what he knew about the party.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ says Newall, ‘I’m a cautious man and
-I’m not going to lay myself open to no law court
-actions for deffination of character. I’m not going to
-say nothing about the woman except that she oughta
-been flung into the bay two years ago with a sinker
-tied to her middle, and then you wouldn’t have saved
-her first husband which she poisoned as sure as my
-name’s Dan Newall, no, nor the men she ruined in
-that gambling joint she run in Caird Street with a
-loaded r’lette wheel that’d stay put wherever you
-wanted by the pressin’ of a button under the table,
-run by a Chink it was with her money.</p>
-
-<p>“‘In with the crimps she was, and if I had a dollar
-for every sailor-man she’s helped to shanghai I’d buy
-a fishin’ boat and make my fortune out of catchin’
-the crabs that are feedin’ on the corpses of the men
-that’s drowned themselves because of her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Laundry,’ he says, ‘a laundry s’big as from here
-to Porte Costa, with every Chink in California workin’
-overtime for a month wouldn’t wash the edges of her
-repitation&mdash;and Buck’s married her; strewth, but he’s
-got himself up to the eyes. What sort of blinkers
-were you wearin’ to let him do it?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t know,’ I says, ‘alligator hide I should
-think was the sort he was wearing, anyhow. Question
-is what am I to do now?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Take a gun and shoot him,’ says Newall, ‘if you
-want to be kind to him.&mdash;Has she got any money out
-of him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I don’t know,’ I says.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Been married to him a month,’ he goes on.
-‘She’ll have every jitney by this&mdash;well, if you’re set
-on trying to do somethin’ for him, get the last of his
-money from him if he’s got any and hide it in a hole
-for him before she kicks him out plucked naked.’”</p>
-
-<p>Off he rowed, and pulling up my line I left the
-<i>Greyhound</i> to the Kanaka watchman and took the
-ferry over to ’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>The laundry was banging away, the Chinks all
-hard at work, Mrs. Slade wasn’t home, over at St.
-Jo for the day, so the forewoman said, but Buck was
-in and upstairs, and up I went.</p>
-
-<p>They’d got a fine sitting-room on the first floor
-with plush-covered chairs and brand new old-fashioned
-looking furniture and a bowl of goldfish in the
-window and pictures in big gold frames on the
-walls.</p>
-
-<p>Buck was sitting in an easy chair reading a paper
-and smoking a cigar.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo,” he says, “here’s a coincidence, for I
-was just coming over to Tiburon to see you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, were you?” says I. “Wits jump sometimes
-and here I am on the same job. How’s the world
-using you, Buck?”</p>
-
-<p>I tried to be as light-hearted as I could, but it was
-hard work. Buck had gone off in looks, and it was
-plain to see things weren’t going easy with him,
-you can always tell when a chap has something on
-his mind, and whilst he was getting out drinks I
-sat putting my thoughts together and only waiting
-to begin. I’d fixed to do a big grab, and get ten
-thousand dollars out of him as a loan to hide away
-for him against the time he got the kick out, plucked
-naked, as Newall had said.</p>
-
-<p>He pours the whisky.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck,” I says, taking the glass. “I’ve come to
-ask a favour of you. I want a loan.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much?” asks Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said, “I’ve ten thousand dollars of my
-own, as you know, and I’ve been offered a big opportunity
-of making a hundred thousand. Safe as
-houses. I want ten thousand to put with mine, I
-wouldn’t ask you to risk yours if I wasn’t risking
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the spec.?” he asks.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t tell you that,” I said&mdash;“I’m under promise,
-but you know me and I give you my word of honour
-your money is as safe as if it was in your pocket&mdash;safer.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’d do it if I could,” he says, “you know
-me and that I’m not lying when I speak, but I can’t,
-haven’t got it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, Buck,” I says, “why, only a month ago you
-had thirty thousand dollars in the bank.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck nods and goes on. “I haven’t got it to put
-my hand on,” he says. “My wife is keeping it for
-me. She says what with those New York banks
-going bust last spring and one thing and another,
-banks aren’t safe and she wants to invest it, she’s
-over at St. Jo to-day looking at some property.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s she got the money?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“In that safe,” says he.</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough there was a big iron safe in the corner
-of the room half hid by a screen.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing how the land lay, I said no more, and he
-changed the subject, going back to what he was
-saying when I first came in, how that he had been
-coming to see me that afternoon about a matter of
-business.</p>
-
-<p>He wouldn’t say what the business was, but he
-wanted my help and he wanted it that night. He
-also wanted the boat of the <i>Greyhound</i> brought over
-to Long Wharf.</p>
-
-<p>“Just bring her over yourself,” said he. “No,
-we don’t want help, just you and me will manage
-it, and bring the mast and sail and some grub, never
-mind what I want her for, I’ll tell you later, it’s a
-paying business, as you’ll find.”</p>
-
-<p>With that I took my leave of him and hiked off
-back to Tiburon, for the day was getting on and I
-had none too much time to get things together.</p>
-
-<p>I was bothered and that’s the truth; Buck had
-gone off, wasn’t the same chap, and by his manner
-when he asked me to meet him with the boat, I knew
-it wasn’t pleasure sailing he was after. I near
-scratched the top off my head thinking what he could
-be wanting with that boat, but it was beyond me
-and I gave it up. Taute was the name of the Kanaka,
-same chap we had with us when we did that gun-running
-job down at Taleka, and when I got back
-to the <i>Greyhound</i> I set Taute to work, getting some
-grub together and a new spar for a mast as the old
-one was sprung. Then, getting along for evening, I
-rowed over to Long Wharf. Long Wharf was pretty
-busy just then, what with wheat ships cleaning up
-before towing to Berkley for cargo and Oregon timber
-ships and such. There was a schooner lying there
-belonging to a chap I knew, so I just tied up to her
-channel-plates and crossed over on to the wharf
-where I sits on a bollard kicking my heels and waiting
-for Buck.</p>
-
-<p>Along he comes just on dark, and without a word
-he follows me across the deck of the schooner into the
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>Tell you I felt queer. We’d sailed pretty close to
-the wind together me and him, gun-running and what
-not, but this job seemed different, sort of back-door
-business with the harbour police or the Fish Patrol
-waiting to lay for us if we hitched up on it anywhere.
-I’d been used to blue water doings and big things
-and it got my goat to feel we were after something
-small and shady. It wasn’t small by any means,
-but, anyhow, that’s how I felt. But I said nothing,
-taking the oars and Buck taking his place in the
-stern sheets. Then we pushed off, Buck steering and
-making as if he was layin’ a course for Oakland. A
-few cable lengths out we took the wind and put up
-the mast, and, Buck taking the sheet, off we set still
-laying as if we were bound for Oakland. I’d sooner
-be out anywhere than in the lower bay after dark,
-what between them dam screeching ferry boats and the
-motor launches and such. Every monkey in ’Frisco
-with brass enough seems to have some sort or another
-of a launch or yacht and to spend his natural trying
-to run folks down. We were near cut into twice,
-seeing we had no light, but after a while, getting off
-the main track and Buck shifting his helm, we got
-along better.</p>
-
-<p>He was steering now laying straight for Angel
-Island. We passed Racoon Straits and kept on,
-the breeze freshening hard and the boat laying over
-to it. The sky was clear and a big moon was coming
-over the hills. Wonderful fine the bay is a night
-like that, with all the lights round showing yellow
-against the moon and ’Frisco showing up against
-Oakland.</p>
-
-<p>However, we weren’t out to admire the view and we
-held on, at least Buck did, till we were near level, as
-far as I could make out, with Reeds and aiming for
-Red Rock, the wind holding well. We passed a Stockton
-boat and an old brig coming down from Benicia
-or somewhere up there. Then away ahead and
-coming along square as a haystack I sighted a Chinese
-junk. Buck let go the sheet and, lighting a lantern
-he’d brought with us, ran it up.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you doing that for?” I asked him.</p>
-
-<p>“Show you in a minute,” says Buck. “Give
-us the boat-hook.”</p>
-
-<p>I handed it along and he told me to have the oars
-handy and then we sat whilst the junk came along
-at a six-knot clip, boosting the water and the great
-eyes in the bow of her showing in the moonlight as
-if they were staring at us, but not a soul to be seen or
-a light on deck.</p>
-
-<p>She snored along to starboard of us not more than
-ten yards away, black as thunder against the moon,
-and she was showing us her stern when something
-went splash over her side, followed by something else
-as if two chaps had gone a dive, one after the other.</p>
-
-<p>On top of that and almost at once a Holmes light
-was thrown over and went floating along, blazing
-and smoking and showing a man’s head squatting
-beside it.</p>
-
-<p>“Man overboard,” I says.</p>
-
-<p>“Row,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>I turned my head as I rowed and saw the junk
-going along as if nothing had happened, and then
-I saw the thing in the water wasn’t a man’s head but
-a buoy. We closed with the buoy and Buck grabs
-it with the boat-hook and brings it on board. It
-had a rope tied to it and he hauls it in, hand over
-hand, till up came a bundle done round with sacking.
-He hooks it over the gunnel and into the boat.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s done,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“It is,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>I didn’t say a word more. We got the sail on her
-and put her on the starboard tack, heading straight
-for Angel Island.</p>
-
-<p>Then we shoved through Racoon Straits. It was
-getting along for morning now and I felt stiff and
-beat, with no heart in me or tongue to tell Buck
-what I was thinking of him for dragging me into a
-business like this, only praying we might get out of
-it without being overhauled.</p>
-
-<p>We had Tiburon lights to starboard now and a bit
-to port the riding light of the old <i>Greyhound</i>, when,
-all of a sudden, we see a light running along towards
-us and heard the noise of a propeller like a sewing
-machine in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>“Police boat,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>My heart rose up and got jammed in my throat,
-and I hadn’t more than swallowed it down when
-they were alongside of us, and there was Buck sitting
-in the stern sheets with the bundle under his legs,
-and a chap in the police boat playing a lantern on him.</p>
-
-<p>Then the chap laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s only you, Buck,” says he. “What are
-you out for this time of night?”</p>
-
-<p>“Smuggling opium,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>The chap laughed. He was Dennis, well known
-to us both, and he shut his lantern and gave us the
-news that he was after some Chink smugglers who
-had their quarters at Valego and, fearing their shop
-was to be raided, were due to run some stuff into
-Tiburon that night according to his information.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ve just come down from San Quenton,”
-says Buck, “and I didn’t sight anything, only a big
-junk that passed us, making as if she was going to
-Oakland&mdash;Good luck to you.”</p>
-
-<p>Off they went and five minutes after we were tying
-up to the <i>Greyhound</i>.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>We got the stuff on board, right down here where
-we are sitting now, and he undoes the sacking and
-there stood six cans of Canton opium, worth Lord
-knows what a can.</p>
-
-<p>I got the whisky out and had a big drink before I
-could get my hind legs under me to go for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said, “this is a nice night’s work.
-S’pose Dennis hadn’t been in that police boat?
-Aren’t you ashamed of yourself? Don’t you see
-you’ve been trading on your good name, for if Dennis
-hadn’t believed in you, we’d both be in quad now
-with the shackles on us&mdash;And look what you’ve done
-to the <i>Greyhound</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“What have I done to her?” he fires.</p>
-
-<p>“Done to her,” I says. “Why, you’ve made
-her disrespectable, that’s what you’ve done to her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, is this the first shady job she’s been in?”
-says he. “Why, look at those guns we run&mdash;what’s
-the difference?”</p>
-
-<p>“Guns aren’t dope,” I says, “and whites aren’t
-Chinks. You’ve been hand in fist with Chinks over
-this, but there’s no use talking. It’s done.”</p>
-
-<p>I knew it was the wife at the back of him. That
-was the cause of it all, so I didn’t rub it in any more.
-I remembered Newall’s words about her and the
-men she’d done in, and I saw as plain as paint
-that laundry of hers was only a blind for the Lord
-knows what. I just had another drink, and then
-I asked him what he was going to do with the stuff
-now he had it on board. He said he was going to
-stick it in the lazarette for a few days till things
-were quiet and then he’d get it ashore, can by can,
-and he’d do it all himself and not ask me to help him.</p>
-
-<p>Then we got the stuff into the lazarette and had
-a snooze, and somewhere about noon next day he
-goes ashore, leaving me on board.</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t eat nor sit still, couldn’t do anything
-but smoke and walk the deck. I reckon when a
-man’s in trouble there’s nothing better than tobacco,
-it gives him better advice than all the friends in the
-world.</p>
-
-<p>There I was with that stuff in the lazarette and
-who knew what moment some gink or another would
-give the show away and the police would be aboard.
-I wasn’t thinking of myself so much as Buck, and after
-him I was thinking of his wife and wishing I had her
-aboard to drown her.</p>
-
-<p>But worry as much as I liked, I couldn’t see a way
-out; the only way was to break him off from her
-and get him away, for this was only the beginning of
-things and I knew it would end in perdition for him.
-She’d managed to get some power over him with
-those mulberry eyes of hers, and how to loose it was
-beyond me.</p>
-
-<p>I slept aboard that night and somewhere getting
-along for morning, I sat up in my bunk with a plan
-full made in my head. I must have been thinking
-it out in my sleep, or maybe it was the Almighty
-put it into my mind, but it was a peach. Question
-was, could I work it?</p>
-
-<p>First thing I did was to make a dive for the lazarette
-and get those opium tins out; getting them on deck
-I dumped them one by one, and every splash I said
-to myself: “There goes a bit of that damn woman.”
-It was just before sun up and there was nobody to
-see.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” I says to myself, “the old <i>Greyhound’s</i> a
-clean ship again and Buck will be a clean man before
-dark if I have to break the laundry up and her on
-top of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Getting on for breakfast time I sent Taute ashore
-for some things and did the cooking myself, then,
-towards noon, I rowed ashore and took the ferry for
-’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>I was as full of nerves as a barber’s cat. It wasn’t
-what I was going to do that rattled me, but the knowing
-that if I didn’t pull it off, Buck would be ruined for
-life.</p>
-
-<p>When I got to the laundry I couldn’t go in. I
-walked up and down the street saying to myself:
-“Bill, you’ve gotta do it; no use hanging in irons,
-you’ve got old Buck to think of. Make yourself think
-what you’re going to say is true, now or never, in you
-go, give her the harpoon.”</p>
-
-<p>In I goes. The head woman said they were upstairs,
-and up I went.</p>
-
-<p>They’d finished their dinner and Buck was smoking
-a cigar, the woman was still at the table, peeling
-an apple.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck,” I says, “it’s up, the police are after
-you. I’ve run all the way to tell you. Dennis has
-given me word and you’ve still time to save yourself
-if you’re quick.”</p>
-
-<p>The woman gives a squeal and flings the apple
-on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Great Scott!” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>Then I turns on his wife and gives her the length
-of my tongue for leading him into the business, and
-she ups and gives me the lie, saying she had nothing
-to do with it, winking at him to back her, which
-the fool did, but so half-hearted you could see he
-wasn’t telling the truth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I said, “it doesn’t matter, the question
-is now to get him out of ’Frisco. Dennis has given
-me three hours to get the <i>Greyhound</i> out with him
-on board her and save him from the penitentiary.
-Has he any money?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got his money,” says she. “Buck, stir
-yourself,” she says. “I’ll pack a bag for you and
-here’s the notes you give me to keep.” She goes
-to the safe and unlocks it and takes out a bundle
-done up in brown paper, and he stuffs it in his pocket,
-and she packs his bag and off I drags him.</p>
-
-<p>Out in the street I told him to wait a minute, and
-ran back, and there she was in the room locking the
-safe.</p>
-
-<p>“I ought to have told you,” said I, “they’re after
-you too; clear out of ’Frisco, git by the next train or
-they’ll have you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s give me away?” she cries.</p>
-
-<p>“The Chinks,” says I; and at that she let a yelp
-out of her, and falls on the sofa in a dead faint.
-I opened the safe and there I sees a parcel the
-identical of the one she’d given Buck, and I put it in
-my pocket after a squint at the contents. Then
-I put her feet up, and lit out to where Buck was waiting
-for me in the street, and catching him by the arm I
-dragged him along down to the wharves where Taute
-was waiting with the boat. We got over to the
-<i>Greyhound</i>, and then the three of us set to work
-to get that schooner out of the bay, a six men’s job,
-but we done it.</p>
-
-<p>All the time we were handling her and getting across
-the bar I was thinking hard enough to split my head
-open. Outside I came to a conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck,” I said, “you’re free of her now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?” says he.</p>
-
-<p>“Your wife,” says I.</p>
-
-<p>Then I told him all I’d done. I thought he’d have
-knifed me. He was for putting back right away till
-I played my last card. I was only working on suspicion
-but I was right.</p>
-
-<p>“Put your hand in your pocket,” I said, “and pull
-out that bundle of notes your wife gave you. If the
-tally is right, I’ll go straight back with you and
-apologise to her.”</p>
-
-<p>He pulls out the parcel and opens it. It was full
-of bits of newspaper and old washing bills. Then I
-pulls out the other parcel I’d nicked and there were
-his notes.</p>
-
-<p>Brent relit his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“He never saw her again,” said Brent. “When we
-put back to ’Frisco, the laundry was shut and she
-gone. He didn’t want to see her either. The old
-<i>Greyhound</i> was enough for him after his experience
-of women&mdash;and now she’s going too.”</p>
-
-<p>We sat for a while in silence and tobacco smoke,
-then Brent looked up. The coughing and churning
-of a tug came through the open skylight and the hot
-hazy atmosphere of the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s them,” said Brent.</p>
-
-<p>We came on deck. Then we climbed on to the wharf
-whilst Scott’s men went aboard, true undertakers’
-assistants, callous, jovial, red-faced, gin-breathing.
-We watched the tow rope passed and the mooring
-ropes cast off, the tow rope tighten and the bowsprit
-of the <i>Greyhound</i> turning for the last time from land.
-We watched the smashed-up water of the harbour
-streaming like a millrace under the bat-bat-bat of
-the tug paddles and the stern of the Greyhound with
-the faded old lettering turned towards a wharf for
-the last time.</p>
-
-<p>As the vision faded, Brent heaved a deep sigh,
-thinking maybe of his partner and old times.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said, turning away, “that’s the end of
-her. What gets me is that the other one may be alive
-and kicking her heels and enjoying herself&mdash;no knowing,
-it’s those sort that live longest, seems to me.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chX' title='X: Iron Law, or the Queen of Utiali'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER X.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>IRON LAW, OR THE QUEEN OF UTIALI</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>If you want to study psychology go to the wilds.
-The minds of civilised men and women are so
-covered with embroidery that the true texture is almost
-hidden; their faces have been used so long for masks
-that form and expression cannot be relied on.
-Amongst savages you come sometimes upon the
-strangest facts bearing upon the structure of mind,
-facts that lose half their significance in the atmosphere
-of London, yet which, all the same, are not unconnected
-with our processes of reasoning and conduct.</p>
-
-<p>I was sitting with Brent in the house of Ibanez,
-the agent of the Southern Islands Soap Syndicate, an
-institution that turns cocoanut trees and native labour
-into soap, mats, margarine, dollars and dividends,
-beats up the blue Pacific with the propellers of filthy
-steamboats and has its offices in San Francisco, London
-and New York. We were sitting, to speak more
-strictly, in the verandah, the southern night lay
-before us and a million stars were lighting the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Tahori, a native boy, and one of Ibanez’s servants,
-had just brought along a big tray with cigars and drinks
-and placed it on a table by us. I noticed that he wore
-white cotton gloves. Brent had also noticed the fact.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wrong with that chap’s hands?” asked
-Brent.</p>
-
-<p>“Tahori’s?” replied our host. “Nothing&mdash;only
-he must not touch glass.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tabu?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. He only helps occasionally in household
-work when Mauri is away. I got over the difficulty
-of his waiting upon me by giving him gloves in case
-he accidentally touched a tumbler or bottle; even
-with the gloves on he will not handle anything in
-the way of glass knowingly; the cook puts the things
-on that tray, and when he takes it back to the kitchen
-she will clear it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought all that was dying out,” said Brent.</p>
-
-<p>“So it is, but it still hangs about. Tahori is a
-South Island boy. I don’t know why the tabu about
-glass came about, makes it awkward for him as a
-servant.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one knows,” said Brent. “I’ve seen chaps
-that were under tabu preventing them from eating
-oysters and others that daren’t touch the skin of a
-shark or the wood of such and such a tree, no one
-knows why.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do they suppose would happen to them if
-they broke the tabu?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“They couldn’t,” said Brent.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, they couldn’t. I’m talking of the real old
-Islanders whose minds haven’t been loosened up by
-missionaries and such, though I’m not so sure it
-wouldn’t hold good for the present-day ones too, and
-I’m saying that a chap like that couldn’t break his tabu
-not if he wanted to, not if his life depended on it;
-beliefs are pretty strong things, but this is something
-stronger even than a belief; maybe it’s the mixture
-of a custom and a belief, and that makes it have such
-a hold on the mind, but there it is&mdash;I’ve seen it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Seen a man unable to break his tabu?”</p>
-
-<p>“Seen the effects, anyhow, same as you might see
-the wreck of a ship lying on a beach. I doubt if
-you’d see the same thing these days, though there’s no
-telling; anyhow, it was away back in the early nineties
-and I’d just come up from the Tongas to Tahiti,
-getting a lift in the <i>Mason Gower</i>, she was an old
-trading schooner the missionaries had collared and
-turned into a Bible ship, and I lent my hand with the
-cooking to pay for my passage.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d had a quarrel with Slane and parted from
-him, taking my share of the money we had in common,
-and I hadn’t seen him for six months and more. I
-hadn’t prospered either, losing nearly every buck in
-a blackbirding venture I ought never to have gone in
-for.</p>
-
-<p>“I hadn’t more than ten dollars in my belt when I
-landed at Papeete, but I’d saved my dunnage and had
-some decent clothes and the luck to fall in with Billy
-Heffernan at the club. Billy was one of the Sydney
-boys; he wasn’t more than twenty-five, but he’d
-seen more of the world than most and lost two fortunes
-which he’d made with his own hands. That was the
-sort Billy was, and when I struck him at Papeete he
-was recovering from his last bust-up and had got
-the money together for another venture.</p>
-
-<p>“His first fortune had been made over Sing Yang
-opium, which isn’t opium no more than Sam Shu is
-honest drink; then he’d done a deal in shell and pulled
-it off and lost the money in copra, and now he was after
-precious coral.</p>
-
-<p>“When I met him in the bar I said: ‘Hello, Heff&mdash;what
-are you after down here,’ and he says, ‘Coral.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, you’ll find lots of it,’ says I, thinking he
-was joking, and then I found it was precious coral
-he was talking of. You see there’s about a hundred
-different sorts of coral. Coral’s made by worms.
-If you go on any reef and knock a chunk off between
-tide marks you’ll find your chunk has got worms
-hanging out of it. I’ve done it often in different
-parts, and I’ve been surprised to find the difference in
-those worms. Some are a foot long and as thin as a
-hair, and some are an inch thick and as long as your
-finger; some are like snails and some are like lobsters
-and prawns in shape; some are yellow and some blue.
-Above tide marks you don’t find anything, just solid
-rock. Well, there’s just as many different sorts of
-coral as there is worms, and there’s only one sort of
-precious coral and it’s a pale pink, the colour of a rose
-leaf, and that’s what Heffernan was after. He’d heard
-of an island in the Paumotus which isn’t very far from
-Tahiti, and by all accounts it was a good fishing ground
-for pink coral, and more than that, it was said the
-Queen of the place&mdash;for it was run by a woman&mdash;had a
-lot of the stuff for sale&mdash;Tawela was her name.</p>
-
-<p>“Ships keep clear of the Paumotus on account of
-the currents that run every which way and the winds
-that aren’t dependable. Heff had his information
-from a whaling captain who’d struck the place the year
-before and had talk with the Kanakas. He was on
-the beach broken down with drink, and gave the
-location for twenty dollars. He said he didn’t think
-they were a dependable lot, but they had the stuff,
-and if Heffernan didn’t mind taking risks he might
-make a fortune. Heff asked the old chap why he
-hadn’t gone in for the business himself, and he answered
-that he would have done so only he had no trade
-goods; nothing but whale oil, and the Kanakas
-didn’t want that, they wanted knives and tobacco
-and any sort of old guns and print calico and so on.
-Heft didn’t know where to get any such things as these,
-and hadn’t the money if he had known, nor a ship
-to lade them into, but next day, by good luck, came
-blowing in the <i>Mary Waters</i>, owned and captained
-by Matt Sellers, a Boston chap who’d come round
-to the Pacific in a whaler out of Martha’s Vineyard,
-skipped at the Society Islands not liking the society on
-board, and risen from roustabout to recruiter and
-recruiter to captain and owner. He’d brought a
-mixed cargo from ’Frisco on spec to the Marquesas,
-couldn’t find a market and had come on to Papeete,
-couldn’t find a market and came into the club for
-a drink, fell into the arms, as you may say, of Heffernan,
-and that did him. He hadn’t been talking half
-an hour with Heff when he sees clearly that the hand
-of the Almighty was in the business, and that a sure
-fortune was waiting for him if he’d only take the
-trouble to pick it up. His trade goods were just the
-things wanted to buy the stuff, and he only had to
-put out for the Paumotus to get it. That was the
-way Heff mesmerised him. Then they had a talk
-as to the profits, and Sellers agreed to give Heff twenty-five
-per cent. commission on the deal.</p>
-
-<p>“I blew into the business, as I was saying, by
-meeting Heffernan a few days later&mdash;day before the
-<i>Mary Waters</i> was due to sail&mdash;and, seeing no chance
-of doing much in Papeete, I joined in with them at
-second officer’s pay, but without any duty, only to
-lend a hand if there should be a dust-up.</p>
-
-<p>“Next day we started, steering a course almost
-due east. We weren’t long in finding out we’d struck
-the Paumotus, tide rips everywhere and reefs, then
-you’d see cocoanut trees growing out of the sea ahead
-and presently you’d be skimming by a beach of coral
-not ten feet above the sea level with cocoanut trees
-blowing in the wind and Kanaka children shouting at
-you. Very low free board those atoll islands have, and
-I’ve heard of ships being blown right over the beaches
-into the lagoons. We passed a big island like that,
-and then, two days after, we raised Utiali; that was
-the name of the island the whaler captain had given to
-Heffernan with the latitude and longitude. It wasn’t
-down in the South Pacific Directory. They’ve got
-it there now, but in those days there was no mention
-of Utiali, though the whaler captains knew it well
-enough, but a whaler captain would never bother to
-report an island; if he’d struck the New Jerusalem
-he wouldn’t have done more than log it as a place
-where you could take on milk and honey. Whales
-was all they cared for, and blubber.</p>
-
-<p>“We came along up and found the place answering
-to all descriptions, lagoon about a mile wide, break
-to the east, good show of cocoanut trees and deep
-soundings all to north-east and south, with another
-island not bigger than the palm of your hand to west
-running out from a line of reef that joined with the
-beach of Utiali.</p>
-
-<p>“If the place had been painted blue with the name
-in red on it, it couldn’t have been plainer.</p>
-
-<p>“We came along to the eastward till we saw the
-opening, and got through without any bother just on
-the slack.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a pretty place to look at. I’ve never
-seen a stretch of water that pleased me more than that
-lagoon; maybe it was the depth or something to do
-with the water itself, but it was more forget-me-not
-colour than sea blue, and where it was green in the
-shallows or the ship shadow, that green was brighter
-and different from any green I’ve ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe that’s why precious coral grew there, since
-the water colours were so clear and bright, the coral
-colours following suit would hit on new ideas, so to
-speak, but however that may have been, there was no
-denying the fact that Utiali was a garden, and the
-native houses on shore seemed the gardeners’ cottages&mdash;had
-that sort of innocent look.</p>
-
-<p>“We dropped the hook close in shore on to a
-flower bed where you could see the sea anemones and
-the walking shells as clear as if there wasn’t more than
-two foot of water over them, and before the schooner
-had settled to the first drag of the ebb that was
-beginning to set, canoes began to come off with
-Kanakas in them.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“They came along paddling under the counter,
-waving their paddles to us, and then, having gone
-round us, like as if they were making a tour of inspection,
-they tied up and came on board, led by a big
-Kanaka Mary&mdash;a beauty to look at, with lovely eyes&mdash;Lord,
-I remember those eyes&mdash;who gave herself a
-bang on the chest with her fist and said ‘Tawela.’
-That was how she presented her visiting card.</p>
-
-<p>“We had a Kanaka with us who could talk most
-of the island tongues, and we put him on to Tawela
-to extract information from her and it came up in
-chunks.</p>
-
-<p>“Tawela, by her own accounts, was anxious to
-trade anything from cocoanuts to her back teeth.
-She wanted guns and rum, which we hadn’t got, but
-she said she’d try to make out with tobacco and beads.
-She said she had plenty of pink coral, and would we
-come on shore and look at it, also would we come to
-dinner and she would give us the time of our lives.</p>
-
-<p>“Then she went off ashore, us promising to follow
-on in an hour or so.</p>
-
-<p>“I was talking to Sellers after she’d left, when
-Sellers says to me: ‘Look over there, what’s that?’
-I looks where he was pointing and I sees something
-black sticking from the water away out in the lagoon.
-The tide was ebbing, as I’ve told you, and the thing,
-whatever it was, had been uncovered by the ebb;
-it didn’t look like the top of a rock, it didn’t look
-like anything you could put a name to unless maybe
-the top of an old stake sticking from the water.
-‘Go over and have a look,’ says Sellers, ‘and find what
-it is.’ I took the boat which had been lowered ready
-to take us ashore, and me and Heffernan pulls out.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s the mast of a ship,’ says Heff, who was
-steering, and no sooner had he given it its name than
-I saw plain enough it couldn’t be anything else.</p>
-
-<p>“It was, and as we brought the boat along careful,
-the ship bloomed up at us, the fish playing round
-the standing rigging and a big green turtle sinking
-from sight of us into her shadow.</p>
-
-<p>“She lay as trigg as if she was on the stocks, with
-scarcely a list and her bow pointing to the break
-in the reef. Her anchor was in the coral, and you
-could see the slack of the chain running to her bow.
-She’d been a brig. The top masts had been hacked
-off for some reason or another, and pieces of canvas,
-yards long some of them, showed waving from her
-foreyard, and it was plain to be seen she’d been sunk
-with the foresail on her and the canvas had got slashed
-by fish and the wear of the tides bellying it this way
-and that till there was nothing left but just them
-rags.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d never seen a ship murdered before and said so.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yes,’ says Heffernan, ‘it’s plain enough, she’s
-been sunk at her moorings; look at the way she’s
-lying, and look at that anchor chain. Well, I never
-did think to see a sunk ship at anchor, but I’ve seen
-it now.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s the chaps ashore that have done this,’
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sure,’ said Heffernan. ‘Done in the ship and
-done in the crew. We’ve got to go careful.’</p>
-
-<p>“We put back to the <i>Mary Waters</i> and reported
-to Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Skunks!’ said Sellers. ‘Tawela’s Queen Bee of
-a proper hive. Well, we must be careful, that’s all.
-Keep our guns handy and give word to the Kanakas
-to be on the look-out.’</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Mary Waters</i> had a Kanaka crew as I’ve said,
-and having given the bo’sun the tip to be on the look-out
-for squalls, we got rowed ashore, sending the
-boat back to the schooner.</p>
-
-<p>“Tawela’s house was the first of the line of houses
-that ran east and west along the beach; it was the
-biggest, too, and there was only her and her son at
-the dinner; the rest of the tribe had gone off in the
-canoes right across the lagoon to the opposite shore
-to gather shell-fish on the outer beach. Our Kanaka
-boy that acted as interpreter got this news from Tawela,
-and it lightened our minds a lot, for if any killing
-had been meant the tribe wouldn’t have gone off like
-that.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t a bad dinner, take it all round. Baked
-pig and oysters, and sweet potatoes and so on, with a
-palm salad that Tawela never invented herself, that
-I’ll lay a dollar, and said so.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, she’s probably made the cook of that brig
-show her how to do things white man style before she
-murdered him,’ says Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Damn her,’ says Heffernan, and there those two
-sat talking away, she listening but not understanding;
-it was better than a pantomime.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the son gets up and brings in some palm
-toddy, best I ever struck, and Sellers opens a box of
-cigars he’d brought with him, and we all lit up, Tawela
-included.</p>
-
-<p>“I remember, as plain as if it was only ten minutes
-ago, sitting there looking at the sunlight coming in
-through the door behind Sellers and striking through
-the blue smoke of the cigars, and then the next thing
-I remember is waking up with my hands tied and my
-feet roped together, lying on my back in a shack with
-the morning light coming through the cracks in the
-wall, Heffernan and Sellers beside me.</p>
-
-<p>“It was plain enough what had happened; we’d
-been doped. I heard Sellers give a groan and called
-out to him, then Heffernan woke, and there we lay
-admiring ourselves for the fools we’d been in falling
-into that mug trap. We’d each landed with a revolver
-strapped to his belt, but the revolvers were gone.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>“We hadn’t been lying there cursing ourselves more
-than half an hour when, the sun having got over
-the reef, a chap comes in, catches Sellers by the
-heels and drags him out just as if he’d been a dead
-carcase.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Good-bye, boys,’ cries Sellers, as he’s dragged
-along the ground, and good-bye it was, for a few
-minutes after we heard him scream.</p>
-
-<p>“He went on screaming for fifteen minutes, maybe
-more, and I was fifteen years older when he let off
-and the silence came up again with nothing but the
-sound of the reef and the jabbering of those cursed
-Kanakas.</p>
-
-<p>“‘If I had a knife I’d stick it into myself,’ says
-Heffernan. ‘Lord! what have they been doing to
-him?’</p>
-
-<p>“I couldn’t answer, more than just by spitting, and
-there we lay waiting our turn and watching the sun
-striking fuller on the lagoon through the door space.</p>
-
-<p>“I could see the schooner lying there at anchor, but
-not a soul could I see on board her; the crew were either
-down below or had been murdered. As I was looking
-at her I heard Heffernan give a grunt, then I saw that
-he was sitting up and that his hands were free. He’d
-been working away, saying nothing, and he’d managed
-to get the cocoanut fibre rope free of his wrists; a
-minute after, he’d got his feet loose, and then he
-turned to me and it didn’t take more than five minutes
-to make me a free man like himself.</p>
-
-<p>“That being done we set to work on the back wall
-of the shack, pulling aside the wattles and tearing out
-the grass binding till we were free at last and out into
-the thick growth, which was mostly mammee apple
-and cassia mixed up with pandanus and cocoanut trees.</p>
-
-<p>“What made us bother to break free from the shack,
-Lord only knows. There was no use getting free,
-seeing we were on an atoll and would be hunted down
-like rats once Tawela and her crowd got wind that we
-were loose; anyhow, we’d worked like niggers and just
-as if our lives had depended on it, and now in the
-bushes we were crawling along on our bellies to put
-as big a distance as we could between ourselves and
-that crowd&mdash;as if it mattered!</p>
-
-<p>“We worked along, taking the line of bushes
-towards the reef opening, and all the time to the left
-of us we could hear the breaking of the swell on the
-outer beach, whilst to the right of us we could see bits
-of the lagoon now and then through the branches.</p>
-
-<p>“The strangest feeling I’ve ever felt was being
-stuck like that between the free sea and that locked-in
-lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Prison on one side, so to say, and an open road
-on the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there we were, the sun getting higher in
-the sky, and the Kanakas sure to be beating the
-bushes after us as soon as they found we’d broke loose,
-but we didn’t say a word on the matter, only went on
-crawling till we’d reached the last of the trees and
-thick stuff. From there the coral ran naked to the
-break in the reef.</p>
-
-<p>“We hadn’t more than reached so far when the
-hellnation of a hullabaloo broke out behind us, and we
-thought they’d found we’d escaped, but that wasn’t
-so, as we discovered in a minute, for chancing to look
-towards the opening, we saw the top canvas of a
-schooner away beyond the northernmost pierhead.
-We reckoned she was two or three mile off, and, crawling
-along the coral on our bellies till we’d got a clear
-view of the sea, there she was, right enough, making
-for the break, the light wind spilling and filling her
-canvas. She hadn’t much more than steerage way.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we looked back. We couldn’t see the
-village because of the trees, but we could see the
-<i>Mary Waters</i> lying there at anchor out in the lagoon,
-and canoes all about her and chaps swarming on
-board of her.</p>
-
-<p>“‘See that,’ said Heffernan, ‘all that hullabaloo
-wasn’t about us. I doubt if they’ve found we’ve
-escaped yet.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are they doing round the schooner?’ says I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Lord knows,’ says he, ‘but we’ll soon see.’</p>
-
-<p>“We did. Those devils were used to the game of
-sinking ships and slaughtering sailor men; they’d
-most likely got all the trade goods they wanted off
-the schooner by this, and now we saw them passing
-a tow rope from the bow to one of the canoes and we
-heard the noise of the winch picking up the anchor
-chain.</p>
-
-<p>“‘They’re not going to sink her at her moorings,’
-said Heffernan, ‘too shallow. Look, they’re towing
-her to a deeper part of the lagoon.’</p>
-
-<p>“That was so, and as we watched we saw she was
-getting deeper in the water even as she was towed;
-they must have begun the job of sinking her the
-minute the schooner was sighted, forgetting like fools
-that the chaps coming up would have been sure to sight
-her spars, or maybe risking even that rather than have
-the newcomers see the bloody work that had been
-done on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“You can sink a ship quicker than clean her sometimes.
-Well, there it was, and suddenly the old
-<i>Mary Waters</i> gave a dive, and dipped her bowsprit
-under. I saw her shiver like a dog, and then the stern
-went, the main hatch cover blowing off from air
-pressure as soon as the decks were awash. After that
-she went like a stone till there was nothing left of her
-but a case or two floating about and a bit of grating.</p>
-
-<p>“Then we crawled back among the trees and held
-a council of war, as you might say, but we couldn’t
-fix on anything to do but lay still and wait our chances.
-We reckoned the fellows in the schooner were sure to
-come ashore armed, and we’d have time to warn them
-before they were set on. Our worst chance was that
-the Kanakas might find us before the schooner was in
-or the chaps come ashore, but there was no use
-bothering about that, and there we lay waiting and
-listening till the fore canvas of the schooner showed
-at the break, and in she came riding the full flood,
-every sail drawing to the wind that was freshening up.</p>
-
-<p>“When I saw her full view I nearly leapt out of my
-skin. She was the <i>Greyhound</i>. Buck, as I found
-afterwards, had put into Papeete, heard of our expedition
-and me being with it, and, the old whaling
-chap offering to give him our port of destination for
-two bottles of whisky, closed on the offer and lit
-after us. He was anxious to pick up with me and
-make friends, and maybe he was anxious to have a
-hand in the coral business as well, no knowing; anyhow,
-here he was bulling along across the lagoon and
-evidently making to drop his anchor close to the village.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come on,’ I says to Heffernan, ‘follow me.’
-We made back through the thick stuff, taking the track
-we’d come by, and we hadn’t more’n reached the
-sight of Tawela’s house through the trees when we
-heard the anchor chain go.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon the damn fool Kanakas had been so busy
-with the sinking of the schooner and then the <i>Greyhound</i>
-coming in, that they’d forgot to look to see if
-we were still safely tied up. Anyhow, the whole
-crowd were down on the beach to meet the boat
-that was coming off, and making sure of that, I took
-a peep into Tawela’s house to see if there was any
-clubs or spears handy for arming ourselves, and there
-I see Tawela’s son hiding a long knife under some
-matting. We went in; he was too scared to yell, and
-shoving him in a corner, we stripped up the matting,
-and there were our revolvers, a couple of knives and
-half a dozen short stabbing spears, all bloody with
-the blood of Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“We kicked him out before us, and, with the guns
-in our hands, down we marched to the beach.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>“Buck Slane had landed, he and four of his men,
-and every man with a Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>“Tawela and her crowd were round them, all
-friendly as pie and wagging their tails, and so busy
-pretending to be innocent and God-fearing Kanakas
-they didn’t notice us till we were almost on them;
-for a moment I thought they were going to show fight,
-but when they saw the guns in our hands they boiled
-down.</p>
-
-<p>“I clapped my gun to Tawela’s head, and called Buck
-to tie her hands behind her&mdash;we hadn’t time to say
-good-day to each other, just that&mdash;and Buck, tumbling
-to the truth of the matter, whips a big pocket handkerchief
-from his pocket, and one of his men does
-the binding. As he was binding her he says, ‘Look
-at her hands,’ and there, sure enough, was blood
-dried on her hands, the blood of Sellers calling out
-for revenge.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, whilst the crowd stood quiet, I gave Buck
-the facts in four words. He made a signal with his
-arms to the schooner, and off comes another boat
-with the mate and four more Kanakas, all armed.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Buck took command, and leaving Tawela
-with a chap and orders to blow her brains out if she
-so much as sneezed, we drove that whole crowd along
-the beach right to the break of the lagoon and left
-them there with four gunmen covering them. Then
-we came back.</p>
-
-<p>“We searched round and found what was left of
-Sellers among the bushes, then we set to.</p>
-
-<p>“‘They’re unfortunate heathens,’ says Buck, ‘but
-they’ve got to be taught,’ and with that he set fire
-to Tawela’s house with his own hands. We burnt
-every house, we smashed everything we could smash,
-and we broke the canoes to flinders, fishing gear and
-spears and everything went, so there was nothing left
-of that population but the people.</p>
-
-<p>“That will learn them,’ says Buck. Then he
-collected his men, and bundling Tawela into a boat
-with a parcel of pink coral we found in a shack back of
-her house, we pushed off. Ridley, the mate, was for
-shooting her&mdash;seeing the evidence on her hands&mdash;and
-slinging the body in the lagoon, but Buck said he was
-going to give her a decent trial when our minds were
-cool, and there was lots of time, anyway, after we’d
-put out. Buck, ever since his business with Sru,
-had been against doing things in a hurry, specially
-when it came to killing, so she was had on board and
-given in charge of two of the Kanaka crew. Then
-we got the hook up and out we put.</p>
-
-<p>“The Kanakas were still herded at the end near the
-break, and as we passed through, knowing we’d got
-their Queen on board, they all set up a shout, ‘Tawela,
-Tawela’ like the crying of sea gulls, and that was the
-last we heard of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, with the ship on her course, and the Kanaka
-bo’sun in charge of the deck, we got down to the cabin
-and started our court-martial.</p>
-
-<p>“She deserved hanging, there were no two words
-about that. And I reckon it was more superstition
-about killing a woman than humanity, but maybe I’m
-wrong; anyhow, Buck brought out his idea, which
-was to take her to Sydney and have her tried there.</p>
-
-<p>“We’d been going at it for an hour or so, when the
-mate was called on deck and comes back in a minute
-or two in a tearing rage.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That wild cat,’ says he, ‘has been asking for food
-and won’t eat bully beef; says anything that comes out
-of a shell is tabu to her, turtle or oysters or shell fish,
-and she reckons canned stuff is the same since it’s in
-a tin shell. I expect she’s had lots of experience
-in canned stuff seeing all the ships she’s wrecked.
-What’s to be done with her?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Give her biscuits,’ says Buck, ‘and there’s lots
-of bananas on board.’</p>
-
-<p>“Off the mate goes and back he comes to the conference,
-but we could fix up nothing that night, Buck
-still holding out for a proper trial at Sydney, and
-we pointing out that English or American law would
-be sure to let a woman escape. It stood like that till
-next morning, when Buck, coming down to breakfast,
-says: ‘Boys, I’ve got an idea.’</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>“He’d struck an idea in the night of how to dispose
-of Tawela. Buck had a fine knowledge of the Kanaka
-mind, and when he’d explained his idea to us I allowed
-it was a peach, if what he said was true.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you ever heard tell of the Swatchway&mdash;the
-Scours some call it? It’s an island, or more truly
-speaking a big lump of reef with half a dozen cocoanut
-trees on it lying south of the Australs about four
-hundred and fifty miles from the steamer track between
-Auckland and Tahiti. It’s got reefs round it all
-spouting like whales, and ships’ captains give it a big
-wide berth.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Buck’s plan was to land Tawela on the
-Scours; there’s water there according to the Pacific
-Directory, and Buck said he wasn’t going to maroon
-her without grub. He’d give her six months’ grub&mdash;canned.
-Bully beef and so on with biscuits in tins.
-If she starved herself to death in the middle of plenty
-then it wouldn’t be our fault. He said he’d come back
-in six months, and if she was alive he’d take her back
-home, said she was only an ignorant Kanaka and he
-reckoned six months’ punishment would fill the bill,
-and if she chose to kill herself, why, then it would
-be Providence not us that did the business.</p>
-
-<p>“Ridley, at first go off, flew out against this till
-Buck quieted him, asking who was master of the
-schooner, and whether he wanted to be logged for
-insubordination; the course was changed to sou’-sou’-west
-and two days later we raised the Scours.</p>
-
-<p>“There were six cocoanut trees there, all bearing,
-so we cut them down and brought the nuts on board,
-then we landed Tawela and her provisions with a
-can opener, showing her how to use it. There was
-a fresh water pond in the coral, so she couldn’t want
-for water, and there we left her.</p>
-
-<p>“We made for Suva and sold that coral, not getting
-near the price we thought to, and then we ran a cargo
-to Auckland.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d noticed for some time Buck wasn’t the man
-he used to be, and one night it come out. ‘I’ve got
-something on my mind,’ he says, ‘it’s that dam
-Kanaka. Can’t help thinking about her. My conscience
-is clear enough,’ he says, ‘for she deserved
-her gruel, but I can’t help thinking of her&mdash;wonder
-if she’s dead.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, it’s ten to one she’s either broke her tabu
-or some ship has taken her off by this,’ I says to ease
-him, for I saw that being a good-hearted chap, and
-imaginative as most Irishmen are, the thing was hitting
-him as it never hit me.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck shakes his head and falls back into himself
-and says no more, and time goes on, till one day
-when we were on the run to Papeete with a mixed
-cargo, seeing that the chap was making an old man
-of himself over the business, I says, ‘S’pose we run
-down to the Scours now instead of on the voyage
-back as you’d fixed, and see what’s become of that
-woman?’</p>
-
-<p>“His face lit up, but he pretended to hang off
-for a while; then he falls in with the idea, and we
-shifted the helm, raising the place four days later
-and dropping anchor outside the reefs four months
-and eight days from the time we’d left it.</p>
-
-<p>“There wasn’t a sign to be seen of anyone on the
-island, so Buck tells me to take a boat and look; he
-hadn’t the heart to go himself and said so, plump,
-and off I put, leaving the boat’s crew with the boat
-on the beach and tramping across the coral on the
-look-out for signs.</p>
-
-<p>“I found the canned stuff. There had evidently
-been a big wind and blown the stuff about, and I
-found it here and there, but not one empty can could
-I find or one that had been opened, then, in a dip of the
-coral I found a skull, the black hair still sticking to
-it, and a backbone and ribs&mdash;the birds make a skeleton
-of a corpse in no time on a place like that; I reckon
-I could have found the whole skeleton if I’d hunted,
-but I didn’t. I put back for the schooner and came
-on board laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ I said, ‘she’s done us. You and your
-talk of Kanakas not breaking their tabu; why, half
-the tins are opened and empty, and she’s gone, took
-off by some ship.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Thank God,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“That lie of mine lifted the black dog right off
-his back, and to his dying day he never knew he’d
-killed that woman as sure as if he’d shot her with
-a gun. He was as cheerful as a magpie all the rest
-of that voyage, and so was I. You see I’d heard
-Sellers screaming whilst those brutes were doing him
-in and Buck hadn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all I know about tabu, but it’s first-hand
-knowledge, personal experience as you might say.”</p>
-
-<p>He ceased, and through the night came the voices
-of fish spearers from the reef and the far rumble of
-the surf, and from the back premises the voice of
-Tahori singing some old song of an Island world
-whose brilliancy breaks sometimes to reveal the
-strangest phantoms from the Past.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chXI' title='XI: The Story of Billy Broke'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XI.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE STORY OF BILLY BROKE</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>Do you know that fiction, without side-tracking
-interest, can often teach a man what he will
-never learn in a class-room or from a text-book? It
-can, and the lesson sticks, because the human mind
-is so constituted that it will retain and assimilate
-a moral wrapped up in a story, whereas the moral
-naked and unadorned would be forgotten in fifteen
-minutes or rejected at once.</p>
-
-<p>I wonder how many men have been saved from
-selling old lamps for new by the story of Aladdin!</p>
-
-<p>I, like hosts of other men, am a nervy and imaginative
-individual, and the devil of the thing is that with
-us our imagination is our worst enemy, keeps us awake
-at night counting up our losses instead of our profits,
-fills us with fantastic fears of the future, and, should
-any of us ever find ourselves in an incriminating
-position&mdash;which God forbid&mdash;would, were we innocent,
-ten to one make us look or act like criminals.</p>
-
-<p>Here is the story of a man who acted like an ass,
-a highly moral married man whose imagination
-betrayed him, the story of Billy Broke of Los Angeles,
-told me by Brent.</p>
-
-<p>Brent had a little fishing boat he kept at a slip
-near Circular Wharf and he and I used often to go out
-fishing in Sydney Harbour. One day we were out
-late, fishing off Farm Cove, so late that on our return
-a huge moon was rising, flooding the harbour and city
-with its light. We left the boat tied up in charge
-of the wharf keeper and tramped off with our fish.
-Coming up along Halkin Street we saw something
-like a bundle of old clothes lying in the moonlight
-right before us, and when we got to it we found it
-was a dead Chink.</p>
-
-<p>It was a narrow street of tenement houses and not
-a soul to be seen. There was a big Labour demonstration
-on that night, so I suppose the inhabitants were
-all off demonstrating and that accounted for the
-desolation of the place.</p>
-
-<p>Brent knelt down to inspect. Then he rose up:</p>
-
-<p>“Stabbed,” said he, “and as dead as mutton.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are we to do?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Brent, “we can’t be of any use to
-him, and we don’t want to be mixed up in the business&mdash;come
-along.”</p>
-
-<p>He took me by the arm and led me off. He was a
-practical man and right enough, I suppose, we could
-give no clue, the murderer, whoever he might be, was
-well away, a thousand to one he was a brother Chink
-and we knew all the bother there would be over the
-inquest,&mdash;still I felt a qualm, but it was so slight
-I easily drowned it in a whisky and soda at a bar
-we stopped at. Then I went home and went to
-bed and put out the light, and with the darkness
-the moonlit street showed up before my mind’s eye&mdash;and
-the Chink.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose,” I thought, “suppose someone saw us
-leaving that street, suppose by any chance we got
-connected with the business&mdash;what would people
-say? Might they say we had committed the
-murder?” Absolute nonsense, but there you are,
-my imagination had got away with me. I couldn’t
-sleep, and next morning when I met Brent he asked
-me what was wrong with me and I told him. He
-took me out for a sail in the harbour where we spent
-the day cruising about, and after luncheon Brent
-tackled me over the stupidity of “fancying things.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the use of fancying things?” said Brent,
-“ain’t there enough troubles in the world without
-breeding them. Suppose you <i>were</i> had over that
-Chink, where’s the damage, you didn’t kill him&mdash;and
-you ain’t going to be. Forget it. Lord o’ mercy,
-I’ve seen more guys fooled by their fancies than I
-can remember the names of. Did I ever tell you of
-Billy Broke? Brooke was the real name, only some
-fool of an English ancestor or another left out one
-of the o’s, so the poor chap was saddled with a nameplate
-only fit for a hoodoo. Nature not to be behind
-in the business, fitted him with a set of nerves and
-an imagination worse than yours and then turned
-him out into the cold world to make his living. On
-top of everything he was pious beyond the ordinary,
-bashful beyond believing and trusting in every man,
-which isn’t a quality which makes for success in
-American business circles.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d gone bankrupt four or five times when
-the Almighty, thinking maybe it was a shame that one
-of his creatures should be used like that, married him
-to a common-sense woman with a bit of money and
-they started a dry goods store in Los Angeles and
-would have done well enough only for Billy’s nerves
-and imagination.</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t speculate a bit in his business for
-fear of ruining himself, an’ his fear of what was going
-to happen in the future took all the pep and energy
-out of him. Worst of it was he would be boss of the
-show and not leave things to his wife. I’m not
-meaning anything personal, but chaps with high-geared
-nerves and X-ray imaginations generally have
-a pretty good opinion of themselves in private.
-Billy had, and the result was that he’d near brought
-the dry goods store to bankruptcy when one day a
-wholesale firm in ’Frisco began to give trouble over
-a bill that was owing and Billy determined to go
-and interview them.</p>
-
-<p>“Mrs. B. wanted to go, but he wouldn’t let her,
-and the unfortunate woman, knowing the fool he
-was, got in such a temper, she wouldn’t even pack
-his grip. The hired girl did the packing. She was
-Irish and given to mistakes, one of them dreamy,
-acushla sort of red-headed Irishwomen with her
-heart on her sleeve and her head in the clouds, regular
-at attending mass and smashing china and dependable
-to shove anything that came handy into the pie she
-was making or the bag she was packing.</p>
-
-<p>“The Irish girl did the packing and Billy with the
-grip in his hand kissed the back of his wife’s neck, for
-she wouldn’t give him her lips, and started off for
-the station. He got to ’Frisco without losing himself
-and put up at the ‘Paris.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now that day me and Slane were at Long Wharf,
-’Frisco, on board the <i>Greyhound</i> ready to put out.
-We’d got five thousand dollars’ worth of trade under
-the hatch, and we were bound for Nanuti in the
-Gilberts, that’s to say right under the Line.</p>
-
-<p>“We were due out next morning at sun up, and
-that night, under a blazing big moon we were sitting
-on deck having a smoke and talking things over.
-Long Wharf was pretty quiet and you couldn’t more’n
-hear the drunks and such yelling in Third and Fourth
-Streets. There was a timber schooner outside of us
-and we could hear a fellow snoring in her cabin and
-a big clock somewhere striking eleven. The strokes
-were all equally loud, which showed there was no
-wind to speak of, and Buck was wondering if we’d
-get enough in the morning to take us out when along
-the wharfside comes running a chap, and, seeing us
-there on deck in the moonlight and the sparks of
-our cigars, he comes bounding down the gang plank
-and lands on the deck on his hands and knees without
-losing grip of a parcel he was carrying.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Save me,’ cries the chap. ‘Get me out of
-’Frisco, the police are after me.’ Then he goes limp
-and Buck bends down and stirs him up.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Drunk,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“He was, and battered at that. His coat was torn
-up the back, he was mud all over and his hat was
-gone, and yet, for all that, he looked to have been
-respectable. You can’t batter the respectability out
-of a man in five minutes, not even if you roll him
-in the gutter and fill him with drink, this chap’s
-hands were clean where they weren’t dirty, and I
-could see his nails had been attended to, his pants
-were muddy and had a tear in them, but they weren’t
-frayed at the heels and the cloth was good.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are we going to do with him?’ I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck scratches his head for a minute, then he
-says:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Get him below.’</p>
-
-<p>“I was none too anxious for extra cargo of that
-sort, but I knew by Buck’s voice he wasn’t in the
-humour for arguing, and, fearing that maybe the
-police might come along and find the chap and hold
-us up maybe next morning as witnesses of Lord
-knows what, I grabbed the guy by the heels whilst
-Buck took the head and between us we slithered
-him down below and shoved him in a spare bunk,
-putting his parcel beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“We reckoned that maybe he’d have slept his liquor
-off before morning, and we could give him a wash up
-and shove him ashore.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“I got into my own bunk and slept like a dead
-policeman till Buck dragged me out.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tug’s along,’ says he, ‘and there’s a good wind,
-but I can’t wake that blighter. He’s still in the
-arms of Bacchus and I’m just going to take him along,
-Bacchus and all.’</p>
-
-<p>“I came on deck and there was a little tinpot tug
-hauling the timber schooner out so’s to free us, with
-the dawn breaking over the bay.</p>
-
-<p>“‘But Lord, Buck!’ I says. ‘What are you going
-to do with him if you take him along, he’s no mascot
-by the look of him, and no sailor-man neither. What
-are you going to do with him?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Save him from the police,’ says he, ‘and from
-liquor and make a man of him or kill him, he’s no
-tough, by his face, just a softy that’s got into bad
-hands maybe, or just run crooked because of the
-drink. Curse the drink,’ says Buck, ‘I’ve seen its
-black work in my family and that’s why I’ve always
-steered clear of it, and if it was only to spite John
-Barleycorn I’d take a dozen guys like that, let alone
-one.’</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t argue. I had my hands full directing
-the crew, and I had it in my mind that Buck was
-as keen of cheating the Penitentiary as he was of
-spiting John Barleycorn. Like most Irishmen he
-had a mortal hatred of policemen and prisons, and
-I don’t blame him, neither.</p>
-
-<p>“We were kept on deck till we were clear of the
-bar and running on a sou’-west course, doing seven
-knots, with the sea piling up and more wind coming,
-then I dropped below for a cup of coffee and a bite
-of food, and looking at the chap in the bunk saw
-he was still snoring.</p>
-
-<p>“The parcel had dropped out of the bunk owing
-to the rolling in crossing the bar, and the brown
-paper covering had got a bit loose and I couldn’t
-for the life of me help poking round with my finger and
-loosening it a bit more so’s to have a look at what
-might be inside. I was thinking it might be banknotes
-or boodle of some sort, but what I come on was
-a female’s silk petticoat. I was more shook up
-than if I’d hit on a rattlesnake, and, calling Buck down,
-I says to him, ‘Buck, this sleeping beauty of yours
-has been murdering a female.’ That’s how the
-business struck me first. Why else should he have
-been running away with the thing and the police
-after him?</p>
-
-<p>“Buck takes one squint, then he begins the Sherlock
-Holmes business, looking for dagger marks
-and bloodstains, but there weren’t none, the article
-looked pretty new, with nothing a Sherlock Holmes
-could lay hold of but the letters J.B. worked in black
-thread very small on the band of it, and no doubt
-the initials of the party owning the concern. Buck
-puts the thing away in a locker and we sits down to
-breakfast, arguing and talking all the time, the professor
-of somnology snoring away in his bunk, the
-schooner getting further to sea and the sea piling
-bigger behind her, with the wind rising to a tearing
-gale.</p>
-
-<p>“I was kept on deck all that morning, at the wheel
-most of the time, for we were running before it and if
-she’d broached to we’d have gone truck over keel
-to perdition.</p>
-
-<p>“Buck comes up at eight bells, saying the petticoat
-man had woke up wanting to know where he
-was and asking to be taken to Los Angeles. I didn’t
-bother about the chap, didn’t see him till next morning,
-when I turned out to find the gale gone into
-a six-knot breeze and Buck and him sitting at
-breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>“He’d washed and brushed and looked more like
-a human being, and he’d given up wantin’ to be
-taken to Los Angeles and he’d settled down to his
-gruel.</p>
-
-<p>“We were keen to have his story out of him and
-know what the crime was, but we had no time for
-tale-telling with the damage on deck, for we’d lost
-several spars in the blow, so we just left him to
-smoke and think over his sins and didn’t tackle
-him till two days later, when he told us the whole
-yarn right off, and without winking, so’s that we
-couldn’t help believing him.</p>
-
-<p>“This is it, as far as I can remember, with nothing
-left out that matters.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>“Billy Broke was his name and he’d left Los
-Angeles as I’ve told you on a visit to ’Frisco to see a
-wholesale firm on some business. He put up at the
-‘Paris’ and went to his room to change his necktie and
-brush his hair, and when he opened his grip to fetch
-out the tie and the hairbrush, he come on a woman’s
-red silk petticoat rolled up and stuck in anyhow.
-At first he thought it was his wife’s, but he couldn’t
-remember ever seeing her in possession of such a
-garment, she being a woman of quiet tastes and not
-given to violent colours. Then he thought the
-thing must have been shoved in for fun by some
-joking young chaps that had been on the train. The
-more he considered this, the more he was sure of it,
-and down he sits to think things over.</p>
-
-<p>“First of all he says to himself that if the thing
-was shoved in by them guys for fun it must have
-been stolen, then it came to him that maybe they
-didn’t put it in for fun but to get rid of it as evidence
-against them of some crime they’d committed. That
-made him sweat, but he got a clutch on himself,
-telling himself it was only in magazine stories things
-like that happened and that the chances were it
-belonged to his wife. Then he told himself that no
-matter who it belonged to or who put it there, he’d
-got to get rid of it.</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t risk bringing it back home, not
-much, and he wouldn’t risk keeping it an instant
-longer in his possession for fear of detectives arriving
-whilst it was still in his possession, so down he goes
-to the office and begs, borrows or steals a piece of
-brown paper and a yard and a half of string and
-back he comes to his room and wraps the evidence
-up and ties the string round it.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There,’ says Billy to himself, ‘that’s done.
-Now the only thing I’ve got to do is take it out and
-lose it. Just throw it away. Some poor woman
-will pick it up and grateful she’ll be for it.’</p>
-
-<p>“He comes down and goes out with the parcel
-under his arm and then he finds himself in the street.
-He’d thought to drop the parcel in the street casually
-as he walked along, it seemed the easiest thing in
-the world to do, but no sooner had he left the hotel
-with the parcel under his arm than he felt that everyone
-was watching him. That wasn’t stupidity either.
-Everyone was watching him. Everyone in every
-street is watching everyone else, doing it unbeknown
-to themselves most of the time, but doing it; it’s
-maybe a habit that has come down to us from the
-time we were hunters, and our lives depended on our
-eyes, but it’s there and if you fall down in any street
-half a dozen people will see you fall who otherwise
-would never have known of your existence, passing
-you without seeing you, consciously.</p>
-
-<p>“That truth hit Billy between the eyes. He felt
-if he were to drop that parcel, not only would some
-guy see him drop it, but he’d know he’d dropped it
-purposefully, so he walks along with it under his arm
-trying to find an empty street, and somehow or another
-failing, till he comes on a narrow lane, and ‘Here’s
-my chance,’ says he and dives down it. Half way
-down, with no one in front or behind, he drops the
-parcel and walks on, but he couldn’t help turning his
-head like a fool, and there behind him, just come
-into the lane, was a man. The parcel was between
-Billy and the man, and Billy in a flash saw that the
-man would know he’d dropped it seeing Billy was
-walking away from it, not towards it. So, having
-turned his head, he had to complete the business
-and turn back and pick up the durned thing and
-walk on with it. He was in Market Street now and
-beginning to set his teeth. There was a good few
-people going and coming and they all seemed so
-busy and full of themselves that Billy took heart,
-and, walking along close to the houses, dropped the
-thing again. He didn’t turn his head this time,
-but just walked on, stopping here and there to look
-in at the shop windows and feeling he’d done the
-trick this time. He’d gone a good way and was
-looking in at a jeweller’s thinking which of the rings
-he’d buy for his wife if he had the money, when an
-old chap comes panting up to him with the parcel.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I saw you drop it,’ says the old guy, and I ran
-after you with it, but you walk so quick I couldn’t
-catch you.’ Then he has a fit of coughing and Billy
-sees he’s nearly in rags and hands out a quarter and
-takes the parcel. Billy was beginning to find out
-the truth that if you want to lose a thing that’s of
-no value to you, you can’t, not in a city anyhow, but
-he was only beginning, else he’d have quitted the
-business right there and have knuckled under to that
-petticoat.</p>
-
-<p>“Instead of that what does he do but go on with
-his peregrinations and his fool attempts to get rid
-of the thing, he makes it a present to a beggar woman
-and when she’d seen what was in it, she runs after him
-saying she’s taking no stolen goods and suggesting a
-dollar commission for not showing it to the police.</p>
-
-<p>“Then getting along for four in the afternoon, Billy,
-feeling he’s married to the thing, begins to celebrate
-his connubial state with drinks. He wasn’t used to
-the stuff and he goes from saloon to saloon, warming
-up as he went and making more attempts at divorce
-till he strikes a bar tender notorious for his married
-unblessedness, offers the thing as a present for the
-B.T.’s wife and gets kicked flying into the street when
-a policeman picks him and his parcel up and starts
-them off again on their ambulations.</p>
-
-<p>“The drink was working in him now strong&mdash;you
-see, he’d always been an abstemious man and you never
-know what whisky will do with a guy like that till
-it’s done with him. Billy cruises into another bar,
-planks down a quarter, swallows a high ball, gets a
-clutch on himself and starts on the king of all jags.
-He wasn’t trying to lose the parcel now. He was
-proud of it. He remembered in one saloon undoing
-it and showing the petticoat to an admiring audience.
-He remembered in another saloon saying the thing
-was full of bonds and banknotes. Then he was
-down in the dock area tumbling into gutters and
-singing songs. Chaps tried to rob him of the thing
-and he fought them like a wild cat. He’d begun the
-day with the parcel sticking to him, and he was
-ending the day by sticking to the parcel and resisting
-all attempts on it by armed force, so to speak. Then
-he believed he had a dust up with some Chinks who
-tried to nab the thing and there seemed to be police
-mixed up with it, for it ended with him running to
-escape policemen. Then he couldn’t remember anything
-more, and we told him how he had come running
-along the dockside till he struck the <i>Greyhound</i> and
-came bounding on board, as per invoice.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>“That was the yarn Billy spun, and there he sat
-when he’d finished asking us what he was to do.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I says to him, ‘you’re asking that question
-a bit too late; to begin with, you should never have
-trusted yourself alone in ’Frisco with them nerves of
-yours. Second, you went the wrong way about getting
-rid of the thing.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Oh, did I?’ said Billy. ‘And how would you
-have done&mdash;put yourself in my position, and what
-would you have done to get rid of it?’</p>
-
-<p>“That flummoxed me.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ I said, ‘to begin with, I wouldn’t have
-been such an ass as to want to get rid of it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘S’posing you were,’ said he, ‘and I allow I was
-an ass to fancy all them things, but supposing you
-were, will you tell me where I went wrong? Wouldn’t
-you have done everything I did just as I did it? Of
-course you would. I tell you I was fixed to that thing
-by bad luck and I only got rid of it after it had done
-me in with the drink.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But you haven’t got rid of it,’ says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Whach you mean?’ asks Billy, his hair standing
-on end.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You brought it on board,’ says Buck, and he
-goes to the locker and takes the parcel out. Billy
-looked at it, took it in his hands and turned it over.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then he says: ‘That does me.’ He says no
-more than that. The life seemed to go out of him for
-a bit as if the hunch had come on him that it wasn’t
-no use to fight any more.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I says to Buck: ‘Come on up on deck and leave
-him with the durned thing,’ and up we went and there
-we saw a big freighter pounding along and coming
-up from south’ard, ’Frisco bound and making to pass
-us close.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There’s his chance,’ says Buck; ‘run down and
-fetch him up and we’ll flag her to stop, it’s better than
-taking him off to hell or Timbuctoo, seeing he’s a
-married man.’</p>
-
-<p>“Down I went and up I brought him. There was
-a fair sea still running, but nothing to make a bother
-about, and we could easy have got him off in a boat.
-But do you think that chap would go, not he; he
-said he’d sure be drowned if he put off in a boat in
-that sea, said the thing was out to drown him if it
-could. Then he went below and got into his bunk
-with his inamorata, and we let the freighter pass,
-and that was his last chance of getting to Los Angeles
-for many a long day.</p>
-
-<p>“I was pretty sick with him, so was Buck. It wasn’t
-so much because he was afraid of drowning as because
-he was afraid of being drowned by that rotten parcel,
-but we weren’t so free of superstitions ourselves as to
-be too hard on the poor chap, so we didn’t do more
-than make his life a hell till he was ashamed of himself
-to the soles of his boots and taking a hand in the
-working of the ship. We wanted to shy parcel and
-petticoat overboard, but he wouldn’t let us. We’d
-shown him the initials on the belt of the thing and he
-said they were his wife’s and it was plain now that
-some mistake had been made in packing it among
-his things by the servant maid he gave us the specification
-of. He said he reckoned he’d keep it to
-bring back to her, so she might know his story was
-true.</p>
-
-<p>“But it was many a day before he was likely to see
-Los Angeles again and so we told him.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>“From the day we passed that freighter till the
-day we lifted Howland Island, which lies nor’-west
-of Nanuti, we only sighted three ships hull down and
-beyond signalling.</p>
-
-<p>“After passing Howland we passed a brig bound
-for Java and a freighter from Rangoon bound for
-South American ports&mdash;Nothing for anywhere near
-’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>“Billy like a good many landsmen seemed to fancy
-that ships were all over the sea close as plums in a
-pudding. He got to know different by the time we
-reached Nanuti and, more than that, he got to know
-that every ship wasn’t bound for ’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why,’ he says one day, ‘if I’ve got to wait for
-a ship back,’ he says, ‘I’m thinking it’s an old man
-I’ll be before we sight one.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘And you’re thinking right,’ says Buck. ‘You
-had your chance and you missed it because the sea
-was a bit rough and your head was stuffed with that
-blessed petticoat and the idea it was going to drown
-you. You’ll just have to stick to the old <i>Greyhound</i>
-till she fetches up again at Long Wharf and that’s
-God knows when, for we don’t run by time-table.’</p>
-
-<p>“And that was the fact; we touched at Nanuti
-and discharged cargo and took on copra. Then we
-came along down by the New Hebrides and shaving
-New Caledonia put into Sydney and discharged and
-took a cargo along to Auckland, and then from North
-Island we took a cargo down for Dunedin. The
-only way to make money with ships is to know where
-to go for your cargoes. Buck had some sort of instinct
-that way and he was backed with friends in the shipping
-trade, but it wasn’t for eight months from starting
-that he got the chance of a cargo to ’Frisco, and it
-wasn’t till two months later that we passed the
-whistling buoy and saw the tumble of the bar.</p>
-
-<p>“I looked at Billy that morning and I thought
-to myself that it was worth it to him. He looked
-twice the man he was when he fetched on board and,
-more than that, he could handle sails and steer and take
-an observation as good as me or Buck, besides which
-Buck had treated him well about payment and he’d
-have a good few dollars waiting for him when we tied
-up at the wharf.</p>
-
-<p>“Which was that day. I’d business which kept
-me running about all the day after and it wasn’t
-till the day after that Billy took heart and come to
-me and asked me to go with him to Los Angeles so’s
-to break him to his wife, so to speak.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d got to like the chap and I agreed. I won’t
-say that I wasn’t anxious to see how he’d make out
-when he got back and what Mrs. Billy would say to
-him, but however that may be, I packed a bag and
-Billy shouldered his dunnage and off we started by
-the night train, getting into Los Angeles next morning.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t as big a place in those days as it is now.
-We left our traps at the station and set off on foot to
-find Mrs. B., Billy back in his old nervous state and
-almost afraid to ask questions as to how his wife and
-the shop had been doing in his absence. The shop
-was on Pine Tree Avenue, and half way along to it
-Billy’s nerves got so bad we stopped at a restaurant
-for some breakfast, fixing it that I should go off after
-the meal and hunt up Mrs. B. and find out what had
-become of her. Billy could scarcely eat his food for
-talking of what might have happened to her, fearing
-maybe she might have committed suicide or gone
-bankrupt or starved to death or gone out of her mind
-at the loss of him. The woman that ran the restaurant
-served us at table and it came to me sudden to ask
-her did she know anything of a Mrs. Broke of Pine
-Tree Avenue who had a dry goods store.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Burstall, you mean?’ said she. ‘She’s married
-again since Broke ran off and left her. He was a little
-no good chap and skipped with all the money they had,
-which wasn’t much, and she got a divorce against
-him for illegally deserting her or incompatibility of
-temper or something and ran the store herself and
-made it pay. Y’ see, he’d been boss of the thing up
-to that, and near made it bankrupt, but once she
-took charge, she made it pay. I’ve never seen Broke,
-I only came to the town six months ago, but I’ve
-seen Burstall often. He’s a fine man and between
-them they’re making that store hum.’</p>
-
-<p>“I got Billy on his feet and out of that place and
-wanted to get him to the station to see about the next
-train for ’Frisco, but he said he wanted to see things
-for himself and make sure; so the funeral procession
-started for Pine Tree Avenue.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s the place,’ said Billy, pointing to a big
-shop with J. Burstall and Co. painted along the front
-in gold letters. ‘There’s my old home&mdash;Well, I wish
-her happiness.</p>
-
-<p>“That seemed to me a pretty weak thing to do, and
-I says to him: ‘Ain’t you going to kick Burstall?’</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t hear me, he was so occupied looking
-at his old home, till a big fellow in his shirt-sleeves
-comes out and begins looking at the contents of the
-shop window to see how they showed.</p>
-
-<p>“Billy goes up to him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You belong to this store?’ says Billy.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Yep,’ says the chap.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then will you give Mrs. Broke, I mean Burstall,
-this parcel,’ says Billy, ‘and ask her to see me about
-it, there’s been a big mistake.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No use troubling her,’ says the big chap. ‘I’m
-Burstall and running this store. What’s this you’ve
-brought back&mdash;we don’t change no goods once
-bought.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s a petticoat,’ says Billy.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, what’s wrong with it?’ asks the other,
-taking the goods.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What’s wrong with it!’ cries Billy, then he begins
-to laugh like a crazy man, till I thought Burstall would
-have gone for the both of us.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Come on, Billy,’ I says, catching him by the arm,
-then I turns to Burstall: ‘You big stiff,’ I says,
-for all my bristles were up at the beefy look of the
-chap and the carried on. ‘You big stiff,’ I
-says, ‘for two pins,’ I says, ‘I’d kick you from
-here to Santa Barbara.’</p>
-
-<p>“Burstall drops the parcel to go for me, when along
-comes a policeman, and explanations begins; Burstall
-saying how we’d been trying to land him some old
-goods we’d never bought in his shop and the policeman
-asking us for our address.</p>
-
-<p>“‘We don’t belong here,’ I says. ‘We’ve come
-from ’Frisco.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well,’ says the bull, ‘if I find you about town
-trying any more of your dodges by noon to-day.
-I’ll run you in, sure as my name’s Bill Adams. Pick
-up your parcel and off with you.’</p>
-
-<p>“I picked the damned thing up and stuffed it in
-the side pocket of Billy’s coat and led him off, the bull
-following us two or three blocks to make sure we
-were moving.</p>
-
-<p>“We found a train was starting at the station,
-and I got Billy in, all broke down. Getting towards
-’Frisco he pulled himself together, he’d been thinking
-a lot on the journey, and I got the surprise of my
-life to find him cheerful all of a sudden.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Do you know what I’m thinking?’ says he.
-‘I’m thinking this thing is my mascot, and I’ve been
-trying to get rid of my luck all this time. It got me
-free of that woman, for we never pulled together
-proper, it got me in with you and Slane, and you’ve
-made a man of me. Every time I tried to lose it,
-bad luck came to me, and look at the luck she’s had
-since she lost it, married to that brute of a Burstall.
-It’s my luck I’ve been trying to get rid of, and now I
-know, I’m going to do big things.’</p>
-
-<p>“I left him at the station, and met him a year later
-all broke down and half in rags.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why, Billy.’ I said, ‘what ails you?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I lost my mascot,’ says he. ‘I was getting on
-fine and making money hand over fist when a damn
-landlady pinched it out of my wardrobe, though I
-never could bring it home to her. It took all the heart
-out of me and things went wrong all round.’</p>
-
-<p>“I gave him a dollar and never saw him again,”
-finished Brent, “and I’ve just told you about him
-to show you what nerves and fancies and such like
-may bring a man to.&mdash;Now as to that dead Chink.”</p>
-
-<p>But I wasn’t bothering any more about the Chink,
-maybe because of the fresh air of the harbour, maybe
-because of the awful warning contained in the story
-of Billy Broke.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chXII' title='XII: The Making of a Millionaire'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XII.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE MAKING OF A MILLIONAIRE</span>
-</h2>
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>I’ve told you, said Brent, that Slane had an
-old uncle in San Francisco, Pat O’Brien, worth
-over two million dollars they said he was and
-I don’t doubt them. Pat had landed in New York
-somewhere in the ’fifties or ’sixties without a jitney,
-then he’d come along to ’Frisco; he hadn’t struck
-gold, he hadn’t struck oil, nor Luck in any special
-way as far as we could make out, he’d just become a
-millionaire, and one day when we were on the trip
-back to ’Frisco with a full cargo, I said to Buck:
-“Look here, Buck,” I says, “you and me has been
-trading together the last ten years. We’re up to
-every game on the Pacific coast, we aren’t simple
-sailors no more than a mule is all an ass. Well,
-we’ve got sixty thousand dollars between us put by,
-but four years ago we had forty thousand. We make
-our money hard and earn it slow, seems to me. Look
-at Pat, he’s none of our natural advantages; the chap
-can’t more than read and write his name, he’s only
-one brain and we’ve got two, but look at him, rolling
-in dollars. How’s it done?”</p>
-
-<p>“Search me,” says Buck. “It’s the way they all
-do it. Seems to me it’s the start. If you’re American-born
-you start selling newspapers, if you’re only a
-blistered alien you land without a cent in your pocket,
-whereas we’d got a few dollars, but there’s no going
-back.”</p>
-
-<p>We left it at that and got into ’Frisco next day
-and went to the lodgings we had in Tallis Street. We’d
-always lived small considering that we could have
-cut a bigger dash if we’d chosen, but the fact of the
-matter is, living big for the likes of us would have
-meant soaking in bars and all the trimmings that
-go with that. It’s God’s truth that a plain sailor
-man who isn’t what the damn fools who run the world
-call a “gentleman” is clean out of it in the big towns&mdash;unless
-he’s a millionaire. So, not being able to
-sit on the top of the pyramid, we just sat on the sand
-waiting for some big strike, and stuck to our rooms in
-Tallis Street in a house kept by a Mrs. Murphy.</p>
-
-<p>Well, as I was saying, we went to our lodgings,
-and a couple of days after, old Pat O’Brien, hearing
-we were back, called on us. Pat, though he was near
-eighty, was an early bird, and though he was worth
-two millions he always footed it about the town; he
-was the spit and image of Mr. Jiggs in the comic papers,
-and as we were sitting at breakfast in he came with a
-cigar butt stuck in the corner of his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love me,” says Pat. “Nine o’clock and you
-at breakfast. No,” he says, “I won’t have no coffee,
-a glass of hot water is all I take till one o’clock in the
-day, and then I have a porterhouse-steak and a pint
-of claret, and that’s why I have all my teeth though
-I’m close on eighty&mdash;and how’s the old Greyhound
-been doing this trip?”</p>
-
-<p>I’ve told you before how Buck got the Greyhound
-out of Pat at our first go off, and he made it a habit
-always to call on us when we were in from a trip to
-ask after her. He didn’t care a dump about her, he
-just wanted to pick up Island news that might be useful
-to him in his business&mdash;but we never pretended we
-knew that.</p>
-
-<p>“Doing fine,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>Then Pat sits down and borrows a match to light
-his cigar stump, and in half an hour he’d got to know
-all he wanted; then, when we’d given him a cigar
-to get rid of him, off he goes stumping down the stairs,
-and a minute after, the window being open owing to
-the hot weather, we heard him talking to Micky
-Murphy, the landlady’s little boy, who was playing
-in the street. Couldn’t hear what he was saying at
-first till a bit of a breeze came in and we heard him
-say to the child: “So Micky is your name,” he says.
-“Well, come along, and bring your play toy with you
-and I’ll buy you some candy.”</p>
-
-<p>I stuck my head out of the window, and there was
-the old chap and the child hand-in-hand going off
-down the street towards the candy shop at the corner.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I says, “Buck, we’ve misjudged him; he’s
-got a heart somewhere and he’s not as mean as he
-advertises himself.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck was as much taken aback as myself. You see,
-we’d had a lot of dealings with the old man and he’d
-always forgot his purse if a tram fare was to be paid,
-and I’ve seen him pick up a match in the street to
-light his cigar, which he was always letting go out to
-save tobacco&mdash;and there he was going off to buy a
-child candy.</p>
-
-<p>But that was only the beginning of things, for two
-days later we had a note from him asking us to dinner.</p>
-
-<p>He had only asked us to dinner once before, years
-ago, and that was when he was shook out of himself
-by a deal we’d done over pearls, and it was at a
-restaurant. This time he was asking us to his house.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he after?” says Buck, turning the letter
-over. “Day before yesterday he was giving Micky
-Murphy candy, and now he’s asking us to dinner.
-He’ll bust himself with generosity if he doesn’t mind
-out. Will you go?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said I, and we went.</p>
-
-<p>Pat was married, as perhaps I haven’t told you,
-and when the darkie let us in, there was Mrs. Pat
-waiting to receive us in the big room hung with
-pictures opening from the hall, and a minute after in
-come Pat’s daughter Sadie with her hair frizzed out,
-and when Pat toddled in after, if it wasn’t McMorrows
-Jiggs family to the life, call me a nigger.</p>
-
-<p>We didn’t feel comfortable by no means, not being
-used to female society done up in diamonds, but
-they were anxious to please, though I could see plain
-enough that behind everything those two women
-looked on us as plated goods, but Pat kept the ball
-rolling, chatting away, and at dinner, after the champagne
-had gone round, the girl suddenly turns to Buck,
-and, “Tell us about your last voyage, Mr. Slane?”
-says she.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” says Buck, “there’s nothing much to tell;
-we went to Levua. We’ve been there three trips;
-there’s several German traders we’re in with and they
-give us a lot of business. We’re off there again in a
-month.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it a long way?” she questions.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, it’s a good bit of a way,” he answers, “and
-it would be longer only the <i>Greyhound</i> is no tortoise.”</p>
-
-<p>“How interesting,” she says, “and I suppose you
-see plenty of other islands on the way there and back.
-Are they as pretty as people say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says Buck, “as a matter of fact we stop
-nowhere but a place we call Palm Island. We put
-in there for water and fruit; it’s not on the charts
-and there’s no trade to be done there, but it’s pretty
-enough.”</p>
-
-<p>He describes the place, and then she tackles him
-on Levua again, and the manners of the natives,
-and then Mrs. Pat cuts in and talks of the opera and
-the theatres and such.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner over, we go to the drawing-room, where
-the women squall at the piano for a bit, and then
-we go to Pat’s den for cigars.</p>
-
-<p>I remember Buck, who was livened up a bit with
-the champagne, asking Pat how to become a millionaire.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” says Pat, cocking his eye at the other,
-“you just pick a million up and stick to it. It’s
-not the picking it up that’s the bother, it’s the sticking
-to it,” he says. Then we went home thinking that
-Pat had been joking with us. But he hadn’t.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>Levenstein was the name of the chief German trader
-at Levua. We had big dealings with him amounting
-to a share in his business, and we were going out this
-time with a cargo of trade goods and with some agricultural
-stuff for a man by name of Marks who had
-started a plantation on the north of the island. Our
-hands were pretty full, for we were our own stevedores,
-not trusting the longshore Johnnies over much, and
-one day, as we were on deck, the both of us, who should
-come along the wharf but Pat. Pat looked down in
-the mouth and as if something was troubling him. He
-gave us good-day and asked us how we were doing,
-and then he told us his bother. Sadie wasn’t well,
-the doctors thought she was going into a consumption.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nothing but trouble in this world,” said
-Pat. “First I lost my partner six months ago,
-then I lost a cargo which wasn’t full insured by a
-mistake of a damn clerk, and now Sadie is took bad.
-Well, good-day to you, boys, and better luck than is
-attending me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I wonder why he came along the wharf to
-tell us that,” says Buck. “Blessed if I can make
-the old man out. His compasses are wrong, he ain’t
-sailing true; he’s doing things he’s never done before.
-Maybe he’s breaking up with old age and that’s what’s
-the matter with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems to have taken a fancy to us anyhow,”
-I says, “and if he’s breaking up let’s hope he won’t
-forget you in his will.”</p>
-
-<p>Then we went on with our work, thinking no more
-about him till two days later up he turns again, comes
-down to the cabin of the <i>Greyhound</i>, pulls out a big
-handkerchief, blows his nose and wipes his eyes and
-starts his batteries.</p>
-
-<p>“Me child’s going to die,” says he. “Oh, it’s the
-cruel disease as has caught hold of her; it’s only
-trotting now, but once it begins to gallop Dr. Hennassy
-says he won’t give her a fortnight. Nothing will save
-her, he says, but a long sea voyage away from excitement
-with the good God’s ozone round her. Steamships
-is no good, and there’s nothing in ’Frisco but
-Cape Horners and timber ships. Buck, you’re me
-nephew, and by the same token you had the old <i>Greyhound</i>
-out of me for next to nothing, though I’m not
-worryin’ about that. Take her for a trip and I’ll pay
-the expenses; she can take the old Kanaka mammy
-with her, that brought her up, to look after her. If
-it’s ten thousand dollars you can have it, but get her
-out into God’s good ozone, away off to Honolulu and
-away round that way for a six months’ trip; fling your
-cargo in the harbour,” he says, “and I’ll pay, for it’s
-me house is on fire and me child is burnin’, and what
-do I care for money where her life is concerned.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Buck, “I’d take her jumping, but
-well you know I’m under contract, and as for throwing
-the cargo in the harbour, barring what the Port
-Authorities would say, it’s not mine to throw.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says the old man, “take her along with
-you, cargo and all; you’ve got an after cabin you
-don’t use with two bunks in it, that will do for them.
-You two bunk here in the main cabin, don’t you?
-Well, there you are, and I’ll pay you a thousand dollars
-for the trip.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a cent,” says Buck. “I don’t eat my relations
-when they’re in trouble. If I take her she goes
-free&mdash;and, sure, how am I to refuse to take her seeing
-what you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s me brave boy,” says Pat, “the true son
-of me sister Mary, God rest her soul.”</p>
-
-<p>Then when we’d done some more talk he goes off.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I says to Buck, “here’s a nice cargo.”</p>
-
-<p>I’ve told you Buck was married to a woman who
-had run away from him. He’d never bothered to
-get divorced from her, fearing if he got amongst lawyers,
-he’d be sure to be robbed, and feeling that, as he
-didn’t ever want to get married again, buying a
-divorce would be like a chap with no heart for music
-buying a concertina.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I says, rubbing it into him, “here’s a nice
-cargo. I’m no marrying man, and you’re hitched,
-so what’s the good of her; a thousand dollars won’t
-pay us for freightage, and if there’s a scratch on her
-when we get back, there’ll be hell to pay with Pat.
-S’pose she dies on us?” I says.</p>
-
-<p>“And what would she die of?” asks he.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, what but consumption?” says I.</p>
-
-<p>Buck laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Consumption of victuals is all that’s wrong with
-her,” he says, and then he says no more, but goes
-on deck leaving me harpooned.</p>
-
-<p>I’d taken in this consumption business as honest
-coin, and now, by Buck’s manner and words, I saw
-that Pat had been lying to us.</p>
-
-<p>The skylight was open, and seeing Buck’s shadow
-across it, I called him down and, “For the love of
-God,” I says, “don’t tell me that the old man has
-been stuffing us. What’s his meaning?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a family affair,” says Buck, “and I’d sooner
-leave it at that till we get to the end of it, but if you
-ask his meaning, why I’ll tell you straight that Pat
-has only one meaning in everything he does, and
-that’s robbery. He’s making to best me. I can’t
-see his game yet or what he is playing for, I can only
-say the stake’s big or he wouldn’t be pulling the girl
-into it.”</p>
-
-<p>“But where’s the meaning of it?” I says, “unless
-he’s sending the girl to queer our pitch with Levenstein,
-and that wouldn’t be worth his trouble; there’s not
-enough business doing at Levua to make it worth his
-while, considering the big deals he’s always after.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says Buck, “I don’t know what’s his game,
-but I’m going to find out.”</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>Day before we sailed, down came two trunks and a
-hat box, and the next day down came the girl herself
-with the old Kanaka mammy and Pat.</p>
-
-<p>He stood on the wharfside and waved to us as we
-were tugged out, and Sadie stood and waved back to
-him. She had a lot of good points that girl, though
-straight dealing wasn’t one of them, and she didn’t
-seem to mind, no more than if she was going on a picnic.
-She took the tumble at the bar as if she was used to it,
-and she settled to the life of the ship same as a man
-might have done.</p>
-
-<p>She was always wanting to know things&mdash;names of
-the ropes and all such, and she hadn’t been a week
-on board before she began to poke her nose into the
-navigating and charts. She used to cough sometimes
-at first, but after a while she dropped all that, saying
-the sea air had taken her cough away.</p>
-
-<p>Now you wouldn’t believe unless you’d been there,
-the down we took on that piece before a week had
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>It wasn’t anything she said or anything she did,
-it was just the way she carried on. She was civil
-and she gave no more trouble than another might
-have done, but we weren’t her style, and she made
-us feel it. Only a woman can make a strong and
-straight man feel like a worm. It wasn’t even that
-she despised us for being below her class, she didn’t;
-she never thought of us, and she made us feel we weren’t
-men but just things&mdash;get me?</p>
-
-<p>“Buck,” I says to him one day, “if you could hollow
-that piece out, stick her on a pivot and put a lid on
-her, she’d make an A 1 freezing machine.”</p>
-
-<p>“She would,” said Buck, “and if you were to plate
-her with gold and set her with diamonds, you couldn’t
-make a lady out of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said I, “but all the same she’ll be an
-A 1 navigator before she’s done with us.”</p>
-
-<p>One evening, somewhere north of Palmyra&mdash;we’d
-been blown a bit south of our course&mdash;I was on deck.
-Buck was below and a Kanaka was at the wheel, and
-a moon like a frying pan was rising up and lighting the
-deck so’s you could count the dowels. I’d turned to
-have a look over the after rail, and when I turned again
-there was Buck just come on deck and an hour before
-his time.</p>
-
-<p>He came up and took me by the arm and walked me
-forward a bit.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve found it out,” he says.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“Why Pat O’Brien took Mrs. Murphy’s child off to
-buy it candy,” he says.</p>
-
-<p>I thought he’d gone off his head for the moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been thinking and thinking ever since we left
-’Frisco,” he goes on, “thinking and thinking, and there
-it was under my nose all the time.”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” I questions.</p>
-
-<p>“The reason of the whole of this business,” says he,
-“why Pat O’Brien, the brother of my mother Mary&mdash;God
-rest her soul&mdash;parted with five cents to buy a kid
-candy, why he asked us to dinner, why he pretended
-that freezing mixture down below had consumption,
-why he shipped her on board the <i>Greyhound</i>, and what
-it is she’s after. It’s all as plain as day, and there’s
-more to it than that. Brent, we’re millionaires.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” I says, “like a good chap, will you
-take your mind off the business and pull yourself
-together&mdash;you’ve been thinking too much over this
-business; forget it.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck was a queer devil. You never knew how he’d
-take things. Seeing I thought his head had gone wrong,
-instead of explaining like a sensible chap, he cut the
-thing off short.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’re right,” he says. “Maybe I’m
-crazy, maybe I’m not. I’ll say nothing more. We’ll
-see.”</p>
-
-<p>I left it at that, not wanting to stir up trouble in
-his head, and we didn’t talk of the thing again&mdash;not
-for a long time, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>But a change had come over Buck. He’d got to
-be as cheerful as a cricket, and I’d see him sometimes
-at table sitting staring in front of himself as if he
-was looking at the New Jerusalem, instead of the
-bird’s-eye panelling of the after bulkhead; then, by
-his talk I could tell his head was travelling on the
-same old track; when a man talks of the building
-price of steam yachts you can tell how his mind is
-running, same as when he talks of rents on Pacific
-Avenue and such places. But I said nothing, just
-kept my head shut and let him talk, and glad I was
-the morning we raised Levua.</p>
-
-<p>It’s a big island&mdash;if you’ve never been down that
-way&mdash;mountainous and with no proper reef only
-to the west, for east the sea comes smack up to the
-cliffs&mdash;but it’s pretty, what with the trees and all,
-and there’s a big waterfall comes down on the south
-from the hills that’s reckoned one of the sights of the
-island.</p>
-
-<p>Levenstein’s house was on the beach to the west;
-a run of reef, broken here and there, kept the sea pretty
-smooth on the beach, and there was ten fathoms
-close up to the sand. A lot of scouring goes on there
-with the tides, and the fishings the best I’ve seen anywhere,
-just in that bit of water.</p>
-
-<p>Old Pat O’Brien hadn’t asked to see a photograph
-of Levenstein, else maybe he wouldn’t have been so
-keen on shipping Sadie off on her travels; I’d forgot
-the fellow’s good looks, but when he boarded us after
-we’d dropped the hook, I remembered the fact and
-I saw he’d taken Sadie’s eye.</p>
-
-<p>Levenstein wasn’t unlike Kaiser Bill, only younger
-and better-looking; he was the sort women like, and
-he could coo like a damn turtle dove when he was in
-the mind, but he had the reputation of having whipped
-a Kanaka to death. I’d just as soon have given a
-girl’s happiness to that chap as I’d have given a rump
-steak to a tiger cat trustin’ in it to honour it. No, sir,
-that build don’t make for happiness, not much, and
-if Sadie had been my girl when I saw her setting her
-eyes on him like that, I’d have put the <i>Greyhound</i>
-to sea again, even if I’d had to shove her over the reef
-to get out.</p>
-
-<p>But I wasn’t bothering about Sadie’s happiness; I
-reckoned a little unhappiness mightn’t help to do her
-much harm by unsticking her glue a bit, and I reckon
-Buck felt the same, so, having business in the trade
-room and ashore enough to last us for days, we let
-things rip and didn’t bother.</p>
-
-<p>Sadie and the old Mammy were given the overseer’s
-house on shore, and the girl settled down to enjoy
-herself. She was awfully keen on exploring the island
-and seeing the natives, and she and the old Kanaka
-woman would make excursions, taking their grub with
-them, and having picnics all over the place, and
-Levenstein would go with her sometimes, and Marks,
-from the north of the island, would come over sometimes,
-and it made my blood fair boil to see her carrying
-on with those two Germans because she thought
-them gentlemen, and at the same time cold-shouldering
-us as if we weren’t more than the dirt she walked
-on.</p>
-
-<p>I said the same to Buck, and Buck he only says:
-“Leave her to me,” he says, “she’s come out to get
-what she won’t get, but she’ll get what she little expects
-if she marries uncle Lev,” says Buck. “Leave her to
-me,” he says, “I’ll l’arn her before I’ve done with
-her,” he says. “Damn her!” says he&mdash;which wasn’t
-the language to use about a girl, but then Sadie wasn’t
-so much a girl as a china figure all prickles, no use to
-hold or carry and not the ornament you’d care to stick
-on your chimney-piece if you wanted to be happy in
-your home.</p>
-
-<p>One day Buck says to me: “Come on over to the
-north of the island,” he says, “I want to have a
-talk to Marks.”</p>
-
-<p>“What about?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“The beauty of the scenery,” he replies.</p>
-
-<p>Off we started. Germans are some good, they can
-make roads&mdash;if I haven’t told you Levua was a German
-island, I’ll tell you now. I’m saying Germans can
-make roads, and if you doubt me, go and see the
-twelve-mile coral road they’ve made round Nauru
-or what they’ve done in German New Guinea, and the
-road to Marks’ plantation was as good as those.</p>
-
-<p>Coming along for late afternoon we hit the place, and
-found Marks in. Marks was like one of those Dutchmen
-you see in the comic papers, long china pipe and
-all, but he was the most level-headed man in the
-Islands, and I soon found that Buck had come to him
-for information and not to talk about the beauty of
-the scenery.</p>
-
-<p>We had drinks and cigars, and presently Buck says
-to Marks, “Look here,” he says, “you’re a man that
-knows everything about the West Pacific, s’pose I
-found an island that wasn’t on the charts and didn’t
-belong to anybody, which of the blessed nations would
-make a claim to it; would it be the one whose territory
-was closest to it?”</p>
-
-<p>Marks leans back in his chair and lights his pipe again,
-then he says: “If you find an unknown island, it
-would belong to England or Germany, all depends on
-where it lies in the West Pacific.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?” says Buck. “Why wouldn’t the
-French or Dutch have a look in?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s this way,” says Marks, “Germany in old
-days wasn’t a sea-going nation much, and so the English
-and French and Dutch took up nearly all the
-islands of the Pacific, leaving Germany in the cold
-till 1865, when she began to want things and show
-that she could get them. She took a big bite of New
-Guinea, then she came to an arrangement with England
-that she and England would take all the lands and
-islands in the West Pacific no one else had seized and
-divide them between them. Get me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>“The line starts from New Guinea,” says Marks,
-“then goes east, then north to fifteen degrees north
-latitude, and 173 degrees, 30 seconds east longitude;
-anything new found west of that would be German,
-anything to the east, British.”</p>
-
-<p>“Show us the line on a map,” says Buck, and
-Marks gets up and fetches down a map and draws
-the line with a pencil.</p>
-
-<p>Buck gives a great sigh and thanks him, and then
-we started off back home with the rising moon to show
-us our way and a three hours’ tramp before us.</p>
-
-<p>On the way I tried to get out of him what his
-meaning was in asking those questions, but he wouldn’t
-tell.</p>
-
-<p>“You thought I was mad when I tried to tell you
-first,” he said, “and now you’ll have to wait till I’ve
-landed the business, but I’ll tell you one thing&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“What?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” he says, “shut heads are best where
-a word might spoil everything.”</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>Three weeks at Levua got the cargo out and the
-cargo in, and the morning came when we were due
-to start. Sadie and Levenstein had been getting
-thicker and thicker; she was one of those girls that
-take the bit between the teeth, and it didn’t knock
-us down with surprise when, coming on board with
-her trunks, she said she’d been married that morning
-to Mr. Levenstein by the native parson and that
-Levenstein was going to follow her on to ’Frisco by
-the next boat he could catch.</p>
-
-<p>Did you ever hear of such a tomfool arrangement?
-For she could just as well have waited till he got to
-’Frisco, and then she’d have had time to change her
-mind; that’s what Buck told her as we put out with
-Levenstein waving to us from the shore.</p>
-
-<p>Buck rubbed it into her proper, he being a relative
-and all that, but I doubt if he wasn’t as glad as myself
-to think of the face Pat would pull when he found his
-daughter had married herself to a small island trader
-and a German at that. She took his lip without saying
-a word, and a day or two after she made inquiries as
-to when we should reach Palm Island.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, in a day or two,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>Now we weren’t due to touch at that place for fourteen
-days if the wind held good, and when I got him
-alone a few minutes later I asked him why he had told
-her that lie.</p>
-
-<p>“And what would you have had me say?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that we wouldn’t be there for a fortnight,”
-I answered.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “that would have been as big a
-lie, for we aren’t going to touch there at all. I’ve got
-extra water casks from that cooper chap at Levua
-and an extra supply of bananas.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your reason?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you when this deal is through,” he answers,
-and knowing it was useless to ask any more, I didn’t.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later. Buck told us that we’d passed
-the location of the island and that it wasn’t there;
-must have sunk in the sea, he said, same as these small
-islands sometimes do.</p>
-
-<p>When he sprung this on us you might have thought
-by the way Sadie went on she’d lost a relative; said
-that she wanted to see it more than the New Jerusalem,
-owing to Buck’s description of it, and asked
-couldn’t we poke round and make sure it was gone
-and that we weren’t being deceived owing to some
-error of the compass.</p>
-
-<p>Buck says: “All right,” and we spent the better
-part of two days fooling about pretending to look for
-that damn island and then we lit for ’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had we got there and landed the cargo,
-Sadie included, than Buck says to me one morning:
-“Clutch on here,” he says, “whilst I’m away. I’m
-going to London.”</p>
-
-<p>“London, Ontario?” I asks.</p>
-
-<p>“No, London, England,” he says.</p>
-
-<p>“And what are you going there for?” I questions.</p>
-
-<p>“To see the Tower,” says he.</p>
-
-<p>Off he goes and in two months he returns.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>I was sitting at breakfast when he comes in, having
-arrived by the early morning train.</p>
-
-<p>Down he sits and has a cup of coffee.</p>
-
-<p>“How’s Pat?” says he.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re even with Pat,” I says. “Levenstein got
-here a week ago and Pat don’t like his new son-in-law.
-There’s been the devil to pay.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m better even with him than that,” says Buck.
-“Brent, we’re millionaires.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spit yer meaning out,” I says.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you remember,” says he, “my saying to you
-last time we touched at Palm Island that the place
-seemed built of a sort of rock I’d never seen before,
-and my bringing a chunk of it away in my pocket?
-Well, what do you think that rock is but phosphate of
-lime.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?” I queries.</p>
-
-<p>“Seagull guano mixed with the lime of coral,” he
-says, “the finest fertiliser in the world and worth
-thirteen to fourteen dollars a ton. How many tons
-would Palm Island weigh, do you think, and it’s most
-all phosphate of lime?”</p>
-
-<p>I begins to sweat in the palms of my hands, but I
-says nothing and he goes on:</p>
-
-<p>“Palm Island being a British possession, since an
-Irishman has discovered it and it lies to eastward of
-the German British line, I went to London, and I’ve
-got not only the fishing rights but the mining rights for
-ninety-nine years. I didn’t say nothing about the
-mining rights, said I wanted to start a cannery there
-since the fishing was so good, and an old cockatoo in
-white whiskers did the rest and dropped the mining
-rights in gratis like an extra strawberry. Then,
-coming through N’ York I got a syndicate together
-that’ll buy the proposition when they’ve inspected it.
-I’ll take a million or nothing,” says he.</p>
-
-<p>“But, look here,” I says, “how in the nation did
-it all happen; how did you know?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” says he, “it was this way. That chunk
-of rock I was telling you of, I stuck in my sea chest,
-and unpacking when I got back I gave it to little Micky
-Murphy who was in the room pretending to help me.
-He used it for a play toy.</p>
-
-<p>“Now do you remember Pat O’Brien that morning
-he left us, talking to Micky outside and taking him off
-to buy candy? Well, next day Mrs. Murphy said to
-me that the old gentleman was very free with his
-money, but she didn’t think he was quite right as he’d
-offered Micky a dollar for the stone he was playing
-with. I didn’t think anything of it at the time, but
-later on, you remember that night on board ship, the
-thing hit me like a belt on the head.</p>
-
-<p>“Micky had told the old chap I’d given him the
-stone when I came back from that trip and Pat had
-recognised it for what it was. The only question that
-bothered him was where I’d picked it up. He knew
-I traded regular with Levua, and when he found we
-stopped nowhere but Levua and Palm Island he knew
-it was at one of those two places. Phosphate of lime
-was to be found, enough maybe to double his fortune.
-He sent the girl to prospect, and she’d have done me
-in only that night I suddenly remembered a chap
-telling me about the phosphate business and saying the
-stuff was like rock, striped in places; I’d never thought
-of it till then, and what made me think of it was that
-I’d been worrying a lot since I’d left ’Frisco over Pat
-and all his doings. Seems to me the mind does a lot
-of thinking we don’t know of.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” I says, “when he sent the girl to prospect
-he didn’t bargain she was going to prospect Levenstein.”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” says Buck, “seems to me we’ve got the
-double bulge on him.”</p>
-
-<p>But we hadn’t.</p>
-
-<p>Buck got a million for his phosphate rights and gave
-me a share, and, as much will have more, we flew high
-and lost every buck in the Eagle Consolidated Gold
-and Silver Mining Corporation, Inc.</p>
-
-<p>Pat met us the day after the burst and we asked
-him how the Levensteins were doing.</p>
-
-<p>“Fine,” says he. “He asked me how to become a
-millionaire last night and I told him it was quite easy,
-you only had to pick up a million and stick to it,
-but mind you,” I said, “it’s not the picking it up’s
-the bother, but the sticking to it. Now look at that
-Eagle Consolidated business,” I says, “many’s the
-fine boy has put his money in tripe stock like that,
-tumbling balmy after working for years like a sensible
-man. You know the stock I mean,” he finishes.
-“The Eagle Consolidated Gold and Silver Mining
-Corporation, Inc.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I know,” says Buck.</p>
-
-<p>We didn’t want to have no last words or let the old
-boy rub it in any more; we hiked off, Buck and me,
-resuming our way to the wharf and the same old life
-we’d always been living but for the three months we’d
-been million dollar men.</p>
-
-<p>“Pat seemed to have the joke on us,” said Brent,
-“but looking back on those three months and the
-worries and dyspepsias and late hours that make a
-millionaire’s life, I’m not so sure we hadn’t the bulge
-on him over the whole transaction, specially considering
-that Levenstein went bust, forged cheques and
-let him in for forty thousand or so to save the name
-of the family.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the last transaction we ever had with Pat,”
-finished Brent. “He dropped calling on us to tell us
-how to become millionaires, seeing we’d given instructions
-to Mrs. Murphy always to tell him we were out.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chXIII' title='XIII: Kiliwakee'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIII.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>KILIWAKEE</span>
-</h2>
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>The longest answer to a short question I ever
-heard given was delivered by Captain Tom
-Bowlby, master mariner, in the back parlour of Jack
-Rounds’ saloon away back in 1903.</p>
-
-<p>Bowlby still lingers as a memory in Island bars;
-a large mahogany-coloured man, Bristol born and
-owned by the Pacific; he had seen sandalwood wane
-and copra wax, had known Bully Hayes and the
-ruffian Pease and Colonel Steinberger; and as to the
-ocean of his fancy, there was scarcely a sounding
-from the Kermadecs to French Frigate Island he
-could not have given you.</p>
-
-<p>An illiterate man, maybe, as far as book reading
-goes, but a full man by reason of experience and
-knowledge of Life&mdash;which is Literature in the raw.</p>
-
-<p>“And so, usin’ a figure of speech, she’d stuck the
-blister on the wrong chap,” said the Captain finishing
-a statement.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon, Cap’,” came a voice through
-the blue haze of tobacco smoke, “but what was you
-meanin’ by a figure of speech?”</p>
-
-<p>The Cap’, re-loading his pipe, allowed his eyes to
-travel from the window and its view of the blue bay
-and the Chinese shrimp boats to the island headdresses
-and paddles on the wall and from thence to
-the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>“What was I meanin’ by a figure of speech?&mdash;why,
-where was you born?” He snorted, lit up, and
-accepted another drink and seemed to pass the question
-by, but I saw his trouble. He couldn’t explain,
-couldn’t give a clear definition off-hand of the term
-whose meaning he knew quite well. Can you?</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was just asking to know,” said the voice.</p>
-
-<p>Then, like a strong man armed, his vast experience
-of men and matters came to the aid of Captain
-Tom:</p>
-
-<p>“And know you shall,” said he, “if it’s in my
-power to put you wise. When you gets travelling
-about in Languige you bumps across big facts. You
-wouldn’t think words was any use except to talk
-them, would you? You wouldn’t think you could
-belt a chap over the head with a couple of words
-strung together same as with a slung shot, would
-you? Well, you can. You was askin’ me what a
-figure of speech is&mdash;well, it’s a thing that can kill
-a man sure as a shot gun, and Jack Bone, a friend
-of mine, seen it done.</p>
-
-<p>“Ever heard of Logan? He’d be before your time,
-but he’s well remembered yet down Rapa way, a tall,
-soft-spoken chap, never drank, blue-eyed chap as
-gentle as a woman and your own brother till he’d
-skinned you and tanned your hide and sold it for
-sixpence. He had offices in Sydney to start with
-and three or four schooners in the trade, <i>bêche de mer</i>,
-turtle shell and copra, with side interests in drinkin’
-bars and such, till all of a sudden he went bust and had
-to skip, leaving his partner to blow his brains out,
-and a wife he wasn’t married to with six children
-to fend for. What bust him? Lord only knows;
-it wasn’t his love of straight dealin’ anyhow. Then
-he came right down on the beach, with his toes through
-his boots, till he managed to pick a living somehow
-at Vavao and chummed in with a trader by name of
-Cartwright, who’d chucked everything owing to a
-woman and taken to the Islands and a native wife&mdash;one
-of them soft-shelled chaps that can’t stand
-Luck, nohow, unless it’s with them. Logan got to
-be sort of partner with Cartwright, who died six
-months after, and they said Logan had poisoned him
-to scoop the business. Some said it was the native
-wife who did the killing, being in love with Logan,
-who took her on with the goodwill and fixtures. If
-she did, she got her gruel, for he sold out to a German
-after he’d been there less than a year, and skipped
-again. I reckon that chap must have been born with
-a skippin’ rope in his fist by the way he went through
-life. They say wickedness don’t prosper; well, in
-my experience it prospers well enough up to a point;
-anyhow Logan after he left Vavao didn’t do bad,
-by all accounts; he struck here and there, pearling
-in the Paumotus and what not, and laying by money
-all the time, got half shares in a schooner and bought
-the other chap out, took her blackbirding in the
-Solomons, did a bit of opium smuggling, salved a
-derelict and brought her right into ’Frisco, turned
-the coin into real estate at San Lorenz, and sold out
-for double six months after; then he went partners
-with a chap called Buck Johnstone in a saloon by the
-water side close on to Rafferty’s landin’ stage, a regular
-Shanghai and dope shop with ward politics thrown in,
-and a place in the wrecking ring, and him going about
-’Frisco with a half-dollar Henry Clay in his face and
-a diamond as big as a decanter stopper for a scarf pin.</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t drink, as I was saying, and that gave
-him the bulge on the others. He had a bottle of his
-own behind the bar with coloured water in it, and when
-asked to have a drink he’d fill up out of it, leaving
-the others to poison themselves with whisky.</p>
-
-<p>“Then one night James Appleby blew into the bar.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“Appleby was a chap with a fresh red face on him,
-a Britisher, hailing from Devonshire and just in from
-the Islands. He’d been supercargo on a schooner
-trading in the Marshalls or somewhere that’d got piled
-on a reef by a drunken skipper and sea battered till
-there wasn’t a stick of her standing and everyone
-drowned but Appleby and the Kanaka bo’sun. He
-was keen to tell of his troubles and had a thirst on him,
-and there he stood lowering the bilge Johnstone passed
-over to him and trying to interest strangers in his
-family history and sea doings. Logan was behind
-the bar with Johnstone, and Logan, listening to the
-chap clacking with a half-drunk bummer, suddenly
-pricks his ears. Then he comes round to the front
-of the bar and listens to his story, and takes him by
-the arm and walks him out of the place on to the
-wharf and sits him on a bollard, Appleby clacking
-away all the time and so full of himself and his story,
-and so glad to have a chap listening to him, and so
-mixed up with the whisky that he scarce noticed that
-he’d left the bar.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, when he’d finished, he seen where he was, and
-was going back for more drinks, but Logan stopped him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘One moment,’ says Logan, ‘what was that you
-were saying about pearls to that chap I heard you
-talking to. Talking about a pearl island, you were,
-and him sucking it in; don’t you know better than
-to give shows like that away in bars to promiscuous
-strangers?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I didn’t give him the location,’ hiccups the other
-chap, ‘and I don’t remember mentioning pearls in
-particular, but they’re there sure enough and gold-tipped
-shell; say, I’m thirsty, let’s get back for more
-drinks.’</p>
-
-<p>“Now that chap hadn’t said a word about pearls,
-but he’d let out in his talk to the bummer that down
-in the Southern Pacific they’d struck an island not
-on the charts, and he had the location in his head
-and wasn’t going to forget it, and more talk like that,
-till Logan, sober and listening, made sure in his mind
-that the guy had struck phosphates or pearls, and
-played his cards according.</p>
-
-<p>“‘One moment,’ says Logan. ‘You’ve landed
-fresh with that news in your head and you’re in ’Frisco,
-lettin’ it out in the first bar you drop into&mdash;ain’t
-you got more sense?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s not in my head,’ says the other, ‘it’s in my
-pocket.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are you getting at?’ says Logan.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s wrote down,’ says Appleby. ‘Latitude
-and longitude on my notebook, and the book’s in
-my pocket. Ain’t you got no understanding?
-Keeping me here talking till I’m dry as an old boot.
-Come along back to the bar.’</p>
-
-<p>“Back they went, and Logan calls for two highballs,
-giving Johnstone the wink, and he takes Appleby
-into the back parlour and Johnstone served them the
-highballs with a cough drop in Appleby’s, and two
-minutes after that guy was blind as Pharaoh on his
-back on the old couch&mdash;doped.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>“There was a stairs leading down from that parlour
-to a landing stage, and when they’d stripped the guy
-of his pocket-book and loose money, they gave him a
-row off to a whaler that was due out with the morning
-tide and got ten dollars for the carcase. Jack Bone
-was the boatman they always used, and it was Jack
-Bone told most of the story I’m telling you now.</p>
-
-<p>“Then they comes back and closes up the bar,
-and sits down to investigate the notebook, and there,
-sure enough, was the indications, the latitude and
-longitude, with notes such as ‘big bed to west of the
-break in the reef,’ and so on.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That does it,’ says Johnstone; ‘we’re made men,
-sure; this beats ward politics by a mile and a half,’
-says he. ‘It’s only a question of a schooner and
-hands to work her and diving dresses; we don’t want
-no labour; see here what the blighter says, “native
-labour sufficient.” Lord love me! what a swab,
-writing all that down; hadn’t he no memory to carry
-it in?’</p>
-
-<p>“He’d struck the truth. There’s some chaps never
-easy unless they’re putting things on paper. I’ve
-seen chaps keeping diaries, sort of logs, and putting
-down every time they’d scratched their heads or
-sneezed, blame fools same as Appleby.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Logan sits thinking things over, and says
-he: ‘We’re both in this thing, though it’s my find.
-Still I’m not grumbling. What’s the shares to be?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Half shares,’ says Johnstone, prompt. Logan
-does another think:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Right,’ says he, ‘and we each pays our shot
-in the fitting out of the expedition.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m agreeable,’ says the other, with a grin on
-his face, which maybe wouldn’t have been there if
-he’d known what was going on in Logan’s mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Next morning they starts to work to look for a
-likely schooner; Johnstone keeping the bar and
-Logan doing the prospecting. It wasn’t an easy job,
-for they had to keep things secret. They knew
-enough of the Law to be afraid of it, and though this
-island of Appleby’s was uncharted, they weren’t
-going to lay no claims to it with the Britishers popping
-up, maybe, or the French or the Yanks with priority
-claims, and every dam liar from Vancouver to Panama
-swearing he’d done the discovering of it first. No,
-their plan was to sneak out and grab what they could,
-working double shifts and skimming the hull lagoon
-in one big coop that’d take them maybe a year. Then
-when they’d got their pearls and stored their shell,
-they reckoned to bring the pearls back to ’Frisco,
-where Johnstone had the McGaffery syndicate behind
-him, who’d help him to dispose of them, and after that
-he reckoned if things went well, to go back and fetch
-the shell. Pearl shell runs from three hundred to a
-thousand dollars a ton depending on quality, and gold-tipped
-being second quality the stuff would be worth
-carting.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Logan had luck and he managed to buy
-Pat Ginnell’s old schooner, the <i>Heart of Ireland</i>, for
-two thousand dollars, Pat having struck it rich in
-the fruit business and disposing of his sea interests;
-they paid twelve hundred dollars for diving gear
-and a thousand for trade goods to pay the workers,
-stick tobacco and all such; then they had to provision
-her, reckoning the island would give them all
-the fish and island truck they’d want, and, to cap
-the business, they had to get a crew that wouldn’t
-talk, Kanakas or Chinks&mdash;they shipped Chinks.
-Logan knew enough navigating to take her there,
-and Johnstone was used to the sea, so they were
-their own afterguard.</p>
-
-<p>“Then one day, when all was ready, Johnstone
-sold out his interest in the saloon, and the next day,
-or maybe the day after, out they put.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>“I’d forgot to say they took Bone with them.
-They’d used the chap so much in the outfitting that
-they thought it was better to take him along than
-leave him behind to talk, maybe; and they’d no
-sooner cleared the Gate and left the Farallones behind
-them than the weather set up its fist against them,
-and the old <i>Heart</i> with a beam sea showed them
-how she could roll; she could beat a barrel any
-day in the week on that game; it was an old saying
-on the front that she could beat Ginnell when he
-was drunk, and Bone said the rolling took it out
-of them so that it was a sick and quarrelling ship
-right from the start to the line. All but Logan. He
-never quarrelled with no one, he wasn’t that sort;
-always smooth spoken and give and take, he held
-that show together, smilin’ all the time.</p>
-
-<p>“Then ten degrees south of the line and somewhere
-between the Paumotus and Bolivia they
-began to keep their eyes skinned for the island,
-struck the spot given by Appleby and went right
-over it.</p>
-
-<p>“There wasn’t no island.</p>
-
-<p>“About noon it was on the day they ought to
-have hit the place, an’ you can picture that flummoxed
-lot standin’ on the deck of the old <i>Heart;</i> thousands
-of dollars gone on a schooner and trade and all, and
-then left.</p>
-
-<p>“The sails were drawing and they were still heading
-south, and Johnstone up and spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Appleby’s done us,’ says he, ‘and there’s no
-use in crying over spilt milk. There’s nothing for it
-but to go back and sell off at a loss. I’m done
-worse than you, seein’ I’ve sold the saloon. Tell
-you what, I’ll give you fifteen hundred dollars for
-your share in the ship and fixin’s; maybe I’ll lose
-when I come to realise,’ says he, ‘for there’s no knowing
-what she and the truck will fetch when it comes
-to auction.’</p>
-
-<p>“He was one of them lightning calculators, and
-he reckoned to clear a few hundred dollars on the
-deal.</p>
-
-<p>“Logan was likewise, and he thinks for a moment,
-and he says, ‘Make it sixteen hundred and I’ll sell
-you my share in the dam show right out.’</p>
-
-<p>“Done,” says Johnstone.</p>
-
-<p>“The words were scarce out of his mouth when
-the Chink stuck in the crosstree cries out ‘Ki, hi.’</p>
-
-<p>“The whole bundle of them was in the rigging
-next minute lookin’ ahead, and then, right to s’uth’ard,
-there was a white stain on the sky no bigger than
-a window.</p>
-
-<p>“Logan laughs.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s her,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“Then they see the pa’m tops like heads of pins,
-and they came down.</p>
-
-<p>“If that was the island, then Appleby’s position
-was near fifty miles out, and again, if it was the
-island, Logan was done, seeing he’d sold his interest
-in the show to Johnstone. Bone said he didn’t
-turn a hair, just laughed like the good-natured chap
-he was, whiles they cracked everything on and raised
-the place, coming into the lagoon near sundown.</p>
-
-<p>“But Bone had begun to have his suspicions of
-Logan by the way he took the business, and determined
-to keep his weather eye lifting.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a big atoll, near a mile broad at its
-narrowest and running north and south, with the
-reef break to north just as given in Appleby’s notebook.
-They ran her to the west a bit when they
-got in, and dropped anchor near the beach, where
-there was a Kanaka village with canoe houses and
-all, and the Kanakas watching them. They didn’t
-bother about no Kanakas; it was out boat as soon
-as the killick had took the coral, and hunt for oysters.
-And there they were, sure enough, a bit more up by
-the western beach as Appleby had noted in his book,
-square acres of them, virgin oysters if ever oysters
-were virgins, and a dead sure fortune.</p>
-
-<p>“The chaps came back and went down below
-to have a clack, and Johnstone turns generous, which
-he couldn’t well help, seeing that Logan might turn
-on him and blow the gaff, and says he: ‘You’ve
-stood out and sold your share in the venture, but
-I’m no shyster, and, if you’re willing, you shall have
-quarter share in the takings and half a share in the
-shell.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Right,’ says Logan.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You helping to work the beds,’ said Johnstone.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m with you,’ says the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Old Jack Bone, who was listening, cocked his
-ear at this.</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed to him more than ever that Logan
-was too much of a Christian angel over the hull of
-this business. He knew the chap by instinc’ to be
-a dam thief, or maybe worse, but he said nothing,
-and then a noise brought them up on deck, and they
-found the island Kanakas had all put off in canoes
-with fruit and live chickens and was wanting to trade.</p>
-
-<p>“It was just after sundown, but that didn’t
-matter to them; they lit up torches and the place
-was like a regatta round the old <i>Heart</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Two of the chiefs came aboard and brought their
-goods with them and squatted on their hams, Johnstone
-doing the bargaining, and, when the bazaar
-was over, Johnstone turns to Logan, and says he:
-‘Lord love me,’ says he, ‘where did these chaps
-learn their business instinc’s? Chicago I shud think.
-Where in the nation will we be when it comes to
-paying them for the diving work? They’ll clear us
-out of goods before a month is over, and that knocks
-the bottom out of the proposition. It’s the Labour
-problem over again,’ says he, ‘and we’re up against
-it.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘We are,’ says Logan, ‘sure. These chaps
-aren’t Kanakas; they’re Rockfellers, virgin ones,
-maybe, but just as hard shelled. I’ll have to do a
-think.’</p>
-
-<p>“The Chinks had all congregated down into the
-fo’c’sle to smoke their opium pipes, and Logan, he
-lit a cigar and sat down on deck in the light of the
-moon that had just risen up, and there he sits like an
-image smoking and thinking whiles the others went
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“It was a tough proposition.</p>
-
-<p>“The Chinks were no use for diving. They’d
-been questioned on that subject and risen against it
-to a man. The island Kanakas were the only labour,
-and, taking the rate of exchange, the pearls would
-have had to be as big as turnips to make the game
-pay.</p>
-
-<p>“But this scamp Logan wasn’t the chap to be
-bested by Kanakas, and having done his think, he
-went below and turned in.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>“Next morning bright and early he tells Johnstone
-to get the diving boat out, and he sends Bone ashore
-in the dinghy with word for the natives to come out
-and see the fun. Bone could talk their lingo. He’d
-been potting about forty years in these seas, before
-he’d taken up the Shanghai job in ’Frisco, and he
-could talk most all the Island patter. Off he goes,
-and then the Chinks get the diving boat out, pump
-and all, and two sets of dresses, and they rowed her
-off and anchored her convenient to the bed, and
-they hadn’t more’n got the anchor down when the
-canoes came out, and Logan, talking to the Kanakas
-by means of Bone, told them he was going down to
-walk about on the lagoon floor, dry.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he gets into a dress and has the headpiece
-screwed on, and down he goes, the Kanakas all
-hanging their heads over the canoe sides and watching
-him. They see him walking about and picking
-up oysters and making a grab at a passing fish’s
-tail and cutting all sorts of antics, and there he stuck
-twenty minutes, and they laughing and shouting,
-till the place sounded more like Coney Island than a
-lonesome lagoon, God knows where, south of the
-line.</p>
-
-<p>“Then up he comes, having sent up half a dozen
-bags full of oysters, and steps out of his diving gear&mdash;dry.</p>
-
-<p>“They felt him, to make sure he was dry, and then
-the row began.</p>
-
-<p>“The chief of the crowd, Maurini by name, wanted
-to go down and play about, but Logan held off, asked
-him what he’d give to be let down, and the chap
-offered half a dozen fowl. Logan closed, and the
-chap was rigged up and got his instructions from
-Bone of what he was to do, and how he wasn’t to
-let the air pipe be tangled, and so on, and how he
-was to pick up oysters and send them up in the bag
-nets. Down the chap goes, and gets the hang of the
-business in two minutes, after he’d done a trip up
-or two and nearly strangled himself. After that the
-whole of the other chaps were wild to have a hand
-in the business, and Logan let them, asking no payment,
-only the oysters.</p>
-
-<p>“In a week’s time he had all the labour he wanted.
-Those Kanakas were always ready for the fun, and
-when any of them tired off there was always green
-hands to take their places; the work was nothing
-to them; it was something new, and it never lost
-colour, not for six months. Then the pumps began
-to suck and they’d had enough. Wouldn’t go down
-unless under pay, and didn’t do the work half as
-well.</p>
-
-<p>“Meanwhile, Logan and Johnstone had built a
-house ashore and hived half a hat full of pearls, and
-about this time the feeling came on Bone strong
-that Logan was going to jump. He didn’t know
-how, but he was sure in his mind that Logan was
-going to do Johnstone in for his share, seeing the
-amount of stuff they’d collected.</p>
-
-<p>“He got Johnstone aside and warned him.</p>
-
-<p>“‘You look out,’ says he, ‘never you be alone
-with that chap when no one’s looking, for it’s in
-my mind he’s going to scrag you.’</p>
-
-<p>“Johnstone laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There ain’t no harm in Logan,’ says he, ‘there’s
-not the kick of a flea in him; you mind your business,’
-says he, ‘and I’ll tend to mine. Whach you want
-putting suspicions in chaps’ heads for?’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Well, I’ve said what I’ve said,’ says Bone,
-‘and I’m not going to say no more.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then he goes off.</p>
-
-<p>“Meanwhile, those island bucks had got to fitting
-things together in their minds, and they’d got to
-connecting pearls with sticks of tobacco and trade
-goods, and they’d got to recognise Johnstone as boss
-and owner of the pearls and goods. They’d named
-Johnstone ‘the fat one’ and they’d labelled Logan
-‘the one with teeth,’ and the specifications fitted,
-for Johnstone weighed all two hundred and fifty,
-and Logan was a dentist’s sign when the grin was
-on his face, which was frequent.</p>
-
-<p>“And so things goes on, the Kanakas diving and
-bringing up shell and the trade goods sinking till
-soon there was scarcely none left to pay the divers,
-and level with that was the fac’ that they’d collared
-enough pearls to satisfy reasonable chaps.</p>
-
-<p>“One day Bone comes back from the diving and
-there wasn’t any Johnstone.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>VI</div>
-
-<p>“He wasn’t in the house nor anywhere in sight,
-and Logan was sitting mending a bag net by the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where’s Johnstone?’ says Bone.</p>
-
-<p>“‘How the &mdash;&mdash; do I know?’ says Logan. He was
-a most civil spoken chap as a rule, and as soon as he’d
-let that out of his head, Bone didn’t look round no
-more for Johnstone.</p>
-
-<p>“He sat down and smoked a pipe, and fell to
-wondering when his turn would come. He had one
-thing fixed in his head, and that was the fact that
-if he let on to be suspicious old smiler would do him
-in. He’d be wanted to help work the schooner back
-to ’Frisco, and it was quite on the cards if he pretended
-to know nothing and suspec’ nothing he might
-get off with his life, but he was in a stew. My hat!
-that chap was in a stew. Living with a man-eating
-tiger at his elbow wouldn’t be worse, and that night,
-when no Johnstone turned up, he could no more
-sleep than a runnin’ dynamo driven by a ten thousand
-horse-power injin stoked by Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Logan said a wave must have taken Johnstone
-off the outer beach of the reef, or he’d tumbled in and
-a shark had took him, and Bone agreed.</p>
-
-<p>“Next day, however, when Bone was taking a
-walk away to the north of the house, he saw a lot
-of big seagulls among the mammee apple bushes
-that grew thick just there, and making his way through
-the thick stuff and driving off the birds, he found
-old man Johnstone on his face with his head bashed in
-and etceteras.</p>
-
-<p>“Bone was a man, notwithstandin’ the fact that
-he’d helped to Shanghai poor sailor chaps, and when
-he seen Logan’s work he forgot his fright of Logan,
-and swore he’d be even with him.</p>
-
-<p>“There wasn’t no law on that island, nor anyone
-to help him to hang old toothy; so he fixed it in
-his mind to do him in, get him by himself and
-bash him on the head same as he’d bashed Johnstone.</p>
-
-<p>“But Logan never gave him a chance, and the
-work went on till all the trade goods were used up
-and there was no more to pay for the divers.</p>
-
-<p>“‘That’s the end,’ said Logan to Bone, ‘but
-it doesn’t matter; we’ve pretty well skinned the
-lagoon, and we’ll push out day after to-morrow when
-we get water and fruit aboard.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Where for?’ says Bone.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Sydney,’ says the other; ‘I’m not going back
-to ’Frisco, and seeing Johnstone is drowned, the
-show is mine; he’s got no relatives. We’ll make
-for Sydney, and to make you keep your head shut,
-I’ll give you the old schooner for keeps; she’ll fetch
-you a good price in Sydney, more than you’d make
-in ten dozen years long-shoring in ’Frisco. I only
-want the pearls.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘All right,’ says Bone, ‘I’ll keep my head shut
-and help you work her,’ having in his mind to tell
-the whole story soon as he landed, for he’d given
-up the notion of killing the other chap, not being
-able to get him alone. But they never put out for
-Sydney, and here’s the reason why.</p>
-
-<p>“There was a Kanaka on that island by name of
-Kiliwakee, a chap with a head all frizzled out like
-a furze bush. He was a looney, though a good
-enough workman, and he’d got no end of tobacco
-and fish scale jewellery and such rubbish from Johnstone
-for his work, and now that supplies had dried
-up he was pretty much down in the mouth; he’d
-got to connect pearls and tobacco in his woolly head,
-and now the lagoon was skinned and there were no
-more pearls, he saw there was to be no more tobacco,
-nor jewellery, nor canned salmon.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that night there was a big Kanaka pow-wow
-on the beach; the chaps were sitting in a ring
-and talking and talking, and Bone, catching sight
-of them, crawled through the bushes to listen.</p>
-
-<p>“He heard the chief chap talking.</p>
-
-<p>“He couldn’t make out at first what he was
-jabbering about; then at last he got sense of what
-he was saying.</p>
-
-<p>“‘There’ll be no more good things,’ says he, ‘sticks
-of tobacco, nor fish in cans, nor knives, nor print
-calico to make breeches of, nor nothing, for,’ says
-he, using a figure of speech, ‘the man with the teeth
-has killed the fat one and swallowed his pearls.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then the meeting closed and the congressmen
-took their ways home, all but Kiliwakee, the half-lunatic
-chap, who sits in the moonlight wagging his
-fuzzy head, which was his way of thinking.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he fetches a knife out of his loin cloth
-and looks at it, then he lays on his back and begins
-to strop it on his heel, same as a chap strops a razor.</p>
-
-<p>“Bone said he’d never seen anything funnier
-than that chap lying in the moonlight stropping away
-at that knife. It give him a shiver, too, somehow.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Kiliwakee sits up again and does another
-brood, feeling the sharp edge of the knife. Then,
-with the knife between his teeth, he makes off on
-all fours like a land crab, for the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Bone follows.</p>
-
-<p>“Kiliwakee listens at the house door and hears
-someone snoring inside&mdash;Logan, no less; then he crawls
-through the door, and Bone guessed that looney was
-after the pearls. If Bone had run he’d have been
-in time to save Logan, but he didn’t. He just listened.
-He heard a noise like a yelp. Then, five minutes
-after, out comes Kiliwakee. He’d done Logan in
-and cut his stomach open, but he hadn’t found no
-pearls, not knowing the chief chap had been usin’
-a figure of speech.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you know what a figure of speech is, and
-don’t you forget it, and if you want to know any more
-about it go and buy a grammar book. Bone&mdash;Oh,
-he never got away with the schooner, nor the boodle
-neither. A Chile gunboat looked into that lagoon
-next week and collared the fishin’ rights and produce
-in the name of Chile, and told Bone to go fight it in
-the courts if he wanted to put in a claim. Said the
-place had been charted and claimed by Chile two
-years before, which was a lie.</p>
-
-<p>“But Bone wasn’t up for fighting. Too much
-afraid of questions being asked and the doing in
-of Logan put down to him by the Kanakas.</p>
-
-<p>“So he took a passage in the gunboat to Valdivia.
-He’d six big pearls stolen from the takings and hid
-in the lining of his waistcoat, and he sold them for
-two hundred dollars to a Jew, and that got him back
-to ’Frisco.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you, I don’t mind; whisky with a dash,
-if it’s all the same to you.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chXIV' title='XIV: Under the Flame Trees'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XIV.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>UNDER THE FLAME TREES</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>I was sitting in front of Thibaud’s Café one evening
-when I saw Lewishon, whom I had not met for
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Thibaud’s Café I must tell you first, is situated on
-Coconut Square, Noumea. Noumea has a bad name,
-but it is not at all a bad place if you are not a convict,
-neither is New Caledonia, take it altogether, and that
-evening, sitting and smoking and listening to the
-band, and watching the crowd and the dusk taking
-the flame trees, it seemed to me for a moment that
-Tragedy had withdrawn, that there was no such place
-as the Isle Nou out there in the harbour, and that
-the musicians making the echoes ring to the “Sambre
-et Meuse” were primarily musicians, not convicts.</p>
-
-<p>Then I saw Lewishon crossing the Square by the
-Liberty Statue, and attracted his attention. He
-came and sat by me, and we smoked and talked whilst
-I tried to realise that it was fifteen years since I had
-seen him last, and that he hadn’t altered in the least&mdash;in
-the dusk.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been living here for years,” said he. “When
-I saw you last in ’Frisco, I was about to take up a
-proposition in Oregon. I didn’t, owing to a telegram
-going wrong. That little fact changed my whole
-life. I came to the Islands instead and started trading,
-then I came to live in New Caledonia&mdash;I’m married.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh,” I said, “is that so?”</p>
-
-<p>Something in the tone of those two words, “I’m
-married,” struck me as strange.</p>
-
-<p>We talked on indifferent subjects, and before we
-parted I promised to come over and see him next
-day at his place, a few miles from the town. I did,
-and I was astonished at what I saw.</p>
-
-<p>New Caledonia, pleasant as the climate may be,
-is not the place one would live in by choice. At all
-events it wasn’t in those days when the convicts were
-still coming there from France. The gangs of prisoners
-shepherded by warders armed to the teeth, the great
-barges filled with prisoners that ply every evening
-when work is over between the harbour quay and the
-Isle Nou, the military air of the place and the fretting
-regulations, all these things and more robbed it of
-its appeal as a residential neighbourhood. Yet the
-Lewishons lived there, and what astonished me was
-the evidence of their wealth and the fact that they
-had no apparent interests at all to bind them to the
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Lewishon was a woman of forty-five or so, yet
-her beauty had scarcely begun to fade. I was introduced
-to her by Lewishon on the broad verandah of
-their house, which stood in the midst of gardens more
-wonderful than the gardens of La Mortola.</p>
-
-<p>A week or so later, after dining with me in the town,
-he told me the story of his marriage, one of the strangest
-stories I ever heard, and this is it, just as he told it:</p>
-
-<p>“The Pacific is the finest place in the world to drop
-money in. You see it’s so big and full of holes that
-look like safe investments. I started, after I parted
-with you, growing cocoanut trees in the Fijis. It
-takes five years for a cocoanut palm to grow, but when
-it’s grown it will bring you in an income of eighteen
-pence or so a year, according as the copra prices range.
-I planted forty thousand young trees, and at the end
-of the fourth year a hurricane took the lot. That’s
-the Pacific. I was down and out, and then I struck
-luck. That’s the Pacific again. I got to be agent
-for a big English firm here in Noumea, and in a short
-time I was friends with everyone from Chardin the
-governor right down. Chardin was a good sort, but
-very severe. The former governor had been lax, so
-the people said, letting rules fall into abeyance like
-the rule about cropping the convicts’ hair and beards
-to the same pattern. However that may have been,
-Chardin had just come as governor, and I had not been
-here more than a few months when one day a big white
-yacht from France came and dropped anchor in the
-harbour, and a day or two after a lady appeared at
-my office and asked for an interview.</p>
-
-<p>“She had heard of me through a friend, she said,
-and she sought my assistance in a most difficult matter.
-In plain English she wanted me to help in the escape
-of a convict.</p>
-
-<p>“I was aghast. I was about to order her out of
-the office, when something&mdash;something&mdash;something,
-I don’t know what, held my tongue and kept me from
-rising for a moment, whilst with the cunning, which
-amounts to magic, of a desperate woman in love,
-she managed to calm my anger. ‘I understand,’ she
-said, ‘and I should have been surprised if you had
-taken the matter calmly, but will you listen to me, and
-when you have heard me out, tell me if you would
-not have done what I have done to-day?’</p>
-
-<p>“I could not stop her, and this is what she told me:</p>
-
-<p>“Her name was Madame Armand Duplessis, her
-maiden name had been Alexandre. She was the only
-child of Alexandre, the big sugar refiner, and at his
-death she found herself a handsome young girl with a
-fortune of about twenty million francs and nothing
-between her and the rogues of the world but an old
-maiden aunt given to piety and guileless as a rabbit.
-However, she managed to escape the sharks and
-married an excellent man, a Captain in the Cavalry
-and attached to St. Cyr. He died shortly after the
-marriage, and the young widow, left desolate and
-without a child to console her, took up living again
-with her aunt, or rather the aunt came to live with her
-in the big house she occupied on the Avenue de la
-Grande Armée.</p>
-
-<p>“About six months after she met Duplessis. I
-don’t know how she met him, she didn’t say, but
-anyhow he wasn’t quite in the same circle as herself.
-He was a clerk in La Fontaine’s Bank, and only drawing
-a few thousand francs a year, but he was handsome
-and attractive and young, and the upshot of it was
-they got married.</p>
-
-<p>“She did not know anything of his past history
-and he had no family in evidence, nothing to stand
-on at all but his position at the bank; but she did
-not mind, she was in love and she took him on trust
-and they got married. A few months after marriage
-a change came over Duplessis; he had always been
-given rather to melancholy, but now an acute depression
-of spirits came on him for no reason apparently;
-he could not sleep, his appetite failed, and the doctors,
-fearing consumption, ordered him a sea voyage. When
-he heard this prescription he laughed in such a strange
-way that Madame Duplessis, who had been full of
-anxiety as to his bodily condition, became for a
-moment apprehensive as to this mental state. However,
-she said nothing, keeping her fears hidden and
-busying herself in preparations for the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>“It chanced that just at that moment a friend had
-a yacht to dispose of, an eight hundred ton auxiliary-engined
-schooner, <i>La Gaudriole</i>. It was going cheap,
-and Madame Duplessis, who was a good business
-woman, bought it, reckoning to sell it again when
-the voyage was over.</p>
-
-<p>“A month later they left Marseilles.</p>
-
-<p>“They visited Greece and the Islands; then, having
-touched at Alexandria, they passed through the Canal,
-came down the Red Sea and crossed the Indian Ocean.
-They touched at Ceylon, and whilst there Madame
-Duplessis suggested that instead of going to Madras,
-as they had intended, they should go into the Pacific
-by way of the Straits of Malacca. Duplessis opposed
-this suggestion at first, then he fell in with it. More
-than that, he became enthusiastic about it. A weight
-seemed suddenly to have been lifted from his mind,
-his eyes grew bright and the melancholy that all the
-breezes of the Indian Ocean had not blown away
-suddenly vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“Two days later they left Ceylon, came through
-the Straits of Malacca and by way of the Arafura
-Sea and Torres Straits into the Pacific. The Captain
-of the yacht had suggested the Santa Cruz islands as
-their first stopping place, but one night Duplessis
-took his wife aside and asked her would she mind their
-making for New Caledonia instead. Then he gave
-his reason.</p>
-
-<p>“He said to her: ‘When you married me I told
-you I had no family; that was not quite the truth.
-I have a brother. He is a convict serving sentence
-in Noumea. I did not tell you because the thing was
-painful to me as death.’</p>
-
-<p>“You can fancy her feelings, struck by a bombshell
-like that, but she says nothing and he goes on telling
-her the yarn he ought to have told her before they were
-married.</p>
-
-<p>“This brother, Charles Duplessis, had been rather a
-wild young scamp; he lived in the Rue du Mont
-Thabor, a little street behind the Rue St. Honoré in
-Paris, and he made his money on the Stock Exchange.
-Then he got into terrible trouble. He was accused
-of a forgery committed by another man, but could
-not prove his innocence. Armand was certain of his
-innocence but could do nothing, and Charles was convicted
-and sent to New Caledonia.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Madame Duplessis sat swallowing that
-fact, and when he’d done speaking, she sat swallowing
-some more as if her throat was dry. Then she says
-to Armand:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Your brother is innocent, then,’ she says.</p>
-
-<p>“‘As innocent as yourself,’ he answers her, ‘and
-it is the knowledge of all this that has caused my
-illness and depression.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Before I was married I was forgetting it all, but
-married to the woman I love, rich, happy, with
-enviable surroundings, Charles came and knocked
-at my door, saying: “Remember me in your
-happiness.”’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But can we do nothing for him?’ asked Madame
-Duplessis.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nothing,’ replied Armand, ‘unless we can help
-him to escape.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then he went on to tell her how he had not wanted
-to come on this long voyage at first, feeling that there
-was some fate in the business, and that it would surely
-bring him somehow or another to Noumea; then,
-how the idea had come to him at Ceylon that he might
-be able to help Charles to escape.</p>
-
-<p>“She asked him had he any plan, and he replied
-that he had not and that it was impossible to make
-any plan till he reached Noumea and studied the place
-and its possibilities.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there was the position the woman found
-herself in, and a nice position it was. Think of it,
-married only a short time and now condemned to help
-a prisoner to escape from New Caledonia, for, though
-she could easily have refused, she felt compelled to
-the business both for the sake of her husband and
-the sake of his brother, an innocent man wrongfully
-convicted.</p>
-
-<p>“She agreed to help in the attempt like the high
-spirited woman she was, and a few days later they
-raised the New Caledonia reef and the Noumea lighthouse
-that marks the entrance to the harbour.</p>
-
-<p>“Madame Duplessis had a big acquaintance in Paris,
-especially among the political and military people,
-and no sooner had the yacht berthed than the Governor
-and chief people who knew her name, began to show
-their attentions, tumbling over themselves with invitations
-to dinners and parties.</p>
-
-<p>“That, again, was a nice position for her, having to
-accept the hospitality of the people she had come to
-betray, so to speak, but she had to do it: it was the
-only way to help her husband along in his scheme, and
-leaving the yacht, she took up her residence in a house
-she rented on the sea road; you may have seen it, a
-big white place with green verandahs, and there
-she and her husband spent their time whilst the yacht
-was being overhauled.</p>
-
-<p>“They gave dinners and parties and went to picnics;
-they regularly laid themselves out to please, and then,
-one night, Armand came to his wife and said that he
-had been studying all means of escape from Noumea,
-and he had found only one. He would not say what it
-was, and she was content not to poke into the business,
-leaving him to do the plotting and planning till the
-time came when she could help.</p>
-
-<p>“Armand said that before he could do anything
-in the affair he must first have an interview with
-Charles. They were hand in glove with the Governor,
-and it was easy enough to ask to see a prisoner, but
-the bother was the name of Duplessis, for Charles
-had been convicted and exported under that name.
-The Governor had never noticed Charles, and the name
-of Duplessis was in the prison books and forgotten.
-It would mean raking the whole business up and
-claiming connection with a convict, still it had to be
-done.</p>
-
-<p>“Next day Armand called at the Governor’s house
-and had an interview. He told the Governor that a
-relation named Charles Duplessis was amongst the
-convicts and that he very much wanted to have an
-interview with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Now the laws at that time were very strict, and the
-Governor, though pretty lax in some things as I’ve
-said, found himself up against a stiff proposition, and
-that proposition was how to tell Armand there was
-nothing doing.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I am sorry,’ said the Governor, ‘but what you
-ask is impossible, Monsieur Duplessis; a year ago it
-would have been easy enough, but since the escape
-of Benonini and that Englishman Travers, the orders
-from Paris have forbidden visitors: any message you
-would like me to send to your relation shall be sent,
-but an interview&mdash;no.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then Armand played his ace of trumps. He
-confessed, swearing the Governor to secrecy, that
-Charles was his brother; he said that Charles had in
-his possession a family secret that it was vital to
-obtain. He talked and talked, and the upshot was
-that the Governor gave in.</p>
-
-<p>“Charles would be brought by two warders to the
-house on the Sea Road after dark on the following
-day, the interview was to take place in a room with a
-single door and single window. One warder was to
-guard the door on the outside, the other would stand
-below the window. The whole interview was not to
-last longer than half an hour.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>“Next evening after dark steps sounded on the
-path up to the house with the green verandahs.
-Madame Duplessis had retired to her room; she had
-dismissed the servants for the evening, and Armand
-himself opened the door. One of those little ten-cent
-whale oil lamps was the only light in the passage, but
-it was enough for Armand to see the forms of the
-warders and another form, that of his brother.</p>
-
-<p>“The warders, unlike the Governor, weren’t particular
-about trifles; they didn’t bother about guarding
-doors and windows, sure of being able to pot anyone
-who made an attempt to leave the house, they sat
-on the fence in the moonlight counting the money
-Armand had given them, ten napoleons apiece.</p>
-
-<p>“Half an hour passed, during which Madame Duplessis
-heard voices in argument from the room below,
-and then she heard the hall door open as Charles went
-out. Charles shaded his eyes against the moon,
-saw the warders approaching him from the fence,
-and walked off with them back to the prison he had
-come from.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Madame Duplessis, hearing the front door
-close, came from her room, and found her husband
-in the passage.</p>
-
-<p>“He seemed overcome by the interview with his
-brother.</p>
-
-<p>“She asked him had he made plans for Charles’
-escape, and he answered: ‘No.’ Then he went on
-to say that escape was impossible. They had talked
-the whole thing over and had come to that decision.
-She stood there in the hall listening to him, wondering
-dimly what had happened, for only a few hours before
-he had been full of plans and energy and now this
-interview seemed to have crushed all the life out of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Then she said: ‘If that is so there is no use
-in our remaining any longer at Noumea.’ He agreed
-with her and went off to his room, leaving her there
-wondering more than ever what could have happened
-to throw everything out of gear in that way.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a high-spirited woman and she had thought
-little of the danger of the business; pitying Charles,
-she did not mind risking her liberty to set him free,
-and the thought that her husband had funked the
-business came to her suddenly as she stood there, like
-a stab in the heart.</p>
-
-<p>“She went off to her room and went to bed, but she
-could not sleep for thinking, and the more she thought
-the clearer it seemed to her that her husband brought
-up to scratch had got cold feet as the Yankees say,
-and had backed out of the show, leaving Charles to
-his fate.</p>
-
-<p>“She was more sure next morning, for he kept away
-from her, had breakfast early and went off into the
-town shopping. But the shock of her life came to her
-at dinner time, for when he turned up for the meal,
-it was plain to be seen he had been drinking more
-than was good for him&mdash;trying to drown the recollections
-of his own weakness, it seemed to her.</p>
-
-<p>“She had never seen him under the influence before,
-and she was shocked at the change it made in him.
-She left the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Afterwards she was sorry that she did that, for
-it was like the blow of an axe between them. Next
-morning he would scarcely speak to her, and the day
-after they were due to leave for France.</p>
-
-<p>“They were due out at midday, and at eleven
-Duplessis, who had lingered in the town to make some
-purchases, had not come on board. He did not turn
-up till half an hour after the time they were due
-to sail, and when he did it was plain to be seen that
-all his purchases had been made in cafés.</p>
-
-<p>“He was flushed, and laughing and joking with the
-boatman who brought him off, and his wife, seeing his
-condition, went below and left the deck to him&mdash;a
-nice position for a woman on board a yacht like that
-with all the sailors looking on, to say nothing of the
-captain and officers. However, there was nothing
-to be done, and she had to make the best of it, which
-she did by avoiding her husband as much as she could
-right from that on, for the chap had gone clean off
-the handle; it was as if his failure to be man enough to
-rescue his brother had pulled a linch-pin out of one
-of his wheels, and the drink which he flew to for
-consolation finished the business.</p>
-
-<p>“They stopped at Colombo and he went ashore,
-and they were three days getting him back, and when
-he came he looked like a sack of meal in the stern sheets
-of the pinnace. They stopped at Port Said and he got
-ashore again without any money, but that was nothing,
-for a chap coming off a yacht like that gets all the
-tick he wants for anything in Port Said. He was a
-week there, and was only got away by the captain of
-the yacht knocking seven bells out of him with his
-fists, and then handing the carcase to two quartermasters
-to take on board ship.</p>
-
-<p>“They stopped nowhere else till they reached
-Marseilles, and there they found Madame Duplessis’
-lawyer waiting for them, having been notified by cable
-from Port Said.</p>
-
-<p>“A doctor was had in and he straightened Armand
-up with strychnine and bromide, and they brushed
-his hair and shaved him and stuck him in a chair
-for a family conference, consisting of Madame
-Duplessis, the old maiden aunt, Armand and the
-lawyer.</p>
-
-<p>“Armand had no fight in him; he looked mighty
-sorry for himself, but offered no explanations or excuses,
-beyond saying that the drink had got into his
-head. Madame Duplessis, on the other hand, was out
-for scalps&mdash;Do you wonder? Fancy that voyage
-all the way back with a husband worse than drunk.
-When I say worse than drunk, I mean that this chap
-wasn’t content to take his booze and carry on as a
-decent man would have done. No, sir. He embroidered
-on the business without the slightest thought
-of his wife. An ordinary man full up with liquor
-and with a wife towing round would have tried to
-have hidden his condition as far as he could, but this
-blighter carried on regardless, and, when the whisky
-was in, wasn’t to hold or bind.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course she recognised that something in his
-brain had given way, and she took into account that
-he was plainly trying to drown the recollection of his
-cowardice in not helping Charles to escape; all the same
-she was out for scalps and said so.</p>
-
-<p>“She said she would live with him no more, that
-she had been a fool to marry a man whom she had
-only known for a few months and of whose family
-she knew nothing. She said she would give him an
-allowance of a thousand francs a month if he would
-sheer off and get out of her sight and never let her see
-him again.</p>
-
-<p>“He sat listening to all this without a sign of shame,
-and when she’d finished he flattened her out by calmly
-asking for fifteen hundred a month instead of a thousand.
-Never said he was sorry; just asked for a bigger
-allowance as if he was talking to a business man he
-was doing a deal with instead of a wife he had injured
-and outraged. Even the old lawyer was sick, and it
-takes a lot to sicken a French lawyer. I can tell you
-that.</p>
-
-<p>“What does she do? She says: ‘I’ll allow you
-two thousand a month on the condition I never see
-your face or hear from you again. If you show yourself
-before me,’ she says, ‘or write to me, I’ll stop the
-allowance&mdash;if you try to move the law to make us live
-together, I’ll turn all my money into gold coin and
-throw it in the sea and myself after it, you beast,’
-she says.</p>
-
-<p>“And he says: ‘All right, all right, don’t fly away
-with things,’ he says. ‘Give me my allowance and
-you’ll never see me again.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then he signs a paper to that effect, and she leaves
-him at Marseilles and goes back to Paris to take up
-her life as if she had never been married.</p>
-
-<p>“Back in Paris she felt as if she’d been through a
-nightmare. You see she’d loved the chap, that was
-the bother. And the rum part of the thing was she
-couldn’t unlove him. That’s to say she couldn’t
-forget him. She couldn’t forget the man he’d been.
-Seemed to her as if some frightful accident had turned
-his nature and that it wasn’t altogether his fault,
-and she guessed that it wasn’t only his funking his duty
-that had changed him, but that Charles, away out
-there in New Caledonia, was haunting him.</p>
-
-<p>“Then, after a while, being a rich woman, she
-managed, unknown to anyone, to get news of what he
-was doing and how he was carrying on, and what she
-found out didn’t comfort her any. He was up in
-Montmartre with another woman and going to pieces
-fast, what with living all his time in cafés and drinking
-and so on. She reckoned she wouldn’t be paying his
-allowance long, and she was right.</p>
-
-<p>“One day an old woman turned up at her house
-asking her to come at once to where he was living
-as he was mortally ill and couldn’t hold out more than
-a few hours.</p>
-
-<p>“She didn’t think twice, but came, taking a cab
-and being landed in a little old back street at the door
-of a house that stood between a thieves’ café and a rag
-shop.</p>
-
-<p>“Up the stairs she went, following the old woman,
-and into a room where his royal highness was lying
-with a jug of whisky on the floor beside him and a
-hectic blush on his cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’m dying,’ he says, ‘and I want to tell you
-something you ought to know. I was sent to New
-Caledonia,’ he says, ‘for a robbery committed by
-another man.’</p>
-
-<p>“She thought he was raving, but she says, ‘Go on.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Armand and I were twins,’ he says, ‘as like as
-two peas. Armand could do nothing. He stayed
-in Paris whilst poor Charles, that’s me, went making
-roads on Noumea. Then you married him.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘But you are Armand,’ she cries, ‘you are my
-husband, or am I mad?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Not a bit,’ says he, ‘I’m Charles, his twin
-brother.’</p>
-
-<p>“Then she recollected how from the first she
-thought Armand had changed. She sat down on the
-side of the bed because her limbs were giving, and he
-goes on.</p>
-
-<p>“‘A year ago, you and him came in a big yacht
-to Noumea, and the Governor sent me one night
-to have a talk with him. When we were alone, he
-told me how his heart had been burning a hole in
-him for years, how he had married a rich woman&mdash;that’s
-you&mdash;and how, when he was happy and rich
-his heart had burned him worse, so that the doctors
-not knowing what was wrong with him had ordered
-him a sea voyage.’ Then Charles goes on to tell
-how Armand had come to the conclusion that even
-if he helped Charles to escape, this likeness between
-them would lead surely to the giving away of the
-whole show, make trouble among the crew of the
-yacht, and so on&mdash;besides the fact that it was next
-to impossible for a man to escape from Noumea in
-the ordinary way, but said Armand, ‘We can change
-places, and no one will know. Strip and change
-here and now,’ he says; ‘the guards are outside. I’ll
-take your place and go to prison, and you’ll be free.
-I’ve got a scissors here and two snips will make our
-hair the same, and by good luck we are both clean
-shaven. You’ve done half your sentence of ten
-years, and I’ll do the other half,’ he says; ‘the only
-bargain I’ll make is that you’ll respect my wife and
-live apart from her, and, after a while, you’ll break
-the news to her, and, maybe, when I’m free in five
-years she’ll forgive me.’</p>
-
-<p>“Charles finishes up by excusing himself for the
-drink, saying if she’d served five years without the
-chance of a decent wet all that time, she’d maybe
-have done as he’d done.</p>
-
-<p>“He died an hour after, and there was that woman
-left with lots to think about. First of all her husband
-wasn’t the drunkard that had disgraced her, but he
-was a convict serving his time and serving it wrongfully
-for a robbery he had not committed and for
-the sake of his brother.</p>
-
-<p>“The thundering great fact stood up like a shot
-tower before her that Armand wasn’t the drunkard
-that had disgraced her in two ports and before a
-ship’s company, wasn’t the swine that took her
-allowance and asked for more. That he was a saint,
-if ever a man was a saint.</p>
-
-<p>“She rushed home, telegraphed to Marseilles and
-re-commissioned the <i>Gaudriole</i>, that was still lying
-at the wharves. A week later she sailed again for
-Noumea.</p>
-
-<p>“On the voyage, she plotted and planned. She
-had determined to save him from the four years or
-so of the remains of his sentence at all costs and
-hazards, and when the yacht put in here she had
-a plan fixed on, but it was kiboshed by the fact that
-the Governor, as I have said, was changed. However,
-she took up residence for awhile in the town,
-people she had known before called on her, and she
-gave out that her husband was dead.</p>
-
-<p>“You can fancy how a rich widow was run after
-by all and sundry, myself included, not that I had
-any idea about her money. I only cared for herself.
-She knew this as women know such things by instinct,
-and one day when she was alone with me and I was
-going to tell her my mind about her, she dropped a
-bombshell on my head by telling me her whole story,
-capped by the fact that she had come to help her
-husband to escape. She asked for my help. I’m
-a queer chap in some ways. I told her I loved her
-enough to ruin myself for her by risking everything
-to give her husband back to her, and between us we
-worked out a plan that was a pippin.</p>
-
-<p>“It would have freed Armand, only that we found
-on inquiring about him that he had already escaped&mdash;he
-was dead. Died of fever two months before she
-came.</p>
-
-<p>“I heard once of a Japanese child that said her
-doll was alive because she loved it so much, adding
-that if you loved anything enough it lived. Well,
-in my experience, if you love anything enough you
-can make it love you.</p>
-
-<p>“That woman stayed on in Noumea, and I made
-her love me at last. I married her, you know her,
-she is my wife. She loves Armand still, as a memory,
-and for the sake of his memory we live here. It’s
-as good a place to live in as anywhere else, especially
-now that they have settled to send no more convicts
-from France.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
-
-<h2 id='chXV' title='XV: The Abbott Mystery'>
- <span style='font-size:1.2em'>CHAPTER XV.</span><br /><span style='font-size:1.0em'>THE ABBOTT MYSTERY</span>
-</h2>
-
-<div class='secn'>I</div>
-
-<p class='ni'>A man may live all his days without finding his
-true vocation, and it is often accident that
-reveals it to him. Herschel might have ended his
-days a music master only for chance, and Du Maurier
-towards the finish of his life found that he had been
-all his life a novelist without knowing it.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago my friend John Sargenson found on
-the beach near Dover an old red satin shoe that had
-been washed ashore tied to a bundle of papers. I
-have told the story elsewhere and how, brooding
-over these things, and by powers of analysis and
-synthesis rarely linked in one brain, he solved the
-riddle and brought a murderer to justice.</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t continue in the business. He is a very
-rich man, and God’s beautiful world offers him better
-objects of pursuit than the crook and criminal; all
-the same, a year after the shoe business, accident
-brought him again in touch with a problem. He
-took the thing up, followed it to its solution and now
-he wishes he hadn’t. This is the story as he told
-me it.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>II</div>
-
-<p>I don’t know what it is about travelling that palls
-on one so much if one is travelling alone, maybe it’s the
-fact that the perfectly friendly people one meets are
-dead strangers to one, for all their conversation and
-close propinquity; a sea and land journey round
-the world is, in this respect, nothing more than a
-magnified bus ride, passengers getting in and out,
-talking together and so forth, but dead to one another
-once the destination is reached.</p>
-
-<p>It was at Rangoon that this great fact hit me,
-and incidentally laid the keel of the yarn I promised
-to tell you. I was suddenly fed up with boats, trains,
-hotels and strangers, homesick down to the heels of
-my boots, and wanting some place of my own to
-hide in; anything, even a shack in the jungle. It
-was the queerest feeling, and one day when it was
-gripping me hard, I fell in talk in the hotel bar with
-an old saltwater chap by name of Boston, who owned
-boats on the Irawadi and a couple of deep-sea
-schooners. I told him what was in my mind and he
-understood. He took me by the arm and led me
-off down to the river, and pointing out a schooner
-tied up to the wharf:</p>
-
-<p>“There you are,” said he, “that’s what you want;
-she’s in ballast and ready for sea. She’s mine.
-Buy her, or rent her. She’s a hundred and ten tons
-and nothing can break her, best sea boat in these
-waters; she’ll take you to Europe safer than the
-mails, and I’ll get you a skipper and crew inside the
-week.”</p>
-
-<p>An hour after I had closed, and the <i>Itang</i>&mdash;that
-was her name&mdash;was mine. I’d found a home. A
-week later I was off, slipping down the Irawadi
-with the land breeze into the Gulf of Martaban, bound
-for Europe?&mdash;oh Lord, no! I was homesick no
-longer; Europe might have gone off the map as far
-as I was concerned, for the Pacific was calling
-me.</p>
-
-<p>We sailed south down by the Andamans and
-through the Straits of Malacca, past Java and Flores,
-into the Banda Sea, tinkered about amongst the
-islands and then came through Torres Straits; it
-was May and the south-east monsoon was blowing&mdash;you
-can’t get through that place when the north-west
-is on, because of the fogs&mdash;then steering north by
-the Louisiades, we passed the Solomons, touched at
-several of the Carolines and pushed on till we were
-about half-way between the Ladrones and Wake
-Island just under 20° North.</p>
-
-<p>That’s where the happening took place.</p>
-
-<p>One blazing hot morning just as I was turning
-out of my bunk Mallinson, the skipper, came down
-to report a boat sighted drifting and derelict away
-ahead on the port bow.</p>
-
-<p>I came up in my pyjamas, and there she was, sure
-enough, a ship’s boat, with no sign of life and evidently
-no dead bodies in her, for she was riding high and
-dancing to the sea like a walnut-shell, but stuck up
-in the bow of her there was something like a bit
-of white board fixed to a spar of some sort.</p>
-
-<p>Through the glass Mallinson made out something
-on the board that he said was writing. I couldn’t;
-it looked like black lines to me, but he was right.</p>
-
-<p>We closed up with her, dropped a boat, and I put
-off with Hogg the mate, the <i>Itang</i> keeping to windward
-on the off-chance of infection. Mallinson had
-it in his head that the notice on the board might be
-a warning of smallpox or plague, or something like
-that, and he’d once been had badly by picking up a
-plague boat off the Maldives. But it wasn’t.</p>
-
-<p>The notice had nothing to do with disease or infection,
-and I’ll give you a hundred guesses as to what
-some old ship master, maybe dying and half crazy
-with the loss of his ship, and a secret on his conscience
-had written up for some passing ship to read.</p>
-
-<p>This was it:</p>
-
-<p class='ni' style='margin-left:2em;margin-top:0.5em; margin-bottom:0.5em;'>“The heir of William Abbott will be found at<br />
-11 Churles Street, Shanghai.”</p>
-
-<p>I don’t mind saying that no sailor man has ever
-struck anything at sea stranger than that. You
-must remember where we were: a thousand miles of
-blue ocean all around and that piece of writing
-staring us in the face; the affairs of William Abbott
-and his heir, whoever they might be, contrasted
-with God’s immensities&mdash;an advertisement, almost,
-you might say, written on that desolation.</p>
-
-<p>It struck me clean between the eyes, it was like
-meeting a man in a top hat in the middle of the
-Sahara desert. We closed up with the boat; she was
-clean swept of everything down to the bailer, no
-ship’s name on her, and worth maybe a hundred
-dollars; so we towed her to the <i>Itang</i> and got her
-on board, notice and all.</p>
-
-<p>It was lashed to a boat-hook, which was lashed to
-the forward thwart, and we cut it loose and brought
-it down to the cabin, where we hung it up as a trophy.</p>
-
-<p>After the word “Shanghai” there was the indication
-of a letter that looked like “L,” faint as if the
-paint had run out or the fellow who was writing
-had given up the job, dying maybe, before he could
-finish it; the board itself was an old piece of white
-enamelled stuff, torn evidently from some part of
-a ship’s make-up, the whole thing was roughly done,
-but the chap, whoever he was, had some education,
-for there was a punctuation mark after the word
-“Street.”</p>
-
-<p>We stuck it up on the after bulkhead, and there it
-hung, giving us food for talk every meal time, and on
-and off for days. Mallinson said it was the work
-of some chap who had died and left no will, he was
-a bit of a sea lawyer and he held that if William
-Abbott was a sailor and it could be proved he was
-lost at sea and if some relation of his was to be found
-at 11 Churles Street, Shanghai, the Law, under the
-circumstance, would regard the thing as a will.</p>
-
-<p>This seemed to me rubbish, but it gave us something
-to argue about, and so it went on till the thing dropped
-from our talk as we raised our latitude, looking in
-at Los Jardines and then steering for Formosa.</p>
-
-<p>I’d determined to have a look at Japan, so we left
-Formosa, steering north, and then one day, it was
-off the Riu Kiu islands, the helm went over and we
-steered for Shanghai.</p>
-
-<p>The fact of the matter was that beastly board
-had obsessed me. Though we had ceased talking
-of it, I hadn’t ceased thinking of it. You know the
-way a problem gets hold of me. Lying in my bunk
-at night, I worked that riddle backwards and forwards,
-and up and down. If William Abbott had
-written it, what had become of him? Why wasn’t
-his corpse in the boat? What was the use of writing
-it? As a legal document, it was useless. The
-whole thing was a tangle, but one fact stood out,
-it was a message. Well, to whom? Not to the seagulls
-or the world at large, but to the first person who
-should pick it up, and the message was:</p>
-
-<p>“The heir of William Abbott lives at such and such
-an address.” That was quite plain. Also it was
-evident that the writer meant that the finder of the
-message should make use of it by bringing it to or
-sending it to 11 Churles Street.</p>
-
-<p>Whether some man at the address given could
-benefit by the message or not was another matter&mdash;evidently
-it was in the mind of the writer that he
-could.</p>
-
-<p>You see how reasoning had brought me to a point
-where conscience was awakened. I began to say
-to myself: “It’s your duty to take that message;
-here you are a well-to-do idler bound for no port in
-particular, but just following your own pleasure, you
-are going to Japan for no earthly reason, just for
-a whim, Shanghai lies almost on your way and your
-duty is to stop there,” but I didn’t want to go to
-Shanghai, I had nothing against the place or the
-Chinese&mdash;I just didn’t want to go; however, that
-didn’t matter, conscience had taken the wheel and
-I went.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>III</div>
-
-<p>We got to the river before noon one day and picked
-up a pilot. You don’t know Shanghai? Well,
-you’re saved the knowledge of the shoals and buoys
-and lightships and the currents, and the five-mile-long
-anchorage, to say nothing of the freighters going
-up and down and the junks out of control. I cursed
-William Abbott and his heirs before we were berthed,
-and then, leaving Mallinson in charge, I went ashore
-to hunt for my man.</p>
-
-<p>I knew Lockhart, the silk man, and found him
-out, and he made me stop with him at his place all
-the time I was there, which was only three days.</p>
-
-<p>It’s an interesting place, Shanghai, but the thing
-that intrigued me most was the fact that there was
-no Churles Street. Thinking the Johnnie who wrote
-the notice might have meant Charles Street, I asked
-for that; there was no such place in the European
-quarter. The European quarter lies east of the
-Chinese town. There was no such place in the
-Chinese town, there was the street of a Thousand
-Delights and the street of the Seven Dead Dogs, and
-the street of the Lanterns, and so forth, but they were
-no use, so, feeling that I was done and shaking the
-dried mud of Shanghai off my shoes, we put out for
-Nagasaki.</p>
-
-<p>I sent the notice board flying over the after rail
-as we dropped the land and dismissed the matter
-from my mind&mdash;from my conscious mind. My
-subliminal mind had it still in hand, and two days
-after landing at Nagasaki it asked me this question:
-“Could that faintly written ‘L’ have been the
-first letter of the word ‘lost’?”</p>
-
-<p>I went straight to the shipping office and, looking
-over the list of overdue ships, I found a notice that
-the steamship <i>Shanghai</i>, bound from London to Canton
-was eight weeks overdue. You can imagine how the
-hound in me woke to life and wagged its tail at that
-discovery. I sat down and wrote out on a sheet
-of paper the message, amended into this: “The
-heir of William Abbott lives at 11 Churles Street.
-Shanghai lost.” If the writer had possessed the time
-and paint and space he might have given the full
-strange history of the case and how the boat had been
-drifted off and about the seas with that message.</p>
-
-<p>Maybe the chap had jumped to the sharks, driven
-by hunger or thirst as many a man has done, maybe
-he had painted his message on that bit of board before
-leaving some slowly sinking ship and taken it in the
-boat&mdash;no knowing, the fact remained, and seemed
-clear enough, that some desperate urgency of soul
-had made him, in face of death and with a steady
-hand, take a paint brush and write that screed on the
-bare chance of someone picking it up.</p>
-
-<p>You know my make-up and how, having gone so
-far on an inquiry of this sort, I was bound to go on.
-It’s different now. I’ll never touch a thing like that
-again, but that day I stripped for action, determining
-to see the business through and find out every bit of
-meaning there was to it.</p>
-
-<p>I started by sending a cable to the Board of Trade,
-London Docks. Next day at noon I had an answer
-which read: “<i>Shanghai</i> sixteen hundred tons, Master’s
-name Richard Abbott.”</p>
-
-<p>That name Abbott coming over the wires all the
-way from murky London, in answer, you might say,
-to the name Abbott written on that board away
-in the blue Pacific, gave me a thrill such as I have
-never felt before. I knew now the writer of the
-message, and at the same time I knew that it was
-not his own money that he was bothering about
-simply because he wasn’t William Abbott. I knew
-that it was highly probable that he was a close relation
-of William Abbott, brother maybe, or son; that
-might be placed among the high probabilities owing
-to the similarity of name and intimate knowledge
-of family affairs. Just so, and I could go a step
-further; it was pretty certain that Richard Abbott,
-the master of the <i>Shanghai</i>, was the sole possessor
-of the knowledge he had given to the world, and,
-from the urge that drove him in the face of death
-to tell what he knew, it was possible that the thing
-weighed on his mind, possible, in fact, that he had
-kept the thing hidden.</p>
-
-<p>In other words, that he was trying to remedy
-an injustice committed either by himself or someone
-else.</p>
-
-<p>I wrote all these probabilities and possibilities
-down on a sheet of paper, with an account of the
-finding of the message, sealed the lot up in an envelope
-and gave it in charge of the manager of the bank
-I dealt with in Nagasaki, so that in the case of death
-or accident the heir of William Abbott might have
-some chance of coming to his due. Then I proceeded
-to enjoy myself in Japan, determined to think no more
-of the matter till I got back to London.</p>
-
-<p>I spent a month in Japan, sold the old <i>Itang</i> for
-more than I had given for her and paid off captain
-and crew.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>IV</div>
-
-<p>I made up my mind that the Churles Street referred
-to in the message lay in London. London was the
-home town evidently of the master of the <i>Shanghai</i>,
-and he would refer to Churles Street&mdash;perhaps a well-known
-place in the dock quarter&mdash;just as one might
-speak of Cromwell Road or Regent Street.</p>
-
-<p>On getting in to Southampton, the first thing I
-did at the hotel was to consult a Kelly’s directory,
-and sure enough, there was Churles Street, E.C., the
-only street of that name, a short street of twenty
-houses or so with the name J. Robertson against
-No. 11. The street opened off the West India Dock
-Road, and two days later, when I had disposed of my
-private business in London, I took a walk in the
-East End. The Dock Road is a fascinating place
-if you are in good health and spirits, and if the day
-is fine, but there is no fascination about Churles
-Street, a gloomy, evil looking cul-de-sac, not rowdy,
-but quiet with the quietude of vice reduced to misery
-and crouching in a corner.</p>
-
-<p>It was a horrible place.</p>
-
-<p>A thin woman nursing a baby was standing at the
-door of No. 11. I asked her was anyone of the
-name of Abbott living there and she glanced me
-up and down.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you come from his brother?” asked she.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I said, “I’ve come from Captain Richard
-Abbott.”</p>
-
-<p>She led the way into the passage, opened a door,
-and showed me into a room where a man, fully dressed,
-was lying on a bed smoking a pipe and reading a
-sporting paper.</p>
-
-<p>A typical lounger and ne’er-do-well, unshaved, and
-with his collar and tie on the chair beside him, this
-chap gave me pause, I can assure you.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he said to the woman, “what’s he want?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re his brother?” I said.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” he replied, “I’m his brother, and who
-might you be?”</p>
-
-<p>“Met him abroad,” I replied, “and he asked me
-to call in and see how you were doing.” I was clean
-cut off from the business I had in mind, some instinct
-told me to halt right there and show nothing that
-was in my hand. The man repulsed me.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you see how I am doing,” replied he, “hasn’t
-he sent me anything but his kind inquiries?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” I said, “he asked me to give you a
-sovereign from him.”</p>
-
-<p>I brought out the money and he took it and laid
-it on the chair by the collar and tie, then he filled his
-pipe again and we talked. I had taken a chair which
-the woman had dusted. I talked but I could get
-nothing much out of him, to ask questions I would
-have had to explain, and to explain might have
-meant bringing this unshaven waster on top of me to
-help him to prosecute his claims. If I did anything
-further in the matter, I would do it through an agent,
-but upon my word I felt I had paid any debt I might
-owe to the master of the <i>Shanghai</i> by the trouble
-I had taken already and the sovereign I had handed
-over in his name.</p>
-
-<p>As we talked a pretty little girl of ten or twelve
-ran into the room; she was dirty and neglected, and
-as she stood at the end of the bed with her great
-eyes fixed on me, I could have kicked the loafer lying
-there, his pipe in his mouth and his sporting paper
-by his side.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed that he had four children altogether, and
-as I took my leave and the woman showed me out,
-I put another sovereign into her hand for the children.</p>
-
-<p>There I was in the West India Dock Road again
-feeling that I could have kicked myself. It was not
-so much the trouble I had taken over the business
-that worried me as the wind up. I’d put into
-Shanghai, sent cables from Japan, altered my plans,
-spent no end of money to bring news to that rotten
-chap, news of a fortune that if secured would certainly
-be burst on racing and drink.</p>
-
-<p>I said to myself that this came of mixing in other folks’
-business and I took an oath never to do it again&mdash;I
-didn’t know I was only at the beginning of things.</p>
-
-<p>Murchison was the agent I determined to employ
-to finish up the affair. Murchison is less a detective
-than an inquiry agent, his game is to find out facts
-relative to people, he lives in Old Serjeants’ Inn, and
-knowing him to be secrecy itself and not caring to
-employ my lawyer, I determined to go to him next
-day and place the matter in his hands, telling him
-to do what he could with the business, but to keep
-my name out of it. He need mention nothing about
-the finding of the message, but he could give it as
-coming from some unknown source&mdash;the message
-was the main thing, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>I called at his office next morning. Murchison is a
-thin old chap, dry as a stick. I told him the whole
-story and it made no more impression on him than if
-I’d been telling it to a pump. He made a note or two,
-and when I had finished, he told me in effect that he
-wasn’t a District Messenger, but an inquiry agent,
-and that I had better take the thing to my lawyer.
-He seemed put out; I had evidently raised his tracking
-instincts by my story and ended simply by asking
-him to take a message.</p>
-
-<p>I apologised, told him the truth, that my lawyer
-was an old-fashioned family solicitor, gone in years,
-touchy as Lucifer, the last man in London to set
-hinting of possible fortunes to beggars in slums.
-“If you won’t do it yourself,” I finished, “tell me of
-a man who will.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can tell you of plenty,” he replied, “but if
-you take my advice you will let me make an inquiry
-into the business before you move further in the
-matter; there’s more in it than meets the eye and you
-may be doing injury to other parties by stirring up
-the mud, for this man you tell me of seems mud.”</p>
-
-<p>“A jolly good name for him,” said I. “Well, go
-ahead and make your inquiries; it’s only a few pounds
-more thrown after the rest, and it will be interesting
-to hear the result.” Then I left him.</p>
-
-<p>A month later I got a letter asking me to call upon
-him, and I went.</p>
-
-<p>When I took my seat he sent the clerk for the Abbott
-documents, and the clerk brought a sheaf of all sorts of
-papers, laid them on the table and went out. Murchison
-put on his glasses, took a glance through the papers
-and started his yarn.</p>
-
-<p>Beautifully concise it was, and I’ll give you it almost
-in his own words.</p>
-
-<div class='secn'>V</div>
-
-<p>William Abbott, of Sydney, N.S.W., was a wool
-broker who came to England in the year 1906 and died
-worth some hundred and fifty thousand pounds. He
-had three sons, John, Alexander and Richard.</p>
-
-<p>The Will was simple and direct. Murchison laid a
-copy of it before me, taken by permission of Abbott’s
-lawyer’s, whom he had found, and it ran something
-like this.</p>
-
-<p>“Owing to the conduct of my eldest son, John
-Abbott, I hereby revoke my Will of June 7th, 1902,
-by which I bequeathed him the whole of my property,
-with the exception of the sum of twenty thousand
-pounds to be equally divided between my sons Alexander
-and Richard. I hereby bequeath the whole of
-my property to my son Alexander Abbott. Signed:
-William Abbott, July 10th, 1904. Witnesses: John
-Brooke, Jane Summers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Murchison, as I handed the paper
-back, “that signature is a forgery; the body of the
-document is written as if by a clerk in almost print
-character, but though I have never seen the handwriting
-of William Abbott, I will bet my reputation
-that the signature is forged.”</p>
-
-<p>“How can you tell?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Because the signatures of the witnesses are forged;
-they have both been written by the same hand.
-The signature ‘William Abbott’ has evidently been
-carefully copied from an original, there is a constraint
-about it that tells me that, but the witnesses’ signatures,
-where the forger had nothing to copy and had to
-invent imaginary names, simply shout. The fool
-never thought of that; leaving the point of similarity
-aside, the woman’s signature is as masculine as a
-Grenadier. The body of the document, though almost
-in print, is also the work of the forger.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely,” said he, “handwriting with me
-is not only a science which I have studied for fifty
-years; it is something that has developed in me an
-instinct. Now to go on. Alexander Abbott lives
-in a big house down in Kent. Richard, at the time
-of his father’s death, was a captain in the Black Bird
-Line, evidently working for his bread. A year after
-his father’s death he bought the steamer <i>Shanghai</i>,
-paying a large sum for it spot cash. He was an
-unmarried man, and when ashore occupied a flat in
-Bayswater. Alexander is a widower with one daughter.&mdash;That’s
-all. The case is complete.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you read it?” I asked. The old chap
-fetched a snuff box out of a drawer in the desk, took
-a pinch and put the box back without offering it.</p>
-
-<p>“I read it,” he said, “in this way. John, the
-eldest son, was a bad lot; the father may have intended
-to disinherit him, and make a second will; anyhow,
-he didn’t; put it off as men do. When the father died,
-Alexander boldly did the trick. Richard may have
-been party to the business, at first&mdash;who knows?
-Anyhow, it seems that he was later on, since he was
-able to plank that big sum down for the ship, and
-since he was left nothing in the will, and since, as you
-say, he put up that notice you took off the boat and
-which told the truth.”</p>
-
-<p>I said nothing for a while, thinking this thing over.
-I was sure Murchison was right.</p>
-
-<p>This thing would have been weighing in the sailor’s
-mind for years; from what I could make out at Churles
-Street he had evidently been making John some sort
-of allowance; one could fancy the long watches of the
-night, the pacing of the deck under the stars, and the
-mind of the sailor always teased by the fact that he
-was party to this business, a forgery that had kept
-a brother, however bad, out of his inheritance. Then
-the last frantic attempt to put things right in the
-face of death, the agonised thought that to write the
-thing on paper was useless, paper that would be washed
-away by the rain or blown away by the wind.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said I to Murchison, “it seems plain enough,
-and now, on the face of it, what would you advise me
-to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“If I were in your place,” said he, “I would do
-nothing. You say this elder brother is a scamp;
-Alexander, on the other hand, is a rogue; if you mix
-yourself up in the business you may have trouble.
-Why should you worry yourself about a bad lot of
-strangers?&mdash;turn it down.”</p>
-
-<p>That seemed sensible enough, but you see Murchison
-knew only the bare facts of the case; he had not seen
-that notice board tossing about in the desolation of
-the Pacific.</p>
-
-<p>I left him without having made up my mind as to
-what I should do, half determined to do nothing.</p>
-
-<p>The bother was that the facts Murchison had put
-before me gave a new complexion to the whole business,
-a new urgency to that message which I had not
-delivered. I felt as if the captain of the <i>Shanghai</i>
-had suddenly come to my elbow, him and his uneasy
-conscience craving to be put at rest. Just so, but on
-the other hand there was John Abbott, and I can’t
-tell you the grue that chap had given me. It wasn’t
-that he was a boozer, or a waster; he was bad; bad
-right through and rotten. There is a sixth sense, it has
-to do with morals and the difference between good
-and evil; it told me this chap was evil, and the thought
-of helping to hand him a fortune made my soul revolt.</p>
-
-<p>Still, there you are, I didn’t make the chap, and the
-fact remained that in doing nothing I was holding
-him out of his rights.</p>
-
-<p>All that evening the thing worried me and most of
-that night. Next morning I couldn’t stand it any
-longer. I took the train for Oakslot in Kent. I
-had determined to go straight to Alexander Abbott,
-beard him, tell him of the notice I had found and see
-what he had to say. The idea came to me that he
-might make restitution in some way without handing
-all the fortune over to John&mdash;anyhow, it would be
-doing something, and I determined to use all my knowledge
-and power if necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Ever been to Oakslot? It is the quaintest and
-quietest place, and it wasn’t till I got out of the train
-and found myself on the platform that the terrible
-nature of the business I was on took me by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>I had no difficulty in finding Alexander Abbott’s
-residence; the Waterings was the name it went by,
-an old Georgian house set in a small park; one of those
-small, rook-haunted, sleepy, sunlit pleasaunces found
-only in England and best in Sussex or Kent.</p>
-
-<p>I was shown into the drawing-room by an old manservant,
-who took my card, on which I had pencilled:
-“From Captain Richard Abbott.”</p>
-
-<p>A few moments passed and the door opened and a
-girl came in, a girl of sixteen or so, pretty as a picture
-and charming as a rose; one of those sweet, whole,
-fresh, candid creatures, almost sexless as yet, but made
-to love and be loved.</p>
-
-<p>I stood before her. I was Tragedy, but she only
-saw a man. She told me her father was unwell but
-would see me. Would I follow her?</p>
-
-<p>She led me to a library, and there, seated by the
-window which gave upon the sunlit park, sat the
-criminal, a man of forty or so, a man with seemingly a
-good and kindly face, a man I would have trusted on
-sight. He was evidently far gone in consumption, this
-forger of documents, and it was pretty evident that
-anxiety had helped in the business; a weight on the
-conscience is a big handicap if one is trying to fight
-disease.</p>
-
-<p>I sat down near him and started right in; the quicker
-you get a surgical operation over the better, and so
-he seemed to think, for when I told him of the finding
-of the notice and went on to say that it might be
-necessary to inquire into the will and that I had
-reason to believe there was something wrong about
-it, he saw I knew nearly everything and stopped me
-right off.</p>
-
-<p>“Everything is wrong about it,” said he, “and
-thank God that this matter has fallen into the hands
-of a straight and honest man like you&mdash;you will
-understand. This thing has tormented me for years,
-but when you have heard what I have to say you
-will know I did wrong only to do right. There is no
-greater scoundrel in this world than my brother
-John Abbott; a terrible thing to say but the truth.
-My father had made a will leaving him everything.
-He placed that will in the hands of James Anderson
-of Sydney, our lawyer. Anderson knew John’s
-character better than my father and was averse
-from the business, but he could do nothing. My
-father was a very headstrong man and blind to John’s
-doings, which the scamp somehow managed to partly
-conceal from him. He thought John was sowing his
-wild oats and that he would be all the better for it.
-John could do no wrong in his eyes, but a few days
-before his death he had a terrible awakening with a
-forged bill of exchange&mdash;forgery seems to run in
-the family. It cost him five thousand pounds to stifle
-the matter, and the day after the business was settled
-my father died; slipped coming downstairs, fell, and
-broke his back.</p>
-
-<p>“I was there and he died in my arms, and his last
-words were: ‘Get that will from Anderson and
-destroy it.’ He had no power to write a new will, no
-strength even to write his signature, and when he was
-dead there was I with those words ringing in my ears.</p>
-
-<p>“I knew my father intended to revoke his first will,
-would have done it that day; maybe, ought to have
-done it days ago, but his mind was in a turmoil and
-he was a strong, hearty man with never a thought
-of death. Well, there I was, not only with that
-knowledge but the knowledge that if the property fell
-to John it would be the end of the family’s good name;
-that beast was only possible when he was kept short
-of money&mdash;then there was the lower consideration of
-my own position, penniless and at John’s mercy.</p>
-
-<p>“I made a will and put my father’s name to it,
-sure that Anderson would make no trouble, sure
-that John would not inquire into it, for the forgery
-of the bill of exchange had drawn his teeth, and the
-fact of that forgery would account to him for the
-change in the disposition of the property.</p>
-
-<p>“I dated the will, it is true, some years back, and
-in the time my father lived in Sydney. I did that
-because I had to forge the names of the two witnesses;
-had I dated it recently someone might ask who are
-these witnesses? As it was there was no one to put
-that question to, for I was not in Sydney at the time
-indicated in the will&mdash;they might have been hotel
-servants&mdash;anyone.</p>
-
-<p>“I left myself the whole property, not from greed
-but simply because my brother Richard was at sea.
-I knew his temperament and character, and it was
-possible that, had I made him part heir, he would
-have revolted and disclosed all&mdash;for I had determined
-to tell him everything.</p>
-
-<p>“I placed the forged will among my father’s papers;
-it was proved and there was no trouble. Anderson,
-whose clients are largely wool brokers and Australian
-merchants, has a branch office in London; they were
-my father’s solicitors in England as well as Australia,
-and the whole thing went through their hands. They
-had all the less reason to cast any suspicious eye on
-the document in as much as they had dealt with the
-forgery of the bill of exchange.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Richard came back from sea and I told him
-all. He was horrified, yet he saw that what I had
-done had been simply to carry out my father’s wish.
-It was impossible to destroy the old will as he had
-directed, or possible only in one way&mdash;by the creation
-of a new will.</p>
-
-<p>“After a while he cooled on the matter and even
-accepted a large sum for the purchase of a ship, the
-<i>Shanghai</i>, now lost. But the thing weighed on his
-mind as it has on mine, only more so. He was of a
-different temperament. He did not dread detection,
-with him it was entirely a matter of conscience: he
-felt he had defrauded John by being partner to the
-business, and accepting that sum of money. He
-seemed to think in his sailor way it would bring him
-bad luck; no doubt when the end came and he lost his
-ship he had that in mind, and lest the bad luck might
-follow him into the next world wrote that notice you
-found. I have only a few more months to live&mdash;now
-tell me, was I right or wrong in doing what I did?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” I said. “I am not your judge,
-but all I can say is this: from what I know of the
-business, I will move no further in the matter, if for
-no other reason than that, should John Abbott get
-word of the business, your daughter would be rendered
-penniless after your death.”</p>
-
-<p>“Absolutely,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>I asked him was John receiving an allowance, and
-he said yes. He was receiving two pounds a week
-for life.</p>
-
-<p>Then I left him and took the train for London, and
-from that day to this I have heard nothing of any of
-the lot of them. I expect he’s dead and his daughter
-an heiress&mdash;I don’t know, but I’ll never touch a thing
-like that again. Even still I’m bothered to know if I
-was right or wrong in holding my hand and tongue.
-What would you have done in similar circumstances?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Ocean Tramps, by H. de Vere Stacpoole
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OCEAN TRAMPS ***
-
-***** This file should be named 63269-h.htm or 63269-h.zip *****
-This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
- http://www.gutenberg.org/6/3/2/6/63269/
-
-Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
-produced from images made available by the HathiTrust
-Digital Library.)
-
-
-Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
-will be renamed.
-
-Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
-one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
-(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
-permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
-set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
-copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
-protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
-Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
-charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
-do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
-rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
-such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
-research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
-practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
-subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
-redistribution.
-
-
-
-*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
-
-THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
-PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
-
-To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
-distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
-(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
-http://gutenberg.org/license).
-
-
-Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic works
-
-1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
-and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
-(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
-the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
-all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
-If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
-terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
-entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
-
-1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
-used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
-agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
-things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
-even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
-paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
-and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works. See paragraph 1.E below.
-
-1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
-or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
-collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
-individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
-located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
-copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
-works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
-are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
-Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
-freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
-this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
-the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
-keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
-Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
-
-1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
-what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
-a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
-the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
-before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
-creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
-Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
-the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
-States.
-
-1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
-
-1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
-access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
-whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
-phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
-Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
-copied or distributed:
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
-from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
-posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
-and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
-or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
-with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
-work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
-through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
-Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
-1.E.9.
-
-1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
-with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
-must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
-terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
-to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
-permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
-
-1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
-work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
-
-1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
-electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
-prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
-active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm License.
-
-1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
-compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
-word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
-distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
-"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
-posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
-you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
-copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
-request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
-form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
-License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
-
-1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
-performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
-unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
-
-1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
-access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
-that
-
-- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
- the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
- you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
- owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
- has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
- Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
- must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
- prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
- returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
- sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
- address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
- the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
-
-- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
- you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
- does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
- License. You must require such a user to return or
- destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
- and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
- Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
- money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
- electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
- of receipt of the work.
-
-- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
- distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
-
-1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
-electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
-forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
-both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
-Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
-Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
-
-1.F.
-
-1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
-effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
-public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
-collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
-"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
-corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
-property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
-computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
-your equipment.
-
-1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
-of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
-Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
-Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
-liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
-fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
-LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
-PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
-TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
-LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
-INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
-DAMAGE.
-
-1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
-defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
-receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
-written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
-received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
-your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
-the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
-refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
-providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
-receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
-is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
-opportunities to fix the problem.
-
-1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
-in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
-WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
-WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
-
-1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
-warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
-If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
-law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
-interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
-the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
-provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
-
-1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
-trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
-providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
-with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
-promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
-harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
-that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
-or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
-work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
-Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
-
-
-Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
-electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
-including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
-because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
-people in all walks of life.
-
-Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
-assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
-goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
-remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
-Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
-and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
-To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
-and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
-and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.
-
-
-Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
-Foundation
-
-The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
-501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
-state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
-Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
-number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
-http://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
-permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
-
-The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
-Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
-throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
-809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
-business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
-information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
-page at http://pglaf.org
-
-For additional contact information:
- Dr. Gregory B. Newby
- Chief Executive and Director
- gbnewby@pglaf.org
-
-
-Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
-Literary Archive Foundation
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
-spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
-increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
-freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
-array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
-($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
-status with the IRS.
-
-The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
-charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
-States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
-considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
-with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
-where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
-SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
-particular state visit http://pglaf.org
-
-While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
-have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
-against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
-approach us with offers to donate.
-
-International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
-any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
-outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
-
-Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
-methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
-ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
-To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate
-
-
-Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
-works.
-
-Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
-concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
-with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
-Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
-
-
-Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
-editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
-unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
-keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
-
-
-Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
-
- http://www.gutenberg.org
-
-This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
-including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
-Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
-subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
-
-
-</pre>
-
-</body>
diff --git a/old/63269-h/images/cover.jpg b/old/63269-h/images/cover.jpg
deleted file mode 100644
index eb3af8c..0000000
--- a/old/63269-h/images/cover.jpg
+++ /dev/null
Binary files differ