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diff --git a/22033.txt b/22033.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..82c4d96 --- /dev/null +++ b/22033.txt @@ -0,0 +1,7224 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Plotting in Pirate Seas, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +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 + + +Title: Plotting in Pirate Seas + +Author: Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +Illustrator: C. A. Federer + +Release Date: July 10, 2007 [EBook #22033] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS *** + + + + +Produced by Steven desJardins and and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + +Round the World with The Boy Journalists: I + +PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS + +FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + + +[Illustration: "NOT THAT WAY--TWO MORE STEPS, BOY, AND YOU ARE DEAD".] + + +By FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +Round the World with The Boy Journalists + PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS + HUNTING HIDDEN TREASURE IN THE ANDES + +Romance-History of America + IN THE DAYS BEFORE COLUMBUS + THE QUEST OF THE WESTERN WORLD + +NEW YORK: GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY + + + + +PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS + +BY FRANCIS ROLT-WHEELER + +Author of "Hunting Hidden Treasure in the Andes," "In the Days Before +Columbus," "The Quest of the Western World," "The Aztec-Hunters," "The +Boy with the U. S. Census," etc. + +_Illustrated by_ C. A. FEDERER + +NEW YORK +GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY + +COPYRIGHT, 1921, +BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY + +PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA + + + + +CONTENTS + + +CHAPTER I PAGE +AMERICAN ALL THROUGH 11 + +CHAPTER II +WHERE BLACK MEN RULE 27 + +CHAPTER III +THE BLOOD-STAINED CITADEL 47 + +CHAPTER IV +THE GHOST OF CHRISTOPHE 66 + +CHAPTER V +THE ISLE OF THE BUCCANEERS 81 + +CHAPTER VI +A CUBAN REBEL 99 + +CHAPTER VII +A NOSE FOR NEWS 117 + +CHAPTER VIII +THE POISON TREES 135 + +CHAPTER IX +THE HURRICANE 155 + +CHAPTER X +THE LAKE OF PITCH 177 + +CHAPTER XI +THE MORNING OF DOOM 196 + +CHAPTER XII +A CORSAIR'S DEATH 217 + +CHAPTER XIII +THE HUNGRY SHARK 231 + +CHAPTER XIV +TRAPPED! 242 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +"NOT THAT WAY--TWO MORE STEPS, BOY, AND YOU _Frontispiece_ +ARE DEAD" + PAGE +FOR A HUNDRED FEET THEY FELL AND STUART 72 +CLOSED HIS EYES IN SICKENING DIZZINESS + +HIS VISION DISTORTED BY THE VENOM-VAPOR OF THE 144 +POISON TREES, THE LAND-CRABS SEEMED OF +ENORMOUS SIZE AND THE NEGRO WHO CAME TO +RESCUE HIM APPEARED AS AN OGRE + +ABOVE THE HOARSE SHOUTS OF RUFFIANS AND JACK-TARS, 224 +ROSE TEACH'S MURDEROUS WAR CRY + + + + +PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS + +CHAPTER I + +AMERICAN ALL THROUGH + + +The tom-tom throbbed menacingly through the heavy dark of the Haitian +night. + +Under its monotonous and maddening beat, Stuart Garfield moved +restlessly. + +Why had his father not come back? What mystery lay behind? + +Often though the boy had visited the island, he had never been able to +escape a sensation of fear at that summons of the devotees of Voodoo. +Tonight, with the mysterious disappearance of his father weighing +heavily on his spirits, the roll of the black goatskin drum seemed to +mock him. + +Hippolyte, the giant negro who had been their guide into this +back-country jungle, rocked and grimaced in balance with the rhythm. + +"Why are they beating that drum, Hippolyte?" demanded Stuart, suddenly. + +"Tonight the night of the Full Moon, Yes," was the answer. "Always +Voodoo feast that night. Often, queer things happen on night of Full +Moon, Yes!" + +Stuart turned impatiently to the door, as much to get his eyes away from +the hypnotic swaying of Hippolyte as to resume his watch for his father. +The negro's reference to "queer things" had added to the boy's +uneasiness. + +Little though Stuart knew about his father's affairs, he was aware that +his investigations dealt with matters of grave importance to the United +States. Ever since Mr. Garfield had resigned his position in the U. S. +Consular Service and left the post in Cuba, where he had stayed so many +years, he had kept a keen eye on international movements in the West +Indies. + +Mr. Garfield was an ardent and flaming patriot. He believed the Monroe +Doctrine with a conviction that nothing could shake. He regarded all the +islands of the West Indies as properly under the sheltering wing of the +United States. He looked with unfriendly eye upon the possession of +certain of the islands by England, France and Holland, and especially +distrusted the colonies of European powers upon South American and +Central American shores. + +Stuart was even more intense in his patriotism. He had not lived in the +United States since early childhood, and saw the country of the Stars +and Stripes enhaloed by romance. + +Though Stuart had been brought up in Cuba, all his tastes ran to things +American. He had learned to play pelota, and was a fair player, but the +rare occasions when he could get a game of baseball suited him far +better. He cared nothing for books unless they dealt with the United +States, and then he read with avidity. Western stories fired his +imagination, the more so because the life they described was so +different from his own. + +Stuart was not the type of boy always seeking a fight, but, beneath his +somewhat gentle brown eyes and dark hair, there was a square aggressive +chin, revealing that trait of character known as a "terrible finisher." +It took a good deal to start Stuart, but he was a terror, once started. +Any criticism of the United States was enough to get him going. His +Cuban schoolmates had found that out, and, whenever Stuart was around, +the letters "U. S." were treated with respect. + +This square chin was aggressively thrust forward now, as the boy looked +into the night. There was trouble in the air. He felt it. Deeper down +than the disturbed feelings produced by the tom-tom, he sensed a +prescience of evil on its way. + +When, therefore, a figure emerged from the forest into the clearing, and +Stuart saw that this figure was not his father, but that of a negro, the +boy stiffened himself. + +"You--Stuart?" the newcomer queried. + +"Yes," replied the boy, "that's my name." + +The negro hardly hesitated. He walked on, though Stuart was full in the +doorway, jostled him aside roughly, and entered. This attitude toward +the white man, unheard of anywhere else, is common in up-country Haiti, +where, for a century, the black man has ruled, and where the white man +is hated and despised. + +A hard stone-like gleam came into Stuart's eyes, but even his mounting +rage did not blind him to the fact that the negro was twice his size and +three times as muscular. Nor did he forget that Hippolyte was in the +hut, and, in any case of trouble, the two blacks would combine against +him. + +The negro who had pushed him aside paid no further attention to the boy, +but entered into a rapid-fire conversation with Hippolyte. Stuart could +follow the Haitian French dialect quite well, but there were so many +half-hidden allusions in the speech of the two men that it was easy for +him to see that they were both members of some secret band. + +The intruder was evidently in some authority over Hippolyte, for he +concluded: + +"Everything is well, Yes. Do with the boy, as was arranged." + +So saying, he cast a look at Stuart, grinned evilly, and left the hut. +The boy watched him until his powerful figure was lost to view in the +forest. + +Then he turned to Hippolyte. + +"What does all this mean!" he demanded, as authoritatively as he could. + +For a moment Hippolyte did not answer. He looked at the boy with a +reflection of the same evil grin with which the other had favored the +white boy. + +A quick choke came into the boy's throat at the change in the negro's +manner. He was in Hippolyte's power, and he knew it. But he showed never +a quiver of fear as he faced the negro. + +"What does it all mean?" he repeated. + +"It is that you know Manuel Polliovo?" + +Stuart knew the name well. His father had mentioned it as that of a +conspirator who was in some way active in a West Indian plot. + +"I have heard of him," the boy answered. + +"Manuel--he send a message, Yes. He say--Tell Stuart he must go away +from Haiti, at once. His father gone already." + +"What does that mean!" exclaimed Stuart. The first words of the warning +had frightened him, but, with the knowledge that his father was in +danger, the fighting self of him rose to the surface, and his fear +passed. + +"How?" returned the negro, not understanding. + +"That my father has gone already?" + +Hippolyte shrugged his shoulders with that exaggeration of the French +shrug common in the islands. + +"Maybe Manuel killed him," came the cheerful suggestion. "Jules, who +tell me just now, says Manuel, he have the air very wicked and very +pleased when he tell him." + +Stuart doubted this possibility. Ever since the American occupation of +Haiti, in 1915, murder had become less common. The boy thought it more +likely that the missing man had been captured and imprisoned. But just +what could Manuel be doing if he dared such drastic action? The lad +wished that he knew a little more about his father's plans. + +A small revolver was in his pocket, and, for one wild moment, Stuart +thought of making a fight for it and going to the rescue of his father. +But his better sense prevailed. Even supposing he could get the drop on +the negro--which was by no means sure--he could not mount guard on him +perpetually. Moreover, if he got near enough to try and tie him up, one +sweep of those brawny arms would render him powerless. + +"And if I do not go?" he asked. + +"But you do go," declared Hippolyte. "It is I who will see to that, +Yes!" + +"Was it Manuel who sent you the money?" + +"Ah, the good money!" The negro showed his teeth in a wide grin. +"Manuel, he tell Jules to find boy named Stuart. If you big, tie you and +take you to the forest; if little, send you away from the island." + +This was one point gained, thought Stuart. Manuel, at least, did not +know what he looked like. + +"I suppose I've got to go to Cap Haitien." + +"But, Yes." + +"And when?" + +"But now, Yes!" + +"It's a long walk," protested Stuart. "Twenty miles or more." + +"We not walk, No! Get mules near. Now, we start." + +The boy had hoped, in some way, to get the negro out of the hut and to +make a bolt for the woods where he might lie hidden, but this sudden +action prevented any such ruse. He turned to the table to put into his +knapsack the couple of changes of clothing he had brought. There was no +way for him to take his father's clothes, but the boy opened the larger +knapsack and took all the papers and documents. + +"See here, Hippolyte," he said. "I give you all these clothes. I take +the papers." + +The negro grinned a white-toothed smile at the gift. He cared nothing +about the papers. He would do what Jules had paid him to do, and no +more. + +As they left the hut, it seemed to Stuart that the nerve-racking beating +of the tom-tom sounded louder and nearer. They walked a mile or so, +then, as Hippolyte suggested, at a small half-abandoned plantation, they +found mules. Once mounted, the negro set off at breakneck speed, caring +nothing about the roughness of the road, all the more treacherous +because of the dead-black of the shadows against the vivid green-silver +patches where the tropical moonlight shone through. + +"What's the hurry?" clamored Stuart, who could see no reason for this +mad and reckless riding. + +"The dance stop at dawn! I want to be back, Yes!" + +They galloped on as before. + +A few miles from the town, Stuart snatched at an idea which flashed upon +him suddenly. + +"Hippolyte," he said. "You want to get back for the voodoo dance?" + +"But, Yes!" + +"You'll be too late if you take me into town. See." + +He showed his watch and held out a twenty-five gourde bill. + +"Suppose I give you this. It's all the money I have. You can tell Jules +to tell Manuel that you saw me get on board a steamer in Cap Haitien, +and that you saw the steamer start. Then you can be back in plenty of +time for the dance." + +Hippolyte hesitated. The temptation was strong. + +"Unless, of course," the boy added carelessly, "you like this white man, +Manuel, so much." + +An expression of primitive hate wrote itself on the ebon face, a +peculiarly malignant snarl, as seen by moonlight. + +"I hate all whites!" he flashed. + +"Then why should you do a good turn for this Manuel?" + +The instincts of a simple honesty struggled with the black's desire. A +passing gust of wind brought the rhythmic beating of the tom-tom +clearer to their ears. It was the one call that the jungle blood of the +negro could not resist. He held out his hand for the money. + +"You go into Cap Haitien alone?" he queried, thickly. + +"Yes, I'll promise that," the boy agreed. + +He dismounted, swung his knapsack on his back, and handed the reins of +the mule to Hippolyte, who sat, still uncertain. But the negro's head +was turned so that he could hear the throbbing of the drum, and, with an +answering howl that went back to the days of the African jungle, he +turned and sped back over the rough trail at the same headlong speed he +had come. + +"If he doesn't break his neck!" commented Stuart, as he saw him go, +"it'll be a wonder!" + +There were yet a couple of hours before dawn, and Stuart plodded along +the trail, which could lead to no other place than Cap Haitien. He +walked as fast as he could, hoping to reach the city before daylight, +but the first streaks of dawn found him still nearly two miles from the +town. He did not want to enter the town afoot by daylight. That would be +too conspicuous, and there were plans germinating in the boy's head +which needed secrecy. He must hide all day, and get into Cap Haitien the +next night. + +Stuart slipped off the road and wriggled his way through the dense +thicket, seeking a place where there was light enough to read, and yet +where the foliage was dense enough to prevent him being seen by anyone +passing that way. + +A few moments' search only were required before he found the ideal spot, +and he threw himself down on a pile of leaves with great zest. That mule +had been hard riding. + +"First of all," he said to himself, half aloud, "I've got to find out +where I'm at. Then I'll maybe be able to figure out what I ought to do." + +Stuart's mind was not so quick as it was strong. He was a straight +up-and-down honest type of fellow, and thoroughly disliked the crafty +and intriguing boy or man. He began cautiously, but got warmed up as he +went on, and made a whirlwind finish. + +It was characteristic of him, thus, not to plunge into any wild and +desperate attempt to rescue his father, until he had time to puzzle out +the situation and work out a plan of action. He began by reading all the +papers and documents he had taken from his father's knapsack. This was a +long job, for the papers were full of allusions to subjects he did not +understand. It was nearly noon before he had digested them. + +Then he lay on his back and looked up through the tracery of leaves +overhead, talking aloud so that the sound of his own voice might make +his discoveries clearer. + +"The way I get it," he mused, "Father's on the trail of some plot +against the United States. This plot is breaking loose, here, in Haiti. +This Manuel Polliovo's in it, and so is a negro General, Cesar Leborge. +There's a third, but the papers don't say who he is. + +"Now," he went on, "I've two things to do. I've got to find Father and +I've got to find out this plot. Which comes first?" + +He rolled over and consulted one or two of the papers. + +"Looks like something big," he muttered, kicking his heels meditatively. +"I wonder what Father would say I ought to do?" + +At the thought, he whirled over and up into a sitting posture. + +"If it's dangerous to the U. S.," he said, "that's got to come first. +And I don't worry about Father. He can get out of any fix without me." + +The glow of his deep-hearted patriotism began to burn in the boy's eyes. +He sat rigid, his whole body concentrated in thought. + +"If Manuel Polliovo has captured Father," he said aloud, at last, "it +must have been because Father was shadowing him. That means that Manuel +doesn't want to be shadowed. That means I've got to shadow him. But +how?" + +The problem was not an easy one. It was obvious that Stuart could not +sleuth this Cuban, Manuel, without an instant guess being made of his +identity, for white boys were rare in Haiti. If only he were not white. +If only---- + +Stuart thumped on the ground in his excitement. + +Why could he not stain his skin coffee-color, like a Haitian boy? If +sufficiently ragged, he might be able to pass without suspicion. It +might be only for a day or two, for Stuart was sure that his father +would appear again on the scene very soon. + +This much, at least, he had decided. No one was going to plot against +his country if he could help it. There was not much that he could do, +but at least he could shadow one of the conspirators, and what he found +out might be useful to his father. + +This determination reached, the boy hunted for some wild fruit to stay +his appetite--he had nothing to eat since the night before--and settled +down for the rest of the afternoon to try and dig out the meaning of his +father's papers, some of which seemed so clear, while to others he had +no clew. It was characteristic of the boy that, once this idea of menace +to the United States had got into his head, the thought of personal +danger never crossed his mind. The slightly built boy, small even for +his age, the first sight of whom would have suggested a serious +high-school student rather than a sleuth, possessed the cool ferocity of +a ferret when that one love--his love of country--was aroused. + +His first step was clear. As soon as it was dark enough to cover his +movements, he would go to the house of one of his father's friends, a +little place built among the ruins of Cap Haitien, where they had stayed +two or three times before. From references in some of the letters, +Stuart gathered that his father had confidence in this man, though he +was a Haitian negro. + +As soon as the shadows grew deep enough, Stuart made his way through the +half-grown jungle foliage--the place had been a prosperous plantation +during French occupation--and, a couple of hours later, using by-paths +and avoiding the town, he came to this negro's house. He tapped at the +same window on which his father had tapped, when they had come to Cap +Haitien a week or so before, and Leon, the negro, opened the door. + +"But, it is you, Yes!" he cried, using the Haitian idiom with its +perpetual recurrence of "Yes" and "No," and went on, "and where is +Monsieur your father?" + +"I don't know," answered Stuart, speaking in English, which he knew Leon +understood, though he did not speak it. "I have missed him." + +"But where, and but how?" queried Leon, suddenly greatly excited. "Was +he already going up to the Citadel?" + +Stuart's face flushed with reflected excitement, but his eyes held the +negro's steadily. Leon knew more than the boy had expected he would +know. + +"No," he replied, "I don't think so. I shall have to go." + +"It is impossible, impossible, Yes!" cried Leon, throwing up his hands +in protest. "I told Monsieur your father that it was impossible for him. +And for you----" + +A graphic shrug completed the sentence. + +Stuart felt a sinking at the pit of his stomach, for he was no braver +than most boys. But the twist of his determination held him up. + +"Leon," he said, trying to keep his voice steady, though he felt it +sounded a little choked, "isn't there the juice of some root which will +turn the skin brown, nearly black?" + +"But, Yes, the plavac root." + +The Haitian peered at the boy. + +"You would make yourself a black man?" he continued. + +Stuart ignored argument. + +"Can you get some? Tonight? Right away?" + +"Ah, well; you know--" Leon began. + +The boy interrupted him sharply. + +"If my father told you to get some, you would get it," he declared +peremptorily. + +This was a shrewd guess, for, as a matter of fact, there were a number +of reasons why Leon should do what Mr. Garfield told him. The negro, who +had no means of finding how much or how little the boy knew, shrugged +his shoulders hugely, and, with a word of comment, left the house, +carrying a lantern. He was back in half an hour with a handful of small +plants, having long fibrous roots. These he cut off, placed in a pot, +covering them with water, and set the pot on the stove over a slow fire. + +"It will not come off the skin as easily as it goes on, No!" he warned. + +"Time enough to think about that when I want to take it off," came the +boy's reply. + +The decoction ready, Leon rubbed it in thoroughly into Stuart's skin. It +prickled and smarted a good deal at first, but this feeling of +discomfort soon passed away. + +"It won't rub off?" queried Stuart. + +Leon permitted himself a grim pleasantry. + +"Not against a grindstone!" + +This positive assertion was as reassuring in one way as it was +disquieting in another. Stuart did not want to remain colored for an +indefinite period of time. In his heart of hearts he began to wonder if +he had not acted a little more hastily, and that if he had asked for +Leon's advice instead of ordering him around, he might have found some +milder stain. But it was too late to repent or retract now. His skin was +a rich coffee brown from head to foot, and his dark eyes and black hair +did not give his disguise the lie. + +"I'm going to bed," he next announced, "and I want some ragged boy's +clothes by morning, Leon. Very ragged. Also an old pair of boots." + +"That is not good," protested the Haitian, "every boy here goes +barefoot, Yes!" + +Stuart was taken aback. This difficulty had not occurred to him. It was +true. Not only the boys, but practically nine men out of ten in Haiti go +barefoot. This Stuart could not do. Accustomed to wearing shoes, he +would cut his feet on the stones at every step he took on the roads, or +run thorns into them every step he took in the open country. + +"I must have boots," he declared, "but old ones. Those I've been +wearing," he nodded to where they lay on the floor--for this +conversation was carried on with the boy wearing nothing but his new +brown skin--"would give me away at once." + +"I will try and get them," answered Leon. His good-humored mouth opened +in a wide smile. "Name of a Serpent!" he ejaculated, "but you are the +image of the son of my half-sister!" + +At which saying, perhaps Stuart ought to have been flattered, since it +evidenced the success of his disguise. But, being American, it ruffled +him to be told he resembled a negro. + +He went to bed, far from pleased with himself and rather convinced that +he had been hasty. Yet his last waking thought, if it had been put into +words, would have been: + +"It's the right thing to do, and I'm going through with it!" + + + + +CHAPTER II + +WHERE BLACK MEN RULE + + +Stuart was not the only person on the streets of Cap Haitien the next +morning who was conscious of personal danger. Manuel Polliovo was ill at +ease. Bearing the secret that he bore, the Cuban knew that a hint of it +would bring him instant death, or, if the authorities had time to +intervene, incarceration in a Haitian prison, a fate sometimes worse +than death. Even the dreaded presence of U. S. Marines would not hold +the negro barbarians back, if they knew. + +Manuel was by no means blind to his peril. He was relieved in the +thought that the American, Garfield, was where he could not do him any +harm, but there were other dangers. Hence he was startled and jumped +nervously, on hearing a voice by his elbow. + +"Do you want a guide, Senor?" + +"A guide, Boy! Where to?" + +The answer came clear and meaningly: + +"To the Citadel of the Black Emperor!" + +The Cuban grew cold, under the burning sun, and, professional +conspirator though he was, his face blenched. His hand instinctively +sought the pocket wherein lay his revolver. + +Yet he dare not kill. Five years of American occupation had bred a sense +of law and order in the coast towns, at least, which had not been known +in Haiti for a century and more. Any violence would lead to inquiry, and +Manuel's record was not one which would bear investigation. + +How came this ragged Haitian urchin to know? Manuel's swift glance at +Stuart had shown him nothing but a Creole lad in clothes too big for him +and a pair of boots fastened with string. The messenger meant nothing, +it was the message which held menace. + +To the Cuban this apparently chance street encounter was ominous of +black threat. It revealed treachery and might mean a trap. But from +whence? Swiftly Manuel's keen brain, the brain of an arch-plotter, +scanned the manifold aspects of this sudden threat. + +How much labor, how many wild adventures, what a series of dangers would +Stuart have escaped, had he but been able to read the thoughts of that +crafty brain! + +Did his fellow-conspirators want to get rid of him? So Manuel's doubts +ran. Did they count on his shooting the boy, in a panic, and being +lynched for it, there and then, on the street of Cap Haitien? Or of his +being imprisoned, tried and executed for murder? Such a plot was not +unlikely. + +But, if so, who had sent the boy? + +Was Cesar Leborge playing him false? True, from that bull-necked, +ferocious negro general, Manuel knew he could expect nothing but +brutality, envy and hate; but such a design as this boy's intervention +seemed too subtle for the giant Creole's brain. Manuel accounted himself +master of the negro when it came to treachery and cunning. Moreover, he +knew Leborge to be a sullen and suspicious character, little likely to +talk or to trust anyone. + +What did the boy know? Manuel flashed a look at him. But Stuart was idly +fiddling in the dust with the toe of his ragged boot, and the Cuban's +suspicions flashed to another quarter. + +Could the Englishman, Guy Cecil, be to blame? That did not seem any more +likely. Manuel was afraid of Cecil, though he would not admit it, even +to himself. The Englishman's chill restraint, even in moments of the +most tense excitement, cowed the Cuban. Never had he been able to +penetrate into his fellow-conspirator's thoughts. But that Cecil should +have talked loosely of so vital, so terrible a secret? No. The grave +itself was not more secretive than that quiet schemer, of whom nothing +ever seemed to be known. And to a negro boy! No, a thousand times, no! + +Stay--was this boy a negro boy? Suspicion changed its seat in the wily +Cuban's brain. That point, at least, he would find out, and swiftly. He +looked at his ragged questioner, still fiddling with his toe in the +dust, and answered. + +"Well," he said, "you can show me what there is to be seen in this +place. But first I will go to the Cafe. No," he continued, as the boy +turned towards the new part of the town, built under American oversight, +"not there. To the Cafe de l'Opera. Go down the street and keep a few +steps in front." + +Stuart obeyed. He had seen the first swift motion of the Cuban's hand, +when he had been accosted, and had guessed that it was pistolwards. It +was uncomfortable walking in front of a man who was probably aching to +blow one's brains out. Nasty little cold shivers ran up and down +Stuart's back. But the tents of the U. S. Marines, in camp a little +distance down the beach, gave him courage. With his sublime faith in the +United States, Stuart could not believe that he could come to any harm +within sight of the Stars and Stripes floating from the flagstaff in +front of the encampment. + +While Stuart was thus getting backbone from his flag, Manuel was +concentrating his wits and experience on this problem which threatened +him so closely. + +Was this boy a negro? + +A life spent in international trickery on a large scale had made the +Cuban a good judge of men. He knew native races. He knew--what the white +man generally ignores or forgets--that between the various black races +are mental differences as wide as between races of other color. He knew +that the Ewe negro is no more like the Riff in character, than the +phlegmatic Dutchman resembles the passionate Italian. If a black, to +what race did this boy belong? Was he a black, at all? + +The bright sun threw no reflected lights on the boy's skin, the texture +of which was darker than that of a mulatto, and had a dead, opaque look, +lacking the golden glow of mulatto skin. The lad's hair showed little +hint of Bantu ancestry and his feet were small. True, all this might +betoken any of the Creole combinations common in Haiti, but the Cuban +was not satisfied. If the skin had been stained, now---- + +"Boy!" he called. + +Stuart looked around. + +"Here are some coppers for you." + +The boy slouched toward him, extended his hand negligently and the Cuban +dropped some three-centime pieces into it. + +Stuart mumbled some words of thanks, imitating, as far as he could, the +Haitian dialect, but, despite his desire to act the part, feeling +awkward in receiving charity. + +Manuel watched him closely, then, abruptly, bade him go on ahead. The +scrutiny had increased his uneasiness. + +This self-appointed guide was no negro, no mulatto, of that Manuel was +sure. The money had been received without that wide answering grin of +pleasure characteristic in almost all negro types. Moreover, the palms +of the boy's hands were the same color as the rest of his skin. The +Cuban knew well that a certain dirty pallor is always evident on the +palms of the hands of even the blackest negroes. + +The boy's reference to the "Citadel of the Black Emperor" showed that he +was aware of this secret meeting of conspirators. + +This was grave. + +More, he was disguised. + +This was graver still. + +Was this boy, too, afraid of Haiti, that savage land at the doors of +America; that abode where magic, superstition and even cannibalism still +lurk in the forests; that barbarous republic where the white man is +despised and hated, and the black man dominates? That land where the +only civilizing force for a century has been a handful of American +marines! + +That this boy was disguised suggested that he was in fear for his life; +but, if so, why was he there? How did he come to know the pass-word of +the conspiracy? For what mysterious reason did he offer himself as a +guide to the haunted place of meeting? + +Who was this boy? + +Manuel turned into the Cafe de l'Opera, a tumble-down frame shack with a +corrugated iron roof, to order a cooling drink and to puzzle out this +utterly baffling mystery. + +The Cuban's first impulse was to flee. Had anything less imperious than +this all-important meeting been before him, Manuel would have made his +escape without a moment's delay. + +Cap Haitien is no place for a white man who has fallen under suspicion. +Of the four gateways into Haiti it is the most dangerous. In Jacamal, a +white man may be left alone, so long as he does not incur the enmity of +the blacks; in Gonaive the foreign holders of concessions may protect +him; in Port-au-Prince, the capital, he is safeguarded by the potent arm +of the American marines; but, in the country districts back of Cap +Haitien, the carrion buzzards may be the only witnesses of his fate. +And, to that back country, the Cuban must go. All this, Manuel knew, and +he was a shrewd enough man to dare to be afraid. + +Stuart squatted in the shadow of the building while the Cuban sipped +from his glass. Thus, each doubting the other, and each fearing the +other, they gazed over the busy desolation of Cap Haitien, a town unlike +any other on earth. + +Save for a small and recently rebuilt section in the heart of the +town--which boasted some 10,000 inhabitants--flimsy frame houses rose in +white poverty upon the ruins of what was once known as "the little Paris +of the West Indies." Of the massive buildings of a century ago, not one +remained whole. The great earthquake of 1842 did much toward their +destruction; the orgy of loot and plunder which followed, did more; but +the chiefest of all agents of demolition was the black man's rule. + +The spacious residences were never rebuilt, the fallen aqueducts were +left in ruins, the boulevards fell into disrepair and guinea-grass +rioted through the cracked pavements. Back of the town the plantations +were neglected, the great houses fallen, while the present owners lived +contentedly in the little huts which once had been built for slaves. The +ruthless hands of time, weather and the jungle snatched back "Little +Paris," and Cap Haitien became a huddled cluster of pitiful buildings +scattered among the rubbish-heaps and walls of a once-beautiful +stone-built town. + +This appearance of desolation, however, was contradicted by the evidence +of commercial activity. The sea-front was a whirl of noise. + +The din of toil was terrific. Over the cobblestoned streets came rough +carts drawn by four mules--of the smallest race of mules in the +world--and these carts clattered down noisily with their loads of +coffee-sacks, the drivers shouting as only a Haitian negro can shout. At +the wharf, each cart was at once surrounded by a cluster of negroes, +each one striving to outshout his fellows, while the bawling of the +driver rose high above all. Lines of negroes, naked to the waist, sacks +on their glistening backs, poured out from the warehouses like ants from +an anthill, but yelling to out-vie the carters. The tiny car-line seemed +to exist only to give opportunity for the perpetual clanging of the +gong; and the toy wharf railway expended as much steam on its whistle as +on its piston-power. + +Stuart had visited the southern part of Haiti with his father, +especially the towns of Port-au-Prince and Jacamel, and he was struck +with the difference in the people. Cap Haitien is a working town and its +people are higher grade than the dwellers in the southern part of the +republic. The south, however, is more populous. Haiti is thickly +inhabited, with 2,500,000 people, of whom only 5,000 are foreigners, and +of these, not more than 1,000 are whites. The island is incredibly +fertile. A century and a quarter ago it was rich, and could be rich +again. Its coffee crop, alone, could bring in ample wealth. + +To Stuart's eyes, coffee was everywhere. The carts were loaded with +coffee, the sacks the negroes carried were coffee-sacks, the shining +green berries were exposed to dry on stretches of sailcloth in vacant +lots, among the ruins on the sides of the streets. Haitian coffee is +among the best in the world, but the Haitian tax is so high that the +product cannot be marketed cheaply, the American public will not pay the +high prices it commands, and nearly all the crop is shipped to Europe. + +"Look at that coffee!" Stuart's father had exclaimed, just a week +before. "Where do you suppose it comes from, Stuart? From cultivated +plantations? Very little of it. Most of the crop is picked from +half-wild shrubs which are the descendants of the carefully planted and +cultivated shrubs which still linger on the plantations established +under French rule, a century and a half ago. A hundred years of negro +power in Haiti has stamped deterioration, dirt and decay on the +island." + +"But that'll all change, now we've taken charge of the republic!" had +declared Stuart, confident that the golden letters "U. S." would bring +about the millennium. + +His father had wrinkled his brows in perplexity and doubt. + +"It would change, my boy," he said, "if America had a free hand. But she +hasn't." + +"Why not?" + +"Because, officially, we have only stepped in to help the Haitians +arrive at 'self-determination.' The treaty calls for our aid for ten +years, with a possibility of continuing that protection for another ten +years. But we're not running the country, we're only policing it and +advising the Haitians as to how things should be handled." + +"Do you think they'll learn?" + +"To govern themselves, you mean? Yes. To govern themselves in a +civilized manner? No. I wouldn't go so far as to say that slavery or +peonage are the only ways to make the up-country Haitian negro work, +though a good many people who have studied conditions here think so. + +"The program of the modern business man in Haiti is different: Make the +negro discontented with his primitive way of living, give him a taste +for unnecessary luxuries, teach him to envy his neighbor's wealth and +covet his neighbor's goods, and then make him work in order to earn the +money to gratify these wishes, and civilization will begin. + +"Mark you, Stuart, I don't say that I endorse this program, I'm only +telling you, in half-a-dozen words, what it really is. It is sure, +though, that when the black man rules, he relapses into savagery; when +he obeys a white master, he rises toward civilization." + +Stuart remembered this, now, as he sat outside the cafe, and looked +pridefully at the tents of the U. S. Marines in the distance. He +realized that American improvements in the coast towns had not changed +the nature of the Haitian negro, or creole, as he prefers to be called. + +Under his father's instruction, the boy had studied Haitian history, and +he knew that the Spaniards had ruled by fear, the French had ruled by +fear, the negro emperors and presidents had ruled by fear, and, under +the direct eye of the U. S. Marines, Haiti is still ruled by fear. In a +dim way--for Stuart was too young to have grasped it all--the boy felt +that this was not militarism, but the discipline necessary to an +undeveloped race. + +Only the year before, Stuart himself had been through an experience +which brought the innate savagery of the Haitian vividly before his +eyes. He had been in Port-au-Prince when the Cacos undertook to raid the +town, seize the island, and sweep the United States Marines into the +sea. And, as he had heard a Marine officer tell his father, but for a +chance accident, they might have succeeded. + +In October, 1919, Charlemagne Peralte, the leader of the Cacos, was +killed by a small punitive party of U. S. Marines. The Cacos may be +described as Haitian patriots or revolutionists, devotees of serpent and +voodoo worship, loosely organized into a secret guerilla army. They +number at least 100,000 men, probably more. About one-half of the force +is armed with modern rifles. The headquarters of the Cacos is in the +mountain country in the center of the island, above the Plain of +Cul-de-Sac, where no white influence reaches. No one who knew Haitian +conditions doubted that revenge would be sought for Charlemagne's death, +and all through the winter of 1919-1920, the Marines were on the alert +for trouble. + +The Cacos leadership had devolved upon Benoit, a highly educated negro, +who had secured the alliance of "the Black Pope" and Chu-Chu, the two +lieutenants of Charlemagne. Upon Benoit fell the duty of "chasing the +white men into the sea" and exterminating the Americans, just as +Toussaint l'Ouverture drove the English, and Dessalines, Christophe and +Petion drove the French, a century before. + +Nearly four years of American occupation had passed. That the purpose of +the United States was purely philanthropic was not--and is not--believed +by the vast majority of the Haitians. Though living conditions have +improved vastly, though brigandage on the plains has ceased, and though +terrorism has diminished, at heart only the Haitian merchants and +job-holders like the American occupation. The educated Creoles tolerate +it. The semi-savages of the hills resent it. + +On January 16, some of the white men in Port-au-Prince noticed that the +Creoles were excited and nervous. At the Cafe Bordeaux, at the Seaside +Inn, at the Hotel Bellevue, strange groups met and mysterious passwords +were exchanged. Sullen and latent hostility was changing from +smouldering rancor to flaming hate. Port-au-Prince was ripe for revolt. + +Stuart remembered his father's return that night. + +"Son," he had said, putting a revolver on the little table beside his +bed, "I hope you won't have to use this, but, at least, I've taught you +to shoot straight." + +That night, Benoit, gathering up the local detachments of his forces, +moved them in scattered groups through the abandoned plantations and off +the main roads to the outskirts of the city. He had over 1,800 men with +him. Most had modern rifles. All had machetes. All over the island other +bands were in readiness, their orders being to wait until they heard of +the fall of Port-au-Prince, when the massacre of all whites might begin. + +Benoit's plan was to take the city at daybreak. At midnight, he started +three columns of 300 men each, from three directions. They wandered +into the city by twos and threes, taking up positions. Their orders +were, that, at the firing of a gun at daybreak, when the stores opened, +they were to rush through the business district, setting fires +everywhere and killing the white men and the gendarmerie. Benoit +believed that, while his men could not withstand a pitched battle with +the Marines, they could sweep the town in guerilla fashion when the +Marines were scattered here and there, putting out fires. Moreover, the +Cacos general was sure that, once a massacre of the whites was begun, +race hatred would put all the black population on his side. + +Two o'clock in the morning came. Mr. Elliott, manager of a sugar +refinery at Hascoville, a suburb two miles out of the city, was +sleepless, and a vague uneasiness possessed him. Thinking that the fresh +air might be beneficial, he went to a window and looked out. + +"Out of the myriad hissing, rustling and squawking noises of a tropic +night, he heard the unmistakable 'chuff-chuff-chuff' of a marching +column of barefoot men. He made out a single-file column moving rapidly +across a field, off the road. He made out the silhouetes of shouldered +rifles. Far off, under a yellow street lamp, he glimpsed a flash of a +red shirt. That was enough. He telephoned to the Marine Brigade that the +Cacos were about to raid Port-au-Prince. + +"Benoit's bubble," continued the report of the Special Correspondent of +the _New York World_, "burst right there. Only about 150 of his 300 +'shock troops' had reached the market-place. No fires had been set. The +people were all in bed and asleep. There were no materials for a panic. + +"The Marines, in patrols and in larger formations, spread through the +streets swiftly to the posts arranged for emergency. Leslie Coombs, one +of the Marines, saw several men enter the market, where they had no +right to be; he ran to the door and was set upon by machete men, who +slashed him and cut him down, but not until he had emptied his +automatic. + +"The shooting and hand-to-hand fighting spread in a flash all through +the business part of the city. The rest of the surprise detachment of +the Cacos made a rush for the center of the city. One block was set on +fire and burned. + +"The Marines deployed steadily and quickly. They put sputtering machine +guns on the corners and cleaned the principal streets. There was +fighting on every street and alley of a district more than a mile +square. + +"The Cacos stood their ground bravely for a while, but their case was +hopeless. The American fire withered them. First those on the rim of the +city, and then those inside, turned their faces to the hills. The main +body, realizing that the plan of attack was ruined, started a pell-mell +retreat. + +"The Marines moved from the center of the city, killing every colored +man who was not in the olive-drab uniform of the gendarmerie. + +"As the sky turned pink and then flashed into blazing daylight, the +fight became a hunt. On every road and trail leading from the city, +Marine hunted Cacos. + +"One hundred and twenty-two dead Cacos were found in and about the city; +bodies found along the line of retreat in the next few days raised the +total of known dead to 176. There were numerous prisoners, among them +the famous chieftain, Chu-Chu." It was a swift and merciless affair, +but, as Stuart's father had commented, no one who knew and understood +Haitian conditions denied that it had been well and wisely done. + +Stuart had seen some of the fighting, and his father had pointed out to +him that Port-au-Prince is not the whole of Haiti, nor does one repulse +quell a revolt. The boy knew, and the Cuban, watching him, knew that for +every man the Marines had slain, two had joined the Cacos and had sworn +the blood-oath before the High Priest and the High Priestess (papaloi +and mamaloi) of Voodoo. + +Revolt against the American Occupation, therefore, was an ever-present +danger. Stuart wondered whether the negro who had been sent to him by +Manuel were a Cacos, and, if so, whether his father were a prisoner +among the Cacos. Manuel, for his part, wondered who this boy might be, +who had darkened his skin in disguise. One thing the Cuban had +determined and that was that he would not let the boy know that his +disguise had been penetrated. None the less, he must find out, if +possible, how the lad had come to know about the meeting-place of the +conspirators. + +Finishing his drink, the Cuban rose, and, motioning to Stuart to precede +him, walked to the sparsely settled section between the commercial +center of the town and the Marine encampment. When the shouts of the +toiling workers had grown faint in the distance, the Cuban stopped. + +"Boy!" he called. + +Stuart braced himself. He knew that the moment of his test had come. His +heart thumped at his ribs, but he kept his expression from betraying +fear. He turned and faced the Cuban. + +"In my right-hand pocket," said Manuel, in his soft and languorous +voice, "is a revolver. My finger is on the trigger. If you tell one +lie--why, that is the end of you! Why did you mention the Citadel of the +Black Emperor?" + +Stuart's heart gave a bound of relief. He judged, from Manuel's manner, +that his disguise had not been guessed. Elated with this supposed +success, he commenced to tell glibly the tale he had prepared and +studied out the day before. + +"I wanted to give you a warning," he said. + +The Cuban's gaze deepened. + +"Warning? What kind of a warning? From whom?" + +"Cesar Leborge," answered Stuart. He had judged from his father's papers +that the two were engaged in a conspiracy, and thought that he could do +nothing better than to provoke enmity between them. The proverb "When +thieves fall out, honest men come by their own," rang through his head. + +Manuel was obviously impressed. + +"What do you know about this?" he asked curtly. "Tell your story." + +"I hate Leborge," declared Stuart, trying to speak as a negro boy would +speak. "He took away our land and killed my father. I want to kill him. +He never talks to anybody, but he talks to himself. The other night I +overheard him saying he 'must get rid of that Cuban at the Citadel of +the Black Emperor.' + +"So when I saw you here in Cap Haitien, I took a chance on it's being +you he meant. If it hadn't been you, my asking you if you wanted a guide +wouldn't have been out of the way." + +"You are a very clever boy," said Manuel, and turned away to suppress a +smile. + +Certainly, he thought, this boy was a very clumsy liar. Stuart had never +tried to play a part before, and had no natural aptitude for it. His +imitation of the Haitian accent was poor, his manner lacked the +alternations of arrogance and humility that the Haitian black wears. +Then his story of the shadowing of Leborge was not at all in character. +And, besides, as the Cuban had convinced himself, the boy was not a +Haitian negro at all. + +Then, suddenly, a new thought flashed across Manuel's mind. He had +thought only of his fellow-conspirators as traitors. But there was one +other who had some inkling of the plot--Garfield, the American. + +And Garfield had a boy! + +The Cuban's lip curled with contempt at the ease with which he had +unmasked Stuart. He had only to laugh and announce his discovery, for +the boy to be made powerless. + +It was a temptation. But Manuel was too wily to yield to a temptation +merely because it was pleasurable. As long as the boy did not know that +he had been found out, he would live in a Fool's Paradise of his own +cleverness. Believing himself unsuspected, he would carry out his +plans--whatever they were--the while that Manuel, knowing his secret, +could play with him as a cat plays with a mouse she has crippled. + +He decided to appear to believe this poorly woven story. + +"If you hate Leborge, and Leborge hates me," he said, "I suppose we are +both his enemies. I presume," he added, shrewdly, "if I refused to take +you with me to the Citadel of the Black Emperor, you would shadow me, +and go any way." + +A flash of assent came into the boy's eyes, which, he was not quick +enough to suppress. Decidedly, Stuart was not cut out for a conspirator, +and would never be a match for the Cuban in guile. + +"I see you would," the Cuban continued. "Well, I would rather have you +within my sight. Here is money. Tomorrow, an hour after sunrise, be at +the door of the hotel with the best horses you can find. I wish to be at +Millot by evening." + +Stuart took the money and preceded Manuel into the town, chuckling +inwardly at his cleverness in outwitting this keen conspirator. But he +would have been less elated with his success if he had heard the Cuban +mutter, as he turned into the porch of the hotel, + +"First, the father. Now, the son!" + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE BLOOD-STAINED CITADEL + + +A foul, slimy ooze, compounded of fat soil, rotting vegetation and +verdigris-colored scum, with a fainter green mark meandering through +it--such was the road to Millot. + +Stuart and the Cuban, the boy riding ahead, were picking their away +across this noisome tract of land. + +For a few miles out of Cap Haitien, where the finger of American +influence had reached, an air of decency and even of prosperity had +begun to return. Near the town, the road had been repaired. Fields, long +abandoned, showed signs of cultivation, anew. + +Two hours' ride out, however, it became evident that the new power had +not reached so far. The road had dwindled to a trail of ruts, which +staggered hither and thither in an effort to escape the quagmires--which +it did not escape. Twice, already, Stuart's horse had been mired and he +had to get out of the saddle and half-crawl, half-wriggle on his belly, +in the smothering and sucking mud. So far, Manuel had escaped, by the +simple device of not passing over any spot which the boy had not tried +first. + +This caution was not to serve him long, however. + +At some sight or sound unnoticed by the rider, Manuel's horse shied from +off the narrow path of tussocks on which it was picking its way, and +swerved directly into the morass. + +The Cuban, unwilling to get into the mud, tried to urge the little horse +to get out. Two or three desperate plunges only drove it down deeper and +it slipped backward into the clawing mire. + +Manuel threw himself from his horse, but he had waited almost too long, +and the bog began to draw him down. He was forced to cry for help. + +Stuart, turning in his saddle, saw what had happened. He jumped off his +horse and ran to help the Cuban. The distance was too great for a +hand-clasp. The ragged trousers which Stuart was wearing in his disguise +as a Haitian lad were only held up by a piece of string; he had no belt +which he could throw. There was no sapling growing near enough to make a +stick. + +Then there came into the boy's mind an incident in a Western story he +had read. + +Darting back to his horse, he unfastened the saddle girth, and, hurrying +back to where Manuel was floundering in the mud, he threw the saddle +outwards, holding the end of the girth. It was just long enough to +reach. With the help of the flat surface given by the saddle and a +gradual pulling of the girth by Stuart, the Cuban was at last able to +crawl out. + +The gallant little horse, freed from its rider's weight, had reached a +point where it could be helped, and the two aided the beast to get its +forefeet on solid land. + +This rescue broke down much of the distance and some of the hostility +between Manuel and Stuart, and, as soon as the road began to rise from +the quagmire country, and was wide enough to permit it, the Cuban +ordered the boy to ride beside him. Naturally, the conversation dealt +with the trail and its dangers. + +"You would hardly think," said the Cuban, "that, a hundred years ago, a +stone-built road, as straight as an arrow, ran from Cap Haitien to +Millot, and that over it, Toussaint l'Ouverture, 'the Black Napoleon,' +was wont to ride at breakneck speed, and Christophe, 'the black +Emperor,' drove his gaudy carriage with much pomp and display." + +To those who take the road from Cap Haitien to Millot today, the +existence of that ancient highway seems incredible. Yet, though only a +century old, it is almost as hopelessly lost as the road in the Sahara +Desert over which, once, toiling slaves in Egypt dragged the huge stones +of which the Pyramids of Ghizeh were built. + +Stuart and the Cuban had made a late start. In spite of the powerful +political influence which the Cuban seemed to wield, his departure had +been fraught with suspicion. The Military Governor, a gigantic +coal-black negro, had at first refused to grant permission for Polliovo +to visit the Citadel; the Commandant of Marines had given him a warning +which was almost an ultimatum. + +Manuel, with great suavity, had overset the former and defied the +latter. His story was of the smoothest. He was a military strategist, he +declared, and General Leborge had asked him to investigate the citadel, +in order to determine its value as the site for a modern fort. + +Stuart's part in the adventure was outwardly simple. No one thought it +worth while to question him, and he accompanied the Cuban as a guide and +horse-boy. + +Although the road improved as the higher land was reached, it was dusk +when the two riders arrived at the foothills around Millot. + +Dark fell quickly, and, with the dark, came a low palpitating rumble, +that distant throbbing of sound, that malevolent vibrance which gives to +every Haitian moonlit night an oppression and a fear all its own. + +"Rhoo-oo-oom--Rhoo-oo-oom--Rhoo-oo-oom!" + +Muffled, dull, pulsating, unceasing, the thrummed tom-tom set all the +air in motion. The vibrance scarcely seemed to be sound, rather did it +seem to be a slower tapping of air-waves on the drum of the ear, too low +to be actually heard, but yet beating with a maddening persistence. + +There was a savagery in the sound, so disquieting, that a deep sigh of +relief escaped from the boy's lungs when he saw the lights of Millot +twinkling in the distance. Somehow, the presence of houses and people +took away the sinister sound of the tom-tom and made it seem like an +ordinary drum. + +Millot, in the faint moonlight, revealed itself as a small village, +nestling under high mountains. Signs of former greatness were visible in +the old gates which flanked the opening into its main street, but the +greater part of the houses were thatched huts. + +When at the very entrance of the village, there came a ringing +challenge, + +"Halt! Who goes there?" + +"A visitor to the General," was Manuel's answer. + +The barefoot sentry, whose uniform consisted of a forage cap, a coat +with one sleeve torn off and a pair of frayed trousers, but whose rifle +was of the most up-to-date pattern, was at once joined by several +others, not more splendidly arrayed than himself. + +As with one voice, they declared that the general could not be +disturbed, but the Cuban carried matters with a high hand. Dismounting, +he ordered one of the sentries to precede him and announce his coming, +and bade Stuart see that the horses were well looked after and ready for +travel in the morning, "or his back should have a taste of the whip." + +This phrase, while it only increased the enmity the soldiers felt +toward the "white," had the effect of removing all suspicion from +Stuart, which, as the lad guessed, was the reason for Manuel's threat. +Feeling sure that the boy would have the same animosity to his master +that they felt, the soldiers seized the opportunity to while away the +monotonous hours of their duty in talk. + +"What does he want, this 'white'?" they asked, suspiciously. + +"Like all whites," answered Stuart, striving to talk in the character of +the negro horse-boy, "he wants something he has no right to have." + +"And what is that?" + +"Information. He says he is a military strategist, and is going to make +La Ferriere, up there, a modern fort." + +"He will never get there," said one of the soldiers. + +"You think not?" + +"It is sure that he will not get there. Permission is refused always, +Yes. The General is afraid lest a 'white' should find the buried money." + +"Christophe's treasure?" queried the boy, innocently. He had never heard +of this treasure before, but rightly guessed that if it were supposed to +be hidden in the Citadel of the Black Emperor, it must have been placed +there by no one but the grim old tyrant himself. + +"But surely. Yes. You, in the south"--Stuart had volunteered the +information that he came from the southern part of the island--"have +you not heard the story of Dimanche (Sunday) Esnan?" + +"I never heard it, No," Stuart answered. + +"It was of strange, Yes," the soldier proceeded. "Christophe was rich, +ah, how rich! He had all the money of the republic. He spent it like an +emperor. You shall see for yourself, if you look, what Christophe spent +in building palaces, but no one shall say how much he spent on his own +pleasures. He had a court, like the great courts of Europe, and not a +'white' in them. Ah, he was very rich and powerful, Christophe. It is +said that, when he died, he left 65,000,000 gourdes (then worth about +$15,000,000) and this he buried, should he need money in order to +escape. But, as even an ignorant like you will know, he did not escape." + +"I know," replied Stuart, "he blew out his brains." + +"Right over there, he did it!" the soldier agreed, pointing into the +night. "But listen to the story of the treasure: + +"When I was but a little older than a boy like you, into the Vache d'Or +(a former gambling-house of some fame) there strolled this Dimanche +Esnan. He swaggered in, as one with plenty of money in his pocket. + +"Upon the table he threw some coins. + +"The croupier stared down at those coins, with eyes as cold and fixed as +those of a fer-de-lance ready to strike. The play at the table stopped. + +"It was a moment! + +"The coins were Spanish doubloons!" + +"A pirate hoard?" suggested Stuart. + +"It was thought. But this Dimanche had not been off the island for +years! And the buccaneers' treasure is at Tortugas, as is well known. + +"This Dimanche was at once asked if he had found Christophe's treasure, +for where else would a man find Spanish doubloons of a century ago? It +was plain, Yes! + +"Well, what would you? President Hippolyte sent for him. He offered to +make him a general, a full general, if he would but tell where he had +found the treasure. He showed him the uniform. It was gold laced, yes, +gold lace all over! Dimanche was nearly tempted, but not quite. + +"Then they let him come back here, to Cap Haitien, Yes. All the day and +all the night he was kept under watch. Ah, that was a strict watch! +Every one of the guards thought that he might be the one to get clue to +the place of the buried treasure, look you! + +"But the general here, at that time, was not a patient man, No! Besides, +he wanted the treasure. He wanted it without having the President of the +Republic know. With sixty-five million gourdes he might push away the +President and be president himself, who knows? + +"What would you? The general put Dimanche in prison and put him to the +question (torture) but Dimanche said nothing. Ah, he was stubborn, that +Dimanche. He said nothing, nothing! The general did not dare to kill +him, for he knew that the President had given orders to have the man +watched. + +"So the prison doors were set open. Pouf! Away disappears Dimanche and +has not been seen since. He still carries the secret of the treasure of +Christophe--that is, if he is not dead." + +"But didn't the President try to find the hoard on his own account?" +asked Stuart. + +"But, most surely! My father was one of the soldiers in the party which +searched in all the wonderful palaces that Christophe had built for +himself in 'Without Worry,' in 'Queen's Delight,' in 'The Glory,' in +'Beautiful View,' yes, even in the haunted Citadel of La Ferriere. No, I +should not have liked to do that, it is surely haunted. But they found +nothing. + +"Me, I think that the money is in the citadel. Has not the ghost of +Christophe been seen to walk there? And why should the ghost walk if it +had not a reason to walk? Eh?" + +"That does seem reasonable," answered Stuart, in response to the +soldier's triumphant tone. + +"But, most sure! So, Boy," the guard concluded, "it is easy to see why +the General does not like any 'white' to go to the Citadel. Perhaps the +'white,' whose horses you look after, has seen Dimanche. Who knows? So +he will not be let get up there. You may be sure of that." + +"One can't ever say," answered the boy. "I must be ready for the +morning," and, with a word of farewell, he sauntered into the village of +Millot, to find some kind of stabling and food for the horses, and, if +possible, some shelter for himself. + +Morning found Stuart outside the door of the general's "mansion," a +straw-thatched building, comprising three rooms and a narrow brick-paved +verandah. From what the soldiers had said the night before, the boy had +not the slightest expectation of the Cuban's success. + +He had not waited long, however, before Manuel came out through the +door, obsequiously followed by a coal-black general daubed with gold +lace--most of which was unsewn and hanging in tatters, and all of which +was tarnished. He was strongly, even violently, urging upon Manuel the +need of an escort. The Cuban not only disdained the question, but, most +evidently, disdained and disregarded the man. + +This extraordinary scene was closed by the General, the commandant of +the entire commune, holding out his hand for a tip. Manuel put a +five-gourdes bill (two dollars and a half) into the outstretched palm, +and mounted his horse to an accompaniment of a profusion of thanks. + +A short distance out of Millot, the two riders came to the ruins of +Christophe's palace of "Without Worry" (Sans Souci). It was once a +veritable palace, situated on the top of a small hill overlooking a deep +ravine. Great flights of stone steps led up to it, while terrace upon +terrace of what once were exquisitely kept gardens, filled with the +finest statuary, stepped to the depths below. + +Now, the gardens are waste, the statuary broken and the terraces are +washed into gullies by the rains. The palace itself is not less +lamentable. The walls are crumbling. Everything movable from the +interior has been looted. Trees grow outward from the upper windows, +and, in the cracks of masonry and marble floors, a tropic vegetation has +sprung up. Moss covers the mosaics, and the carved woodwork has become +the prey of the worm. + +A little further on, at a hut which the General had described, Manuel +and Stuart left their horses, and then began the steep climb up La +Ferriere. From the steaming heat of the plain below, the climbers passed +into the region of cold. The remains of a road were there, but the track +was so indistinct as to render it difficult to follow. + +"Where the dense forest begins," Manuel explained, "we shall find a +warder. I would rather be without him, but the General does not dare to +send a message that a 'white' may visit the Citadel unaccompanied. +Besides, I doubt if we could find the way, though once this was a wide +road, fit for carriage travel, on which the Black Emperor drove in pomp +and state to his citadel. It is incredible!" + +"What is incredible?" asked Stuart. + +"That Christophe should have been able to make these negroes work for +him as no people in the world have worked since the days when the +Pharaohs of Egypt built the Pyramids. You will see the vast size of the +Citadel. You see the steepness of the mountain. Consider it! + +"The materials for the whole huge pile of building and the three hundred +cannon with which it was fortified, were dragged up these steep mountain +scarps and cliffsides by human hands. Christophe employed the troops +mercilessly in this labor and subdued mutiny by the simple policy of not +only shooting the mutineers, but also a corresponding number of innocent +men, as well, just to teach a lesson. Whole villages were commandeered. +Sex made no difference. Women worked side by side with men, were whipped +side by side with men, and, if they weakened, were knifed or shot and +thrown into a ditch. One of Christophe's overseers is said to have +boasted that he could have made a roadway of human bones from Sans Souci +to the summit." + +The words "bloody ruffian" were on Stuart's lips, but, just in time, he +remembered his character, and replied instead, + +"But Christophe was a great man!" + +The boy knew well that though Toussaint L'Ouverture, the "Black +Napoleon," had truly been a great man in every sense of the word, a +liberator, general and administrator, the Haitians think little of him, +because he believed that blacks, mulattoes and whites should have an +equal chance. Dessalines and Christophe, monsters of brutality, are the +heroes of Haiti, because they massacred everyone who was not coal-black. + +Manuel cast a sidelong glance at Stuart, smiling inwardly at the boy's +attempt to maintain his disguise, that disguise which the Cuban had so +quickly pierced, and shrugged his shoulders. + +"What would you!" he rejoined. "You see yourself, it is the only +government that Haitians understand. To this day, a century later, this +part of the island is better than the south, because of the impress of +the reign of Christophe. Nothing changes Haiti!" + +"The Americans?" queried Stuart, trying to put a note of dislike into +his voice, but intensely interested in his own question. + +"They have changed nothing!" declared the Cuban, emphatically. "They +have painted the faces of the coast towns, and that is all. You heard +that drum, the night before last? Not until the tom-tom has ceased to +beat in Haiti, can anything be changed." + +He rose, threw away the stump of his cigar, and motioned to the boy to +take up the trail. + +A few hundred yards higher, a raucous shout halted them. + +There was a rustle of branches, and a negro colossus, of the low-browed, +heavy-jawed type, plunged through the thicket and barred the path. + +Bareheaded, barefooted, his shirt consisting of a piece of cloth with +holes for head and arms, his trousers torn to tatters by thorns, the +warder of the Citadel looked what he was, a Caco machete man, little +removed from the ferocity of African savagery. + +To his shout, the Cuban deigned no answer. + +He broke a switch from a bush, walked toward the negro guard with a +contemptuous look and lashed him across the face with the switch, +ordering him to lead the way. + +Stuart expected to see the Cuban cut down with one stroke of the +machete. + +Far from it. Cowed at once, the negro cringed, as to a master, and, +without a word as to Manuel's authority, led the way up the trail. + +A hundred yards higher, all sign of a path was lost. The negro warder +was compelled to use his machete to cut a way through thorny underbrush +and creepers in order to make a path for the "white's" feet. + +The afternoon was well advanced when openings amid the trees showed, +beetling overhead, the gray walls of the Citadel. An hour's further +climbing brought them to the guard-house, where eight men watch +continually, each relief for a period of a month, against the intrusion +of strangers into Christophe's Citadel. + +An irregularly disposed clump of posts, stuck into the ground, supported +a rusted and broken tin roof, without walls, but boasting a brushwood +pile on one side--such was the entire barracks of the La Ferriere +garrison. The furniture consisted only of a log on which to sit, a few +cooking utensils, and a pile of rags in the driest corner. + +True, there was plenty of room in the Citadel. Many a chamber in the +ruined place was dry and sheltered from the weather, many a corner was +there where the watchers could have made themselves warm and +comfortable. They were not forbidden to sleep there. On the contrary, +they were encouraged. But never a one would do so. They declared the +place haunted and were in a state of terror even to be near it. + +Manuel, after pausing for a moment to take his breath, strode up to the +group. + +"Get in there, some of you!" he ordered, "And show me the way. I want to +see over the place." + +A chorus of wails arose. The guards shrank and cowered at the +suggestion. Their terror was more than panicky, it was even hysterical. +They shook with convulsive jerks of fear, as though they had a spasm +disease. + +"Christophe!" cried one of them, in a sort of howl. "Christophe! For +three days he is here, Yes! We see him walk, Yes! If we go in, he will +make us jump off the cliff!" + +And another added, with an undertone of superstitious horror, + +"And his ghost will be waiting at the bottom to carry our ghosts away!" + +"Fools!" declared Manuel, "open the door!" + +He pointed to where the huge, rusty iron-bound door frowned in the blank +wall of gray stone. + +The negro guards hung back and gabbled together, but Manuel turned upon +them fiercely with uplifted switch. At that, the giant warder, who had +already acknowledged the mastership, slouched forward and pulled open +the creaking door, leaving a dark opening from which came the smell of +foul air and poisonous vegetation. + +Manuel motioned with his head for Stuart to precede him. + +The boy hesitated. He was brave enough, but the terror of the negroes +was catching. He would not have admitted to being afraid, but there was +a lump in his throat and his legs felt unsteady. + +The Cuban, who felt sure that Stuart was not the negro horse-boy that he +seemed, judged this appearance of fear as evidence that the boy was +still playing a part, and turned on him with a snarl. + +"Get in there, you!" + +Screwing up his courage, Stuart stepped forward, though hesitatingly and +unwillingly. Just as he crossed the threshold, the giant warder reached +out a gaunt hand and pulled him back. + +"Not that way!" he said. "Two steps more, Boy, and you are dead!" + +Manuel started. From his pocket he took a portable electric light and +flashed it upon the ground just within the entrance. + +The negro guard was right. Immediately before him lay a deep pit, how +deep there was no means of saying. Once it had been covered with a +trap-door, which could be worked from the Inner Citadel. Thus +Christophe, if he pleased, could send a message of welcome to his +visitors, and drop them to a living death with the words of hospitality +on his lips. + +"If I had gone first," said Manuel quietly, turning to the guards, "not +one of you would have said a word!" + +The negroes slunk away under his gaze. The accusation was true. They had +no love for the "whites." Only the fact that they believed Stuart to be +a negro boy had saved him. + +The boy looked down at that profound dungeon, from which rose a faint +stench, and shuddered. + +There was a heavy pause. Manuel was debating whether he dare try and +force the guards to show the way. If he ordered it, he would have to +force it through, or the prestige he had won would be lost. He dared +not. As between the terror of a white man's gun, and the terror of a +"ha'nt," the latter was the more powerful. + +Motioning Stuart to enter and showing the narrow ledge around the pit +with the spotlight, he followed. Then he turned to the guards clustered +outside. + +"Close the door!" he ordered, curtly. + +This command was obeyed with alacrity. The negro guards were only too +anxious to see that hole in the wall shut. Suppose the ghost of +Christophe should come gliding out among them! + +So far, the Cuban was safe. He had reached the Citadel and entered it. +He had no fear that the warders would open it again to spy on him. +Their terror was too real. + +Raising the spotlight so that it flashed full upon Stuart's face, the +Cuban spoke. + +"Understand me, now," he said curtly, and with a hard ring in his voice. +"How much of your story may be true and how much false I have not yet +found out. But, if what you say about hating Leborge is true, I will put +you in a place where you will be able to see him. You have a pistol, I +know. If you see Leborge raise pistol or knife against me, shoot, and +shoot quickly! I will make you rich!" + +Stuart thought to himself that if the conspirators were to come to +quarreling, that was the very time he would keep still. He, certainly, +had no desire for bloodshed, nor any intention to fire at anybody, if he +could help it. But he only answered, + +"I understand." + +Manuel's intention was no less concealed. He planned either to reveal +the boy to his fellow-conspirators, or else, to reveal him to the negro +warders as a white intruder. Either way, he figured, there would be an +end to the boy. + +By the light of his lamp, consulting a small manuscript chart of the +ruin, Manuel passed through many tortuous passages and dark chambers +until he came to a ruined wall. Climbing a few feet up the crumbling +stones, he set his eye to a crevice, nodded as though satisfied, +wrenched away several more stones, laying these down silently and +beckoned Stuart to come beside him. + +The boy looked down on a circular hall, the outer arc of which was +pierced with ruined windows opening to the sky. + +"Leborge will sit there!" whispered Manuel, pointing. "Kill him, and you +will be rich!" + +Stuart nodded. He did not trust himself to speak. + +Walking as silently as he could, Manuel left the place, pondering in his +own mind what he was going to do with the boy. Should he reveal the +secret and have his fellow-conspirators kill him? Should he turn him +over to the machetes of the negroes? Or should he kill the boy, himself? +One thing he had determined--that Stuart should not reach the plains +below, alive. + +And Stuart, in that hole of the ruined wall, crouched and watched. Of +what was to happen in that room below, what dark plot he was to hear, he +had no knowledge. Yet, over his eager desire to find out this conspiracy +against the United States, above his anxiety with regard to the fate of +his father, one question loomed in ever larger and blacker proportions-- + +He had got into the Citadel. How was he to get out? + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE GHOST OF CHRISTOPHE + + +Manuel was no coward. Somewhere, back in his Spanish ancestry, had been +a single drop of an Irish strain, adding a certain combativeness to the +gallantry of his race. That drop, too, mixed badly with Spanish +treachery, and made him doubly dangerous. + +Certainly the Cuban was no coward. But, as he came out from the murk of +those chambers with their rotting floors, many of them undermined by +oubliettes and dungeons, he felt a chill of fear. Even the occasional +bursts of sunshine through the cloud-fog which perpetually sweeps over +La Ferriere did not hearten him. He passed into the open space back of +the outer walls and set himself to climb the long flight of stone steps +that led to the battlements, where, he thought, his fellow conspirators +might be. But, on the summit, he found himself alone. + +The battlements cowed his spirits. With walls fifteen feet thick, wide +enough to allow a carriage to be driven upon them, they looked over a +sheer drop of two thousand feet. Sinister and forbidding, even the +sunlight could not lessen their grimness. + +As if in memory of the hundreds of victims who had been bidden jump off +those ramparts, merely for Christophe's amusement, or who had been +hurled, screaming, as penalty for his displeasure, a ruddy moss feeding +upon decay, has spread over the stones, and this moss, ever kept damp by +the cloud-banks which wreathe the Citadel continually is moistly red, +like newly shed blood. In cracks and corners, fungi of poisonous hues +adds another touch of wickedness. Manuel shivered with repulsion. +Probably not in all the world, certainly not in the Western Hemisphere, +is there a ruin of such historic terror as the Citadel of the Black +Emperor on the summit of La Ferriere.[1] + +[Footnote 1: This ruin, now, is nominally in territory under the +jurisdiction of an American provost-marshal. It is therefore less +difficult of access than formerly, but it is still considered unsafe for +travelers.] + +A gleam of sun revealed the extraordinary impregnability of the place. +The double-walled entrance from the hillside, pierced by but a single +gate, could only be battered down by heavy artillery, and no guns +powerful enough for such a feat could be brought up the hill. The Inner +Citadel, access to which was only by a long flight of steps, is +unapproachable from any other point, and a handful of defenders could +keep an army at bay. + +The cliff-side is as sheer as Gibraltar, affording not even a foothold +for the most venturesome climber. The walls are built upon its very +verge and are as solid as the rock itself. Its gray mass conveys a +sense of enormous power. "It towers upon the last and highest +precipice," says Hesketh Prichard, "like some sinister monster of the +elder world, ready to launch itself forth upon the spreading lands +below." + +The Citadel commands the whole of the Plain of the North clear to the +distant sea. At its south-eastern end it faces toward the frontier of +St. Domingo, the sister republic, fifty miles away. Christophe built it +as a central base, controlling the only roads and passes which command +the range from Dondon to Valliere, and rendering attack impossible, from +the southern side, through Marmalade. (Many names in Haiti give an +irresistible appearance of being comic, such as the Duke of Lemonade, +Duke of Marmalade, Baron the Prophet Daniel, and Colonel the Baron Roast +Beef, but they are intended seriously.) + +Manuel had gazed over the landscape but a few moments when the sun was +veiled in one of the cold, raw cloud-fogs which continually sweep the +summit. Billowing, dank masses hurtled about him, blotting out even the +outlines of the ruin. For several minutes the grey mists enwreathed him, +then, as they lightened, the Cuban saw before him, shadow-like and +strange, the figure of the Black Emperor himself. + +The warders' terror of the ghost of Christophe cramped Manuel's heart +for a moment and he fell back. His hand flashed to his pocket, none the +less. + +The figure laughed, a harsh coarse laugh which Manuel knew and +recognized at once. + +"General Leborge," he exclaimed, surprise and self-annoyance struggling +in his voice. "It is you!" + +"But Yes, my friend, it is I. You see, I am not so daring as you. I came +secretly. I have been here three days, waiting for you." + +"But the meeting was set for today!" + +"It is true. But it was more difficult for me to get here than for you. +See you, as a stranger you had not the suspicion of intrusion to combat. +No, if it were known that I were here, there would be political +difficulties--ah, many! Yes!" + +The Cuban nodded. He was not especially interested in the political +embroilments of his co-conspirator. As a matter of fact, the plot +accomplished, it was Manuel's purpose to let enough of the truth leak +out to make it seem that Leborge had been a traitor to the Haitian +Republic. + +"Have you seen Cecil?" he asked. + +"Not yet, No!" answered the negro general. "Me, I had thought he would +come with you." + +"He didn't. And he wasn't on the road from Cap Haitien, either. Queer, +too. First time I ever knew him to fail." + +"So! But I have a feeling he will not fail. He will be here today. Come +down to the place of meeting. I have some food and we can have a +mouthful while waiting for him." + +The big negro cast a look at himself. + +"I do not think we shall be interrupted, No!" he commented. + +The Cuban showed his teeth in the gleam of a quick smile. + +"The guards are too much afraid of the ghost of Christophe to dare enter +the place," he said. "That was a good idea of yours." + +The two men turned away from the battlements to the steps which led down +toward the dwelling rooms, and Manuel laid finger on lip. + +"It is well to be a ghost," he said, "but if the guards should chance to +hear me talking to the ghost, they might begin to think. And thinking, +my dear Leborge, is sometimes dangerous." + +The huge negro nodded assent and hung back while Manuel descended the +stair. + +At the entrance into the high room, ringed with windows, in a small +ruined opening of which Stuart crouched watching, Manuel waited for +Leborge. Together they entered. + +At the door of the room the negro started back with an exclamation of +astonishment, and even Manuel paused. + +On a square block of stone in the center of the room, which Manuel could +have sworn was not there when he looked into the chamber a short +half-hour before, sat Guy Cecil, complacently puffing at a briar pipe. +His tweeds were as immaculate as though he had just stepped from the +hands of his valet, and his tan shoes showed mark neither of mud nor +rough trails. Manuel's quick glance caught these details and they set +him wondering. + +"By the Ten Finger-Bones!" ejaculated Leborge. "How did you get in +here?" + +"Why?" asked Cecil, in mild surprise. + +"Polliovo didn't see you come. I didn't see you come." + +"No?" + +The negation was insolent in its carelessness. + +"But how did you get in?" + +The Englishman took his pipe from his mouth, and, with the stem, pointed +negligently to a window. + +"That way," he said. + +The negro blustered out an oath, but was evidently impressed, and looked +at his fellow-conspirator with superstitious fear. + +The Cuban, more curious and more skeptical, went straight to the window +and looked out. The crumbling mortar-dust on the sill had evidently been +disturbed, seeming to make good the Englishman's story, but, from the +window, was a clear drop of four hundred feet of naked rock, without +even a crack to afford a finger-hold, while the precipitous descent fell +another fifteen hundred feet. To climb was a feat manifestly impossible. + +"Permit me to congratulate you on your discovery of wings, Senor Cecil," +remarked Manuel, with irony. + +The Englishman bowed, as at a matter-of-course compliment, and, by +tacit agreement, the subject dropped. + +Yet Manuel's irritation was hard to hide. Not the least of the reasons +for his animosity to Cecil was the Englishman's undoubted ability to +cover his movements. In the famous case when the two conspirators had +negotiated an indigo concession in San Domingo and the profits had +suddenly slipped through Manuel's fingers, the Cuban was sure that the +Englishman had made a winning, but he had no proof. Likewise, with this +plot in hand, Manuel feared lest he should be outmanoeuvred at the last. + +Following Cecil's example, Leborge and Manuel rolled out to the center +of the room some blocks that had fallen from the walls, and sat down. +Stuart noticed that the Cuban so placed himself that he was well out of +a possible line of fire between the negro general and the embrasure +where the boy was hidden. This carefulness, despite its air of +negligence, reminded Stuart of the role he was expected to play, and he +concentrated his attention on the three conspirators. + +Although the Cuban was apparently the only one who had reason to suspect +being overheard, the three men talked in low tones. The language used +was French, as Stuart gleaned from a word or two which reached his ears, +but the subject of the conversation escaped him. One phrase, however, +attracted his attention because it was so often repeated, and Stuart +surmised that this phrase must bear an important relation to the main +subject of the meeting. The boy did not fail to realize that a +conference so important that it could only be held in so secret a place +must be of extraordinary gravity. This phrase was---- + +[Illustration: FOR A HUNDRED FEET THEY FELL AND STUART CLOSED HIS EYES +IN SICKENING DIZZINESS] + +"Mole St. Nicholas." + +The words held no meaning for Stuart, though he had seen reference to +them in his father's papers. He suspected that the phrase might be some +catch-word referring to a subject too dangerous for mention, possibly +the Presidency of Haiti. Following out this theme, the boy guessed that +he was a witness to the hatching of one of the political revolutions, +which, from time to time, have convulsed the Republic of Haiti. If so, +the matter was serious, for, as the boy knew, ever since the treaty of +1915, the United States was actively interested in forcing the +self-determination of Haiti, meanwhile holding the country under a +virtual protectorate. Such a revolution, therefore, would be a +deliberate attack upon the United States. + +This impression was heightened by his catching the words "naval base," +which could only deal with possible developments in a state of war. +Stuart strained his ears to the utmost, but isolated words were all that +he could glean. + +Later, Stuart was to learn that his guess was at fault in general, but +that the conclusion he had reached--namely, that injury to the United +States was intended--was not far wide of the mark. + +As the conference proceeded, it became evident to the hidden observer +that the relations between the conspirators were growing strained. The +Cuban seemed to be in taunting mood. The veins on the negro general's +bull neck began to swell, and he turned and called Manuel, + +"Pale Toad!" + +A moment after, his raucous voice insulted the Englishman with the +description, + +"Snake that does not even hiss!" + +Stuart expected to see violence follow these words, but the Cuban only +moved restlessly under the insult; the Englishman smiled. It was a +pleasant smile, but Stuart was keen enough to grasp that a man who +smiles when he is insulted must either be a craven or a dangerous man +with an inordinate gift of self-control. Cecil could not be a coward, or +such men as Manuel and Leborge would not so evidently fear him, +therefore the other character must befit him. + +Another word which repeated itself frequently was---- + +"Panama." + +This confirmed Stuart in his suspicions that the conspiracy, whatever it +might portend, was directed against the authority of the United States, +since the Panama Canal Zone is under American jurisdiction. + +The conference was evidently coming to a crisis. The negro was becoming +excited, the Cuban nervous, the Englishman more immovable than ever. + +Came a sudden movement, following upon some phrase uttered by Manuel, +but unheard by the boy, and the Cuban and Leborge leaped to their feet, +a revolver in each man's right hand. + +Spoke the Englishman, in a quiet voice, but sufficiently deepened by +excitement to reach the boy's ears: + +"Is there any reason, Gentlemen, why I should not shoot both of you and +finish this little affair myself?" + +A revolver glittered in his hand, though no one had seen the action of +drawing. + +In the flash of a second, Stuart understood Manuel's plot. It was the +Cuban who had provoked the negro to draw his weapon, counting on the +boy's shooting his supposed enemy, as had been agreed upon. Then Manuel +would drag him out of his hiding-place and kill him for an eavesdropper. +He crouched, motionless, and watched. + +"Sit down, and put up your weapons," continued Cecil, his voice still +tense enough to be heard clearly. "This is childishness. Our plans need +all three of us. It will be time enough to quarrel when we come to +divide the spoils. First, the spoils must be won." + +Negro and Cuban, without taking their eyes from other, each fearing that +the other might take an advantage, realized from Cecil's manner, that he +must have the drop on them. With a simultaneous movement, they put away +their guns. The negro sat down, beaten. Manuel, with a swift and hardly +noticeable side-step, moved a little nearer to Cecil, putting himself +almost within knife-thrust distance. + +A slight, a very slight elevation of the barrel of the tiny revolver +glittering in the Englishman's hand warned the Cuban that the weapon was +covering his heart. An even slighter narrowing of the eyelids warned him +that Cecil was fully ready to shoot. + +With a low curse, the Cuban retreated to his stone and sat down. He did +not sprawl loosely in dejection, as had the negro, but he sat with one +foot beside the stone and his body leaning half-forward, his muscles +tense, like a forest cat awaiting its spring. + +The conference came to a head quickly, as Stuart saw. The outbreak of +mistrust and hostility, followed by discussion, proved how closely +linked were the plotters. Yet each man wanted the business done as +quickly as possible, and wanted to be free from the danger of +assassination by his comrades. + +Leborge drew from his pocket a paper which he showed to the other two, +and, in turn, Manuel and Cecil produced documents, the Englishman using +his left hand only and never dropping the barrel of his revolver. Few +words were exchanged, and these in the low tones in which the conference +had been carried on before. Of the contents of the papers, Stuart could +not even guess. Whatever they were, they seemed to be satisfactory, +for, so far as the boy could judge, harmony returned among the +conspirators. But the Englishman kept wary watch with his gun. + +"All goes well, then," concluded Leborge, rising and shivering in the +damp air, for the clouds were eddying through the ruined windows in raw +and gusty blasts. + +"It can be done next spring!" declared the Cuban. + +"It will be done, as agreed," was the Englishman's more cautious +statement. + +"Then," said Manuel, raising his voice a trifle in a way which Stuart +knew he was meant to hear, "the sooner I get down to Cap Haitien the +better. I had trouble enough to get up." + +"It might be well," suggested the Englishman, "if Leborge should repeat +his trick of appearing as the ghost of Christophe. The guards will be so +frightened that they will think of nothing else, and you will be able to +get away without any unpleasantness." + +"And you?" queried the Cuban. "How will you go?" + +Again the Englishman nodded toward the window. + +"I will use the wings you were kind enough to say I must possess," he +answered, enigmatically. + +Peering out cautiously from his post of observation in the embrasure, +Stuart saw that both Manuel and Leborge hesitated at the entrance to +the dark passage which led from the Dining Hall and Queen's Chamber to +the inner court, from whence went the paths leading respectively to the +outer gate, whither Manuel must go, and to the battlements, where +Leborge was to reappear as the ghost of Christophe. + +"You are afraid of each other?" queried Cecil, with his faint smile. +"Well, perhaps you have reason! I will go through the passage with both +of you. As I said before, each of us needs the other." + +Relief and hate passed like shadows across the faces of Leborge and +Manuel. Each had intended to kill the other in the dark of those +passages, each had feared that he might be slain himself. As Cecil knew, +once out in the open, mutual distrust and watchfulness would ensure the +keeping of the peace. + +Stuart, listening intently for the sound of shots, heard in the distance +the Englishman's voice: + +"I forgot my pipe. I'll just go back for it." + +And then he heard steps coming at a light, but fast run. Evidently Cecil +wanted to gain time. + +The Englishman came in swiftly, picked up his pipe--which he had left on +the stone--slipped across toward the window, moved a loosened stone and +drew out from a cavity in the wall a green bundle from which some straps +were hanging. These he buckled on as a body-harness. Stuart had never +seen fingers that moved so quickly, or which had less appearance of +hurry. + +A thought struck him. Impulsively, he leaped from the embrasure. + +A glitter told him that the gun was covering him. + +He spoke breathlessly. + +"Manuel expected me to kill Leborge. He'll kill me for not doing it." + +In answer to a commanding look of interrogation, Stuart went on: + +"I'm an American, and straight. I'll tell you all about it, later. Guess +there isn't much time, now. Take me with you." + +Cecil knew men. He looked at the boy, piercingly, and answered: + +"Very well. If you've got the nerve." + +"I have!" + +Eye flashed to eye. + +Came the decision: + +"Your belt's too small. Take mine!" + +The Englishman unfastened his own belt, grasped the boy by the +shoulders, spun him round, ran the belt under his arms and through the +two sides of the harness he had strapped on himself. He took a step and +a heave and both were on the window-sill. + +At the sight of the abyss below, a sudden panic caught Stuart's breath +and heart, and he seemed to choke. + +"What do we do?" he gasped. + +"We jump!" said Cecil. + +They leaped clear. + +For a hundred feet they fell, and Stuart closed his eyes in that +sickening dizziness which comes from a high fall. + +Then he felt Cecil's arm grip him in a bear hug, and, a second after, +his breast bone seemed to cave in, as a sudden jerk and strain came on +the strap by which he was bound to the Englishman. + +Instinctively he tried to squirm free, but the grip and the strap held +firm. + +Then the falling motion changed into a slow rocking see-saw, coupled +with a sense of extraordinary lightness, and Stuart, looking overhead, +saw the outstretched circle of a modern parachute. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +THE ISLE OF THE BUCCANEERS + + +Swaying in sea-sick fashion, Stuart saw the forests, far below, seem to +rise up to meet him. Under the influence of the double motion of drop +and roll, the whole earth seemed to be rocking, and the sense of the +void beneath him made Stuart feel giddy and faint. The fall was slower +than he had expected. + +Soon, a damp heat, rising from below, warned the boy that they were +approaching the ground, and, a second or two later, the Englishman said +quietly: + +"We are going to hit the trees. Cover your face and head with your arms. +You won't be hurt, but there is no sense in having one's eyes scratched +out." + +In fact, the trees were very near. Stuart cast one look down, and then, +following the advice given, covered his face. A quarter of a minute +later, his legs and the lower half of his body plunged into twigs and +foliage. The parachute, released from a part of the weight which had +held it steady, careened, was caught by a sidewise gust of wind, and, +bellying out like a sail, it dragged the two aerial travelers through +the topmost branches in short, vicious jerks which made Stuart feel as +though he were being pulled apart. This lasted but a minute or two, +however, when the parachute itself, torn, and caught in the branches, +came to anchor. + +"I fancy we had better climb down," remarked Cecil, cheerfully, and, at +the same time, Stuart realized that the belt, which had grappled him +tight to the Englishman's harness, had been loosened. + +The boy drew a long breath, for his lungs had been tightly compressed +during the downward journey, and, instinctively, reached out for a +branch sufficiently strong to support him. + +The Englishman, a man of quicker action, had already swung clear and was +descending the tree with a lithe agility that seemed quite out of +keeping with his quiet and self-possessed manner. The boy, despite his +youth, came down more clumsily. On reaching ground, he found his +companion sedately polishing his tan boots with a tiny bit of rag he had +taken from a box not much bigger than a twenty-five cent piece. Stuart's +clothes were torn in half-a-dozen places, Cecil's tweeds were absolutely +unharmed. + +The Englishman caught the boy's thought and answered it. + +"Explorers' Cloth," he said. "I have it made specially for me; you can +hardly cut it with a knife." + +Inwardly the boy felt that he ought to be able to carry on the +conversation in the same light vein, but his nerves were badly shaken. +His companion glanced at him. + +"A bit done up, eh?" He took a metal container from his pocket, in shape +like a short lead pencil, and poured out two tiny pellets into his palm. + +"If you are not afraid of poison," he remarked amicably, "swallow these. +They will pick you up at once." + +The thought of poison had flashed into Stuart's mind. After all, the +Englishman was just as much one of the conspirators as Manuel or +Leborge, and might be just as anxious for the death of an eavesdropper. +At the same time, the boy realized that he was absolutely in the +Englishman's power, and that if Cecil wanted to get rid of him, there, +in that thick forest, he had ample opportunity. To refuse the pellets +might be even more dangerous than to accept them. Besides, there was a +certain atmosphere of directness in Cecil, conspirator though the boy +knew him to be, which forbade belief in so low-grade a manner of action +as the use of poison. + +He held out his hand for the pellets and swallowed them without a word. + +A slight inclination of the head showed the donor's acceptance of the +fact that he was trusted. + +"Now, my lad," he said. "I think you ought to tell me something about +yourself, and what you were doing in the Citadel. You asked me to save +you from Manuel, and I have done so. Perhaps I have been hasty. But, in +honor bound, you must tell me what you know and what you heard." + +Through Stuart's veins, the blood was beginning to course full and free. +The pellets which Cecil had given him--whatever they were--removed his +fatigue as though it had been a cloak. They loosened the boy's tongue, +also, and freely he told the Englishman all his affairs save for his +cause in pursuing Manuel, which he regarded as a personal matter. He +mentioned the only words he had overheard, while watching in the ruined +Citadel and explained that the taunting of Leborge by Manuel, during the +conference, had been only a ruse to provoke trouble, the Cuban hoping +that the boy would shoot. + +"And what general impression did you get from the meeting?" Cecil +queried. + +The boy hesitated, fearing to enrage his questioner. + +"Well," he blurted out, "if I must say it, I think that you're plotting +a revolution in this country, putting Leborge up as president, letting +Manuel run the country, driving the United States clean out of it, and +giving you the chance to take all sorts of commercial concessions for +yourself." + +The Englishman nodded his head. + +"For a guess," he declared, "your idea is not half bad. Evidently, you +have plenty of imagination. The only trouble with your summing up of the +situation, my boy, is that it is wrong in every particular. If you did +not learn any more than that from the conference, your information is +quite harmless. I suppose I can count on your never mentioning this +meeting?" + +Stuart thought for a moment. + +"No," he said, "I can't promise that." + +The Englishman lifted his eyebrows slightly. + +"And why?" + +Stuart found it difficult to say why. He had a feeling that to swear +silence would, in a sense, make him a party to the conspiracy, whatever +it might be. + +"I--I've got it in for Manuel," he said lamely, though conscious, as he +said it, that the reply would not satisfy. + +Cecil looked at him through narrowed eyelids. + +"I suppose you know that I would have no scruples in shooting you if you +betrayed us," he remarked. + +Stuart looked up. + +"I don't know it," he answered. "Manuel or Leborge might do it, but I +think you'd have a lot of scruples in shooting an unarmed boy." + +"Surely you can't expect me to save your life merely to run my own neck +in a noose?" + +"That's as good as admitting that what you're doing might run your neck +into a noose," commented Stuart shrewdly, if a little imprudently. + +"All right. But you must play fair. I have helped you. In honor, you +can't turn that help against me." + +It was a definite deadlock. The boy realized that, while the Englishman +was not likely to put a bullet through his head, as either Manuel or +Leborge would have done, he was none the less likely to arrange affairs +so that there would be no chance for talk. Haitian prisons were +deathtraps. Also Cecil's declaration that an abuse of kindness would be +dishonorable had a great deal of weight with the boy. His father had +taught him the fine quality of straight dealing. + +"Look here, sir," he said, after a pause. "You said that I hadn't got +the right idea as to what you three were doing." + +"You haven't." + +"Then I can't betray it, that's sure! I'll promise, if you like, that, +if I do ever find out the whole truth about this plot, and if it's +something which, as an American, I oughtn't to let go by, I won't make +any move in it until I know you've been warned in plenty of time. If it +isn't, I'll say nothing. There's no reason why I should get Leborge or +you in trouble. It's Manuel I'm after." + +"If you'll promise that," said Cecil, "I fancy I can afford to let you +go. I don't want you with me, anyway, for that Cuban dog would be sure +that you had betrayed him to me, and he would suppose that I was going +to betray him in turn. I'll land you in Cuba, and if you take my advice, +you'll keep away from Haiti. It isn't healthy--for you." + +Having thus settled Stuart's fate to his own satisfaction, Cecil +climbed a little distance up the tree, caught the ropes of the +parachute, and with much hauling, assisted by Stuart, he pulled the +wreckage down and thrust it under a bush. + +"The weather and the ants will make short work of that," he commented. +"There won't be much of it left but the ribs in a week. And now, lad, +we'll strike for the coast." + +Though there seemed to Stuart no way of telling where they were, Cecil +took a definite course through the jungle. They scrambled over and +through the twisted tangle of undergrowth, creepers and lianas, and, in +less than an hour, reached a small foot-path, bearing north-westward. + +"I don't know this path," the Englishman remarked frankly, "but it's +going in the direction I want, any way." A little later, he commented, +"I fancy this leads to a village," and struck out into the jungle for a +detour. On the further side of the village, he remarked, "I know where I +am, now," and, thereafter, made no further comment upon the route. He +talked very interestingly, however, about the insects, flowers and trees +by the way, and, when dark came on, taught Stuart more about the stars +than he had learned in all his years of schooling. + +They walked steadily without a halt for food, even, from the late +afternoon when the parachute had hit the trees, until about an hour +after sunrise the next morning, when the faint trail that they had +lately been following, suddenly came to an end on the bank of a narrow +river, hardly more than a creek. + +Putting a tiny flat instrument between his teeth, Cecil blew a shriek so +shrill that it hurt Stuart's ears. It was repeated from a distance, +almost immediately. Five minutes later the boy heard the "chug-chug" of +a motor boat, and a small craft of racing pattern glided up to the bank. + +"Got a passenger, Andy," he said to the sole occupant of the boat. + +"Food for fishes?" came the grim query, in reply. + +"Not yet; not this time, anyway. No, we'll just put him ashore at Cuba +and see if he knows how to mind his own business." + +The motor boat engineer grumbled under his breath. He was evidently not +a man for half-measures. The blood of the old buccaneers ran in his +veins. It was evident, though, that Cecil was master. + +The two men aboard, Andy turned the head of the motor boat down the +river and out to sea, shooting past the short water-front of the little +village of Plaine du Nord at a bewildering speed. The Creoles had barely +time to realize that there was something on the water before it was gone +out of sight. + +Despite its speed--which was in the neighborhood of thirty-two +knots--the motor boat was built for sea use, and it ran along the coast +of the Haitian north peninsula, past Le Borgne and St. Louis de Nord, +like a scared dolphin. Arriving near Port-de-Paix, it hugged the shore +of the famous lair of the buccaneers, Isle de Tortugas, and thence +struck for the open sea. + +"Tortugas!" commented Cecil, pointing to the rocky shores of the islet. + +"That's where all the pirates came from, wasn't it?" queried Stuart, +eager to break the silence of the journey. + +"Pirates? No. The pirate haunts were more to the north. It was the +stronghold of the buccaneers." + +"I always thought pirates and buccaneers were the same thing," put in +the boy. + +"Far from it. Originally the buccaneers were hunters, and their name +comes from _boucan_, a word meaning dried flesh. They hunted wild cattle +and wild pigs on that island over there." + +"Haiti?" + +"It was called Hispaniola, then. The Spanish owned it, but had only a +few settlements on the coast. The population was largely Carib, a savage +race given to cannibalism. There seems little reason to doubt that even +if the buccaneers did not actually smoke and cure human flesh, as the +Caribs did, they traded in it and ate it themselves." + +"Were the buccaneers Spaniards?" queried Stuart. + +"No. French to begin with, and afterwards, many English joined them. +That was just where the whole bloody business began. France protected +the buccaneers, sent them aid and ammunition; even their famous +guns--known as 'buccaneering pieces' and four and a half feet long--were +all made in France. There was a steady demand for smoked meat and hides, +and France was only too ready to get these from a Spanish colony without +payment of any dues thereon. + +"At the beginning of the seventeenth century the buccaneers--at that +time only hunters--settled in small groups on the island of Hispaniola. +Such a policy was dangerous. Time after time parties of Spanish soldiery +raided the settlements, killing most of the hunters and putting the +prisoners to the torture. In desperation, the buccaneers decided to +abandon Hispaniola. They united their forces and sailed to the island of +St. Kitts, nominally in the hands of Spain, but then inhabited only by +Caribs. + +"The French government at once extended its protection to St. Kitts, +thus practically seizing it from Spain and claimed it as a possession. +Great Britain agreed to support France in this illegal seizure and thus +the little colony of St. Kitts was held safe under both French and +English governments, which actually supported the hunting ventures of +the buccaneers, and winked at the piratic raids which generally formed a +part of the buccaneering expeditions. + +"But it was not to be expected that the Spanish would keep still under +the continual pillage of these plundering hunters. The Dons undertook +to destroy the small vessels in which the buccaneers sailed and, before +three years had passed, fully one-half of the buccaneers sailing from +St. Kitts had been savagely slaughtered. These outrages prompted +reprisals from the English and the French and thus the privateers came +into the field." + +"What's a privateer?" queried Stuart. + +"I was just about to tell you," answered Cecil. "A privateer on the +Caribbean and the Spanish Main, in those days, was a man who had +sufficient money or sufficient reputation to secure a ship and a crew +with which to wage war against the enemies of his country. As his own +government had given nothing but permission to his venture, it gained +nothing but glory from it. The privateer had the right to all the booty +and plunder he could secure by capturing an enemy's ship, or raiding an +enemy's settlement. The plunder was divided among the crew. Thus, a +lucky voyage, in which, for example, a Spanish treasure-ship was +captured, would make every member of the crew rich. Some of these +privateers, after one or so prosperous voyages, settled down and became +wealthy planters. The great Sir Francis Drake, on several of his +voyages, went as a privateer." + +"And I suppose the governments gained, by having a fleet of vessels +doing their fighting, for which they needn't pay," commented the boy. + +"Exactly. In a way, this was fair enough. The privateer took his +chance, and, whether he won or lost, he was, at least, fighting for his +country. But there were other men, unable to secure ships, and who could +not obtain letters-of-marque from their governments, to whom loot and +plunder seemed an easy way of gaining riches. Some of these were men +from the crews of privateers that had disbanded, some were buccaneers. +They claimed the same rights as privateers but differed in this--that +they would attack any ship or settlement and plunder it at will. At +first they confined themselves to small Spanish settlements only, but, +later, their desires increased, and neutral ships and inoffensive +villages were attacked. + +"In order to put a stop to the raids of the buccaneering hunters, the +Spaniards planned an organized destruction of all the wild cattle on +Hispaniola, hoping thus to drive the ravagers away. It was a false move. +The result of it was to turn the buccaneers into sea-rovers on an +independent basis, ready for plunder and murder anywhere and everywhere. +At this period they were called Filibusters, but, a little later, the +word 'buccaneer' came to be used for the whole group of privateers, +filibusters and hunters. + +"The fury of both sides increased. So numerous and powerful did these +sea-rovers become that all trade was cut off. Neutral vessels, even if +in fleets, were endangered. With the cutting off of trade by sea, there +was no longer any plunder for the rovers and from this cause came about +the famous land expeditions, such as the sack of Maracaibo by Lolonnois +the Cruel, and the historic capture of Panama by Morgan. Large cities +were taken and held to ransom. Organized raids were made, accompanied by +murder and rapine. The gallantry of privateering was degenerating into +the bloody brutality of piracy. + +"In 1632, a small group of French buccaneer hunters had left St. Kitts +and, seeking a base nearer to Hispaniola, had attacked the little island +of Tortugas, on which the Spanish had left a garrison of only +twenty-five men. Every one of the Spaniards were killed. The buccaneers +took possession, found the harbor to be excellent, and the soil of the +island exceedingly fertile. As a buccaneer base, it was ideal. +Filibusters saw the value of a base so close to Spanish holdings, +realized the impregnability of the harbor and flocked thither. +Privateers put in and brought their prizes. Tortugas began to prosper. +In 1638 the Spaniards, taking advantage of a time when several large +expeditions of buccaneers were absent, raided the place in force and +shot, hanged, or tortured to death, every man, woman and child they +captured. Only a few of the inhabitants escaped by hiding among the +rocks. But the Spanish did not dare to leave a garrison. + +"The buccaneers got together and under Willis, an Englishman, reoccupied +the island. Although Willis was English, the greater part of the +buccaneers with him were French and they gladly accepted a suggestion +from the governor-general at St. Kitts to send a governor to Tortugas. +In 1641 Governor Poincy succeeded in securing possession of the Isle of +Tortugas for the Crown of France. Thus, having a shadow of protection +thrown around it, and being afforded the widest latitude of conduct by +its governor--who fully realized that it was nothing but a nest of +pirates--Tortugas flamed into a mad prosperity. + +"That little desert island yonder became the wildest and most abandoned +place that the world probably has ever seen. Sea-rovers, slave-runners, +filibusters, pirates, red-handed ruffians of every variety on land or +sea made it their port of call. Everything could be bought there; +everything sold. There was a market for all booty and every +article--even captured white people for slaves--was exposed for sale. An +adventurer could engage a crew of cut-throats at half-an-hour's notice. +A plot to murder a thousand people in cold blood would be but street +talk. Every crime which could be imagined by a depraved and gore-heated +brain was of daily occurrence. It was a sink of iniquity. + +"After France had taken possession of Tortugas, it came about quite +naturally that the French buccaneers found themselves better treated in +that port than the English filibusters or the Dutch Sea-Rovers. Almost +immediately, therefore, the English drew away, and established their +buccaneer base in other islands, notably Jamaica, of which island the +notorious adventurer and pirate, Sir Henry Morgan, became governor. + +"The steady rise of Dutch power, bringing about the Dutch War of 1665, +brought about a serious menace against the English power, increased +when, in 1666, France joined hands with Holland. Peace was signed in +1667. In the next thirty years, four local West Indian wars broke out, +the grouping of the powers differing. All parties also sought to control +the trade across the Isthmus of Panama, and there was great rivalry in +the slave trade. During this period, privateers and buccaneers ceased to +attack Spanish settlements only, and raided settlements belonging to any +other country than their own. During the various short intervals of +peace between these wars, the several treaties had become more and more +stringent against the buccaneers. When, therefore, in 1697, the Treaty +of Ryswick brought peace between England, France, Holland and Spain, it +ended the period of the buccaneer." + +"I don't quite see why," put in Stuart, a little puzzled. + +"For this reason. The buccaneers had not only existed in spite of +international law, they had even possessed a peculiar status as a +favored and protected group. The treaty put an end to that protection. +Sea-fighting thereafter was to be confined to the navies of the powers, +and the true privateers and sea-rovers roved the seas no more." + +"But how about the pirates--'Blackbeard' Teach, Capt. Kidd, 'Bloody' +Roberts and all the rest?" queried Stuart. + +"They were utterly different in type and habits from the buccaneers," +explained Cecil. "After the Treaty of Ryswick, piracy became an +international crime. A harbor belonging to one of the powers could no +longer give anchorage to a pirate craft. Markets could no longer openly +deal in loot and plunder. + +"Those freebooters who had learned to live by pillage, and who thus had +become outlaws of the sea, were compelled to find some uninhabited +island for a refuge. They made their new headquarters at the Island of +New Providence, one of the Bahamas. With buccaneering ended, and piracy +in process of suppression by all the naval powers, the reason for +Tortugas' importance was gone. It dwindled and sank until now it is a +mere rocky islet with a few acres under cultivation, and that is all. I +know it well. Much treasure is said to be buried there, but no one has +ever found it. Don't waste your time looking for it, boy. You will keep +away from this part of the world if you know what is good for you!" + +With which menace, the Englishman fell silent, and Stuart felt it wiser +to refrain from disturbing him. Even over a copiously filled lunch +basket, the three in the boat munched, without a word exchanged. + +At dusk they ran into a small cove at the easternmost end of the +northern coast of Cuba, not far from Baracoa, the oldest city in Cuba +and its first capital, where Columbus, Narvaez, Cortes and others of the +great characters of history, played their first parts in the New World. + +Under the shadow of Anvil Mountain, the motor boat ran up to a little +wharf, almost completely hidden in greenery, and there Cecil and the boy +landed. Stuart did not fail to observe that the motor boat engineer +needed no directions as to the place of landing. Evidently this cove was +familiar. + +On going ashore, without a word of explanation to the boy, Cecil led the +way to a small hut, not far from the beach. When, in response to a +knock, the door opened, he said, in Spanish: + +"Ignacio, this American boy is going to Havana. You will see that he +does not get lost on the way!" + +"Si, Senor," was the only reply, the fisherman--for so he +appeared--evincing no surprise at the sudden appearance of Cecil at his +door, nor at his abrupt command. This absence of surprise or question +was the strongest possible proof of the extent of the Englishman's +power, and Stuart found himself wondering to what extent this +conspirator's web extended over the West Indies. + +A phrase or two, when they were walking together through the jungle, +after the parachute descent, had shown Stuart that the Englishman was +especially well acquainted with the flora and fauna of Jamaica. He must +possess powerful friends in Haiti, or he could never have reached the +Citadel, to arrive at which point both Manuel and Leborge had been +compelled to employ tortuous methods, even to disguise. The motor boat +awaiting him in the Haitian jungle showed an uncanny knowledge of that +locality. He had mentioned that he knew the Isle of Tortugas. He was +evidently known on the Cuban coast. This plot, whatever it might be, was +assuredly of far-reaching importance, if one of the plotters found it +necessary to weave a web that embraced all the nearby islands. + +"I'm glad I didn't promise not to tell about it," muttered the boy, as +he watched Cecil stride away without even a word of farewell, "for I +miss my guess if there isn't something brewing to make trouble for the +United States." + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +A CUBAN REBEL + + +Stuart stood with the supposed fisherman at the door of the hut until +the throbbing of the motor boat's engine had died away in the distance. +Then, American fashion, he turned to the brown-skinned occupant with an +air of authority. + +"Who is this man Cecil?" he asked. The phrase began boldly, but as he +caught the other's glance, the last couple of words dragged. + +Brown-skinned this fisherman might be, but the dark eyes were keen and +appraising. Stuart, who was no fool, realized that his new host--or, was +it captor?--was more than he seemed. At the same time, the boy +remembered that he was in rags and that his own skin was stained brown. +Yet the fisherman answered his question courteously. + +"Does not the young Senor know him? Senor Cecil is an Englishman, and +wealthy." + +"But what does he do?" persisted Stuart. + +The other shrugged his shoulders. + +"Can anyone tell what wealthy Englishmen do?" he queried. "They are all +a little mad." + +The boy held his tongue. This evasive reply was evidence enough that he +would not secure any information by questioning. Also, Stuart realized +that anyone whom the Englishman trusted was not likely to be +loose-mouthed. + +"Senor Cecil said you were an American," the fisherman continued, "he +meant by that----" + +"Probably he meant that he knew I'd like to get this brown off my skin," +declared Stuart, realizing that his disguise was unavailing now. "Have +you any soap-weed root?" + +The Cuban bent his head and motioned the boy to enter the hut. It was +small and clean, but did not have the atmosphere of use. Stuart guessed +that probably it was only employed as a blind and wondered how his host +had come to know of the arrival of the motor boat. Then, remembering +that the sound of the motor boat's engine had been heard for several +moments, as it departed from the cove, he thought that perhaps the noise +of the "chug-chug" would be a sufficient signal of its coming, for, +surely, no other motor boats would have any reason for entering so +hidden a place. + +"If the young Senor will add a few drops from this bottle to the water," +commented his host, "the stain will come out quicker." + +Stuart stared at the man. The suggestion added to the strangeness of the +situation. The presence of chemicals in a fisherman's hut tallied with +the boy's general idea that this man must hold a post of some +importance in the plot. But he made no comment. + +While he was scrubbing himself thoroughly, so that his skin might show +white once more, the fisherman prepared a simple but hearty meal. His +ablutions over, Stuart sat down to the table with great readiness, for, +though he had joined Cecil in a cold snack on the motor boat, the boy +had passed through thirty-six hours of the most trying excitement, since +his departure from Millot the morning of the day before. The food was +good and plentiful, and when Stuart had stowed away all he could hold, +drowsiness came over him, and his head began to nod. + +"When do we go to bed?" he asked with a yawn. + +The fisherman motioned to a string-bed in the corner. + +"Whenever the young Senor wishes," was the reply. + +"And you?" + +"Did you not hear Senor Cecil say that I was to be sure you did not get +lost?" He smiled. "You might have dreams, Senor, and walk in your sleep. +When Senor Cecil says 'Watch!' one stays awake." + +At the same time, with a deft movement, he pinioned Stuart's arms, and +searched him thoroughly, taking away his revolver and pocket knife. No +roughness was shown, but the searching was done in a businesslike +manner, and Stuart offered no resistance. As a matter of fact, he was +too sleepy, and even the bravest hero might be cowed if he were fairly +dropping for weariness. Stuart obediently sought the string-bed, and, a +few seconds later, was fast asleep. + +It was daylight when he awoke. Breakfast was on the table and the boy +did as much justice to the breakfast as he had to the supper. With rest, +his spirits and energy had returned, but he was practically helpless +without his revolver. Besides, on this desolate bit of beach on the +eastern end of Cuba, even if he could escape from his captor, he would +be marooned. Such money as the boy possessed was secreted in Cap +Haitien, most of his friends lived in Western Cuba. If this fisherman +were indeed to aid him to get to Havana, nothing would suit him better. +All through the meal he puzzled over the fisherman's rough mode of life, +and yet his perfect Spanish and courtly manners. + +"If the young Senor will accompany me to the stable?" suggested his +host, when the meal was over, the mild words being backed by an +undertone of considerable authority. Stuart would have liked to protest, +for he was feeling chipper and lively, but, just as he was about to +speak, he remembered Andy's remark, on board the motor boat, about "food +for fishes." Probably Cecil's allies were ready for any kind of +bloodshed, and the boy judged that he would be wise to avoid trouble. He +followed without a word. + +The stables were of good size and well kept, out of all proportion to +the hut, confirming Stuart's suspicion that a house of some pretensions +was hidden in the forest nearby. A fairly good horse was hitched to a +stoutly-built light cart and the journey began. The driver took a rarely +traveled trail, but, at one point, an opening in the trees showed a snug +little town nestling by a landlocked harbor of unusual beauty. + +"What place is that?" queried Stuart, though not expecting a response. + +To his surprise, the driver answered promptly. + +"That, Senor," he said, "is Baracoa, the oldest town in Cuba, and the +only one that tourists seldom visit." + +Whereupon, breaking a long silence, Vellano--for so he had given his +name to Stuart--proceeded to tell the early history of Eastern Cuba with +a wealth of imagery and a sense of romance that held the boy spellbound. +He told of the peaceful Arawaks, the aboriginal inhabitants of the +Greater Antilles, agriculturists and eaters of the cassava plant, +growers and weavers of cotton, even workers of gold. He told of the +invasion of the meat-eating and cannibal Caribs from the Lesser +Antilles, of the wars between the Arawaks and Caribs, and of the +hostility between the two races when Columbus first landed on the +island. He told of the enslavement of the peaceful Arawaks by the +Spaniards, and of the savage massacres by Caribs upon the earliest +Spanish settlements. + +From that point Vellano broke into a song of praise of the gallantry of +the early Spanish adventurers and conquerors, the conquistadores of the +West Indies, who carried the two banners of "Christianity" and +"Civilization" to the islands of the Caribbean Sea. He lamented the +going of the Spaniards, took occasion to fling reproach at France for +her maladministration and loss of Haiti, and, as Stuart was careful to +observe, he praised England and Holland as colonizing countries as +heartily as he condemned the United States for her ignorance of +colonization problems. + +This fitted in exactly with Stuart's opinion of the plot of which Cecil +was the head. Here, in Vellano, was an underling--or another +conspirator, as it might be--favorable to England, resentful of the +United States, and probably in a spirit of revolt against existing +conditions in his own country. The boy decided to test this out by +bringing up the subject a little later in the journey. + +Presently the road turned to the westward, following the valley of the +Toa River. Duala, Bernardo and Morales were passed, the road climbing +all the time, the mountain ranges of Santa de Moa and Santa Verde rising +sentinel-like on either side. The trail was obviously one for the saddle +rather than for a cart, but Stuart rightly guessed that Vellano was +afraid that his captive might escape if he had a separate mount. + +They stayed that night at a small, but well-kept house, hidden in the +forests. The owner seemed to be a simple guarijo or cultivator, but was +very hospitable. Yet, when Stuart, tossing restlessly in the night, +chanced to open his eyes, he saw the guarijo sitting near his bed, +smoking cigarettes, and evidently wide awake and watching. It was clear +that he was keeping guard while Vellano slept. Certainly, the Englishman +had no need to complain that his orders were unheeded! + +Taking up the way, next morning, the road became little more than a +trail, through forests as dense as the Haitian jungle. The guarijo +walked ahead of them with his machete, clearing away the undergrowth +sufficiently for the horse and cart to get through. From time to time, +Velanno took his place with the machete and the guarijo sat beside the +boy. Never for a moment was Stuart left alone. + +It was a wild drive. The trail threaded its way between great Ceiba +trees, looming weird and gigantic with their buttressed trunks, all +knotted and entwined with hanging lianas and curiously hung with air +plants dropping from the branches. Gay-colored birds flashed in the +patches of sunlight that filtered through the trees. The Cuban +boa-constrictor or Maja, big and cowardly, wound its great length away, +and the air was full of the rich--and not always pleasant--insect life +characteristic of the Cuban eastern forests. + +Approaching San Juan de la Caridad, the trail widened. Machete work +being no longer necessary, the guarijo was enabled to return, which he +did with scarcely more than an "adios" to Vellano. + +The trail now skirted the edges of deep ravines and hung dizzily on the +borders of precipices of which the sharply and deeply cut Maestra +Mountains are so full. The forest was a little more open. Thanks to the +information given him by Cecil during their walk through the Haitian +jungle, after the parachute descent, Stuart recognized mahogany, lignum +vitae, granadilla, sweet cedar, logwood, sandalwood, red sanders and +scores of other hardwood trees of the highest commercial value, standing +untouched. Passing an unusually fine clump of Cuban mahogany, Stuart +turned to his companion with the exclamation: + +"There must be millions of dollars' worth of rare woods, here!" + +"Cuba is very rich," came the prompt reply, coupled with the grim +comment, "but Cubans very poor." + +"They are poor," agreed Stuart, "and in this part of the island they +seem a lot poorer than in the Pinar plains, where I lived before. Why? +Here, nine out of every ten of the guarijos we've seen, live like hogs +in a sty. Most of the huts we've passed aren't fit for human beings to +live in. Why is it?" + +Stuart had expected, and, as it turned out, rightly, that this opening +would give Vellano the opportunity to express himself on Cuban +conditions as he saw them. Stuart was eager for this, for he wanted to +find out where his companion stood, and hoped to find out whether he was +ripe for revolt. But he was surprised at the bitterness and vehemence of +the protest. + +"Ah! The Rats that gnaw at the people!" Vellano cried. "The Rats that +hold political jobs and grow fat! The government Rats who care for +nothing except to make and collect taxes to keep the people poor! The +job-holders of this political party, or that political party, or the +other political party! What are they? Rats, all! Tax-Rats! + +"Why do the guarijos live like hogs in a sty? The Rats ordain it. It is +the taxes, all on account of the taxes. Consider! All this land you see, +all undeveloped land, belonging, it may be, to only a few wealthy +people, pays no tax, no tax at all. But if a man wishes to make a +living, settles on the ground and begins to cultivate it, that day, yes, +that hour, the owner will demand a high rent. And why will he ask this +rent? Because, Young Senor, as soon as land is cultivated, the +government puts a high tax on it. The Rats punish the farmers for +improving the country. + +"What happens? I can tell you what happens in this province of Oriente. +In the province of Camaguey, too. The small farmer finds a piece of good +land. He settles on it--what you Americans call 'squatting'--and, if he +is wise, he says nothing to the owner. Perhaps he will not be found out +for a year or two, perhaps more, but, when he is found, he must pay a +big rent and the owner a big tax. Perhaps the guarijo cannot pay. Then +he must go away. + +"Generally he goes. In some other corner, hidden away, he finds another +piece of land. He squats on that, too, hoping that the tax-Rats may not +find him. He does not cultivate much land, for he may be driven off next +day. He does not build a decent house, for he may have to abandon it +before the week's end. + +"Suppose he does really wish to rent land, build a house and have a +small plantation, and is willing to pay the rent, however high it be. +Why then, Young Senor, he will learn that it will be many years before +he finds out whether the man to whom he is paying the rent is really the +owner of the land. And if he wishes to buy, it is worse than a lottery. +In this part of the island no surveys have been made--except a circular +survey with no edges marked--and land titles are all confused. Then the +lawyer-Rats thrive." + +"It's not like that near Havana," put in Stuart. + +"Havana is not Cuba. Only three kinds of people live in Havana: the +Rats, the tourists, and the people who live off the Rats and the +tourists. They spend, and Cuba suffers. + +"For the land tax, Senor, is not all! Nearly all the money that the +government spends--that the Rats waste--comes from the tax on imports. +No grain is grown in Cuba, and there is no clothing industry. All our +food and all our clothes are imported, and it is the guarijo who, at +the last, must pay that tax. Young Senor, did you know that, per head of +population, the poor Cuban is taxed for the necessities of life imported +into this island three and a half times as much as the rich American is +taxed for the goods entering the United States? + +"Even that is not all. Here, in Cuba, we grow sugar, tobacco, +pineapples, and citrus fruit, like oranges, grapefruit and lemons. Does +America, which made us a republic, help us? No, Young Senor, it hurts +us, hinders us, cripples us. In Hawaii, in Porto Rico, in the southern +part of the United States, live our sugar, tobacco and fruit +competitors. Their products enter American markets without tax. Ours are +taxed. What happens? Cuba, one of the most fertile islands of the West +Indies is poor. The Cuban cultivator, who is willing to be a hard +worker, gives up the fight in disgust and either tries in some way to +get the dollars from the Americans who come here, or else he helps to +ruin his country by getting a political job." + +Stuart, listening carefully to this criticism, noticed in Vellano's +voice a note of hatred whenever he used the word "American." Connecting +this with his own suspicion that Cecil was head of a conspiracy against +the United States and that this supposed fisherman was evidently the +Englishman's tool, he asked, casually: + +"Then you don't think that the United States did a good thing in +freeing Cuba from Spain?" he hazarded. + +To the boy's surprise, his companion burst out approvingly. + +"Yes, yes, a magnificent thing! But they did not know it, and they did +not know why! The Americans thought they were championing an oppressed +people struggling for justice. Nothing of the sort. They took the side +of one party struggling for jobs against another party struggling for +jobs. But the result was magnificent. Under the last American Military +Governor, Leonard Wood, Cuba advanced more in two years than she had in +two centuries. When the Americans went away, though, it was worse than +if they had never come. Cubans did not make Cuba a republic, Americans +made Cuba a republic and then abandoned us. Of course, confusion +followed. And in the revolution of 1906 and other revolutions, the +Americans meddled, and yet did nothing. It is idle to deny that American +influence is strong here! But what does it amount to? We are neither +really free, nor really possessed." + +"But what do you want?" queried Stuart. "I don't seem to understand. You +don't want to be a possession of Spain, you don't want to be an American +colony, and you don't want to be a republic. What do you want?" + +"Do I know?" came the vehement reply. "Does anyone in Cuba know? Does +anyone, anywhere, know? Remember, Young Senor, the Cuban guarijo does +not feel himself to be a citizen of Cuba, as an American farmer feels +himself a citizen of the United States. He has been brought up under +Spanish rule, and is, himself, Spanish in feeling. + +"What does he know about a republic? Unless he can get a political job +for himself, unless he sees the chance to be a Rat, he cares nothing +about politics, but he will fight, at any time, under any cause, for any +leader who will promise him a bigger price for his sugar, his tobacco or +his fruit. The World War helped him, for sugar was worth gold. But +now--if the Cuban wishes to say anything to America, he must do it +through the Sugar Trust, the Tobacco Trust or the Fruit Trust. + +"What!" Vellano flamed out, "The United States will not answer us when +we pray, nor listen when we speak? Then we will make her hear!" + +Upon which, suddenly realizing that in this direct threat he might have +said too much, Vellano dropped the subject. Nothing that Stuart could +suggest would tempt him to say anything more. + +The boy had been brought up in Cuba, and, though he had never been in +this eastern part of the island, he knew that a great deal of what his +companion had said was true. At the same time, he realized that Vellano +had not done justice to the modern improvements in Cuba, to the +extension of the railroads, the building of highways, the improvement of +port facilities, the establishment of sugar refineries, the spread of +foreign agricultural colonies, the improved sanitation and water supply +and the development of the island under foreign capital. It was as +foolish, Stuart realized, for Vellano to judge all Cuba from the wild +forest-land of Oriente as it is for the casual tourist to judge the +whole of Cuba from the casinos of Havana. + +Cuba is not small. Averaging the width of the State of New Jersey, it +stretches as far as the distance from New York to Indianapolis. Its +eastern and western ends are entirely different. Originally they were +two islands, now joined by a low plain caused by the rising of the +sea-bottom. + +Climate, soil and the character of the people vary extremely in the +several provinces. High mountains alternate with low plains, dense +tropical forests are bordered by wastes and desert palm-barrens. Eighty +per cent of the population are Cubans--which mean Spanish and negro +half-breeds with a touch of Indian blood, and of all shades of +color--fifteen per cent Spanish and less than two per cent American. + +Foreign colonies are numerous, though small. They are to be found in all +the provinces, and exhibit these same extremes. About one-half have sunk +to a desolation of misery and ruin, one-half have risen to success. As +Stuart once remembered his father having said: + +"I will never advise an American, with small capital, to come to Cuba. +If he will devote the same amount of work to a piece of land in the +United States that he will have to give to the land here, he will be +more prosperous, for what he may lose in the lesser fertility of the +land, he will gain by the nearness of the market. There are scores of +derelicts in this island who would have led happy and useful lives in +the United States." + +Crossing the hills--by a trail which threatened to shake the cart to +pieces at every jolt--the two travelers reached Palenquito, and thence +descended by a comparatively good road to Vesa Grande and on to Rio +Seco. A mile or so out of the town, Stuart saw the gleaming lines of the +railway and realized that this was to be the end of the long drive. + +"I have no money for a trip to Havana!" he remarked. + +"That is a pity," answered Vellano gravely, who, since he had searched +the boy's pockets, knew that only a few dollars were to be found +therein, "but Senor Cecil said you were to go to Havana. Therefore, you +will go." + +There seemed no reply to this, but Stuart noted that, at the station, +the supposed fisherman produced money enough for two tickets. + +"Are you coming, too?" queried Stuart, in surprise. + +"Senor Cecil said that I was to see that you did not get lost on the +way," came the quiet answer. + +Certainly, Stuart thought, the Englishman's word was a word of power. + +From Rio Seco, the train passed at first through heavy tropical forests, +such as those in the depths of which Vellano and Stuart had just driven, +but these were thinned near the railroad by lumbering operations. The +main line was joined a little distance west of Guantanamo. Thence they +traveled over the high plateau land of Central Oriente and Camaguey, on +which many foreign colonies have settled, the train only occasionally +touching the woeful palm barrens which stretch down from the northern +coast. + +Vellano, who seemed singularly well informed, kept up a running fire of +comment all the way, most of his utterances being colored by a +resentment of existing conditions--for which he blamed the United +States--and containing a vague hint of some great change to come. + +At Ciego de Avila, where a stay of a couple of hours was made, Stuart's +companion pointed out the famous _trocha_ or military barrier which had +been erected by the Spaniards as a protection against the movements of +Cuban insurgents, and which ran straight across the whole island. + +This barrier was a clearing, half-a-mile wide; a narrow-gauge railway +ran along its entire length, as did also a high barbed-wire fence. Every +two-thirds of a mile, small stone forts had been built. Each of these +was twenty feet square, with a corrugated iron tower above, equipped +with a powerful searchlight. The forts themselves were pierced with +loopholes for rifle fire and the only entrance was by a door twelve feet +above ground, impossible of entrance after the ladder had been drawn up +from within. The forts were connected by a telephone line. They have all +fallen into ruins and are half swallowed up by the jungle, while the +half mile clearing is being turned into small sugar plantations. + +Beyond Ciego, the train passed again through a zone of tropical forest +lands and then dropped into the level plains of Santa Clara, the center +of the sugar industry of Cuba. From there it bore northward toward +Matanzas, through a belt of bristling pineapple fields. + +One station before arriving at Havana, Stuart's companion, who showed +signs of fatigue--which were not surprising since he had wakened at +every stop that the train had made during the night to see that the boy +did not get off--prepared to alight. + +"You're not going on to Havana?" queried Stuart. + +"I shall step off the train here after it has started," replied Vellano. +"There will be no opportunity for you to do the same until the train +stops at the capital. Senor Cecil said only that I was to see that you +did not get lost on the way. He said nothing about what you should do in +Havana. Possibly he has plans of his own." + +The train began to move. + +"Adios, Young Senor," quoth the supposed fisherman, and dropped off the +train. + +During the long train trip, and especially when lying awake in his +berth, Stuart had plenty of time to recall the events of the four days +since he first met Manuel on the streets of Cap Haitien and had offered +himself as a guide to the Citadel of the Black Emperor. Much had passed +since then, and this period of inaction gave the boy time to view the +events in their proper perspective. + +The more he thought of them, the more serious they appeared and the more +Stuart became convinced that the plot was directed against United States +authority in Haiti. Perhaps, also, it would attack American commercial +interests in Cuba. As the train approached Havana, Stuart worked himself +up into a fever of anxiety, and, the instant the train stopped, he +dashed out of the carriage and into the streets feeling that he, and he +alone, could save the United States from an international tragedy. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +A NOSE FOR NEWS + + +Through the maze of the older streets of Havana, with their two-story +houses plastered and colored in gay tints, Stuart rushed, regardlessly. +He knew Havana, but, even if he had not known it, the boy's whole soul +was set on getting the ear of the United States Consul. It was not until +he was almost at the door of the consulate that his promise to Cecil +recurred to him as a reminder that he must be watchful how he spoke. + +At the door of the consulate, however, he found difficulty of admission. +This was to be expected. His appearance was unprepossessing. He was +still attired in the ragged clothes tied up with string, and the aged +boots he had got Leon to procure for him, to complete his disguise as a +Haitian boy. Moreover, while the soap-weed wash at the fisherman's hut +had whitened his skin, his face and hands still retained a smoky pallor +which would take some time to wear off. + +In order to gain admission at all, Stuart was compelled to give some +hint as to his reasons for wishing to see the consul, and, as he did not +wish to divulge anything of importance to the clerk, his explanation +sounded as extravagant as it was vague. His father's name would have +helped him, but Stuart did not feel justified in using it. For all he +knew, his father might have reasons for not wishing to be known as +conducting any such investigations. This compulsion of reserve confused +the lad, and it was not surprising that the clerk went into the +vice-consul's office with the remark: + +"There's a ragged boy out here, who passes for white, with some +wild-eyed story he says he has to tell you." + +"I suppose I've got to see him," said the harassed official. "Send him +in!" + +This introduction naturally prejudiced the vice-consul against his +visitor, and Stuart's appearance did not call for confidence. Moreover, +the boy's manner was against him. He was excited and resentful over his +brusque treatment by the clerk. Boy-like, he exaggerated his own +importance. He was bursting with his subject. + +In his embarrassed eagerness to capture the vice-consul's attention and +to offset the unhappy first impression of his appearance, Stuart blurted +out an incoherent story about secret meetings, and buried treasure and +conspiracy, and plots in Haiti, all mixed together. His patriotic +utterances, though absolutely sincere, rang with a note of insincerity +to an official to whom the letters "U. S." were not the "open sesame" of +liberty, but endless repetitions of his daily routine. + +"What wild-cat yarn is this!" came the interrupting remark. + +Stuart stopped, hesitated and looked bewildered. It had not occurred to +him that the consular official would not be as excited as himself. He +spluttered exclamations. + +"There's a Haitian, and a Cuban, and an Englishman in a conspiracy +against the United States! And they meet in a haunted citadel! And one +said I was to kill the other! And I got away in a parachute. And they're +going to do something, revolution, I believe, and----" + +Undoubtedly, if the vice-consul had been willing to listen, and patient +enough to calm the boy's excitement and unravel the story, its value +would have been apparent. But his skeptical manner only threw Stuart +more off his balance. The vice-consul was, by temperament, a man of +routine, an efficient official but lacking in imagination. Besides, it +was almost the end of office hours, and the day had been hot and sultry. +He was only half-willing to listen. + +"Tell your story, straight, from the beginning," he snapped. + +Stuart tried to collect himself a little. + +"It was the night of the Full Moon," he began, dramatically. "There was +a voodoo dance, and the tom-tom began to beat, and----" + +This was too much! + +"You've been seeing too many movies, or reading dime-novel trash," the +official flung back. "Besides, this isn't the place to come to. Go and +tell your troubles to the consul at Port-au-Prince." + +He rang to have the boy shown out. + +The next visitor to the vice-consul, who had been cooling his heels in +the outer office while Stuart was vainly endeavoring to tell his story, +was the Special Correspondent of a New York paper. It was his habit to +drop in from time to time to see the vice-consul and to get the latest +official news to be cabled to his paper. + +"I wish you'd been here half-an-hour ago, Dinville, and saved me from +having to listen to a blood-and-thunder yarn about pirates and plots and +revolutions and the deuce knows what!" the official exclaimed +petulantly. + +"From that kid who just went out?" queried the newspaper man casually, +nosing a story, but not wanting to seem too eager. + +"Yes, the little idiot! You'd think, from the way he talked, that the +West Indies was just about ready to blow up!" + +His bile thus temporarily relieved, the official turned to the matter in +hand, and proceeded to give out such items of happenings at the +consulate as would be of interest to the general public. + +The newspaper man made his stay as brief as he decently could. He wanted +to trace that boy. Finding out from the clerk that the boy had come in +from the east by train, and, having noted for himself that the lad was +in rags, the Special Correspondent--an old-time New York reporter--felt +sure that the holder of the story must be hungry and that he did not +have much money. Accordingly, he searched the nearest two or three cheap +restaurants, and, sure enough, found Stuart in the third one he entered. + +Ordering a cup of coffee and some pastry, the reporter seated himself at +Stuart's table and deftly got into conversation with him. Inventing, for +the moment, a piece of news which would turn the topic to Haiti, +Dinville succeeding in making the boy tell him, as though by accident, +that he had recently been in Haiti. + +"So!" exclaimed the reporter. "Well, you seem to be a pretty keen +observer. What did you think of things in Haiti when you left?" + +Stuart was flattered--as what boy would not have been--by this +suggestion that his political opinions were of importance, and he gave +himself all the airs of a grown-up, as he voiced his ideas. Many of them +were of real value, for, unconsciously, Stuart was quoting from the +material he had found in his father's papers, when he had rescued them +from Hippolyte. + +Dinville led him on, cautiously, tickling his vanity the while, and, +before the meal was over, Stuart felt that he had found a friend. He +accepted an invitation to go up to the news office, so that his recently +made acquaintance might take some notes of his ideas. + +The news-gatherer had not been a reporter for nothing, and, before ten +minutes had passed Stuart suddenly realized that he was on the verge of +telling the entire story, even to those things which he knew must be +held back. Cecil's warning recurred to him, and he pulled up short. + +"I guess I hadn't better say any more," he declared, suddenly, and +wondered how much he had betrayed himself into telling. + +Persuasion and further flattery failed, and the newspaper man saw that +he must change his tactics. + +"You were willing enough to talk to the vice-consul," he suggested. + +"Yes, but I wasn't going to tell him everything, either," the boy +retorted. + +"You're not afraid to?" + +Stuart's square chin protruded in its aggressive fashion. + +"Afraid!" he declared contemptuously. Then he paused, and continued, +more slowly, "Well, in a way, maybe I am afraid. I don't know all I've +got hold of. Why--it might sure enough bring on War!" + +Once on his guard, Stuart was as unyielding as granite. He feared he had +said too much already. The reporter, shrewdly, suggested that some of +Stuart's political ideas might be saleable newspaper material, handed +him a pencil and some copy-paper. + +The boy, again flattered by this subtle suggestion that he was a +natural-born writer, covered sheet after sheet of the paper. Dinville +read it, corrected a few minor mistakes here and there, counted the +words, and taking some money from his pocket, counted out a couple of +bills and pushed them over to the boy. + +"What's this for?" asked Stuart. + +"For the story!" answered the reporter in well-simulated surprise. +"Regular space rates, six dollars a column. I'm not allowed to give +more, if that's what you mean." + +"Oh, no!" was the surprised reply. "I just meant--I was ready to do that +for nothing." + +"What for?" replied his new friend. "Why shouldn't you be paid for it, +just as well as anyone else? Come in tomorrow, maybe we can dope out +some other story together." + +A little more urging satisfied the rest of Stuart's scruples and he +walked out from the office into the streets of Havana tingling with +pleasure to his very toes. This was the first money he had ever earned +and it fired him with enthusiasm to become a writer. + +As soon as he had left, the reporter looked over the sheets of +copy-paper, covered with writing in a boyish hand. + +"Not so bad," he mused. "The kid may be able to write some day," +and--dropped the sheets into the waste-paper basket. + +Why had he paid for them, then? Dinville knew what he was about. + +He reached for a sheet of copy-paper and wrote the following dispatch-- + + WHALE - OF - BIG - STORY. - INFORMANT - A - KID. - WORTH - SENDING + - KID - NEW - YORK - PAPER'S - EXPENSE - IF - AUTHORIZED. - + DINVILLE. + +He filed it in the cable office without delay. + +Before midnight he got a reply. + + IF - KID - HAS - THE - GOODS - SEND - NEW - YORK - AT - ONCE. + +"Here," said Dinville aloud, as he read the cablegram, "is where Little +Willie was a wise guy in buying that kid's story. He'll land in here +tomorrow like a bear going to a honey-tree." + +His diagnosis was correct to the letter. Early the next morning Stuart +came bursting in, full of importance. He had spruced up a little, though +the four dollars he had got from Dinville the night before was not +sufficient for new clothes. + +"Say," he said, the minute he entered the office, "Mr. Dinville, I've +got a corker!" + +"So?" queried the reporter, lighting a cigar and putting his feet on the +desk in comfortable attitude for listening. "Fire away!" + +With avid enthusiasm, Stuart plunged into a wild and woolly yarn which +would have been looked upon with suspicion by the editor of a +blood-and-thunder twenty-five-cent series. + +The reporter cut him off abruptly. + +"Kid," he said dryly, "the newspaper game is on the level. I don't say +that you don't have to give a twist to a story, every once in a while, +so that it'll be interesting, but it's got to be news. + +"Get this into your skull if you're ever going to be a newspaper man: +Every story you write has got to have happened, actually happened, to +somebody, somewhere, at some place, at a certain time, for some reason. +If it hasn't, it isn't a newspaper story. What's more, it must be either +unusual or important, or it hasn't any value. Again, it must have +happened recently, or it isn't news. And there's another rule. One big +story is worth more than a lot of small ones. + +"Now, look here. You've got a big story, a real news story, up your +sleeve. It happened to you. It occurred at an unusual place. It has only +just happened. It's of big importance. And the why seems to be a +mystery. If you were a A Number One newspaper man, it would be your job +to get on the trail of that story and run it down." + +And then the reporter conceived the idea of playing on Stuart's sense of +patriotism. + +"That way," he went on, "it happens that there's no class of people that +does more for its country than the newspaper men. They show up the +crooks, and they can point out praise when public praise is due. They +expose the grafters and help to elect the right man to office. They root +out public evils and push reform measures through. They're Democracy, in +type." + +The words fanned the fire of Stuart's enthusiasm for a newspaper +career. + +"Yes," he said, excitedly, "yes, I can see that!" + +"Take this story of yours--this plot that you speak about and are afraid +to tell. You think it's planned against the United States'?" + +"I'm sure it is!" + +"Well, how are you going to run it down? How are you going to get all +the facts in the case? Who can you trust to help you in this? Where are +you going to get all the money that it will take? Why, Kid, if these +conspirators you talk of have anything big up their sleeve, they could +buy people right and left to put you off the track and you'd never get +anywhere! On your own showing, they've just plumped you down here in +Havana, where there's nothing doing." + +"They sure have," admitted Stuart ruefully. + +"Of course they have. Now, if you had one of the big American newspapers +backing you up, one that you could put confidence in, it would be just +as if you had the United States back of you, and you'd be part and +parcel of that big power which is the trumpet-voice of Democracy from +the Atlantic to the Pacific--the Press!" + +The boy's eyes began to glisten with eagerness. Every word was striking +home. + +"But how could I do that?" + +"You don't have to. It's already done!" + +Stuart stared at his friend, in bewilderment. + +"See here," he said, and he threw the cablegram on the table. "That +paper is willing to pay any price for a big story, if it can be proved +authentic. Proved, mind you, documents and all the rest of it. I cabled +them to know if they wanted to see you, and, if they found what you had +was the real goods, whether they would stake you. They cabled back, +right away, that you were to go up there." + +"Up where?" + +"N'York." + +"But I haven't money enough to go to New York!" protested Stuart. + +"Who said anything about money? That's up to the paper. Your expenses +both ways, and your expenses while you're in N'York, will all be paid." + +"Are you sure?" + +"Seeing that I'll pay your trip up there myself, and charge it up on my +own expense account, of course I'm sure. There's a boat going tomorrow." + +"But you couldn't get a berth for tomorrow," protested Stuart, though he +was weakening. He had never been to New York, and the idea of a voyage +there, with his fare and all his expenses paid, tempted him. Besides, as +the reporter had suggested, it would be almost impossible for him to +continue the quest of Manuel, Leborge and Cecil alone. More than that, +the boy felt that, if he could get a big metropolitan paper to back him, +he would be in a position to find and rescue his father. + +"Can't get a berth? Watch me!" said the reporter, who was anxious to +impress upon the lad the importance of the press. And, sure enough, he +came back an hour later, with a berth arranged for Stuart in the +morrow's steamer. He also advanced money enough to the boy for a +complete outfit of clothes. An afternoon spent in a Turkish bath +restored to the erstwhile disguised lad his formerly white skin. + +One sea-voyage is very much like another. Stuart made several +acquaintances on board, one of them a Jamaican, and from his traveling +companion, Stuart learned indirectly that Great Britain's plan of +welding her West India possessions into a single colony was still a live +issue. The boy, himself, remembering how easily he had been pumped by +Dinville, was careful not to say a word about the purpose of his trip. + +Thanks to Dinville's exact instructions, Stuart found the newspaper +office without difficulty. The minute he stepped out of the elevator and +on the floor, a driving expectancy possessed him. The disorderliness, +the sense of tension, the combination of patient waiting and driving +speed, the distant and yet perceptible smell of type metal and printers' +ink, in short, the atmosphere of a newspaper, struck him with a sense of +desire. + +Although Stuart's instructions were to see the Managing Editor, the +young fellow who came out to see what he wanted, brought him up to the +City Editor's desk. The latter looked up quickly. + +"Are you the boy Dinville cabled about?" + +"Yes, sir," the boy answered. Here, though the City Editor was ten +times more commanding a personality than the vice-consul, the boy felt +more at ease. + +"Ever do any reporting?" + +"No, sir." + +"What's this story? Just the main facts!" + +"Are you Mr. ----" the boy mentioned the name of the Managing Editor. + +"I'll act for him," said the City Editor promptly. + +Stuart's square chin went out. + +"I came up to see him personally," he answered. + +The City Editor knew men. + +"That's the way to get an interview, my son," he said. "All right, I'll +take you in to the Chief. If things don't go your way, come and see me +before you go. I might try you on space, just to see how you shape. +Dinville generally knows what he's talking about." + +Stuart thanked him, and very gratefully, for he realized that the curt +manner was merely that of an excessively busy man with a thousand things +on his mind. A moment later, he found himself in the shut-in office of +the Managing Editor. + +"You are a youngster," he said with a cordial smile, emphasizing the +verb, and shaking hands with the boy. "Well, that's the time to begin. +Now, Lad, I've time enough to hear all that you've got to say that is +important, and I haven't a second to listen to any frills. Tell +everything that you think you have a right to tell and begin at the +beginning." + +During the voyage from Havana, Stuart had rehearsed this scene. He did +not want to make the same mistake that he had made with the vice-consul, +and he told his story as clearly as he could, bearing in mind the "Who," +"What," "Why," "When" and "Where" of Dinville's advice. + +The Managing Editor nodded approvingly. + +"I think," he said reflectively, "you may develop the news sense. Of +course, you've told a good deal of stuff which is quite immaterial, and, +likely enough, some of the good bits you've left out. That's to be +expected. It takes a great many years of training to make a first-class +reporter. + +"Now, let me see if I can guess a little nearer to the truth of this +plot than you did. + +"You say that the only three phrases you can be sure that you heard were +'Mole St. Nicholas,' 'naval base' and 'Panama.' That isn't much. Yet I +think it is fairly clear, at that. The Mole St. Nicholas is a harbor in +the north of Haiti which would make a wonderful naval base--in fact, +there has already been some underground talk about it--and such a naval +base would be mighty close to the Panama Canal. Suppose we start with +the theory that this is what your conspirator chaps have in mind. + +"Now, my boy, we have to find out some explanation for the meeting in so +remote a place as the Citadel. Those three men wouldn't have gone to +all that trouble and risked all that chance of being discovered and +exposed unless there were some astonishingly important reasons. What can +these be? Well, if we are right in thinking that a naval base is what +these fellows are after, it is sure that they would need a hinterland of +country behind it. The Mole St. Nicholas, as I remember, is at the end +of a peninsula formed by a range of mountains, the key to which is La +Ferriere. So, to make themselves safe, they would need to control both +at the same time. Hence the necessity of knowing exactly the defensive +position of the Citadel. How does that sound to you?" + +"I'd never thought of it, sir," said Stuart, "but the way you put it, +just must be right. I was an idiot not to think of it myself." + +"Age and experience count for something, Youngster," said the Managing +Editor, smiling. "Don't start off by thinking that you ought to know as +much as trained men." + +Stuart flushed at the rebuke, for he saw that it was just. + +"Now," continued the Editor, pursuing his train of thought, "we have to +consider the personalities of the conspirators. You'll find, Stuart, if +you go into newspaper work, that one of the first things to do in any +big story, is to estimate, as closely as you can, the character of the +men or women who are acting in it. Newspaper work doesn't deal with cold +facts, like science, but with humanity, and humans act in queer ways, +sometimes. A good reporter has got to be a bit of a detective and a good +deal of a psychologist. He's got to have an idea how the cat is going to +jump, in order to catch him on the jump. + +"Now, so far, we know that the conspirators are at least three in +number. There may be more, but we know of three. One is a Haitian negro +politician. One is a Cuban, who, from your description, seems to be a +large-scale crook. One is an Englishman, and, in your judgment, he is of +a different type from the other two. Yet the fact that he seems to +possess an agent on the eastern shore of Cuba--which, don't forget, +faces the Mole St. Nicholas--seems to suggest that he's deep in the +plot." + +He puffed his pipe for a moment or two, and then continued, + +"Now, there are two powerful forces working underground in the West +Indies. One is the Spanish and negro combination, which desires to shake +off all the British, French and Dutch possessions, and to create a +Creole Empire of the Islands. The other is an English plan, to weld all +the British islands in the West Indies into a single Confederation and +to buy as many of the smaller isles from France and Holland as may seem +possible. Both are hostile to the extension of American power in the +Gulf of Mexico. Possibly, some European power is back of this plot. A +foreign naval base in the Mole St. Nicholas would be a menace to us, +and one on which Washington would not look very kindly. + +"So you see, Youngster, if such a thing as this were possible, it would +be a big story, and one that ought to be followed up very closely." + +"That's what Dinville seemed to think, sir," interposed the boy, "and I +told him I didn't have the money." + +"Nor have you the experience," added the Editor, dryly. "Money isn't any +good, if you don't know how to use it." + +He pondered for a moment. + +"I can't buy the information from you," he said, "because, so far, the +story isn't in shape to use, and I don't know when I will be able to use +it. Yet I do want to have an option on the first scoop on the story. You +know what a scoop is?" + +"No, sir." + +"A 'scoop' or a 'beat' means that one paper gets hold of a big story +before any other paper has it. It is like a journalistic triumph, if you +like, and a paper which gets 'scoops,' by that very fact, shows itself +more wide awake than its competitors. + +"Now, see here, Stuart. Suppose I agree to pay you a thousand dollars +for the exclusive rights to all that you find out about the story, at +what time it is ready for publication, and that I agree to put that +thousand dollars to your account for you to draw on for expenses. How +about that?" + +Stuart was taken aback. He fairly stuttered, + +"Why--sir, I--I----" + +The Editor smiled at the boy's excited delight. + +"You agree?" + +"Oh, yes, sir!" + +There was no mistaking the enthusiasm of the response. + +"Very good. Then, in addition to that, I'll pass the word that you're to +be put on the list for correspondence stuff. I'm not playing any +favorites, you understand! Whatever you send in will be used or thrown +out, according to its merits. And you'll be paid at the regular space +rates, six dollars a column. All I promise is that you shall have a look +in." + +"But that's--that's great!" + +"It's just a chance to show what you can do. If there's any stuff in you +at all, here is an opportunity for you to become a high-grade newspaper +man." + +"Then I'm really on the staff!" cried the boy, "I'm really and truly a +journalist?" + +The Managing Editor nodded. + +"Yes, if you like the word," he said, "make good, and you'll be really +and truly a journalist." + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +THE POISON TREES + + +For a couple of days, Stuart wandered about New York, partly +sight-seeing and partly on assignments in company with some of the +reporters of the paper. The City Editor wanted to determine whether the +boy had any natural aptitude for newspaper work. So Stuart chased around +one day with the man on the "police court run," another day he did +"hotels" and scored by securing an interview with a noted visitor for +whom the regular reporter had not time to wait. The boy was too young, +of course, to be sent on any assignments by himself, but one of the +older men took a fancy to the lad and took him along a couple of times, +when on a big story. + +Just a week later, on coming in to the office, Stuart was told that the +Managing Editor wanted to see him. As this was the summons for which he +had been waiting, Stuart obeyed with alacrity. The Managing Editor did +not motion him to a a chair, as before, so the boy stood. + +"First of all, Garfield----" and the boy noticed the use of the +surname--"I want to tell you that your father is safe. We've been +keeping the wires hot to Port-au-Prince and have found out that some +one resembling the description you gave me of your father commandeered a +sailing skiff at a small place near Jacamel and set off westward. Two +days afterward, he landed at Guantanamo and registered at a hotel as +'James Garfield.' He stayed there two days and then took the train for +Havana. So you don't need to worry over that, any more." + +"Thank you, sir," answered the boy, relieved, "I'm mighty glad to know." + +"Now," continued the Editor, "let us return to this question for which +we brought you here. According to your story, you heard the conspirators +say that their plans would be ready for fulfillment next spring." + +"Yes, sir," the boy agreed, "Leborge said that." + +"Good. Then there is no immediate need of pressing the case too closely. +It will be better to let the plans mature a little. A mere plot doesn't +mean much. News value comes in action. When something actually happens, +then, knowing what lies behind it, the story becomes big. + +"What we really want to find out is whether this plot--as it seems to +be--is just a matter between two or three men, or if it is widely spread +over all the islands of the West Indies. You're too young, as yet, for +anything like regular newspaper work, but the fact that you're not much +more than a youngster might be turned to advantage. No one would +suspect that you were in quest of political information. + +"So I'm going to suggest that you make a fairly complete tour of the +islands, this fall and early winter, just as if you were idling around, +apparently, but, at the same time, keeping your ears and your eyes open. +In order to give color to your roamings, you can write us some articles +on 'Social Life and the Color Line in the West Indies' as you happen to +see it. First-hand impressions are always valuable, and, perhaps, the +fact that you see them through a boy's eyes may give them a certain +novelty and freshness. Of course, the articles will probably have to be +rewritten in the office. By keeping a copy of the stuff you send, and +comparing it with the way the articles appear in the paper, you'll get a +fair training. + +"We'll probably handle these in the Sunday Edition, and I'm going to +turn you over to the Sunday Editor, to whom you'll report, in future." + +He nodded pleasantly to the boy in token of dismissal. + +"I wish you luck on your trip," he said, "and see that you send us in +the right kind of stuff!" + +Stuart thanked him heartily for his kindness, and went out, sorry that +he was not going to deal with the Chief himself. + +The Sunday Editor's office was a welter of confusion. As Stuart was to +find out, in the years to come when he should really be a newspaper +man, the Sunday Editor's job is a hard one. It is much sought, since it +is day work rather than night work, but it is a wearing task. The Sunday +Editor must have all the qualities of a magazine man and a newspaper man +at the same time. He must also have the creative faculty. + +In such departments of a modern newspaper as the City, Telegraph, +Sporting, Financial, etc., the work of the reporters and editors is to +chronicle and present the actual news. If nothing of vital interest has +happened during the day, that is not their fault. Their work is done +when the news is as well covered and as graphically told as possible. + +There are no such limits in the Sunday Editor's office. He must create +interest, provoke sensation, and build the various extra sections of the +Sunday issue into a paper of such vital importance that every different +kind of reader will find something to hold his attention. He has all the +world to choose from, but he has also all the world to please. The work, +too, must be done at high pressure, for the columns of a Sunday issue to +be filled are scores in number, and the Sunday staff of any paper--even +the biggest--is but small. + +Fergus, the Sunday Editor, was a rollicking Irishman, with red hair and +a tongue hung in the middle. He talked, as his ancestors fought, all in +a hurry. He was a whirlwind for praise, but a tornado for blame. His +organizing capacity was marvelous, and his men liked and respected him, +for they knew well that he could write rings around any one of them, in +a pinch. He began as the boy entered the door, + +"Ye're Stuart Garfield, eh? Ye don't look more'n about a half-pint of a +man. Does the Chief think I'm startin' a kindergarten? Not that I give a +hang whether ye're two or eighty-two so long as ye can write. Ye'll go +first to Barbados. Steamer sails tomorrow at eight in the morning. +Here's your berth. Here's a note to the cashier. Letter of instructions +following. Wait at the Crown Hotel, Bridgetown, till you get it. Don't +write if ye haven't anything to say. Get a story across by every +mail-boat. If ye send me rot, I'll skin ye. Good luck!" + +And he turned to glance over his shoulder at a copy-boy who had come in +with a handful of slips, proofs and the thousand matters of the editor's +daily grind. + +Stuart waited two or three minutes, expecting Fergus to continue, but +the Sunday Editor seemed to have forgotten his existence. + +"Well, then, good-by, Mr. Fergus," said the boy, hesitatingly. + +"Oh, eh? Are ye there still? Sure. Good-by, boy, good-by an' good luck +to ye!" + +And plunged back into his work. + +There seemed nothing else for Stuart to do but to go out of the office. +In the hall outside, he paused and wondered. He held in his hand the two +slips of paper that Fergus had given him, and he stared down at these +with bewilderment. Fergus' volley of speech, had taken him clean off +his balance. + +There was no doubt about the reality of these two slips of paper. One +was the ticket for his berth and the other had the figures "$250" +scrawled across a printed form made out to the Cashier, and it was +signed "Rick Fergus." + +In his uncertainty what he ought to do, Stuart went into the City Room +and hunted up his friend the reporter. To him he put the causes of his +confusion. The old newspaper man smiled. + +"That's Rick Fergus, all over," he said. "Good thing you didn't ask him +any questions! He'd have taken your head off at one bite. He's right, +after all. If a reporter's any good at all, he knows himself what to do. +A New York paper isn't fooling around with amateurs, generally. But, +under the circumstances, I think Rick might have told you something. +Let's see. How about your passport?" + +"I've got one," said Stuart, "I had to have one, coming up from Cuba." + +"If you're going to Barbados, you'll have to have it viseed by the +British Consul." + +"But that will take a week, maybe, and I've got to sail tomorrow!" + +"Is that all your trouble?" + +He stepped to the telephone. + +"Consulate? Yes? _New York Planet_ speaking. One of our men's got to +chase down to Barbados on a story. Sending him round this afternoon. +Will you be so good as to vise him through? Ever so much obliged; +thanks!" + +He put up the receiver and turned to the boy. + +"Easy as easy, you see," he said. "The name of a big paper like this one +will take you anywhere, if you use it right. Now, let's see. You'll want +to go and see the Cashier. Come on down, I'll introduce you." + +A word or two at the Cashier's window, and the bills for $250 were +shoved across to Stuart, who pocketed them nervously. He had never seen +so much money before. + +"Next," said the reporter, "you'd better get hold of some copy-paper, a +bunch of letter-heads and envelopes. Also some Expense Account blanks. +Stop in at one of these small printing shops and have some cards printed +with your name and that of the paper--here, like mine!" And he pulled +out a card from his card case and gave it to the boy for a model. + +Stuart was doing his best to keep up with this rapid change in his +fortunes, but, despite himself, his eyes looked a bit wild. His friend +the reporter saw it, and tapped him on the back. + +"You haven't got any time to lose," he said. "Oh, yes, there's another +thing, too. Can you handle a typewriter?" + +"No," answered the boy, "at least, I never tried." + +"Then you take my tip and spend some of that $250 on a portable machine +and learn to handle it, on the way down to Barbados. You'll have to +send all your stuff typewritten, you know. Imagine Fergus getting a +screed from a staff man in longhand!" + +The reporter chuckled at the thought. + +"Why, I believe the old red-head would take a trip down to the West +Indies just to have a chance of saying what he thought. Or, if he +couldn't go, he'd blow up, and we'd be out a mighty good Sunday Editor. +No, son, you've got to learn to tickle a typewriter!" + +They had not been wasting time during this talk, for the reporter had +taken out of his own desk the paper, letter-heads, expense account +blanks and the rest and handed them over to the boy, explaining that he +could easily replenish his own supply. + +"Now," he suggested, "make tracks for the consulate. Stop at a printer's +on your way and order some cards. Then chase back and buy yourself a +portable typewriter. And, if I were you, I'd start learning it, right +tonight. Then, hey! Off for the West Indies again, eh?" + +"But don't I go and say good-by to the City Editor, or the Managing +Editor, or anyone?" + +"What for? You've got your berth, you've got your money, you're going to +get your passport, and you've got your assignment. Nothing more for you +to do, Son, except to get down there and deliver the goods." + +He led the way out of the office and to the elevator. On reaching the +street, he turned to the boy. + +"There's one thing," he said, "that may help you, seeing that you're new +to the work. When you get down to Barbados, drop into the office of the +biggest paper there. Chum up with the boys. They'll see that you're a +youngster, and they'll help you all they can. You'll find newspaper men +pretty clannish, the world over. Well, good-bye, Garfield, I won't be +likely to see you again before you go. I've got that Traction Swindle to +cover and there's going to be a night hearing." + +The boy shook hands with real emotion. + +"You've been mighty good to me," he said, "it's made all the difference +to my stay in New York." + +"Oh! That's all right!" came the hearty reply. "Well--good luck!" + +He turned down the busy street and, in a moment, was lost in the crowd. + +For a moment Stuart felt a twinge of loneliness, but the afternoon was +short, and he had a great deal to do. It was only by hurrying that he +was able to get done all the various things that had been suggested. +Despite his rush, however, the boy took time to send a cable to his +father, telling of his own safety, for he had no means of knowing +whether or not his father might be worrying over him also. He worked +until midnight learning the principles of the typewriter and, in a poky +sort of way, trying to hammer out the guide sentences given him in the +Instruction Book. Next day found him again at sea. + +In contrast with the riotous vegetation of the jungles of Haiti and the +tropical forests of Eastern Cuba, Stuart found the country around +Bridgetown, the sole harbor of Barbados, surprisingly unattractive. The +city itself was active and bustling, but dirty, dusty and mean. On the +other hand, the suburbs, with villas occupied by the white residents, +were remarkable for their marvelous gardens. + +On the outskirts of the town, and all over the island, in rows or +straggling clumps which seemed to have been dropped down anywhere, +Stuart saw the closely clustered huts of the negroes. These were tiny +huts of pewter-gray wood, raised from the ground on a few rough stones +and covered by a roof of dark shingles. They were as simple as the +houses a child draws on his slate--things of two rooms, with two windows +and one door. The windows had sun shutters in place of glass and there +were no chimneys, for the negro housewives do their cooking out of doors +in the cool of the evening. The boy noticed that, by dark, all these +windows and doors were closed tightly, for the Barbadian negro sleeps in +an air-tight room. He does this, ostensibly, to keep out ten-inch-long +centipedes, and bats, but, in reality, to keep out "jumbies" and ghosts, +of which he is much more afraid. + +[Illustration: HIS VISION DISTORTED BY THE VENOM-VAPOR OF THE POISON +TREES, THE LAND-CRABS SEEMED OF ENORMOUS SIZE AND THE NEGRO WHO CAME TO +RESCUE HIM APPEARED AS AN OGRE.] + +The greater part of the island seemed, to the boy, utterly unlike any +place he had seen in the tropics. Around Bridgetown, and over two-thirds +of the island of Barbados, there is hardly a tree. The ground rises in +slow undulations, marked, like a checker-board, with sugar-cane fields. +No place could seem more lacking in opportunity for adventures, yet +Stuart was to learn to the contrary before long. + +Acting upon the advice given him by his friend the reporter, in New +York, just before leaving, Stuart seized the first opportunity to make +himself known to the newspaper men of Bridgetown. He was warmly +received, even welcomed, and was amazed at the ready hospitality shown +him. Moreover, when he stated that he was there to do some article on +"Social Life and the Color Question" for the _New York Planet_, he found +that he had struck a subject on which anyone and everyone he met was +willing to talk--as the Managing Editor no doubt had anticipated when he +suggested the series to the boy. + +In one respect--as almost everyone he interviewed pointed out--Barbados +differs from every other of the West India Islands. It is densely +populated, so densely, indeed, that there is not a piece of land +suitable for cultivation which is not employed. The great ambition of +the Barbadian is to own land. The spirit of loyalty to the island is +incredibly strong. + +This dense population and intensive cultivation has made the struggle +for existence keen in Barbados. A job is a prize. This has made the +Barbadian negro a race apart, hardworking and frugal. Until the building +of the Panama Canal, few negroes left their island home. With the help +of his newspaper friends, Stuart was able to send to his paper a fairly +well-written article on the Barbadian negro. The boy was wise enough to +take advice from his new friends how best to write the screed. + +Moreover, he learned that there was also, on the island, a very unusual +and most interesting colony of "poor whites," the descendants of English +convicts who had been brought to the island in the seventeenth century. +These were not criminals, but political prisoners who had fought in +Monmouth's Rebellion. Pitied by the planters, despised even by the negro +slaves, this small colony held itself aloof, starved, and married none +but members of their own colony. They are now mere shadows of men, with +puny bodies and witless minds, living in brush or wooden hovels and +eating nothing but a little wild fruit and fish. + +Their story made another good article for Stuart's paper, and he spent +almost an entire day holding such conversation with them as he could, +though their English language had so far degenerated that the boy found +it hard to understand. + +The colony is not far from the little village of Bathsheba, which Stuart +had reached by the tramway that crosses the island. The returning tram +was not due to start for a couple of hours, and so, idly, Stuart +strolled southward along the beach, which, at that point, is fringed +with curiously shaped rocks, forming curving bays shaded with thickets +of trees which curve down to the shore. Some of these were +modest-looking trees, something like apple-trees but with a longer, +thinner leaf. They bore a fruit like a green apple. + +The boy, tired from his walk along the soft white sand, threw himself +down negligently beneath the trees, in the shade, and, finding one of +the fruits fallen, close to his hand, picked it up and half decided to +eat it. An inner warning bade him pause. + +The day had been hot and the shade was inviting. A sour and yet not +unpleasant odor was in the air. It made him sleepy, or, to speak more +correctly, it made his limbs heavy, while a certain exhilaration of +spirits lulled him into a false content. Soon, under these trees, on the +beach near Bathsheba, Stuart passed into a languorous waking dream. + +And the red land-crabs, on their stilt-like legs, crept nearer and +nearer. + +An hour later, one of the Barbadian negroes, coming home from his work, +was met at the door of his cabin by his wife, her eyes wide with alarm. + +"White pickney go along Terror Cove. No come um back." + +"Fo' de sake!" came the astonished exclamation. "Best hop along, see!" + +The burly negro, well-built like all his fellows, struck out along the +beach. He talked to himself and shook his frizzled head as he went. His +pace, which was distinctly that of hurry, betokened his disturbed mind. + +"Pickney go alone here, by golly!" he declared as he traced the prints +of a booted foot on the white sand and saw that they led only in one +direction. "No come back! Dem debbil-trees, get um!" + +He turned the corner and paused a minute at the extraordinary sight +presented. + +In the curve of the cove, dancing about with high, measured steps, like +that of a trained carriage-horse, was the boy, his hands clutching a +stout stick with which he was beating the air around him as though +fighting some imaginary foe, in desperation for his life. The sand +around his feet was spotted, as though with gouts of blood, by the ruddy +land-crabs, and, from every direction, these repulsive carrion eaters +were hastening to their prey. + +They formed a horrible alliance--the "debbil-trees" and the blood-red +land-crabs! + +The negro broke into a run. The old instinct of the black to serve the +white rose in him strongly, though his own blood ran cold as he came +near the "debbil-trees." + +The crabs were swarming all about the boy. Some of the most daring were +clawing their way up his trousers, but Stuart seemed to have no eyes for +them. With jerky strokes, as though his arms were worked by a string, +he struck and slashed at the air at some imaginary enemy about the +height of his waist. + +As his rescuer came nearer, he could hear the boy screaming, a harsh, +inhuman scream of rage and fear and madness combined. Jerky words amid +the screams told of his terrors, + +"They're eating me! Their claws are all around! Their eyes! Their eyes!" + +But still the strokes were directed wildly at the air, and never a blow +fell on the little red horrors at his feet. + +"Ol' Doc, he say debbil-tree make um act that way," muttered the negro, +as he ran, "pickney he think um crabs big as a mule!" + +Stuart, fighting for his life with what his tortured imagination +conceived to be gigantic monsters, saw, coming along the beach, the +semblance of an ogre. The pupils of his eyes, contracted by the poison +to mere pin-pricks, magnified enormously, and the negro took on the +proportions of a giant. + +But Stuart was a fighter. He would not run. He turned upon his new foe. + +The negro, reckoning nothing of one smart blow from the stick, threw his +muscular arms about the boy, held him as in a vice, and picking him up, +carried him off as if he were a baby. The boy struggled and screamed but +it availed him nothing. + +"Pickney, he mad um sartain," announced the negro, as he strode by his +own hut, "get him Ol' Doc good'n quick!" + +Half walking and half running, but carrying his burden with ease, the +negro hurried to a well-built house, on a height of land half a mile +back from the coast. The house was surrounded by a well-kept garden, but +the negro kicked the gate open without ceremony, and, still running, +rushed into the house, calling, + +"Mister Ol' Doc! Mister Ol' Doc!" + +At his cries, one of the doors into the hall opened, and a keen-eyed +man, much withered, and with a scraggly gray beard, came out. The negro +did not wait for him to speak. + +"Mister Ol' Doc," he said, "this pickney down by de debbil-trees, they +got um sartain. You potion um quick!" + +The doctor stepped aside from the door. + +"Put him in there, Mark!" he directed. "Hold him, I'll be back in a +minute!" + +The negro threw Stuart on a cot and held him down, an easy task, now, +for the boy's strength was ebbing fast. + +The doctor was back in a moment, with a small phial. He dropped a few +drops into the boy's mouth, then, stripping him, put an open box of +ointment between himself and the negro. + +"Now, Mark," he said, "rub that stuff into his body. Don't be afraid of +it. Go after him as if you were grooming a horse. Put some elbow-grease +into it. The ointment has got to soak in, and the skin has got to be +kept warm. See, he's getting cold, now!" + +The negro suited the action to the word. He rubbed with all his +strength, and the ointment, concocted from some pungent herb, reddened +the skin where it went in. But, a moment or two after, the redness +disappeared and the bluish look of cold returned. + +"Faster and harder!" cried the old doctor. + +Sweat poured down from the negro's face. He ripped off jacket and shirt, +and, bare to the waist, scrubbed at the boy's skin. And, if ever he +stopped a moment to wipe the sweat from his forehead, the doctor cried, + +"Faster and harder!" + +Little by little, the reddening of the skin lasted longer, little by +little the bluish tints began to go, little by little the stiffening +which had begun, relaxed. + +"He's coming round," cried the doctor. "Harder, now! Put your back into +it, Mark!" + +Nearly an hour had passed when the negro, exhausted and trembling from +his exertions, sank into a chair. The doctor eyed him keenly, gave him a +stiff dose from a medicine glass, and returned to his patient. + +"He'll do now," he said. "In half an hour he'll feel as well as ever, +and by tomorrow he'll be terribly ill." + +"For de sake, Mister Ol' Doc, I got to rub um tomorrow?" pleaded the +negro. + +"No, not tomorrow. From now on, I've got to 'potion um,' as you put it." + +He put his hand in his pocket. + +"Here, Mark," he said, "is half a sovereign. That isn't for saving the +boy's life, you understand, for you'd have done that any way, but for +working on him as you have." + +The negro pocketed the coin with a wide smile, but lingered. + +"I want to see um come 'round," he explained. + +As the doctor had forecast, in half an hour's time, the color flowed +back into Stuart's cheeks, his breathing became normal, and, presently, +he stirred and looked around. + +"What--What----" he began, bewildered. + +"You went to sleep under the shade of some poison-trees, manchineel +trees, we call them here," the doctor explained. "Did you eat any of the +fruit?" + +"I--I don't know," replied Stuart, trying to remember. "I--I sort of +went to sleep, that is, my body seemed to and my head didn't. And then I +saw crabs coming. At first they were only small ones, then bigger ones +came, and bigger, and bigger----" + +He shivered and hid his face at the remembrance. + +"There was nothing there except the regular red land-crabs," said the +doctor, "maybe eighteen inches across, but with a body the size of your +hand. Their exaggeration of size was a delirium due to poisoning." + +"And the big, black ogre?" + +"Was our friend Mark, here," explained the doctor, "who rescued you, +first, and has saved your life by working over you, here." + +Stuart held out his hand, feebly. + +"I didn't know there were any trees which hurt you unless you touched +them," he said. + +"Plenty of them," answered the scientist. "There are over a hundred +plants which give off smells or vapors which are injurious either to man +or animals. Some are used by savages for arrow poisons, others for fish +poisons, and some we use for medicinal drugs. Dixon records a 'gas-tree' +in Africa, the essential oil of which contains chlorine and the smell of +which is like the poison-gas used in the World War. And poison-ivy, in +the United States, will poison some people even if they only pass close +to it." + +"Jes' how does a tree make a smell, Mister Ol' Doc?" queried Mark. + +"That's hard to explain to you," answered the scientist, turning to the +negro. "But every plant has some kind of a smell, that is, all of them +have essential oils which volatilize in the air. Some, like the bay, +have these oil-sacs in the leaves, some, like cinnamon, in the bark, and +so on. The smell of flowers comes the same way." + +"An' there is mo' kinds of debbil-trees 'an them on Terror Cove?" + +"Plenty more kinds," was the answer, "though few of them are as deadly. +These are famous. Lord Nelson, when a young man here in Barbados, was +made very ill by drinking from a pool into which some branches of the +manchineel had been thrown. In fact, he never really got over it." + +"How about me, Doctor?" enquired Stuart. His face was flushing and its +was evident that the semi-paralysis of the first infection was passing +into a fever stage. + +"It all depends whether you ate any of the fruit or not," the doctor +answered. "If you didn't, you're safe. But you seem to have spent an +hour in that poison-tree grove, and that gives the 'devil-trees,' as +Mark calls them, plenty of time to get in their deadly work. You'll come +out of it, all right, but you'll have to fight for it!" + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +THE HURRICANE + + +For many days Stuart lay in an alternation of fever and stupor, +tormented by dreams in which visions of the red land-crabs played a +terrible part, but youth and clean living were on his side, and he +passed the crisis. Thereafter, in the equable climate of Barbados--one +of the most healthful of the West Indies Islands--his strength began to +return. + +The "Ol' Doc," as he was universally known in the neighborhood, was an +eccentric scientist who had spent his life in studying the plants of the +West Indies. He had lived in the Antilles for over forty years and knew +as much about the people as he did about the plant life. + +Kindly-natured, the old botanist became greatly interested in his young +patient, and, that he should not weary in enforced idleness, sent to +Bridgetown for Stuart's trunk and his portable typewriter. Day by day +the boy practised, and then turned his hand to writing a story of his +experiences with the "debbil-trees" which story, by the way, he had to +rewrite three times before his host would let him send it. + +"Writing," he would say, "is like everything else in the world. You can +do it quickly and well, after years of experience, but, at the +beginning, you must never let a sentence pass until you are sure that +you cannot phrase it better." + +Moreover, as it turned out, the Ol' Doc was to be Stuart's guide in more +senses than one, for when the boy casually mentioned Guy Cecil's name, +the botanist twisted his head sidewise sharply. + +"Eh, what? Who's that?" he asked. "What does he look like?" + +Stuart gave a description, as exact as he could. + +"Do you suppose he knows anything about flowers?" + +"He seemed to know a lot about Jamaica orchids," the boy replied. + +The botanist tapped the arm of his chair with definite, meditative taps. + +"That man," he said, "has always been a mystery to me. How old would you +take him to be?" + +"Oh, forty or so," the boy answered. + +"He has looked that age for twenty years, to my knowledge. If I didn't +know better, I should believe him to have found the Fountain of +Perpetual Youth which Ponce de Leon and so many other of the early +Spanish adventurers sailed to the Spanish Main to find." + +"But what is he?" asked Stuart, sitting forward and eager in attention. + +"Who knows? He is the friend, the personal friend, of nearly every +important man in the Caribbean, whether that official be British, French +or Dutch; he is also regarded as a witch-master by half the black +population. I have met him in the jungles, botanizing--and he is a good +botanist--I have seen him suddenly appear as the owner of a sugar +plantation, as a seeker for mining concessions, as a merchant, and as a +hotel proprietor. I have seen him the owner of a luxurious yacht; I have +met him, half-ragged, looking for a job, with every appearance of +poverty and misery." + +"But," cried the lad in surprise, "what can that all imply? Do you +suppose he's just some sort of a conspirator, or swindler, sometimes +rich and sometimes poor, according to the hauls he has made?" + +"Well," said the botanist, "sometimes I have thought he is the sort of +man who would have been a privateer in the old days, a 'gentleman +buccaneer.' Maybe he is still, but in a different way. Sometimes, I have +thought that he was attached to the Secret Service of some government." + +"English?" + +"Probably not," the scientist answered, "because he is too English for +that. No, he is so English that I thought he must be for some other +government and was just playing the English part to throw off +suspicion." + +"German?" + +"It's not unlikely." + +Whereupon Stuart remembered the guarded way in which the Managing Editor +had spoken of "European Powers," and this thought of Cecil threw him +back upon his quest. + +"I'll soon have to be going on to Trinidad," he suggested a day or two +later. "I think I'm strong enough to travel, now." + +"Yes," the old botanist answered, "you're strong enough to travel, but +you'd better not go just now." + +"Why not?" + +"Well----" the old West Indian resident cast a look at the sky, "there +are a good many reasons. Unless I'm much mistaken, there's wind about, +big wind, hurricane wind, maybe. I've been feeling uneasy, ever since +noon yesterday. Do you see those three mares'-tail high-cirrus clouds?" + +"You mean those that look like feathers, with the quills so much thicker +than usual?" + +"Yes, those. And you notice that those quills, as you call them, are not +parallel, but all point in the same direction, like the sticks of a fan? +That means a big atmospheric disturbance in that direction, and it +means, too, that it must be a gyrating one. That type of cirrus clouds +isn't proof of a coming hurricane, not by a good deal, but it's one of +the signs. And, if it comes, the center of it is now just about where +those mares'-tails are pointing." + +"You're really afraid of a hurricane!" exclaimed Stuart, a little +alarmed at the seriousness of the old man's manner. + +"There are few things in the world of which one ought more to be +afraid!" declared the old scientist dryly. "A hurricane is worse, far +worse, than an earthquake, sometimes." + +Stuart sat silent for a moment, then, + +"Are there any more signs?" he asked. + +"Yes," was the quiet answer. "Nearly all the hurricane signs are +beginning to show. Look at the sea! If you'll notice, the surface is +fairly glassy, showing that there is not much surface wind. Yet, in +spite of that, there is a heavy, choppy, yet rolling swell coming up on +the beach." + +"I had noticed the roar," Stuart agreed, "one can hear it plainly from +here." + +"Exactly. But, if you watch for a few minutes, you'll see that the +swells are not long and unbroken, as after a steady period of strong +wind from any quarter, but irregular, some of the swells long, some +short. That suggests that they have received their initial impulse from +a hurricane, with a whirling center, the waves being whipped by gusts +that change their direction constantly. + +"Notice, too, how hollow our voices sound, as if there were a queer +resonance in the air, rather as if we were talking inside a drum. + +"You were complaining of the heat this morning, and, now, there is +hardly any wind. What does that mean? + +"It means that the trade wind, which keeps this island cool even in the +hottest summer, has been dying down, since yesterday. Now, since the +trade winds blow constantly, and are a part of the unchanging movements +of the atmosphere, you can see for yourself that any disturbance of the +atmosphere which is violent enough to overcome the constant current of +the trade winds must be of vast size and of tremendous force. + +"What can such a disturbance be? The only answer is--a hurricane. + +"Then there's another reason for feeling heat. That would be if the air +were unusually hazy and moist. Now, if you'll observe, during this +morning and the early part of the afternoon, the air has been clear, +then hazy, then clear again, and is once more hazy. That shows a rapid +and violent change in the upper air. + +"So far, so good. Now, in addition to observations of the clouds, the +sea and the air at the surface, it helps--more, it is all-important--to +check these observations by some scientific instrument which cannot lie. +For this, we must use the barometer, which, as you probably know, is +merely an instrument for weighing the air. When the air is heavier the +barometer rises, when the air grows lighter, the barometer falls. + +"Yesterday, the barometer rose very high, much higher than it would in +ordinary weather. This morning, it was jumpy, showing--as the changes in +the haziness of the air showed--irregular and violent movements in the +upper atmosphere. It is now beginning to go down steadily, a little +faster every hour. This is an almost sure sign that there is a hurricane +in action somewhere, and, probably, within a few hundred miles of here. + +"But tell me, Stuart, since we have been talking, have you noticed any +change in the atmosphere, or in the sky." + +"Well," answered the boy, hesitating, for he did not wish to seem +alarmist, "it did seem to me as if there were a sort of reddish color in +the sky, as if the blue were turning rusty." + +"Watch it!" said the botanist, with a note of awe in his voice, "and you +will see what you never have seen before!" + +For a few moments he kept silence. + +The rusty color gradually rose in intensity to a ruby hue and then to an +angry crimson, deepening as the sun sank. + +Over the sky, covered with a milky veil, which reflected this glowing +color, there began to rise, in the south-west, an arch of shredded +cirrus cloud, its denser surface having greater reflecting powers, +seeming to give it a sharp outline against the veiled sky. + +The scientist rose, consulted the barometer, and returned, looking very +grave. + +"It looks bad," he said. "There is not much doubt that it will strike +the island." + +"Take to the hurricane wing, then!" suggested Stuart, a little +jestingly. In common with many Barbados houses, the botanist's dwelling +was provided with a hurricane wing, a structure of heavy masonry, with +only one or two narrow slits to let in air, and with a roof like a gun +casemate. + +There was no jest in the Old Doctor's tone, as he answered, + +"I have already ordered that provisions be sent there, and that the +servants be prepared to go." + +This statement brought Stuart up with a jerk. In common with many +people, it seemed impossible to him that he would pass through one of +the great convulsions of nature. Human optimism always expects to escape +a danger. + +"But this is the beginning of October!" the boy protested. "I always +thought hurricanes came in the summer months." + +"No; August, September and October are the three worst months. That is +natural, for a hurricane could not happen in the winter and even the +early summer ones are not especially dangerous. But the signs of this +one are troubling. Look!" + +He pointed to the sea. + +The rolling swell was losing its character. The water, usually either a +turquoise-blue or a jade-green, was now an opaque olive-black. The waves +were choppy, and threw up small heads of foam like the swirl of +cross-currents in a tide-rip. + +Stuart began to feel a little frightened. + +"Do you really think it will come here?" + +"Yes," said the botanist gravely, "I do. In fact I am sure of it. +Barbados is full in the hurricane track, you know." + +"But why?" queried the boy. "I've always heard of West Indian +hurricanes. Do they only happen here? I don't see why they should come +here more than any other place." + +"Do you know why they come at all?" + +Stuart thought for a moment. + +"No," he answered, "I don't know that I do. I never thought anything +about it. I always figured that storms just happened, somehow." + +"Nothing 'just happens,'" was the stern rebuke. "Hark!" + +He held up his finger for silence. + +A low rumbling, sounding something like the pounding of heavy surf on a +beach heard at a distance, and closely akin to the sound made by Niagara +Falls, seemed to fill the air. And, across the sound, came cracks like +distant pistol shots heard on a clear day. + +The white arch rose slowly and just underneath it appeared an arch of +darker cloud, almost black. + +At the same moment, came a puff of the cool wind from the north. + +"We will have it in less than two hours," said the scientist. "It is a +good thing that all afternoon I have had the men and women on the place +nailing the shutters tight and fastening everything that can be +fastened. We may only get the edge of the hurricane, we may get the +center. There is no telling. An island is not like a ship, which can +direct its course so as to escape the terrible vortex of the center. +We've got to stay and take it." + +"But has every hurricane a center?" queried the boy, a little relieved +by the thought that the storm would not come for two hours. In that +time, he foolishly thought, it might have spent its force. He did not +know that hurricanes possess a life of their own which endures not less +than a week, and in one or two cases, as long as a month. + +"You wouldn't ask whether every hurricane has a center," the scientist +replied, "if you knew a little more about them. As there is nothing for +us to do but wait, and as it is foolish to go to the hurricane wing +until the time of danger, I might as well explain to you what a +hurricane really is. Then, if you live through it----" Stuart jumped at +the sudden idea of the imminent danger--"you'll be able to write to your +paper about it, intelligently." + +"I'd really like to know," declared Stuart, leaning forward eagerly. + +"Well," said his informant, "I'll make it as simple as I can, though, I +warn you, a hurricane isn't a subject that can be explained in a +sentence or two. + +"You know that summer and winter weather are different. You ought to be +able to see that summer and winter winds are different. The difference +in seasons is caused by the respective positions of the northern and +southern hemispheres to the sun. The greater the heat, the greater the +atmospheric changes. Hurricanes are great whirls caused by violent +changes of the air. Therefore hurricanes come only in the summer." + +"That's clear and easy!" declared the boy, delighted that he was able to +follow the explanation. + +"Now, as to why hurricanes strike here and nowhere else. I'll try and +explain that, too. There is a belt of ocean, just north of and on the +equator, known as the 'doldrums,' where it is nearly always calm, and +very hot. There is also a belt of air running from Southern Europe to +the West Indies where the north-east trade winds blow all the year +round. Between this perpetual calm of the doldrums and the perpetual +wind of the trades is a region of atmospheric instability. + +"Now, consider conditions to the west of us. The Caribbean Sea and the +Gulf of Mexico, together, form what is almost a great inland sea with +the West Indian Islands as its eastern shore. The trade winds do not +reach it. The Pacific winds do not reach it, for they are diverted by +the high ranges of Central America. The winds from North America do not +reach it, because these always turn northwards on reaching the +Mississippi Valley and leave the United States by the St. Lawrence +Valley. + +"So, Stuart, you can see that the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico +have over them, in summer, a region of air, little disturbed by wind, +not far from the Equator and which, therefore, becomes steadily heated +and steadily saturated by the evaporation from the body of water +below." + +"Yes," agreed the boy, "I can see that." + +"Very good. Now, such a steady heating of one section of air is bound to +disturb the balance of the atmosphere. This disturbance, moreover, must +be acted upon by the rotation of the earth. Just as all the weather in +the United States comes from the west and travels eastwards, so the +track of hurricane origins travels eastwards during the course of a +summer. + +"For this reason, West Indian hurricanes in June generally have their +origin west of Jamaica, July hurricanes east of Jamaica, August +hurricanes in the eastern Caribbean, September hurricanes in the +Atlantic east and south of the West Indies, and October hurricanes far +out to sea, perhaps even as far as half-way to the Cape Verde Islands on +the shores of Africa. This hurricane which is approaching, is from the +direction of East-South-East, judging from the barometer and other +conditions, and probably had its cradle a thousand or more miles away." + +"And it hasn't blown itself out?" + +"Far from it. It is only gathering strength and violence. Not until it +twists off on its track will it begin to diminish. For hurricanes follow +a regular track, an invisible trail marked out for them in the sky." + +"They do!" + +"Yes, all of them. This track is shaped like a rounded cone, or, more +often, like a boomerang, with a short arm running north-westwards to +its place of turning and a long arm running northeastwards until its +force is spent. The point of turning is always in the West Indies zone. +As the storm is at its worst at the point of turning, it is always in +the West Indies that the hurricane is most destructive. + +"No matter where they start, West Indian hurricanes always sweep +north-westward until they have crossed the line of the West Indies and +then wheel around sharply to the north-east, skirting the United States +coast. Some strike Florida. A good many run along the coast and hit +Hatteras. Some never actually touch the continent at all, and only a few +ever strike inland. But some part of the West Indies is hit by every one +of them." + +"Are they so frequent?" + +"There's never a year without one or more. There have been years with +five or six. Of course, some hurricanes are much more violent than +others. Their destructive character depends a good deal, too, on the +place where their center passes. Thus if, at the moment of its greatest +fury, the full ferocity of the whirl is expended on the ocean, not much +harm is done. But if it should chance to descend upon a busy and +thriving city, the loss of life will be appalling. + +"Of these disastrous hurricanes, it would be fair to state that at least +once in every four years, some part of the West Indies is going to +suffer a disaster, and once in every twenty years there is a hurricane +of such violence as to be reckoned a world calamity." + +The botanist rose, took another look at the barometer, and called one of +the older servants. + +"Send every one into the hurricane wing," he said. "See that the storm +lantern is there, filled and lighted. Tell the cook to pour a pail of +water on the kitchen fire before she leaves. See, yourself, that every +place is securely fastened. The rain will be here in ten minutes." + +The negro, who was gray with fright, flashed a quick look of relief at +the orders to seek the hurricane wing, and ran off at full speed. + +"The first rain-squalls will not be bad," continued the "Old Doc," "and +I like to stay out as long as I can, to watch its coming. It will be +nearly dark when this one strikes us, though, and there won't be much to +see." + +"But what starts them, sir?" queried the boy, who had become intensely +interested, since the grim phantasmagoria was unfolding itself on sea +and sky before his eyes. + +"As I have told you, it is the creation of a super-heated and saturated +mass of air, only possible in a calm region, such as the Caribbean west +of the West Indies, or the doldrum region southeast of them. Let me show +you how it happens. + +"A region of air, over a tropical sea, little moved by wind-currents, +becomes warmer than the surrounding region of air; the air over this +region becomes lighter; the lighter air rises and flows over the colder +layers of surrounding air, increasing the pressure on that ring and +increasing the inward flow to the warm central area where the air +pressure has been diminished by the overflow aloft. The overflowing air +reaches a point on the outside of the cold air area, when it again +descends, and once more flows inward to the center, making a complete +circuit. Do you understand so far?" + +Stuart knitted his brows in perplexity. + +"I--I think so, but I'm not sure," he said. "Then the barometer rose, +yesterday, because we were in the cold air area, which became heavier +because there was a layer of warm air on the top of it. The storm has +moved westward. The cold air section has passed. The barometer is +falling now because we're in the region of warm air, which is steadily +rising and is therefore lighter. That shows we're nearer to the center. +Is that it?" + +The scientist tapped his fingers on the arm of his chair in pleased +appreciation. + +"Very good," he said, "you are exactly right. And, from now on, the +barometer will drop suddenly, for the whirl of the wind will make a +partial vacuum in the very center of the hurricane." + +"But I don't see what makes it whirl," protested the boy. "If it goes up +in the middle, flows over at the top and comes down at the outside and +then flows into the middle again, why could it not keep on doing that +all the time, until the balance was put straight again?" + +"It would," the scientist agreed, "but for one thing you have +forgotten." + +"And what's that?" + +"The rotation of the earth." + +A single drop of rain fell, then another, making a splash as large as a +twenty-five cent piece. + +"Now see it come!" said the scientist. + +As though his words had summoned it, a liquid opacity, like a piece of +clouded glass, thrust itself between their eyes and the landscape. So +suddenly it came that Stuart actually did not realize that this was +falling rain, until, looking at the ground, he saw the earth dissolve +into mud before his eyes and saw the garden turn into what seemed like +the bed of a shallow river. The wind whistled with a vicious note. The +squall lasted scarcely a minute, and was gone. + +"That's the first," remarked the boy's informant. "We'd better get under +shelter, they'll come fast and furious soon." + +Passing through a low passage connecting the house with the hurricane +wing, Stuart noticed that, beside the massiveness of the structure, it +was braced from within. + +"In case the house should fall on it," the scientist observed, noting +Stuart's glances. "I've no wish to be buried alive. In any case, I keep +crowbars in the wing, so that, in case of any unforeseen disaster, a +breach could be made in the walls and we could get out that way." + +They entered the hurricane wing. It was not as dark as Stuart had +expected. The scientist, anxious to observe the storms when they should +come, had built into the wall two double dead-eye windows, such as are +used in the lower decks of liners and which can resist the impact of the +heaviest waves. + +The crimson light had gone. The vivid sunset reflections, now thrown +back from the black arch, yet gave a reddish smokiness to the livid and +sickly green which showed, from time to time, beneath the underhanging +masses of inky black. The sky to the north and to the south had a +tortured appearance, as though some demon of a size beyond imagining +were twisting the furies of the tempest in his clutch. + +"You asked," said the scientist, speaking in the hurricane wing, as +quietly as he had on the verandah, and paying absolutely no heed to the +moaning and praying of the negroes huddled in the darkest corner, "what +makes a hurricane whirl. Yet, in the heavens, you can see the skies +a-twist!" + +A second rain-squall struck. Thick as were the walls, they could not +keep out the wailing shriek of the wind, nor the hissing of the rain, +which flashed like a continuous cutting blade of steel past the windows. +The hurricane wing could not rock, it was too low and solidly planted +for that, but it trembled in the impact. + +After a couple of minutes came a lull, and Stuart's ears were filled +with the cries and howling of the frightened negroes, not a sound of +which had been audible during the squall. The scientist continued his +talk in an even voice, as peacefully as though he were in his study. + +"You asked what could set the skies a-twist. I told you, the earth's +rotation. For, Stuart, you must remember that a hurricane is not a small +thing. This heated region of the air of which we have been speaking, +with its outer belt of cooler air, and the descending warm air beyond, +is a region certainly not less than five hundred miles in diameter and +may be a great deal more. + +"Now, the air, as you know, is held to the earth's surface by +gravitation, but, being gaseous, it is not held as closely as if it were +in a solid state. Also, there is centrifugal force to be considered. +Also the fact that the earth is not round, but flattened at the poles. +Also the important fact that air at the equator is more heated than at +the Polar regions. All these things together keep the air in a constant +commotion. The combined effect of these, in the northern hemisphere, is +that air moving along the surface of the earth is deflected to the +right. Thus in the case we are considering, the lower currents, +approaching the heated center, do not come in equally from all +directions, but are compelled to approach in spirals. This spiral action +once begun increases, of itself, in power and velocity. This is a +hurricane in its baby stage." + +Another squall struck. + +Speech again became impossible. As before, sheets of water--which bore +no relation to rain, but seemed rather as though the earth were at the +foot of a waterfall from which a river was leaping from on high--were +hurled over the land. The shrieking of the wind had a wild and maniacal +sound, the sound which Jamaicans have christened "the hell-cackle of a +hurricane." This squall lasted longer, five minutes or more, and when it +passed, the wind dropped somewhat, but did not die down. It raged +furiously, its shriek dropped to a sullen and menacing roar. + +"Such a hurricane as this," the "Ol' Doc" continued, "has taken many +days to brew. Day after day the air has remained in its ominous quietude +over the surface of the ocean, becoming warmer and warmer, gathering +strength for its devastating career. The water vapor has risen higher +and higher. Dense cumulus clouds have formed, the upper surfaces of +which have caught all the sun's heat, intensifying the unstable +equilibrium of the air. The powers of the tempest have grown steadily in +all evil majesty of destructiveness. Day by day, then hour by hour, then +minute by minute, the awful force has been generated, as steam is +generated by fierce furnace fires under a ship's boilers. + +"Why, Stuart, it has been figured that the air in a hurricane a hundred +miles in diameter and a mile high, weighs as much as half-a-million +Atlantic liners, and this incredibly huge mass is driven at twice the +speed of the fastest ship afloat. In these gusts, which come with the +rain squalls, the wind will rise to a velocity of a hundred and twenty +miles an hour. It strikes!" + +A crack of thunder deafened all, and green and violet lightning winked +and flickered continuously. The hiss of the rain, the shrieking of the +wind and the snapping crackle of the thunder defied speech. The heat in +the hurricane wing was terrific, but Stuart shivered with cold. It was +the cold of terror, the cold of helplessness, the cold of being +powerless in such an awful evidence of the occasional malignity of +Nature. + +Between the approach of night and the closing in of the clouds, an inky +darkness prevailed, though in the intervals between the outbursts of +lightning, the sky had a mottled copper and green coloration, the copper +being the edges of low raincloud-masses, and the green, the flying scud +above. + +Squall followed squall in ever-closer succession, the uproar changing +constantly from the shriek of the hundred-mile wind in the squall to the +dull roar of the fifty-mile wind in between. The thunder crackled, +without any after-rumble, and the trembling of the ground could be felt +from the pounding of the terrific waves half a mile away. Then, in a +long-drawn-out descending wail, like the howl of a calling coyote, the +hurricane died down to absolute stillness. + +"Whew!" exclaimed Stuart, in relief. "I'm glad that's over." + +"Over!" the scientist exclaimed. "The worst is to come! We're in the eye +of the hurricane. Look!" + +Overhead the sky was almost clear, so clear that the stars could be +seen, but the whirl of air, high overhead, made them twinkle so that +they seemed to be dancing in their places. To seaward, a violet glow, +throbbing and pulsating, showed where the lightning was playing. + +"I'm going out to see if all's safe," said the scientist. "Do you want +to come?" + +Stuart would have rather not. But he dared not refuse. They had hardly +left the hurricane wing and got to the outside, when "Ol' Doc" sniffed. + +"No," he said, "we'll go back. We're not full in the center. The edge +will catch us again." + +He pointed. + +Not slowly this time, but with a swiftness that made it seem unreal, a +shape like a large hand rose out of the night and blotted out the stars. +A distant clamor could be heard, at first faintly, and then with a +growing speed, like the oncoming of an express train. + +"In with you, in!" cried the scientist. + +They rushed through the low passage and bolted the heavy door. + +Then with a crash which seemed enough to tear a world from its moorings, +the opposite side of the hurricane struck, all the worse in that it came +without even a preparatory breeze. The noise, the tumult, the sense of +the elements unchained in all their fury was so terrible that the boy +lost all sense of the passage of time. The negroes no longer moaned or +prayed. A stupor of paralysis seized them. + +So passed the night. + +Towards morning, the painful rarefaction of the air diminished. The +squalls of rain and all-devouring gusts of wind abated, and became less +and less frequent. + +The sky turned gray. Upon the far horizon rose again the cirrus arc, but +with the dark above and the light below. Majestically it rose and +spanned the sky, and, under its rim of destruction, came the sunrise in +its most peaceful colors of rose and pearl-gray, sunrise upon a ravaged +island. + +Over three hundred persons had been killed that night, and many millions +of dollars of damage done. Yet everyone in Barbados breathed relief. + +The hurricane had passed. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +THE LAKE OF PITCH + + +Still weak from his illness after the manchineel poisoning, and +exhausted as he was after a sleepless night in the grip of a hurricane, +yet Stuart's first thought on leaving the hurricane wing was to get a +news story to his paper. The spell of journalism was on him. + +Around the "Ol' Doc's" place, the hurricane seemed to have done little +damage. Not a building had fallen. Trees were stripped bare of their +leaves, cane-fields laid low, but when the boy commented on this escape, +the old scientist shook his head. + +"I built these structures with hurricanes in view," he said. "This old +place will stand like a lighthouse. But you'll find it different in the +negro quarters. Alas! You will find mourning, everywhere." + +At the boy's urgency the botanist agreed to lend him a horse and light +carriage and bade one of the negroes drive the lad to Bridgetown. A +hasty breakfast was swallowed, and, before six in the morning, Stuart +was on his way back across the island, his faithful typewriter beside +him. + +They had not gone far before the real tragedy of the hurricane began to +show itself. Here was a house in splinters, and a group of people, +crying, with bowed heads, told that death had been there. The fields +were stripped bare. Near Corrington, a sugar factory showed a piece of +broken wall as all that remained. The road had been washed away by the +torrential floods. + +In a small settlement, some negroes were working in a frenzy around a +mass of ruined cottages, from beneath which sounded dolorous cries. The +carriage stopped and both Stuart and the driver leaped out to aid. Ten +minutes' work unearthed three sufferers, two but slightly hurt, the +third with his leg broken. Alas! Others were not so fortunate. + +Rising smoke, here and there, showed where fire had followed the +hurricane. Instead of the songs of labor in the fields, nothing was to +be heard but cries of distress. As the country grew more thickly +settled, on the way to Bridgetown, so was the suffering more intense and +the death-roll heavier. The drive, not more than twelve miles in all, +took over four hours, so littered was the road with fallen trees and the +debris of houses. + +In the ruins of Bridgetown, Stuart met one of his newspaper friends, the +news instinct still inspiring him to secure every detail of the +catastrophe, though there was no newspaper office, the building being in +ruins and the presses buried under an avalanche of brick. + +"The wires are down, too," said this newspaper man, "if I were you, I'd +chase right over to Trinidad. The mail steamer, which should have gone +last night, hasn't left yet, or, at least, I don't think she has. She +couldn't leave till the hurricane passed and the sea calmed down a bit. +At present, we are cut off from the world. It'll take two or three days, +a week, maybe, before the shore ends of the submarine cables are +recovered. If you can catch that steamer, you'll be in Trinidad this +evening." + +"But suppose the cables are broken there, too?" suggested Stuart. + +"They're not likely to be," his friend replied, "we just caught the +southern end of the hurricane here--lucky we didn't get the middle!--and +so Trinidad is likely to have escaped entirely. But you'll have to hurry +to catch that steamer. I'll get in touch with Ol' Doc, the best way I +can, and send your trunk on to you down there. Got your typewriter? +That's all right, then. Write your story on the boat. Now, hurry up! +Here!" + +He shouted to a passing negro. + +"Go down to the pier, Pierre, get a boat, any boat, and take this +passenger. He's got to catch the steamer." + +"Me catch um!" + +And he did, though it was by the narrowest margin, for the mail steamer +had steam up, and only waited until this last passenger should come +aboard. + +Stuart had counted on being able to enrich his account of the hurricane +with personal stories from the passengers on the steamer, all of whom +had been through the disaster, some on board ship and some ashore. There +was no chance of this. Although a glorious day, not a soul among the +passengers was on deck. All were sleeping, for all, alike, had waked and +watched. + +Stuart was dropping with weariness and sleep, but he remembered what the +Managing Editor had said to him about a "scoop" and he thought that this +might be the great opportunity of his life to make a reputation for +himself on his first trip out. A well-placed half-sovereign with the +deck steward brought him a cup of strong coffee every two hours, and +though his mind was fogged with weariness, so vivid had been his +impressions that they could not help but be thrilling. + +Though one of the most richly verdant of all the West India islands, +Trinidad had little beauty to Stuart, on his first sight of it. He saw +it through a haze of weariness, his eyes red-rimmed through lack of +sleep. The harbor is shallow, and Stuart, like other passengers, landed +in a launch, but he had eyes only for one thing--the cable office. Since +his only luggage consisted of a portable typewriter--his trunk having +been left behind at "Ol' Doc's"--the customs' examination was brief. + +At the Cable Office, Stuart learned, to his delight, that not a message +had either reached the office or gone out about the Barbados hurricane. +He had a scoop. He put his story on the wires, staggered across the +street to the nearest hotel, threw off coat and boots and dropped upon +the bed in an exhausted slumber. And, as an undercurrent to his dreams, +rang the triumph song of the journalist: + +"A Scoop!" + +Stuart slept the clock round. It was evening again when he awoke. A wash +to take the sleep out of his eyes, and down he went to see how big a +dinner he could put away. But the doorman at the hotel, an East Indian, +came forward to him with a telegram on a salver. The boy tore it open, +and read: + + "GOOD--STUFF--SEND--SOME MORE--FERGUS." + +And if Stuart had been offered the Governor Generalship of all the West +Indian Islands put together, he could not have been more proud. + +He spent the evening interviewing some of the passengers who had come on +the mail steamer the day before and who had stayed in Port of Spain and, +before midnight, filed at the cable office a good "second-day story." +Remembering what his friend the reporter had told him, Stuart realized +that though he was still sending this matter to Fergus, as it was +straight news stuff, it probably was being handled by the Night +Telegraph staff. That would not help to fill Fergus' columns in the +Sunday issue, and the boy realized that, no matter what live day stuff +he got hold of, he must not fall behind in his series of articles on the +Color Question in the West Indies. + +This question--which takes on the proportions of a problem in everyone +of the West Indian Islands--was very different in Trinidad than in +Barbados. The peoples and languages of Trinidad are strangely mixed. +Though it is an English colony, yet the language of the best families is +Spanish, and the general language of the negro population is Creole +French, a subvariant of that of Haiti. The boy found, too, on his first +long walks in the neighborhood of Port-of-Spain, that there was a large +outer settlement of East Indian coolies, and quite a number of Chinese. +The English, in Trinidad, were few in number. + +In his quest for interviews about the hurricane, one of the chattiest of +Stuart's informants had been a Mr. James, a resident of Barbados, but +whose commercial interests were mainly in Trinidad. Since, then, this +gentleman evidently knew the life in both islands, his comparisons would +be of value, and the following day Stuart asked him for a second +interview. + +"I'm starting out to my place on the Nariva Cocal," the planter replied, +"going in about an hour. Very glad to have you as my guest, if you wish, +and the trip will give you a good view of the island. Then we can chat +on the way." + +Stuart jumped at the opportunity. This was exactly what he was after, +for the Nariva Cocal, with its thirteen-mile long coco-nut grove on the +shore of the ocean, is famous. The boy knew, too, that this section was +very difficult of access, the Nariva River forming a mixture of river, +tidal creek, lagoon, mangrove swamp and marsh, hard to cross. + +For some little distance out of Port-of-Spain the train passed through +true tropical forests of a verdure not to be outrivaled in any part of +the New World. "Here," says Treves, "is a very revel of green, a hoard, +a pyramid, a piled-up cairn of green, rising aloft from an iris-blue +sea. Here are the dull green of wet moss, the clear green of the +parrot's wing, the green tints of old copper, of malachite, of the wild +apple, the bronze-green of the beetle's back, the dead green of the +autumn Nile." And these are expressed, not in plants, but in trees. The +moss is waist-high, the ferns wave twenty feet overhead, the bamboo +drapes a feathery fringe by every stream, the cocoa trees grow right up +to the road or railroad which sweeps along as on an avenue between them, +while at every crossing the white roadway is lined by the majestic +sentinels of plantain, coco-nut palm and breadfruit tree. + +Beyond St. Joseph, the ground became a low plain, level and monotonous, +and given over to sugar-cane. Near d'Abadie, this crop gave place to +cocoa, the staple of the center of the island, and this extended through +Arima to Sangre Grande, the terminus of the railroad. During the trip +Stuart's host had enlightened him by an exact and painstaking +description of the growing of these various crops and the methods of +their preparation for market. + +At Sangre Grande, the railroad ended and a two-wheeled buggy was +waiting. The planter ordered the East Indian driver to follow in the +motor-bus which conveys passengers to Manzanilla, and took the reins +himself, so as to give a place to Stuart. The road had left the level, +and passed over low hills and valleys all given over to cocoa trees. + +"See those bottles!" commented Mr. James, pointing to bottles daubed +with paint, bunches of white feathers and similar objects hung on trees +at various points of the road. + +"Yes," answered Stuart, "what are they for?" + +"Those are our police!" the planter explained. "This colony is well +governed, but planters have had a good deal of trouble keeping the +negroes from stealing. We used to engage a number of watchmen, and the +police force in this part of the island was increased. It didn't do any +good, you know! Stealing went on just the same. + +"So my partner, down here, went and got hold of the chief Obeah-man or +witch-doctor of the island--paid him a good stiff price, too--and asked +him to put a charm on the plantation. He did it, and those bottles and +feathers are some of the charms. We pay for having them renewed every +year. It costs a tidy bit, but less than the watchmen and police did." + +"And have the thefts stopped?" + +"Absolutely. There hasn't been a shilling's worth of stuff touched since +the obeah-man was here." + +"But obeah wouldn't have any effect on East Indian coolies," objected +Stuart. + +"Coolies don't steal," was the terse reply, "those that are Mohammedans +don't, any way. Trinidad negroes do. They're different from the +Barbadian negroes, quite different. Obeah seems to be about the only +thing they care about." + +"I ran up against some Obeah in Haiti," remarked Stuart, "though Voodoo +is stronger there." + +"I never heard of much real Voodoo stuff here in the Windward Islands," +the planter rejoined, "but Obeah plays a big part in negro life. And, as +I was just telling you, the whites aren't above using it, sometimes." + +"In Haiti," responded Stuart, "Father and I once found an Obeah sign in +the road. Father, who knows a lot about those things, read it as a charm +to prevent any white man going that way. I thought it was silly to pay +any attention, but Father made a long detour around it. A week or so +after I heard that a white trader had been driving along that road, and +he drove right over the sign. Half a mile on, his horse took fright, +threw him out of the buggy and he was killed." + +The planter shrugged his shoulders. + +"I know," he said. "It's all right to call it coincidence, but down in +these islands that kind of coincidence happens a bit too often. For me, +I'll throw a shilling to an Obeah-man any time I see one, and I won't +play any tricks with charms if I know enough about them to keep away." + +The buggy jogged along at a smart pace until the shore was reached, and +then set down the beach over the hard wet sand. On the one side heaved +the long rollers of the Atlantic, on the other was the continuous grove +of coco-nut palms, thirteen miles long, one of the finest unbroken +stretches in the entire world. + +A hospitable welcome was extended to Stuart at the house of the Nariva +Cocal, and, after dinner, the planter took him to the shores of the +Nariva River, not more than twenty or thirty yards from the house, +which, at this place, had a bank free of marsh for a distance of perhaps +a couple of hundred yards. + +"It was just at a place like this, but a little higher up-stream," said +the planter, "that the snake story happened which Kingsley described in +'At Last.' Four girls were bathing in this river, because the surf is +too heavy for sea-bathing, and one of them, who had gone into the water +partly dressed, felt something clutch at her dress. + +"It was a huge anaconda. + +"The other three girls, with a good deal of pluck, I think, rushed into +the shallow water and grabbed hold of their comrade. The snake did not +let go, but the dress was torn from her body by the wrestle between the +strength of the reptile and that of the four girls. I know one of the +sisters quite well. She's an old woman, now, but she lives in Sangre +Grande, still." + +Turning from the river, Stuart and the planter strolled some distance +down the knife-like sandy ridge between the ocean and the swamp. This +narrow ridge, at no point a hundred yards wide and averaging less than +half that, contains over 300,000 palms, and this plantation alone helps +to make Trinidad one of the greatest coco-nut markets of the world. + +"I notice," said Stuart, anxious to get material for his articles, "that +nearly all your laborers here are East Indian coolies. Are they better +than negroes?" + +"They come here under different conditions," explained the planter. "The +negro is free to work or not, as he chooses, but the coolie is +indentured. He has to work. He earns less than the negro, but, by the +time we pay his voyage and all the various obligations that we have to +undertake for an indentured laborer, the coolie isn't much cheaper to us +than the negro. But, while the negro can do more work in a day than the +coolie, he won't. Moreover, if he feels, after a few days' work, that he +has had enough of it, he just goes away. A Trinidad negro with a pound +or two in his pocket won't do a tap of work until the last penny be +spent. The coolie will work quietly, steadily, continuously. What is +more, he saves his money. That's bringing about a deuced curious +situation in Trinidad, you know. + +"One of the queer things about the West Indies, as you know yourself, +having lived in Cuba, is that there is really no middle class. Here, in +Trinidad, there are the wealthy Spanish families and the English +officials and planters. The blacks are the laborers. For many decades +there has been no class between. Now, the East Indians, who came here as +coolies, are beginning to follow the commercial instinct of the east, +and to open small shops or to buy land. Hence the negro, who used to +despise and look down on the coolie because he worked for even less +money, is now finding himself subordinate to an East Indian class which +has risen to be his superior. Then the East Indians have commenced +rice-growing, and now are employing negroes, oversetting the old social +basis. + +"There's one thing, son, which few people realize in this color question +in the West Indies. That is that the negro has not got the instincts of +a shopkeeper. He doesn't take to trade, ever. If he gets educated, he +wants at once to be a doctor, a lawyer, or, still more, a preacher. But +this is a commercial age, and any race which shows itself unfitted for +commerce is bound to stay the under dog, you know. Trinidad shows that, +given equal conditions, the East Indian coolie will rise, the negro +will not." + +The following morning, Mr. James having gone over the books of the +plantation with his manager, the two started back for Port-of-Spain. + +"Why don't you live here, Mr. James?" asked the boy. "It's a lovely +spot, in that coco-nut grove, with the sea right at your doors." + +"Climate, my boy," was the answer. "I told you, on the way over here, +that Trinidad is reckoned one of the most prosperous islands of the West +Indies--though it really belongs more to the coast of South America than +it does to the Antilles--but, if you stop to think for a moment, you'll +see that the prosperity of Trinidad is due to the fact that it has a +warm, moist, even climate all the year round. That's fine for cocoa and +coco-nuts, but it's not good for humans. The warm moist air of Trinidad +is deuced enervating. No, let me go back to Barbados. It may not be as +beautiful--I'll admit that it isn't--but at least there is a north-east +breeze nearly all the year round to keep me jolly cool." + +The two travelers talked of various subjects, but, once more aboard the +train at Sangre Grande, the question of Trinidad's wealth recurred to +Stuart, and he sought further information. + +"You spoke of the island as being prosperous, Mr. James," he said. "Has +the Pitch Lake, discovered so many centuries ago by Sir Walter Raleigh, +had anything to do with it?" + +"Directly, not such a great deal, though, of course, it is a steady +source of income, especially to the Crown. Asphalt is less than a +twentieth part of the value of the exports of the island, so, you see, +Trinidad would have been rich without that. Indirectly, of course, the +Pitch Lake has been the means of attracting attention to the island, +especially in earlier times. The facts that Trinidad is out of the +hurricane track and off the earthquake belt have had a good deal to do +with its prosperity, too, you know. My friend Cecil always declares that +Trinidad and Jamaica together, the two richest of the West Indian +islands, ought to run the whole cluster of Caribbean islands, just as +little England runs the whole British Empire." + +"Who was it said that?" asked Stuart curiously, though his heart was +thumping with excitement. + +"A chap I know, Cecil, Guy Cecil, sort of a globe-trotter. One of the +biggest shareholders in this Pitch Lake. Funny sort of Johnny. Know +him?" + +"I--I think I've met him," answered the boy. "Tall, eyes a very light +blue, almost colorless, speaks very correct English, fussy about his +clothes and doesn't talk about himself much." + +"That's the very man!" cried the planter, "I couldn't have described him +better myself. Where did you meet him?" + +Stuart answered non-committally and steered the subject into other +channels, determining within himself that he would certainly go out to +the Pitch Lake, if only with the hope of finding out something more +about this mysterious Guy Cecil, whose name seemed to be cropping up +everywhere. + +The following day, having seen his friend the planter off on the +homeward bound mail steamer, Stuart prepared for his visit to the famous +Pitch Lake, though the planter had warned him that he would be +disappointed. + +Going by railway to Fernando, Stuart took a small steamer to La Brea, +the shipping point for the asphalt, a town, which, by reason of its +association with pitch, has a strange and unnatural air. The beach is +covered with pieces of pitch, encrusted with sand and stones, worn by +the water into the most grotesque shapes and forming so many +resting-places for hundreds of pelicans. Some of these blocks of +hardened asphalt had been polished by the sea until they shone like +jewels of jet as large as a table, others, fringed with green seaweed, +gave the shore an uncanny appearance of a sea-beach not of this earth. +Unlike the universally white towns of the West Indies, La Brea is black. +The impress of pitch is everywhere. The pier is caked with the pitch, +the pavements are pitch, and, on the only street in the town as Stuart +passed, he saw a black child, sitting on a black boulder of pitch, and +playing with a black doll made of pitch. + +Taking a negro boy as a guide, Stuart started for the famous deposit of +asphalt, about one mile inland. The countryside leading thither was not +absolutely barren, but it was scrawny and dismal. A coarse sand +alternated with chunks of black asphalt. A few trees managed to find a +foothold here and there, and there was sparse vegetation in patches. + +There was nothing exciting, nothing momentous in the approach to the +lake. Nor was there anything startling in the sight of the lake itself. + +Although previously warned, Stuart could not repress an exclamation of +disappointed surprise at his first view of this famous lake, the +greatest deposit of natural asphalt in the world. + +A circular depression, so slight that it was hard for the boy to realize +that it was a depression at all, had, toward its center, a smaller flat, +115 acres in extent. There were no flames, no sulphurous steam, no +smoke, no bubbling whirls of viscid matter, nothing exciting whatever. +The stretch before him resembled nothing so much as mud-flat with the +tide out. The dried-up bed of a large park pond, with a small island or +two of green shrubbery, and some very scrawny palms around the edge +would exactly represent the famous Pitch Lake of Trinidad. + +Arriving at the edge, Stuart stepped on the lake with the utmost +precaution, for he had read that the lake was both warm and liquid. Both +were true. But the warmth was only slight, and the liquidity was so +dense that, when a piece of pitch was taken out, it took several hours +for the slow-moving mass to fill up the hole. + +"The sensation that walking upon this substance gave," writes Treves, +"was no other than that of treading upon the flank of some immense +beast, some Titanic mammoth lying prostrate in a swamp. The surface was +black, it was dry and minutely wrinkled like an elephant's skin, it was +blood-warm, it was soft and yielded to the tread precisely as one would +suppose that an acre of solid flesh would yield. The general impression +was heightened by certain surface creases, where the hide seemed to be +turned in as in the folds behind an elephant's ears. These skin furrows +were filled with water, as if the collapsed animal was perspiring. + +"The heat of the air was great, the light was almost blinding, while the +shimmer upon the baked surface, added to the swaying of one's feet in +soft places, gave rise to the idea that the mighty beast was still +breathing, and that its many-acred flank actually moved." + +The task of taking the pitch out of this lake, Stuart found to be as +prosaic as the lake itself. Laborers, with picks, broke off large +pieces--which showed a dull blue cleavage--while other laborers lifted +the pieces on their heads--the material is light--and carried them to +trucks, running on a little railroad on the surface of the lake, and +pulled by a cable line. + +The tracks sink into the lake, little by little, and have to be pried +up and moved to a new spot every three days, but as they are specially +constructed for this, the labor is trifling. The laborers work right +beside the railroad trucks. It makes no difference where the ditch is +dug, from which the asphalt is taken, as the hole left the night before +is filled again by the following morning. + +It has been estimated that this deposit alone contains over 9,000,000 +tons of asphalt. It is 135 feet deep, and though enormous quantities of +the stuff have been taken out, the level has not fallen more than ten +feet. + +In the lake are certain small islands, which move around from place to +place, apparently following some little-known currents in the lower +layers of the pitch. + +Stuart went on to the factory, hoping to get some further information +about Guy Cecil, but met with a sudden and unexpected rebuff. Not only +did no one about the place seem to know the name, but they refused to +admit that they recognized the description, and seemed to resent the +questions. + +Trying to change the subject, Stuart commenced to ask questions about +where the asphalt came from, and the manager, who seemed to be a +Canadian, turned on the boy, sharply. + +"See here," he said, "I don't know who you are, nor where you come from. +But I'll give a civil answer to a civil question. As for this Cecil, I +don't know anything about him. As for where this asphalt come from, I +don't know, and nobody knows. Some say it's inorganic, some say is from +vegetable deposits of a long time ago, some say it's fish. The chemists +are still scrapping about it. Nobody knows. Now, is there anything +more?" + +The manner of the response was not one to lead Stuart to further +attempts. He shook his head, and with a curt farewell went back to La +Brea, Fernando and Port de Spain. + +At the hotel he found a telegram. + + "GET--STORY--PRESENT--CONDITION--ST. PIERRE--MARTINIQUE--FERGUS." + +Two days later Stuart boarded the steamer for Martinique, the Island of +the Volcano. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE MORNING OF DOOM + + +"Ay," said the first mate to Stuart, as they paced the bridge on the +little steamer which was taking the boy to Martinique, "yonder little +island is St. Lucia, maybe the most beautiful of the West Indies, though +it isn't safe for folks to wander around much there." + +"Why?" asked Stuart in surprise, "are the negroes mutinous?" + +"No, bless ye!" the mate gave a short laugh. "Mighty nice folks in St. +Lucia, though Castries, the capital, is a great fever town. It isn't the +folks that are dangerous. Snakes, my bully boy, snakes! It's the home of +the fer-de-lance." + +"The Yellow Viper?" queried Stuart. + +"The same. An' the name's a good one. It's more viperous than any other +snake of the viper bunch, an' its disposition is mean and yellow right +through. Ever see one?" + +"No," said Stuart, "I haven't. I heard there were some in Trinidad, and +there have been a few reported in Cuba. But I guess they're rare there. +What do they look like?" + +The mate spat freely over the side, while he gathered his powers for a +description. + +"If ye can think of a fish that's been a long time dead," he suggested, +"an' has turned a sort of phosphorescent brown-yellow in decayin', ye'll +have a general idea of the color. The head, like all the vipers, is low, +flat an' triangle-shaped. The eye is a bright orange color, an' so +shinin' that flashes from it look like sparks of red-yellow fire. I've +never seen them at night, but folks who have, say that in the dark the +eyes look like glowin' charcoal. + +"If I had to take a walk through the St. Lucia woods, I'd put on armor, +I would! Why, any minute, something you take for a branch, a knot of +liana, a clump of fruit, a hangin' air-plant, may take life an' strike. +An' that's all ye'll ever know in this world." + +"There's no cure for it?" + +"None. A little while after a fer-de-lance strikes, ye're as dead as if +you'd been dropped in mid-Atlantic, with a shot tied to your feet." + +"Maybe I'm just as glad I'm not going to land there," said Stuart, +"though I guess it's one of the most famous fighting spots of the world. +I read once that for a hundred and fifty years there was never a year +without a battle on that island. Seven times it was held by the English +and seven times by the French." + +"Like enough," replied the mate. "It's owned by the English now, but +Castries is a French town, through and through. But Castries sticks in +my memory for a reason which means more to a deep-water sailor than any +land fightin'. We were lyin' in the harbor at Castries when the _Roddam_ +came in, ay, more'n twenty years ago." + +"What was the _Roddam_?" queried Stuart, scenting a story. + +"Have ye forgotten," answered the mate in a return query, "or didn't ye +ever know? Let me tell ye what the _Roddam_ was!" + +"We were lyin' right over there, in Castries Harbor, dischargin' +coal--which was carried down by negro women in baskets on their +heads--when we saw creep round the headland of Vigie, where you can see +the old barracks from here, the shape of a steamer. She came slowly, +like some wounded an' crippled critter. Clear across the bay we could +hear her screw creakin,' an' her engines clankin' like they were all +poundin' to pieces. What a sight she was! We looked at her, struck still +ourselves an' unable to speak. They talk of a Phantom Ship, but if ever +anything looked like a Phantom Steamer, the _Roddam_ was that one. + +"From funnel-rim to water-line she was grey an' ghost-like, lookin' like +a boat seen in an ugly dream. Every scrap o' paint had been burned from +her sides, or else was hangin' down from the bare iron like flaps o' +skin. She had been flayed alive, an' she showed it. Some of her derricks +were gone, the ropes charred an' the wires endin' in blobs o' melted +metal. The planks of her chart-house were blackened. Her ventilators had +crumpled into masses without any shape. + +"Laborin' like a critter in pain, she managed to make shallow water, an' +a rattle o' chain told o' the droppin' o' the anchor. After that, +nothin'! There wasn't a sign o' life aboard. + +"The harbor folks pulled out to take a look at the craft. As they came +near, the smell o' fire an' sulphur met them. A hush, like death, seemed +to hang over her. The colored boatmen quit rowin', but the harbor-master +forced them on. Her ladder was still down. The harbor-master climbed +aboard. + +"On deck, nothin' moved. The harbor-master stepped down into grey ashes, +sinkin' above his knee. With a scream he drew back. The ashes were hot, +almost white-hot, below. The light surface ash flew up about him and +half-suffocated him. His boot half-burned from his foot and chokin', the +harbor-master staggered back to the rail for air. + +"No life was to be seen, nothin' but piles o' grey ash, heaped in +mounds. Ash was everywhere. From it rose a quivering heat, smellin' o' +sulphur an' the Pit. + +"Yet everyone couldn't be dead on this ghost-ship, for someone must ha' +steered her into the harbor, an' dropped the anchor. Makin' his way +along the rail, the harbor-master made his way to where he could reach +the iron ladder goin' to the bridge, an' climbed it. The bridge was +clear of ash, blown free by the mornin' breeze. + +"The chart-house door was open. In it, lyin' across the steam steerin' +wheel, was Captain Freeman, unconscious. His face was so blistered that +his eyes were nearly shut. His hair was singed right down to the skull. +His hands were raw an' bleedin'. His clothes were scorched into +something that was black an' brittle. The harbor-master lifted him, an' +laid him on the chart-house bunk." + +"What others were there?" + +"Pickin' his way, he got to the bow an' found the deck hand who had let +down the anchor. He was blind an' his flesh was crisped and cracking. + +"From below, crawled up four o' the engine-room crew. Most o' the others +aboard lay dead under those heaps o' hot ash on the deck." + +"What had happened?" + +"This had happened. The _Roddam_ had been through the eruption of Mont +Pelee, the only ship which escaped o' the eighteen that were in the +harbor. She got away only because she made port just fifty-two minutes +before the eruption, an' had been ordered to the quarantine station, +some distance off." + +"Did you see anything of the eruption yourself?" + +"We knew that somethin' had happened, even down here in St. Lucia. It +turned almost as black as night for a few minutes, an' our skipper, who +was ashore, said he had felt a slight earthquake. But we saw enough of +it, right after." + +"How?" queried Stuart. + +"We had a lot o' foodstuff in our cargo, some of which was billed for +Caracas. But, as soon as we heard the story, our captain told the +engineer to get up full steam an' make for Fort-de-France. He knew the +owners would have wanted him to go to the relief of the folks of +Martinique. We got there the next day an' saw sights! Sights I can't +ever forget!" + +The eruption of Mont Pelee and the destruction of the town of St. +Pierre, in 1902, over 30,000 people being killed in the space of three +seconds, was one of the most tragic disasters of history, and the ruins +of St. Pierre are today the most astounding ruins that the world +contains of so vast and terrible a calamity, outrivaling those of +Pompeii. + +The cataclysm did not come without warning. As early as March 23, a +scientist ascended the volcano and reported that a small crater was in +eruption. By the end of April, to quote from Heilprin, "vast columns of +steam and ash had been and were being blown out, boiling mud was flowing +from its sides and terrific rumblings came from its interior. Lurid +lights hung over the crown at night-time, and lightning flashed in +dazzling sheets through the cloud-world. What further warnings could any +volcano give?" + +On April 25, a crater broke into a small eruption, throwing out showers +of rock-material, which, however, did not reach the town, distant a mile +from the foot of the volcano. On May 5, an avalanche of boiling mud, +many acres wide, tumbled down from the volcano, and went roaring along +the bed of the Riviere Blanche at the rate of a mile a minute. A large +sugar factory was engulfed and some 159 lives lost. On May 6 and 7, the +sulphur fumes were so strong in the streets that horses, and even +people, dropped from suffocation. + +Again--what further warning could any volcano give? + +There were other warnings. On April 30, light ashes had begun to fall. +On May 1 an excursion was announced for the summit of Mont Pelee for +those who wished to see a volcano in action, but that morning a deeper +coat of ashes blanched the streets. The Jardin des Plantes--one of the +richest tropical gardens of the West Indies--lay buried beneath a cap of +gray and white. The heights above the city seemed snow-clad. The country +roads were blocked and obliterated, and horses would neither work nor +travel. Birds fell in their noiseless flight, smothered by the ash that +surrounded them, or asphyxiated by poisonous vapors or gases that were +being poured into the atmosphere. + +"The rain of ashes never ceases," the local paper wrote on May 3. "At +about half-past nine, the sun shone forth timidly. The passing of +carriages is no longer heard in the streets. The wheels are muffled. +Many business houses are closed to customers.... The excursion which +had been organized for tomorrow morning cannot take place, the crater +being absolutely inaccessible. Those who had planned to take part will +be informed on what date this excursion will become possible." + +On May 4 the paper wrote: "The sea is covered in patches with dead +birds. Many lie asphyxiated on the roads. The cattle suffer greatly, +asphyxiated by the dust of ashes. The children of the planters wander +aimlessly about the courtyards, with their little donkeys, like human +wrecks. They are no longer black, but white, and look as if hoar frost +had formed upon them.... Desolation, aridity and eternal silence prevail +over the countryside." + +Next day, May 5, was the day when the mud crater opened. It was followed +by an upsurging wave from the ocean, which added to the fear of the +people, but which receded slowly and with little damage. On the day +following, Pelee was shrouded in a heavy cloud, and ashes and cinders +fell over a wide stretch of country. The surface waters had disappeared. +Trees had been burned of their leaves. Yet a commission appointed to +investigate the condition of the volcano made light of it, saying "the +relative position of the craters and the valleys, leading towards the +sea, enables the statement that the safety of St. Pierre is complete." + +Wednesday, May 7, opened one of the saddest and most terrorizing of the +many days that led up to the final eruption. Since four o'clock in the +morning, Mont Pelee had been hoarse with its roaring, and vivid +lightning flashed through its shattered clouds. Thunder rolled over its +head, and lurid glares played across the smoky column which towered +aloft. "Some say," says Heilprin, "that at this time it showed two fiery +crater-mouths, which shone out like fire-filled blast furnaces. The +volcano seemed prepared for a last effort. + +"When daylight broke through the clouds and cast its softening rays over +the roadstead, another picture of horror rose to the eyes. The +shimmering waters of the open sea were loaded with wreckage of all +kinds--islands of debris from field and forest and floating fields of +pumice and jetsam. As far as the eye could reach, it saw but a field of +desolation." The river of Basse-Pointe overflowed with a torrent of +black water, which carried several houses away. Black rains fell. + +Again, and for the last time--could a volcano give any further warning? + +Yet the governor, a scientific commission, and the local paper joined in +advising the inhabitants of St. Pierre not to flee the city, the article +closing with the words, "Mont Pelee presents no more dangers to the +inhabitants of St. Pierre than does Vesuvius to those of Naples." + +Next day the governor was dead, the members of the commission were dead, +the editor was dead, and the presses on which this article had been +printed had, in one blast, been fused into a mass of twisted metal. + +Came the 8th of May, 1902. + +Shortly after midnight the thunders ceased for a while, but by four +o'clock, two hours before the shadows of night had lifted, an ominous +cloud was seen flowing out to sea, followed in its train by streaks of +fiery cinders. The sun was barely above the horizon when the roaring +began again. The Vicar-General describes these sounds as follows: "I +distinguished clearly four kinds of noises; first the clap of thunder, +which followed the lightning at intervals of twenty seconds; then the +mighty muffled detonations of the volcano, like the roaring of many +cannon fired simultaneously; third, the continuous rumbling of the +crater, which the inhabitants designated the 'roaring of the lion,' and +then last, as though furnishing the bass for this gloomy music, the deep +noise of the swelling waters, of all the torrents which take their +source upon the mountain, generated by an overflow such as has never yet +been seen. This immense rising of thirty streams at once, without one +drop of water having fallen on the sea-coast, gives some idea of the +cataracts which must pour down upon the summit from the storm-clouds +gathered around the crater." + +"Hundreds of agonized people," writes Heilprin, in his great scientific +work on the catastrophe, "had gathered to their devotions in the +Cathedral and the Cathedral Square, this being Ascension Day, but +probably there were not many among them who did not feel that the tide +of the world had turned, for even through the atmosphere of the sainted +bells, the fiery missiles were being hurled to warn of destruction. The +fate of the city and of its inhabitants had already been sealed. + +"The big hand of the clock of the Military Hospital had just reached the +minute mark of 7:50 a.m. when a great brown cloud was seen to issue from +the side of the volcano, followed almost immediately by a cloud of +vapory blackness, which separated from it and took a course downward to +the sea. Deafening detonations from the interior preceded this +appearance, and a lofty white pennant was seen to rise from the summit +of the volcano. + +"With wild fury the black cloud rolled down the mountain slope, pressing +closely the contours of the valley along which had previously swept the +mud-flow that overwhelmed the factory three days before, and spreading +fan-like to the sea. + +"In two minutes, or less, it had reached the doomed city, a flash of +blinding intensity parted its coils, and St. Pierre was ablaze. The +clock of the Military Hospital halted at 7:52 a.m.--a historic time-mark +among the ruins, the recorder of one of the greatest catastrophic events +that are written in the history of the world." + +Just before the cloud struck, its violet-grey center showed, and the +forepart of this was luminous. It struck the town with the fury of a +tornado of flame. Whirls of fire writhed spirally about it. The mountain +had belched death, death in many forms: death by fire, death by +poisonous gases, death by a super-furnace heat, but, principally, death +by a sudden suffocation, the fiery and flaming cloud having consumed all +the breathable air. + +Whole streets of houses were mown down by the flaming scythe. Walls +three to four feet in thickness were blown away like paper. Massive +machinery was crumpled up as if it had been clutched in a titanic +white-hot metal hand. The town was raked by a hurricane of incandescent +dust and super-heated gas. + +The violet luminosity, with its writhing serpents of flame, was followed +in a second or two by a thousand points of light as the town took fire, +followed, almost instantaneously, by a burst of light of every color in +the spectrum, as a thousand substances leaped into combustion, and then, +in a moment---- + +Night! + +An impenetrable cloud of smoke and ash absolutely blotted out the sun. +The sky was covered. The hills were hidden. The sea was as invisible as +at midnight. Even the grayness of the ash gave back no light; there was +none to give. + +Three seconds had elapsed since the violet-gray cloud of fury struck the +town, but in those three seconds 30,000 people lay dead, slain with +such appalling swiftness that none knew their fate. No one had tried to +escape. + +The eruption was witnessed, from a distance, by only one trained +observer, Roger Arnoux, and a translation of his record is, in part, as +follows: + +"Having left St. Pierre at about five in the evening (May 7) I was +witness to the following spectacle: Enormous rocks, being clearly +distinguishable, were being projected from the crater to a considerable +elevation, so high, indeed, as to occupy a quarter of a minute in their +flight. + +"About eight o'clock of the evening we recognized for the first time, +playing about the crater, fixed fires that burned with a brilliant white +flame. Shortly afterwards, several detonations, similar to those that +had been heard at St. Pierre, were noted coming from the south, which +confirmed me in my opinion that there already existed a number of +submarine craters from which gases were being projected, to explode when +coming in contact with the air. + +"Having retired for the night, at about nine o'clock, I awoke shortly +afterwards in the midst of a suffocating heat and completely bathed in +perspiration.... I awoke again about eleven thirty-five, having felt a +trembling of the earth ... but again went to sleep, waking at half-past +seven. My first observation was of the crater, which I found +sufficiently calm, the vapors being chased swiftly under pressure of an +east wind. + +"At about eight o'clock, when still watching the crater (M. Arnoux was +the only man who saw the beginning of the eruption and lived to tell the +tale), I noted a small cloud pass out, followed two seconds after by a +considerable cloud, whose flight to the Pointe de Carbet (beyond the +city) _occupied less than three seconds_, being at the same time already +in our zenith, thus showing that it developed almost as rapidly in +height as in length. The vapors were of a violet-gray color and +seemingly very dense, for, although endowed with an almost inconceivably +powerful ascensive force, they retained to the zenith their rounded +summits. Innumerable electric scintillations played through the chaos of +vapors, at the same time that the ears were deafened by a frightful +fracas. + +"I had, at this time, an impression that St. Pierre had been +destroyed.... As the monster seemed to near us, my people, +panic-stricken, ran to a neighboring hillock that dominated the house, +begging me to do the same.... Hardly had we arrived at the summit when +the sun was completely veiled, and in its place came almost complete +blackness.... At this time we observed over St. Pierre, a column of +fire, estimated to be 1,200 feet in height, which seemed to be endowed +with the movement of rotation as well as onward movement." St. Pierre +was no more. + +Rescuers were soon on their way. Twenty-three minutes after the clouds +had been seen rising from Mont Pelee and the cable and telephone lines +were broken, a little steamer left Fort-de-France, the capital. It +reached half-way, then, finding that the rain of stones and ashes +threatened to sink it, returned. The boat started anew at ten o'clock +and rounded the point of Carbet. The volcano was shrouded in smoke and +ashes. For three miles the coast was in flames. Seventeen vessels in the +roadstead, two of which were American steamers, burned at anchor. The +heat from this immense conflagration prevented the boat from proceeding +and it returned to Fort-de-France, reaching there at one o'clock, +bringing the sinister tidings. + +At midday, the Acting Governor of Martinique ordered the _Suchet_ to go +with troops to be under the direction of the Governor, then at St. +Pierre. About three o'clock, a party was landed on the shore. The pier +was covered with bodies. The town was all in fire and in ruins. The heat +was such that the landing party could not endure more than three or four +minutes. The Governor was dead also. + +"St. Pierre," writes a witness on another rescue ship, which arrived at +almost the same moment, "is no more. Its ruins stretch before us, in +their shroud of smoke and ashes, gloomy and silent, a city of the dead. +Our eyes seek the inhabitants fleeing distracted, or returning to look +for the dead. Nothing to be seen. No living soul appears in this desert +of desolation, encompassed by appalling silence.... Through the clouds +of ashes and of smoke diffused in our atmosphere, the sun breaks wan and +dim, as it is never seen in our skies, and throws over the whole +picture a sinister light, suggestive of a world beyond the grave." + +Two of the inhabitants, and two only, escaped; one a negro prisoner, who +was not found until three days later, burned half to death in his prison +cell; and one, a shoemaker, who, by some strange eddy in the all-killing +gas, and who was on the very edge of the track of destruction, fled, +though others fell dead on every side of him. + +A second eruption, coupled with an earthquake, on May 20, completed the +wreckage of the buildings. This outburst was even more violent than the +first. There was no loss of life, for no one was left to slay. + +Five years later, Sir Frederick Treves visited St. Pierre. "Along the +whole stretch of the bay," he writes, "there is not one living figure to +be seen, not one sign of human life, not even a poor hut, nor grazing +cattle.... A generous growth of jungle has spread over the place in +these five years. Rank bushes, and even small trees, make a thicket +along some of the less traversed ways.... Over some of the houses +luxuriant creepers have spread, while long grass, ferns and forest +flowers have filled up many a court and modest lane." + +Twelve years later, a visitor to St. Pierre found a small wooden pier +erected. A tiny hotel had been built. Huts were clustering under the +ruins. Several parties were at work clearing away the ruins, but slowly, +for the government of the colony would not assist in the work, +believing that the region was unsafe. At the time of this visit, Mont +Pelee was still smoking. + +This was the ruined city which Stuart was going to see. On board the +steamer were the two or three books which tell the story of the great +eruption, and the boy filled his brain full of the terrible story that +he might better feel the great adventure that the next day should bring +him. + +The steamer reached Fort-de-France in the evening, and the boy found the +town, though ill-lighted, gay. A band was playing in the Plaza, not far +from the landing place and most of the shops were still open. Morning +showed an even brighter Fort-de-France, for, though when St. Pierre was +in its glory, Fort-de-France was the lesser town, the capital now is the +center of the commercial prosperity of the island. For this, however, +Stuart had little regard. Sunrise found him on the little steamer which +leaves daily for St. Pierre. + +The journey was not long, three hours along a coast of steep cliffs with +verdant mountains above. Small fishing hamlets, half-hidden behind +coco-nut palms, appeared in every cove. The steamer passed Carbet, that +town on the edge of the great eruptive flood, which had its own +death-list, and they turned the point of land into the harbor of St. +Pierre. + +Before the boy's eyes rose the Mountain of Destruction, sullen, twisted, +wrinkled and still menacing, not all silent yet. The hills around were +green, and verdure spread over the country once deep in volcanic ash. +But Mont Pelee was brown and bald still. + +Nineteen years had passed since the eruption, but St. Pierre had not +recovered. At first sight, from the sea, the town gave a slight +impression of being rebuilt. But this was only the strange combination +of old ruins and modern fishing huts. The handsome stone wharves still +stood, but no vessels lay beside them. + +The little steamer slowed and tied up at a tiny wooden pier. A statue, +symbolical of St. Pierre in her agony, had been erected on the end of +the pier. The boy landed, and walked slowly along the frail wooden +structure, to take in the scene as it presented itself to him. + +Alas, for St. Pierre! As Lafcadio Hearn described it--"the quaint, +whimsical, wonderfully colored little town, the sweetest, queerest, +darlingest little city in the Antilles.... Walls are lemon color, quaint +balconies and lattices are green. Palm trees rise from courts and +gardens into the warm blue sky, indescribably blue, that appears almost +to touch the feathery heads of them. And all things within and without +the yellow vista are steeped in a sunshine electrically white, in a +radiance so powerful that it lends even to the pavement of basalt the +glitter of silver ore. + +"Everywhere rushes mountain water--cool and crystal--clear, washing the +streets; from time to time you come to some public fountain flinging a +silvery column to the sun.... And often you will note, in the course of +a walk, little drinking fountains contrived in the angle of a building, +or in the thick walls bordering the bulwarks or enclosing public +squares; glittering threads of water spurting through lion-lips of +stone." + +Alas for St. Pierre! + +Above the pier but one street had been partly restored, and, at every +gap, the boy's gaze encountered gray ruins. The ash, poured out by the +mountain in its vast upheaval, has made a rich soil. To Stuart's eyes, +the town was a town of dreams, of great stone staircases that led to +nowhere, of high archways that gave upon a waste. The entrance hall of +the great Cathedral, once one of the finest in the West Indies, still +leads to the high altar, but that finds its home in a little wooden +structure with a tin roof, shrinking in what was once a corner of the +apse. + +Built as a lean-to in the corner of what had once been a small, but +strongly-built house was a store, a very small store, outside the door +of which a crippled negro was sitting. Thinking that this might be one +of the old-timers of St. Pierre, Stuart stopped and bought a small +trinket, partly as a memento, partly as a means of getting into +conversation. + +"But yes, Monsieur," answered the storekeeper, "it was my wife and I--we +escaped. My wife, she had been sent into Morne Rouge, that very morning, +with a message from her mistress. Me, I was working on the road, not +more than a mile away. I saw nothing of it, Monsieur. About half-past +seven that morning (twenty-two minutes, therefore, before the final +eruption) a shower of stones fell where I was working. One fell on my +back, and left me crippled, as you see. But my four children, ah! +Monsieur, they sleep here, somewhere!" + +He waved his hand toward the riot of ruin and foliage which now marks +the city which once prided itself on being called "the gayest little +city in the West Indies." + +"Yet you have come back!" exclaimed Stuart. + +"But yes, Monsieur, what would you? It pleased God that I should be born +here, that my children should be taken away from me here; and, maybe, +that I should die here, too." + +"You are not afraid that Mont Pelee will begin again?" + +The negro shrugged his shoulders. + +"It is my home, Monsieur," he said simply. "Better a home which is sad +than the place of a stranger which is gay. But we hope, Monsieur, that +some day the government of Martinique will accept a parole of good +conduct from the Great Eater of Lives"--he pointed to Mont Pelee--"and +give us back our town again." + +Next morning, studying the life of the little town, Stuart found that +many others shared the view of the crippled negro. The little +market-place on the Place Bertin, though lacking any shelter from +pouring rain or blazing sun, was crowded with three or four hundred +market women. Daily the little steamer takes a cargo from St. Pierre, +for the ash from the volcano has enriched the soil, and the planters are +growing wealthy. There are many more little houses and thatched huts +tucked into corners of the ruins than appear at first sight, and a hotel +has been built for the tourists who visit the strange spot. + +The crater in Mont Pelee is silent now; the great vent which hurled +white-hot rocks, incandescent dust and mephitic gases, is now covered +with a thick green shrubbery, only here and there do small smoke-holes +emit a light sulphurous vapor; but the great mountain, treeless, +wrinkled, implacable, seemed to Stuart to throw a solemn shadow of +threat upon the town. The secret of St. Pierre, as Stuart wrote to his +paper, "lies in the hope of its inhabitants, but its real future lies in +the parole of good conduct from the Great Eater of Human Lives, Mont +Pelee." + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +A CORSAIR'S DEATH + + +There is not a corner of the world which is more full of historic +memories than is the West Indies. Dominica, the next island which Stuart +passed after he had left Martinique, besides being one of the scenic +glories of the world, described as "a tabernacle for the sun, a shrine +of a thousand spires, rising tier above tier, in one exquisite fabric of +green, purple and grey," has many claims to fame. Here, the cannibal +Caribs were so fierce that for 255 years they defied the successive +fleets of Spaniards, French and English who tried to take possession of +the island. Some three hundred Caribs still dwell upon the island upon a +reservation provided by the government. The warriors no longer make war, +and fish has taken the place of the flesh of their enemies as a staple +diet. + +Under the cliffs of Dominica is a memory of the Civil War, for there the +Confederate vessel _Alabama_ finally escaped the Federal man-of-war +_Iroquois_. A few miles further north, between Dominica and Guadeloupe, +in The Saints Passage, was fought, in 1782, the great sea-battle between +Rodney and De Grasse, which ended in the decisive victory of the +English over the French and gave Britain the mastery of the Caribbean +Sea. It ranks as one of the great historic sea-fights of the world. + +The next island on the direct line to the north, St. Kitts, is not +destitute of fame. As Cecil had told Stuart, St. Kitts or St. +Christopher was first a home for buccaneers, and later one of the keys +to the military occupation of the West Indies. Its neighbor, St. Nevis, +together with other claims to romance, has a special interest to the +United States in that Alexander Hamilton--perhaps one of the greatest of +American statesmen--was born there. + +Near St. Kitts lies Antigua, where the _Most Blessed Trinity_--despite +her name, one of the most famous pirate craft afloat--settled after her +bloody cruises. Its captain was Bartholomew Sharp, described as "an +acrid-looking villain whose scarred face had been tanned to the color of +old brandy, whose shaggy brows were black with gunpowder, and whose long +hair, half singed off in a recent fight, was tied up in a nun's wimple. +He was dressed in the long embroidered coat of a Spanish grandee, and, +as there was a bullet hole in the back of the garment, it may be +surmised that the previous owner had come to a violent end. His hose of +white silk were as dirty as the deck, his shoe buckles were of dull +silver." + +Sharp, with 330 buccaneers, had left the West Indies in April, 1760. +They landed on the mainland, and, crossing the isthmus, made for +Panama. Having secured canoes, they attacked the Spanish fleet lying at +Perico, an island off Panama City, and, after one of the most desperate +fights recorded in the annals of piracy, they took all the ships, +including the _Most Blessed Trinity_. Then followed a long record of +successful piracy, of battle, murder and sudden death, of mutiny and +slaughter grim and great. Sharp, who, with all his crimes, was as good a +navigator as he was reckless a fighter, sailed the _Most Blessed +Trinity_ with his crew of desperadoes the whole length of South America, +rounded the Horn and, after eighteen months of adventure, peril and +hardship, reached the West Indies again. + +"The log of the voyage," writes Treves, "affords lurid reading. It +records how they landed and took towns, how they filled the little +market squares with corpses, how they pillaged the churches, ransacked +the houses and then committed the trembling places to the flames. + +"It tells how they tortured frenzied men until, in their agony, they +told of hiding places where gold was buried; how they spent an unholy +Christmas at Juan Fernandez; how, in a little island cove, they fished +with a greasy lead for golden pieces which Drake is believed to have +thrown overboard for want of carrying room. It gives account of a cargo +of sugar and wine, of tallow and hides, of bars of silver and pieces of +eight, of altar chalices and ladies' trinkets, of scented laces, and of +rings torn from the clenched and still warm fingers of the dead. + +"The 'valiant commander' had lost many of his company on the dangerous +voyage. Some had died in battle; others had mumbled out their lives in +the delirium of fever, sunstroke or drink; certain poor souls, with +racked joints and bleeding backs, were crouching in Spanish prisons; one +had been marooned on a desert island in the Southern Pacific Ocean." At +the last, Sharp turned over the ship to the remainder of his crew and +set sail, rich and respected (!) for England. + +On the way from St. Kitts to St. Thomas, Stuart passed the two strange +islands of St. Eustatius and Saba, remnants of the once great Dutch +power in the West Indies. Statia, as the first island is generally +called, is a decadent spot, its commerce fallen to nothing, the +warehouses along the sea-front of its only town, in ruins. Yet once, +strange as it may seem, for a few brief months, Statia became the scene +of a wild commercial orgy, and the place where once was held "the most +stupendous auction in the history of the universe." + +It happened thus: When the American Revolulutionary War broke out, +England being already at war with France, commercial affairs in the West +Indies became complicated by the fact that the Spanish, the French and +the English, all enacted trading restrictions so stringent that +practically every port in the West Indies was closed. The Dutch, seizing +the opportunity, made Statia a free port. Immediately, the whole of +French, English, Spanish, Dutch and American trade was thrown upon the +tiny beach of Fort Oranje. + +More than that, Statia became the center for contraband of war. All the +other islands took advantage of this. Statia became a huge arsenal. +American privateers and blockade-runners were convoyed by Dutch +men-of-war, which, of course, could not be attacked. Smugglers were +amply provided with Dutch papers. Goods poured in from Europe every day +in the week. Rich owners of neighboring islands, not knowing how the +French-English strife might turn out, sent their valuables to Statia for +safe keeping. The little island became a treasure-house. + +At times more than a hundred merchant vessels could be seen swinging to +their anchors in the roadstead. A mushroom town appeared as by magic. +Warehouses rose by scores. The beach was hidden by piles of boxes, bags +and bales for which no storeroom could be found. Merchants came from all +ports, especially the Jews and Levantines, who, since the beginning of +time, have been the trade-rovers of the sea. Neither by day nor by night +did the Babel of commerce cease. Unlike other West Indian towns, where +such a condition led to gaiety and pleasure, Fort Oranje retained its +Dutch character. It was a hysteria, but a hysteria of buying and selling +alone. + +Then, one fine day, February 3, 1781, Rodney came down with a British +fleet and captured Fort Oranje and all that it contained. There were +political complications involved, but Rodney bothered little about that. +Fort Oranje was a menace to British power. Rodney took it without +remorse, appropriated the more than $20,000,000 worth of goods lying on +the beach and the warehouses, and the 150 merchantmen, which, on that +day, were lying in the bay. Jews and Levantines were stripped to the +skin and sent packing. The Dutch surrendered and took their medicine +phlegmatically. The French, as open enemies, were allowed to depart with +courtesy. + +Then came the great auction. Without reserve, without remorse, over +$20,000,000 worth of goods were put up for what they would fetch. Boxes, +crates, bales and bags melted away like snow before the sun. Warehouses +bursting with goods became but empty shells. Traders' booths were +abandoned, one by one. Just for a few months the commercial debauch +lasted, then Rodney sailed away. Since then, the selling on the beach of +Statia has been confined to a little sugar and a few yams. + +For the United States, the little fort above Fort Oranje has a historic +memory. From the old cannon, still in position on that fort, was fired +the first foreign salute to the Stars and Stripes, the first salute +which recognized the United States as a sovereign nation. + +It was on the 16th of November, 1776, that the brig _Andrea Doria_, +fourteen guns, third of the infant American navy of five vessels, under +the command of Josiah Robinson, sailed into the open roadstead of St. +Eustatius, and dropped anchor almost under the guns of Fort Oranje. + +"She could have chosen no more fitting name," writes Fenger, "than that +of the famous townsman of Columbus.... The _Andrea Doria_ may have +attracted but little attention as she appeared in the offing ... but, +with the quick eyes of seafarers, the guests of Howard's Tavern had +probably left their rum for a moment to have their first glimpse of a +strange flag which they all knew must be that of the new republic. + +"Abraham Ravene, commandant of the fort, lowered the red-white-and-blue +flag of Holland in recognition of the American ship. In return, the +_Andrea Doria_ fired a salute. + +"This put the commandant in a quandary. Anchored not far from the +_Andrea Doria_ was a British ship. The enmity of the British for +Holland, and especially against Statia, was no secret. + +"In order to shift the responsibility, Ravene went to consult De Graeff, +the governor. De Graeff had already seen the _Andrea Doria_, for Ravene +met him in the streets of the Upper Town. A clever lawyer and a keen +business man, the governor had already made up his mind when Ravene +spoke. + +"'Two guns less than the national salute,'" was the order. + +"And, so, the United States was for the first time recognized as a +nation by this salute of eleven guns. + +"For this act, De Graeff was subsequently recalled to Holland, but he +was reinstated as Governor of Statia, and held that position when the +island was taken by Rodney in 1781. The Dutch made no apology to +England." + +Saba, which lies close to Statia, depends for its interest on its +location. It is but an old volcanic crater, sticking up out of the sea, +in the interior of which a town has been built. As a writer describes +it, "if the citizens of this town--which is most fitly called +Bottom--wish to look at the sea, they must climb to the rim of the +crater, as flies would crawl to the edge of a tea-cup, and look over. +They will see the ocean directly below them at the foot of a precipice +some 1,300 feet high. To go down to the sea it is necessary to take a +path with a slope like the roof of a house, and to descend the Ladder, +an appalling stair on the side of a cliff marked at the steepest part by +steps cut out of the face of the rock." + +This strange town of Bottom is built with a heavy wall all round it, to +save it from the torrents which stream down the inside slopes of the +crater during a rain. Its population is mainly white, flaxen-haired +descendants of the Dutch. + +More amazing than all, most of the inhabitants are shipbuilders, but the +ships, when built, have to be let down by ropes over the side of the +cliff. These fishing smacks are not only built in a crater, but on an +island which has neither beach, harbor, landing stage nor safe anchoring +ground, where no timber is produced, where no iron is to be found, and +where cordage is not made. The island has no more facilities for the +shipbuilding trade than a lighthouse on a rock in the middle of the sea. + +[Illustration: ABOVE THE HOARSE SHOUTS OF RUFFIANS AND JACK-TARS, ROSE +TEACH'S MURDEROUS WAR CRY.] + +Passing Saba, the steamer went on to her next port of call, St. Thomas. +Here was seen the influence of another European power. Barbados and +Trinidad are English; Martinique, French; Statia and Saba, Dutch; but +St. Thomas is Danish. It is the chief of the Virgin Islands, and +rejoices in a saintlier name than many of its companions which are known +as "Rum Island," "Dead Man's Chest," "Drowned Island," "Money Rock," +"Cutlass Isle" and so forth, the naming of which shows buccaneer +authorship. Even in the town of Charlotte Amalia, the capital of St. +Thomas, the stamp of the pirate is strong, for two of the hills above +the city are marked by the ruins of old stone buildings, one of which is +called "Bluebeard's Castle," and "Blackbeard's Castle," the other. It +was once, no doubt, one of the many ports of call of that Nero of +pirates, Blackbeard Edward Teach. + +Cecil's description of the buccaneers had greatly stimulated Stuart's +interest in pirate stories, and, rightly thinking that he could sell a +story to his paper by new photographs of "Blackbeard's Castle" and by a +retelling of the last fight of that savage scoundrel, he set himself to +find out what was known of this career of this "Chiefest and Most +Unlovely of all the Pyrates" as he is called in a volume written by one +of his contemporaries. + +In appearance he was as fierce and repulsive as in character. He was of +large size, powerfully built, hairy, with a mane-like beard which, black +as his heart, grew up to his very eyes. This beard he twisted into four +long tails, tied with ribbons, two of which he tucked behind his +outstanding ears, and two over his shoulders. His hair was like a mat +and grew low over his forehead. In fact, little of the skin of his face +was visible, his fierce eyes glaring from a visage like that of a +baboon. In fighting, it was his custom to stick lighted fuses under his +hat, the glare of which, reflected in his jet-like eyes, greatly +increased the ferocity of his appearance. + +Teach was an execrable rascal, who ruled his ship by terror. The worst +of his crew admitted him master of horror as well as of men. It was his +custom ever and anon to shoot a member of his crew, whenever the fancy +pleased him, in order that they should remember that he was captain. + +Blackbeard is famous in the annals of piracy for his idea of a pleasant +entertainment. One afternoon, when his ship was lying becalmed, the +pirates found the time pass heavily. They had polished their weapons +till they shone like silver. They had gambled until one-half of the +company was swollen with plunder and the other half, penniless and +savage. They had fought until there was nothing left to fight about, and +it was too hot to sleep. + +At this, Teach, hatless and shoeless, and, says his biographer, "a +little flushed with drink"--as a man might be who spent most of his +waking hours swigging pure rum--stumbled up on deck and made a proposal +to his bored companions. + +"I'm a better man than any o' you alive, an' I'll be a better man when +we all go below. Here's for proving it!" + +At which he routed up half a dozen of the most hardened of the crew, +kicked them down into the hold, joined them himself and closed the +hatches. There in the close, hot hold, smelling of a thousand odors, +they set fire to "several pots full of brimstone and other inflammable +matters" and did their best to reproduce what they thought to be the +atmosphere of the Pit. + +One by one, the rest gave in and burst for the comparatively free air of +the deck, but Teach's ugly head was the last to come up the hatch, and +his pride thereon was inordinate. It was the surest road to the +Captain's good favors to remind him of his prowess in that stench-hole +on a tropic afternoon. + +Teach's death was worthy of his life. Lieutenant Maynard of H. M. S. +_Pearl_ learned that Teach was resting in a quiet cove near Okracoke +Inlet, not far from Hatteras, N. C. He followed the pirate in a small +sloop. Teach ran his craft ashore. + +Maynard was determined to get alongside the pirate, so with desperate +haste he began to throw his ballast overboard. More than that, he staved +in every water cask, until, feeling that he had enough freeboard, he +slipped his anchor, set his mainsail and jib, and bore down upon the +stranded sea robber. + +As he came on, Teach, with fuses glowing under his hat, hailed him, and, +standing on the taffrail, defied him and drank to his bloody end in a +goblet of rum.... Teach, surrounded by his sullen and villainous gang, +shrieked out the chorus of a sea song as the sloop drew near and, when +she had drifted close enough, he pelted her deck with grenades. + +At this moment, the two vessels touched, whereupon Teach and his crew, +with hideous yells, and a great gleam of cutlass blades, leapt upon the +sloop's deck. Through the smoke cloud the awful figure of the pirate +emerged, making for Maynard. At the same time, the men hidden in the +sloop scrambled up from below, and the riot of the fight began. + +As Teach and Maynard met, they both fired at each other, point blank. +The lieutenant dodged, but the robber was hit in the face, and the blood +was soon dripping from his beard, the ends of which were, as usual, +tucked up over his ears. + +There was no time to fumble with pistols now. So they fought with +cutlasses. Teach, spitting the blood from his mouth, swore that he would +hack Maynard's soul from his body, but his opponent was too fine an +adept with the sword to be easily disposed of. It was a fearful duel, a +trial of the robber's immense strength against the officer's deftness. + +They chased each other about the deck, stumbling across dead bodies, +knocking down snarling men, who, clutched together, were fighting with +knives. Ever through the mirk could be seen the pirate's grinning teeth +and his evil eyes lighted by the burning and smoking fuses on either +side of them, ever above the groans of the wounded and the hoarse shouts +of ruffians and jack tars, rose Teach's murderous war cry. + +At last, Maynard, defending himself from a terrific blow, had his sword +blade broken off at the hilt. Now was the pirate's chance. He aimed a +slash at Maynard. The lieutenant put up the remnant of his sword and +Teach's blow hacked off his fingers. Had the fight been left to the duel +between the two, Maynard had not a second to live. But, just as the +pirate's blow fell, one of the navy men brought his cutlass down upon +the back of the pirate's neck, half severing it. Teach, too enraged to +realize it was his death blow, turned on the man and cut him to the +deck. + +The current of the fight changed. From all sides the jack tars, who +dared not close with the pirate chief, fired pistols at him. The decks +were slippery with blood. Still fighting, Teach kicked off his shoes, +to get a better hold of the planks. His back was to the bulwarks. Six +men were attacking him at once. + +Panting horribly, and roaring curses still, Teach, with his dripping +cutlass, kept them all at bay. He had received twenty-five wounds, five +of which were from bullets. His whole body was red. The half-severed +head could not be held straight, but some incredible will power enabled +him to twist his chin upwards, so that, to the last, his eyes glared +with the fierce joy of battle, and the lips, already stiffening, smiled +defiantly. + +The six men drew back, aghast that a creature so wounded could still +live and move, but Teach drew a pistol and was cocking it, when his +eyelids closed slowly, as though he were going to sleep, and he fell +back on the railing, dead. + +So, in fitting manner, perished the last of the great pirates of the +Spanish Main. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +THE HUNGRY SHARK + + +"Hyar, sah! Please don' you go t'rowin' nuffin to de sharks, not 'roun' +dese waters, anyhow." + +"Why?" asked Stuart in return, smiling at the grave face of the negro +steward on board the steamer taking him from Porto Rico to Jamaica. His +stay at Porto Rico had been brief, for he found a telegram awaiting him +from Fergus, bidding him hurry at once to Kingston. + +"No, sah," repeated the negro, "dar witch-sharks in dese waters, +debbil-sharks, too. Folks do say dem ol' buccaneers, when dey died, was +so bad dat eben de Bad Place couldn't take 'em. Now, dey's sharks, +a-swimmin' to an' fro, an' lookin' for gol', like dem yar pirates used +ter do." + +"Oh, come, Sam, you don't believe that!" protested the boy. "What could +a shark do with gold, if he had it?" + +"Sho's you livin', Sah," came the response, "I done see two gol' rings +an' a purse taken out'n the inside of a shark. An' you know how, right +in dese hyar waters, a shark swallowed some papers, an' it was the +findin' o' dose papers what stopped a lot o' trouble between Great +Britain an' the United States, yes, Sah!" + +The gift of silver crossing a palm has other powers besides that of +inspiring a fortune-teller. It can inspire a story-teller, as well. +Stuart, scenting a story which he could send to the paper from Kingston, +put half-a-crown where he thought it would do most good, namely, in the +steward's palm and heard the strange (and absolutely true and authentic) +story of the shark's papers. + +"Yes, Sah," he began, "I know jes' how that was, 'cause my gran'pap, he +was a porter in de Jamaica Institute, an' when I was a small shaver I +used to go wid him in the mornin's when he was sweepin' up, and I used +to help him dust de cases. Yes, Sah. Bime by, when I got big enough to +read, I got a lot o' my eddication from dose cases, yes, Sah! + +"This hyar story begins dis way. On July 3, 1799--I remember de dates +persackly--a brig, called de _Nancy_, lef' Baltimore for Curacao. Her +owners were Germans, but 'Merican citizens, yes, Sah. Her cargo was +s'posed to be dry goods, provisions an' lumber, but dere was a good deal +more aboard her, guns, powder an' what they call contraband, ef you know +jes' what that is. I don't rightly." + +"I do," agreed Stuart. "Go ahead." + +"Well, Sah, dis hyar brig _Nancy_, havin' stopped at Port-au-Prince, +started on down de coast, when, strikin' a heavy blow, she los' her +maintopmast. She was makin' for a little island, not far 'way, to make +some repairs, when she was captured by H.M.S. _Sparrow_, a cutter +belongin' to H.M.S. _Abergavenny_, de British flagship stationed at Port +Royal. De _Sparrow_ was commanded by Lieutenant Hugh Wylie, and dis hyar +Wylie sent her in with anoder prize, a Spanish one, to Port Royal. So, +naterally, Wylie brings a suit for salvage against de _Nancy_, bein' an +enemy vessel." + +"But where does the shark come in?" queried Stuart, growing impatient. + +"Jes' you wait a minute, Sah!" the negro responded, "I bring um in de +shark pretty quick. De owners of de _Nancy_, dey come to court an' show +papers that de _Nancy_ never was no 'Merican ship at all, an' dat +Lieutenant Wylie, he make one great big mistake in capturin' dis hyar +brig. + +"But, what you t'ink, Sah? Right at dat moment, up steps in de +court-room, Lieutenant Fitton, of H.M.S. _Ferret_, another cutter +belongin' to the _Abergavenny_ an' hands the judge some papers. + +"'Your Honor,' he says, 'these are the true papers of the brig _Nancy_. +Those you have before you are false.' + +"'Where did you find these papers?' ask de judge. + +"'In the belly of a shark, My Lord,' answers Lieutenant Fitton, clear +an' loud. + +"For de sake, Sah, dem Germans must ha' turn green! In de belly ob a +shark, Yah, ha-ha!" And the steward roared in white-toothed laughter. + +"But how were they found there?" came the boy's next question. + +"Yes, Sah, I was jes' comin' to that. Dis hyar Fitton, wid one cutter, +was a-cruisin' together wid Wylie, in de other cutter, when Wylie broke +away to take de _Nancy_. + +"Bein' nigh breakfast time, Fitton signals to Wylie to come to +breakfast. Wylie, he right busy wid _Nancy_ an' can't come right away. +Fitton, fishin' while he waitin' for Wylie, catch a small shark. Dey cut +him open, jes' to see what he got inside, an' dar, right smack in de +belly, dey see a bundle o' papers. + +"'Hi!' says Fitton, 'dat somet'ing important!' and he keep de papers an' +tow de shark to Port Royal." + +"I suppose," said Stuart, "the captain of the _Nancy_ must have thrown +the papers overboard. But why should the shark swallow them? I know +sharks will turn over and make ready to swallow most things, but they +don't take them in, as a rule, unless they're eatable." + +"Yes, Sah, quite right, Sah, but dar was a reason. De papers, Sah, had +been hidden in a pork barrel on board de _Nancy_, an' de shark must ha' +t'ought dey smelt good. When Fitton showed dese hyar papers in court, de +experts what were called in on de case said dat dere was grease on 'em +what wouldn't come from no shark's stomach. No, Sah. + +"Dey figured, right den an' dar, dat de grease must ha' been on de +papers, fust. So dey started lookin' on board de _Nancy_ an', for de +sake, dey found, right in a pork barrel, a lot more papers, all written +in German an' showin' a reg'lar plot for privateerin' against the United +States. + +"Dose papers, Sah, dey're right thar in de Institute in Jamaica, wid a +letter from de official, who was in charge ob de case, ober a hundred +years ago. In de United Service Museum, in London, is de head of de +shark what swallowed de papers. I reckon, Sah, dat was de fust time dat +a shark ever was a witness in a court!" + +And, with a loud laugh, the steward went to respond to the call of +another of the passengers. + +Strange as was the story of the shark swallowing the papers and being +forced to give them up again, still stranger was the story that Stuart +heard from one of the passengers. This tale, equally authentic, was of +an occurrence that happened even earlier, in that famous town of Port +Royal, which, in the long ago days, was the English buccaneer center, +even as Tortugas was the center of the French sea-rovers. + +This was the story of Lewis Galdy, a merchant of Port Royal, French-born +and a man of substance, who went through one of the most extraordinary +experiences that has ever happened to a human being. + +He was walking down the narrow street of that buccaneer town, on June 7, +1692, when the whole city and countryside was shaken by a terrific +earthquake shock. The earth opened under the merchant's feet and he +dropped into the abyss. He lost consciousness, yet, in a semi-comatose +state, felt a second great wrenching of the earth, which heaved him +upwards. Water roared about his ears, and he was at the point of +drowning, when, suddenly, he found himself swimming in the sea, +half-a-mile from land. + +As the place where he had been walking was fully three hundred yards +inland, he had been carried in the bowels of the earth three-quarters of +a mile before being thrown forth. A boat picked him up, and he lived for +forty-seven years after his extraordinary escape. + +Jamaica, indeed, has been the prey of earthquakes, the most serious of +which wrecked the city of Kingston, in 1907. The shocks lasted ten +seconds, and the town of 46,000 inhabitants was a ruin. The death list +reached nearly a thousand. From this shock, however, as Stuart found, +the city has recovered bravely, largely due to the lighter system of +building common to British islands, and all places which have an +American impress, while in French, Dutch and Danish islands, buildings +are more solidly constructed. Frame houses, however, are less damaged by +earthquake than are stone structures. + +There was, however, little opportunity for Stuart to make tours in +Jamaica or to work out any articles for his "Color Question" series. A +registered letter from the paper awaited the boy in Kingston, the +reading of which he concluded with a long, low whistle. + +That night, without attracting attention, Stuart left the city on foot, +taking neither tramway nor railroad, and made a long night march. The +roads were steep, but the cool air compensated for that difficulty, and +having spent a long time on board ship the boy was glad to stretch his +legs. On the further side of Spanish Town he saw what he sought, a +rickety automobile under a lean-to-shed. + +He hurried to the negro owner, who was lolling on the verandah. + +"I want to go to Buff Bay," he said. "How soon can you get me there?" + +"De road ain' none too good, Sah," the Jamaican answered, "your bes' way +is to take de train f'm Spanish Town. Dat'll land you right in Buff +Bay." + +"I don't want to," answered Stuart, making up the first excuse that came +to mind, "I get train-sick. Can't your car make it?" + +The boy knew that there is nothing in the world that so much touches a +man's pride as to have his car slighted, no matter whether it be the +craziest kettle on wheels or a powerful racer. + +"Make it? Yes, Sah!" The exclamation was emphatic. "I can have you in +thar by noon." + +Business arrangements were rapidly concluded, and in a few minutes they +started out, Stuart having borrowed an old straw hat from the driver, in +order, as he said, that he could take a good sleep under it, which +indeed, he did. But his main reason was disguise. + +The negro looked back at his passenger once or twice, and muttered, + +"Train-sick? Huh! Looks more like ter me he's in pickle wid de police! +Wonder if I didn't ought to say somet'ing?" + +Then a remembrance of some of his own earlier days came to him, and he +chuckled. + +"Fo' de sake!" he said. "I wouldn' want to tell all I ever did!" + +And he drove on through Linfield, without summoning the guardians of the +law. + +Stuart, unconscious how near he had been to an unpleasant delay, slept +on. Questioning would have been awkward, search would have been worse, +for, in the pocket of his jacket, was Fergus's letter he had received in +Kingston, which closed with the words, + +"Get to the Mole St. Nicholas with utmost speed! Spare no expense, but +go secretly!" + +That this bore some new development in the Great Plot, there was no +doubting, and the letter had told him to be sure to leave Kingston +without letting Cecil catch a glimpse of him. That meant that Cecil was +still in Kingston. In that case, what could the other conspirators be +doing without him? + +Towards noon, a whiff of salt air wakened Stuart. He stirred, rubbed his +eyes and looked round. + +"The north shore, eh!" he exclaimed on seeing the sea. + +"Yes, Sah! Annotta Bay, Sah!" + +"Do you know anyone around these parts?" + +"Fo' de sake, yes, Sah! I was born in dese parts. I jes' went to Spanish +Town a few years ago, when my wife's folks died." + +"Do you know anyone who has a motor boat?" + +"You want to buy one?" + +"Not unless I have to. Do you happen to know of any?" + +"Well, Sah," said the negro cautiously, "thar's a preacher here what has +one, but--but--he's a mighty careful man is Brother Fliss, an'----" + +Stuart, refreshed from his sleep, grasped the hitch at once. + +"You think I'm in trouble and running from the police, eh? Not a bit of +it! Here, run up to this preacher's. I'll convince him, in a minute." + +A little further on, the machine turned to the left, and just as it +turned off, a racing car flashed by. Something about one of the figures +was familiar. + +"Whose car was that?" + +The driver turned and stared at the cloud of dust. + +"I didn't rightly see, it might ha' been----" He stopped. "I'll tell you +whar you can get a boat, Sah!" he suggested. "Mr. Cecil, he keeps one +down at his place a bit down de road." + +"Cecil!" Stuart had to control himself to keep from shouting the name. +"Has he a place on this coast?" + +"Yes, Sah; fine place, Sah, pretty place. Awful nice man, Mr. Cecil. +He'll lend you de boat, for nuffin', likely. Brother Fliss, good man, +you un'erstand, but he stick close to de money." + +"Let's go there, just the same," said Stuart, "I don't want to be under +obligations. I'd rather pay my way." + +The negro shrugged his shoulders and, in a few minutes, the car stopped +at the preacher's house. + +As the driver had suggested, Brother Fliss "stick close to de money" and +his charge was high. He was an intensely loyal British subject, and an +even more loyal Jamaican, and when Stuart showed his card from the paper +and at the same suggested that he needed this help in order to trace up +a plot against Jamaica, the preacher was so willing that he would +almost--but not quite--have lent the boat free. + +Being afraid that the automobile driver might talk, if he returned to +Spanish Town, and thus overset all the secrecy that Stuart flattered +himself he had so far maintained, the boy suggested that the negro come +along in the boat. This suggestion was at once accepted, for the mystery +of the affair had greatly excited the Jamaican's curiosity. + +The preacher, himself, received the suggestion with approval. +Usually--for the craft, though, sturdy, was a small one--he was his own +steersman and engineer. Now, he could enjoy the luxury of a crew, and +the driver, who was a fairly good mechanic, was quite competent to +handle the small two-cylinder engine. + +So far as the boy was concerned, he had another reason. The quest might +be dangerous. Undoubtedly Cesar Leborge and Manuel Polliovo would be +there. Equally certainly, Guy Cecil, who had protected him before, would +not. A companion would be of aid in a pinch. + +And it was all so dark, so mysterious, so incomprehensible! He had +learned nothing new about the plot. He had no documents with which to +confront the conspirators. He had no protection against these two men, +one of whom, he knew, had vowed to kill him. + +The motor boat glided out on the waters north of Jamaica, on her way to +that grim passage-way between Cuba and Haiti, that key to the Caribbean, +which is guarded by the Mole St. Nicholas. + +Yet, withal, Stuart had one protector. Behind him stood the power of a +New York newspaper, and, with that, he felt he had the power of the +United States. There is no flinching, no desertion in the great army of +news-gatherers. There should be none in him. + +With no support but that, with nothing to guide him but his faith in the +paper that sent him forth, Stuart set his face to the shore of that +semi-savage land, on the beach of which he expected to find his foes +awaiting him. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +TRAPPED! + + +All that night the little motor boat chugged on. She was small for so +long a sea-passage, but the preacher knew her ways well. Many a journey +had he taken to the Caymans and other Jamaican possessions in the +interests of his faith. + +In the night-watches, Stuart grew to have a strong respect for him, for +the preacher was one in whom the missionary spirit burned strongly, and +he was as sincere as he was simple. Each of the three on board took +turns to sleep, leaving two to manage the boat. Stuart got a double dose +of sleep, for the preacher, seeing that the boy was tired, ran the craft +alone during the second part of his watch. + +Dawn found them in the Windward Passage, with the Mole of St. Nicholas +on the starboard bow. They slowed down for a wash and a bite of +breakfast, and then the preacher, with a manner which showed it to be +habitual, offered a morning prayer. + +The Mole St. Nicholas, at its southern end, has some small settlements, +but Stuart felt sure that it could not be here that he was to land. They +cruised along the shore a while, and, on an isolated point, saw an old +half-ruined jetty, with four figures standing there. As the boat drew +nearer, Stuart recognized them as Manuel Polliovo, Cesar Leborge and two +Cacos guerillas, armed with rifles and machetes. + +"Are you afraid to follow me?" queried Stuart to the negro who had +driven the automobile. + +"'Fraid of dem Haiti niggers? No, Sah. I'm a Jamaican!" + +This pride of race among certain negroes--not always rightly valued +among the whites--had struck Stuart before. Indeed, he had done a +special article on the subject during the voyage on the steamer. + +Reaching the wharf, Stuart sprang ashore. The Jamaican at once sought to +follow him, but the two Cacos tribesmen stepped forward with uplifted +machetes. The odds were too great and Stuart's ally fell back. + +"It is very kind of you to come and pay us a visit!" mocked Manuel, as +Stuart stepped upon the wharf. "We prefer, however, to have you alone. +We do not know your guests." + +"You know me, then?" + +"I knew the ragged horse-boy to be Stuart Garfield, all the way on the +road to Millot and the Citadel," the Cuban purred. "I cannot +congratulate you on your cleverness. The disguise was very poor." + +Stuart thrust forward his chin aggressively, but no retort came to +mind. + +"I missed you, on the return journey," Manuel continued. + +"Yes," the boy answered. "I came down another way." + +"Perhaps you borrowed a pair of wings from the Englishman?" + +Stuart made no reply. + +But this ironic fencing was not to Leborge's taste. He broke in, +abruptly, + +"You spy on us once, Yes! You spy on us again, Yes! You spy no more, +No!" + +He made a rough gesture, at which one of the Cacos dashed upon the boy, +pinned his arms to his sides and harshly, but deftly, tied him securely +with a rope. This done, the Haitian took the boy's small revolver from +his pocket and cast it contemptuously on the ground. + +"The white carries a pistol, Yes! But he does not even know how to shoot +it!" + +The phrase irritated Stuart, but he had sense enough to keep still. As a +matter of fact, he was a fairly good shot, but, with four to one against +him, any attempt at violence would be useless. Besides, Stuart had not +lost heart. He had landed, in the very teeth of his foes, confident that +Fergus would never have directed him to go to the Mole St. Nicholas, +unless the editor had cause. The boy's only cue was to await +developments. + +At this juncture, the Jamaican preacher, with a good deal of courage, as +well as dignity, rose in the boat. He thrust aside, as unimportant, the +machete of the Caco who threatened him, and the assumption of authority +took the guerilla aback. Quietly, and with perfect coolness, he walked +up to the Haitian general. A little to Stuart's surprise, he spoke the +Haitian dialect perfectly. + +"You're goin' to untie de ropes 'round dat boy, Yes!" he declared, "an' +if you're wise, you do it quick. De Good Book say--'Dose who slay by de +sword, shall be slain by de sword, demselbes,' Yes! I tell you, dose dat +ties oders up, is goin' to be tied up demselbes, Yes!" + +"What are you doin' here?" demanded Leborge, with an oath. + +"I's a minister ob de gospel," said the preacher, standing his ground +without a quaver, in face of the threatening aspect of the giant +Haitian, "an' I tell you"--he pointed a finger accusingly--"dat, for +ebery oath you make hyar in de face ob de sun, you is goin' to pay, an' +pay heabily, before dat sun go down! + +"You's a big nigger," the preacher went on, his voice taking the high +drone of prophetic utterance, "an' you's all cobered wit' gol' lace. De +Good Book say--'Hab no respec' for dem dat wears fine apparel.' No! +'Deir garments shall be mof-eaten, deir gol' an' silver shall be +cankered, an' de worm'--hear, you nigger!--'de worm, shall hab 'em'!" + +Leborge, superstitious like all the Haitian negroes, cowered before the +preacher who advanced on him with shaking finger. + +But Manuel was of another stripe. + +He strode forward, put a lean but sinewy hand on the preacher's shoulder +and twisted him round, with a gesture as though he would hurl him into +the water, when there came a sharp, + +"Spat!" + +The Cuban's hat leaped from his head and fluttered slowly to the ground, +a bullet-hole through the crown. + +Manuel stared at it, his jaw dropping. + +"White man----" the preacher began. + +The Cuban took no heed. The shot, he figured, could have come from no +one but the negro in the boat, and he wheeled on him, flashing his +revolver. As he turned to the sea, however, he saw a motor boat coming +at terrific speed into the harbor. He took one glance at it. + +"We've got to get rid of the boy before he comes!" he cried. + +Leborge, with a wide grin, gave a nod of approval, and Manuel's gun came +slowly to the shoulder, for cat-like, he wanted to torture the boy +before he fired. + +Quicker than his grave manner would have seemed to forecast, the +preacher stepped fairly between the Cuban and his victim. + +"De Good Book say----" he began, but Manuel gave him a push. There was a +slight struggle and a flash. + +The preacher fell. + +Manuel turned on Stuart, who had tried to catch the falling man, +forgetting for the instant that his hands were tied. He stumbled, and +the pistol centered on his heart. + +Came another, + +"Spat!" + +A shrill scream rang out. Manuel's gun fell to the ground, suddenly +reddened with blood. The Cuban's hand had been shot through. + +Clumsily kneeling, Stuart put his ear to the wounded man's heart. It was +beating strongly. The bullet seemed to have struck the collar bone and +glanced off, stunning the nerves, but not doing serious injury. + +For a moment, the four men stood dazed. + +Whence came these bullets that made no sound? Could the Englishman be +shooting? They stared out to sea. + +The "chug-chug" of the motor boat was deafening, now. It stopped, +suddenly, and, standing in the bow, the figure of Cecil could be plainly +seen. He held no gun in his hand, however. + +Never was the Englishman's quiet power more strongly shown than in the +fact that, in this tense moment, the conspirators waited till he landed. +Leborge shuffled his feet uneasily. Manuel, his face twisted with pain, +and holding his wounded arm, glared at his fellow-conspirator, +undauntedly. + +"My friend," said Cecil to him, calmly, "I have many times instructed +you that nothing is to be done until I give the word." + +The Cuban cursed, but made no other answer. + +"As for you," the Englishman continued, turning to Leborge, "I have told +you before that the time to quarrel about the sharing of the spoils was +after the spoils were won. Why have you posted men to murder Manuel and +me, in the granadilla wood, between here and Cap Haitien?" + +The giant would have liked to lie, but Cecil's determined gaze was full +on him, and he flinched beneath it, as a wild beast flinches before its +tamer. + +"If you had waited for me," the calm voice went on, "I might have helped +you to escape, but now----" + +He raised his hat and passed his hand over his hair, as though the sun +had given him a headache. + +At the same moment, as though this gesture had been a signal, from the +low bushes a hundred yards away burst a squad of a dozen men, rifles at +the "ready," in the uniform of American marines. + +Manuel and Leborge cast wild glances around, seeking some place to flee, +but there was none. They were cut off. + +"Quick, Cecil!" they cried, together. And Leborge added, "Your boat! She +is fast!" + +"Not as fast as a rifle bullet," was the quiet answer. + +At the double the Marines came over the scrubby ground, and, running +beside the officer in command was a figure that Stuart recognized--his +father! + +The officer of the Marines came up. + +"Seize them!" he said briefly. + +The boys in blue disarmed and bound the four, one of the Marines freeing +Stuart's arms the while. The second he was free, Stuart sprang forward +and grasped his father's hand with a squeeze that made the older man +wince. + +"Father!" he cried. "It's really you!" + +The American official clapped the boy on the shoulder with praise and a +look of pride. + +"Reckon that high-powered air rifle came in handy, eh?" he answered. + +"Was it you, Father, who did the shooting?" + +"No, not me. Wish I could shoot like that! We brought along the crack +sharp-shooter of the camp." + +One of the Marines looked up and grinned. + +"This chap," the official continued, "could hit the hind leg of a fly +that's scratching himself on a post fifty yards away!" + +Then, to Stuart's enormous surprise, he turned to the prisoners with an +air of authority. + +"In the name of the United States," he said, "you are arrested. You, +Cesar Leborge, for having plotted against American authority in Haiti, +while holding rank in the Haitian Army; also for having accepted a bribe +from other Haitian officials for betraying your fellow-conspirator; also +for having given money and issued orders to a band of Cacos to post +themselves in ambush with the purpose and intent of murdering Haitian +and American citizens. + +"You, Manuel Polliovo," he continued, turning to the second prisoner, +"are arrested on a Cuban warrant for the murder of one Gonzales Elivo, a +guard at the prison from which you escaped two years ago; also upon a +charge of assault and attempted murder against this negro minister, for +which there are several witnesses present; also on a charge of attempted +murder of Stuart Garfield, son of an American citizen; also on a Haitian +warrant for conspiring against the peace of the Republic." + +Stuart stood with wide-open eyes, watching the denouement. He stepped +back, and waited to see what would be said to Cecil, who, so far, had +remained motionless. + +The Marines, at a word from their officer, turned to go, taking the +prisoners with them. + +"And Cecil, Father?" the boy asked, in a low voice. + +"Mr. Guy Cecil, my son," replied the American official, "is my very good +friend, as well as yours, and the very good friend of the United States. +No man knows more of the inner workings of affairs in the West Indies, +and he has the confidence of his Government. + +"It was through him that I was first advised of this plot to seize the +northern peninsula of Haiti, from the Citadel of La Ferriere to the Mole +St. Nicholas, to make of this stretch a small republic as was done at +Panama, and to sell the Mole St. Nicholas, as a naval base, to a certain +European power which is seeking to regain its lost prestige. + +"It was a pretty plot, and your investigations, my boy, will help to +bring the criminals to judgment. + +"Also, I think, Mr. Cecil will release you from your promise not to tell +the secret, and you can write your story to the press. It will be a +scoop! Only----" he smiled--"don't say too much about the crimes of the +arch-conspirator, Guy Cecil!" + +"Then he's not a conspirator, at all!" cried Stuart, half-sorry and +half-glad. + +"Rather, an ally," his father answered, "an ally with me, just as his +government is in alliance with our government, an alliance among the +English-speaking peoples to keep the peace of the world." + + +THE END + + + + +[Transcriber's Note: Several typographical errors in the original +edition have been corrected. The following sentences are as they +originally appeared, with corrections noted in brackets.] + + Chapter I + + "But, it is you, Yes!" he cried, using the Haitian idom [idiom] + with its perpetual recurrence of "Yes" and "No," and went on, "and + where is Monsieur your father?" + + + Chapter II + + To the Cafe [Cafe] de l'Opera. Go down the street and keep a few + steps in front." + + Manuel turned into the Cafe [Cafe] de l'Opera, a tumble-down frame + shack with a corrugated iron roof, to order a cooling drink and to + puzzle out this utterly baffling mystery. + + The Cacos may be described as Haitian patriots or revolutionists, + devotees of serpent and voodoo worship, loosely organized into a + secret guerille [guerilla] army. + + + Chapter V + + ["]A privateer on the Caribbean and the Spanish Main, in those + days, was a man who had sufficient money or sufficient reputation + to secure a ship and a crew with which to wage war against the + enemies of his country. + + + Chapter VI + + ["]What happens? I can tell you what happens in this province of + Oriente. + + + Chapter VII + + It had not occured [occurred] to him that the consular official + would not be as excited as himself. He spluttered exclamations. + + + Chapter VIII + + The greater part of the island seemed, to the boy, uttterly + [utterly] unlike any place he had seen in the tropics. + + + Chapter IX + + Spech [Speech] again became impossible. + + + Chapter X + + There are many more little houses and thatched huts tucked into + corner [corners] of the ruins than appear at first sight, and a + hotel has been built for the tourists who visit the strange spot. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Plotting in Pirate Seas, by Francis Rolt-Wheeler + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLOTTING IN PIRATE SEAS *** + +***** This file should be named 22033.txt or 22033.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/2/0/3/22033/ + +Produced by Steven desJardins and and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +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. 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