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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55183 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55183)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Satan, by Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Satan
- A Romance of the Bahamas
-
-Author: Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-Release Date: July 23, 2017 [eBook #55183]
-[Most recently updated: March 5, 2023]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Produced by Roger Frank, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-Revised by Richard Tonsing.
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATAN ***
-
-
-
-
- SATAN
-
- A Romance of the Bahamas
-
-
- _By_
- H: DE VERE STACPOOLE
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE BLUE LAGOON,” “THE BEACH
- OF DREAMS,” ETC.
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- NEW YORK
- ROBERT M. McBRIDE & COMPANY
- 1921
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1920, by
- ROBERT M. McBRIDE & CO.
-
-
- _Printed in the
- United States of America_
-
-
- Published, · 1921
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PART I
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I PALM ISLAND 1
-
- II A FLOATING CARAVAN 6
-
- III BREAKFAST 16
-
- IV PAP’S SUIT 23
-
- V THE PORTMANTEAU 34
-
- VI SKELTON SAILS 58
-
- VII CARQUINEZ 68
-
- VIII JUDE OVERDOES IT 79
-
- IX THE “JUAN” SAILS 96
-
- X CUSS WORDS 107
-
- XI THE COMING OF CLEARY 116
-
- XII AN HONEST MAN 123
-
- XIII PROBLEMS 130
-
- XIV HANTS AND OTHER THINGS 136
-
- XV UNDER WAY 144
-
- XVI THE STEERSMAN 150
-
-
- PART II
-
- XVII LONE REEF 157
-
- XVIII THE WRECK 169
-
- XIX MUTINY 174
-
- XX THE SANDSPIT 183
-
- XXI DISHED 193
-
- XXII THE CRABS 199
-
- XXIII THE RETURN 206
-
- XXIV A BOTTLE OF RUM 215
-
- XXV THEY FIRE THE FUSE 220
-
- XXVI THE CARGO 226
-
- XXVII CROCKERY WARE 232
-
- XXVIII TIDE AND CURRENT 238
-
- XXIX SATAN IN PARADISE 243
-
- XXX A SECRET OF THE SAND 253
-
- XXXI THE GO-ASHORE HAT 259
-
- XXXII CLEARY! 267
-
- XXXIII THE FIGHT 272
-
- XXXIV “I’LL TAK!” 280
-
-
- PART III
-
- XXXV THE VANISHED LIGHT 285
-
- XXXVI THE WEDDING PRESENT 295
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-SATAN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-PALM ISLAND
-
-
-The sky from sea-line to sea-line was crusted with stars, a triumphant,
-cloudless, tropic night-sky beneath which the _Dryad_ rode at her
-anchor, lifting lazily to the swell flowing up from beyond the great
-Bahama bank.
-
-She was Skelton’s boat, a six-hundred-tonner, turbine engined, rigged
-with everything new in the way of sea valves and patent gadgets, and
-she had anchored at sundown off Palm Island, a tiny spot, gull haunted,
-and due west of Andros.
-
-Skelton was a Christchurch man, Bobby Ratcliffe a Brazenose, and Bobby,
-tonight, as he leaned on the starboard rail smoking and listening to
-the wash of the waves on the island beach, was thinking of Skelton,
-who was down below writing up his diary. Before coming on this “winter
-cruise to the West Indies in my yacht” Bobby did not know that Skelton
-kept a diary, that Skelton was so awfully Anglican, so precise, so
-stuffed with the convenances, that he dined in dress clothes even in
-a hurricane, that he had a very nasty, naggling temper, that he had
-prayers every Sunday morning in the cabin which the chief steward,
-the under stewards, and the officers off watch were expected to
-attend—also Bobby. Two other men were booked for the cruise, but they
-cried off at the last moment. If they had come, things might have been
-different. As it was, Bobby, to use his own language, was pretty much
-fed up.
-
-Skelton was a right good sort, but he was not the man with whom to
-share loneliness, and Bobby, who had plenty of money of his own, was
-thinking how jolly this winter cruise would have been if he had only
-taken it on board a passenger liner, with girls and deck quoits and
-cards in the evening, instead of Skelton.
-
-Bobby was only twenty-two, a good-looking clean youth, well-balanced
-enough, but desirous of fun. Oxford had not spoiled him a bit. He had
-no “manner,”—just his own naturalness,—and he had shocked Skelton at
-Barbados by getting a great negro washing woman on board (she had come
-alongside in a blue boat) and giving her rum, for the fun of the thing.
-“Debauching a native woman with alcohol!” Skelton had called it.
-
-Skelton vetoed shark fishing. It messed his decks. He was like an old
-woman about his decks. “I tell you what you ought to do, Skelly,” Bobby
-had said. “You ought to start a blessed laundry!” They had nearly
-quarreled at Guadeloupe over sharks.
-
-And again at St. Pierre, where, lying off the ruins of the town,
-Skelton had likened it to Gomorrah, declaring it had been destroyed
-because of the wickedness of its inhabitants.
-
-“And how about the ships in the bay?” had asked Bobby. “What had they
-to do with the business? Why weren’t they given notice to quit?”
-
-“We won’t argue on the matter,” replied Skelton.
-
-And there was still two months of this blessed cruise to be worked out!
-
-He was thinking of this when Skelton came on deck, his white
-shirt-front shining in the starlight. He was in an amiable mood tonight
-and, ranging up beside Bobby, he spoke about the beauty of the stars.
-
-It was chiefly on Bobby’s initiative that they had dropped the anchor
-so that they might prospect the island on the morrow, and as they
-smoked and talked the conversation passed from stars to desert islands,
-and from desert islands to the old Spaniards of the West Indies,
-bucaneers, filibusters, pirates, and Brethren of the Coast.
-
-Perhaps it was the starlight, or the tepid wind blowing up from the
-straits of Florida, or the distant starlit palms of Palm Island that
-set Skelton off and touched a vein in his nature hitherto unsuspected:
-whatever it was, he warmed to his subject and for the first time on the
-voyage became interesting. He could talk! Nombre de Dios, Carthagena,
-and Porto Bello,—he touched them alive again, set the old plate-ships
-sailing and the pirates overhauling them, sacked cathedrals of gold and
-jewels, showed Bobby Tortuga, the great rendezvous of the bucaneers and
-the Spaniards attacking it, men marooned on desolate places like Palm
-Island, treasure buried—and then all of a sudden closed up and became
-uninteresting again. The remnants of the boy in him had spoken, the
-old pirate that lives in most men’s hearts had shown his head. Perhaps
-he was ashamed of his warmth and enthusiasm over these old romantic
-things—who knows? At all events, he retired into himself and then went
-below to find a book he was reading, leaving the deck to Bobby and the
-anchor watch.
-
-Then the moon began to rise from beyond the Bahamas, a vast, full moon,
-with the sea seeming to cling to her lower limb as she freed herself.
-Dusky, at first, she paled as she rose, and now, in her light, the
-palms of the island and the coral beach showed clear.
-
-Palm Island is a scrub of cactus and bay cedar bushes, half a mile long
-and quarter of a mile broad, with not more than forty trees. Crabs and
-turtles and gulls are its only visitors, and desolation sits there
-visible and naked. But in the moonlight, on a night like this and seen
-from the sea, it is fairyland—storyland.
-
-Ratcliffe, his mind full of pirates and bucaneers, Spaniards and
-plate-ships, found himself wondering if men had ever been marooned
-here, if Morgan and Van Horn and all that crowd had ever had dealings
-on that beach, and what the moon could tell about it all if she could
-remember and speak. He was thinking this when the creak of block and
-cordage struck his ear, and past the stern of the _Dryad_ came gliding
-the fore canvas of a small vessel, a thing that seemed no larger than a
-fishing boat.
-
-She had been creeping in from the sea unnoticed by them as they talked.
-Skelton had gone below without sighting her, and she was so close that
-the slap of her bow-wash came clearly as she passed.
-
-He watched her gliding shoreward like a phantom, and then across the
-water came a voice, shrill as the voice of a bird:
-
-“Seven fathom!”
-
-And on top of that another voice:
-
-“Let go!”
-
-The rumble—tumble—tumble—of an anchor chain followed, and then the
-silence of the night closed in, broken only by the far-off wash of the
-waves on the beach.
-
-This ghost of the sea fascinated Ratcliffe. He could see her now riding
-at anchor against the palms and bay cedars of the island.
-
-She was shedding her canvas; and now a glow-worm spark, golden in the
-silver of the moonlight, climbed up and became stationary but for the
-lift and fall of the swell as she rode at her moorings. It was her
-anchor light.
-
-He listened for voices. None came. Then he saw a lantern being carried
-along her deck. It vanished, probably through a hatch.
-
-Then he went below, and, dropping asleep the instant he turned in,
-dreamt that he was marooned on Palm Island with Skelton, and Skelton
-was trying to hang him on a palm tree for a pirate, and the gulls
-were shouting “Seven fathom!—seven fathom—seven fathom!” Then came
-oblivion and the sleep of youth that defies dreams.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-A FLOATING CARAVAN
-
-
-Next morning, an hour after sunrise, Ratcliffe came on deck in his
-pajamas,—gorgeous blue and crimson striped pajamas,—a sight for the
-gods.
-
-The sky was cloudless. The wind of the night before had fallen to a
-tepid breathing scarcely sufficient to stir the flag at the jackstaff,
-and from all that world of new-born blue and mirror-calm sea there came
-not a sound but the sound of the gulls crying and quarreling about the
-reef spurs of the island.
-
-Amid the glory of light and color and against the palms and white beach
-lay the ghost of the night before, a frowzy-looking yawl-rigged boat of
-fifty feet or so, a true hobo of the sea, with wear and weather written
-all over her and an indescribable something that marked her down even
-to Ratcliffe as disreputable.
-
-Simmons, the second officer, was on deck.
-
-“She must have come in last night,” said Simmons. “Some sea scraper or
-another working between the islands—Spanish most likely.”
-
-“No, she’s not Spanish,” said Ratcliffe. “I saw her come in and I heard
-them shouting the soundings in English—look! there’s a chap fishing
-from her.”
-
-The flash of a fish being hauled on board had caught his eye and fired
-his passion for sport. They had done no fishing from the _Dryad_.
-
-He borrowed the dinghy from Simmons and, just as he was, put off.
-
-“Ask them to sell some of their fish, if they’ve any to spare,” cried
-Simmons as the dinghy got away.
-
-“Ay, ay!” replied Ratcliffe.
-
-The sea blaze almost blinded him as he rowed with the gulls flying
-round and shouting at him. As he drew up to the yawl the fisherman
-lugged another fish on board. The fisherman was a boy, a dirty-faced
-boy, in a guernsey, and as the dinghy came alongside he stared at the
-pajama-clad one as at an apparition.
-
-“Hullo, there!” cried Ratcliffe, clawing on with the boathook.
-
-“Hullo, yourself!” replied the other.
-
-“Any fish for sale?”
-
-“Any what?”
-
-“Fish.”
-
-The boy disappeared. Then came his voice, evidently shouting down a
-hatch.
-
-“Satan, below there!”
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Here’s the funniest guy come alongside wants to know if we’ve got fish
-to sell him. Show a leg!”
-
-“One minute,” replied the second voice.
-
-The boy reappeared at the rail in the burning sunlight. “The cap will
-be up in a minute,” said he. “What in the nation are you got up like
-that for?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Them things.”
-
-Ratcliffe laughed.
-
-“I forgot I was in my pajamas. I must apologize.”
-
-“What’s pajamas?”
-
-“My sleeping suit.”
-
-“You sleep in them things?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Well, I’m damned!” said the boy. Then he gave a sudden yell of
-laughter and vanished, sitting down on the deck evidently, while
-another form appeared at the rail, a lantern-jawed, long-haired,
-youthful figure, rubbing the sleep out of its eyes. It stared at the
-occupant of the dinghy, then it opened its mouth and uttered one word:
-
-“Moses!”
-
-“He sleeps in them things!” came a half-strangled voice from the deck.
-“Satan, hold me up, I’m dyin’!”
-
-“Shut your beastly head!” said Satan. Then to Ratcliffe, “Don’t be
-minding Jude,—Jude’s cracked,—but you sure are gotten up—Say, you
-from that hooker over there?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What are you?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-Another explosion from the deck, stifled by a kick from Satan.
-
-“But what are you doing here, anyway?”
-
-Ratcliffe explained, Satan leaning comfortably on the rail and
-listening.
-
-“A yacht—well, we’re the _Sarah Tyler_. Pap and me and Jude used to
-run the boat. He died last fall. Tyler was his name, and Satan Tyler’s
-mine. He said I yelled like Satan when a pup and he put the name on
-me—Say, that’s a dandy boat. I’m wanting a boat like that. Will you
-trade?”
-
-“She’s not mine.”
-
-“That don’t matter,” said Tyler with a laugh. “But I forgot: you aren’t
-in our way of business.”
-
-“What’s your way of business?”
-
-“Lord! Shut up, Satan!” came the voice from the deck.
-
-“Well, Pap was one thing or another; but we’re respectable, ain’t we,
-Jude?”
-
-“Passons to what Pap was,” agreed the voice in a quieter tone, and it
-came to Ratcliffe that the figure of Jude remained invisible, being
-ashamed to show itself after having guyed him.
-
-“We’re out of Havana, and we scratch round and make a living,” went on
-Tyler, “and the boat being ours we make out. There’s lots to be had on
-these seas for the looking.”
-
-“Do you work the boat alone?”
-
-“Well, we had a nigger to help since Pap died. He skipped at Pine
-Island a fortnight ago. Since then we’ve made out. Jude’s worth a man
-and don’t drink—”
-
-“Who says I don’t drink?” Two grimy hands seized the rail and the body
-and face of Jude raised themselves. Then the whole apparition hung,
-resting midriff high across the rail, just balanced, so that a tip
-from behind would have sent it over.
-
-“Who says I don’t drink? How about Havana Harbor last trip?”
-
-“They gave her rum,” said Satan gloomily, “gave her rum in a doggery
-down by the waterside—curse the swabs! I laid two of them flat and
-then got her aboard.”
-
-“Her!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Blind, wasn’t I?” cut in Jude hurriedly.
-
-“Blind you were,” said Tyler.
-
-Jude grinned. Ratcliffe thought he had never met with a stranger couple
-than these two, especially Jude. Hanging on with the boathook, he
-contemplated the dirty, daring face whose fine, gray, long-lashed eyes
-were the best features.
-
-“How old are you?” asked he, addressing it.
-
-“Hundred an’ one,” said Jude. “Ask me another.”
-
-“She’s fifteen and a bit,” said Tyler, “and as strong as a grown man.”
-
-“I thought she was a boy,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“So I am,” said Jude. “Girls is trash. I’m not never goin’ to be a
-girl. Girls is snots!”
-
-As if to prove her boyhood, she hung over the rail so that he feared
-any moment she might tumble.
-
-“She’s a girl, right enough,” said Tyler as if they were discussing an
-animal, “but God help the skirts she ever gets into!”
-
-“I’d pull them over me head and run down the street if anyone ever
-stuck skirts on me,” said Jude. “I’d as soon go about in them pajamas
-of yours.”
-
-Ratcliffe was silent for a moment. It amazed him the familiarity that
-had suddenly sprung up between himself and these two.
-
-“Won’t you come aboard and have a look around?” asked Tyler, as though
-suddenly stricken with the sense of his own inhospitality.
-
-“But the boat?”
-
-“Stream her on a line—over with a line, Jude!”
-
-A line came smack into the dinghy, and Ratcliffe tied it to the painter
-ring. Next moment he was on board, and the dinghy, taking the current,
-drifted astern.
-
-No sooner had his feet touched the deck of the _Sarah Tyler_ than he
-felt himself encircled by a charm. It seemed to him that he had never
-been on board a real ship before this. The _Dryad_ was a structure
-of steel and iron, safe and sure as a railway train, a conveyance, a
-mechanism made to pound along against wind and sea; as different from
-this as an aëroplane from a bird.
-
-This little deck, these high bulwarks, spars, and weather-worn
-canvas,—all them collectively were the real thing. Daring and distance
-and freedom and the power to wander at will, the inconsequence of the
-gulls,—all these were hinted at here. Old man Tyler had built the
-boat, but the sea had worked on her and made her what she was, a thing
-part of the sea as a puffin.
-
-Frowzy looking at a distance, on deck the _Sarah Tyler_ showed no sign
-of disorder. The old planking was scrubbed clean and the brass of the
-little wheel shone. There was no raffle about, nothing to cumber the
-deck but a boat,—the funniest-looking boat in the world.
-
-“Canvas built,” said Tyler, laying his hand on her; “Pap’s invention;
-no more weight than an umbrella. No, she ain’t a collapsible: just
-canvas and hickory and cane. That’s another of Pap’s dodges over
-there, that sea anchor, and there’s ’nother, that jigger for raising
-the mudhook. Takes a bit of time, but half a man could work it, and I
-reckon it would raise a battleship. There’s the spare, same as the one
-that’s in the mud—ever see an anchor like that before? Pap’s. It’s a
-patent, but he was done over the patentin’ of it by a shark in Boston.”
-
-“He must have been a clever man,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“He was,” said Tyler. “Come below.”
-
-The cabin of the _Sarah Tyler_ showed a table in the middle, a hanging
-bunch of bananas, seats upholstered in some sort of leather, a telltale
-compass fixed in the ceiling, racks for guns and nautical instruments,
-and a bookcase holding a couple of dozen books. A sleeping cabin
-guarded by a curtain opened aft. Nailed to the bulkhead by the bookcase
-was an old photograph in a frame, the photograph of a man with a
-goatee beard, shaggy eyebrows, and a face that seemed stamped out of
-determination—or obstinacy.
-
-“That’s him,” said Jude.
-
-“Your father?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“It was took after Mother bolted,” said Tyler.
-
-“She took off with a long-shore Baptis’ minister,” said Jude. “Said
-she couldn’t stand Pap’s unbelievin’ ways.”
-
-“He made her work for him in a laundry,” said Tyler.
-
-“It was at Pensacola, up the gulf, and a year after, when we fetched up
-there again, she came aboard and died. Pap went for the Baptis’ man.”
-
-“He wasn’t any more use for a Baptis’ minister when Pap had done with
-him,” said Jude. “That’s his books—Pap’s. There’s dead loads more in
-the spare bunk in there.”
-
-Ratcliffe looked at the books. Old man Tyler’s mentality interested him
-almost as much as the history of the Tyler family,—“Ben Hur,” Paine’s
-“Age of Reason” and “Rights of Man,” Browne’s “Popular Mechanics,”
-“The Mechanism of the Watch,” “Martin Chuzzlewit,” and some moderns,
-including an American edition of “Jude the Obscure.”
-
-“Some of those came off a wreck he had the pickin’s of,” said Tyler, “a
-thousand-tonner that went ashore off Cat Island.”
-
-“That was before Jude was born,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Lord! how do you know that?” said Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe laughed and pointed to the book. “It’s the name on that
-book,” said he. “I didn’t know: I just guessed.”
-
-“I reckon you’re right,” said Tyler, opening a locker and fetching out
-cups and saucers and plates and dumping them on the table. “Not that
-it matters much where it come from, but you’ve got eyes in your head,
-that’s sure. Say, you’ll stay to breakfast, now you’re aboard?”
-
-“I’d like to,” said Ratcliffe, “but I ought to be getting back: they
-won’t know what’s become of me. And besides I’m in these.”
-
-“That’s easy fixed,” said Tyler. “Jude, tumble up and take the boat
-over to the hooker and say the gentleman is stayin’ to breakfast an’ll
-be back directly after. I’ll fix him for clothes.”
-
-Jude vanished, and Tyler, going into the after-cabin, rousted out an
-old white drill suit of “Pap’s” and a pair of No. 9 canvas shoes.
-
-“They’re new washed since he wore them,” said Tyler. “Slip ’em on
-over your what’s his names and come along and lend me a hand in the
-galley—can you cook?”
-
-“You bet!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Eased in his mind as to the _Dryad_, the boy in him rose to this little
-adventure, delightful after weeks of routine and twenty years of
-ordered life and high respectability. He had caravaned, yachted in a
-small way, fancied that he had at all events touched the fringe of the
-Free Life—he had never been near it. These sea gipsies in their grubby
-old boat were It! A grim suspicion that these remains of the Tyler
-family sailed sometimes pretty close to the law and that their sea
-pickings were, to put it mildly, various did not detract in the least
-from their charm. He guessed instinctively they were not rogues of a
-bad sort. The lantern-jawed Satan had not the face of a saint. There
-were indications in it indeed of the possibility of a devilish temper
-no less than a desperate daring, but not a trace of meanness. Jude was
-astonishingly and patently honest, while old man Tyler, whose presence
-seemed still to linger on in this floating caravan, had evident titles,
-of a sort, to respect.
-
-He was helping to fry fish over the oil-stove in the little galley when
-Jude returned with the information, delivered through the shouting of
-the frying pan, that everything was all right, and the message had been
-delivered to a “guy” in a white coat who was hanging his fat head over
-the starboard rail of the _Dryad_; that he had told her to mind his
-paint; that she had told him not to drop his teeth overboard, and he
-had “sassed” her back; that the _Dryad_ was a dandy ship, but would be
-a lot dandier if she were hove up on some beach convenient for pickin’
-her.
-
-Then she started to make the coffee over an auxiliary stove, mixing her
-industry with criticisms of the cookery and instructions as to how fish
-should be fried.
-
-“Jude does the cookin’ mostly,” said Tyler, “and we’d have hot rolls
-only we were under sail last night and she hadn’t time to set the
-dough. We’ll have to make out with ship’s bread.”
-
-Considering the condition of Jude’s grubby hands, Ratcliffe wasn’t
-sorry.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-BREAKFAST
-
-
-The amount of food those two put away was a revelation to Ratcliffe,
-and from start to finish of the meal they never stopped talking.
-One being silent, the other took up the ball. They had cottoned to
-Ratcliffe, evidently from the very first moment, for, at the very first
-moment, Tyler had been communicative about himself and his ship and his
-way of life. An ordinary ship’s officer coming alongside would have got
-fish at a price if he had been civil or a fish flung at his head if he
-had given “sass”: Ratcliffe got friendship.
-
-It was maybe his youth and the fact that all young people are
-Freemasons that did the business; the humor of the gorgeous pajamas may
-have helped. Anyhow, the fact remained. He had secured something that
-knowledge or position or fortune could not have bought,—the good will
-and conversation of this pair, the history of the Tylers, and more than
-a hint of their life on these seas. They had four thousand dollars in
-the bank at Havana left by Pap, not to be touched unless the _Sarah
-Tyler_ came to smash. They had no house rent or rates; no expenses but
-harbor dues, food, oil, and tobacco, and not much expense for food—at
-least just at present.
-
-Tyler winked across the table at Jude and Jude grinned.
-
-“Shut your head,” said Jude, “and don’t be givin’ shows away!” then
-suddenly to Ratcliffe, “We’ve got a cache.”
-
-“Who’s giving shows away now?” asked Tyler.
-
-“Oh, he won’t split,” said Jude.
-
-“It’s on the island here,” said Tyler, “near a ton of stuff, canned. A
-brig went ashore south of Mariguana. We picked up the crew and heard
-their yarn and got the location. Then a big freighter came along and
-took the men off us. The wreck was only a hundred and fifty miles from
-our position, and we reckoned the salvage men wouldn’t be on the spot
-for a fortnight or more and something was due to us for savin’ that
-crew; so we lit out for the wreck. We had four days’ work on her. She
-was straddled on a reef with twenty fathoms under her counter and a
-flat calm, all but a breathin’ of wind. We made fast to her, same as if
-she’d been a wharf. We had the nigger then to help, and we took enough
-grub to last us two years an’ fourteen boxes of Havana cigars and a
-live cat that was most a skeleton.”
-
-“She croaked,” put in Jude. “Satan fed her half a can of beef cut
-small, and then she scoffed half a bucket of water—that bust her.”
-
-“We wouldn’t have been so free in taking the things but for the lie
-of the hooker on the reef and the weather that was sure coming,” said
-Tyler. “We knew all about the weather and the chances. And we didn’t
-cast off from that hooker an hour too soon! We were ridin’ out that
-gale three days, and when we passed the reef again making west the brig
-was gone.”
-
-“And you cached the stuff here?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But we hadn’t to make no cache hole,” put in Jude. “Pap had one here.
-It’s among the bushes—and he didn’t make it, neither.”
-
-“It’s all coral rock a foot under the bushes,” said Tyler, “and there’s
-a hole you drop down six foot, that leads to a cave as cool as a
-refrigerator; so the goods would keep to the last trumpet. The old
-Spaniards must have cut it to hide their stuff in. Pap dropped on it
-by chance. Said they’d used it for hidin’ gold and such. Not that he
-believed in the buried treasure business—sunk ships is different.”
-
-Jude, who was hacking open a can of peaches, suddenly made an awful
-face at Satan. It had the effect of cutting him short. Ratcliffe
-refused the peaches. He sat watching this pair of cormorants and
-thinking that the cache must be pretty big if it held two years’
-provisions for them.
-
-Then suddenly he said so, laughing and without giving the least
-offense. Tyler explained that the cache was not their only larder:
-there were fish and turtle and turtle eggs, birds sometimes, fruit to
-be had for next to nothing, often for nothing. The only expense was
-for tobacco, and he had not paid ten cents for tobacco since last fall
-and wouldn’t want to for a year to come; clothes, and they didn’t want
-much clothes, Jude did the mending and patching; paint, and the _Sarah
-Tyler_ had ways and means of getting paint and all such, spars and so
-on. He gave a wonderful instance:
-
-Before Christmas last they had chummed up with a big yacht on the
-Florida coast near Cedar Cays. Thelusson was the owner, a man from New
-York. He took a fancy to the _Sarah_ and her way of life, and he and
-his crew helped to careen her in a lagoon back of the reefs, cleaned
-her copper (she was dead foul with barnacles and weeds), gave her a
-new main boom and foresail and some spare canvas, and all for nix. He
-had no paint, or he would have painted her. He drank champagne by the
-bucket, and he wanted to quit the yacht and go for a cruise with them,
-only his missus who was on board wouldn’t let him.
-
-Ratcliffe thought he could visualize Thelusson.
-
-“She was a mutt,” put in Jude, “with a voice like a muskeeter.”
-
-“She wanted to ’dopt Jude and stick a skirt on her,” said Tyler.
-
-“Handed me out a lot of sick stuff about sayin’ prayers and such,”
-hurriedly cut in Jude.
-
-“And put the nightcap on it by kissin’ her,” finished Tyler.
-
-Jude’s face blazed red like a peony.
-
-“If you chaps have had enough, I’m goin’ to clear,” said Jude.
-
-“Right!” said Satan, rising, and she cleared, vanishing with the
-swiftness of a rabbit up the companionway.
-
-Tyler fetched out a box of cigars. They were Ramon Alones.
-
-“She won’t speak to me now for half a day,” said Tyler. “If you want
-to guy Jude, tell her she’s a girl. I wouldn’t a told you, only you’re
-not in our way of life and so can’t make trouble. No one knows. There’s
-not a man in any of the ports knows: she goes as me brother. But the
-Thelusson woman spotted her on sight—Come on deck.”
-
-Jude was emptying a bucket of refuse overboard, then she vanished into
-the galley, and Ratcliffe, well fed, lazy, and smoking his cigar,
-leaned for a moment over the rail before taking his departure, talking
-to Tyler.
-
-To starboard lay Palm Island, with the sea quietly creaming on the
-coral beach and the palms stirring to the morning wind, to port the
-white _Dryad_ riding to her anchor on the near-shore blue, and beyond
-the _Dryad_ the violet of the great depths spreading to the far
-horizon, beyond which lay Andros, and the islands, reefs, and banks
-from Great Abeco to Rum Cay. Not a sail on all that sea, nor a stain on
-all that splendor: nothing but the gulls wheeling and crying over the
-reefs to southward.
-
-But Satan’s mind as he leaned beside Ratcliffe was not engaged by the
-beauty of the morning or the charm of the view. Satan was a dealer with
-the sea and the things that came out of the sea or were even to be met
-with floating on the waves. Ratcliffe was one of these things.
-
-“You’ve never had no call to work?” said Satan tentatively. “You’ve
-lots of money, I s’pect, and can take things easy.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so.”
-
-“Like fishin’?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Well, if you ever wants to see good fishin’ and more than ordinary
-folk see of the islands here, drop me a word to Havana. Kellerman,
-marine store dealer, Havana, will get me. He’s a pal of mine. I fetch
-up in Havana every six months or so—and there’s more than fishin’—”
-
-Tyler stopped short, then he spat overboard and began to fill his pipe.
-He had no use for cigars—much.
-
-“How do you mean more than fishing?”
-
-“Well, I don’t know. We’re underhanded a bit for any big job and I
-wouldn’t trust most men. They don’t grow trustable parties in Havana,
-nor the coast towns—not much. I’ve taken a likin’ to you somehow
-or ’nother, and if ever we come together again I’ll tell you maybe
-somethin’ that’s in my mind. You see, between Pap and me and the old
-_Sarah_, we’ve seen close on thirty years of these waters right from
-Caicos to N’y’Orleans and down to Trinidad. Turtle egg huntin’ and
-fishin’ and tradin’, there’s not a reef or cay we don’t know. The old
-_Sarah_ could find her way round blind. Put her before the wind with
-the wheel half a spoke weather helm and leave her, and she’d sniff the
-reefs on her own.”
-
-“You were saying about something more than fishing,” persisted
-Ratcliffe, whose curiosity had been, somehow, aroused.
-
-“I was,” said Tyler; “but I’m not free to speak about private affairs
-without Jude, and there’s no use in tacklin’ her when she’s snorty.
-Listen to that!”
-
-Sounds were coming from the galley as of a person banging pots and pans
-about.
-
-Tyler chuckled.
-
-“It’s always the same when her dander is up,—she starts cleanin’ and
-dustin’ and makin’ hell of the place. Mother was the same. I reckon
-a woman can’t help bein’ a woman, not if she had a hundred pair of
-breeches on.”
-
-“Well,” said Ratcliffe, “I’d like to come for a cruise, and I will some
-day, I hope. Maybe I’ll see you on the island later. I was intending
-going ashore today to have a look round: that’s why we anchored here.”
-
-“Maybe I’ll see you ashore then,” said Tyler, “but if I’m not there,
-mind and say nothin’ of the cache.”
-
-“Right!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-PAP’S SUIT
-
-
-Jude, having been fetched out of the galley, the canvas boat was got
-overboard.
-
-Ratcliffe had offered to shed Pap’s suit and return in his pajamas as
-he had come, but Tyler vetoed the idea. The far-seeing Satan, who had
-snaffled a careen and clean up, not to speak of a main boom and spare
-canvas, out of Thelusson, had an object in view.
-
-“It’s no trouble,” said he. “You take the dinghy, and we’ll take the
-boat and fetch the duds back. It’s late in the mornin’ for you to be
-boarding your ship in them colored things.”
-
-One of the big fish caught that morning was dropped into the boat as a
-“present for the yacht,” and they started.
-
-The accommodation ladder was down and Simmons and a quartermaster
-received Ratcliffe. As he went up the side he heard Tyler shouting to
-Simmons something about the fish. There was no sign of Skelton on deck,
-for which he was thankful, then he dived below to change.
-
-Now “Pap’s” suit had been constructed for a man of over six feet and
-broad in proportion and a man, moreover, who liked his clothes loose
-and easy. On Ratcliffe they recalled the vesture of Dr. Jekyll on Mr.
-Hyde. The saloon door was closed. He opened it, and found himself face
-to face with Skelton, who was sitting at one end of the saloon table
-reading from a book, while Strangways the captain, Norton the first
-officer, Prosser the steward, and sundry others ranged according to
-their degree sat at attention.
-
-It was Sunday morning. He had forgotten that fact, and there was no
-drawing back. He reached his cabin, mumbling apologies to the dead
-silence which seemed crystallized round Skelton, closed the door, and
-stuffed his head among the pillows of his bunk to stifle his laughter,
-then he undressed and dressed.
-
-As he dressed he could hear through the open port the voice of Tyler
-from alongside. The voice was pitched in a conversational key; it was
-saying something about a lick of white paint. He was talking evidently
-to Simmons.
-
-Then, fully dressed, with the bundle of clothes and the canvas shoes
-under his arm, Ratcliffe peeped into the saloon. The service was over
-and the saloon was empty. He reached the deck. It was deserted save for
-a few hands forward and Simmons.
-
-Then he came down the accommodation ladder to the stage, and handed the
-clothes over to Satan.
-
-A drum of white paint and a coil of spare rope were in the boat close
-to Jude, and Satan was saying to Simmons something about a spare ax.
-
-“Well, if you haven’t got one, there’s no more to be said,” finished
-Satan; then to Ratcliffe, “See you ashore, maybe.”
-
-Jude grinned kindly, and they pushed off, the boat a strake lower in
-the water with their loot.
-
-The fat-faced Simmons watched them with the appearance of a man just
-released from mesmerism.
-
-“That chap would talk the hat off one’s head,” said he. “I’ll have h—l
-to pay with Norton over that paint; most likely I’ll have to put my
-hand in my own pocket for it. But he’s a decent chap, that fellow, but
-sharp—the way he landed me with that fish for a bait!”
-
-“He’s all there,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“So’s the boy,” said Simmons. “Come alongside after you’d gone, to
-say you were staying to breakfast with them. Told him to mind and not
-damage the paint. Let out like a bargee at me—and Sir William Skelton
-listening!”
-
-“Where’s Sir William now, Simmons? He wasn’t in the saloon when I’d
-finished dressing.”
-
-“I expect he’s in his cabin,” said Simmons.
-
-Ratcliffe got a book and, taking his seat under the double awning
-sheltering the quarterdeck, tried to read. He had chosen a History
-of the West Indies, the same book most likely from which Skelton had
-“cadged” his information of the night before. The printed page was
-dull, however, compared to the spoken word, and he found himself
-wondering how it was that Skelly could have warmed him up so to all
-this stuff and yet be such an angular stick-in-the-mud in ordinary
-life. What made him such a superior person? What made him at thirty
-look forty, sometimes fifty, and what made him, Ratcliffe, fear Skelly
-sometimes, just as a schoolboy fears a master?
-
-He guessed he was in for a wigging now for cutting breakfast and
-appearing like a guy before the officers, and he knew instinctively the
-form the wigging would take,—a chilly manner and studious avoidance
-of the subject, that would be all,—Christchurch on a wet Sunday
-for forty-eight hours, with the Oxford voice and the Oxford manner
-accentuated and thrown in.
-
-At this moment Sir William Skelton, Bart., came on deck,—a tall, thin
-man, clean shaved, like a serious-minded butler in a yachting suit of
-immaculate white drill. His breeding lay chiefly in his eyes: they
-were half-veiled by heavy lids. He had an open mother-of-pearl-handled
-penknife in his hand.
-
-Free of the saloon hatch and not seeing Ratcliffe, he stopped dead like
-a pointer before game and called out “Quartermaster!”
-
-A quartermaster came running aft.
-
-Some raffle had been left on the scupper by the companionway, a fathom
-or so of old rope rejected by Tyler as not being the quality he was
-“wantin’.”
-
-He ordered it to be taken forward, then he saw Ratcliffe and nodded.
-
-“’Morning,” said Skelton.
-
-He walked to the rail and stood with his hand on it for a moment,
-looking at the island and the _Sarah Tyler_.
-
-Jude and Satan were at work on something aft. In a minute it became
-apparent what they were doing. They were rigging an awning in imitation
-of the _Dryad’s_, an impudent affair made out of old canvas brown with
-weather and patched from wear.
-
-It was like seeing a beggar woman raising a parasol.
-
-Skelton sniffed; then he turned and, leaning with his back against
-the bulwarks, began attending to his left little fingernail with the
-penknife.
-
-“Ratcliffe,” said Skelton suddenly and apparently addressing his little
-finger, “I _wish_ you wouldn’t!” He spoke mildly, in a vaguely pained
-voice. It was as though Ratcliffe had acted in some way like a bounder;
-more, and, wonderfully, he actually made Ratcliffe feel as though he
-had acted in some way like a bounder. He was Ratcliffe’s host; that
-gave an extra weight to the words. The whole thing was horrible.
-
-“Wouldn’t what?” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Skelton had been rather hit in his proprieties by a man going off his
-boat in pajamas and remaining away to breakfast on board a thing like
-the _Sarah Tyler_ in his pajamas; but the real cause of offense was
-“Pap’s” suit suddenly appearing at Sunday morning prayers. The chief
-steward had grinned.
-
-Skelton, though a good sailor, an excellent shipmaster, and as brave as
-a man need be, was a highly nervous individual. A general service on
-deck for the whole crew was beyond him: he compromised by conducting a
-short service in the saloon. Even that was a tax on him. The entrance
-of Ratcliffe in that extraordinary get-up had joggled his nervous
-system.
-
-“If you can’t understand, I can’t explain,” said Skelton. “If our
-cases had been reversed, I should have apologized. However, it doesn’t
-matter.”
-
-“Look here, Skelly!” said Ratcliffe. “I’m most awfully sorry if I have
-jumped on your corns, and I’ll apologize as much as you want, but the
-fact of the matter is we don’t seem to hit it off exactly, do we? You
-are the best of good people, but we have different temperaments. If
-those other fellows had come along on the cruise, it would have mixed
-matters more. We want to be mixed up in a big party more, you and I, if
-we want to get on together.”
-
-“I told you before we started I disliked crowds,” said Skelton, “and
-that only Satherthwaite and Magnus were coming. Then, when they failed,
-you said it didn’t matter, that we should be freer and more comfortable
-alone.”
-
-“I know,” said Ratcliffe. “It was my mistake, and besides I didn’t want
-to put you off the cruise.”
-
-“Oh, you would not have put me off. I should have started alone. I am
-dependent on no one for society.”
-
-“I believe you would have been happier alone.”
-
-“Perhaps,” said Skelton with tight lips.
-
-“Well then, shove me ashore, somewhere.”
-
-“That is talking nonsense!” said Skelton.
-
-Ratcliffe had risen and was leaning over the rail beside the other. His
-eyes were fixed on the _Sarah Tyler_, the disreputable _Sarah_, and as
-he looked at her Jude and Satan suddenly seemed to him real live free
-human beings and Skelton as being not entirely alive nor, for all his
-wealth, free.
-
-It was Skelton who gave the Tylers a nimbus, extra color, fascination,
-especially Jude. There was a lot of fascination about Jude, even
-without the background of Skelton.
-
-“It’s not talking nonsense a bit,” said he, “and, if you can trundle
-along the rest of the cruise alone, I’ll drop you here.”
-
-“Drop you on this island?”
-
-“No—I’d like to go for a cruise with those chaps—I mean that chap in
-the mud barge over there. He asked me, any time I wanted to.”
-
-“Are you in earnest?”
-
-“Of course I am. It would be no end of a picnic, and I want to shove
-round these seas. I can get a boat back from Havana.”
-
-Skelton felt that this was the washerwoman of Barbados over
-again,—irresponsibility—bad form. He was, under his courteousness as
-a host, heartily sick of Ratcliffe and his ways and outlook. A solitary
-by inclination, he would not at all have objected to finishing this
-cruise by himself. All the same, he strongly objected to the idea just
-put before him.
-
-What made him object? Was he insulted that the _Dryad_ should be turned
-down in favor of the frowzy, disreputable-looking _Sarah Tyler_, that
-the companionship of the Tylerites should be preferred to his? Did
-some vague instinct tell him they were the better people to be with
-if one wanted to have a good time? Was high conventionality outraged
-as though, walking down Piccadilly with Ratcliffe, the latter were to
-seize the arm of a dustman?
-
-Who knows? But he bitterly and strongly objected. And how and in what
-words did he show his objection and anger?
-
-“Then go, my dear fellow, go!” said he as though with all the good will
-in the world.
-
-“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But are you sure you don’t mind?”
-
-“Mind! Why should I mind?”
-
-“One portmanteau full of stuff will do me,” said Ratcliffe, “and I have
-nearly a hundred and fifty in ready money and a letter of credit on
-the Lyonnaise at Havana for five hundred. I’ll trundle my stuff over
-if you’ll lend me a boat, and be back for luncheon. You’ll be off this
-evening, I suppose, and I can stay aboard here till you get the anchor
-up. It’s possible I might pick you up at Havana on the way back; but
-don’t worry about that. Of course all this depends on whether that
-fellow will take me. I’ll take the portmanteau with me and ask.”
-
-He did not in the least see what was going on in Skelton’s mind.
-
-“You will take your things with you in a boat, and if this—gentleman
-refuses to take you, what then?”
-
-“I’ll come back.”
-
-“Now I want to be quite clear with you, Ratcliffe,” said Skelton.
-“If you leave my ship like that—for nothing—at a whim and for
-disreputable chance acquaintances—absolute scowbankers—the worst
-sort—I want to be clear with you—quite, absolutely definite—I must
-ask you not to come back!”
-
-“Well, I’m hanged!” said Ratcliffe, suddenly blazing out. “First
-you say go and then you say don’t! Of course that’s enough: you’ve
-practically fired me off your boat.”
-
-“Do not twist my words,” said the other. “That is a subtle form of
-prevarication I can’t stand.”
-
-“I think we had better stop this,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m going! If I
-don’t see you again. I’ll say goodby.”
-
-“And please understand,” said the other, who was rather white about the
-mouth, “please understand—”
-
-“Oh, I know,” said Ratcliffe. “Goodby!”
-
-He dived below to the saloon and rang for his bedroom steward.
-
-Burning with anger and irritation and a feeling that he had been sat
-upon by Skelton, snubbed, sneered at, and altogether outrageously
-used, he could not trust himself to do his own packing. He sat on his
-bunkside while the steward stuffed a portmanteau with necessaries, and
-as he sat the thought came to him of what would happen were Tyler to
-refuse to take him. He would have to take refuge on Palm Island. It was
-a comic opera sort of idea; yet, such was the state of his mind, he
-actually entertained it.
-
-Skelton was no longer “Skelly,” but “that beast Skelton.” Then he
-tipped the steward and the chief steward, telling them that he was
-going for a cruise in that “yawl over there.” On deck he met Norton
-and Simmons and told them the same tale. Skelton had vanished to his
-cabin. He told the first and second officers that he had said goodby to
-his host and asked for a boat to be lowered.
-
-“I’ll pick you up most likely at Havana,” said he to gloze the matter
-over. “I expect I’ll have a good time, but rather rough. I want to do
-some fishing.”
-
-The whole thing seemed like a dream and not a particularly pleasant
-one. Embarked on this business now, he almost wished himself done with
-it. The yacht was comfortable, the cooking splendid; to satisfy any
-want, one had only to touch a bell. There were no bells on board the
-_Sarah Tyler_. A lavatory and a sort of bathroom invented by “Pap” were
-the only conveniences, and the bath was impracticable. It was “Pap’s”
-only failure, for the sea-cock connecting it with the outer ocean was
-so arranged or constituted that as likely as not it would let in the
-Caribbean before you could “stop it off.”
-
-If Skelton now, at the last moment, had asked Ratcliffe to come down
-and have an interview, things might have been smoothed over, but
-Skelton was not the sort of man to make advances; neither, in his way,
-was Ratcliffe.
-
-Meanwhile, Simmons was directing the lowering of a boat. The
-companionway was still down. The luggage was put in, and Simmons,
-seated by Ratcliffe in the stern seats, took the yoke lines. Not a sign
-of Skelton, not even a face at a porthole!
-
-“Give way!” shouted Simmons.
-
-As they drew up to the _Sarah Tyler_, Ratcliffe saw Satan leaning over
-the rail and watching them. Jude was nowhere visible.
-
-“Hullo!” said Ratcliffe as they came alongside. “I’ve come back.”
-
-“I was half-expectin’ you,” said Satan with a grin.
-
-“Will you take me for that cruise right off?”
-
-“Sure! That your dunnage?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Satan stepped to the cabin companionway and shouted down it.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“Hullo!” came Jude’s voice.
-
-“He’s come back!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE PORTMANTEAU
-
-
-As Jude came on deck the portmanteau was being hoisted on board.
-Ratcliffe passed down a five-pound note to the boat’s crew, and then
-stood, waving to Simmons as the boat put away. Then, turning to
-Satan, he tried to discuss terms, but was instantly silenced by Jude
-and Satan. They would hear nothing of money. Used to sea changes and
-strange happenings, they seemed to think nothing of the business, and
-after the first words fell to talking together.
-
-The trend of their talk induced in Ratcliffe a vaguely uncanny feeling.
-It was as though they had already discussed his coming on board and
-the storage of himself and his baggage, as though they had known by
-instinct that he would return. The size of the portmanteau affected
-Jude.
-
-“You can’t keep that,” said Jude, giving the portmanteau a slight kick.
-“It’s a long sight too big. Say, what have you got in it?”
-
-“Clothes.”
-
-“Pajamas?”
-
-“Yes, and lots of other things.”
-
-Jude tilted back the old panama she was wearing and took her seat
-on the portmanteau. Her feet were bare, and she twisted her toes in
-thought as she sat for a moment turning matters over in her mind.
-
-“You can stick the things in the spare locker,” said she at last. “You
-gonna have a gay old time if you keep this in the cabin, tumblin’ over
-it. Better empty her here an’ cart the stuff below.”
-
-“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But what shall I do with the portmanteau when
-it’s empty?”
-
-“Heave her overboard,” said Jude.
-
-“Shut your head!” said Tyler, suddenly cutting in. “What you talkin’
-about? Heave yourself overboard!” Then to Ratcliffe, “She’s right, all
-the same; there’s no room for luggage. If you’ll help Jude to get the
-things below, I’ll look after the trunk. When you’ve done with the
-cruise you can get a bag to hold your things.”
-
-Ratcliffe opened the portmanteau. The steward of the _Dryad_ was an
-expert: in a past existence he had probably been a pack rat. In any
-given space he could have tucked away half as much again as any other
-ordinary mortal. But he certainly had no imagination, or perhaps he had
-been too busy to cast his eye overboard and see the manner of craft
-Ratcliffe was joining, and Ratcliffe had been far too much exercised in
-his mind about Skelton to notice what was being packed.
-
-Jude on her knees helped.
-
-“What’s this?” asked Jude, coming on a black satin lining.
-
-“Confound the fool!” said Ratcliffe. “He needn’t have packed that: it’s
-a dinner jacket.”
-
-“Mean to say you sit down to your dinner in a jacket?” Jade choked
-and snorted while Ratcliffe hurriedly, on his knees, hauled out the
-trousers and waistcoats that went with the garments.
-
-“That’s the lining—it’s worn the other way about—I know it’s
-tomfoolery. Stick ’em all in one bundle—Lord! look at the shirts he’s
-packed!”
-
-“They’ve got tucks in them,” said Jude, looking at the pleated fronts.
-
-“I know. They go with that tomfool dinner suit. You can’t knock sense
-into the head of a bedroom steward. Come along and let’s get them down
-below.”
-
-While they were carting the stuff down, Satan on the hatch cover
-cut himself a chew of tobacco (he sometimes chewed) and, with his
-lantern jaws working regularly like the jaws of a cow chewing the cud,
-contemplated the steadily emptying portmanteau.
-
-He had a plan about that portmanteau, a plan to turn it to profit.
-Satan’s plans generally had profit for their object. He had taken
-a genuine liking for Ratcliffe; but it was a curious thing with
-Satan that even his likings generally helped him along toward
-profit,—perhaps because they were the outcome of a keen intelligence
-that had been sharpened by knocking about among rascals, beachcombers,
-wharf rats, as well as honest folk.
-
-When Ratcliffe had fetched down the last load and come up again, he
-found Satan and the portmanteau gone.
-
-The canvas boat had not been brought on board, but streamed astern
-on a line. He looked over the side. Satan was in the boat with the
-portmanteau and in the act of pushing off.
-
-“I’m takin’ her back to the yacht,” said Satan.
-
-Ratcliffe nodded.
-
-At that moment Jude came on deck blinking and hitching up her trousers.
-She had washed her face and made herself a bit more tidy,—perhaps
-because she had remembered it was Sunday or perhaps because company had
-come on board. She had evidently put her whole head into the water.
-It was dripping, and as she stood with the old panama in her hand
-and her cropped hair drying in the sun Ratcliffe observed her anew
-and thought that he had never seen a more likable figure. Jude would
-never be pretty, but she was better than pretty,—healthy, honest
-and capable, trusting and fearless, easily reflecting laughter, and
-with a trace of the irresponsibility of youth. It was a face entirely
-original and distinctive. Dirty, it was the face of a larrikin;
-washed, a face such as I have attempted to describe; and the eyes were
-extraordinary,—liquid-gray, with a look of distance, when she was
-serious, a look acquired perhaps from life among vast sea spaces.
-
-“Where’s Satan?” asked Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe pointed.
-
-Jude, shading her eyes, looked. Then she laughed.
-
-“Thought he was up to somethin’,” said she. “He’s gone to kid that
-officer man out of some more truck.”
-
-In a flash Ratcliffe saw the reason of Satan’s activities, and in
-another flash he saw again, or seemed to see, in Satan and Jude a
-pair of gipsies of the sea. A gipsies’ caravan camped close to a
-neat villa,—that was the relationship between the _Sarah Tyler_ and
-the _Dryad_,—and Satan was the caravan man gone round to the villa’s
-back door to return an empty portmanteau and blarney the servants out
-of scraps and old odds and ends not wanted, maybe to commandeer a
-chicken or nick a doormat—heaven only knew! He remembered the fancy
-Satan had taken to the dinghy. And he, Ratcliffe, had thrown in his
-lot with these people! Fishing cruise! Rubbish! Gipsy patter, sea
-thimblerigging, wreck-picking, and maybe petty larceny from Guadaloupe
-to dry Tortugas,—that was what he had signed on for. Why, the _Sarah
-Tyler_, could she have been hauled into any law court, would have
-stood convicted on her very appearance! Jude was honest enough in her
-way; but her way was Satan’s way, and she had owned up with steadfast,
-honest eyes to the plundering of a brig and the caching of the plunder.
-They were “passons to what Pap had been,” but they were his offspring,
-and the law to them was no doubt what it had been to him,—a something
-to be avoided or outwitted, like a dangerous animal.
-
-All these thoughts running through his head did not disturb him in the
-least. Far from that! The reckless in him had expanded since he had cut
-the cable connecting him with the _Dryad_, and not for worlds would
-he have changed the _Sarah_ into a vessel of more conventional form,
-or altered Satan from whatever he might be into a figure of definite
-respectability.
-
-He reckoned that if Satan broke the law he would be clever enough to
-avoid the consequences. His tongue alone would get him out of most
-fixes, and just this touch of gipsiness in the business gave a new
-flavor to life,—the flavor boys seek when they raid orchards and
-hen-roosts and go pirating with corked faces and lath swords.
-
-“He’s goin’ aboard her,” said Jude.
-
-The portmanteau had been taken up by one of the crew, and now Satan,
-evidently at the invitation of one of the white-clad figures leaning
-over the rail of the _Dryad_, was going up the accommodation ladder,
-leaving the boat to wash about in the blue water by the stage.
-
-Ratcliffe guessed that one of the white-clad figures was Skelton and
-that it was on Skelton’s invitation he had gone on board. He felt
-vaguely uneasy. What did Skelton mean by that? Was he up to any dodge
-to “crab” the cruise?
-
-However, he had no time to bother over this, for Jude, who had him now
-to herself without fear of interruption, had opened her batteries.
-
-“Say,” said Jude, hanging over the rail where the awning cast its
-shadow, speaking without looking at him and spitting into the water,
-“what are you when you’re ashore, anyway?”
-
-“I’m one of the idle rich,” said Ratcliffe, lighting his pipe.
-
-“Well, you won’t be idle aboard here,” said Jude definitely. “What was
-your dad? Was your dad an idle rich?”
-
-“No, he was a ship owner.”
-
-“How many ships did he own?”
-
-“About forty.”
-
-“What sort?”
-
-“Steamers.”
-
-“What sizes?”
-
-“Oh, anything from two to five thousand tons.”
-
-She turned to see if he were guying her.
-
-“There was another man in the business,” said Ratcliffe, “a partner;
-Ratcliffe & Holt was the same of the firm. The governor died intestate.”
-
-“Somethin’ wrong with his inside?”
-
-“No, he died of a stroke; he was found in his office chair dead; he
-died at his work.”
-
-“Did they get the chap that did him in?” asked Jude.
-
-“No, it wasn’t a man that struck him; it was apoplexy, a disease, and
-dying without a will, all his money was divided up between my two
-brothers and me.”
-
-“How much did you get?”
-
-“Over a hundred thousand.”
-
-“Dollars?”
-
-“No, pounds—four hundred thousand dollars.”
-
-“Got ’em still?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“In the bank?”
-
-“Some; the rest is invested.”
-
-She seemed to lose interest in the money business and hung for a moment
-over the rail, whistling almost noiselessly between her teeth and
-kicking up a bare heel. Then she said:
-
-“Who’s the chap you were sailin’ with?”
-
-“Skelton is his name.”
-
-“He owns that hooker?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well,” said Jude suddenly, as if waking from a reverie, “this won’t
-boil potatoes—I’ve got to get dinner ready. Come ’long and help if
-you’re willin’.”
-
-There was half a sack of potatoes in the galley. She set the stove
-going, and then, on her knees before the open sack, she sent him to
-fetch half a bucket of water from overboard. He found the bucket with a
-rope attached, brought the water, and filled the potato kettle, then he
-brought more water for the washing of the potatoes.
-
-She did the washing squatting on her heels before the bucket.
-
-“Where did you get them from?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Get which?”
-
-“The potatoes.”
-
-“Bought them,” said Jude; then, as though suddenly smitten by
-rectitude, “No, we didn’t, nuther: we kidooled them out of a fruiter.”
-
-“What’s a fruiter?”
-
-“Fruit steamer. Satan fixed her.”
-
-“How did he fix her?”
-
-“Well,” said Jude, “it’s no harm to hold up a packet if you don’t throw
-her off her course—much. It’s the owners pays, and they can stand the
-racket. The crew likes it, and if there’s passengers aboard they just
-love it.”
-
-“Do you mean to say you hold up steamers?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But how do you do it?”
-
-“Oh, it’s only now and then. What’s easier than to lay in her course
-with the flag half-mast? Then she heaves to.”
-
-“And you board her and ask for potatoes, or whatever you want?”
-
-“Not much!” said Jude. “They’d boot you off the ship. Water’s what you
-ask for, pretendin’ you’re dying of thirst; then you drink till you’re
-near bustin’ and fill the breaker you’ve brought with you. It’s all
-on the square. Satan would never hold a ship unless he had some fish
-to offer them for whatever he wants,—potatoes or fruit or tobacco.
-He’s got the fish in the boat and hands it up. They’re always glad of
-fresh fish and they offer to buy it; but he won’t take money, but says,
-‘If you’ve got a few potatoes handy, I don’t mind takin’ them for the
-fish.’ Sometimes it’s fruit he wants, or other things. Then you push
-off—and if it’s a passenger packet the passengers, thinkin’ they’ve
-saved you from dyin’ of thirst, line up and cheer. It’s no end of fun.”
-
-“What flag do you sail under?”
-
-“’Murrican, what else? You see,” went on Jude as she put the potatoes
-into the kettle, “fish costs nothing to us and they’re mighty glad of
-it, but I reckon they’d bat our heads off if they knew about the dyin’
-of thirst business.”
-
-“But suppose you struck the same ship twice?”
-
-“It’s not a job one does every day,” said Jude, with a trace of
-contempt in her tone, “and Satan don’t wear blinkers, and it’s not a
-job you could do at all if you didn’t know the lie of the fishin’
-banks by where the ship tracks run. I reckon you’ve got to learn
-something about things.”
-
-“I reckon I have,” said Ratcliffe, laughing, “and I bet you’ll teach
-me!”
-
-“Well, shy that over to begin with,” said Jude, giving him the pail of
-dirty water.
-
-He flung the water over the side, and as he did so he took a glance at
-the _Dryad_. Satan was in the boat just pushing off. When he returned
-to the galley with the news, Jude was preparing to fry fish: not the
-early morning fish, but some caught just before Ratcliffe had come on
-board.
-
-Then he went to the rail again just as Satan was coming alongside.
-
-Satan had a cargo of sorts. His insatiable appetite for canvas and rope
-was evidenced by the bundle in the stern, and there were parcels. The
-return of the empty portmanteau had not been waste labor.
-
-“That’s coffee,” said he to Ratcliffe, handing up the goods. “We were
-runnin’ short. And here’s biscuits—catch a holt—and here’s some
-fancy muck in cans and c’ndensed milk—I told the chap our cow died
-yesterday. ‘Take everything you want,’ says he. ‘Don’t mind me—I’m
-only the owner.’ Offered me the mainsail as I was putting off an’
-told me to come back for the dinghy. I’d told him I was sweet on
-her—full of fun he was—and maybe I will. Claw hold of this bundle
-of matches—they’re a livin’ Godsend—and here’s a case of canned
-t’marters—and that’s all.”
-
-Skelton’s irony was evidently quite lost on Satan, or put down to his
-“fun,” but Ratcliffe could appreciate it, and the fact that its real
-target was himself.
-
-The canned t’marters appeared with the food at dinner, and during the
-meal more of Skelton came out. He had offered Satan vinous liquors,
-hoping, so Ratcliffe dimly suspected, to send him back a trouble to
-the _Sarah Tyler_ and an object lesson on the keeping of disreputable
-company; but the wily Satan had no use for liquor. He was on the water
-wagon.
-
-“I leave all them sorts of things to Jude,” said he, with a grin. He
-was referring to Jude’s boasted drunk at Havana, and Ratcliffe, who was
-placed opposite to the pair of them, across the table, saw Jude’s chin
-project. Why she should boast of a thing one moment and fire up at the
-mention of it at another was beyond him.
-
-For a moment it seemed as if she were going to empty the dish of
-tomatoes over Satan, but she held herself in, all but her tongue.
-
-“You’d have been doin’ better work on board here, mendin’ the gooseneck
-of that spare gaff, than wangling old canvas an’ rope out of that man,”
-said she. “We’re full up of old truck that’s no more use to us than
-Solomon’s aunt. It’s in the family, I suppose, seein’ what Granf’er
-was—”
-
-“Oh, put a potato in your mouth!” said Satan.
-
-“He used to peddle truck on the Canada border,” said she to
-Ratcliffe,—“hams—”
-
-“Close up!” said Satan.
-
-“—made out o’ birchwood, and wooden nutmegs—”
-
-“That was Pap’s joke,” said Satan. “And another word out of you and
-I’ll turn you over me knee and take down your—”
-
-“Then what do you want flingin’ old things in my face?” cried Jude,
-wabbling between anger and tears. “Some day I’ll take me hook, same as
-mother did.”
-
-“There’s not a Baptis’ minister would look at you,” said Satan, winking
-at Ratcliffe.
-
-“Damn Baptis’ ministers! You may work your old hooker yourself. I’ll
-skip! Two thousand of them dollars is mine, and next time we touch
-Havana I’ll skip!”
-
-“And where’ll you skip to?”
-
-“I’ll start a la’ndry.”
-
-“Then you’ll have to black your face and wear a turban, same as the
-others—and marry a nigger. I can see you comin’ off for the ship’s
-washin’.”
-
-Jude began to laugh in a crazy sort of way, then all at once she
-sobered down and went on with her dinner. One could never tell how her
-anger would end,—in tears, laughter of a wild sort, or just nothing.
-
-Not another word was said about the family history of the Tylers, at
-least at that meal, and after it was over Jude made Ratcliffe help to
-wash up the plates and things in the galley.
-
-“Satan’s Cap,” said Jude. “He never helps in the washin’ or swillin’.
-Not cold water!—land’s sake! where did you learn washin’ up?—hot!
-I’ve left some in that billy on the stove.”
-
-She had taken off her old coat and rolled her guernsey sleeves up to
-the shoulders nearly, and it came to Ratcliffe as he helped that,
-without a word of remonstrance, naturally, and as a part adapts itself
-to the economy of a whole, he had sunk into the position of kitchen
-maid and general help to the Tyler family, taken the place of the
-nigger that had skipped; furthermore that Satan was less a person
-than a subtle influence. Satan seemed to obtain his ends more by
-wishing than by willing. He wanted an extra hand, and he had somehow
-put the spell of his wish on him, Ratcliffe. He had wished a drum of
-paint out of Simmons—and look at Skelton, the cynical and superior
-Skelton, sending off doles of coffee and “t’marters” to the dingy and
-disreputable _Sarah Tyler_, offering his mainsail to the rapacious
-Satan as a gibe! What had he been but a marionette dancing on the
-string of Satan’s wish?
-
-Only for Jude and the _Sarah_ and the queer new sense of freedom from
-all the associations he had ever known, only for something likable
-about Satan, the something that gave him power to wheedle things out
-of people and bend them to his wishes, Ratcliffe might have reacted
-against the Tyler hypnotism. As it was, the whole business seemed as
-jolly as a pantomime, as exciting as a new form of novel in which the
-folk were real and himself a character.
-
-Leaving Satan and the old _Sarah_ aside, and the extraordinary
-fascination of spars, sails, narrow deck, and close sea, catching one’s
-own fish, cooking one’s own food, and dickering with winds, waves,
-reefs, and lee shores for a living,—leaving all these aside, Jude
-alone would have held him; for Jude gave him what he possessed when
-he was nine,—the power of playing again, of seeing everything new and
-fresh. Washing up dishes with Jude was a game. To the whole-souled
-Jude all this business was a game,—hauling on the halyards, fishing,
-cooking, hanging on to the beard of a storm by the sea anchor, wreck
-picking and so on,—and she had infected him. Already they were good
-companions and, when together, of the same age, about nine—though she
-was fifteen and he over twenty.
-
-“Stick them on that shelf,” said Jude. “Oh,
-Lord!—butter-fingers!—lemme! That’s the gadget to keep them from
-shiftin’ if the ship rolls. Now stick the knives in that locker. You
-don’t mind my tellin’ you, do you?”
-
-“Not a bit.”
-
-“Well, that’s all.”
-
-They found Satan under the awning, attending to the gooseneck of the
-spare gaff.
-
-Jude sat down on the deck clasping her knees, criticized Satan’s
-handiwork, received instructions to hold her tongue, and then
-collapsed, lying on her back with knees up and the back of her hand
-across her eyes. She could sleep at any odd moment.
-
-The horizon had vanished in haze, the crying of the gulls had died
-down, and the washing of the lazy swell on the island beach sounded
-like a lullaby.
-
-A trace of smoke was rising from the yellow funnel of the _Dryad_ as
-she lay like a white painted ship on a blue painted ocean. They were
-firing up.
-
-“How about getting ashore?” asked Ratcliffe. “I want to see that cache
-of yours. Care to come?”
-
-“I’d just as soon leave it till they’re away,” said Satan, jerking his
-hand toward the _Dryad_. “There’s no tellin’, they might be spottin’ us
-on the location with a glass, and they’ll be off tonight—so the chap
-told me. You leave it to me and I’ll show you a cache better nor that
-in a day or two.”
-
-“Shut up, Satan!” came a drowsy voice from the deck.
-
-“Shut up yourself!” said Satan. “I’m not talkin’ of what you mean: I’m
-talkin’ of the abalone reef—lyin’ there like a lazy dog and lippin’
-your betters!”
-
-“Where’s me betters?” cried Jude, sitting bang-up suddenly, like the
-corpse in “Thou art the man.”
-
-“I’m your betters.”
-
-“You!”
-
-“Me!”
-
-Jude broke into a cracked laugh.
-
-“Listen to him talkin’!” cried she to the universe in general. “Ain’t
-fit to bile potatoes!” She was on her feet, and he was after her with a
-rope’s end, dodging her round the mast. “Touch me and I’ll tell him!” A
-flick of the rope’s end caught her, and next moment she was clinging to
-Ratcliffe and using him as her shield. “It’s an old ship sunk south o’
-Rum Key!” cried Jude. “South o’ Rum Key! I told you I’d tell him if you
-touched me.”
-
-Satan dropped the rope and resumed the gooseneck business.
-
-“Now you’ve done it!” said he.
-
-“Told you I would,” said Jude. She sat down on the deck again as
-though nothing had happened and nursed her knees.
-
-“You needn’t mind me,” said Ratcliffe. “I won’t tell.”
-
-“Oh, it’s not that,” said Satan, “but Pap was mighty particular about
-keepin’ close. He located that hooker only three months before the
-fever took him—and he didn’t come on it by chance nuther. And now
-Jude’s given the show away!”
-
-“I told you I’d tell him,” said Jude broodily.
-
-“Told me you’d tell him! Why, ever since last fall you’ve been at me
-to keep my tongue in my head about it, and then you bring it out bing,
-first thing, yourself! That’s a woman all over.”
-
-“Who are you callin’ a woman?”
-
-“Me aunt. Shut your head and give over handlin’ that ball of yarn,
-clutch hold of the gaff and keep it steady while I fix this ring on
-her!”
-
-He worked away in silence while Ratcliffe sat watching, vaguely
-intrigued by what had just passed. It was less the words than the place
-and circumstance,—the little deck of the _Sarah Tyler_, the blue lazy
-sea, the voice of the surf on Palm Island, the figure of Jude and
-Satan. He had seen Rum Cay: They had passed it in a pink and pearly
-dawn. The steward had called him up to look at it. South of that lonely
-and fascinating place old man Tyler had located a sunk ship. What sort
-of ship he knew instinctively and that the Tylers were not the people
-to halloo over nothing. The gulls did not know these seas better than
-they. He said nothing, however. It was Satan who spoke next.
-
-“Pap had reckoned to lay for it this spring,” said Satan, “but the
-fever took him. Then we were underhanded. Jude and me can make out to
-work the boat and get a livin’, but we’re too underhanded for a big
-job. Why, takin’ that truck off the brig I told you about near laid us
-out, and we had the nigger to help and she was hove up so that it was
-like takin’ cargo off a wharfside.”
-
-“Look here,” said Ratcliffe, “I’ll help if you care to go for it. I
-don’t want any share: just the fun. What’s in her?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan in a half-hearted way, “maybe we’ll have a look at
-her; but it’s a job that wants more than three by rights. Pap was three
-men in himself; he’d a done it. It’s a dynamite job. She’s got to be
-blasted open.”
-
-“I’ve heard stories about buried treasure in these seas—” began
-Ratcliffe. Jude turned her head.
-
-“That’s bilge,” said she.
-
-“Yarns,” said Satan. “Pap used to turn any man down that talked of
-stuff bein’ buried. First he said that chaps didn’t bury stuff, second
-if they did you couldn’t find it, what with earthquakes and sand
-siftin’ and such, and third that never an ounce of silver, or gold for
-the matter of that, has ever been dug up by the tomfools huntin’ for
-it. Havana is full of tall stories of buried treasure—chaps make a
-livin’ sellin’ locations and faked charts and the like of that. It’s a
-Spanish game, and it takes good American money every year. You see, Pap
-was a book-readin’ man,—taught himself to read, too, and didn’t start
-the job till he was near forty,—so he had a head on him, but somehow
-or ’nother he never made the money he ought. If he’d stuck in towns and
-places, he’d have been a Rock’feller; but he liked beatin’ about free,
-said God’s good air was better than dollars. But it stuck in him that
-he hadn’t made out, somehow. Then he turned into unbelievin’ ways, Said
-he was a soci—what was it, Jude?”
-
-“Somethin’ or ’nother,” said Jude.
-
-“Socialist?” suggested Ratcliffe.
-
-“That’s it! Said the time was coming when all the guys that were down
-under would be on top of the chaps that were on top, and that there’d
-be such a hell of a rough house money’d be no use anyway; said the
-time was comin’ when eggs would be a dollar apiece and no dollars to
-buy them with, and me and Jude would be safest without money gettin’
-our livin’ out of the sea. He was a proper dirge when he got on that
-tack. But all the same it stuck in him that he wasn’t on top, and one
-night when he was in Diegos’ saloon he heard three Spanish chaps layin’
-their heads together. He knew the lingo well enough to make out their
-meanin’. They were in the bar. Pap wasn’t on the water wagon, but he
-was no boozer. He was sittin’ there that night just dead beat, as any
-man might be after the day’s work he’d done, runnin’ the customs—”
-
-“Luff!” said Jude in a warning voice.
-
-“Oh, close your head! Think I am talkin’ to a customs officer? He don’t
-care.”
-
-“Not a bit,” said Ratcliffe. “Heave ahead.”
-
-“Well, he was sittin’ with his eyes shut, and he heard these guys
-colludin’ together. He didn’t get more than half they said, but he
-got enough to make him want to hear more. Then they quit the bar and
-went into a back room with their lemon juice and cigarettes. Ten
-minutes after hell broke loose in that back room, and when Pap and the
-bartender got the door open there was the chaps, one on the floor shot
-through the head and the other two near done in. Two of them had set
-on the guy that was dead; but they hadn’t knocked him out before he
-began to shoot, and he’d pretty well riddled them with a Colt automatic
-pistol—”
-
-“Them’s the things!” said Jude. “I’m savin’ up to buy one of them
-things on my own—twenty-five dollars—”
-
-“Shut your head! Then they must have knocked it out of his hand and
-used the last shot on him.”
-
-“His brains were all over the floor,” said Jude with relish. “Pap said
-they looked like white of egg beat up and enough to fill a puddin’
-basin.”
-
-“Pap spotted somethin’ else on the floor,” went on Satan, “a piece of
-paper folded double. He put it in his pocket while the fellers were
-bein’ lifted to the hospital, where they died that same night. He was
-on the square all right, takin’ that paper, and I’ll tell you why. Six
-months before that we’d spotted a wreck comin’ up from Guadaloupe.
-She’s so placed—as maybe you’ll see yourself one day—that a hundred
-ships might have passed her without spottin’ her, and bein’ out of
-trade tracks made her all the safer. These guys had been talkin’ about
-a wreck before they left the bar for the back room, and he reckoned it
-was our find they were onto. The piece of paper made him sure of that,
-and, takin’ it with the talk he’d heard, he reckoned he had got the
-biggest thing that ever humped itself in these waters. He said there
-was a hundred thousand dollars aboard her.”
-
-It was a fascinating story, yet it seemed to Ratcliffe that Satan
-showed little enthusiasm over the business.
-
-“You don’t seem very keen about it,” said he.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “it seems a bit too big, and that’s the truth. The
-hooker’s there right enough, but I don’t seem to see all that stuff
-aboard of her.”
-
-“It’s there right enough,” said Jude.
-
-“Then there’s the getting of it,” went on Satan. “That’s a tough job to
-tackle. Months of work, no pay, and the chance of bein’ let down at the
-end of it.”
-
-“Satan’d sooner be grubbin’ round after abalones,” said Jude. “Bone
-lazy, that’s what he is! I know the stuff’s there, and I’m goin’ to get
-it if I have to dig it out myself.”
-
-“Well, off with you then,” said the other, “and a good riddance you’d
-be!” Then to Ratcliffe, “We’ll run you down there some day and you can
-see for yourself. If you’ve any money to burn, you might like to put
-it in the spec’. We’d want extra help. Jude’s talkin’ through her hat.
-We can’t tackle that business alone, even Pap saw that—though he was
-mighty set on doin’ it single-handed. And that’s where the bother
-comes in, for the island where she’s lyin’ is Spanish, and the Dagoes
-would claim what we got if they knew.”
-
-“We’d have to get half a dozen men and give them a share,” said
-Ratcliffe. “That would make them hold their tongues; but I see an awful
-lot of difficulties. Suppose you got the stuff, how are you to get rid
-of it?”
-
-“We’d have to get it down to a Brazil port,” said Satan, “or run it
-into Caracas. That’s handier. Them Venezuelans are the handiest chaps
-when it comes to loose dealin’.”
-
-“For the matter of that,” said Ratcliffe, “one could run it straight
-to England. There are lots of places there where we could get it
-ashore—but we’ve got to get it first.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan. “Look! She’s puttin’ a boat off.” He pointed
-to the _Dryad_.
-
-A quarter-boat had been lowered and was pulling away from the yacht.
-As she drew closer Ratcliffe saw that the man in the sternsheets,
-steering, was Skelton,—Skelton coming either to make trouble or to
-make friends.
-
-The oars rose up and fell with a crash as the bow oar hooked on to the
-dingy old _Sarah_.
-
-“Hulloo!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Hulloo!” said Skelton.
-
-“Won’t you come on board?”
-
-“No, thank you.” A sniff from Jude. “I just came over to say that we
-are starting.”
-
-Ratcliffe saw that he wanted to say a lot, but was tongue-tied before
-the boat’s crew and the Tylers.
-
-“Better come on board,” said he, “and have a chat in the cabin before
-you’re off.”
-
-Skelton hesitated a moment, then he came. He gave Satan a nod, utterly
-ignored Jude, and, followed by Ratcliffe, passed below. Downstairs his
-manner changed. Standing and refusing a seat, as though fearing to
-contaminate his lily-white ducks, he began to speak as if addressing
-the portrait of old man Tyler.
-
-“I can’t believe you absolutely mean to do this,” said he. “I can
-understand a moment’s temper, but—but—this is a joke carried too far.”
-
-“My dear Skelton,” said the other, “what’s the good? I have the
-greatest respect for you, but we are dead opposites in temperament and
-we make each other unhappy. What’s the good of carrying it on? It’s not
-as if you minded being alone. You like being alone, and I like this old
-tub and her crew. Well, let’s each carry out our likings. I’m as happy
-as anything here.”
-
-“I’m not thinking of your happiness, but of the position. You were a
-guest on my yacht, and you leave me like this—I need not embroider on
-the bare fact.”
-
-“Do you want me to go back?”
-
-“Not in the least,” said Skelton. “You are a free agent, I hope.”
-
-Ratcliffe’s blood was beginning to rise in temperature. He knew quite
-well Skelton wanted him to go back, but was too proud to say so, and he
-knew quite well that Skelton wanted him back, not for any love of him,
-but simply because the _position_ was irregular and people, if they
-heard of all this, might talk; also it might seem queer to the yacht’s
-crew.
-
-“Well, then, if you don’t specially want me back, I’ll stay,” said he.
-
-“Very well,” said Skelton, “as you please. I wash my hands of the
-affair, and if you come to grief it is your own lookout. I will have
-the remainder of your baggage forwarded home to you when I reach
-England.”
-
-“I’ll maybe see you at Havana when this cruise is over,” said Ratcliffe
-vaguely.
-
-“I doubt it,” said Skelton. “It is quite possible I may not call
-there.” He turned and began to climb the companionway. On deck he
-nodded frigidly to Satan and got over the side.
-
-Satan, leaning across the rail, looked down.
-
-“How about that mains’l?” asked Satan jocularly.
-
-“I’m afraid I have no more spare canvas available,” said Skelton, with
-a veiled dig at the rapacity of the lantern-jawed one, “or provisions.
-Anything else I shall be delighted to let you have.”
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “you might send us a loan of the dinghy.
-We’re short of boats.”
-
-“You shall have her,” said Skelton with a glance at Ratcliffe, who was
-also leaning over, as though to say, “This is the sort of man you have
-thrown your lot in with!”
-
-The boat pushed off.
-
-“Goodby!” cried Ratcliffe, half laughing, half angry, with Satan, but
-quite unable to veto the promised gift.
-
-“’By,” replied the other, raising a hand.
-
-Jude, who had said not one word, suddenly began to giggle.
-
-“What’s wrong with you?” asked Satan.
-
-“I dunno,” replied Jude, “but there’s somethin’ about that guy that
-makes me want to laugh.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-SKELTON SAILS
-
-
-The breeze had risen with the declining sun and the water round the
-_Dryad_ looked like a spread of smashed sapphires.
-
-They watched Skelton getting on board, and then they saw the dinghy
-lowered and the quarter-boat taking her in tow. In five minutes, like
-a white duckling behind a moor-hen, she was streaming on a line behind
-the _Sarah_ and the quarter-boat was pulling back for the yacht.
-
-Satan had got his wish, and Ratcliffe was feeling just as Skelton
-wanted him to feel, under a compliment and rather a beast. Then they
-saw the boat taken on board and the hands laying aloft and the canvas
-shaking out to the favoring breeze.
-
-“He’ll have the wind right aft, and that’ll save his coal,” said Satan.
-“I reckon if his engines give out he wouldn’t bother much, with all
-that canvas to carry him.”
-
-“They’re handlin’ it smart,” said Jude. “There’s the anchor goin’ up.”
-
-The flurried sound of the steam winch raising the anchor came across
-the water, then it ceased, and Jude, running to the flag locker,
-fetched out a dingy old American flag, bent it on, and ran it up,
-dipping it as the _Dryad_ began to move.
-
-She returned the compliment, gliding away with the bow-wash beginning
-to show and the wake creaming behind her. As she passed the southern
-reefs and shifted her helm, squaring her yards to the following wind,
-a blast from her siren raised a blanket of shouting gulls. Then the
-island cut her off and the sea lay desolate.
-
-The sense of his loneliness came on Ratcliffe, sudden as the clap of a
-door. He had cut the painter with civilization. The deck of the _Sarah
-Tyler_ seemed smaller than ever, Jude and Satan more irresponsible and
-unaccountable, and his own daring a new thing, somewhat dubious. He had
-renounced services and delicacies and surety of passage and safety,
-letters and newspapers, everything he had known! The shock scarcely
-lasted a minute, and then, with the breeze across the pansy-blue
-evening sea, came blowing the wind of Adventure and Freedom.
-
-Then in a moment some spirit explained to him what life really
-meant,—life as the Argonauts knew it, as the gulls know it, freedom
-in the intense and living moment, without a thought of yesterday, with
-scarcely a care for the morrow.
-
-He took his seat in an old chair that Satan had placed under the rag of
-awning and lit his pipe. That delightful smoke seemed the culmination
-of everything in these first moments in this new world. As he smoked he
-watched the Tylers, who were so busy with their own affairs that they
-seemed to have forgotten him. They had hauled the dinghy alongside,
-then they got into her and were lost to sight; but he could hear their
-voices, Jude’s shrill with pleasure and excitement.
-
-“My! Ain’t she a beauty? Ain’t she a dinky boat? My! look at
-the _cus_hions!” A laugh. “For the love of Mike look at the
-cushions—_cus_hions in a boat! Heave ’em on deck!” The cushions came
-flying over the rail, together with the voice of Satan, evidently
-bending.
-
-“Leave them alone or I’ll bat y’ with the bailer! Well, let them lay
-on deck if they’re there. She’s a duck, new built too,—teak, copper
-fastenin’s, all the best that money could buy. Stop rockin’ her and
-over you get after the cushions.”
-
-Jude came clambering on board, beaming in the sunset, then she got
-one of the boat’s cushions and took her seat on it on the deck beside
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“I reckon old Popplecock’s as soft as his cushions, to be wangled out
-of a boat like that,” said Jude, examining the sole of her bare right
-foot for a fancied splinter. “Satan said he was goin’ to try it on him
-when you were down below with him. Didn’t believe he’d do it. That chap
-looked as stiff as his own mainmast—but there’s no tellin’—Say, I
-heard what you said to him when you were down below.”
-
-“Oh, did you?”
-
-“I wasn’t listenin’: I just heard through the skylight. I heard you
-sayin’ you liked us and the old _Sarah_ better’n him and his boat—what
-makes likin’s?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“Nuther do I; but we took to you right off, same as you to us. Ever
-done abalone fishin’?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Well, I reckon you won’t want to do it again, once you’ve tried.
-There’ll be a big low tide tomorrow after sun-up, and you’ll have a
-chance of seein’ what it is. Finished your pipe? Well, come along and
-help us to get supper.”
-
-For all the work Ratcliffe did, she might have got the supper herself.
-He was mostly in the way; but it was the companionship that helped.
-Brothers aren’t much good as companions. Ratcliffe was a new thing,
-absolutely new, from his striped pajamas and dandy clothes to his
-condition of mind, just as she was a new thing to Ratcliffe. Never did
-two beings come together so well or create more rapidly a little world
-of mutual interests out of the little things of life, or a weaker being
-dominate more completely the stronger.
-
-“Can you make bread?” asked Jude after he had filled the tin kettle
-for her. “Well, you’ll have to learn. That’s the bakin’ powder in that
-big tin, and the flour’s in the starboard locker—What’re you doin’
-with the tin? Land’s sake! You don’t think I’m goin’ to make bread for
-supper, same as you make tea? Where was you born?”
-
-“Hampshire.”
-
-“I thought it was somewhere like that,” said Jude.
-
-She instructed him in the primitive method of bread making as conducted
-on board the _Sarah Tyler_, finishing up with the information that
-hardtack would be their portion at supper that night and breakfast
-next morning, as she was “up to the gunnel” in other business. Among
-the other things was having to put a patch on her trousers: not the
-ones she was wearing, which were her next best, but her worst. The old
-guernsey she was wearing was her second best. Coats! Oh, coats were
-good enough on Sunday or for going ashore in, but no use much in a
-ship, except an oilskin for dirty weather. Boots the same; stockings
-the same. You had to wear boots, of course, over rocks and through
-stuff like that over there on the island.
-
-“Them pajamas” would be bully things to wear by day, only they’d
-frighten the fish. As for sleeping in such things, she’d just as soon
-seek the arms of Morpheus in a top hat. Why didn’t he wear a nighty
-like her and Satan? Pap’s eyes would have bugged out had he seen those
-things. He was “awful old fashioned,”—used to make her and Satan
-put cotton between their teeth every night. They did it still. She
-exhibited a set of dazzling white teeth to prove the fact. You just
-pulled a cotton thread between them, and then they never went rotten.
-Also he made them brush their teeth every morning. Folks that didn’t do
-that got toothache.
-
-“Kettle’s boilin’,” suddenly finished Jude. “Now start in an’ let’s
-see you make the tea—said you could do it. There’s the can. Ain’t
-you goin’ to heat the pot first? How’re you to heat it? Let me have a
-hold. Now fling the water out. A spoonful a head and one for the pot
-and another one for Satan,—he likes it strong,—and if you’ll take it
-along to the cabin without spillin’ it I’ll be after you in a minute
-with the plates and things.”
-
-Satan, who never put his hand to menial work, maintaining, without
-the least offense, his position as captain and owner, came down to
-supper, flushed with the good qualities of the dinghy. He had taken
-her for a row—and it was like hearing a man talking of a stroll with
-a sweetheart—if men ever talk of such things. Before going on deck
-to smoke he pointed out Ratcliffe’s quarters for the night. He was to
-have Pap’s cabin, the space divided off with a curtain. Jude and he
-always slept in hammocks swung in the “saloon.” Before going on deck he
-fetched an old canister out of a locker and, emptying some dried herbs
-into a saucer, set fire to them and left them smoldering on the table.
-It was to keep the mosquitoes away. Pap had got the receipt from a
-Seminole Indian up near Cedar Cays. It was patent stuff. Not a mosquito
-would come when there was a sniff of it in the air.
-
-Then, just as the moon was rising, and after the things were washed up,
-they sat on deck, smoking, listening to the waves on the beach, and
-watching fish jumping in the track of the moon. They talked of fish,
-and to Ratcliffe’s mind two things became apparent,—Satan’s profound,
-awful knowledge of the sea and all that lived therein, and his absolute
-indifference to sport. Satan fished for food. Tarpon and tarpon
-fishermen filled him with disgust and disdain. You can’t eat tarpon,
-and the guys that came from New York and such places and spent their
-days fighting tarpon with a ten-ounce rod and a twenty-one-thread line
-seemed to him bereft of reason.
-
-Jude, sitting on the deck and mending her pants by the light of the
-moon, concurred.
-
-“But it’s the fun of the thing,” said Ratcliffe; “it’s the matching of
-one’s skill and strength against the fish.” He talked of the joys of
-salmon fishing.
-
-“What bait do you use for them?” asked Satan.
-
-“Flies.”
-
-Jude shrieked.
-
-“Not live flies,” he explained: “imitation ones.” He tried to describe
-artificial fly-making and finished with a sense of failure as of one
-who had entered the lists in defense of a niggling form of business
-that had yet a touch of humor in it.
-
-Then, as they talked, suddenly through the night came a sound like the
-boom of a big gun. Ratcliffe nearly dropped his pipe.
-
-“That’s a fish,” said Satan.
-
-“Sea bat,” said Jude indifferently.
-
-“That noise?”
-
-“Sea bat jumping. There they go again. Must be a circus of them playin’
-about beyond the reefs,—big flat fish, weigh all of a ton.”
-
-“Tails as long as themselves and eyes like dinner plates,” said Jude,
-“mushy brutes. Tow a ship after them if they foul the anchor—won’t
-they, Satan?”
-
-“They’re loudenin’,” said Satan. “They’ll be comin’ this way with the
-current. Come forward and have a look.”
-
-Leaning over the rail, they watched the moon-shot water. The sounds had
-ceased.
-
-“They’ve stopped playin’,” said Satan, as though he knew exactly what
-they were doing.
-
-“It’s too shallow for them here,” said Jude.
-
-“Shallow! It’s fifty foot of water and a sandy bottom. What are you
-talkin’ about? Told you.”
-
-The depths of the sea suddenly became lit. Down below vast forms came
-drifting like the mainsails of ships ablaze with phosphorescent light,
-drifting and turning over as they drifted like gargantuan leaves blown
-by the wind. The whiplike tails could be seen as streaks of flame.
-Glimpses of devilish faces and lambent eyes showed as they turned, the
-fins waving like frills of fire.
-
-Then they were gone.
-
-The Tylers showed little concern over the marvelous sight; allowing,
-however, that it was the biggest school of “bats” they had ever struck;
-but to Ratcliffe it was as though the sea had disclosed a peep of its
-true heart and real mystery.
-
-Then they went to rest, and as he lay in Pap’s cabin, listening to the
-occasional trickle of the water against the planking and the groan of
-the rudder moved by the lilt of the swell, it seemed to him that daring
-in its everyday and cold-blooded form could not have carried a man
-much further than it had carried him. The sea bats had underscored the
-business as far as the mystery of the ocean and danger of cruising in
-such a small boat were concerned; the hardness of Pap’s bunk bedding
-told of comforts renounced; while the morals of the Tylers, though
-good enough no doubt, had, as disclosed in their conversation, a
-touch of the free lance and a threat of port authority troubles and
-differences of opinion with the customs. Absolute respect for the
-rights of man, partial respect for the rights of shipping companies and
-steamer lines, no respect at all for governments and customs,—that
-was an outline of the Tyler morality. What had made him renounce
-the _Dryad_ for the _Sarah?_ What, lying in his hard bunk, made him
-contented with the exchange? The love of adventure and the craving for
-something new contributed, no doubt, but the main reason he felt to be
-the Tylers,—Satan with his strange mentality and queer methods; Jude,
-unlike any other being he had ever met.
-
-Then, as he lay considering all this, came muted voices from the
-“saloon.” Satan’s voice:
-
-“Have you put the cotton between your teeth?”
-
-Then Jude’s, drowsily:
-
-“Naw—leave a body alone!”
-
-“Get out o’ your hammock, you lazy dog, an’ fix your teeth or I’ll let
-you down by the head!”
-
-Then Jude’s voice, dolorous and muffled, “Shut up or you’ll be wakin’
-him! Cuss my teeth—cayn’t find the cotton! Wakin’ a body up like that!
-Tell you I’m _lookin’_ for it—got it—”
-
-A long silence, during which Ratcliffe dropped off, to be awakened an
-hour later by the lamentations of Jude and the sounds of Satan prodding
-her out of a nightmare,—a gastric nightmare, in which it appeared to
-her troubled soul that she _had_ to fry a sea bat, _totum terres atque
-rotundum_, in the small galley frying pan for breakfast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-CARQUINEZ
-
-
-The tide had begun to draw out with the setting stars, and the tune of
-the waters on the beach had sunk to the merest thread of sound.
-
-Then, through the silence from the far reefs to southward, came the
-single, lamentable cry of a gull; then a chorus, and away against the
-vague blue of the east, here and there, like leaves blown about a dimly
-lit window showed the wings of the birds already putting out to sea for
-the fishing.
-
-Ratcliffe was awakened by Jude calling on him to “show a leg.”
-
-“Satan’s on deck,” said Jude, “and if you believe in washin’ he’ll give
-you a swill with a bucket. Hurry up and come down again, for I want a
-swill myself. Swim? Not on your life! Sharks, that’s why.”
-
-The voice came from a hammock which he had blundered against in the
-semidarkness. Then on deck after his swill, drying himself with an old
-towel provided by Satan, he stood for a moment watching the sun break
-up through the water and the great sea flashing to life and the white
-gulls flying.
-
-The island was sending a faint breeze to them, a tepid breeze flavored
-with earth and cactus and bay cedar scents, perfumes that mixed with
-the tang of the ocean and the tar-oakum scents of the _Sarah Tyler_.
-
-And all these scents and sounds and sights, from the sun flash on the
-sea to the trembling palm fronds on the shore, seemed like a great
-bouquet presented by youth and morning.
-
-Oh, the splendor of being alive, free, happy, without a single care,
-and the deck of the wandering _Sarah_ under foot!
-
-From below through the skylight came a sleep-heavy voice.
-
-“Ain’t you done yet?”
-
-“Coming,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-He dived into his pajamas and came below.
-
-“Get into your cabin an’ shut the door,” commanded the yawning voice
-from the hammock.
-
-“There’s no door.”
-
-“Well, draw the curtain. Oh, Lord! what’s the good o’ gettin’ up? I’m
-near dead asleep!”
-
-Then the voice of Satan descending the companion ladder.
-
-“Ain’t you up? Well, you wait one minute!”
-
-A thump on the floor, a scurry up the companion ladder, and then
-shuddery lamentations and the sounds of swilling from the deck above,
-mixed with the admonitions of Satan from below.
-
-“Oh, my! ain’t it cold? Oh, my! ain’t it frizzin’?”
-
-“Get on, you mad turkle! You ain’t washin’, you’re splashing the water
-on the deck. Slush it over you.”
-
-“I’m slushing it.”
-
-“Think I don’t know? Why, you ain’t gasped yet! Give a gasp, or I’ll be
-up to you with a rope-end! That’s more like it.”
-
-It was!
-
-The sun was high when Ratcliffe got on deck, and a light, steady breeze
-was blowing up from the straits of Florida; the gulls looked like
-snowflakes blowing round the far reefs and against the morning blue of
-the sea.
-
-Jude had put the kettle on. She had dressed on deck, having carried her
-“togs” with her, and she was now preparing a line for fishing, and, as
-she bent over it, appeared Satan,—Satan rising from the cabin hatch
-with a toothbrush in his hand.
-
-“You’ve forgot your teeth,” said Satan.
-
-“No, I haven’t,” said Jude. “I’ve been fillin’ the kettle—I’ll fix
-them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”
-
-“Fishin’ will wait.” He fetched a pannikin of water. “You’re more
-trouble than a dozen. What’d Pap say if he saw you?”
-
-“I’ll fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”
-
-“You’ll fix them now!”
-
-“No. I won’t!”
-
-Satan put down the pannikin and the brush. She evaded him like a flash
-and skimmed up the mast to the crosstrees.
-
-Scarcely had she got up than she came sliding down, seized the
-toothbrush and pannikin, and began to brush her teeth over the scupper
-with a fire speed and fury that seemed born of dementia.
-
-“Sardines comin’,” explained Jude between mouthfuls. “Look alive and
-get a bucket!”
-
-Ratcliffe looked over the sea, where her birdlike sight had spotted
-the sardine shoal being driven like a gray cloud under the water
-by pursuing fish. A fringe of dancing silver showed the leaping
-sardines, and the great fish driving the shoal broke up now and then in
-sword-flashes.
-
-They were coming from south to north, and the left wing of the shoal
-would pass the island beach by a cable length.
-
-While Satan stood by with a bucket at the end of a rope, Ratcliffe hung
-over the side watching.
-
-The driven sardines had no eyes for the _Sarah_. They struck her like
-the blow of a great silvery hand, boiled around her, and passed. The
-army of pursuit followed, passed and vanished, leaving the water clear
-and Satan with a dipped up bucket full of quivering silver.
-
-The Tylers, absolutely blind to the wonder of the business, fried the
-sardines just as they were, tossed out of the blue sea into the frying
-pan, and, breakfast over, Satan and Ratcliffe took the dinghy to hunt
-for abalones on the uncovered reef.
-
-The reefs to southward formed two spurs divided by a creek of blue
-water, and having got the dinghy into this creek Ratcliffe tended the
-boat while Satan hunted for the abalones.
-
-Satan in search of pearls was a sight. Heart, soul, and mind bound
-up in the business, like a dog hunting for truffles, every find was
-announced by a yell or a whoop, like the whoop of a Red Indian.
-
-Ratcliffe could see squiggly-wiggly cuttlefish tendrils running up
-Satan’s arms as he delved in some of the rock-clefts, and Satan
-disengaging them and flinging the “mushy brutes” away. The big abalones
-were nearly always deep down under the rock ledges and had to be
-chiseled off, wallowing in the water. At these times Ratcliffe might
-have fancied the vanished one lost or drowned, but for the profane
-language that rose and floated away on the breeze.
-
-All the same, it was dull work for the boat tender. Having nothing else
-to think of, he thought of Jude. Her figure chased away dullness.
-
-A man in the bright and early morning is quite a different person
-from the same man at noon, and coming across Jude after a long course
-of Skelton was like stepping from a gray afternoon to dawn. Was it
-possible that Skelton and Jude were vertebrates of the same species?
-
-Then there was what women would have called the pity of it. Ratcliffe
-did not deal much with the conventions as a rule; still, he could
-not but perceive that all life has an aim and ending, and that the
-end of an old sailor was not what life and the fitness of things had
-destined for Jude. What would she grow up into? He thought of all the
-girls he had ever known. There was not one so jolly as Jude; still,
-it was terrible, somehow, monstrous. He remembered her threat to pull
-her skirts over her head and run down the street if skirts were ever
-imposed upon her. Her contempt for the feminine rose up before him, and
-against all that her housewifely instincts and the fact that, despite
-Satan’s rope-end and mock bluster, she ruled the _Sarah Tyler_ just as
-a woman rules a house.
-
-Still, it was deplorable. Looking away into distance, what would become
-of her?
-
-Vague and fatherly ideas of getting her away from this life and having
-her brought up properly and educated came to him, only to be dispelled
-by Jude. Imagine Jude in a girls’ school, at a tea party!
-
-He was aroused from these meditations by Satan,—Satan with an armful
-of abalones, Satan scratched and bleeding and soused in sea water, but
-triumphant.
-
-He reckoned they were the biggest “fish” ever got on these reefs. There
-were a dozen and six all told, and when they were collected and put on
-board the dinghy put back.
-
-Coming round the western spur of the reef, they found that Jude had
-left the _Sarah_—a high crime—and rowed herself ashore.
-
-The canvas boat was on the beach, and away amid the bay cedars and
-cactus toward the trees could be seen the head and shoulders of the
-deserter moving about. She seemed in search of something.
-
-“God love me!” cried Satan.
-
-He beached the dinghy, helped Ratcliffe to run her up, and then
-started, followed by the other, running and shouting as he ran.
-
-“Hi! chucklehead! Whatcha leave the ship for? Didn’t I tell you to
-stand by her? Whatcha huntin’ for—turkles’ eggs?”
-
-“What you done with your eyes?” retorted the other. “Cayn’t you see?”
-
-Instantly, and by her tone and by some sixth sense, Satan was appeased.
-He seemed suddenly to scent danger. He saw the work she had been on,
-camouflaging the cache more effectively. He cast his glance over the
-island, the western sea, turned, and then stood stock-still, shading
-his eyes.
-
-Away beyond the _Sarah Tyler_ across the purple blue stood a sail. The
-land wind had died off, and the stranger was bringing the sea wind with
-her. A small topsail schooner she showed now, with all sail set, making
-dead for the island.
-
-“That’s him,” said Satan.
-
-“Spotted him half an hour ago,” said Jude. “He was steering
-nor’-nor’west and shifted his helm when he saw us.”
-
-The bay cedar bushes sighed suddenly to the new-risen wind, and as
-Ratcliffe glanced about him the feeling of the desolation of the place
-where he stood came to him strong,—strong in the scent of cactus and
-herbage, the tune of the water on the beach, and the rustle of the wind
-in the bushes.
-
-“He’s been huntin’ for us,” said Satan, “curse him!”
-
-“Who is he?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Friend of Pap’s, he was—”
-
-“Pretended to be,” put in Jude.
-
-“Spanish,” continued Satan, “and ever since Pap gave out he’s been
-pretty much on our heels. Jude and me worked the thing out and we came
-to conclude he’d scented, somehow, from Pap, about the hooker I spoke
-of.”
-
-“The wreck?’
-
-“Yep. Pap was keen on gettin’ extra money into the business of salvin’
-her, and I b’lieve he sounded Carquinez,—that’s his name,—and how
-much he let out takin’ his soundin’s the Lord only knows! Cark’s in the
-tobacco line. Does a bit of everythin’,—has a shop in the Calle Pedro
-in Havana and a gamblin’ joint on the front, owns ships. That’s one of
-them, and Matt Sellers runs her for him. He don’t trouble handlin’ her:
-sits in the cabin all day smokin’ cigarettes.”
-
-“He’s been after us ever since Pap died,” said Jude, “on and off.”
-
-“It was one of his men got Jude in that doggery down by the wharf and
-filled her up with rum,” said Satan, turning the brim of his panama
-down. “Remember I told you—and what she let out the Lord only knows!”
-
-“I didn’t let out nothin’,” said Jude; “only that we were goin’ east
-this trip, I owns to that.”
-
-“Well, there’s the result of your jaw,” said Satan. “East was good
-enough for Cark: he’d hunt hell for a red cent. And don’t you be sayin’
-you didn’t let out nothin’. Why, I heard you jawin’ about all the money
-you had when I come in and collared you! Cark believes Pap found that
-stuff and cached it—that’s what he believes, or my name’s not Tyler.”
-
-“Well, let’s get aboard,” said Jude. “If they see us squatting about
-here, they’ll maybe think the stuff’s hid here.”
-
-“They’ve seen us by this, though it’s too far for them to make out who
-we are,” said Satan, pushing his panama farther forward to hide his
-face. He led the way to where the boats were on the sand, and they
-reëmbarked.
-
-The abalones were got on board, and then they stood watching the
-approach of the stranger.
-
-The white had gone out of her sails. Close in now, they showed dingy
-and patched. She had a low freeboard. Then, as she dropped anchor and
-swung to her moorings broadside on to the _Sarah_, the rake of her
-masts became apparent, and her whole disreputableness spoke aloud.
-
-Ratcliffe felt like a man who, having got into pleasant low company,
-suddenly finds himself drawn into unpleasant low company.
-
-The _Tylers_ and the old _Sarah_ were all right, but this new crowd
-and that ratty old schooner he felt to be all wrong. And the newcomer
-somehow did not add honesty or moral stability to the appearance of the
-_Sarah_, nor did the half-disclosed character and activities of Cark
-shed luster on old man Tyler or his present representatives.
-
-However, he had gone into this business open-eyed, and it was not for
-him to grumble at the friends or relationships of his hosts; besides he
-had trust in Satan and the wit of Satan to preserve them from the law.
-
-Satan had covered the heap of abalones with some sailcloth, and he was
-standing now working his lantern jaws on a bit of chewing gum, his eyes
-fixed on the stranger as though she were made of glass and he could
-see Carquinez sitting smoking his cigarettes in the cabin.
-
-“They haven’t shown a sign,” said Jude.
-
-“They’re bluffin’ us to believe they haven’t spotted who we are,” said
-Satan. “Cark doesn’t want us to twig he’s been lookin’ for us.”
-
-“Well,” said Jude, “let’s get the mudhook up and put out right away.
-They won’t have the face to chase us.”
-
-“Yes,” said Satan, “and leave them to hunt the island and find the
-cache! They’d lift the stuff to the last tin of beef. They’ve seen us
-ashore among the bushes. You shouldn’t have gone ashore.”
-
-“I went to see we hadn’t left no traces.”
-
-“Traces be damned! Cark wants no traces. Once he starts to hunt, he’ll
-turn the durned island upside down and shake it. He’ll say to himself,
-‘What were they doin’ here, anyway; what were they pokin’ about them
-bushes for?’ No, we’ve got to sit here till he goes, and that’ll be
-this time next year, maybe.”
-
-“What’s the name of his schooner?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“The _Juan Bango_,” replied Satan, “named after the tobacco company
-people. Look, they’re gettin’ a boat off. That’s Sellers, and he’s
-comin’ aboard.”
-
-Then he collapsed, squatting under the bulwarks. “Guy them,” said he to
-Jude. “Tell them I’m down with smallpox: that’ll make them shove.”
-
-“Leave ’em to me,” said Jude.
-
-It was Matt Sellers right enough, a big wheezy man suggestive of
-Tammany Hall, but a sure-enough sailor in practice. “The biggest
-blackguard on the coast” was his subsidiary title. He was the henchman
-of Carquinez. His career was not without interest and romance of a
-sort. It was he who had bought, with the money of Carquinez, the bones
-of the _Isidore_, wrecked against the sheer cliffs by the black strand
-of Martinique. Ten thousand dollars in gold coin she had on board her,
-and he salved them. That was a straight job, and a wonderful bit of
-work, taking it all together. It was a curiosity, too, because it was
-straight.
-
-The crooked jobs of Matt Sellers would have filled a book.
-
-Like old man Tyler, Sellers had no use for people who talked of buried
-treasure, he knew the Caribbean and the gulf too well.
-
-If he was keen on the wreck business, then it was because he had
-excellent reasons for his keenness.
-
-As the boat drew near, Ratcliffe noticed the villainous-looking crew,
-Spaniards, some of them with red handkerchiefs tied round their heads.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-JUDE OVERDOES IT
-
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers as the boat came alongside the _Sarah_.
-
-“Hullo, yourself,” replied Jude. “Where’ve you blown in from?”
-
-“What’s become of Satan? Ain’t he aboard?” asked Sellers, ignoring the
-question.
-
-“Satan’s dead,” said Jude.
-
-“Satan’s which?”
-
-“Died of the smallpox.”
-
-“Well, I’m d—d!” said Sellers, casting his eyes over the _Sarah_ and
-then resting them on Ratcliffe. “When was it?”
-
-“A week ago.”
-
-Sellers gave a word to the bow oar and the boat pushed off a bit, the
-fellows hanging on their oars.
-
-“I thought I saw three of you on deck,” he shouted.
-
-“The other chap’s gone below,” replied Jude.
-
-The boat of the _Juan_ hung for a moment as if in meditation. She made
-a striking picture, the blue water paling to green under her and the
-sun-blaze on the red topknots of the oarsmen.
-
-Then without a word more she turned back to the _Juan_.
-
-Satan in the scupper seemed preparing to have a fit.
-
-“What’s the matter now?” asked Jude.
-
-“What’s the matter? What did you say I was dead for? Didn’t I tell you
-to say I was down with smallpox?”
-
-“Well, what’s the difference?”
-
-“Why, you mutt, wouldn’t you have been snivelin’ and cryin’ if I was
-dead? And you handed that yam out to him as ca’m as if you were talking
-of a tomcat! I didn’t believe you myself.”
-
-“Why, I told him you was dead a week,” cried Jude. “D’you think I’d be
-snivelin’ and cryin’ a week if you was dead? Lord! what you do think of
-yourself!”
-
-Satan did not reply. He was thinking that he had made a false move and
-that Jude had put the cap on the business. Cark would be certain now
-that there was something hidden on the island.
-
-Satan was on the horns of a dilemma. One horn was the cache of
-provisions containing a couple of thousand dollars’ worth of stuff, the
-other horn was the old wreck that might contain nothing.
-
-To hang on here was useless, for Cark would hang on too. Even if Cark
-went away, he would be sure to come back to hunt.
-
-He sat with his back to the bulwarks, chewing and thinking. Then,
-heedless whether he was seen or not from the _Juan Bango_, he rose
-to his feet and leaned with his back against the rail He had come to
-a decision. Jude, watching him, said nothing, and Ratcliffe waited
-without a word. This little sea comedy interested him intensely, and
-all the more for its setting of loneliness and its background of blue
-sea and quarreling gulls.
-
-It was to Ratcliffe that Satan spoke first “Look here!” said Satan.
-“You’re standin’ out of this, aren’t you?”
-
-“Which—the wreck business?”
-
-“Yep. You’re not keen upon puttin’ money into it and havin’ a share?”
-
-“Oh, no. If you wanted me to, I’d be glad enough; but if you’d rather I
-stood out, I’ll do so. I’m not keen about money, anyway; only I’d like
-to see the fun.”
-
-“You’ll see fun enough,” said Satan. “I’m goin’ to drag Cark in. First
-of all, if I don’t, he’ll keep hangin’ round here and sniff the cache;
-second, he’ll work the job for us with his crew.”
-
-“He’ll gobble every cent,” said Jude.
-
-“Which way?” asked Satan. “We’ll give him half shares, and well split
-on him if he doesn’t play fair. If we found stuff there, and once it
-was known, d’you think we’d be let keep it? We’ve got to get help, and
-isn’t he as good as another? If there’s no stuff there, he’ll have all
-his work for nothing.”
-
-“The thing I can’t make out,” said Ratcliffe, “is the way he started
-out from Havana to find you. How did he ever expect to come across you?”
-
-“Well, it’s this way,” said Satan. “Bein’ in with Pap, he knew the
-lines we worked on; f’rinstance, he knew we worked this place for
-abalones. If he hadn’t sighted us here; he’d have tried Little Pine
-Island, which is lonesomer than this place. You see he’s got it in his
-noddle, as far as I can make out, that Pap lifted the stuff and cached
-it, and Pine Island or here would have been the likeliest places. He
-reckoned when we put out of Havana this time we were out to lift it
-for good. Well, he’ll do the liftin’ if it’s to be done. Come on, I’m
-going over to see him right off. Jude, you stick here and clean up them
-abalones.”
-
-He got into the dinghy, followed by Ratcliffe, and they pushed off.
-
-As they drew closer the _Juan Bango_ showed up more distinctly for what
-she was.
-
-One of the old schooners that used to run in the carrying trade between
-Havana and the Gulf ports, she had fallen from commercial honesty;
-anyhow in appearance, perhaps because Carquinez did not bother about
-appearance. You could not have damaged his paint if you had tried,—it
-was sun-blistered and gone green,—but his copper showed sharp and
-clear through the amazing brilliance of the water, without trace of
-weeds or barnacles.
-
-Sellers was hanging over the rail as they came alongside.
-
-If he felt surprise at this resurrection, he did not show it much.
-
-“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers. “Thought you was dead.”
-
-“Cark on board?” asked Satan without wasting time on explanations.
-
-“He’s down below,” said Sellers, accepting the attitude of the other.
-“Who’s your friend?”
-
-“Oh, just a gentleman that’s come along for a cruise,” said Satan. “So
-you’ve found me!”
-
-“Seems so,” said Sellers; “but tie up and come aboard.”
-
-Satan tied the painter to a channel plate and got over the side,
-followed by Ratcliffe.
-
-The deck of the _Juan_ sagged, and plank and dowel were
-indistinguishable one from the other by reason of dirt. Forward some
-of the crew were scraping a spare boom, and others collected round the
-foc’sle head were smoking cigarettes. The wind had died out into a warm
-breathing, setting aft and bringing with it a faint odor like the smell
-of acetylene. It was garlic.
-
-From the foc’sle came the muffled thrumming of a guitar.
-
-It was Ratcliffe’s first experience with a Spaniard. He followed Satan,
-who followed Sellers down a steep companionway and then into a cabin
-where a great shaft of sunlight from the skylight above struck down
-through a haze of cigarette smoke.
-
-The place was paneled with bird’s-eye maple; the seats were upholstered
-in thick ribbed silk, worn and stained; the carpet was of the best, but
-threadbare in spots and burnt with cigar droppings; the metal fittings
-far too good for a trading schooner of the _Juan_ type.
-
-Everywhere lay evidence of splendor that had seen better days.
-
-All these fittings had, in fact, been torn out of a yacht bought by
-Carquinez for an old song, and at the end of the saloon table, going
-over some papers with a cigarette in his mouth, sat Carquinez himself,
-a figure to give one pause.
-
-The whole of the left side of this gentleman’s face was covered by a
-green patch. It was said that he had no left side to his face, that it
-had been eaten away by disease, and that, were he to unveil himself,
-the sight would frighten the beholder. However that may have been, what
-remained visible was enough to frighten any honest man with eyes to
-behold the nose of a vulture above the peaked chin of a money changer.
-
-“Hullo, Cark!” said Satan.
-
-“Come in,” said Cark.
-
-“Bring yourselves to an anchor,” said Sellers, pointing out two of the
-fixed seats on each side of the table and taking another close to the
-owner of the _Juan_. “What’ll you have?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” said Satan. “Something soft will suit us, and long.”
-
-Carquinez raised a bird-shrill voice:
-
-“Antonio!”
-
-“Si, Sigñor,” came a response from outside, and on the voice a dusky
-form at the cabin door.
-
-“Bring me two Zin and Zinzibeers for these two zentlemen, please.”
-
-“No gin!” cried Satan, Ratcliffe concurring. “Ginger beer will do.”
-
-“Zinzibeers,” said Carquinez.
-
-It was nearly all that he said at this interview, the trusty Sellers
-doing the talking.
-
-Said Sellers to Satan, “Well, it’s funny us hittin’ on you like this,
-durned funny! We’d been down to Acklin looking up a location Cark was
-keen about, and comin’ back I shifted the helm, seein’ you lying here
-and not recognizin’ the old _Sarah_. I thought it was Gundyman’s boat.”
-
-Said Satan, taking up the drink just presented by Antonio, “Here’s our
-respects to you both. Thought I was Gundyman, did you? Well, I spotted
-you on sight. Didn’t want to see you neither. This gentleman will tell
-you I was squattin’ in the scuppers while Jude was handing you that lie
-about the smallpox.”
-
-“Oh, was you?” said Sellers with an open and hearty laugh.
-
-“I was so. Let’s cut pretendin’ and play on the square—are you
-willin’?”
-
-“None better.”
-
-“Well, I’ll put my cards out. You and Cark here have been after me
-pretty near since last fall; reason why, that wreck Pap told Cark of.”
-
-“W’ich was that?”
-
-“I said let’s cut pretendin’ and play fair,” said Satan sternly.
-
-Cark wilted and raised his fingers in deprecation, and Sellers cut in.
-
-“Yes, we’ll play fair. There was talk of a wreck between your dad and
-us, and I’m not denying we had an eye after it. You see I’m open and
-honest with you. Heave ahead.”
-
-“I’m comin’ to the point,” said Satan, “and the point is you and Cark
-between you have got it in your heads that you’ve only to follow me,
-find out where she’s located, and claim shares for not tellin’.”
-
-“Heave ahead,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, you’ve got it wrong,” went on Satan. “You may follow me till the
-old _Juan_ rots to pieces and you’ll never know, not if I don’t want
-you to know—got that clear?”
-
-“Clear as day,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, then, here’s something else. If that wreck is what she’s taken
-to be, it’s more than one man’s job to shift the boodle and bank it.
-I’ve got to have help, and if we can arrange a deal I’d just as soon
-have you two in the show as anyone else.”
-
-“Now you’re talking,” said Sellers.
-
-Carquinez said nothing, but his hand shook, and Ratcliffe, watching
-him, received a shock. A wreath of cigarette smoke was stealing out
-from beneath the patch on his cheek! He wished the conference over and
-himself back on board the healthy _Sarah_. It came to him all at once
-that he had been drawn into a web of which Carquinez was the spider.
-Satan, too, and Jude had been drawn in. He could do nothing, however,
-at least for the moment, but watch and wait, and Satan’s face was worth
-watching as that wily diplomatist sat facing Sellers.
-
-“Not that I don’t believe you’d kidoodle me over the business if you
-had a chance,” continued Satan. “You would, sure; but you see I’ve got
-the weather gauge of you, knowing what I do of you, and that’s more’n
-I’d have with strangers.”
-
-“Sure,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “we’ve got that far, and it comes to terms.
-What’s your share to be for helpin’ to collar the stuff and dispose of
-it in Havana?”
-
-“Two dollars out of every three that we make,” said Sellers promptly.
-“There’s the salving, you can’t do that alone, or your dad would have
-done it prompt; then there’s the cashing of it, you’re lost men if you
-try that job on by yourselves. Why, there’s not another man in Havana
-could do it only Cark, and even he couldn’t bring the stuff into Havana
-Harbor! It’ll have to be landed back of the island, north of Santiago.
-Lord knows what he’ll have to pay!”
-
-Satan cogitated for a moment.
-
-“I’ll meet you,” said he at last. “I’m not set on big money. Anything
-more?”
-
-“No, that’s all,” said Sellers.
-
-Carquinez nodded approval, and lighting another cigarette leaned back
-in his chair.
-
-“And what’s this gentleman doing in the business?” asked Sellers,
-referring to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, he’s standing out,” said Satan. “He’s just on a cruise with us.”
-
-“Yes, I’m standing out,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m in it only for the fun of
-the thing, though I’m willing to help.”
-
-“Well, I reckon you’ll have fun enough,” said Sellers, “if we get foul
-of the customs, or if some other hooker comes poking along while we’re
-salving. You’re British, aren’t you?”
-
-“I am.”
-
-“I thought so. Come out for a spree?”
-
-“You may put it like that.”
-
-“Did you by any chance come off a big white yacht that went west
-yesterday?”
-
-“Yes, I did. What made you guess that?”
-
-“Well,” said Sellers, “it’s easy to be seen you aren’t one of us, and
-your clothes give you away. It’s easy to be seen you haven’t been
-dough-dishing long in the old _Sarah_. I didn’t get your name.”
-
-“Ratcliffe.”
-
-“No trade or business?”
-
-“None. My father was Ratcliffe the shipowner, Holt & Ratcliffe.”
-
-“Lord—love—a—duck!” said Sellers. “You’re not wanting for money,
-I reckon. Well, this gets me, it do indeed! Holt & Ratcliffe—should
-think I _did_ know them!”
-
-“Antonio!” suddenly piped Carquinez.
-
-“Si, Señor.” Antonio appeared.
-
-“Pedro Murias,” said Carquinez.
-
-Antonio vanished, and reappeared with a box of cigars, colossal cigars,
-worth twenty-five guineas a hundred in the London market. They were
-placed on the table and pushed toward Ratcliffe.
-
-Satan grinned.
-
-“Well,” said he, “we’ve fixed things so far,—two out of every three
-dollars to you and no deductions.”
-
-“That’s it,” said Sellers.
-
-“And now we’ve fixed terms,” said Satan, “I want to know all about this
-hooker.”
-
-“Which was you meaning?” asked Sellers.
-
-“The wreck.”
-
-“Listen to him!” cried Sellers. “Mean to say you don’t know all about
-her?”
-
-“N’more than Adam. I’ve heard from Pap she was called the _Nombre de
-Dios_, and was full of gold plate got from churches; but that’s not
-much more than a name and a yarn. I’ve never banked much on the yarn.
-Seems too much of the New Jerusalem touch about it for me.”
-
-“Well, maybe you’re wrong,” said Sellers.
-
-“Spit it out,” said Satan. “Tell us what you know about her. You’ve got
-the contrac’; give us the news.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Sellers. “She weren’t no ship with gold
-plates,—your dad got that wrong,—she was a big Spanish ship out of
-Vera Cruz making for Spain. She had a cargo of timber, some of them
-heavy foreign timbers that don’t float. She’d got aboard her, besides
-the timber, more’n a million dollars’ worth of gold,—Mexican gold most
-of it, Spanish coin some of it. Lopez was the name of the skipper, and
-he laid to bank that gold for himself. He’d been forty years in these
-seas and knew every key and sandbank same as the insides of his own
-pockets.
-
-“Him and the mate were the only men in the know about that gold beside
-a supercargo by name of Perez.
-
-“Well, he colluded together with them two guys to sink the hooker in
-six fathom water out of trade tracks, give out that she’d sunk in a
-gale, and come back in a year or two and collar the boodle. They had
-her bored and plugged for the game, and when they got her to the
-location they pulled out the plugs, and she went down without a sneeze,
-natural as a dyin’ Christian.
-
-“They got the boats away in order, and the crew was got off to a man;
-but that crew never got ashore. Maybe it was something wrong with the
-grub or the water, there’s no saying, but they never got ashore to turn
-witness. But the grub and water was all right in the dinghy. Them three
-guys had taken the dinghy, and they were picked up and landed somewhere
-on the gulf, fat and well.”
-
-All through Sellers’ recitation Carquinez had sat nodding his head.
-He glanced now at Satan and Ratcliffe as if measuring its effect upon
-them, then he half closed his eyes again and retired into himself like
-a tortoise.
-
-“They slung their yarn,” went on Sellers, “and made all good, and it
-was only left for them to wait awhile and hire or steal a likely boat
-to pick up the stuff, when the yellow fever took the supercargo and the
-mate, leaving Lopez to fish for himself.
-
-“He got back to Havana, which was his natural home, and there he put
-up with his son, who was a trader in tobacco, got a bit of a factory
-not bigger than a henh’us, and turned out a brand of cigars made out of
-leavin’s and brown paper mostly.
-
-“He put the son wise about the wreck; but he wouldn’t give the location
-away till it was time to go and pick up the stuff, which wouldn’t be
-for a year yet.
-
-“Then he up and died, and the son started to hunt for the chart and
-couldn’t find it. The old guy had given him everything but the chart
-with the location marked on it. It wasn’t a proper chart, neither: just
-a piece of paper with the thing done rough, but giving the bearings.
-And it was never found—not by the son. The grandson found it—and
-where do you think? Pasted into the lining of an old hat. That wasn’t
-so long ago, neither, and what do you think that fool of a grandson
-did? Well, I’ll tell you what he did. First of all he comes to Cark
-here, and tries to get him onto the job on a ten per cent basis, Cark
-to risk his money and repitation for a lousy ten per cent on what might
-be only the bones of an old ship. He let out her name and history and
-everything but the location.
-
-“Cark wasn’t having any on those terms,—was you, Cark?—and he told
-the chap to go to Medicine Hat and pick bilberries. The chap goes off,
-and what does he do but tries to get up a syndicate between himself and
-two yeggmen without a keel to their names! Perrira was the name of one,
-and da Silva was the name of the other, and they held a board meeting
-in Diego’s saloon one night and shot holes in one another in the back
-parlor.
-
-“Silva and Perrira had fixed it to lay the grandson out and collar the
-chart for themselves, and they’d have done it, only he wasn’t backward
-with the shooting. Your dad was in the bar that night, and he twigged
-something from what they let drop before they went to the back parlor
-to hold their meeting. Then when the shooting began he was first into
-the room, and collared the chart, which was lying on the floor. He was
-always quick on the uptake, was your dad. Being a knowledgeable man,
-he reckoned Cark was the only chap in Havana to help him take the stuff
-and clear it. He knew the stuff was there by what he’d heard going on
-in the bar before the three chaps had left it for the back room, but
-before he could conclude business with Cark he up and died.”
-
-Cark nodded.
-
-“That was so,” said he.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “we’ve got the whole yarn now, and I’m wishing
-to be done with the business. I’m pretty near sick of you two guys
-trailing after me, and I’ll hand you out my belief for what it’s worth.
-It don’t seem natural to me to find gold in a hooker like that, just
-for the picking up, and I’d sell any man my chances for a thousand
-dollars. I’ve no knowledge of what’s there. I’m just talkin’ out of
-my head. You know what I am, I make my livin’, and I’m content to run
-small. It’s maybe that that puts me against big ventures. Anyhow, we’ve
-got to push this thing through, we’ve made the contrac’. I don’t want
-it written down and signed, seein’ that the law couldn’t help me. I’m
-only sayin’ that if you play me crooked I’ll split. Got that in your
-heads?”
-
-The high contracting parties on the other side nodded assent.
-
-“That bein’ settled,” said Satan, “here’s the chart.”
-
-He produced a metal tobacco box and took from it a folded piece of
-paper, which he laid on the table before Sellers.
-
-The effect was magical.
-
-Carquinez sprang from his chair like a young man, came behind Sellers,
-and, bending over his shoulder, looked. Ratcliffe, though out of the
-business, was as excited as the others. Satan alone was calm.
-
-He had been carrying the thing about so long that it had probably lost
-its freshness of interest.
-
-Sellers, without speaking, stared at the chart before him.
-
-Rum Cay was shown, and then, southwest of Rum Cay, a line of reef
-marked “Lone Reef,” and in red ink, connected to the reef by a red
-line, the name “Nombre de Dios” could be made out, the “Dios” very
-indistinct at the frayed edge of the paper. In the top right hand
-corner the latitude and longitude were written, but so faintly that it
-would have required close study in a strong light to make the figures
-out.
-
-Nobody bothered about them. Lone Reef was on all the charts, and the
-name was enough.
-
-“I’ve been by there,” said Sellers at last, “and I’ve never seen signs
-of a wreck.”
-
-“You wouldn’t,” said Satan. “She lies flush with the coral in a crik
-between two arms of reef, not a stump of a mast on her. The hull of
-that reef must have raised itself since she was sunk, for the water in
-the crik doesn’t cover her at high tide and low tides it’s pretty near
-empty. But she’s been under right enough, years ago, for the decks are
-coraled over, hatches and all, and the stuff’s turned to iron cement
-with the sun and weather. We’ve got to dynamite her open.”
-
-“Sure,” said Sellers; then, after a moment’s pause, “It’ll be a big
-job, if it’s what you say. I had it in my mind that she was a diving
-job in shallow water—never thought of the blasted coral.”
-
-Carquinez said nothing. He withdrew to his seat at the end of the
-table and lit another cigarette. To Ratcliffe the silence of Carquinez
-approached the weird. The way Sellers, without consulting him, did all
-the talking seemed uncanny as though the pair were telepathic.
-
-One thing certain was gradually being borne in upon him,—they were a
-most atrocious pair of rogues, and the marvel to him was the simplicity
-of Satan in having any dealings at all with them. They would surely
-swindle him, take what precautions he might. They would never give
-him a third share of any treasure. They would, most likely, murder
-him before he could split on them, if treasure were found. Of this
-Ratcliffe felt certain. He tried to telegraph a warning across the
-table, but Satan seemed blind to winks and frowns.
-
-“Well, it’s there,” said Satan, “near a foot thick. You’ve got to drill
-it, and stick dynamite cartridges in the drill-holes and fire them. Got
-any dynamite aboard?”
-
-“Not an ounce.”
-
-“We might make out with blasting powder.”
-
-“Yes, if we’d got it,” said Sellers. “There ain’t no use worrying,
-we’ve got to shin out of this back to Havana and get the explosives.
-Question is who’ll go for them, us or you?”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan, “not if she was to lie there till the last
-trumpet. We’re underhanded, for one thing, and, f’r another, I’m
-gettin’ little enough out of the job as it stands without fetchin’ and
-carryin’ for you.”
-
-“Then we’ll go,” said Sellers. “’Twon’t take us more than a week to get
-there and back. Give us ten days, counting accidents, and we’ll pick
-you up here.”
-
-“Why not at the reef?” asked Satan.
-
-“Don’t matter,” said Sellers. “Here or there, it’s all the same to us;
-ain’t it, Cark?”
-
-Cark nodded assent, and Satan, recapturing the chart, folded it up and
-put it back into the tobacco box.
-
-“Right!” said he, placing the box into his pocket. “Here you’ll find
-us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE “JUAN” SAILS
-
-
-They rose from the conference table, and Carquinez stood holding his
-coat together with a veined and knotted hand while the visitors were
-making their adieux.
-
-“You haven’t a few feet of galvanized wire aboard?” asked Satan as he
-passed out, following Sellers.
-
-“Come on deck,” said Sellers.
-
-On deck he stood listening, while the other passed from galvanized
-wire to the question of spare ring-bolts and other trifles he stood
-desperately in need of. Like a hypnotized fowl in the hands of Satan,
-he made scarcely any resistance.
-
-He had no ring-bolts, but the galvanized wire was forthcoming, also
-a little barrel for use as a buoy, some Burgundy pitch, an old
-paintbrush, a small can of turpentine, and a couple of pounds of twine.
-
-A small boat-anchor that had raised Satan’s desires brought the séance
-to a conclusion and broke the spell that seemed to lie on Sellers.
-
-Blessed if Satan wouldn’t be asking for his back teeth yet! What did he
-take the _Juan_ for, a marine store? What would he want next, Carquinez?
-
-They rowed off with the spoil, Sellers leaning on the rail and
-lovingly pressing on them the acceptance of other trifles, including a
-guitar.
-
-Alongside the _Sarah_ they found Jude waiting to receive them.
-She had been cleaning up the abalones, was dissatisfied with the
-result,—quarter of a matchbox full of seed pearls,—and said so.
-
-When her eye lighted on the stuff in the boat that Satan had wangled
-out of Sellers, she laughed in a dreary fashion.
-
-“What you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.
-
-“Nothing,” said Jude.
-
-She sat down on an upturned keg while they brought the truck on board.
-Then, nursing her knee and wiggling her bare toes to the warmth of the
-sun, she sat without a word, waiting for explanations.
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that a critic had come on the scene.
-He had forgotten Jude in relation to the deal over the wreck, and he
-was wondering now how she would take it. The female does not always
-see eye to eye with the male, as many a business man has discovered on
-revealing a transaction to the wife of his bosom.
-
-Leaning against the rail, he filled his pipe and awaited the
-revelation with interest; but Satan, the revealer, seemed in no hurry
-for the business. He was bustling about disposing of the new-gotten
-“stores,”—the turpentine and pitch forward in the hole where paints
-were kept, the galvanized wire in a locker, and the little barrel
-behind the canvas boat.
-
-Then he came aft again and, lighting a pipe, stood beside Ratcliffe.
-
-“Well, what you been doing, anyway?” asked Jude, suddenly opening her
-batteries.
-
-“Doing—which?” asked Satan. “Oh, you mean with Cark. Well, I’ve
-settled things with him, fixed it up so’s he’s goin’ to help.”
-
-“Which way?” asked Jude.
-
-“Why, to get the stuff, if it’s there—what else? He’s our only chance
-of doing the thing proper.”
-
-“What’s he askin’?” said Jude.
-
-“You mean terms?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Well, it’s this way: He’ll have to do the wreckin’ business, and then
-if the stuff’s got he’ll have to run it ashore, and after that he’ll
-have to get rid of it. I’m givin’ him two dollars out of every three.”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Jude.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?”
-
-“Why didn’t you give him the lot?”
-
-“Now look you here!” cried Satan. “I don’t want no sass! Who’s runnin’
-this show, you or me? How do you know what I’ve got up my sleeve?
-Have you ever known me done on a deal yet? Now you take my orders
-where Cark’s concerned and take them smart, with no questions! If you
-don’t—well, then, trade with him yourself, take charge of the _Sarah_
-and run her yourself! Lippin’ your betters!”
-
-Jude took off her old hat and looked into it as if for inspiration;
-then she clapped it on her head again, drew up both feet, clasped her
-arms round her knees, and sat on the keg-top speechless and brooding,
-her eyes fixed on the _Juan_.
-
-Satan turned and went below.
-
-“Jude,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“What you want?” said Jude, without shifting her gaze.
-
-“Suppose you had all the money off that old wreck, if the money is
-there, what would you do with it?”
-
-“What’s the good of askin’ me things like that?” said Jude. “I’d
-precious soon do something with it!”
-
-“No, you wouldn’t. You’d put it in the bank, and then your trouble
-would begin.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Well, you’d have it in the bank or invested and it would bring you
-in, say, twenty thousand dollars a year; well, you couldn’t spend that
-on the dock-side, could you? You wouldn’t be able to spend it at all
-unless you gave up the _Sarah_ and lived ashore in a fine house with a
-carriage and horses and servants, and to do that you’d have to become
-a lady—or gentleman,” hastily put in Ratcliffe, the figure on the keg
-suddenly threatening to turn on him. “You’d have to do that, and you’d
-have to do more than that: you’d have to learn all sorts of things.”
-
-“Which sort?”
-
-“Oh, lots. Can you write, Jude?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Told me the other day you couldn’t.”
-
-“Well, I’ve most forgot. Pap started to learn me, then he said he
-reckoned I was more cut out for makin’ puddin’s, but he learned me to
-write my name.”
-
-“Well, if you ever grow rich, you’ll have to do a lot more than write
-your name.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“You’ll have to write checks and letters, and, what’s more, you’ll have
-to be able to read them.”
-
-“Well, I reckon,” said the philosophical Jude, “it’ll be time enough
-to bother about that when I’m rich—and seems to me I’ll never be rich
-with them two diddling Satan same as they’ve done.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you will; you are going to be rich some day, as rich as I am.
-I’m a fortune teller. Show us your hand.”
-
-Jude held out a hand, and Ratcliffe examined the palm where the lines
-were few but straight and clear cut. It was a beautiful little hand,
-despite the hard work it had done, full of character and vigor, and
-expressing kindliness and honesty and capability.
-
-Ratcliffe had an instinct for hands. A hand could attract or repulse
-him just as powerfully as a face; more so, perhaps, for a hand never
-lies.
-
-“Oh, yes,” said he, “you are going to be rich, you can’t escape it, and
-you are going to learn reading and writing and arithmetic, and you are
-going to live to be a hundred.”
-
-“Cut me throat first!” said Jude. “Heave ahead.”
-
-“And you are going to England some day, and you’ll turn into a
-Britisher.”
-
-“Damned if I do! Satan!”
-
-“Hullo!” came a faint voice from below.
-
-“Rat says I’m goin’ to turn into a Britisher.”
-
-“They wouldn’t own you. Quit foolin’ and get the dinner ready.”
-
-Jude uncurled herself, came down from the keg with a thud, ran to the
-open skylight, and was about to reply in kind, when her eye caught
-sight of something that brought her to a halt.
-
-They were handling the canvas on the _Juan_.
-
-“Cark’s off!” cried she.
-
-Satan came on deck. Across the blue blaze of the sea they could hear
-now the clank of the windlass pawls,—the _Juan’s_ anchor was coming up.
-
-“I thought Sellers would have come on board before they started,” said
-Ratcliffe. “They’re in a big hurry, aren’t they?”
-
-“You bet,” said Satan with a grin. “He’ll crack on everything to get to
-Havana for that dynamite; won’t stop to eat their dinners till they’re
-back,—that’s what they’d have us believe—swabs!”
-
-“Why, don’t you think they are going to Havana?”
-
-“Oh, they’re _goin’_ to Havana right enough,” said Satan. “You watch
-and you’ll see them headin’ that way. Look! she’s fillin’ to the wind.”
-
-The anchor was home now, and they watched the sails filling as she
-headed on the same course the _Dryad_ had taken. She dipped her flag,
-and they returned the compliment; then she drew past the southern
-reefs, the hull vanished, and nothing remained but the topsails far
-against the western blue.
-
-Ten minutes later, down below at dinner, Jude, who had said no word
-about the departure of the _Juan_, but seemed to have been thinking a
-lot, suddenly spoke.
-
-“You never told me that chap was going to Havana for dynamite,” said
-Jude. “What for—to bust the wreck open?”
-
-“That’s it,” replied Satan. “Did you think he wanted it to eat?”
-
-“There’s no knowing what a feller may swallow, seeing you’ve swallowed
-that yarn,” said Jude. “He’s gone to Havana to sell us, that’s my
-’pinion.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Lord! there’s many a way of sellin’ fools.”
-
-Ratcliffe felt that the truth was with Jude, he felt an uneasy
-conviction that they had been done. The hurried departure of Carquinez
-seemed to put a seal on the business. He looked at Satan expecting an
-explosion; but Satan was quite calm and helping himself to canned ox
-tongue.
-
-“Seein’ I have the chart,” said he, “where’s the sellin’ to come in?”
-
-“But you’ve give him the location,” said Jude. “You said yourself that
-the place was fixed on every chart and a chap had only to have Lone
-Reef in his head to put his claws on the wreck.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan; “but the location is no use without the chart.”
-
-“What are you gettin’ at?”
-
-“I’m tryin’ to get at your intellects. How often have you seen that
-chart?”
-
-“Dozens of times.”
-
-“Ever noticed anything queer about it? Not you! Giving sass to your
-betters is your lay in life instead of usin’ your eyes.” He pushed his
-plate away, produced the tobacco box, and, taking the chart from it,
-laid it on the table.
-
-Jude got up and came behind him to look, while Ratcliffe leaned forward.
-
-“There’s the chart,” said Satan. “There’s the reef, and there’s the
-name of the hooker pointin’ at the reef, and there’s the latitude and
-longitude wrote up in the corner. Plain, ain’t it?”
-
-“That’s plain enough,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Jude, munching a biscuit, concurred.
-
-“Plain enough, ain’t it?” went on Satan. “Give a man the name of Lone
-Reef, and with any old Admiralty chart he’ll get there, and he has
-only to land on the reef to find the hooker stuck there in that crik
-between them two arms. Jude has seen her, and I’ve walked over her and
-’xamined her, and she’d have been broke open maybe by this, only chaps
-don’t land on reefs like that, not unless a storm lands them. We struck
-it huntin’ for abalones. Plain enough, ain’t it? Well, I tell you the
-whole business is no use to any man who hasn’t that chart in his hand
-and who can’t read what’s written on it secret. Here you are! Take a
-good long look, and I’ll give you ten dollars if you spot what I mean.
-It’s as clear as simple.”
-
-Ratcliffe spread the thing before him on the table.
-
-“I can’t see anything in it,” said he at last, “except what’s written
-plain enough. There’s Rum Cay, there’s the reef, the name of the wreck
-with a pointer to the reef, and the latitude and longitude up in the
-corner. No, I can’t see anything but that: it all seems plain as a
-pikestaff. I take an interest in cryptograms, too.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Cryptograms? Hidden writing.”
-
-“Well, that’s what’s before you,” said Satan. “Pap never twigged it,
-nor any of the crowd that had the handlin’ of it. It’s only a month ago
-I spotted it.”
-
-“You never said a word to me,” cut in Jude.
-
-“Get back to your place and don’t be chewin’ in my ear,” said Satan,
-reaching for the chart and pocketing it again. “Tell you? Likely! Why,
-if I had, you’d have let it out, same as you did the lie of the reef
-to Rat here the other day. Get on with your dinner! Why haven’t we any
-potatoes?”
-
-“No time to boil them,” said Jude, “cleanin’ up your mushy abalones.”
-
-“No time, and you yarnin’ and havin’ your future told! I heard you.”
-
-“My fault,” said Ratcliffe. “I began the business.”
-
-“Not you,” said Satan. “I heard her start in on it, sayin’ what she’d
-do with a fortune if she had it and finishin’ up by mistrustin’ me.”
-
-“Lord love you for a liar! I only said them two guys had done you in
-over the wreck,” cried Jude. “Don’t be stickin’ words in my mouth.”
-
-“How was it you came to spot the cryptogram?” asked Ratcliffe, eager to
-cut the dissension short.
-
-“The which?” asked Satan. “Oh, ay—well, it come natural for me to
-say to myself, ‘Here’s a thing that’s been hid up and kept secret, yet
-it’s all wrote out as plain as my palm.’ I said to myself, ‘It’s too
-blame simple! A man who knows where money is hid doesn’t write the
-location on a bit of paper, to be lost, maybe, and picked up by God
-knows who. Why, drop that chart in the streets of Havana, and the first
-chap with any knowledge in his head that picks it up will turn it into
-dollars right off. It’s a sure bait for fools, anyhow, and a wreckin’
-expedition would be out before the end of the week. They’d only have to
-look up any chart that’s been printed the last hundred years to find
-Lone Reef as easy as the Swimmer Rocks.’ Then I said to myself, ‘What
-in the nation did the guy want makin’ a chart at all for? Why couldn’t
-he have written on a piece of paper, “The Nombre de Dios lies on Lone
-Reef, sou’west of Rum Cay”? That’s all the chart says, and yet he must
-go and make drawin’s; must have taken him an hour’s pen scraping to
-make that chart.’ Puttin’ the two things together, I says to myself,
-‘The feller concerned must have been a fool in two ways if this thing’s
-genuine,—a fool to leave the fac’s as plain as an ad for liver pills,
-and a fool to waste his time drawin’ his advertisement instead of
-writin’ it,’ but I reckoned he was no fool. Dad was always quotin’ some
-damn ass who said the world was most made up of fools. Well, in my
-’xperience that don’t hold. Maybe in Europe it does, but not in Havana
-and the Gulf ports, anyway. So I says to myself, ‘Let’s try and see
-what the guy was drivin’ at.’”
-
-“And you won’t tell us how you did it?”
-
-“I’d just as soon not.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because,” said Satan, “I may be wrong; though I’m pretty sure I’m
-right—and I b’lieve in a shut head.”
-
-“You opened your head to Cark, anyhow,” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll tell you once and I won’t tell you twice, if I have any more
-chat out of you, I’ll lay into you with a slipper! O’ course I opened
-my head to him! Did you want him hanging round here and sniffin’ out
-the cache? Haven’t we got rid of him? I don’t want any more talkin’.
-I’ve my plan laid out and you’ve get to take my orders right from now
-without questions!” He turned to Ratcliffe. “You don’t mind helpin’ to
-work the boat, leavin’ sailing directions to me?”
-
-“Not I,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m quite content to help and look on,
-leaving things to you. What’s your first move?”
-
-“I’m goin’ to clear out of this tomorrow.”
-
-“Why, I thought you was going to wait for Cark to come back,” said Jude.
-
-“Never you mind what you thought. I’m goin’ to clear out of this
-tomorrow. Meantime, I want more stuff from the cache, and you’d better
-take the dinghy and get it right off. I want provisions for a month for
-the three of us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-CUSS WORDS
-
-
-When they had washed up and put the plates in their rack, Jude
-commandeered Ratcliffe to help with the dinghy. Satan, having given
-his orders, had retired into himself and the business of patching an
-old sail. He was seated at the work under the awning, and he seemed
-scarcely to notice the others as they got the boat away.
-
-“Satan’s got something up his sleeve,” said Jude as they pulled for the
-beach. “I reckon he’s laying low to get the better of Cark.”
-
-“Well, if you ask me,” said Ratcliffe, “I think he has got the better
-of him in some way or another. I don’t know how, and I don’t want to.
-I’d sooner wait and see. It’s as interesting as a game of chess.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Chess—oh, it’s a game. I’ll show you some day. Don’t you ever play
-games, Jude?”
-
-“You bet! Why, I won five dollars day before we put out buckin’ against
-the red at Chinese Charlie’s—y’know Havana? Well, it’s on the Calle
-sin Pedro. They play faro, but mostly r’lette.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t mean that sort of games.”
-
-“Which sort did you mean?” asked Jude, as the nose of the boat beached
-on the sand and they scrambled out. “Did you mean whisky drinkin’ and
-cuttin’ and carryin’ on?”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no! I meant games, just ordinary games.”
-
-Jude, the boat well beached, sat down on the blazing sands. It was
-two hours past noon, and the heat of the day had lifted under the
-freshening wind from the east, the tide was on the turn, and the
-far-off lamentations of the gulls around the southern reef-spurs came
-mixed with the fall of the waves,—waves scarcely a foot high, crystal
-clear, less waves than giant ripples.
-
-Beyond the _Sarah Tyler_ and her reflection on the water lay the
-violet-colored sea, infinity, and the blue of sky, broken only by a
-gull, spar white in the dazzle.
-
-Ratcliffe sat down beside his companion. Jude, like any old salt, had
-her moments of dead laziness. Active as a kitten as a rule, she would
-suddenly knock off, when the fancy took her, “let go all holts,” to use
-Satan’s expression, and laze. You couldn’t kick her out of it, Satan
-said.
-
-She had brought an old pair of boots for going through the bay cedar
-bushes. It wasn’t good to walk among the bushes unshod: there were
-tarantulas there, and scorpions, to say nothing of stump cacti. The
-boots were lying beside her on the sand, to be put on only at the last
-moment.
-
-“What you mean by ordinary games?” asked Jude suddenly, finishing the
-inspection of a new variety of soft-shell crab she had just caught and
-flinging it into the sea.
-
-“Oh, the games people play,” said Ratcliffe, who had almost forgotten
-what they had been talking about. He tried to explain, and found it
-singularly hard, especially when cross-examined.
-
-Jude did not seem able to understand grown men and women spending half
-a day “knockin’ a ball about.”
-
-“I used to play ma’bles with Dutch Mike’s kids when we were at
-Pensacola,” said she. “Mike ran a whisky joint, and the kids were
-pretty ornery. When we’d done playin’ marbles they’d have a cussin’
-bee.”
-
-“What on earth’s that?”
-
-“Well, you’ve heard of a spellin’ bee—you get a prize for spellin’ the
-best. Well, a cussin’ bee you start cussin’ each other, and the one
-that cusses hardest gets the prize. Pap never knew till one day he let
-into me with a strap for somethin’ or ’nother and I let fly at him.
-Then he found it was Mike’s children who’d been learnin’ me, and he had
-a dust-up with Mike on the wharf, and left him limpin’ for the rest of
-his natural. Did you cuss when you was young?”
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I learned that later.”
-
-“’R you any good at it?”
-
-“Upon my word, I don’t know.”
-
-“Have a try,” said Jude, losing her languor. “Clench your fists to
-it and have a go at me, and then I’ll have a go at you—there’s no
-one listenin’. Pretend you’re the skipper and I’m a hand that’s been
-haulin’ on the wrong rope.”
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m no use at it, and it’s not a nice game,
-anyway. I’d sooner play at something else.”
-
-Jude sniffed. She evidently felt snubbed. “I’m not a baby to be playing
-games,” said she. “You can go and play by yourself if you want to.”
-
-She collapsed on her back with her knees up and her old hat covering
-her face; then from under the hat:
-
-“You’ll hear all the swearin’ you want to in a minute from the old
-hooker.”
-
-“You mean Satan?”
-
-“Yep, the minute he turns his eye ashore and sees us lazin’ here
-instead of workin’.”
-
-“Then, come on.”
-
-“Not me,” said Jude, “not till Satan begins. I’m too comfortable. I
-been working hard all the morning while you two was aboard the _Juan_
-clackin’ with Sellers and havin’ drinks, I bet. I’m going to rest
-myself—what did you have?”
-
-“Ginger beer and a cigar.”
-
-“Did you take notice of Cark’s face?”
-
-“Rather!”
-
-“They say he hasn’t any one side to his face where the patch is. I’d
-like to see him with the patch off, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“Lord, no! I saw quite enough of him with it on. Come, get up, and
-let’s get to work.”
-
-“I’m not goin’ to work no more,” mumbled Jude drowsily. “I’m dead sick
-of fetchin’ and carryin’. Let Satan go and fetch and carry for himself.
-I’m going to stick here.”
-
-“On the island?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“And give up Satan and the _Sarah_?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But what will you do for a living?”
-
-“Start a la’ndry.”
-
-“But there’s no one here to give you any washing to do.”
-
-“Then I’ll have all the easier time.”
-
-“That’s true. It’s a bright idea, and I’ll stay with you and carry the
-laundry basket.”
-
-“No, you won’t! I’ll stick here alone.”
-
-Suddenly, across the water from the _Sarah_ and shattering this
-fantasy, came a voice. It was Satan’s voice, distant and borne on the
-breeze. Ratcliffe thought he could make out the words “lazy dog.”
-
-He got up. Jude with the old panama over her face had stiffened out as
-if dead. He tried to turn her over with his foot. Then he felt half
-frightened. Had the sun got to her head, and was all that nonsense talk
-delirium?
-
-He knelt down beside her and shook her.
-
-“Jude, what’s the matter with you?”
-
-No reply.
-
-He took the panama from the face. The eyes were closed and the features
-were in repose.
-
-Now, really alarmed, he jumped up, ran down to the boat, seized the
-baling tin, and filled it with sea water. He had never seen a case of
-sunstroke, but he had heard cold water on the head was a remedy.
-
-As he turned back with the tin the corpse was sitting up putting on its
-boots.
-
-“What’re you doing with that baling tin?” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll jolly soon show you!” said he, making toward her. “Shamming dead!”
-
-But before he could reach her she was gone among the bushes, one boot
-on, the other off. Then, flinging the baling tin away, he joined her,
-helped her on with the boot, and they started. Jude, as if to make up,
-put her hand into his in a trusting and loving manner. She swung his
-hand as they walked. Then, near their destination, she flung it away
-and made off, hunting like a dog among the bushes till she found what
-she was in search of,—a long, knotted rope.
-
-“What’s that for?” asked he.
-
-“You wait and see,” replied Jude. “Here’s the cache. Mind where you’re
-walkin’ or you’ll be into it.”
-
-The cache was well hidden among the bay cedars. The opening, eight feet
-long by six broad, was covered over with short poles spread with cut
-branches gone withered with the sun. When they had got the covering
-off, Jude tied one end of the rope to a tree close by and dropped the
-other end into the cache. She swung herself down by it, and Ratcliffe
-followed.
-
-From the floor of this place a step, two feet high, gave entrance to
-the cave.
-
-“You see,” said Jude. “It may rain till it’s black, but it never floods
-the cave. The water drains off before it can rise the height of the
-step.”
-
-There were a candle and some matches inside the cave entrance. She lit
-the candle and led the way.
-
-Ratcliffe was astounded, less by the size of the place, than the stacks
-of goods,—canned peaches, condensed milk, corned beef, tomatoes, ox
-tongues, Heinz’s pickles, Nabisco wafers. The old brig, making for some
-gulf port, must have been a floating Italian warehouse as far as cargo
-was concerned.
-
-“I don’t wonder at Satan not wanting Sellers and Carquinez to spot all
-this,” said he. “Why, there must be five hundred pounds’ worth of stuff
-here. Aren’t you afraid that nigger who skipped from you at Pine Island
-may split?”
-
-“Sakes, no! He was too much afeared of Satan. Satan was always
-threatening to skin him. Besides, he doesn’t know. We told him this
-place was Turtle Island, and that’s a hundred and fifty miles to
-s’uth’ard. You trust Satan to keep a thing dark. Here, catch hold of
-the candle while I collect.”
-
-There were two sacks folded up on the floor. She started collecting
-things, and when the sacks were half-filled Jude, clambering out of the
-pit, hauled them up by the rope.
-
-“Anything more?” asked he, from below.
-
-“I reckon that will be enough,” said Jude, looking down at him. “It’ll
-take us all our time to carry them to the boat, and if Satan ain’t
-satisfied he can come and fetch some more himself.”
-
-“Then drop the rope; I want to get out.”
-
-Jude, kneeling at the cache edge, lowered the rope gingerly. He reached
-up, and was just about to seize the loose end when it eluded him.
-
-“Why don’t you catch hold?” asked Jude.
-
-“I can’t. How could I when you pulled it up again. Go on, drop it and
-don’t play the fool.”
-
-“Who’s playin’ the fool?”
-
-“You are.”
-
-The rope, instead of descending again, was hauled right out of the
-cache. Then a face appeared, looking down and framed against the sky.
-He had forgotten the snub he had given her on the beach, but she hadn’t.
-
-“D’y’r’member what you said down there on the beach?” asked Jude.
-
-“No, what about?”
-
-“Cussin’.”
-
-“Oh, yes.”
-
-“Said I wanted you to play games that wasn’t nice.”
-
-“I never said any such thing.”
-
-“Didn’t yer? Well, whether you did or you didn’t, you’ve got to swear
-before I let you out.”
-
-“Well, then I’ll stay in. Go on, Jude, don’t be silly. It’s cold down
-here.”
-
-The rope came down, and he was just seizing the end when it was whipped
-out of his hand.
-
-“Damn!” said Ratcliffe wholeheartedly.
-
-“Now you’re talkin’,” said Jude.
-
-Like a boy fishing for polliwogs, she lowered the rope again and
-snatched it up suddenly, bringing with it another oath.
-
-But the third time he was too quick for her. Then as he came swarming
-up with skinned knuckles and rage in his heart, she bolted. He chased
-her, dodging here and there among the bushes, then he chased her round
-a tree, caught her, and, in his anger and irritation somehow, kissed
-her.
-
-The perfectly amazing smack on the face that followed was revelation;
-it also knocked him off his balance so that he sat down as though cut
-off at the knees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE COMING OF CLEARY
-
-
-She stood for a moment, frightened at her handiwork.
-
-Then, as he pulled himself together, she drew away a step.
-
-“What ails you?” asked she.
-
-Ratcliffe, sitting up with his hand to the top of his head, groaned.
-
-She drew a step closer. Then she saw that he was laughing, and drew a
-step back.
-
-“Get up, and don’t be fooling,” said she.
-
-“Fooling! And who started it?” asked he.
-
-Jude made no reply. She turned and went off to the cache, lugged the
-sacks a bit more away from the opening, and started to put the poles
-across. When he joined her on the work she wouldn’t speak. She was
-evidently mortally offended.
-
-He knew at once and by some fine instinct what was the matter with her.
-He had trod on her dignity, like the Thelusson woman,—treated her like
-a child, that is to say like a girl, for the two things were synonymous
-with Jude, who seemed to have no more idea of the realities of sex than
-a pumpkin.
-
-When she did speak at last, it was to give jeering orders.
-
-“Lord! Did you never have to use your hands? Which way is that to be
-sticking the poles? Why, it’d take twenty dozen to cover it the way
-you’re doing! Leave a foot and a half between them.”
-
-“Right,” said Ratcliffe humbly.
-
-“I didn’t say two foot.”
-
-“Sorry.”
-
-“Now the branches an’ stuff.”
-
-She had reserved one of the poles, for what reason soon became apparent.
-
-Each sack was too heavy to be carried by one person, so she slung one
-to the middle of the pole, and they started for the beach, Caleb and
-Joshua fashion, Ratcliffe in front.
-
-It was horrible work. They had to keep step, which was difficult; owing
-to the bushes, the going was bad. The sack kept slipping toward Jude,
-owing to the inequality of their heights, and the pressure of the pole
-on his shoulder was galling; also the wind had changed and was coming
-from the direction of the gulf, warm and moist like the breath from a
-great mouth.
-
-When they reached the beach he sat down. Unused to hard work and
-unused to the climate, he was sweating and exhausted. Jude looked
-comparatively cool and fresh.
-
-“Now then, Lazybones!” said Jude. Then she collapsed also, sitting down
-with her knees up and her arms round them.
-
-She seemed to have forgotten the sack, Ratcliffe, everything, as she
-sat whistling dreamily between her teeth and staring across the water
-toward the _Sarah_.
-
-She had kicked off her boots, and her toes were playing with the sand.
-Uncramped by boots, her feet were as expressive as her hands.
-
-“You’ll hear Satan begin to holler in a minute,” said Jude.
-
-“Let him,” said the other, “I’m not going to stir another foot till
-I’ve rested myself.”
-
-“Oh, he won’t holler at you. It’s me he’ll go for; you’re the
-first-class passenger.”
-
-“No, I’m not: I’m one of the crew.”
-
-Jude laughed in a mirthless manner.
-
-“Well, I reckon myself one, anyhow,” said he. “I wouldn’t have come on
-board unless I was to help in working the boat.”
-
-“Oh, Satan won’t mind you helpin’ to work her,” replied she; “but he
-didn’t bring you aboard for that.”
-
-“I know—and it was awfully decent of him. He just thought I’d like the
-cruise.”
-
-Jude sniffed.
-
-“I reckon you don’t know Satan,” said she.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Satan never does nothing for nothing.”
-
-“Well, what did he bring me aboard for?”
-
-“Lord knows,” said Jude; “but he’s got something up his sleeve, sure.
-Mind you, Satan’s as straight as they make them unless he’s dealin’
-with law chaps and such, and you’d be safe with him if you was blind
-and dumb and covered with diamonds only waitin’ to be picked off you.
-You see, you’re straight, and anyone that’s straight with Satan he’s
-straight with them. It’s different with lawyers, or guys like Cark and
-Sellers, who’d beat their own gran’mothers out of their store teeth.
-All the same, you look out with Satan. He’s got some plan about you,
-sure.”
-
-“What sort of plan is it, do you think, Jude?”
-
-“Lord knows. Nothing to harm you, anyway; maybe it’s to go shares in
-some deal—I dunno.”
-
-“Well, I’m up for any deal he likes to propose that would benefit
-him—as much money as he wants.”
-
-“Satan’s not set on money,” said Jude, “not in a big way. I reckon
-he’s something like Pap. Pap would take no end of trouble making a few
-dollars, but he was never really set on bein’ rich. I reckon he took up
-that old wreck business more for the fun of the thing than the dollars.
-He used to say great riches was only trouble to a man, an’ that he only
-wanted God’s good air and ’nough to live on.”
-
-“Well, maybe he was right,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“I reckon Satan cottoned to you because he thought you was honest,”
-said Jude.
-
-“Well, I hope I am.”
-
-“He said to me, right off, after you’d gone back to the yacht, ‘I
-reckon that feller’s honest,’ he said.”
-
-Ratcliffe laughed.
-
-“You see,” went on Jude, “you don’t pick up honest parties round these
-parts, not by the bushel. You might rake Havana with a fine-tooth comb
-lookin’ for fellers that wouldn’t do you, but you wouldn’t find none.
-It’s the same all round the gulf, from N’Orleans to Campêche; you can’t
-stick your nose in anywhere without being stung—if you’re a softy.”
-
-“So he liked me because he thought I was straight. What did you like me
-for, Jude?”
-
-“Lord! if you don’t fancy yourself! Who told you I liked you?”
-
-“You did last night. You said you and Satan took to me right off.”
-
-“Oh, did I? Well, maybe it was them pajamas—Hullo!” The shrill notes
-of a bo’sn’s whistle came over the water. She sprang to her feet.
-
-Satan’s form appeared at the rail of the _Sarah_. He was making
-movements with his arms as though signaling, and Jude flung up an arm
-in answer.
-
-Then, shading her eyes, she looked seaward.
-
-“What’s up?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Come on!” said Jude.
-
-She seized the sack, called on him to help her, and between them they
-ran it down to the water’s edge. Then they got the dinghy afloat, the
-sack on board, and started.
-
-“What’s up?” again asked Ratcliffe, as they rowed.
-
-“Sail,” said Jude.
-
-He had seen nothing, perhaps because of the sun-dazzle on the water or
-because he had not looked in the right direction. The sensitiveness
-of the Tylers to the approach of strangers and their hawklike vision
-struck him as belonging almost to the uncanny.
-
-Satan had rigged a tackle, and without a word uttered the sack was got
-aboard and below. Then and not till then did Satan speak.
-
-“It’s Cleary,” said he.
-
-Jude took the old glass he had been using, and examined the stranger,
-then she handed it to Ratcliffe. He turned it on the fleck of sail
-which sprang gigantic into the form of a big fore-and-aft-rigged boat,
-beating up for the island, the late afternoon sunlight flashing back
-from the foam at the forefoot and her foam-wet bows.
-
-“Who is Cleary?” asked he, handing back the glass.
-
-“Cark’s partner,” said Satan, “sort of half and half partner. They’re
-always bestin’ one another. Cleary is by way of bein’ a ship breaker
-and dealer in odds and ends; owns a couple of ratty old schooners
-besides that old ketch. Wonder what he’s doin’ down here? Curse him!”
-
-“He’s after Cark, most likely,” said Jude. “Maybe he’s got a smell of
-the wreck.”
-
-“Maybe,” replied Satan. “He’s always spyin’ on Cark. There’s nothin’
-much that Cleary don’t know, and if he got wind that Cark’s on a likely
-job he’d put out after him.”
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that the old wreck lying on that
-unseen reef might have been likened to a carcass in the desert, and
-that he was watching the gathering of the vultures to a feast.
-
-First Carquinez, now Cleary—how many more would come circling out of
-the blue?
-
-He said so, and Satan concurred.
-
-“It’s got out somehow or ’nother,” said Satan, “and Lord only knows
-there may be half a dozen others on the hunt. You see, the very fac’
-of Cark’s puttin’ to sea himself would give suspicions to half Havana;
-but Cleary is the only man beside Cark that knows my ports of call. He
-knows I come here for abalones, and he knows I hunt round Pine Island,
-not to say other places.”
-
-Satan fell into meditation for a moment. Then he resumed:
-
-“That’s what the cuss has been doin’. He’s been on the hunt for me,
-same as Cark was, only for different reasons. Now you wait and see.
-Jude!”
-
-“Hullo,” said Jude.
-
-“Did you cover the cache proper?”
-
-“You bet; but there’s a sack of stuff we didn’t manage to bring off.
-It’s among the bushes.”
-
-“It’ll have to lay there.”
-
-“What’s the name of Cleary’s boat?” asked Ratcliffe as he watched the
-approaching ketch.
-
-“The _Natchez_,” said Satan, “an old cod boat, built at Marthas
-Vineyard. Lord! ain’t they crackin’ on! Cleary’s in a hurry. There’s no
-denyin’ that.”
-
-He whistled contentedly as he leaned on the rail, and Ratcliffe,
-watching his hatchet-sharp profile, wondered what was coming next.
-Of one thing he was beginning to feel certain,—Cleary, Carquinez,
-Sellers, and anything else that might come out of Havana on the long
-trail for plunder would find a match in Satan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-AN HONEST MAN
-
-
-The ketch carried on, heading straight for the _Sarah_; then, spilling
-the wind from her sails, she came round, presenting a full view of her
-dirty old hull and dropping her anchor two cable lengths away.
-
-Almost on the last rasp of the anchor chain she dropped a boat, which
-shoved off for the _Sarah_.
-
-“That’s Cleary,” said Satan, shading his eyes.
-
-It was, and as Cleary came on board, leg over rail, saluting Satan
-with the affability of old acquaintanceship and the quarterdeck with
-a squirt of tobacco juice, Ratcliffe fell to wondering what sort of
-place Havana might be and what else it might give up in the way of
-detrimentals.
-
-Carquinez was bad and Sellers was bad, but Cleary was—Cleary. Against
-the gold and blue of afternoon, the sight of this faded man, who
-looked as though he had seen better days, who suggested a broken-down
-schoolmaster, with a slungshot in his pocket, struck Ratcliffe with
-astonishment and depression. It was as though the dazzling air had
-suddenly split to disclose a London slum.
-
-“Hullo! Hullo!” said Cleary. “Thought I recognized the old hooker. What
-you doin’ down here away?”
-
-Jude made a dive for the galley, and Ratcliffe could hear her choking.
-The sound banished the feeling of depression and repulsion created by
-the newcomer and brightened him somehow.
-
-Here was the comic man of the pantomime come aboard.
-
-“What am I doin’?” said Satan. “I’m fishin’ for chair-backs. What are
-you doin’ yourself?”
-
-Cleary turned, spat his quid overboard, and then, leaning on the rail,
-looking seaward, with his back to the others, and, just as easy as
-though he were aboard his own ship, laughed.
-
-“Fishin’ for chair-backs!” Then, sluing his head half round, “How’s the
-abalone fishin’ gone?”
-
-“Jude!” cried Satan.
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Bring up them pearls!”
-
-Cleary turned, and, leaning with his back against the rail, began to
-fill an old pipe in a languid and leisurely manner. Then, when the
-pearls were produced, he turned them from the matchbox into the palm of
-his hand.
-
-“How much?” asked Cleary.
-
-“Forty dollars,” said Satan.
-
-“Forty which?”
-
-“Dollars.”
-
-“Ain’t worth forty cents.”
-
-“Well, who’s askin’ you to deal?”
-
-Cleary carefully poured the pearls into the matchbox, closed it, and
-put it in his pocket.
-
-Satan did not seem to mind.
-
-“Jude!” said Satan.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Bring up them cigars!”
-
-“Who’s the gentleman?” asked Cleary.
-
-“Gentleman came aboard for a cruise off a yacht. You needn’t mind him;
-he’s only out for pleasure.”
-
-Cleary nodded to Ratcliffe, who nodded in return. Then things hung
-for a moment till Jude appeared with the cigar-box, and the newcomer,
-having tapped the tobacco out of his pipe, chose a cigar, lit it and,
-leaning with his back against the rail and his thumbs in the armholes
-of his old waistcoat, blew clouds. He seemed for a moment far away in
-thought, and Ratcliffe, watching him and Satan,—Jude having vanished
-again, attacked with another fit of choking,—puzzled his head in
-vain to find out the inner meaning of what was going on. The wretched
-pearls were scarcely worth five dollars, he had heard Satan say so, and
-Cleary, evidently an expert, was not the man to pay eight times their
-worth, nor was Satan the man to allow the other to pocket them.
-
-Then suddenly Cleary spoke.
-
-“Cark’s a clever man, don’t you think?”
-
-“Well, seein’ he’s your partner, you’re a better judge than me,”
-replied Satan.
-
-“Well, maybe that’s so,” said Cleary. “Partners we were, and partners
-we are till I ketch him and bust him.”
-
-“Why, what’s he been doin’ to you?”
-
-“Now, I’ll tell you,” said Cleary. “I’m an honest man. I don’t say in
-trade I’m not above shavin’ the barber, but between man an’ man I’m
-honest, and I’m goin’ to tell you straight out Cark and me has been
-layin’ for you ever since your dad was fool enough to give Cark the
-tip about that treasure business. I wasn’t keen on it, same as he
-was. I allowed there might be somethin’ in it—but that don’t matter.
-What gets my monkey is Cark he gets fearful thick with Sellers, then
-he cools off on the business of the treasure gettin’, and a matter of
-two weeks ago he rigs up a job for me to see after at Pensacola that’d
-have taken me two months and more. I says to myself, ‘There’s somethin’
-in this.’ Says nothin’ to Cark. Off I goes, taking the old _Natchez_.
-Hadn’t reached the latitood of Key West when back I puts, and finds
-Cark gone with the _Juan_ and Sellers.
-
-“Then I knew he’s started to hunt for you again, leavin’ me in the
-lonely cold. He’s been huntin’ you ever since last fall, that’s
-straight; but he’d never let me down before. He’d always told me the
-results. I tell you he’s huntin’ for you now, and the surprisin’ thing
-is he hasn’t found you, knowing as he does this is one of your grounds.”
-
-“How do you know he hasn’t found me?”
-
-“What you mean?”
-
-“Why, he was here this morning and off not four hours ago.”
-
-“Christopher!”
-
-“Him and Sellers.”
-
-“Holy Mike!”
-
-“You was comin’ up from West, you ought to have sighted him.”
-
-“Sighted nothin’ but a tank, and her nearly hull down.”
-
-“Well, if you’d been here a few hours earlier, you’d have smelt the old
-_Juan_ as well as sightin’ her.”
-
-“Was he here on business?”
-
-“He was,—he was after that wreck Pap told him of. You just told me
-he’s been after me since last fall spyin’ on me. I know it, and I’m
-pretty sick of the business. B’sides, he’s as good to help in it as
-anyone else; so I’ve made a contrac’ with him.”
-
-“_Sufferin_’ Moses!—a contrac’ with Cark!” Cleary stood for a moment
-as though absorbing this news, then he laughed, the funniest laugh
-Ratcliffe had ever heard,—it was like the whinny of a pony. He saw
-Jude’s head at the cabin hatch, and the head suddenly duck and vanish,
-as though her body had been doubled up.
-
-“A contrac’ with Cark!”
-
-“Well, what are you laughin’ at?”
-
-“Nothin’. May I ask what terms?”
-
-“We go shares.”
-
-“In the pickin’s?”
-
-“What else?”
-
-“Have you give him the location?”
-
-“I have.”
-
-“You’ve give him the location and let him slip his cable—him and
-Sellers?”
-
-“What odds? It’ll take a month to bust her open and hunt for the
-stuff. I’ll be after him tomorrow.”
-
-Cleary crossed his arms and stood with the half cigar stuck in the
-corner of his mouth and pointing skyward, his eyes fixed on the deck
-and his left eye half closed.
-
-Jude’s face had reappeared at the cabin hatch, and the grin on it
-spread to Ratcliffe’s.
-
-Satan alone was unmoved, half-sitting on the keg and cutting up some
-tobacco.
-
-“Well,” said Cleary at last, “you’ve made your bargain, there’s no
-gettin’ round that. _I’m_ not wishin’ to poke my nose in your business,
-nor to ask what your share is to be, but I’m partners with Cark, and
-you see how he’s let me down—cayn’t you give me a lead?”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Give me a lead to the location. It won’t make a cent difference to
-you.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Clear enough, I don’t want none of your share. Cark’s the man I want
-to tap, having a right to, being partners.”
-
-Satan seemed to turn this matter over in his mind for a moment. Then he
-said, “Suppose we come back to them pearls?”
-
-“Right,” said Cleary in a lively voice. “What’s this you was askin’,
-forty? Well, forty you shall have.”
-
-He produced an old brown pocketbook, counted out four ten-dollar notes,
-and handed them over.
-
-Satan examined each note, back and front, folded them, and placed them
-into his pocket.
-
-“Now,” said Cleary, “out with the lead!”
-
-“You’ll have it tomorrow,” said Satan. “I’m pickin’ up my anchor
-tomorrow mornin’. You’ve only to follow me.”
-
-“I’d rayther have the indications on paper.”
-
-“Maybe you would, but you won’t. I’ve made my bargain with Cark, and
-there’s nothin’ in the contrac’ about givin’ the location away to third
-parties. I can’t help you followin’ me.”
-
-“I take you,” said Cleary.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-PROBLEMS
-
-
-The sun was nearly touching the horizon when he dropped into his boat
-and rowed off.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “Are you in earnest with that chap?”
-
-“I sure am,” said Satan.
-
-“Going to take him down to Lone Reef?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But how about Carquinez? We had got to wait for him here till he gets
-back from Havana with the dynamite.”
-
-“Yes,” said Satan, “we’d got to wait here one week, or maybe ten days
-allowin’ for weather—where was you born?”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Cark’s tried to sell me a pup, that’s how! He’s gone to no Havana:
-he’s crackin’ on for the wreck with every stitch he can carry. Reckons
-to bust her open and scoop the boodle while we’re layin’ here rubbin’
-our noses and waitin’ for him. Mind you,” said Satan, “I may be wrong,
-but that’s my ’pinion.”
-
-“But he sailed off toward Havana.”
-
-“Lord! Hasn’t he a rudder?”
-
-“All the same, would it pay him?”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Well, if he played a dirty trick on you like that, wouldn’t he be
-afraid you’d split?”
-
-“Who to?”
-
-“To the authorities at Cuba.”
-
-“D’you remember Sellers talkin’ about landin’ the stuff,” asked Satan,
-“sayin’ they’d have to take it round to Santiago way? They thought I
-was drinkin’ all that in. If there were any dollars in the business,
-d’you think they’d touch Cuba? Not they! They’d either cache the stuff
-or run it to some likely port. I was laughin’ in my hat all the time.
-Now you may think me a suspicious cuss. I’m not; but a feller has to
-run by compass in this world or go off his course, and my compass in
-this turnout is Cark. I say he’s gone down to Lone Reef and given me
-the left leg over the business, and my compass is the fac’ that he
-can’t run straight. Not if he tried to, he couldn’t run straight; nor
-could Sellers nor Cleary. If them fellers were straight, I’d match
-them and give them a fair deal. As it is, they’re like a lot of blind
-bally-hoolies playin’ blindman’s buff, runnin’ round and round, with me
-in the middle, tryin’ to kidoodle me and bein’ kidoodled themselves.
-Forty dollars for them rotten pearls, and all sorts of fixin’s out of
-Sellers—_and I haven’t done with them yet_!”
-
-It had seemed to Ratcliffe, on board the _Juan_, that Carquinez was
-the spider of the web of this business. It seemed to him now that the
-spider was Satan.
-
-He began to wonder was there any wreck at all, was the treasure
-story a myth. The idea of these rogues being incited to dreams of
-fortune so that they might be plundered of pots of paint and cans of
-turpentine and a few dollars appealed to him immensely. He remembered
-Thelusson and Skelton, he remembered Jude’s yarn about fruit steamers
-being held up, he remembered Carquinez and Sellers, and he had just
-seen Cleary; and of a sudden Satan’s ocean-wide activities appeared
-before him in nightmare contrast with their microscopic results. Great
-steamers stopped for a bunch of bananas, yachts lying idle to careen
-the _Sarah_, ships sailing from Havana to hunt for buried treasure—but
-in reality to supply the wandering _Sarah_ with cans of turpentine and
-a few dollars! Was there any treasure, or was the whole thing a Tyler
-fake invented by Pap and handed to his family as an heirloom? He could
-not resist the question.
-
-“That chart you showed us,” said he,—“is there anything really in it?”
-
-Satan took him at once.
-
-“The chart’s all right,” said he, “for them that can read it. If you
-mean is it _genuine_, I reckon it is—for them that can read it.
-We’ll see some day if I’m right or wrong; but, honest truth, I’m not
-botherin’ much about it,—the chances are so big, as I told you before,
-against treasure huntin’, and even if we strike it what’s the use of
-barrels of gold to a feller like me? If you ask me, I’m botherin’ more
-about the kid than huntin’ for money.”
-
-“You mean?”
-
-“Jude. Suppose I was to get a bash on the head from one of them cusses,
-or drop to the smallpox, same as I pretended to Sellers, what’d become
-of the kid?”
-
-The sound of the “kid” frying fish for supper came mixed with the
-question.
-
-“I know,” said Ratcliffe, “that’s a problem that must often occur to
-you, I should think.”
-
-“You’ve seen the sort of crowd Havana’s made of,” went on Satan. “It’s
-hard to tell which is worse, the Yanks or the Spaniards, and there’s
-not a seaport that’s not the same, and when I think of me lyin’ dead
-and her driftin’ loose, it gets my goat. It’d be different if she was a
-boy.”
-
-“Besides that,” said the other, “she can’t go on always as she is now.”
-
-“How’d you mean?”
-
-“Well, dressed as she is now. She’ll grow up.”
-
-“Sure,” said Satan.
-
-“She’ll have to dress differently some day.”
-
-“Meanin’ skirts?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Satan laughed a hollow laugh. The idea seemed so futile that he did not
-dwell upon it, or seemed not to.
-
-“Have you any female relations yourself?” asked he.
-
-“Lots,” replied Ratcliffe, calling up in memory his cousins and aunts,
-females of the highest upper-middle-class respectability, and vaguely
-wondering what they would think of Jude could they see her.
-
-“The bother is,” said Satan, “she don’t take to women folk; always was
-against them, and that Thelusson woman put the cap on the business,
-kissin’ her and handin’ out slop talk. Well, I don’t know. I reckon
-she’ll have to go on bein’ what she is till somethin’ happens; but it
-would have been a lot handier if she’d been born a boy.”
-
-He turned and went below.
-
-The sun had sunk beyond Palm Island, and a violet dusk, forerunner of
-the dark, was spreading through the sky. Over beyond the _Natchez_ the
-sea for a moment became hard looking as a floor of beryl, then vague.
-
-Ratcliffe, lingering for a moment watching this transformation scene,
-found himself thinking of Jude and her problem. The Tylers had taken an
-extraordinarily firm hold upon him. He knew them more intimately than
-he knew his own relations, or fancied so. It seemed to him that he had
-known them for years.
-
-When this cruise was over and he packed up his traps and left them, he
-would probably never see them again. Jude and Satan would go their way
-and he would go his way—and what would happen to Jude? Suppose Satan
-were to die, get knocked on the head or “fall to the smallpox”? The
-thought hurt him almost as much as it hurt Satan; for Jude had, somehow
-or another, captured his mind and touched his heart, and her youth and
-absolute irresponsibility before the major facts of life had infected
-him in the most extraordinary manner.
-
-Over there on the island, engaged in the serious matter of provisioning
-the _Sarah_, they had been carrying on like children. He had not
-thought of it then; now, reflecting sanely, it rose before him together
-with the rest of this strange cruise, and for a moment the whole
-business seemed mad, absolutely mad. The supersane figure of Skelton
-rose up before him, and beyond Skelton, Oxford, the calm, sane
-English country, where the Tylers would have been impossible, the hard
-bourgeois conventions of the upper-upper-middle classes, those uncles,
-cousins, and aunts to whom Class was as holy as Sunday and to whom Jude
-would be absolutely invisible as she was.
-
-He was engaged in these reflections when a voice broke the stillness
-of the evening, a half-tired, half-cantankerous voice, the voice of an
-overworked housekeeper who had been frying fish while others have been
-idling.
-
-“_Ain’t_ you comin’ to help me?” inquired the voice.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-HANTS AND OTHER THINGS
-
-
-Down below, at supper, the injured housekeeper was still in evidence
-and rose to a charge that the fish was over-fried. Satan was the accuser.
-
-The defendant, “het up” and flushed, replied in the language of the sea:
-
-“Go’n fry your head! Clackin’ on deck and leavin’ me to do the
-work—the pair of you! It’s all men’s good for.”
-
-“Why, I thought you was a man!” said Satan. “You cut and carry on like
-a man; scratch you and your tongue goes both ends like a woman. Start
-you on a job, and you sit down to it before it’s half done. I saw you
-lazin’ on the beach, and now look where we are,—there’s a sack of
-stuff not brought off and how are we to bring it with Cleary messin’
-round?”
-
-“It wasn’t my fault,” said Jude. Then she checked herself and her eyes
-met Ratcliffe’s.
-
-“It was my fault,” said he. “I got tired.”
-
-Jude looked at him. This defense of her, trifling though it was,
-seemed to make a new relationship between them. It seemed to her that
-Ratcliffe had suddenly become different. She could not tell what the
-difference was or how it had come about in the least, or why she
-half-resented his shielding her, even in this small matter; then her
-eyes fell away and rested on the table before her.
-
-“It wasn’t,” said she. “It was my fault I was foolin’ when I ought to
-have been workin’, and now the stuff is lyin’ there—” She choked, and
-then to the horror of Satan she pushed her plate away and broke into
-tears, hiding her face on her folded arms. Then, before the astonished
-ones could speak, she rose and dashed out of the cabin.
-
-“Land’s sake!” cried Satan. “What ails her? Cryin’! She’s never done
-that before—and all over that rotten sack—why, let it lay there, cuss
-the thing!”
-
-He went on with his supper in an irritable manner.
-
-“She’s overtired, maybe,” said Ratcliffe. “Wait and I’ll fetch her
-back.”
-
-He left the cabin and came on deck.
-
-The moon had not risen yet, and the riding light, which had been run up
-before supper, showed yellow against the stars.
-
-Not a sign of Jude.
-
-He went forward. There she was, huddled up in the bows.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-The bundle sniffed.
-
-“Come on down to supper. Satan’s not angry.”
-
-“Who the”—sniff—“cares whether’es angry or not? You lea’ me alone!”
-
-“But what are you crying about?”
-
-“_Ain’t_ cryin’!”
-
-“Well, what are you lying on the deck for?”
-
-“’Cause I choose.”
-
-“Come on down and help to clear the things away.”
-
-“Clear them yourself!”
-
-He bent down and tried to take her arm. She shook him off, rose
-suddenly like a released spring, ran to the side where the dinghy was
-moored, and got over the rail.
-
-He looked over. She was in the boat unfastening the painter.
-
-“Where on earth are you going?”
-
-“Ashore.”
-
-She pushed off.
-
-Ratcliffe came down to the cabin.
-
-“She’s gone ashore.”
-
-“She’s gone for that sack,” said Satan unconcernedly. “Reckons to get
-it off before moon rise, I expect.”
-
-“But it’s too heavy for one.”
-
-“She’ll do it. You’ve put her monkey up makin’ her confess it was her
-fault. She’s never done that before in all her born life. She’s just
-natural proud and she’d as soon cut her tongue out as give in she was
-in the wrong. You’ve made her do more’n I’ve ever made her do, and how
-you’ve done it—well, search me.
-
-“You aren’t gettin’ on with your supper,” said Satan after a pause.
-
-“Oh, I’ve had enough. I was wondering if she has her boots for going
-through that bush stuff.”
-
-“She’s got them all right. They were in the dinghy: she didn’t bring
-them aboard. You’re worryin’ a lot about the kid.”
-
-“Well, maybe. She’s the jolliest kid I ever struck, and I don’t want
-any harm to come to her; the pluckiest, too. There’s not many people
-would go off alone in the dark like that in a place like this.”
-
-“Lord bless your soul!” said Satan. “That’s nothin’, no more than
-walkin’ down the street to Jude. Do you think sailin’ these seas is all
-fair-weather work? Why, we’ve been rubbin’ our noses in _des_truction
-since she was born. She don’t know what fear is.”
-
-“I could tell that from her face.”
-
-“It’s her face that’s troublin’ me,” said Satan. “Pass me the water
-pitcher, will you? She’s begun to take after mother. A few months ago
-she was the homeliest little pup ever littered; but she’s beginnin’ to
-pick up in looks, and if she takes after her mother’s side in looks and
-ways—Lord save us!”
-
-“Was your mother good looking?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “I don’t know what you call good looks. Pap said
-she was a nacheral calamity; that was after she’d bolted with the
-Baptis’ man. It wasn’t the looks so much as the somethin’ about her
-that’d make a blind man rubber after her if she passed him in the
-street, that’s what Pap said. He never said no prayers, but when he was
-talkin’ of Jude I’ve heard him say time and again, ‘Thank the Lord she
-don’t take after her mother!’ and now it’s comin’ out, same as the ace
-of spades a shark has hid up his sleeve—and what’s comin’ after, Lord
-only knows.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“Well, I scarce know myself, but Pap said those sort of women couldn’t
-help bein’ nacheral calamities, attractin’ chaps and turnin’ the world
-upside down. He said a man, once they’d got the clutch on him, was no
-more use than a hypnotized fowl, whatever that is. You’ve heard what
-Jude said about skirts—well, I’m thinkin’ that’s all baby talk, an’
-it’s my ’pinion when she gets her nacheral sailing orders she’ll be
-into skirts some day, same as a dude takes to water, and hypnotizing
-chaps, same as her mother before her.”
-
-“I wouldn’t be surprised,” said Ratcliffe; “but I don’t think she’ll be
-a natural calamity. I think, from what I have seen of her, that she has
-a fine character, honest as the day, good as gold.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan; “but you never know what a woman is, seems to me,
-till she’s been rubbed against a man. Those were Pap’s words and he’d
-got a headpiece on him. Well, I reckon time will tell.”
-
-They went on deck.
-
-The moon had not risen yet, and the island lay like a humped shadow
-in the starlight. To seaward the anchor light of the _Natchez_ showed
-a yellow point, and from the beach came the lullaby of little waves
-falling on the sand.
-
-“Now if it wasn’t these days,” said Satan, “I’d be in two minds about
-putting out straight now, rather than lyin’ all night by that feller
-Cleary.”
-
-“What do you mean by these days?”
-
-“Well, in the old throat-cuttin’ days I reckon Cleary would have gone
-through us, sunk the old _Sarah_, and taken me aboard his hooker with a
-gun at my head to make me show him the way to the wreck; but things is
-different now. Fellers are afraid of the law. Cark’s mortally afraid of
-the law, so’s Cleary.”
-
-“What time do you start tomorrow?”
-
-“After sun-up, if the wind holds.”
-
-“It will be a joke if we find Carquinez at the reef. What will he say,
-do you think?”
-
-“Cark? Oh, he’ll not mind. There ain’t no shame in Cark. He’ll have
-broke his contrac’ by not goin’ to Havana, he’ll stand proved to the
-eyes as a damn cheat. He won’t mind: the contrac’ not bein’ regular,
-the law can’t have him.”
-
-“I expect Cleary will go for him.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan. “Then we’ll have some fun. There’s Jude.”
-
-Something like a swimming water rat was breaking the star shimmer on
-the sea. It was the dinghy.
-
-Jude was sculling it from behind, noiselessly. It came alongside to
-starboard like a ghost, and with it came Jude’s voice calling for the
-tackle. Then the sack came aboard and after it Jude.
-
-“Well, you’ve done it smart,” said Satan, “and no mistake. Now off down
-with you and have your supper. We’ve got to start bright and early in
-the morning.”
-
-Jude said nothing. Her anger and irritability seemed to have departed.
-She kicked off her boots, hitched up her trousers, and started down
-below.
-
-“She never keeps a grudge up,” said Satan.
-
-Away in the middle of the night Ratcliffe was awakened by a stifled
-scream, the voice of Satan promptly following.
-
-“Wake up! What ails you?”
-
-“For the Land’s sake, where am I?”
-
-“In your hammock. What’re you dreamin’ of?”
-
-“Gee-owsts.”
-
-“Hants, you mean.”
-
-“Black faces they had, and they was chasin’ me round and round them
-trees.”
-
-“That’s what comes of stuffin’ yourself and goin’ to bed on top of it.
-Get off your back and onto your side. Wakin’ a body up like that! What
-was they like?”
-
-“The hants?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“I can’t be talkin’ for fear of wakin’ him up.”
-
-“He’s asleep. I hear him snorin’. What was they like?”
-
-“They’d black faces and tails like cows—an’ I’d rather not be talkin’
-of them.”
-
-“Wonder what it means dreamin’ of them things?”
-
-“Nothin’ good—bad weather, most like.”
-
-“Glass is steady.”
-
-“Well, maybe we’ll bust on a reef or somethin’.”
-
-“Oh, shet your head!”
-
-“Shet yours. I’m wantin’ to get asleep.”
-
-Silence.
-
-Ratcliffe could hear the water outside tickling the ribs of the
-old _Sarah_. A bigger swell was running, and she rose to it with
-balloon-like buoyancy. A score of little voices from the trickle and
-slap of the sea against the timbers to the click of the rudder chain
-marked her movements.
-
-The idea of the ghosts chasing Jude round the dream tree reminded him
-of how he had chased her round the real tree and kissed her—kissed her
-out of irritation.
-
-Something in his half-asleep state told him he had been a fool to do
-that. It was all done in play, just as a little boy might kiss a little
-girl; but he was not a little boy. What had prompted him?
-
-Then as he lay dissolving into slumber the groaning timbers of the
-_Sarah_ said something that sounded like “nacheral calamity,” and then,
-the door of sleep flung wide, he was walking on a blazing beach with
-Cleary.
-
-The _Natchez_ and the _Juan_ were at anchor out on the blue dream
-sea, a great wreck was heaved up on the sands, and when they reached
-it Cleary tapped on the timbers and said something about a “nacheral
-calamity,” and at the words a porthole opened and Jude’s fresh young
-face appeared laughing, framed by the timbers of the wreck.
-
-It seemed to him the most delightful vision—then it popped in and the
-porthole closed and Carquinez came riding up on a horse, saying he was
-going to “bu’st” the wreck open with dynamite to get at the treasure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-UNDER WAY
-
-
-He was routed out before dawn by Satan. The cabin lamp was lit, the
-table spread, and Jude was bringing in coffee. She seemed in a bad
-temper, and as he huddled himself into his clothes he could hear her:
-
-“Knockin’ myself about in the dark! That old slush lamp in the galley
-don’t burn worth a cent. What you want haulin’ out this hour for?”
-
-And to her Satan:
-
-“Wind will be up with the sun—where’s them biscuits? We’ve got to get
-the dinghy aboard yet, and all that raffle forward stowed, and it’ll be
-light enough in another ten minutes.”
-
-“Where’s Rat?”
-
-“He’s comin’.”
-
-He sat down to table opposite Jude. She scarcely gave him good morning.
-The face that had looked so well framed by the porthole of the dream
-ship was cross, almost sullen. He thought for a moment that her
-ill-temper was directed toward Satan as well as himself; then, in some
-subtle way, he knew it wasn’t. Early rising may have helped; but he was
-the cause. What had he done? He could not think.
-
-He remembered how she had acted when he had stood up for her the night
-before. It was just the same this morning.
-
-Satan said the coffee was burnt,—tasted like bud barley, and ought to
-be slung in the slush tub. Ratcliffe stood up for the coffee, but was
-cut short by Jude.
-
-“I reckon it’s beastly,” said Jude; “but I haven’t more’n two hands
-to be gettin’ the things on the table and the coffee boiled—and some
-folks snoring in their bunks!”
-
-“Shet up!” said Satan, ruffled at this wanton attack on the guest “And
-talkin’ of snorin’, I reckon you can give any man points and beat him,
-once you lay down to it. Why, you shake the ship so that I’ve woke often
-of nights thinkin’ we’d got adrift and was dudderin’ over sandbanks.”
-
-“Lord love you for a liar!” was all Jude said. She refused help in
-clearing away the things, joining them on deck a few minutes later,
-just as day was coming into the eastern sky.
-
-The problem of how to get the dinghy aboard had not occurred to
-Ratcliffe till now. The _Sarah Tyler_ possessed no davits, and though
-the old canvas boat was easy to handle as an umbrella, the sturdy
-little dinghy was a different matter.
-
-Standing in the half-dark with a faint wind bringing the smell of
-the early morning sea, sharp as the smell of a new-drawn sword, he
-questioned Satan on the subject.
-
-“Get her aboard?” said Satan. “Oh, I’ll durn soon get her aboard.
-Davits! God love you! what do you want them things for?”
-
-“Except for hoistin’ fools off the ship?” said the voice of Jude from
-the darkness. “_Air_ you goin’ to get a move on? You’ve got the old
-awning to take in and stow. Maybe you’ve forgotten it.”
-
-They got the awning down and stowed, and then, against a train of fire
-crawling on the eastern sea-line and in a light that made the world
-like the vestibule of Fairyland, Satan set to on the problem of the
-dinghy. He had no doubt half a dozen dodges for the purpose. The one he
-employed was simply to unshackle the main halyards and fix them to the
-ring-bolt on the bow.
-
-As they hauled on the tackle, and as if in answer to the creak of block
-and shrill chantey started by Satan, the races of the gulls blazed
-out. The deep-sea fishing gulls had long since started for sea; but
-the shore gulls, as though waiting for a convoy to follow, were round
-the stern of the _Sarah_. Then, the dinghy secured, the throat and
-peak halyards were manned, and the mainsail rose slatting against the
-splendor of the morning.
-
-The sun was over the sea-line now, the wind rising to meet him, and
-to starboard the fresh blue sea flooding against the wind showed the
-_Natchez_, her canvas rising and the fellows swarming at the ropes.
-
-Satan had unlashed the wheel and was standing by it, now that the
-mainsail was set, shouting directions to his crew; and to Ratcliffe,
-as he labored with Jude getting the foresail and jib on her, the truth
-came in a flash that this was the real thing. The lazy peace of the
-last couple of days had broken all at once. Activity, Adventure,
-and Danger seemed suddenly to have boarded the old _Sarah Tyler_ and
-delivered her as a prey to enormous and unknown forces.
-
-He had never recognized till now the potential energy of canvas. The
-mainsail seemed horribly vast, out of all proportion to the hull; the
-slatting of the jib as they raised it spoke of an energy new born,
-viewless, and seeming to have little relationship to the warm and
-benign breeze.
-
-But he had no time to think. The anchor was still to be had in, and
-as he helped with Jude at the windlass—Pap’s patent that would have
-raised a battleship—the threshing of the canvas with all sheets slack
-and the voice of Satan came urging speed.
-
-Then, when the old killick was aboard and the sails trimmed, came
-Peace. With the wind on the starboard beam and the canvas hard against
-the blue the _Sarah_ settled down to her work, Palm Island fading to
-westward, and to sou’west the _Natchez_ with all sail set in pursuit.
-
-Jude’s bad temper seemed to have blown away on the wind, the surly look
-had gone from her face, and as she stood for a moment by Ratcliffe,
-looking over the weather rail, her mind seemed entirely occupied by
-Cleary.
-
-“He’s blowing along,” said Jude; “but he’s feeling our pace. Not more
-than holding his own—and he had the cheek to tell me once his old tub
-could sail circles round the _Sarah_!”
-
-Satan at the wheel cocked his eye over his shoulder at the _Natchez_,
-spat, and refixed his gaze on the binnacle.
-
-“Where’s your eyes?” asked Satan.
-
-“In my head,” replied Jude. “What you gettin’ at?”
-
-“He’s overhaulin’ us. Wonder he ain’t aboard! Time you was gettin’ that
-anchor up and handlin’ the jib.”
-
-Ratcliffe was about to share the blame when, remembering the incident
-of the coffee, he checked himself and held his peace.
-
-Satan was right. The _Natchez_ had the pace of the _Sarah_, at least
-under present wind conditions and under plain sail. The two boats had
-evidently never been matched before, and the gloom of the Tylers might
-have been gaged by their silence. Satan did not want to run away from
-Cleary; but he had promised him a “lead,” and this impudent display
-of the better sailing qualities of the _Natchez_ was like a derisive
-underscore to the promise.
-
-Cleary, in this matter at least, was a very unwise man. He should have
-checked the speed of his boat by mishandling her or even trailing a
-drogher. Instead of that he held on, determined, evidently, to take the
-shine out of the _Sarah_ and pour derision on the head of Satan.
-
-Ratcliffe, little as he knew of boat-craft, felt the situation. Being
-wise, he said nothing.
-
-Suddenly Jude spoke.
-
-“It’s her beams helping her. Try her on a wind and we’d knock flinders
-out of her. Lord! to think of being beat by that old cod boat! Say,
-cayn’t we do nothin’, crack on a balloon jib or somethin’?”
-
-Satan laughed a mirthless laugh.
-
-“S’much as to tell the cuss we’re beat. Don’t you think Cleary’s got no
-balloon jibs up his sleeve? Hain’t you no sense?”
-
-They held on, the _Natchez_ steadily overhauling them till she was dead
-level half a mile away and drawing ahead.
-
-Then, having demonstrated her superiority, she began to reduce sail so
-as to give the _Sarah_ the lead.
-
-Jude turned away and leaned with her back against the rail; then Satan
-told her to take the wheel and went below for a “wash.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE STEERSMAN
-
-
-Ratcliffe, taking his seat on the bottom of the dinghy, watched her as
-she steered, the old panama on the back of her head and her eyes roving
-from the binnacle to the luff of the mainsail. The following wind blew
-warm, and the gentle creak of a block, the slash of the bow-wash, and
-the occasional click of the rudder chain were the only sounds in all
-the blue world ringing them.
-
-A mile or more behind them the _Natchez_ showed, a triangle of pearl,
-Palm Island had vanished, and nothing remained in all the wheel of sea
-but a trace of smoke to the southward,—the smoke of some freighter
-hull down on the horizon.
-
-The sturdy little figure at the wheel seemed to have forgotten his
-existence. He was wondering whether the grudge was still being kept up
-against him, and what it was all about, and whether this indifference
-was real or assumed, when a voice made him start:
-
-“Say! Have you swallowed your tongue?”
-
-“No, but I didn’t like to speak to you.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“Well, I’ve heard you mustn’t speak to the man at the wheel.”
-
-“Who stuffed you with that yarn?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve seen it stuck up on steamboats, and besides I thought you
-were in a temper with me.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Well, you said davits were only good for hoisting fools off a ship.”
-
-“So they are.”
-
-“I thought you meant me.”
-
-“Thought you was a fool, did you?”
-
-“Then last night you got in a wax—Jude.”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Nothing—only—we don’t want to quarrel—and we haven’t been the same
-since last night, somehow.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. You wouldn’t let me help to clear the things this
-morning.”
-
-“Wouldn’t I? Well, you can help to steer the ship now. Kin you steer?”
-
-“Only a boat.”
-
-“Well, it’s easy learnt, and you’re not much use aboard unless you can
-take your hand at the wheel.”
-
-He said nothing for a minute, admiring the way she had steered clear of
-the subject he had started on.
-
-“I don’t mind,” said he at last. “I’ll learn some time—you can teach
-me.”
-
-Jude let her eyes rest on him. Then suddenly, and with the vehemence
-and force of a Methodist preacher driving home a point from the pulpit,
-she spoke:
-
-“_Air_ you stuck to the bottom of that dinghy with cobbler’s wax?”
-
-He laughed and stood up.
-
-“That’s right,” said Jude. “Now come’n take the wheel. Some time’s no
-time! You’ve got to learn to handle her now if you want to. Go behind
-me and look over my shoulder—that’s right.”
-
-He stood behind her, wondering what the next command would be. It came
-almost at once.
-
-“Stick your eye on the compass card.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-“S’long as the pointer’s like that she’s on her course. Now I’ll let
-her off a spoke or two—keep your eye on the card.”
-
-The pointer altered its indication, and the mainsail seemed suddenly
-attacked by the ague.
-
-“Now she’s on her course again,” said Jude, altering the wheel. “Take
-hold of her. I’ll stand by to give you a hand if you want it.”
-
-He took the spokes she had been holding as she relinquished them, and
-the first sensation that came to him was the feeling that he had taken
-hold of something alive, something alive and sensitive as a hare.
-The wheel seemed to have a motive power and will of its own, and the
-infernal compass card to take affront at the least movement of the helm.
-
-Jude rested her hand on his left hand to show him how and give him
-confidence, and at the touch of her firm little hand the stage-fright
-that comes to every steersman when he first takes the wheel left him.
-
-In five minutes he had got the hang of the thing, or thought so.
-
-“Can you run her alone?” asked Jude.
-
-“Rather! It’s as simple as simple.”
-
-“Right,” said Jude.
-
-She drew off and took her seat on the dinghy.
-
-“Easy, ain’t it?”
-
-“Easy as pie.”
-
-The wind freshened a bit, and the _Sarah_, heeling slightly, took
-matters in her own hand for a moment and fell off her course. He put
-the wheel over too much, and like a frightened horse she went plunging
-away in the opposite direction, the wind spilling from her sails and
-the main boom threatening to swing to port.
-
-In a moment Jude was beside him, her hands on the spokes, and the
-_Sarah_ on her course again.
-
-A voice came from below, where Satan, like a sensitive plant, had
-evidently felt the alteration in their course.
-
-“What the —— are you doin’ up there?”
-
-“Learning Rat to steer,” cried Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe, himself again, retaking the wheel, turned to her.
-
-“For God’s sake,” said he, “don’t call me that!”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Rat.”
-
-“For the land’s sake what’s the matter with it?”
-
-“It’s a beastly name. If you want something short, call me what
-everyone else calls me.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Bobby.”
-
-“You’re lettin’ her off again,” said Jude. “Starboard—that’s it. Here’s
-Satan: he’ll go on learnin’ you. I’m goin’ below for a wash.”
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-LONE REEF
-
-
-It was the morning of the third day out, somewhere about four o’clock.
-The moon had set, and the _Sarah_ was lifting against a gentle head
-sea, boosting the foam from her bows under the light of a million stars.
-
-Satan was at the wheel, Jude below in her hammock, and Ratcliffe at
-the weather rail, close to Satan. He was leaning over watching the
-water,—gouts and lines of star-shot foam, planes of ebony blackness,
-and now and then, deep down, the bloom of phosphorus like the life in
-the heart of a black opal.
-
-“What time do you reckon we’ll strike the reef?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“We’re right on to it now,” replied Satan, “and if it wasn’t more’n a
-five-knot breeze I’d heave her to.”
-
-“You aren’t afraid of running on it?”
-
-“Lord, no! There’s no smell of it yet.”
-
-“You mean to say you could smell it?”
-
-“Waal,” said Satan, “I don’t know if it’s rightly smell or hearin’ or
-what, but I’d know it, even with the wind as she is. I reckon it’s
-maybe the water. Shoal water smells different from deep, and it’s shoal
-water right up from four miles to Lone. Feels different too.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“More choppy—I dunno—different. Jude would tell you the same. Pap had
-the sense of it too. Western ocean folks can smell ice miles off when
-the bergs are cruisin’ about. I reckon it’s the same thing— There’s
-the sun.”
-
-Right ahead, as if touched by a wizard, the stars had faded above
-the sea-line, the sky over there looked sick, a stain on the velvety
-splendor of the night.
-
-A great gull passed the _Sarah_, flying topmast high, and now far
-off and as though coming through a pinhole could be heard a creaky
-lamentable sound,—the crying of gulls.
-
-“I’ve got the smell of her now,” said Satan. “Them gulls you’re hearin’
-aren’t all of them from Lone. There’s a big spit to east’ard, and
-they’ll be comin’ up against the wind. Say, will you take a bet?”
-
-“What sort?”
-
-“I’ll bet you even dollars Cleary hasn’t held on same as we’ve done the
-last six hours. He was droppin’ astern a long way last time I sighted
-him. He’ll have seen the reef on the chart right ahead of him, and his
-navigation is no account: hasn’t no sea sense. He’ll be hove to singin’
-‘Lead, kindly light’ and listenin’ for the breakers—What you say?”
-
-“I’d rather bet on the _Sarah_.”
-
-“Maybe you’re right,” said Satan.
-
-The head sails showed hard now against the east, and almost before
-one could turn and look again the blaze had come above a band of
-opal-tinted mist which passed and vanished, leaving on the horizon a
-train of fire pale as guinea gold.
-
-In that moment, far ahead and as if suddenly sketched by a pencil
-against the eastern light, they saw the naked spars of a vessel
-anchored in the dawn.
-
-“That’s Cark,” said Satan. “Told you we’d find him here—damn swab!”
-
-“Well, I couldn’t have believed it,” said Ratcliffe. He remembered the
-sailing of the _Juan_, presumably for Havana, and though he had sized
-up Sellers and Carquinez for what they were worth, still, the evidence
-of their duplicity, here before his eyes, came as a shock.
-
-In a moment it was blotted out by the sun, washed away in the blazing,
-seething ocean of light that sprang on them as if to the blast of a
-trumpet.
-
-Satan swung his head over his shoulders. Ratcliffe followed his gaze.
-The sea to westward was empty, not a sign of a sail.
-
-“Cleary’s gone,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, he’ll be nosin’ along soon,” said Satan. “He’s sure to come close
-enough to see Cark’s topmasts, and then he’ll pounce.”
-
-He put the helm over, and the _Sarah_ payed off to the north so as to
-round the northern spur of the reef.
-
-“That’s the wreck,” said Satan, “that line like a lump of rock.”
-
-Ratcliffe, shading his eyes, could now see the reef, long and
-foam-flecked, stretching from north to south, the line of rock
-absolutely unsuggestive of a wreck, beyond the reef the _Juan’s_ masts
-and spars, and about the reef-spurs the gulls flitting and wheeling;
-but, despite the movement of the gulls and the splendor of the morning,
-the place struck him as the most desolate he had ever seen.
-
-“Nothing stirring,” said Satan, as they rounded the north spur and the
-boom came over. “Them lowsy Spaniards are all in their bunks. Rap on
-the deck for Jude. Hi, Jude, y’lazy dog, show a leg! What you doin’!”
-
-“Comin’,” cried a voice, followed by the sounds of thrashing about and
-inquiries of the Lord to know where her clothes were.
-
-Then at the hatch appeared a face blind with sleep. She ran with
-Ratcliffe to get the lashings off the anchor, helped to let go the
-halyards, and as the anchor fell and the _Sarah_ swung to her moorings
-a couple of cable lengths from and outside the _Juan_, down she sat on
-the deck like a person collapsing under a heavy load.
-
-The sight of the _Juan_ did not seem to move her at all. Like a
-dormouse suddenly electrified into life and movement, the stimulus
-withdrawn, the mechanism ceased to act. She yawned, turned on her side,
-and hid her face in the crook of her arm as if to shut out the sun.
-Satan, whistling between his teeth, stood with his hands on the rail
-looking at the _Juan_.
-
-“They’re wakin’ up,” said he.
-
-A fellow with a red handkerchief round his head had appeared on deck.
-He came and looked over the side at the _Sarah_, then vanished.
-
-“Gone to wake Cark out of his beauty sleep,” said Satan. “Look! There’s
-two more of them movin’ about like sick flies. Will you look at the
-way they’ve stowed them sails?—and they’ve got her a sight too close
-to the reef. Get a Western Ocean sea suddenly runnin’ and the anchor to
-drag, where’d they be?”
-
-He turned and contemplated the prostrate figure of Jude.
-
-“There’s another sleepin’ beauty,” said he. “Ought a be married to
-Cark. Well they’d look in the same hammock with Sellers fannin’ the
-flies off them!”
-
-The figure on the deck turned on its back, stretched out its arms,
-yawned, and then sat up holding its knees.
-
-Youth may sneer at Age; but, anyhow, Age knows nothing of the weariness
-of Youth, of a morning.
-
-Satan, satisfied with the semi-resurrection, dropped below, and
-promptly the figure fell on its back again with arms outspread.
-
-“Get up!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“I’m getting— Say!”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I—ow—yow—ain’t it awful bein’ tired?”
-
-“You’ll be all right when you’re on your feet. Get up!”
-
-“I’m getting— Say, d’you know where the fishing lines are? Starboard
-locker. Fetch’m up, an’ that chunk of grouper I kep’ for bait—in the
-tub.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-When he returned on deck she was drying her head in the sun, having
-soused it in a bucket of water.
-
-Then they dropped a line.
-
-Away through the diamond-clear water, thirty feet down, they could see
-the slack of the anchor chain like a conger on the coral and sponge.
-
-A nurse shark passed like a grisly ghost, then a shoal of sardines,
-then a young whip ray not bigger than a soup plate, then a mangrove
-schnapper that nosed the bait, swallowed it, and was hauled on board.
-
-“He’ll be enough,” said Jude. “You clean him while I get the frying pan
-ready. Hullo! blest if Cark’s not putting off a boat!”
-
-A boat had been dropped on the starboard side of the _Juan_ and was
-rounding her stern.
-
-“That’s Sellers,” said Jude, shading her eyes. “Satan! Below there!”
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Sellers is coming off.”
-
-“I’ll be up in a minute.”
-
-The boat came alongside, just as it had come at Palm Island,—same
-boat, same crew, Sellers just the same.
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers.
-
-“Hullo yourself! Thought you was gone to Havana.”
-
-“Thought you was to wait for us at Pa’m Island,” said Sellers. “Hullo,
-Satan, that you? How about your contrac’ with us?”
-
-Satan, who had just come on deck, leaned over the rail and contemplated
-Sellers. Then he spoke.
-
-“God A’mighty!” said Satan. He stared at Sellers for a moment as one
-might stare at a prodigy. Then he broke out:
-
-“Contrac’! Holy George! _What_ you say, contrac’? You daar to hook
-onto my channel plates, and I’ll buzz this fish at y’r head! Shove off!
-What are you doin’ here, anyway? Why aren’t you at Havana gettin’ the
-dynamite?”
-
-“Why ain’t you waitin’ for us at Pa’m Island?” logically responded
-Sellers. “If you want to know why we’re here. I’ll tell you. It was a
-bet I had with Cark.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I bet him you’d never wait for us at Pa’m Island, but’d light out for
-here to raise the stuff if we went foolin’ off to Havana. Seems I was
-right, don’t it?”
-
-The impudence of this made Ratcliffe gasp, but left Satan quite unmoved.
-
-“S’pose we quit lyin’,” said he.
-
-“I’m willin’ to follow soot,” replied Sellers.
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “follow soot off to the wreck an’ get your
-workin’ party onto the business like hot nails. I’ll be over to help
-you soon’s we’ve had breakfast. You’ve no time to waste.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Cleary’s after you.”
-
-This news seemed to take the wind out of Sellers. He sat for a moment
-without speaking.
-
-“How do you know that?” asked he at length.
-
-“He put into Palm Island not more’n four hours after you’d gone; said
-you and Cark had tricked him and he was after your blood. I told him
-that wasn’t no concern of mine. He asked me had I seen you.”
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“The truth. Think I’d perjure me soul lyin’ for the likes of you and
-Cark? Told him I was goin’ to join you.”
-
-“_Sufferin’_ Moses! You’ve put your hoof in it this time! Go on and
-don’t stand waggin’ your tail! What’d he say?”
-
-“Nothin’, didn’t say nothin’, but when I put out he put out after me.”
-
-“Followed you?”
-
-“Yep. I only lost him last night; but it’s ten to one he’ll drop on us.
-He’ll be bustin’ everywhere round here.”
-
-“He will,” said Sellers, “and then it’s half shares he’ll be wantin’,
-not to mention Cark’s liver. I’m sweatin’! Cark’s let that chap down
-cruel. I owns it. Did it against my advice. Did he have many with him?”
-
-“Reckon so. The old _Natchez_ was full as a beehive with the
-toughest-lookin’ crowd.”
-
-The sight of Sellers’ face at this announcement set Jude off. She
-seized the fish and started off to the galley with it, while Sellers,
-having communed with himself for a moment, spoke:
-
-“Crooked’s a bad course to run,” said this moralist. “I’ve always told
-Cark so. I told you we’d no dynamite aboard,—neither we had,—but
-there’s a keg of powder in the hold, and Cark reckoned to sample the
-goods without your help. There, it’s out! You’d have had your share
-as long as I’d a leg to stand on, honest you would, s’far as I was
-concerned, and that’s all I have to say pers’nally on the matter. What
-I’m gettin’ at is this: If Cleary turns up, there’ll be hell of a
-rough house. Will you stand for us if there’s fightin’ to be done?”
-
-“That depends,” said Satan.
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I’m not trustin’ you no more, not without the coin in my hand. Cark’s
-got to plank down something on account, if it’s no more’n a thousand
-dollars. If he don’t, I’ll put out for Havana and blow the gaff. You’ve
-overhauled the wreck?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Well, you can judge what the chances are. You hop back lively as a
-flea and tell Cark what I’m sayin’. Gold coin and right into my fist
-this mornin’, or I’ll give the show away. It’s his own doin’. If he’d
-played straight with me, I’d have trusted him. Seein’ he’s played
-crooked, he’ll have to pay. One thousand dollars, or I go back to
-Havana and you’ll have a t’pedoboat on top of you, to say nothin’ of
-Cleary!”
-
-“I’ll tell him,” said Sellers. “Come over to the reef soon as you’re
-ready and I’ll give you word of what he says. I reckon it’ll be all
-right. One thousand dollars?”
-
-“Gold coin, and tell him it’ll be double after eleven o’clock.”
-
-“Oh, he won’t kick,” said Sellers.
-
-The boat shoved away.
-
-Ratcliffe remembered what Satan had said about the chart and the hidden
-writing in it and the high probability that the bones of the _Nombre
-de Dios_ were lying elsewhere than here. More than ever did it seem to
-him that Satan was the spider of this web,—not a malignant spider,
-for the flies he was catching in the form of Carquinez and Sellers,
-and possibly Cleary, were the weavers of the web, in which they seemed
-tangling themselves. Satan only fell in with circumstance and took toll.
-
-“Look here!” said he. “Suppose Carquinez pays you a thousand dollars’
-advance, and suppose you don’t find any treasure, will you pay him
-back?”
-
-“Why should I pay him back?” asked Satan. “I’ve given him the location,
-and that’s worth a thousand anyway.”
-
-“But you said there was nothing on the chart, that it was a fake.”
-
-“Lord! I said no such thing. I said that in my ’pinion the stuff wasn’t
-here; but I may be wrong. There’s Jude hollering for us to come to
-breakfast. Come along down and I’ll show you my meanin’.”
-
-He scarcely spoke during the meal, and when it was over he took the
-tobacco box from his pocket and opened the chart on the table.
-
-“Now,” said Satan, “I’ll show you what I mean by sayin’ the stuff may
-be here, but it’s a big sight larger maybe it isn’t. Don’t crowd me.
-Stand behind me on either side and keep your eyes on the chart. Well,
-now, there’s Lone Reef with the creek marked and the name of her, and
-there’s Rum Cay to the left, and there’s the latitude and longitude
-wrote up—all plain, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, seein’ Rum Cay is given, and seein’ Lone Reef is down on all
-the charts and as well known as Cuba to any sailor man, what did the
-man want stickin’ the latitude and longitude down for? The chart’s
-not a sailin’ chart. A blind monkey wouldn’t use it nor bother about
-examinin’ the latitude and longitude wrote on it. He’d just say, ‘Lone
-Reef is the place I want to get to,’ and he’d get there with the
-ordinary ship’s chart.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “in my opinion the chap that sank the _Nombre de
-Dios_ knew of the old wreck lyin’ over there on Lone Reef and used it
-as a blind, for the latitude and longitude wrote there so faint that
-no man would bother to try to read it isn’t the latitude and longitude
-of Lone Reef; it’s a hundred and ten mile out. It’s the latitude and
-longitude of Cormorant Cay, a blasted sandbank down to s’uthard, all
-shoals and gulls, and that’s where the _Nombre de Dios_ lies, in my
-’pinion.”
-
-Ratcliffe whistled.
-
-“Of course I may be wrong,” said Satan, “there’s no knowin’.”
-
-“I see what you mean,” said Ratcliffe. “This chap reckoned that anyone
-finding or stealing the chart would take the latitude and longitude
-written there for granted as the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef,
-and not bother to examine the figures and verify them; having no cause,
-indeed, to do so, seeing Lone Reef is so well known and on all the
-charts.”
-
-“That’s how it seems to me,” said Satan. “I’m not sayin’ I’m right, but
-that’s how it seems to me, and if he figured that no one would trouble
-about readin’ and verifyin’ the latitude and longitude as given there
-he was right. Pap didn’t, and it was only by chance I did, a month
-ago.”
-
-“Have you seen Cormorant Cay?”
-
-“Lord, yes! It’s a lagoon sandspit, and the hooker may be in the lagoon
-for all I know, or under the sand for all I know, or I may be wrong all
-through and that may be her on the reef over there. Well, we’ve got to
-see; but it seems to me I’m pretty safe anyway, if I can touch Cark for
-that thousand.”
-
-So thought Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE WRECK
-
-
-After breakfast, leaving Jude to keep ship, they got the dinghy
-overboard and rowed for the reef. Here to eastward the landing was made
-easy by a scrap of beach a hundred yards long, where the boat of the
-_Natchez_ was lying, having landed Sellers and his working party.
-
-Satan, scrambling, led the way over the rocks to the central creek
-between the two reef arms, where, ponded round with water, lay the
-wreck.
-
-The reef, seen from the deck of the _Sarah_, showed little sign of a
-wreck. One had to land on it to discover that the long hogback of rock
-rising from the creek had structure. There was not even the indication
-of where a mast had been, bowsprit there was none, stem and stern were
-almost indistinguishable; yet, standing there, with the gulls flying
-round him and the lonely tune of the sea in his ears, Ratcliffe knew
-that the thing he was gazing upon was a ship. Structure speaks! You can
-destroy it, but can scarcely disguise it.
-
-Between the right arm of the reef and the starboard bow of the hulk a
-ridge of rock gave access to the deck, and as the others crossed over
-he took his seat to rest for a moment and contemplate the thing before
-him.
-
-To see the Sphinx properly, one should visit it alone, and so with the
-great wreck of the _Nombre de Dios_,—if that were its name,—crouching
-here, camouflaged with rock-growth and weed, swollen, sinister in the
-blazing sunlight, and sung to by the chime and gurgle of the sea.
-
-Sunk in shallow water,—so the tale ran,—raised by that alteration in
-level constantly in progress among the reefs and islands, freighted
-with treasure, and guilty of the death of many a man—well, the tale
-here rang true. On board the _Sarah_ one might doubt, but here, even in
-face of that chart which seemed faked, one believed,—mainly, perhaps,
-because one wanted to believe.
-
-Here, sitting on the reef, one became part of the story, just as when
-the lights of the theater are lowered one becomes part of the play.
-The flower-blue sky, the sapphire sea, the tepid wind, the shouting
-gulls, all became confederates. One saw, in the far past, the _Nombre
-de Dios_ setting sail,—the tragic figure of Lopez on her quarterdeck;
-the sinking of her in shallow, reef-strewn water; the escape in the
-boats; men dying of starvation; the lapse of years; Lopez dying with
-her secret still hidden; and Lone Reef rising still higher out of the
-sea to expose more fully the murdered ship.
-
-The reef had always been here, for it was down in the oldest charts.
-Had it really risen? Was that chart, as Satan supposed, a lie?
-
-According to Sellers’ story, the _Nombre de Dios_ had been sunk in
-six-fathom water, thirty-six-foot. Well, if that was so, Satan was
-right, for the highest point of the reef was only six feet above water,
-and when she was sunk the reef would have been thirty feet under water
-and so uncharted.
-
-There was the chance that Lopez might have sailed her into the creek,
-deeper in those days, and that the creek bottom might have raised
-itself to its present level, the reef remaining the same. This seemed
-unlikely.
-
-And yet the decks must have been under water once, to account for the
-old coral deposits.
-
-It was low tide in the creek now: high-tide mark was six feet below the
-deck level. He tried to calculate how far she must have been lifted,
-gave up the attempt, and, rising, crossed by the rock bridge to her
-deck.
-
-This bridge of rock was another factor in the insoluble problem. It
-seemed placed there by some marine architect without reason, built up
-out of huge fragments as if from some fallen peak or spire.
-
-“Step careful!” shouted Satan.
-
-The warning came just in time, for the deck was slippery as ice in
-patches where a thin moss had grown,—a gray, greasy moss, treacherous
-as Death, and covering the droppings of innumerable sea birds.
-
-He made his way aft, where Sellers was standing with Satan and the
-half-dozen Spaniards that formed the working party. Drills and picks
-lay about, and marks showed where work had been started the day before.
-
-“It’s a foot thick,” said Sellers, “whatever it is, and harder than
-cement. Rock!—this ain’t coral rock, not such as I’ve ever seen.
-Harveyized steel’s more like it, and after that there’s the deck
-planking to be got through.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “I told you it was a dynamite job, and if you’d
-played fair and got the stuff we’d have been a long sight nearer the
-end of the business, even if we started a week later. But there’s no
-use in talkin’ now, and there’s no use in messin’ about pickin’ holes
-here and there. Your job is to make a hole big enough to sink that
-barrel of powder of yours—take me? Sink it half deep and then lay a
-fuse and fire the whole lot at once and risk chances. It’s ten to one
-you’ll split the deck right open at one go. As for sinkin’ little holes
-and usin’ small charges, you’ll be ten years on the job.”
-
-Sellers rose up and wiped his brow and cast his eyes over the sea to
-westward, evidently with Cleary in his mind.
-
-“Well, I’m not sure you aren’t right,” said he. “I’ll fix it that way;
-but it’ll be a long job with the tools we have.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan. “And now to the question of them dollars.”
-
-“Oh, them—I’ve spoke to Cark, and he’s agreeable.”
-
-“Oh, is he? Well, then. I’ll go right aboard with you now while he’s
-warm and get them dollars into my hand. Set your men at work and you
-come along with me.”
-
-Sellers hung fire for a moment, then he agreed, gave the working party
-their directions, and led the way off the deck across the rock bridge.
-
-He pushed off with Satan in the boat of the _Juan_. Satan asked
-Ratcliffe to take the dinghy back to the _Sarah_.
-
-“You won’t want to be hangin’ about the reef,” said Satan; “you’ll be
-more comfortable aboard ship. And tell Jude to be sure and wash that
-old jumper I left on the rail. She’s forgot it, for there it’s hangin’
-still.”
-
-“Right,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-MUTINY
-
-
-As he sculled up alongside the _Sarah_ there was no sign of Jude. He
-tied up the boat and came over the rail.
-
-“Jude, where are you?”
-
-“What you want?” came a surly voice from below. She was in the
-“saloon,” for he could hear her moving about.
-
-“You.”
-
-“Well, you kin go on wantin’. I’m sick!”
-
-“What on earth’s the matter with you?”
-
-Pause—then the voice came again mixed with sounds as of plates being
-put away.
-
-“I’m sick of the hull of this crowd—washing up and cooking and you two
-playin’ about!”
-
-“Come up on deck.”
-
-“Sha’n’t! I’m going to scatter—soon’s I’ve finished clearing away.
-Life of a dog!” indistinct grumbles tailing away into silence.
-
-He lit a pipe and waited.
-
-Presently the companionway creaked and a head appeared at the cabin
-hatch. He said nothing while the whole body emerged, stood erect on the
-deck, and shaded its eyes toward the _Juan_. Then, still speechless,
-it leaned on the rail, looking toward the reef and apparently lost in
-thought.
-
-The sleeves of the guernsey were rolled up to mid-arm, ill temper
-seemed to have vanished and to have been replaced by sudden laziness,
-and as she lolled, kicking up a bare heel, she whistled.
-
-She seemed utterly unconscious of his presence—or pretending to be.
-Then her eyes fell to the water alongside and the dinghy. The whistling
-ceased and her face turned to him.
-
-“Say,” said Jude, “where did you learn to tie up boats?”
-
-He came beside her.
-
-“What’s the matter?”
-
-“Nothing at present, but give her half an hour and she’d work herself
-free of that tomfool knot.”
-
-“I’ll go down and retie it.”
-
-“No use in troubling, I’m going off in her in a minute, and she’ll hang
-there till I’m ready.”
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“Never _you_ mind! You’ve been playing about on the reef, and you’ve
-got to stick here now and boil the potatoes! Me alone here all the
-morning!”
-
-“Why, I wasn’t more than an hour on the reef—and I never knew you
-wanted to go. If I had, I shouldn’t have gone, honestly I shouldn’t.”
-
-Jude contemplated him a moment with a more friendly face.
-
-“Well,” said she, “I’m going, anyhow.”
-
-“But where to?”
-
-“Gulls-nesting.”
-
-“On the reef?”
-
-“Lord, no! To the spit away there to east’ard. You can’t see it: it’s
-near seven mile away.”
-
-“But you can’t row there alone.”
-
-“Can’t I? You bet I can, there and back by sundown!”
-
-“But what will Satan say?”
-
-Jude laughed. “He’ll be wild—that’s what I want to make him. I’ll
-learn him! Him and his jumpers!”
-
-She took the jumper off the rail, rolled it up and threw it on the
-deck, then she dived below and reappeared with a water jar and some
-provisions done up in a bundle. She had evidently been making her
-preparations.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “If you’re going, I’ll go too.”
-
-“No, you won’t!” said Jude. “You’ve got to stick here and look after
-the ship—and see how you like it.”
-
-“Not I—I couldn’t face Satan; besides, if you want to make him wild
-really, hell be twice as wild if we both go; besides, I’m sick of the
-ship. Come on: I’ve never been gulls-nesting.”
-
-Jude, evidently weakening, put down her bundle.
-
-“Well, there ain’t enough grub for two,” she complained. “I reckon
-there’s enough water, though.”
-
-“Well, get some more grub.”
-
-She cast her eyes about in indecision, now at Ratcliffe, now at the
-_Juan_, then, with one of those sudden changes so indicative of her,
-she made up her mind and dived below.
-
-Five minutes later she reappeared with another small bundle.
-
-Ratcliffe, during her absence, had torn the back off an old letter. He
-had a pencil in his pocket, and, scrawling “gone gulls-nesting on the
-sandspit” on the paper, stuck the missive to the mast with his penknife.
-
-Then, bundling the food and the water jar into the dinghy, they started.
-
-He took the sculls at first, Jude steering, her eyes fixed ahead under
-the shade of her old panama. She could tell exactly the spot where
-the spit lay. She could not see it, but she could see in the sky now
-and then over there a faint trace like a haze of smoke that formed,
-vanished and reformed,—gulls.
-
-Occasionally she looked back where the deserted _Sarah Tyler_ lay,
-with the _Juan_ seeming now close beside her and the reef behind them.
-Smaller and smaller they grew and more vast the ocean, an infinity of
-blazing lazulite, without horizon, silent, but sonorous with light.
-
-The current was with them.
-
-Satan had made a small mast and lug sail for the dinghy. That was the
-job he had been engaged on while Jude and Ratcliffe had landed on Palm
-Island to get provisions from the cache. He had worked with all the
-care of a fond mother making a garment for a beloved child. The little
-mast, scraped and varnished, the sail made of an extra special bit of
-stuff wheedled from Thelusson, were in the boat, and, a breeze now
-springing up from the sou’west, Jude gave orders to step the mast. Then
-she took the sheet, he slipped from his seat to the bottom of the boat,
-and the dinghy, bending to the three-knot breeze, lifted to the gentle
-swell.
-
-A great herring hog passed them, plunging like a dolphin, and a
-flying fish with blind, staring eyes missed the sail by a hand’s
-breadth and flickered into the sea ahead; then a strange-looking gull
-swooped toward them from nowhere, hung for a moment with domed wings,
-honey-colored against the sun, and passed with a cry into the great
-silence, a silence broken only by the slap and tinkle of the water
-against the planking.
-
-Ratcliffe lit his pipe. Jude, steering, seemed to have forgotten her
-last trace of grudge against him, forgotten Satan and the jumper and
-the fact that she had been left to her lonesome while they had been
-playing on the reef and her desire to cut the whole show and start a
-“la’ndry.” She seemed just now a different person, companionable and
-friendly and sane, as though the cooking and cleaning and the worries
-and troubles of the _Sarah_ had been lifted like a dish-cover from her
-prisoned soul.
-
-It was the first time they had been really alone together, and the
-companionship that springs from loneliness helped.
-
-The gull reminded her of gulls she had seen on the Louisiana coast
-where the cypress swamps come down to meet the sea and you could hear
-“the bullfrogs shoutin’ all night, ‘Paddy got drunk, Paddy got drunk,
-Paddy got drunk,’ and the other chaps answering up, ‘Bottle of rum,
-bottle of rum, bottle of rum,’ and the ’gaters would come alongside
-grinding against the planking sniffing for bits—ever seen a ’gater?”
-
-“Only stuffed.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, in museums and places.”
-
-“What’s them?” asked Jude.
-
-“Oh, places where they keep stuffed birds and animals.”
-
-“Git a bit more to sta’board to trim the boat; _sta_’board I said, not
-port! And what in the nation do they want keeping them things for?”
-
-“Jude,” said he lazily.
-
-“What?”
-
-“This is the jolliest time I ever spent. I’ve never felt free before
-till just now. I’d like to go sailing round and round the world in this
-little dinghy and forget civilization. That’s the place where they keep
-stuffed birds to look at, and stuffed animals in museums, and where the
-men and women are stuffed idiots. Do you remember the morning I came on
-board the _Sarah_ first?”
-
-“Them pajamas!”
-
-“Yes, them pajamas. Only for them you wouldn’t have laughed at me, and
-if you hadn’t laughed at me I shouldn’t have come aboard, perhaps.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you would.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Satan wanted you.”
-
-“Oh, did he? Bless Satan!—he made me young again.”
-
-“Lord! you ain’t so old as all that.”
-
-“I’m over twenty-one—and you’re only—”
-
-“Raisin’ sixteen,” said Jude, with steady eyes fixed ahead where the
-gulls above the spit were now well visible.
-
-He refilled and lit his pipe, bending under the gunnel.
-
-“You’re mighty fond of that old pipe,” said Jude.
-
-“Have a whiff?”
-
-“Not me! I had half a cigar once; Dirk Peterson dared me. It was one
-of them wheelings, black, slick-lookin’ cigars. He and me an’ anuther
-boy’d gone to look at the nigger girls bathin’ and clod them—”
-
-“Where on earth was that?”
-
-“Vera Cruz.”
-
-“Oh, and who was Dirk Peterson?”
-
-“Son of an old feller that run a dridger in the harbor, Yankee,
-half-Dutch, hadn’t only one eye, and wasn’t more’n eleven, biggest liar
-from here to C’necticut. His face was all chawed up, and he said he’d
-got it like that and lost his eye fightin’ with a tiger. Confl’ent
-smallpox was what had done him, so Pap said; but the boys believed him
-till that day I was telling you of, he fetched out a half cigar he’d
-stole or picked up somewhere and a box of waxios and dared me smoke
-her—and I lit her up, like a durned fool!”
-
-“What happened then?”
-
-“Oh, lots of things,” said Jude. “First of all the harbor begun
-spinnin’, and then it went on till two tides more I’d have been inside
-out, when Dirk shouts to some chaps to come an’ look at Jonah tryin’ to
-bring up the whale. That got my goat, and I laid for him by the foot
-and brought him down and near beat the head off him. Then I got sick on
-him again, and he run home to his mother, with all the fellers after
-him wantin’ to know about that tiger.”
-
-“He couldn’t fight?”
-
-“N’more than a jewfish.”
-
-“Have you had many fights with boys?”
-
-“Not me—not with Satan handy to do the fighting. I’d only to say to
-one, ‘You touch me and I’ll put Satan on you,’ and he’d shrivel.”
-
-“Well, I shouldn’t care to tackle Satan myself,” admitted Ratcliffe.
-“And Sellers seemed to think a lot of him that way, for I heard him
-asking if he’d stand by if Cleary showed fight.”
-
-“Garn!” said Jude. “Cleary—he’s no good; Sellers is no good, neither.
-There’s not a man in these seas nowadays that’s got the fight of a
-tomcat in him. That’s what Pap used to say. He was great on old times,
-and used to string off yarns about the pirates and the high doin’s
-there used to be, and he said we were nothing but a lot of scowbankers
-now—and that’s the truth! If Cleary comes up with Cark, they’ll be
-shaking hands and kissing one another, feeling in each other’s pockets
-all the time to see if they can’t steal five cents. In the old days
-they’d have been cutting each other’s throats.”
-
-“Would you like to be a pirate, Jude?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Murdering people?”
-
-“Oh, ask me another.”
-
-“How’d you like to kiss Cark?”
-
-“How’d you? Hear the gulls!”
-
-The crying of the gulls above the spit was coming up against the wind,
-a lamentable sound across the lone blue sea.
-
-“We’re not more’n a mile away,” said the steersman. “You can get a
-sight of the spit if you raise yourself. That’s it, the white line
-runnin’ north and south; but the gulls don’t seem to be as many as they
-used to be a year ago. It’s a bit early for the full laying season, but
-there’s sure to be turkles’ eggs. Better get your shoes and stockin’s
-off and roll up your pants, for it’s shallow beaching and we’ll have to
-run her up.”
-
-“Won’t you take down the sail and row her in?”
-
-“Not me. There’s no sea on and I’ll run her up as she is.”
-
-They held on, the gulls shouting over them now, and the sigh of the
-sandspit, fuming to the lazy sea, in their ears. It was full tide, and
-as the keel touched the sand, letting the sheet go and the sail to flog
-in the wind, they tumbled over and dragged the little boat high and dry.
-
-Then Jude took down the sail.
-
-“You aren’t hungry yet?” said Jude.
-
-“No; are you?”
-
-“Well, I can wait. Well leave the grub and the water jar in the boat
-and cover them with the sail,—keep the sun off. Lend’s a hand.”
-
-They covered the provisions, hauled the boat up another foot or two to
-make sure, and, that done, Ratcliffe looked around him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-THE SANDSPIT
-
-
-That was one of the strangest moments in his life. He had never seen
-anything comparable to this long white street of sand curbed with
-emerald waves, leading nowhere, lost, useless, desolate, brilliant with
-a brilliance that hit the heart as well as the eye, flown over by the
-white gulls.
-
-The sands fizzed to the sea wind, and away to north and south they
-trembled and waved in the heat; but the curious thing was the fact
-that, despite their loneliness, one did not feel alone. The place
-seemed populous, filled with a crowd that for a moment had made itself
-invisible. Perhaps it was the riot of color and the brilliance of
-light: the effect remained.
-
-Jude, looking round, seemed preoccupied about something. It was the
-absence of gulls.
-
-“Last time I was here,” said Jude, “it was all over gulls’ nests, right
-here in the middle. Now they seem to have gone off to the ends. Wonder
-what’s come to them?”
-
-“Maybe it’s too early for them.”
-
-“It’s a bit early, but not much: there’s always early breeders. No,
-they’ve just took their hook—gulls are like that. We’ll have to go
-and hunt at the ends. You go north and I’ll go south.”
-
-“Well,” said he, “it’s an awfully long way. Suppose we have something
-to eat first?”
-
-“I don’t mind,” said Jude.
-
-They got the provisions and water jar from the boat and sat down on the
-sands. It was past noon and cooler, for the breeze had livened up, the
-outgoing tide was leaving a strip of wet sand glittering like a golden
-sword, and the fume of beach filled the air resonant with the gentle
-rhythm of the waves.
-
-They ate, leaning on their sides like old Athenians. They had no cup;
-so they took it in turns to drink from the water jar. Then he lit a
-pipe.
-
-“This is jolly,” said he.
-
-“Ain’t bad,” said Jude.
-
-She made a pillow of sand for her head, and then, on her back with her
-head on the pillow, lay like a starfish, spread-eagled, her hat over
-her eyes.
-
-He followed suit.
-
-“How about those gulls’ nests?” he asked.
-
-“Which ones?” evaded Jude.
-
-“The ones you were going to hunt for?”
-
-“Oh, them? Well, I reckon there’s dead loads of time.”
-
-“Lots—listen to the sand!”
-
-“It’s the wind blowing it.”
-
-“I know. All the same this is a rum place. Do you know when we landed
-here, just now, the first thing that struck me?”
-
-“Naw.”
-
-“Well, I felt as if the place was full of people.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know; people I couldn’t see, ghosts.”
-
-“Hants?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What made y’ think that?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. Somehow it reminded me of a story I’d once read.”
-
-“What was the story?”
-
-“About a beach over in the Pacific where wizards used to go and pick up
-shells.”
-
-“What’s them?”
-
-“Chaps that work magic and sell themselves to the devil. They can make
-themselves invisible so’s you can’t see them, and they used to come
-to the beach and pick up shells, and then turn the shells into silver
-dollars. You couldn’t see them, but you could hear them rustling about,
-like that sand, and talking to one another, and now and then you’d see
-a little fire blaze up.”
-
-Jude, interested, rolled over, rested her chin in her palms, and kicked
-a bare heel to the sun.
-
-“I reckon you’re not far wrong,” said Jude.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Well, I’ve felt the same way here myself, as if there was hants about
-and if you’d turn your head sharp you’d see someone behind you. Now
-you’ve talked of it. I’ll be always thinking it if I come here again.
-Wish you’d kept your head shut.”
-
-She sat up and looked about her.
-
-“Sorry,” said Ratcliffe, raising himself on his arm; “but if you come
-again I’ll come with you, and that’ll keep the hants off—unless I’m
-gone.”
-
-“How d’you mean?”
-
-“Well, when this cruise is over I’ll have to leave you both and go
-home. I don’t want to go.”
-
-Jude said nothing. Staring over the sea under the brim of her hat, she
-did not seem to have heard him.
-
-“I’d much sooner stick on here with you and Satan. What’s that thing
-floating out there?”
-
-“Turkle,” said Jude. “Look, he’s doing a dive!”
-
-He sat up beside her.
-
-“So he has. Well, he’s gone.” He sat with his knees up, looking over
-the sea.
-
-Alone here with Jude she seemed a different person from what she had
-been aboard the _Sarah_. The strange antagonism she had suddenly
-exhibited, and a trace of which had remained up till this morning,
-seemed to have utterly vanished. Perhaps it was the “hants,” or the
-loneliness, or a combination of both, but she seemed subdued.
-
-“Well, I don’t see what you want going for if you don’t want to,”
-suddenly said Jude, drawing up her knees and crossing them with her
-hands.
-
-“Oh, bother!” said he. “Don’t let’s think of it; besides, we’ll fix up
-something. I don’t want to go. I’ve never had such a jolly time in my
-life, and I’m not going to lose sight of you and Satan—unless you want
-to.”
-
-“Lord! I don’t want to.”
-
-“Well, that’s all right We’ll stick together, somehow, and let the old
-world go hang, and we’ll go hunting abalones and fishing—let’s make
-plans.”
-
-His arm somehow slipped round her waist, half automatically, just as
-one puts one’s hand on a person’s shoulder. When he realized what he
-had done, he realized, at the same time, that she did not seem to mind;
-more than that, she reciprocated in a way by letting her shoulder rest
-more comfortably against his. It was companionship, pure and simple,
-and her mind seemed far away, wrapped in the sun-blaze as with a
-garment, and wandering—who knows where?
-
-“Heave ahead,” said Jude drowsily. “What’s your plans?”
-
-“Plans—oh, I’ve lots. Let’s go round the world in the old _Sarah_—get
-a couple more hands.”
-
-“Where’d you stick them?”
-
-“Well, you’ve got a foc’s’le.”
-
-“Not big enough for a tomcat. The nigger filled it. He said he reckoned
-he’d got to stick his head through the hatch to breathe.”
-
-“Well, we’ll get rid of the _Sarah_ and get a bigger boat.”
-
-“Lord! Don’t you never let Satan hear you say that: she’s his skin!”
-
-“We’ll do without extra hands, then, and work her, the three of us. I
-can steer all right now.”
-
-“Kin you?”
-
-“You know jolly well I can!”
-
-“What’s the points of the compass? Run ’em off.”
-
-“North—nor’-nor’east, nor’east—um—”
-
-Jude chuckled subduedly.
-
-“Heave ahead!”
-
-“I’ve forgotten.”
-
-“Never knew.”
-
-“Well, maybe.”
-
-The confiding shoulder rested more heavily against him as against a
-cushion and she began to hum a tune. She seemed to have forgotten
-the points of the compass, him, everything, just as a child suddenly
-forgets everything in day-dream land.
-
-The absolute contentment of doing nothing, resting, listening to the
-waves, had fallen upon him too, with a something else, a sort of
-mesmerism born of his companion, the strangest feeling as though Jude
-were a part of himself, as though he had put his arm round his own
-waist and a new self,—a much pleasanter self than the old one, less
-stiff, more human, and somehow more alive.
-
-The metronomic rhythm of the little waves falling on the sand seemed
-to mix his thoughts together and blur them; but he saw Skelton,
-Sir William Skelton, Bart., he saw a girl he, Ratcliffe, had been
-engaged to, he saw all sorts of men and all sorts of women, everyone
-he had ever known, it seemed to him, in a nebulous cluster, and they
-all seemed, somehow, not quite alive,—not dead, but sleeping in
-the trance we call civilization, their days ordered by the beat of
-a metronome,—get up—wash—dress—eat—work or play—eat—work or
-play—eat—work or play—bed—sleep—get up—wash—dress etc.,—all the
-figures moving like one, their very laughter and tears ordered except
-when they got drunk or went mad.
-
-It seemed to him that vivid life was not so much a question of vitality
-as of freedom.
-
-Was that the secret Satan had discovered,—Satan, who had no hankering
-after great riches, but was free as a gull? Satan and Jude were
-gulls,—seagulls, untamable as seagulls and as far from civilization!
-It was as though his arm were round a bird,—quiescent by some miracle
-and allowing him to handle it, and imparting to him, somehow, the
-knowledge of its vitality,—the vitality of freedom.
-
-“What I like about the old _Sarah_,” said he, “is the way she just pots
-about—with nothing to do.”
-
-“Nothing to do!”
-
-“Well, you and Satan can take things easy.”
-
-“Oh, can we? That’s news—what d’you call easy?”
-
-“You have no fixed work, you can knock off when you like, you haven’t
-to carry cargo, or be bothered with owners, or be up to time. You are
-as free as the gulls.”
-
-Jude took his hand and removed his arm from around her waist just
-as one removes a belt. She wanted to shift her position. She seemed
-to have lost interest in the conversation. Sand had got between her
-toes, and she removed it, running her finger between them. She had
-no handkerchief,—never used one or needed to use one: the perfectly
-healthy animal never does.
-
-Then, crossing her legs like a tailor and squatting in front of him,
-she dived into the right hand pocket of her trousers and produced a
-dollar, a slick, evil, suspicious-looking dollar. She seemed utterly
-to have forgotten the gulls’-nesting business and how the time was
-running on, and having little passion for the business he was content
-not to remind her.
-
-“I’ll match you for dollars,” said Jude. She was no longer the person
-of a moment ago. She was the harbor larrikin, the clodder of bathing
-nigger girls, a person to be avoided by pious boys with possessions in
-the form of money or land.
-
-The coin spun in the air.
-
-“Tails is the bird,” cried Jude.
-
-“Heads, then.”
-
-“Tails! Y’owe me a dollar.”
-
-It spun again.
-
-“Heads! We’re quits. Heads again, heads—oh, hell!—what you want
-sticking to heads for? That’s two dollars I owe you. Tails—scrumps!
-that’s three! Tails again, that’s four. What you want sticking to tails
-for? Why don’t you wabble about an’ give a body a chance? Heads—holy
-Mike! What’s wrong with the durned thing? Five dollars gone on a bang!”
-
-“We’re not playing right,” said he. “We should call alternately.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“One after the other.”
-
-“I’m not going to play any more,” said Jude. “I’m broke. The bank’s
-bust and I kin’t pay you, not till I get to Havana—unless I play you
-double or quits. You call; I’ll toss.”
-
-“Heads.”
-
-She sent the coin six feet high and it fell on the sand—heads!
-
-“That settles it,” said Jude. “Ten dollars I owe you. You’ll have
-to wait till we get to Havana, for if Satan knew I was tossing for
-coins he’d sculp me. I can get some money out of the bank at Havana,
-pretending it’s for something else. I haven’t a cent, an’ this old
-dollar’s no use: it’s a dud.”
-
-“You don’t owe me anything,” said Ratcliffe. “We were only tossing for
-fun.” The words were no sooner out of his mouth than he regretted them.
-
-Jude flushed red under her freckles and sunburn.
-
-“I’m not taking your money, thank you,” said she; then breaking out,
-“What the blizzard d’you think we’ve been playing at, and what you take
-me for? S’posin’ I’d won, you’d a paid, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“I didn’t mean anything,” said he.
-
-“Y’shouldn’t have said it, then,” said she.
-
-“Well, I’m sorry—I take it back.”
-
-She played with the dud dollar for a moment, tossing it, and catching
-it; then she put it into her pocket, uncrossed her legs, and lay flat;
-her chin resting on the back of her hands.
-
-Her hat was off, lying beside her, and the quarrel with him was
-evidently over; she seemed plunged in reverie. Then he noticed that the
-eyes, upturned under their lashes, were steadfastly looking at him.
-Instantly they fell, and her position altered so that her face was
-hidden on her arm.
-
-He lit his pipe and smoked for a moment in silence.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-No answer.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?”
-
-Silence. He remembered how she had shammed dead on Palm Island, put
-down his pipe, and crawled toward the corpse. It was rigid, and to
-revive it he began to pour sand on its head.
-
-“Quit fooling,” grumbled a voice; then, as if the sand had suddenly
-revived memory and galvanized her to life, she scrambled to her feet.
-
-“Them eggs—and the sun’s getting down and we fooling about!” She
-picked up her hat. “I’ll take this end and you go t’other.”
-
-“But I haven’t anything to gather them in.”
-
-“Gather them in your hat, and keep a lookout for quicksan’s. If you get
-into one, holler and throw yourself on your back. But you’ll easy tell
-them—they look different from the or’nary sands.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“I dunno; just different. If you see the sand in front of you looking
-different, keep clear of it.”
-
-Off she went.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-DISHED
-
-
-He struck to the north. Over there in the north the sea was of a violet
-blue accentuated by the white blaze of the sands.
-
-The sands, once one got moving on them, were full of interest,
-strewn along the sea-edge with all sorts of prizes,—colored shells,
-cuttlefish bones, extraordinary seaweeds, bits of wreckage; a few yards
-out a nautilus fleet was steering, with tiny sails set to the wind, the
-oldest ships that ever floated on the sea, unspoiled by storm and time,
-just as they were launched in the morning of the world. He watched them
-for awhile, forgetful of gulls’ eggs, or quicksands, or the sun, now
-sensibly declining.
-
-If ever things had purpose, these had. They were going somewhere,
-bound on some business, keeping formation, and possessed of charts and
-compasses and barometers as surely as of sails. They made him think of
-God, and then they made him think of Satan,—Satan, whose sea sense
-served him better than all precise knowledge.
-
-Then he remembered Jude and glanced back. Away, far away to the south,
-he saw her. The sands dipped and rose there, and sometimes she was
-invisible and his heart thumped to the idea that a quicksand had taken
-her, then she reappeared and he went on, and, ever as he went, he
-seemed walking deeper into loneliness, peopled with viewless things and
-half-heard voices.
-
-Sometimes a chiming sound like the shattered and mingled voices of
-distant bells filled the air,—it was the singing of the sands. He had
-not noticed it in company with Jude, but here alone he noticed it.
-Sometimes laughter, far away in the distance, came distinct, human,
-and startling,—it was the calling of a laughing gull,—and always,
-penetrating all other sounds with the subtlety of osmosis, the silky,
-sinister whisper of the wind playing with the sand-grains. He went on.
-Something nearly tripped him. It was a great spar, half sanded over,
-the relic of some ship that had come to grief, maybe, on the spit.
-
-The sight of this spar touched everything with a new and momentary
-color. “Gascoign, the Sandal Wood Trader,” and other old stories he had
-read in his boyhood came back to him half-remembered, and with them
-came a whiff from a world he had half-forgotten,—a breath of the air
-we breathe at fifteen.
-
-He saw to his satisfaction that the gulls were beyond his reach, a
-broad channel of water cutting the spit in two right ahead. He took his
-seat on the spar for a moment to rest and look about, and as he sat the
-gulls, wheeling and crying, kept up around him the elusive atmosphere
-of storyland.
-
-All the money in the world could not have brought him that! Nor
-could he have found it had he landed here from a yacht with grown-up
-companions.
-
-He fell to thinking what an extraordinarily lucky person he was, and
-to plume himself on his instinctive wisdom in dropping Skelton and
-civilization for Jude and Satan, who had led him into a world of
-things he had never seen, things he had never imagined, things he had
-half-forgotten.
-
-Carquinez alone was a revelation, to say nothing of Sellers and Cleary.
-There was only one cloud, smaller than a man’s hand; but there!—where
-was it to end? It was all very well talking to Jude about sailing round
-the world: you can’t sail out of Time, and the time would come—the
-time would come—
-
-Jude was winding threads round him as a silkworm winds a cocoon,—tiny
-threads but deathly strong. It was almost as though she were becoming
-part of himself,—part of himself and part the sun and freedom and blue
-sea. She seemed half built up of those things and to have the power
-to make him one with them. Well, there was no use in bothering. So he
-said to himself, and as he said it the cloud no larger than a man’s
-hand swelled and twisted and rolled across the sandspit before him,
-resolving itself into a troupe of female relations, male relations,
-friends,—people as remote from Satan and Jude as parrots from
-seagulls, caged parrots content in the great gilded cage of convention.
-
-What would they say about Jude? He had an instinctive knowledge of what
-Jude would say about them, if they ever met, which seemed impossible.
-
-Then came the weird recollection that they had, in a way, actually met.
-She had met Skelton, the high priest of the whole crowd, Sir William
-Skelton, Bart. Old Popplecock was the label she had affixed to him, and
-it somehow stuck and fitted. What label would she affix to his aunts,
-his two maiden mid-Victorian aunts, should she ever meet them?
-
-A faint halloo from the south sent aunts and all other considerations
-flying. He turned. Jude, far away on the sands, was coming toward the
-dinghy. She was carrying something and running as if pursued; then he
-saw her trip and fall.
-
-She was on her feet in a second, and the thing pursuing her had
-evidently given up the hunt, for she stood examining something she had
-picked up from the ground, and seemed regardless of everything else.
-
-He waited for her by the boat, and as she came up he guessed the
-tragedy. She had been carrying a hatful of birds’ eggs and had smashed
-than when she fell. The hat was eloquent.
-
-“Smashed them every one,” said Jude, wading out and beginning to wash
-the hat. “All your fault!”
-
-“My fault! For heaven’s sake how?”
-
-“Stuffing me up with them yarns.”
-
-“What yarns?”
-
-“Hants.”
-
-“Was that what made you run?”
-
-“Who was running?”
-
-“You were.”
-
-“Oh, was I? Reckon you’d have run too.”
-
-“Did you see anything?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“What was it?”
-
-“You never mind.”
-
-She was evidently in a vile, bad temper; so he took his seat on the
-sand waiting for her to cool. Then, hat in hand, she came and sat
-close beside him, more out of a desire for company than friendship, he
-imagined; then, placing the hat to dry, she began examining the sole of
-her right foot, spreading the toes apart and brushing off the sand.
-
-“Well, I’m awfully sorry,” said he at length. “But tell us—what was it
-you saw, really?”
-
-“A wuzzard.”
-
-“What was it like?”
-
-“Nothin’,” then suddenly, and as if unburdening her soul, “I hadn’t
-more’n got the last of the eggs when I turned and saw him walking on
-the sands,—little old man with a glass under his arm, dressed queer
-in a long coat, an’ a hat on his head like an I dunno what. I wasn’t
-afraid, thought he was real, and he stuck the glass to his eye ’sif he
-was looking out for a ship.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then he went out—puff—like the sniff of a candle—hu—hu—” She
-clung to him.
-
-“It was all my fault,” said he, “talking that nonsense. Don’t think of
-it: it was only an optical illusion.”
-
-“He didn’t cast a shadow—I remember now.”
-
-“That proves it. I’ve often heard cases like that. Sir Walter Scott saw
-a man like that once, and he knew it was only an illusion. He had some
-wine handy and he drank a glass of it, and the thing disappeared.”
-
-“I reckon I’d have drunk a barrel of rum if I’d had one handy,” said
-Jude, drawing away a bit. “Let’s get off. Lord! Look at the sun—it’s
-half down. Come’n help with the boat.”
-
-They got up, and taking the dinghy by the gunnels began to haul her to
-the water. They had not got her more than a couple of yards when Jude
-straightened up as though remembering something and clapped her hand to
-her head.
-
-“We’re dished!” said Jude.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THE CRABS
-
-
-“How do you mean?” said he.
-
-She explained. It was like her to forget and spend the precious time
-lazing and playing about with “wuzzards.” The sun was taking his plunge
-into the sea, darkness was upon them, and she could not find her way
-back in the dark. Moon or starlight would be of no use. The thriddy
-spars of the _Sarah_ and _Juan_, invisible from the sandspit even in
-daylight, would be picked up only several miles out. She could not
-steer by the stars, and there was a great sweep of current setting
-sou’east which might take them to Timbuktu. Satan would have done
-the business right enough blindfolded; but she was a night-funk, she
-confessed it. Night put her all abroad and mixed up everything in her
-mind so that front seemed back and west seemed east, besides filling
-the world with “hants.” She had “near died” of fright fetching that
-sack from the cache the other night.
-
-All this in a lugubrious voice not far from tears, as they stood facing
-each other, and lit by the remorselessly setting sun.
-
-“All right,” said Ratcliffe. “Cheer up. We’ll just have to stick here
-till daybreak. We have some grub left and lots of water. No use
-pulling the boat farther down. But I expect Satan will be in a stew.”
-
-“I reckon he’ll know,” said Jude. “The weather’s all right. He’d scent
-if we were in any trouble, and he’d borrow Cark’s boat to hunt for us.”
-
-“How do you mean ’scent’?”
-
-“He’d smell trouble; he’s awful sharp.”
-
-“Sort of telepathy.”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Mind reading.”
-
-“I dunno, but I reckon he’s not worrying, and if he was he’d be
-alongside here pronto.”
-
-Her face was like a buttercup in the extraordinary light of that
-sunset. The whole sky was buttercup color; the great sea was seething
-round the great sun, now half-gone, churning and washing round him, a
-blazing globe sinking in boiling gold.
-
-Golden gulls, golden sky, golden sea,—all fading at last, the purple
-of night breaking through, rushing dark from the west across the sea.
-
-The shipwrecked mariners lost their golden faces and hands, and,
-as they sat down with their backs to the dinghy and the remains of
-the “grub” between them, laughing gulls, passing like ghosts in the
-twilight, hailed them, while the stars broke out to look above the
-darkness and the tepid wind.
-
-There is nothing like eating to keep up the spirits. Jude got less
-doleful. In the stir of mind caused by the new circumstances she had
-clean forgotten the “hants,” nor did she remember them for a moment
-now, as she chatted away in an uplift of spirits caused by the food
-and the recognition that to be downcast was futile.
-
-“I sure am a mutt!” said Jude. “Reckon I was born on a Friday—they say
-mugs are all born on a Friday. We should a been off two hours before
-sundown, and there I was talking and listening to your yarns, and here
-we are on the beach—oh, mommer!” Then after a long pause:
-
-“What’s them stars, do you reckon?”
-
-“Suns.”
-
-“Gar’n!”
-
-“It’s so.”
-
-“Say!”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did you notice anything looking north before sundown, or were you
-asleep sitting on that spar?”
-
-“I did see something over there; looked like the ghost of a cloud.”
-
-“That was Rum Cay, and a sure sign the weather’s going to hold. It
-lifts itself into the sky like that, evening times; you can see it from
-Lone Reef too.”
-
-“I wish I had known that and I should have looked at it more
-particularly. I was thinking.”
-
-“What was you thinking about?”
-
-He laughed. “My people.”
-
-“Which people?”
-
-“My relations.”
-
-“What made you think of them for?”
-
-“You.”
-
-“Me?”
-
-“Yes, I was wondering what you’d think of them if you saw them,
-especially my aunts.”
-
-“Well, you take the bun,” said Jude, “you sitting there thinking of
-your aunts and me running with them eggs!” She stopped of a sudden; her
-memory had suddenly conjured up the “wuzzard.”
-
-“That cuss!” said Jude.
-
-“Which?”
-
-“The one I saw.” She wriggled close to him till their sides touched.
-“S’posin’?”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“S’posin’ he was to take it into his head to do a walk along here?”
-
-“Don’t you bother about him,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d kick him into the
-sea—besides, he was only an optical illusion. It was my stupid talk
-did it.”
-
-“I’m not bothering,” said Jude, “only it’s a durned long time till
-morning. N’matter,” she rested her hand on his shoulder in all the
-familiarity of companionship; then she shifted her hand from his left
-to his right shoulder so that her arm was across his back, and then she
-fell silent and he felt something poking into his left shoulder—it was
-her nose! She had evidently under his protection forgotten “hants” and
-“wuzzards,” forgotten him, even, for she was humming a sort of tune
-under her breath.
-
-He knew exactly her mental condition,—mind wandering,—and it
-was a strange feeling to be cuddled like that by a person who had
-half-forgotten his existence, except as a protection against fears,
-especially when he remembered her recent antagonism that had developed
-so mysteriously and as mysteriously vanished. He slipped his left arm
-round her to make her more comfortable. Then her nose gave place to her
-cheek against his shoulder and she yawned. He could feel her ribs under
-her guernsey and the beat of her heart just beneath the gentle swell of
-her breast. He remembered her coat, which was in the dinghy. She had
-thrown it in as an after-thought in case of a change of weather, but
-had never worn it.
-
-“Hadn’t you better put on your coat?” asked he.
-
-“Lord! I don’t want no coat.”
-
-“But the night air.”
-
-“Nothing wrong with it. It’s a Gulf wind an’ as hot as a blanket—ain’t
-you warm enough?”
-
-“Lots.”
-
-“Ever slept out before?”
-
-“Only in a tent—have you?”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Slept out before?”
-
-“Heaps o’ times. But I wouldn’t sleep out in a full moon.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“’Cause I don’t want to wake up with my face twisted to one side like
-a flat fish—mean to say you don’t know?—either that or a chap goes
-loony. But there’s no fear tonight; it’s only a half-moon. The only
-thing I’m frightened of is crabs. We’ve gotta keep our eyes skinned for
-crabs. This mayn’t be a crab spit; then again, there’s no knowing but
-it may.”
-
-“What on earth is a crab spit?”
-
-Jude raised her face from his shoulder and sat up a bit straighter as
-though the question had roused her.
-
-“Place where crabs come, hun’erds of millions of them, same as Crab
-Cay. There’s crabs everywhere of course, but not in shiploads same as
-Crab Cay. Three men were drifted ashore there once, and after sundown
-up came the crabs and fought them all night, and there was nothing but
-their skeletons left in the morning. We’d better take it turn about to
-keep watch.”
-
-She released herself from his arm and scrambling about in the starlight
-on her hands and knees began to make a sand pillow.
-
-“There you are!” said she. “Stick your head on it; I’ll take first
-watch. You be port watch, and I’ll be sta’board.”
-
-“No, you won’t! I will. I’m not a bit sleepy.”
-
-“Neither’m I. Stick your head on it. You’ve gotta turn in or you’ll be
-no use tomorrow.”
-
-He did as he was bid, and Jude took her place sitting on the sand close
-to him.
-
-“Give us a call if anything happens,” said he.
-
-“You bet!” replied Jude.
-
-Then he closed his eyes. A moment before and he had been leagues away
-from sleep, but with the compulsory closing of his eyes a drowsiness
-began to steal on him. The wind had died to nothing and in the dead
-silence of the night the sound of the waves on the mile and a half of
-spit came loud and low, rhythmical, mesmeric. It was as though the
-tide of sleep were rising to drift him off.
-
-Now, suddenly, he was walking in the blazing sunlight on the spit, and
-toward him was walking the “wuzzard,”—a little old man in a cocked
-hat with a spyglass under his arm, who vanished, giving place to Jude,
-carrying a hatful of gulls’ eggs.
-
-Then Skelton landed from somewhere, and Jude, turning, was calling him
-a “pesky brute.”
-
-The words broke the dream, and he opened his eyes. The moon had just
-risen, touching the spit, and in her light, seated on the sand propped
-up on its stilts, a spirit crab, white as snow with ruby eyes, was
-staring at Jude.
-
-Drugged with weariness and ozone, he closed his eyes for one moment,
-determined to rise up and drive the thing away in one moment. When he
-opened his eyes again the sun was rising.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE RETURN
-
-
-The gulls were mewing and calling and flying above him in the blue.
-He was lying on his back, his left arm out, and Jude’s head on his
-shoulder.
-
-She had snuggled up beside him for company, and then, regardless of
-spirit crabs, “hants,” and the possibility of crustaceans landing in
-shiploads to devour them, had fallen asleep. Her arm was flung over
-his chest. It was the embrace of a tired child, delightful to wake up
-to as the freshness of the air and the new life of the world and the
-innocence of the flower-blue sky, delightful as her breath, sweet and
-warm against his cheek. As he moved she stirred, grumbled something
-under her breath, shifted her head so that his arm was released, and
-turned on her other side, with her right arm flung out on the sand.
-
-He stood up. The tide was in and the dinghy only waiting to be
-launched. Not a sail or speck upon the sea.
-
-Rum Cay had prophesied right,—the fine weather held,—but the water
-was nearly gone, and the “grub” was finished. There was no breakfast
-till they boarded the _Sarah_ again.
-
-He turned to where the starboard watch was lying, clinging still to
-Morpheus, and stirred it gently with his foot. Jude moved, turned,
-grumbled to herself, and then, as if electrified, sat up digging her
-fists into her eyes and yawning. Then she sat gazing at the sea as if
-stunned.
-
-“Come on,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve got to be starting. All the grub’s
-gone and nearly all the water. How did you sleep?”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Jude. “I’ve been chasin’ round the hull night with a
-hatful of eggs. I’m near dead beat. Which way’s the wind? Sou’east.
-Must a changed in the night. It’ll take us back in two ticks.”
-
-She collapsed again comfortably.
-
-“Remember,” said he, “the current is against us.”
-
-“Oh, it ain’t no distance,” said Jude, “and a few minutes more or less
-don’t count. Wonder what Satan’s doing?”
-
-Knowing that it was hopeless to bother till the spirit moved her, he
-sat down on the sand beside her and began picking up little shells and
-casting them into the sea.
-
-“Goodness knows!” said he. “I’m wondering what he’ll say when we get
-back.”
-
-“He’ll start jawing,” said Jude dreamily and fatefully and with her
-eyes closed. “I can hear him as if I was listening. He’ll say, ‘What
-you mean leaving the ship, and where’s your eggs?’ No use telling him
-they’re broke. Lord! I’m sick of it all! I’m just going to lay here and
-die.”
-
-He began to drop shells on her chest.
-
-“Quit foolin’.”
-
-“Then get up and come on. Let’s get it over. It’s like having a tooth
-pulled,—the sooner over the better.”
-
-“Did y’ever have a tooth pulled?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What’s it like?”
-
-“Beastly for a moment, but it’s soon over.”
-
-“Did y’spit blood?”
-
-“Rather! Come on.”
-
-“I’m coming in a minute.”
-
-Then suddenly she sat up, put on her hat, scrambled to her feet, took a
-glance round the sea, and made for the dinghy.
-
-“Shove in the water jar,” said Jude. He put the jar in, seized the
-opposite gunnel, and ran her down.
-
-In a minute they were afloat, the sail spread to the wind, Jude
-steering and holding the sheet. Gulls chased them out, and the beam
-wind meeting tide and current sent boosts of spray on board. It was a
-rougher passage coming than going, and a more silent one. Ratcliffe,
-squatting in the bottom of the boat, had little else to do than smoke
-and watch Jude. Jude, engaged with her own thoughts, and with her eyes
-keened for the indications of Lone Reef, seemed absolutely to have
-forgotten him.
-
-There was no indication of the companion who had slept with her arm
-round him, who had sat almost lovingly, half-forgetfully, with her arm
-across his shoulder and his arm round her waist.
-
-It came to him suddenly and with a curious pang that Jude would never
-be more than that,—a warm companion if cast alone together, just as
-she might be with Satan, or any stranger her fancy approved of.
-
-Instinctively he felt that there was a barrier,—a curious barrier, he
-seemed to have broken through that night he took her part, and when,
-for the first time in her life, she had confessed herself at fault;
-a barrier, that had, however, mended itself. It was as though he had
-injured her independence. Yet Satan was injuring her independence all
-day long with his orders and what not. Ay, but Satan was her brother,
-almost part of herself. She would not have banged Satan on the head for
-kissing her.
-
-He gave up thinking, watching her and how well she handled the boat.
-The crying of the gulls round the spit had died down; nothing remained
-but the voice of the sea, silent as dumb death from the blue horizon to
-the planking of the dinghy when it spoke.
-
-“That’s her!” suddenly said Jude.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Lone—I kin see the spars of the _Juan_ an’ the _Sarah_. Rubber and
-you’ll see them too.”
-
-He turned with his elbow resting on the thwart and picked out the spars
-on the sea-line.
-
-“And the _Natchez_,” said Jude. “Look, close up to the _Juan_. Cleary’s
-put in and we not there! I’d forgot Cleary; didn’t believe he’d pick up
-the place so soon. There he is. Oh, hell!”
-
-“No matter,” said Ratcliffe; “it can’t be helped.”
-
-“Cuss them gulls! If they’d stuck to their laying places, we’d have got
-the eggs soon’s we’d landed and been back last night. Wonder what’s
-been going on?”
-
-“Well,” said he, “Satan’s all right. Cleary has no grudge against him.
-If there has been any bother, it has been between Cleary and Sellers.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Jude.
-
-An hour later they were so close up that they could see the reef-line
-and the line of the wreck with fellows working on it. Whatever had
-happened, business was going on as usual.
-
-The three vessels, anchored and swinging to the tide, looked peaceful
-enough, and as they drew up to the _Sarah_, Satan, who had just
-appeared on deck, came and stood by the starboard rail watching them.
-
-They fastened up, preparing for an explosion. None came.
-
-“Couldn’t get back last night,” said Jude as they came on board. “Left
-it till sundown, and then I was afeard of the current.”
-
-“Afeard of the dark,” said Satan. “I reckoned that’d be so—whar’s your
-eggs?”
-
-“Gone phut. Smashed the lot. Wasn’t more than a hatful. Them rotten
-gulls had given up nesting, all but at the ends—and say, Satan, I saw
-a wuzzard! I was carrying the eggs when I saw him, and then I ran and
-smashed the lot.”
-
-“A which?”
-
-“A hant—little old chap walking on the sands. D’you remember the
-figurehead on that old bark they broke up last year at Havana,—man
-with a glass under his arm and the other arm wavin’ his hat? That was
-him plain as my eye. He up with his glass and I let one yelp. Rat’ll
-tell you: he saw me running.”
-
-“Oh, git along—git along, you and your hants! I’d been countin’ on
-them eggs, and here you come back like a one-eyed skite with your yarns
-about hants. Why, you ought a had a boatful! Didn’t you see no turkles’
-eggs?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-“Well, come along down if you want some grub. I sighted you more’n an
-hour ago, and there’s coffee waitin’. D’ye see that?” He pointed to a
-new-washed jumper drying in the blazing sun on the rail.
-
-“Well, I was het up,” said Jude, “or I’d have la’ndered it before I
-started.”
-
-“Come along down,” said Satan.
-
-It came to Ratcliffe that the quietude of Satan over the business came
-less from natural good temper than some other reason. The desertion of
-the _Sarah_ was mutiny and a rank crime. Satan had been left with his
-food to cook and his jumper to wash, his sister had been off with an
-almost stranger for a whole night—yet he was not displeased.
-
-If Jude had done the business alone, she most surely would have been
-carpeted. It was evidently his—Ratcliffe’s—participation in it that
-fended off trouble and turned wrath into complacence. Why?
-
-Was it because he was a guest? Not a bit! Satan, had he been angry,
-would not have bothered about that. He followed down below, and there,
-over the breakfast table, the Cleary business was cleared up.
-
-“He dropped in last night,” said Satan, “an hour before sundown,
-and the anchor hadn’t more than clawed the mud before he was aboard
-the _Juan_. I expected the shootin’ to begin; but there weren’t no
-fireworks, and after dark I lit out for the _Juan_ in the c’lapsible
-and tied up and boarded her. All the men were in the foc’sle, eating
-onions and playin’ tunes on guitars,—no anchor watch,—and the Cleary
-crowd down in the saloon as friendly as pie, Cark ladling the liquor
-and Cleary suckin’ it down, cigars as big as your leg in their faces,
-and Cleary with his thumbs in the armhulls of his vest leanin’ back
-laughin’. That’s how I found them.”
-
-“I told you,” said Jude to Ratcliffe, “they’d be kissing each other
-and—”
-
-“Suppose you shet your head!” said Satan. “I’m tellin’ you—there they
-were sittin’ all colludin’ together thick as thick, and I sat for an
-hour with them and then lit out. Sweet as sugar they were; but I tell
-you this, I’m as frightened as hell.”
-
-“How’s thet?”
-
-“Cleary. Y’see Cark and Sellers aren’t much by themselves, but Cleary
-is the snake’s tooth an’ poison bug of that combination, now that he’s
-joined in with Cark again. Cleary’s Irish gone bad on the father’s
-side and drunk Welsh on the mother’s: I had his pedigree from Pap. Pap
-said he was a sure-enough thoroughbred of a hellhound, and he reckoned
-the roof of his mouth was black right down to the heart of him. Well,
-I’ve had forty dollars from Cleary for them rotten pearls and one
-thousand dollars from Cark on account of takin’s. Now you see how I am,
-supposin’ the wreck turns out a dud. D’you mean to say they won’t go
-for me to get their money back? Supposin’ the gold is there. D’you mean
-to say they won’t chouse me out of my share?”
-
-“What are you going to do?”
-
-“I worked the hull thing out last night before I boarded them. Seeing
-there was no fighting, I concluded they’d joined up an’ become friends;
-then I made my plans, I didn’t put out no anchor light.
-
-“Sellers, when I was leaving the _Juan_, said, ‘Whar’s your light?’
-
-“‘Run short of oil,’ says I. ‘Kin you let me have some?’ He thought I
-was tryin’ to wangle oil out of him, and he closed; said he was run
-short himself.”
-
-“What was your meaning in not putting out a light?” asked Jude.
-
-“Maybe you’ll find out,” said Satan, “if you keep your eyes skinned
-and stop askin’ questions. Well, that’s where we are. They’ll have the
-barrel of gunpowder fixed by tomorrow to blow the deck off her, and as
-soon as they put a light to it we’ll know. It’s blastin’ powder and
-ought to split the deck to flinders if they fix it proper. I don’t
-b’lieve it’s coral coverin’ that deck, I b’lieve it’s old petrifacted
-guano, if you ask me; anyhow, it’s hard enough.”
-
-“By Jove!” said Ratcliffe. “If that’s so, it bears out my theory. I
-came to the conclusion that the old hooker had never been under water
-according to that yarn Lopez slung; yet I couldn’t account for the
-coral deposits. I believe you’re right. I believe the real wreck
-is lying at that place you said that’s given in the latitude and
-longitude. Well, see here, why not get the anchor up and light out
-right now for the other place. They wouldn’t follow.”
-
-“Wouldn’t they?” said Satan. “The _Natchez_ would be after us like a
-cat pouncin’. No, I’d rather stick, if it’s all the same to you, and
-see the fireworks. After that leave ’em to me. There aren’t many’s got
-the better of me when my dander’s up. Now then, Jude, if you’ve done
-stuffin’ yourself, maybe you’ll lend a hand on deck. There’s swabbin’
-to be done.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-A BOTTLE OF RUM
-
-
-Ratcliffe helped in the swabbing and polishing. No housekeeper ever
-exercised more meticulous care in this respect than Satan. He was a
-fanatic where cleanliness was concerned, and polish,—witness the
-brasswork of the wheel, the binnacle and skylight,—even paint and
-varnish were minor gods compared with Brasso!
-
-Meanwhile, as the Sarahites worked, the _Natchez_ and _Juan_, lying in
-cynical and sinister neglect and dirt, showed little signs of life. The
-working party on the reef seemed busy enough; but the ships, save for
-a few hands lounging at the rails or squatting about the foc’sle head,
-might have been deserted.
-
-About ten o’clock a boat put off from the _Natchez_. Cleary was in the
-sternsheets, and as she came alongside he hailed the _Sarah_.
-
-Satan came to the rail.
-
-“Sellers’s going to bust her open today,” said Cleary. “Just had word
-from him.”
-
-“I thought he wouldn’t be ready till tomorrow,” said Satan.
-
-“Just had word the hole’s near deep enough and the star cuttin’s from
-it. He’s got the powder off and reckons to fire it at noon. Wants you
-to come an’ help.”
-
-“Oh, does he?”
-
-“He’s a bit bothered about the fuse, not havin’ done much of that sort
-of work, and he reckons you’re an ingenious cuss an’ll be able to put
-him wise.”
-
-“Oh, does he? Well, I’ll be there.”
-
-Cleary came over the rail.
-
-“No spittin’!” cried Satan.
-
-Cleary, averting his head in time to send the squirt of tobacco juice
-overside instead of on the deck, looked around.
-
-He nodded at Ratcliffe, disregarded Jude, and fixed his eye on the
-blazing binnacle and the glittering rods of the skylight.
-
-“Dandy ship,” said he. “Whaar you goin’ to take the prize?”
-
-“Where your old tub’d be skeered to show her nose. How’s the potato
-crop gettin’ along?”
-
-Cleary turned his quid over and allowed his eyes to travel about the
-deck.
-
-“Waal,” said he, speaking with point and consideration, “some likes one
-thing and some likes another, but I never did see that fandanglin’ with
-frills an’ brasswork an’ sich lends anythin’ to the _sailin’_ qualities
-of a ship.”
-
-Jude, raising herself up from flemish coiling a rope, blazed out:
-
-“Maybe it don’t to an old cod boat blowin’ along with her own smell,”
-began Jude.
-
-“Shet up!” said Satan. Then to Cleary, “Have a drink?”
-
-“I’m willin’,” said Cleary, “but thought you was a dry ship.”
-
-Satan winked, slipped below, and returned with a bottle of rum, a
-glass, and a water jar. There were three or four bottles of rum on
-board. Satan said he kept the stuff for “rubbing his corns”; he never
-drank it. There were also a revolver and a rifle on board. He never
-fired them: lethal weapons have their time and place.
-
-Satan, having placed the bottle and jar on the deck, produced another
-glass from his pocket, filled out a four-finger peg for Cleary and
-another for himself.
-
-“Here’s luck,” said Cleary.
-
-“Here’s luck—no _spittin’_!”
-
-They drained glasses.
-
-“Holy Mike!” cried Cleary, his eyes bulging and his face injected.
-“What sorter bug-water’s this?”
-
-“British Navy; thirty over proof.”
-
-Cleary, with one eye shut, seemed turning over in his mind the
-activities going on in his stomach and on the whole approving.
-
-“Well,” said he, “I’ve drunk wasp brandy and one or two nigger
-dopes—they don’t get near it, not in knots. A man’d want to be a
-centipede to carry a bottle of that stuff, I reckon. N’more, thanky.
-Well, I’m off, and I’ll fly a flag when Cark gives the signal he’s got
-the stuff ready for the fuse.”
-
-Off he went.
-
-“For the land’s sake, Satan! what made you swallow that stuff for?”
-said Jude.
-
-Satan took his seat on the skylight edge, then he gulped, then he
-hiccupped.
-
-“Get your hind legs under you and cart the bottle and the glasses down
-below,” said Satan. “Strewth!—gimme the water jar till I flood my
-hold.”
-
-He drank till Ratcliffe thought he would never stop, then he went to
-the port rail and canceled matters.
-
-“It’s Demerara Black John,” said he apologetically to Ratcliffe as he
-turned, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. “Some likes it, but
-I’ve no holdin’ with drink.”
-
-Ratcliffe was about to ask why he had swallowed it, but he checked
-himself. Jude, who had just appeared again, put the question.
-
-“What in the nation made you drink that snake-juice?” asked Jude.
-
-Satan took a glance at the sun, at the reef, and at the _Juan_.
-
-“Now then,” said he, “finish up clarin’ away that raffle and get the
-dinner ready; I’ve no time to be talkin’.”
-
-He set to sand and canvassing the rail he had been working on when
-Cleary appeared, Jude and Ratcliffe took up their jobs, and the
-ordinary life of the _Sarah_ resumed as though the rum incident had
-never been.
-
-All the same, work could not prevent Ratcliffe from pondering the dark
-problem of Satan and his doings.
-
-Why had he not put out an anchor light last night? Why had he pretended
-to Sellers that he was short of oil? Why had he swallowed a glass of
-rum only to unswallow it again?
-
-Then in the monotony of work his mind passed from these considerations
-to a state of pleasant expectancy. What would they find in the wreck,
-and the explosion of the barrel of powder, how would it come off?
-
-He felt as pleased as a boy about to fire a brass cannon and not sure
-whether it will burst or not.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THEY FIRE THE FUSE
-
-
-Satan used a modification of the deck bear for cleaning his decks; that
-is to say, a box filled with stones having a rough mat nailed under it.
-The deck having been sprinkled with sand, the bear had to be pulled
-backward and forward after the fashion of a carpet sweeper. This was
-Ratcliffe’s job, and he was not sorry when it was over.
-
-Dinner was served at eight bells, and getting along toward one o’clock
-the _Natchez_ and _Juan_ were flying all sorts of flags on the tepid
-breeze as a signal, evidently, that it was time to get to business.
-
-Ratcliffe made out the red and white flag indicating H, the triangular
-blue with the white ball, the red cross on a white ground, and the
-white with the blue square,—H. D. V. S.
-
-“What are they trying to say?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, them flags,” replied Satan. “_They’re_ not tryin’ to say anythin’,
-only flyin’ to show time’s up. Cark hasn’t got a full set of the
-c’mercial code; wouldn’t know how to use them, neither. Now if you’re
-ready we’ll put off. Jude will stick here to keep ship.”
-
-Jude protested.
-
-“Why, you’ll see the blow-up from here a durned sight better than from
-the boat,” said Satan.
-
-“I want to see her innards when the deck’s off,” said Jude.
-
-“Why, Lord bless me! you’ll have days to see them in,” said Satan, “and
-there’s no knowin’ what may happen when the blow-up comes, what with
-flyin’ timbers and muck. I’ll come back and bring you off when the
-powder’s fired. I can’t say fairer than that.”
-
-They got into the dinghy and shoved off, Jude watching them.
-
-Sellers was waiting for them on the reef, and Cleary. Their boats were
-on the strip of beach surrounded by the crews, and a couple of fellows
-on the wreck were putting the last touches to the preparation of the
-charge. Sellers was holding what seemed a length of thick white cord in
-his hand.
-
-“Here’s the fuse,” said he. “I had it left over with the barrel from
-that last wrecking business we did in the fall. It’s a five-minutes’
-fuse.”
-
-“Oh, is it?” said Satan, handling the thing. “And where’s your
-guarantee? S’posin’ it only takes a minute? And five minutes is none
-too much for the man that fires it to get clear of the reef and put
-out.”
-
-“That’s true,” said Sellers, “and one of you will have to do the firin’
-business, seein’ I’m lame.”
-
-“What’s lamed you?”
-
-“Fell on the deck this mornin’ over a slush tub one of them damn dagoes
-left lyin’ in the dark. Near put my knee out.”
-
-“Then Cleary will do the trick,” said Satan.
-
-Cleary laughed. “Not me! I’m not lame, but it ain’t my job. Runnin’
-over rocks don’t suit me, and I reckon the man that lays a light to
-that thing will want to be a boundin’ kangaroo.”
-
-“Instead of a damned ass like y’self,” said Satan. “Come on. I’ll light
-it, I’m not afeard.”
-
-They clambered over the rocks, crossed the rock bridge, and gained the
-wreck.
-
-The little barrel had been well and truly laid, the top almost flush
-with the level of the stuff covering the deck.
-
-“We got right through the deck plankin’,” said Sellers, “or to a
-crossbeam. Wood’s most dry-rotted, and it’ll be a nacheral mercy if the
-powder don’t blow the whole coffee shop to blazes right down to the
-reef. Here’s the hole for the fuse.”
-
-While they were examining the fuse-hole, Ratcliffe took notice of the
-cuts radiating starlike from the charge-hole that had been made in the
-deck-casing. When he turned again, Satan, with the aid of Sellers, had
-fixed the fuse. The Spanish sailors who had been at work had taken
-their departure and were already down by the boats, leaving only four
-men on the wreck,—Satan, Sellers, Cleary and himself.
-
-Satan rose up, clapped the knees of his trousers as if to knock dust
-off them, and produced a yellow box of Swedish matches from his pocket.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not fair. Let’s draw lots who’ll
-fire the thing.”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan. “I wouldn’t trust one of them two with a box of
-matches, let alone a dollar. Now then, scatter for the boats!”
-
-Then to Ratcliffe, as Sellers and Cleary made off, “Stand by ready to
-shove the dinghy off when you see me coming.”
-
-“All right,” said the other; “but I’ll stick by you if you like.”
-
-“I reckon two don’t run quicker than one,” said Satan. “Off with you,
-and, if I’m blown to blazes, look after the kid.”
-
-When Ratcliffe reached the strip of beach the boats of the _Juan_ and
-_Natchez_ had shoved off. He could see the figure of Carquinez at the
-after rail of the _Juan_ and Jude watching from the _Sarah_. He pulled
-the dinghy down a bit more to the water and then, turning, looked at
-the wreck.
-
-Satan was standing against the skyline, now he was down on his knees,
-and now he was up again. The fuse had evidently been fired, but he did
-not move; stood evidently looking to see that it was burning properly,
-and then moved off, walking, not running, and not even hurrying himself.
-
-Then he came clambering over the rocks, reached the dinghy, and they
-pushed off.
-
-“Well, you are a cool chap,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d have run.”
-
-“And broke your leg, maybe. There’s no danger unless a spark got at the
-powder. The durned thing was sparkin’ and spittin’ like all possessed
-when I left it. I reckon that’s why Sellers got cold feet. We’re out
-far enough now.” He ceased rowing, and they hung drifting.
-
-Ratcliffe looked round. The other boats were much farther out. The
-tepid wind had almost died off, so that the flags on the _Juan_ and
-_Natchez_ hung in wisps. They could hear the wash of the water on the
-reef and the occasional lamentation of a gull. No other sound broke the
-silence of the blue and gorgeous afternoon.
-
-“Seems like as if everything was listenin’, don’t it?” said Satan,
-wiping his forehead. “The bust ought to have come by this. Wonder if
-the durned thing has fizzled out?”
-
-A gull made derisive answer and across the satin smooth swell a hail
-came from the _Juan_.
-
-“That’s Cark,” said Satan, “makin’ kind inquiries, blister him!”
-
-“There she goes!” cried Ratcliffe.
-
-A jet of flame and a column of smoke sprang from the reef, followed by
-a clap of thunder that could have been heard at Rum Cay.
-
-Flying filth and deck planking filled the air, and on top of all came
-the yelling of a thousand gulls.
-
-The dinghy jumped as though from the blow of a great fist—then
-silence, and over the reef a filthy dun-colored cloud of smoke curling
-upward like a djin.
-
-Satan seized the sculls and headed for the beach. The boats of the
-_Juan_ and _Natchez_, already under way, were rowing as if for a
-wager, but the dinghy had the lead. They beached her, hauled her up
-a foot, and started over the rocks, running this time, heedless of
-broken limbs, Satan leading like the bounding kangaroo of Cleary’s and
-whooping as he went.
-
-The rock bridge was still intact, but nearly the whole of the after
-part of the deck was gone.
-
-“Go careful!” cried Satan. He got down on hands and knees and,
-crawling, followed by Ratcliffe, leaned over the break and looked.
-
-Ratcliffe cried out in horror.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE CARGO
-
-
-In that vast and gloomy interior the great beams showed like the ribs
-of some eviscerated monster and the honest light of day fell sick upon
-the cargo,—a cargo of skulls, ribs, vertebræ, and entire skeletons,
-piled high, as though five hundred men had struggled aft for exit in
-one mad rush and died heaped one upon the other like refuse. A charnel,
-limy smell rose, poisoning the air.
-
-“Good God!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan. “What did I tell you? _Nombre de Dios_ be
-sugared! She’s an old slaver, wrecked with the men under hatches.
-Here’s Sellers!”
-
-Sellers, panting, his face all mottled, and followed by Cleary, had
-gained the deck.
-
-“Boys, what is it?” cried Sellers.
-
-“Gold!” cried Satan. “Go careful, for the hull deck’s sprung. Get on
-your hands and knees. Gold bars an’ di’monds—we’re all rich men!”
-
-The pair of scoundrels, crawling like crabs, stuck their heads over the
-break.
-
-“Oh, hell!” said Sellers.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan.
-
-Cleary spat. He was the first to laugh.
-
-“This is putting it over on Cark, ain’t it?” said Cleary. “How many
-dollars d’you think it’s cost our firm to blow the lid off this
-damned scrofagus, to say nothin’ of the time? And he packed me off to
-Pensacola to get me out of the way! Oh, send for him to have a look!”
-
-“No use sendin’, he’s comin’,” said Satan, pointing to where the gig of
-the _Juan_ was approaching the beach.
-
-Carquinez crossed the rock bridge and advanced along the deck,
-clutching his old coat together and making birdlike noises. When he
-reached the break, crouching like the others, he looked over.
-
-The sight below did not seem to horrify him.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan for the third time, turning his head for a moment
-from the objects that seemed to fascinate him.
-
-“Pst, pst, pst!” said Carquinez. “Vel, I reckon dat is so.”
-
-“No gold ship,” said Sellers.
-
-“Maybe there was gold in the after-cabin,” suddenly broke in Cleary,
-“and the niggers broke through the bulkhead and are on top of it.”
-
-“Where’s your bulkheads?” asked Sellers. “There was no after-cabin to
-the hooker. It was all one cattle boat below, with niggers for cattle.”
-
-“That is so,” said Carquinez.
-
-The old gentleman seemed taking his setback extraordinarily well; so,
-too, seemed Sellers and Cleary. They were evidently used to reverses in
-business, and treasure hunting was wildcat anyway, a thousand to one
-against the chance of a colossal fortune.
-
-“That is so,” said Carquinez. Then he proceeded to demonstrate what the
-hold of a slaver was like,—men lying side by side and sometimes on top
-of one another. There was no after-cabin, indeed nothing, no latrines,
-no means of washing, nothing: just one vast sty without straw even for
-the human beasts to lie on.
-
-The officers and crew slept in deckhouses; sometimes the crew had
-nothing to shelter them, sleeping on the bare decks.
-
-Carquinez knew it all. His grandfather had been in the business, and he
-mentioned the fact with a sort of pride.
-
-Then he drew back from the break like a reptile balked and retreating;
-rose to his feet, and stood contemplating the sea.
-
-Satan rose also, as did Ratcliffe.
-
-“I’m off,” said Satan. “This boneyard don’t please me any. Say, what
-you goin’ to do?”
-
-“Von moment,” said Cark.
-
-“Which?” asked Satan.
-
-“Cark means how about the contrac’?” said Sellers.
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Lord! Why, we’re left, left with a cargo of skelentons, and you—why,
-you’ve got a thousand dollars in your pocket.”
-
-“There was nothin’ in the contrac’ about handin’ them back,” said
-Satan; “b’sides the contrac’s bust. That thousand dollars was on
-account of findin’s. Is it my fault the findin’s is skelentons? But,
-see here, you give’s a few hours to turn the thing over, and come
-aboard the _Sarah_ gettin’ along sundown, and we’ll have a clack. We’re
-all in the soup, seems to me, and I’m not wishin’ to be hard on you.”
-
-“We’ll drop aboard,” said Sellers.
-
-Cleary said nothing.
-
-After his outburst of laughter he had remained dumb.
-
-“Well, I’m off,” said Satan. “I want a drink and that’s the truth. The
-smell of them skelentons’s enough to start a Baptis’ minister on the
-booze.” Then he turned to Carquinez. “What did I tell you, sittin’
-in your cabin? Told you I didn’t bank on this business, maybe you’ll
-remember that. Blast treasure liftin’! Leavin’ salvage aside, have
-you ever seen an ounce of gold raised in all these years? There was a
-hundred million lyin’ off Dry Tortugas—did they ever get it? How many
-ships has been down to Trinidad huntin’ for the pirates’ gold? Knight
-was the last man there—a lot he made of it! It’s only the chaps that
-sell locations to mugs that make money over this business, it’s my
-b’lief. Well, see you aboard later on.”
-
-Off he went, Ratcliffe following.
-
-As they came alongside the _Sarah_, Jude was hanging over the rail.
-
-“What’s the luck?” cried Jude as they came aboard.
-
-“Skelentons,” said Satan, “shipload of skulls an’ cross-bones. Slaver,
-that’s what she was; dead men’s bones, that’s your treasure.”
-
-“Lord! And I’ve never seen them!”
-
-“Well, there’s nothin’ much to see,” said Satan, with the irritating
-nonchalance of the one who has seen the show; “ain’t worth the trouble
-of lookin’.”
-
-“I want to see them skelentons,” said Jude.
-
-“Tell you they ain’t wuth lookin’ at!”
-
-“I want to see them—”
-
-“Oh, well then, tumble into the boat, tumble into the boat, and I’ll
-row you over.”
-
-Ratcliffe watched while the dinghy passed over to the reef. He saw Jude
-on the wreck, kneeling and poring over the cargo, held, evidently, by
-the fascination that lies for youth in the horrible.
-
-Then they returned, and Satan ordered the dinghy to be taken on board.
-
-“Are you going to put out now?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Put out!” said Satan, with a grin. “Why, I’ve asked those fellers to
-come aboard gettin’ on for sundown, and whether or no if I raised a
-foot of chain they’d be on me with the first click of the windlass.
-I tell you we’re in a tight place! Cleary said nothin’, you noticed
-that, but he’s goin’ to have his forty dollars back if he knows how,
-and Sellers is the same,—he wants his thousand. We’re held for one
-thousand and forty dollars, and we’re not strong enough to fight them.”
-
-“Well, see here,” said the peacemaker. “Pay them. I’ll stand the
-racket. It’s only a little over two hundred pounds, and I’ll give you a
-check.”
-
-“You don’t get me,” said Satan. “It’s not the dollars I’m thinkin’ of
-so much as the game. Cark played me a low-down trick lightin’ out for
-here to scoop the boodle, and Cleary laughed at me with his old cod
-boat outsailin’ us. They’ve got to pay. B’sides, if I was to hand over
-that money, I’d never be able to show my nose again in Havana.”
-
-“How so?”
-
-“Why, them two would put the laugh on me, and it’d be ‘what price
-skelentons’ wherever I went, see? I’d be the mug then. They’re the mugs
-now, seem’ they’ve paid a thousand and forty for what they’ve got.”
-
-“I see. But considering that they’ll be after you if you move, and that
-we’re not strong enough to fight them, what’s to be done?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “when they come aboard it’ll be either to get the
-dollars back or fight. You’ve noticed I asked them to come, seein’
-they’d have come whether I asked them or not. Well, if I can foozle
-them into hanging on for their answer till tomorrow, I’ll give them the
-slip tonight. Moon’s not up till late.”
-
-“But they’ll hear you getting the anchor up and handling the sails!”
-
-“Not with an ear trumpet,” said Satan, “if I can only foozle them into
-waitin’ till tomorrow. Now then, Jude, lend a hand with the dinghy.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-CROCKERY WARE
-
-
-An hour before sunset, Jude, on the lookout, gave the alarm. “Sellers’s
-getting ready to come off,” she cried.
-
-Satan’s head appeared at the cabin hatch.
-
-“Sure?”
-
-“The boat’s alongside the _Juan_ full of dagoes, and Sellers and
-Cleary’s gettin’ in.”
-
-“Where did you stick that bottle of nose-paint?”
-
-“Starboard forward locker.”
-
-“One minute.”
-
-In a minute the head reappeared and an arm holding the rum bottle.
-
-“Now, mind you, I’m drunk,” said Satan, “fightin’ drunk, not to be
-disturbed on no account. They can call again tomorrow morning.”
-
-He smashed the rum bottle on the deck.
-
-“Leave the pieces lyin’.” He vanished.
-
-Jude looked at Ratcliffe and grinned.
-
-“Rub your nose and pretend to be cryin’,” came a voice from below.
-
-“What for should I be cryin’?” answered Jude.
-
-“God A’mighty! I’ll show you if I get on deck! Ain’t I drunk and
-cuttin’ up? What else would you be doin’? _I’ll_ larn you!”
-
-A smash of crockery came from below that made the housekeeper spring to
-the cabin skylight.
-
-“Quit foolin’,” cried she. “I’m willin’ to rub the damn nose off my
-head, but stop smashin’ the plates—what have you broke?”
-
-Another plate went.
-
-“I’m rubbin’.”
-
-“Here they are!” cried Ratcliffe.
-
-Jude’s nose did not seem to want any rubbing, nor her face. Descended
-from generations of crockery worshipers and careful housewives,
-instinctively hating Cleary, Sellers, Cark, and all their belongings,
-feeling with perfect illogic that they had been done out of the
-treasure by the “skelentons” somehow through Cark, she was convincing.
-Satan with rare art had worked her up to the part. She was not crying:
-her mind was raging above tears.
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers, as the boat ground alongside and a filthy
-ruffian with a handkerchief twisted round his head clawed on with a
-boathook. “What’s the matter, Kid? What’s up with you? Where’s Satan?”
-
-“Who’re you kiddin’?” cried Jude, as Sellers came aboard, followed by
-Cleary. “Where the hull are your fenders? Comin’ cuttin’ the paint off,
-you and your skullintons! Where’s Satan? He’s down below drunk as Billy
-be damn and cuttin’ the lights out of the ship.”
-
-“He’s been at the eyewash I was tellin’ you of,” said Cleary. “Look,
-he’s broke a bottle of it. Lord! don’t the place stink?”
-
-“Well, drunk or sober, he’s got to bail up,” said Sellers. “It’s my
-belief he’s been spoofin’ us all along.”
-
-“Spoofin’ who?” cried Jude.
-
-“Cark an’ me.”
-
-“Cark an’ you—that old leather face an’ _you_! Satan been spoofin’
-you—pair of yeggmen! Satan’s straight, the on’y straight man in
-Havana! Get off this ship! Come in the mornin’ if you want to try an’
-rob him. Off with you now!”
-
-“Why,” cried Sellers, half laughing, half angry, “what’s the matter
-with the kid? What’s gingerin’ you up?”
-
-The answer came from another smashed plate below.
-
-Jude made one spring for a deck-mop standing handy, twirled it so that
-the water sprayed from it in a rainbow, and brought it to the charge.
-
-Cleary slipped over the rail.
-
-“Off with you!” cried Jude.
-
-“Put down that mop!” cried Sellers, now suddenly furious. “Put down
-that mop, you braying little bitch! Go’n get inter your petticoats! You
-ain’t a boy! I never b’lieved it, not for the last six months, an’ now
-I know. You’ve give yourself away proper. Why, look at you, as round as
-a tub—you’re a wumman!”
-
-Ratcliffe looked on horrified. Jude, flushed and bright-eyed, had
-somehow revealed her sex. In her excitement she looked for a moment
-almost beautiful. Her tongue had done the rest. The smashing of the
-plates had brought the woman out of her as a conjurer brings a rabbit
-out of a hat.
-
-“Put down that mop!”
-
-Jude from rose color had turned awfully white; then with the élan and
-dash of a gamecock she charged. The wet swab hit the ruffian full in
-his flat face, and he fell on the deck with a bang.
-
-In a second he was up and scrambling over the rail. Again she charged,
-the swab meeting him this time full on his stem and sending him over
-into the boat like a bag of oats.
-
-A slush tub, fortunately half-full, and marked by her prescient mind,
-was her next weapon. The contents caught Cleary full in the face, and
-as the boat made off, the oars, all at sixes and sevens, wildly rowing,
-she pursued it with the battery of her tongue till it was out of range.
-Then she broke down and cried, sniffed, with her arm hiding her face,
-and then flushed, like a thing of shame dived below.
-
-Ratcliffe knew.
-
-Her sex proclaimed aloud by the shameless Sellers was as a garment
-stripped off her publicly. On the very first day Satan had stated her
-case and she didn’t mind, though he, Ratcliffe, had been a stranger;
-but it was different now, somehow. It was as if the end of her boyhood
-had come. Sellers would no doubt proclaim the fact in Havana.
-
-He heard voices from below.
-
-“I don’t care if I’d killed him! Wish’t I had! Lea’ me alone—for two
-cents I’d go drown myself! Look at them plates! You’ve broke the two
-blue pattern ones an’ the chaney one with the bird on it, the best we
-had, an’ not a cracked one touched! Hain’t you no sense?”
-
-“Never you mind; I’ll get you some more.”
-
-“I’m not wanting more. Them plates were mother’s—much you care! I’ve
-gone as careful as walking on eggs with them, and now they’re broke
-an’ the old Delf’ ones left. If you must be breaking and cutting
-up, couldn’t you a broke the cracked ones? An’ where’s the sense in
-breaking them anyhow?”
-
-“Waal, I reckoned it’d liven you up hearin’ the crockery goin’.”
-
-“Liven me up! Makes me believe you _have_ been getting at the rum to
-hear you talk. Where’s the sense in all your doings,—ship stinking of
-drink and all the crockery broke, and what’s the use?”
-
-“I’ll show you after dark. I tell you I want to get away from those
-thugs, and if I hadn’t headed them off pretendin’ to be drunk they’d
-have gone through me.”
-
-“Well, they’ll go through you right enough tomorrow morning.”
-
-“No, they won’t.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I’ll be gone.”
-
-“Gone! Why, first click of the windlass and they’ll be aboard us.”
-
-“You leave it to me.”
-
-“Well, I wish we’d have went before you broke them plates.”
-
-“Oh, cuss the plates!”
-
-“Easy to say that. It makes me just nacheral wild to see that old Delf’
-plate starin’ me in the face, round and sound, and the blue pattern
-ones gone.”
-
-Silence for a moment, at the end of which Satan’s head and bust
-appeared at the cabin hatch.
-
-He winked at Ratcliffe, and pointed backward with his thumb and down
-below, as if indicating the domestic trouble.
-
-“There’s no sign of them swabs comin’ off again?” asked he.
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “They seem to have had enough of it.”
-
-The rum bottle had broken fairly in two without splinters.
-
-“You might heave the bottle over, like a good one,” said Satan. “I
-can’t show on deck for fear of those shrimps seein’ me. It’ll be dark
-in an hour, and then I’ll be up. You can wait for your supper till we
-get away?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Ratcliffe; “I’m in no hurry.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-TIDE AND CURRENT
-
-
-He lit a pipe. Having disposed of the fragments of the bottle, he got
-the mop and a bucket of water and swabbed the rum-stained deck. Then he
-took his seat forward and watched the sunset.
-
-The great sun, half-shorn of his beams and bulging broad as Jupiter,
-lolled above the reef in a sky of laburnum gold fading to aquamarine.
-Gulls, dark as withered leaves, blew about him, and shifting here and
-there to north and south became gulls of gold, while the wind blowing
-up from the gulf and the westward running current, meeting the last of
-the flood, broke the sea surface into a million tiny dancing waves,
-momentary mirrors dazzling the eye with shattered light.
-
-Lone Reef seemed well named. Dawn or sunset or the blaze of full day
-could not take from its desolation, and this evening the sinister line
-of the wreck dominated everything, turning the blaze of sunset to the
-light of a funeral pyre.
-
-The _Sarah_, moving to the swell, creaked and whimpered, and now and
-then from below he could hear voices,—Jude’s voice and the voice of
-Satan. Beyond that came the murmur of the reef and the clang of the
-gulls, and now and again a snatch of Spanish song from the _Juan_.
-
-Then the sun passed below the reef, the tide began to draw out, and
-the _Sarah_, swinging to it, brought to his view the _Juan_ and the
-_Natchez_, ships of dusk in a world of dusk powdered with star dust.
-Presently a light was run up on the _Natchez_, then the _Juan_ put up
-her riding light, then Satan appeared, a dusky form, rising from the
-cabin hatch and followed by Jude.
-
-They came forward. Jude squatted on the deck, and Satan drew close to
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“Now, if them skunks had any sense in their skulls, they’d stick out
-a guard boat,” said Satan; “but I’ve fair put the hood on them, I
-b’lieve, and they’ve never saw what I was after, pretendin’ I had no
-oil for an anchor light. Why, they are only fit to be put out to nuss!
-Half an hour more and we’ll be off.”
-
-“How are you going to do it?”
-
-“Knock the shackle off the anchor chain an’ let her drift. Tide an’
-current is runnin’ four knots.”
-
-“But even without the anchor light they’ll be able to see us by the
-stars.”
-
-“Lord bless you! at this distance they won’t be able to see mor’n a
-glimpse of us. We’ll go so gradual they won’t notice. If they keep
-a lookout at all,—which they won’t, ten to one,—he’ll see us by
-believin’ we’re there.”
-
-“Lord! I’d love to see their faces in the morning!” murmured Jude.
-
-“But won’t they go for you when we get back to Havana?” asked
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“Not they,” said Satan. “They’ll say nothin’, seein’ as how they’re
-done and the laugh’s against them. Why, Cark will respect me more for
-this job than if I’d run straight with him over the biggest deal. If
-it’d been the other way about and he’d pulled the dollars off me, I’d
-have been nowhere with him. Mind you out here, if I was to stick here
-till tomorrow, they’d be aboard and maybe manhandling us if I didn’t
-bail up; but back in Havana the thing will be closed and the accounts
-wrote off.”
-
-The sound of a guitar came through the dusk, crossing the warm wind,
-the lazy, languorous wind of a perfect summer’s night. Seville, which
-he had never seen, rose before Ratcliffe, firefly-haunted orange
-groves, lovely women all skewered together by the remembered words of a
-ribald song.
-
- “When I was a student at Cadiz!”
-
-“There goes old Catguts,” said Satan. “He’s the band aboard the
-_Juan_,—Antonio, Alonzo, Alphonso—damn his name!”
-
-“It ain’t,” said Jude. “It’s that old copper-patch Cleary’s got with
-him. I’ve heard him in harbor. I gave him a plug of tobacco once for
-getting me some bait, and he showed me the thing. It’s got a crack
-in it or suthin’, and makes a noise like a skeeter in a jug,—kind
-a fizzin’ noise between the plonks. He’s got an ulster on his leg
-so’s you can see the bone. He took off the rags an’ showed me—he’s a
-Portugee.”
-
-“Well, it’s time to get busy,” said Satan. “Here, h’ist yourself and
-lend a hand!”
-
-Ratcliffe got more forward while they knocked the shackle off the
-chain. There came a splash. Then the meeting resumed.
-
-“If they heard that splash,” said Satan, “they’d put it down to a fish
-jumpin’. Now you watch them lights.”
-
-Ratcliffe watched the amber lights of the _Natchez_ and _Juan_. They
-did not seem to alter position in the least. In the first of the
-starlight and the last of the dusk the spars and hulls of the two
-vessels could just be made out.
-
-Then presently he saw that the lights had drawn a bit more aft and
-seemed closer together. The feel of the _Sarah_ was different too, she
-moved more freely to the swell.
-
-The sound of the guitar seemed slightly fainter.
-
-Now and then the beguiling sea would give the _Sarah_ a little slap, no
-louder than the slap of a girl’s hand, on the low planking as if joking
-with her over some secret shared in common.
-
-Yes, the sound of the guitar was fainter, much fainter, and the
-spars and hulls of the vessels now invisible as though they had been
-dissolved in the gloom.
-
-The anchor lights alone marked their places.
-
-“We’re all right now,” said Satan; “but I’ll give them another five
-minutes. Got the matches for the binnacle light?”
-
-“Yes,” said Jude.
-
-Five minutes passed, then they got the canvas on her, and Satan, at
-the wheel, taking his bearings from the far-off lights of the betrayed
-ones, turned the spokes.
-
-“Where are you going to sail for?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Cormorant Cay,” said Satan. “I’ve a fancy to look at that place.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-SATAN IN PARADISE
-
-
-He had divided Ratcliffe and Jude into watches, port and starboard.
-
-Jude turned in first, relieving him somewhere about two in the morning.
-At six, when Ratcliffe turned out and came on deck, he found Satan at
-the wheel, relinquished by Jude, and day pursuing the Sarah across a
-wrinkled sea of tourmaline and hinted blue. Away ahead somewhere to the
-south lay Cormorant Cay, the true tomb, if the chart indications were
-correct, of the _Nombre de Dios_.
-
-A strong sailing wind was blowing, and Satan gave their speed at seven
-knots. He refused to hand over the wheel.
-
-“I’ve had a snooze on deck,” said he, “while the kid took charge. We’re
-nearly sixty miles south of Lone, and if this wind holds will be on to
-Cormorant somewhere about eight bells.”
-
-“Not a sign of those chaps,” said Ratcliffe, looking back over the sea,
-clear of Cleary and Sellers and their dirty crowd.
-
-“Naw; they’ll be just about rousin’ up now and rubbin’ their eyes.”
-
-“You don’t think they’ll try to follow us?”
-
-“Not likely, I don’t think. They’re wastin’ time and money if they
-cruise after us. Cark’s got his business in Havana to attend to, and
-Cleary’s the same. What’s gettin’ me is the fac’ that Sellers has
-spotted the kid for what she is. It’ll be all over Havana, and she
-knows it.”
-
-“Well, it had to come out some time.”
-
-“Maybe.”
-
-“Look here, Satan!” said Ratcliffe. “I’ve been thinking a lot about the
-girl and what’s to become of her. She can’t go on as she is. We must
-fix up something.”
-
-“That’s easy said.”
-
-“Well, I’ve grown fonder of her than any person I’ve ever met, that’s
-the truth. There’s no one like her; she’s gold right through.”
-
-“She ain’t bad.”
-
-“This sort of thing was all right when she was a child,” went on
-Ratcliffe; “but she’s growing out of that. Why, even in the little time
-since I’ve come aboard, she seems different, somehow.”
-
-“Well, if you ask me,” said Satan, “you seem to have made a change in
-her. She’s brightened up, somehow, has more sass in her. Y’see, when
-we were cruisin’ round since Pap died, me, she, and the nigger, there
-wasn’t much company, and she was gettin’ a bit down-hearted. Then, when
-you came aboard, she picked up. She hadn’t laughed for weeks till she
-saw you in that pajama rig; then she chummed onto you.”
-
-“She did.”
-
-“Liked you from the first minute she saw you. There’s no two ways
-about Jude,—it’s either like or the other thing, right off.”
-
-“Well, I’m pretty much the same—and I don’t want to lose sight of
-her—or you.”
-
-“How’d you mean?”
-
-“Oh, just that. I’m bothering about when this cruise is over. That’s
-bothering me a lot. Well, we’ll leave it at that for the present.”
-
-Satan turned his lantern face to starboard for half a moment to
-expectorate right over the starboard rail—maybe also to hide a grin.
-
-“I reckon it’ll come all right somehow,” said he. “We ain’t much in
-the world, but we’re straight. Reckon you’re straight too. That’s all
-I want. That feller Thelusson, y’remember I told you he wanted to come
-for a cruise with us. Well, he was straight enough s’far as dollars
-went, but I wouldn’t have had him on this ship, not if he’d paid me
-a dollar a minute and a bonus for every knot we made—not with Jude
-aboard—Here’s the wheel for a sec’, if you’ll take it whiles I get
-some coffee ready.”
-
-Toward noon a wreath of gulls in the sky showed Cormorant.
-
-Jude was at the wheel, Satan forward on the lookout.
-
-Twenty minutes later Satan came running aft, fetched the old glass out
-of its sling, and went forward with it.
-
-“There’s a hooker on the sands!” cried he. “Looks like a small fruiter
-or suthin’ hove up.”
-
-Ratcliffe, standing beside him, could see nothing,—the sand, owing
-to their low level, was invisible from the deck of the _Sarah_,—then,
-straining his eyes, he made out a speck on the sea-line.
-
-“Mast’s gone,” said Satan, “white painted, not more’n fifty ton, and
-she’s layin’ in the lagoon. She must have come in over the sand where
-it narrows to the westward. There’s a pinch of sand there that’s near
-under water at flood, and the seas come right over it in an east’ard
-gale.”
-
-He handed the glass to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Funny,” said Ratcliffe, “if you were right about the _Nombre de Dios_
-being sunk here and we come to have a look for her and find another
-wreck.”
-
-“Well, I don’t take no shares in the _Nombre de Dios_,” said Satan.
-“I ran here more for somewhere to run to than with any thought of the
-_Nombre_. She’s a hundred foot under the sand if she’s here at all; but
-it’s luck all the same. There’ll be pickin’s. There was a big blow two
-weeks ago from the east,—that’s what’s done her,—and the salvage men
-won’t be here yet, if they ever come.”
-
-He stuck the glass to his eye.
-
-“She’s a yacht, that’s what she is, one of them small cruisers, not
-more’n fifty or sixty, and her fittin’s will just do for us, if she’s
-not been stripped. There’s all sorts of folks come from New York and
-Philadelphia and N’ y’Orleans, cruisin’ about these seas in tubs like
-that,—fishin’ mostly.”
-
-The _Sarah_ held on, almost due south, with the daring of a sea-bird,
-Satan giving directions to the steersman and seeming absolutely
-regardless of the death and dangers around them,—reefs that they
-shaved, rocks that waved fathom-long ribbons of fuci a few feet under
-water,—he avoided them all.
-
-South, east, and west Cormorant Cay is devoid of danger. Only here to
-the north do the reefs and rocks show, and it is just here that the
-only entrance to the lagoon lies.
-
-The place consists really of two sandspits widely separated to the
-north so as to form a pondlike harbor running from five to ten fathoms
-deep. Farther south the sandspits join so as to form a wide street,
-like the spit to eastward of Lone Reef.
-
-They held on. The sound of the gentle surf on the sands came now, and a
-full view of the lagoon water reflecting the sun-blaze like a mirror.
-
-On the still lagoon, with strange stereoscopic effect seen between the
-two sand-arms holding off the wrinkled sea, lay the craft, floating on
-an even keel, and showing a stump of mainmast against the skyline. From
-her lines she had been a yacht.
-
-“Why, Go’ bless my soul, she’s anchored!” cried Satan. “Derelic’ and
-anchored. The people must have got away in a boat or suthin’. There’s
-not a sign of them. Port—hard—port—as you were—steady—so!”
-
-He ran to let go the halyards.
-
-Another anchor had been bent on to some spare chain. It was heaved
-over, and the _Sarah_ came up to it, swinging less than fifty yards
-from the stranger. She was a picture, a forty-ton fishing yawl, white
-painted, gracile as a fish, dismasted, abandoned, and swinging to a
-taut anchor chain; beyond her and the emerald of the lagoon lay the
-great stretch of sands, running due south, blanketing to the heat and
-showing ponds of aquamarine and storms of gulls.
-
-The anchor down, Satan stood with his eyes fixed on his prey; Jude
-too. They seemed considering her as a butcher might consider a carcass
-before he cut it up.
-
-“Aren’t you going to board her?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Have you ever seen a dead b’ar?” asked Satan. “Sometimes a b’ar isn’t
-as dead as he looks, and sometimes a derelic’ isn’t as empty as it
-looks. It’s a common thing for men on the Florida coast to hide in a
-driftin’ canoe and rise up and laugh at them that come out to collect
-it. I can’t make out that anchor chain bein’ down, and I’ll just give
-them one hour whiles we have dinner.”
-
-When they came on deck again after the meal, they dropped the dinghy,
-and the three of them put off for the derelict.
-
-She must have been dismasted outside the sands, for not a spar lay in
-the water alongside,—dismasted and driven over by a big wave, her crew
-clinging to her. On the bow was her name, _Haliotis_. They tied up and
-scrambled on board. The deck ran flush fore and aft. The wheel looked
-all right, but was jammed and immovable; the binnacle glass was smashed.
-
-Satan stood, whistling and looking about him. Then he dived below,
-followed by the others. The cabin had been left in good order. It was a
-bit over-gilded and decorated for a plain man’s taste, but everything
-was of the best, and a hanging lamp of solid brass still swung over
-the center-table. The walls were of bird’s-eye maple, the cushions of
-the best blue cloth, and the fittings of the tiny sleeping cabins to
-match.
-
-There was plenty of stuff lying about,—books, clothes, boots. The
-people had evidently put off in a hurry, not caring much what they took
-as long as they got away. Perhaps they had taken advantage of a passing
-steamer.
-
-Ratcliffe picked up a book, a volume of O. Henry. There was a name in
-it,—J. Seligmann.
-
-Jude, delving in the starboard after-cabin, came out holding up
-something. It was a pair of boots, women’s, patent leather with white
-suede tops and heels three inches high.
-
-“Look at them things!” said Jude with a burst of suppressed laughter.
-
-“A girl’s boots,” said Ratcliffe. “Try them on, Jude.”
-
-“If I wore them things,” said Jude, “I’d have to walk on my hands.
-There’s dead loads more of stuff, and the place smells as if a polecat
-had been living there.”
-
-Ratcliffe stuck his head into the little cabin. It reeked of California
-poppy as though a bottle of it had been upset, California poppy and
-cosmetic scents. Clothes were lying about in disorder; a woman’s white
-yachting cap, deck shoes, lingerie, bursting like froth out of a cabin
-trunk, gave added touch to the hysterical distraction of the scene.
-
-One could see her, the woman, rushing about saving or collecting her
-valuables, leaving everything else, and calling on the gods to witness
-that she would never set foot again on another small yacht for a
-pleasure cruise among the islands.
-
-Jude picked out a frilled garment from the lingerie box, looked at
-it, rolled it up, and cast it with a chuckle into the bunk, then she
-reached up and opened the little port.
-
-Ratcliffe left her pursuing her investigations, attracted by the whoops
-of Satan, who seemed pursuing things about the deck.
-
-Satan, with his hair wild and his eyes ablaze, had rapidly sampled his
-treasure. Everything he wanted had been left. Had he found the _Nombre
-de Dios_ with gold to her hatches, it is doubtful if his excitement
-would have been so intense.
-
-“Look at that!” cried he, pointing to the mast winch. “Wantin’
-it—should think I had been! Come along and see!” He led the way
-to a heap of raffle and broken spars forward. “Look at them gaff
-jaws, galvanized an’ covered with hide, and me with old wooden ones
-creakin’ like an old shoe! There’s a mainsheet buffer too! Camper
-Nicholson’s—rubber—cringles—come along to the sail room!”
-
-They went to the sail room, then to the galley,—everywhere finds,
-glorious finds, with this rough sum total:
-
-In the sail room, sixty fathoms of new manila rope, an eighty-foot
-otter trawl, harpoons and grains and a seine net, a trysail, square
-sails, two jibs; in the galley, cooking gear, an Atkey cooking stove
-to burn coal or coke; in addition to all this some splendid blocks
-with patent sheaves with ball bearings which run so much better than
-dummies, a lower mainsheet block and two quarter-blocks, fathoms of
-galvanized chain, and two Nicholson’s patent anchors. Other things
-included lamps, a pair of binoculars, a sextant and a chronometer,
-charts, and lastly, glorious but useless, in a little engine room
-the auxiliary, a 13–15 horse-power petrol-paraffin Kelvin engine,
-two-cylinder, with the shaft running out through the quarter, and a
-spare Bergius propeller, which shuts up and opens out automatically
-when in motion.
-
-When they came on deck again after a rapid glance at these things a
-brain-wave came to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Look here!” said he. “Why not tow her back to Havana and claim
-salvage? She’s worth a lot and she’s derelict.”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan. “Have you ever claimed salvage? First there’s
-the tow, and we’re underhanded. Then there’s the lawyers. What’s to
-stop this Seligmann whoever he is poppin’ up an’ swearin’ against me.
-He’d say he left her with the anchor down in harbor; it amounts to
-that, though she’s derelic’ right enough. Not me! I’ll take what I want
-without no lawyers to help me. She’s my meat, by all the laws of the
-sea, and that’s the end of it.”
-
-Appeared Jude from the cabin hatch, carrying as a trophy a go-ashore
-hat she had unearthed from somewhere, a crushed-strawberry-colored
-straw hat—or was it a bonnet? It had long strings and a rose stuck on
-one side of it.
-
-“Look what that catawampus has left behind her!” cried Jude.
-
-“Quit your foolin’,” cried Satan, “and come along and lend a hand.
-Here, h’ist these things into the dinghy!”
-
-Jude flung the hat down the open skylight, and the rank burglary of the
-_Haliotis_ began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-A SECRET OF THE SAND
-
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe in the days that followed that he had never
-known what work meant before. That he, a wealthy and respected member
-of the British upper, upper-middle classes, an ex-Christ Churchman, and
-a member of Boodles, was assisting Satan Tyler in “tearing the tripes”
-out of another man’s yacht, also occurred to him sometimes as a fact, a
-distorted sort of fact, blurred and dimmed by the blazing and brilliant
-atmosphere in which they were working, the absolute and shocking
-loneliness that hemmed them in, Satan’s personality, and Jude’s
-companionship.
-
-By all the laws of the sea, according to Satan, these things were the
-property of the first finder. That was all very well according to
-Satan, and indeed according to what seemed common-sense; still, sea
-law was for all he could tell not quite the same thing as the laws of
-the sea, according to Satan. Though belonging to a great ship-owning
-family, he knew nothing of the rights of the matter; but the business
-they were engaged on seemed to him sometimes, when he cared to
-think, most tremendously like larceny,—larceny excused by a lot of
-considerations and made picturesque by environment; still, a business
-that in the unpicturesque surroundings of the London Sessions would
-undoubtedly have appealed to a judge in the voice of Larceny.
-
-Sometimes he imagined a warship, one of those prying, officious little
-cruisers that do police work, closing up with the cay and sending a
-boat into the lagoon.
-
-Sometimes he fell to wondering what Seligmann was like,—an American
-surely, one of the Gulf haunters, belonging, most probably, to one of
-the numerous clubs on the Florida coast, and Mrs. Seligmann—or was it
-Miss—or not even that?
-
-One thing was certain, Seligmann was rich. They were not robbing a poor
-man.
-
-At the end of the third day Jude gave out, not from weariness, but from
-distaste.
-
-“Lord! haven’t you had enough of this old truck?” said Jude. “I don’t
-feel’s if I ever wanted to see a len’th of rope nor a cringle again.”
-
-Ratcliffe felt pretty much the same.
-
-“I’ll finish the business myself,” said Satan. “You can knock off if
-you like. Go’n hunt for turkles’ eggs.”
-
-“I’m going,” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll come along, too,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Satan ferried them over to the sands. It was about two hours before
-sundown, and an easterly breeze was blowing fresh and cool, shivering
-up the lagoon water and whispering among the sand-grains.
-
-Jude walked despondently as they trudged along close to the sea edge
-and discovering nothing.
-
-“D’you know,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve never even started to hunt for a
-sign of the _Nombre de Dios_? I wonder if she’s sunk, really, anywhere
-near here?”
-
-“I dunno,” said Jude; “don’t care, nuther. Satan’s so full of his pesky
-old fittings he’s no time to think of anything else.”
-
-“Cheer up, Jude.”
-
-“I’m all right.”
-
-“No, you’re not. What’s wrong?”
-
-“Lots of things.”
-
-“When we get back to Havana—” began Ratcliffe. She cut him short.
-
-“I don’t want to go back to Havana,” said she. “Ain’t going.”
-
-She sat down on the sands plump, nursed her knees, and stared over the
-sea, casting her hat beside her. He stood for a moment, then he sat
-down. He knew at once, knew what had been working in her mind for days.
-
-“You’re bothering about what Sellers said, dirty scoundrel! I’d have
-punched his head, only the whole thing happened so quick and you landed
-him with that mop—don’t worry.”
-
-No reply.
-
-“What’s the good?” went on Ratcliffe; then cautiously and feeling that
-he was treading on dangerous ground, “See here, there’s no harm in
-being a girl, no more than there is in being a man.”
-
-No reply.
-
-A laughing gull passed and jeered at them. Jude followed it with her
-eyes. She seemed almost unconscious of his presence and not to have
-heard his words. He watched her profile against the sky, noticed the
-eyelashes which seemed longer and more curved up than ever, the nice
-shape of the head, free of the old panama.
-
-Then she turned, leaned on her elbow, and looked up at him—then she
-looked down.
-
-“What made you think I was botherin’ about Sellers?” asked Jude.
-
-“I don’t know,” said Ratcliffe, “I just thought it. I’ve been thinking
-a lot about you—I care for you a lot, that’s about it.”
-
-She looked up at him again, full in the eyes, and with a new expression
-he had never seen before, a puzzled, half-startled look, like that of a
-person suddenly awakened in strange surroundings.
-
-Then her eyes fell away from him.
-
-She took a handful of sand and let the grains fall between her fingers.
-
-“Just that,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-She was still playing with the sand, letting it fall between her
-fingers carefully as though trying to count the grains. Then she threw
-the stuff away, brushed the palm of her hand clean, and sat up. Drawing
-a little closer to her, he put his hand round her waist, just as he had
-done when they were on the sandspit, and just as on the sandspit, she
-let it rest there—for a moment. Then, with a queer little laugh, she
-removed the hand and struggled to her feet.
-
-He rose up and they went on, without a word. Then presently they
-began to talk about indifferent matters almost as though nothing had
-occurred.
-
-They found a nest of turtles’ eggs, and Jude marked it; farther along
-they came upon something strange, a sort of platform half-covered with
-sand. Jude said it was the foretop of a ship sunk and sanded over.
-
-“It’s the _Nombre de Dios_, maybe,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Maybe,” said Jude. “It’s the foretop of an old ship, anyhow. See,
-where the mast’s broke off—she’s thirty or forty foot under that.”
-
-“Not much good to us, even if she is the _Nombre de Dios_.”
-
-“Not much.”
-
-The gulls seemed to agree, and the little waves, falling crystal clear
-on the beach.
-
-It was near the end of the spit just here, and the sands shelved out,
-losing themselves in the immeasurable loneliness of the sea stretching
-to Mariguana and the Caicos and the northern shoulder of South America.
-
-Jude, on her knees with a bit of driftwood, was scraping away the sand
-from the edge of the sunk foretop, when something caught her eye.
-
-A turtle had landed where they had marked the eggs. It was so far away
-that it did not look bigger than a threepenny bit.
-
-She flung the bit of driftwood away, rose to her feet, and started
-running, taking the extreme sea-edge where the sand was hard. Ratcliffe
-followed. They were half a minute too late, the turtle turning back to
-the sea and leaving them spent and laughing. She got down on her knees
-and hived the eggs in her hat still laughing. He helped, filling his
-hat and his pockets, and then they started for the lagoon edge, Jude
-suddenly in the wildest spirits. He had never seen her in such high,
-good spirits. When they got aboard it was just the same. Even Satan’s
-maniacal passion for old junk, expressed at supper in the determination
-to spend two more days picking and scraping at the _Haliotis_, did not
-depress her, it only made her laugh.
-
-“You’ll be cryin’ before you’ve done if you go on laughin’ like that,”
-said Satan. “What’s possessed you eh?”
-
-Sure enough she was. The words acted like a pin on a bubble.
-
-She flushed, pushed her plate away, half rose, and then sat down again.
-
-“You’re always going on at me! Whatch’a want me to do? If I’m crying,
-I ought to be laughin’, an’ if I’m laughin’ I ought to be crying! I’ll
-laugh as much as I want—”
-
-Then, logically, she broke into violent tears, rose, and ran on deck.
-
-“What the hell-nation’s the matter with her?” asked Satan.
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-THE GO-ASHORE HAT
-
-
-He had time to think over the matter as he lay in his bunk that night.
-
-He fell to wondering, among other things, what the spell was that drew
-him toward Jude and held him.
-
-Was it the indefinable attractive quality that had made her mother a
-“nacheral calamity” where men were concerned, or just the power of
-youth? Scarcely the latter. He had met lots of youth in his time, and
-it had not attracted him much; besides, when you have only to look into
-the looking-glass to see youth, it is at a discount.
-
-Puzzling over the matter, he came to the bedrock fact that Jude, in
-some extraordinary way, had the power to make him feel more alive than
-he had ever felt before.
-
-Leaving other things aside, there were an honesty, faithfulness, and
-simplicity about Jude that removed her from the category of bifurcated
-beings and raised her to the level of a dog.
-
-Instinct told him that this compound quality was worth more than all
-the gold lying under the hatches of the _Nombre de Dios_, more than
-all the diamonds in the Rand, when combined with that other quality
-speaking in her level gaze,—steadfastness, the something that would
-make her keep the wheel in all weathers.
-
-But these excellencies would have been nothing without the
-impossibilities with which they were allied,—social and conventual
-impossibilities. The one reacted on the other, making an irresistible
-whole combined with the something else that was Jude.
-
-He remembered the queer little laugh with which she had freed herself
-from his hand round her waist—then he fell asleep and dreamt that he
-and Jude and a lot of larrikins were lying in wait by a harbor blue as
-the sea off Jamaica, to clod bathing nigger girls; then he was chasing
-Jude round and round a tree, only to catch her and find that she was
-Carquinez.
-
-When he got on deck next morning he found the ship deserted. The others
-were away on the sandbank, and he amused himself by fishing till they
-returned.
-
-Jude showed no traces of the tears of the last night, and Satan was
-elated. He had been examining the wreck-wood, and his experienced eye
-backed the declaration of Jude. It was the foretop of a ship, right
-enough, and, a hundred to one, so he declared, the foretop of the
-_Nombre_.
-
-Ratcliffe, wondering vaguely why he seemed so pleased over the find,
-considering the sand conditions, asked him the chances of raising her.
-Then said Satan, seeming to turn his gaze inward upon his awful and
-profound knowledge of the sea and its ways:
-
-“If you was to get all the dridgers from H’vana to Pensacola and
-dridged till your eyes bugged out o’ your head an’ your tongue hanged
-down to your heels, you wouldn’t clear her—siltin’—but she’s a sure
-enough mug trap.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“Why, with that story and that chart an’ that old foretop, I could set
-half Havana diggin’ like dogs for a bone, to say nothin’ of private
-parties an’ syndikits an’ such things—maybe I will, too, some day.”
-
-They put out after breakfast for the _Haliotis_ and another load of
-“old junk.” Satan rowed back with it, leaving Jude and Ratcliffe on
-board,—Ratcliffe collecting things forward, and Jude grubbing about in
-the saloon.
-
-Having collected the odds and ends in a heap, he turned his eyes to the
-_Sarah_. Satan, having tied up the dinghy, was busy transhipping his
-plunder. Then the beauty of the morning sea flooding into the lagoon,
-held him for a moment. He followed the gulls in their flight, noted
-the sudden break from emerald to ultramarine deepening to purple,
-and beyond the reefs the sudden glitter of a leaping fish. Then he
-remembered Jude down below.
-
-He came to the companionway and down the stairs.
-
-The cabin was brilliant with sunlight, with water reflections through
-the open portholes playing on the ceiling and polished maple and
-venesta of the walls. Across a pile of truck and bunk bedding heaped on
-the table he caught a glimpse of the upper part of Jude.
-
-Jude, fancying herself entirely alone, and yielding to some prompting
-or other, had picked up the despised go-ashore hat and put it on;
-she was looking at herself in the mirror fixed to the after bulkhead.
-She was looking at herself with her head now straight and now tilted
-slightly to one side; then the head turned, but she did not see
-Ratcliffe: her eyes were still fixed on the hat, she was looking at it
-sidewise.
-
-All her unconscious movements might have been those of a lady in a
-milliner’s shop trying on a hat in a critical spirit.
-
-She had not heard him coming down the companionway, owing to the fact
-that he was in his bare feet, and she did not hear him go up again.
-
-On deck he took his seat on an old box upended close to the
-mainmast stump, and considered the thing he had just witnessed in a
-philosophical spirit.
-
-It was like seeing a chrysalis crack and a butterfly’s wing protruding.
-
-If Jude had not been admiring herself in that hat, then sight was a
-liar and its evidence worthless. But Jude was as honest as the day.
-She had greeted the thing with derision, brought it on deck to show
-as an object of mirth, and flung it down the skylight opening with
-contempt—yesterday morning.
-
-What had happened since then to make her consider the thing at all, let
-alone wear it before a looking-glass?
-
-Had she put it on in derision and to see what a guy she looked? Not a
-bit! She had made friends with that hat! Those few movements of the
-head spoke of consideration not derision, in a language old as the
-earliest feather headdress and more universal than Esperanto.
-
-Then he remembered last evening on the sandspit and her sudden passage
-from despondency to high spirits; he remembered her queer little laugh
-as she removed his hand from round her waist,—had that been the sound
-of the rift coming in the chrysalis casing?
-
-For a moment he almost yielded to the desire to go below and see if the
-butterfly had really arrived. Then he checked himself. There was time,
-plenty of time; besides, Satan was putting off again in the dinghy for
-another load.
-
-Satan, over this business, like a man in drink or a lunatic, had his
-hot fits and cold fits. A hot fit had suddenly come on him.
-
-The petrol-paraffin engine had begun suddenly to shout to him that
-it must be taken. A glorious idea, too, had evolved itself in his
-brain,—why not fit it to the _Sarah_; not there in the lagoon,
-of course, but in some port? All that was required would be some
-structural alterations and a shaft-hole in the quarter; he reckoned the
-fitting would cost under three hundred dollars.
-
-He didn’t want the thing, really,—masts and sails were good enough for
-his pottering-about work,—it was the passion of a woman for jewelry.
-The _Sarah_ would be a nobbier boat with an auxiliary,—sea swank,
-purely, exhibiting the only apparent weak spot in his character.
-
-That spare Bergius propeller had begun revolving in his mind days
-ago,—“thrud—thrud—thrud! See me drive the _Sarah_, see me drive the
-_Sarah_!” He had examined the propeller already attached and found the
-blades all broken. The shaft was intact, and, beaching the _Haliotis_
-stern on in that quiet lagoon, it would have been possible to fit on
-the spare one and take her off unmasted, as she was under her own
-motive power.
-
-He had a vague notion of the structure of engines and Yankee ingenuity
-enough to have driven her, but the fact of her anchor being down, as
-before stated, and the fact that he had already “torn the tripes” out
-of her plundered the sail room and the store room, removed brasswork
-that would have taken weeks to replace, and generally left her like a
-scooped cheese, prevented an idea of salvage.
-
-Taking the _Haliotis_ into port he would have to declare her like a
-box of cigars,—a box of cigars belonging to another man and half the
-cigars gone.
-
-Coming over the rail, Ratcliffe saw the new light in his eye and
-wondered what it portended.
-
-“I’ve been thinkin’,” said Satan, taking his stand by the mast stump
-and surveying the heap of stuff collected by the other, “I’ve been
-thinkin’ it’s tomfoolery to leave that engine.”
-
-Jude, brought up by the sound of the dinghy coming alongside, appeared
-at the saloon companionway. She wore no hat.
-
-“Good Lord!” said Ratcliffe, aghast. “You don’t mean to say—but it’s
-impossible. We haven’t the means to take it.”
-
-“There’s enough of the mast left to rig a tackle to,” said Satan, “and
-that hatch leads right down to the engine place. The heavy fittin’s are
-easy raised from the bed-plates, and they’re not too heavy to go in
-the dinghy. We can tow her with the c’lapsible.”
-
-“But what can you do with the thing?”
-
-“Fit her to the _Sarah_, of course.”
-
-“Here, in the lagoon?” asked the horrified Ratcliffe.
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t mind if I had the hands and the tools for the job,”
-replied Satan. “Naw, it’s beyont me. I’ll have to take her to a port to
-have it done,—not Havana, neither: there’s too many eyes in Havana and
-people that know my business. Vera Cruz is the place. I know a Spanish
-yard there’ll do the job.”
-
-“The year after next,” put in Jude, “supposing you do manage to get
-it aboard, you know what the dagoes are, and you’ll knock the inside
-of the _Sarah_ to flinders. She won’t be the same boat with that old
-traction injin in her—I wish we’d never struck this cay!”
-
-She sat down on the combing of the skylight and folded her hands.
-Ratcliffe had never seen her do that before. He stood torn between two
-things,—the desire to please Satan and the desire to please Jude.
-Pulling on the side of Jude there was also the sure foreknowledge of
-the heavy work that would be required. That did not frighten him; but
-it did seem to him that they had done enough and ought to be satisfied.
-It was like burglars going for the kitchen boiler after having removed
-the plate, furniture, and very bed-linen of a house.
-
-All the same he could not but admire Satan. Time was pressing, it was
-quite possible that a salvage boat might poke her nose into the lagoon
-at any moment. Satan knew this as well as he, yet it did not move him.
-
-“It’s not a dago yard,” said Satan, evading the traction engine dig,
-“it’s French, and I’ve been wanting an auxiliary for years. Pap was
-with me, only he was awful slow over business, and here’s one for nix.
-I’m goin’ down to have a look at her.”
-
-He dived below.
-
-Jude sat brooding.
-
-“Never mind,” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not a big engine, and he and I will
-be able to do it with a tackle. I’m not going to let him put you to
-work on it.”
-
-“I’m not bothering about that,” said Jude fatefully. “It’s when it’s
-fixed up I’m thinking of.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“He’ll make me drive the durned thing.”
-
-“No, he won’t.”
-
-“What’s to stop him?”
-
-“Oh, lots of things—leave it to me.”
-
-He was cut short by Satan’s voice calling him to come below. Down below
-he had to follow all sorts of details pointed out, details proving the
-desirability of the prize and the miraculous ease of its removal.
-
-Then they came on deck and put off for dinner. But Satan was never
-destined to lift that engine. Fate had fixed it to its bed-plates more
-securely than screws and nuts could hold it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-CLEARY!
-
-
-Dinner was over and Jude had run up on deck. Suddenly her voice came
-down through the open skylight.
-
-“Below there! Cleary’s coming!”
-
-Satan jumped from his place like a man shot. Next moment he was on
-deck. Jude pointed and handed him the binoculars she had been using.
-
-“That’s them!” said Satan, after a long look. “Cuss the swabs!”
-
-He handed the glasses to Ratcliffe.
-
-Away to the north two sails cut the sea-line. With the aid of the
-glasses two vessels leaped into view,—a topsail schooner and a smaller
-vessel of fore-and-aft rig. Even with the glasses he could not have
-been sure that these were the _Natchez_ and the _Juan_ like a pair of
-evil dogs hunting in company; but Satan was sure, so was Jude.
-
-“They’re coming dead for the cay,” said Jude. Satan said nothing.
-
-He had been filling his pipe when the hail came, he lit it now, walked
-to the starboard rail to be alone, and stood with his eyes fixed on the
-_Haliotis_.
-
-The position was as bad as could be. First of all, these ruffians would
-be sure to make him bail up even more than he had had out of them;
-secondly, they would have the laugh at him and post him as a mug all
-over Havana; thirdly, they would give him away about the _Haliotis_, if
-they discovered how he had plundered her.
-
-Having smoked for a moment in silence, he turned to his companions.
-
-It was a boast of Satan’s that he had never lost a spar, a fact partly
-due to luck, partly to his foreseeing eye; like a good general, he had
-plans for all eventualities.
-
-“They won’t be in the lagoon for a couple of hours,” said he, “with
-this wind and all. Come on aboard the old tub.”
-
-“What are you going to do?” asked Jude. “Sink her at her moorings?”
-
-“No time; besides, they’d see her on the lagoon floor. It’s up anchor
-and let her drift on the sands.”
-
-“What’s the good of that?”
-
-“Oh, Lord! Don’t stand jibberin’! I’ve got my plan. Into the dinghy
-with you!”
-
-They rowed over to the _Haliotis_.
-
-The one thing that Satan had not coveted was, mercifully, the winch;
-it was of the type of the West Country winch, and not a spot on Pap’s
-patent, at least in Satan’s eyes.
-
-They set to, got the anchor in, secured it, and rowed back to the
-_Sarah_. Then they watched the _Haliotis_ drift. The tide was going
-out. She was close to the eastern arm of the spit, and that arm had a
-bead in it toward the narrowing entry.
-
-Satan reckoned she would take the sand a hundred yards or so from the
-entry, and he reckoned right.
-
-But they had no time to watch her. The deck of the _Sarah_ was lumbered
-with stuff that had to be stowed out of sight. It took an hour before
-everything was shipshape and snug, and by that time the oncomers were
-close in, their sails big bellied with the wind, beating up for the
-entrance.
-
-They came through, the _Juan_ leading, the _Natchez_ some two cable
-lengths behind; then, with canvas threshing and the gulls yelling
-round them, they dropped their anchors, the _Juan_ to starboard of the
-_Sarah_ and the _Natchez_ farther up the lagoon. Ratcliffe had expected
-demonstrations of hostility: there were none.
-
-They could see Sellers directing the fellows forward, and they could
-make out Cleary on the deck of the _Natchez_. Then they saw Sellers
-drop below, and through the binoculars they could see Cleary as though
-he were only a few yards off,—he was smoking and giving orders to the
-hands. Then he came and spat over the rail and stood looking toward the
-_Sarah_ with his eyes shaded; having finished this inspection, he too
-dropped below.
-
-“I’d a sight sooner they’d shook their fists at us,” said Satan. “They
-know they’ve got us, sure.”
-
-Then Sellers reappeared on the deck, and the _Juan_ dropped a boat.
-
-“Here he is,” said Jude, “and whether he’s got us or whether he
-hasn’t, he ain’t coming aboard this ship!”
-
-She ran forward and fetched the mop from the hole where it was stowed.
-
-“Let up!” said Satan. “I don’t want no fightin’: I tell you, I’ve got a
-plan; I don’t want no mops in it.”
-
-“He ain’t coming aboard,” said Jude.
-
-As the boat of the _Juan_ came alongside, Sellers, in the sternsheets,
-raised his hand in a lordly fashion and slightly, as befitted a
-superior taking notice of an inferior.
-
-“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers as the bow oar hooked on.
-
-“Hullo, yourself!” replied Satan. “What you doin’ down here away?”
-
-“Tell you when I get aboard,” said Sellers. “Why, there’s the kid!
-Hullo, Kid!”
-
-“Claws off!” cried Jude. “You try to come aboard and I’ll land you with
-this mop! You can talk from the boat.”
-
-Sellers sat down again in the sternsheets.
-
-“She won’t let you aboard,” said Satan, speaking as though Jude were
-not present. “You shouldn’t have sassed her the way you did over there
-at Lone.”
-
-“I’m sure I beg your pardon,” said Sellers. “I’m trooly sorry to have
-trod on a female’s sussuptibilities; but what I’m wishin’ to say is
-this, and it’s as easy said from here as on deck: You’ve got to come
-aboard the _Juan_, you and that thousand dollars you’ve had from Cark,
-to say nothin’ of the coin you’ve had from Cleary, an’ be tried by C’t
-Martial, an’ take your sentence. If you don’t, I’ll board you, me
-and Cleary, an’ go through your ship, an’ fling the lot of you in the
-lagoon—d’you take me? I’m not funnin’.”
-
-“I’ll come,” said Satan. “I want to have a talk with Cark anyhow.”
-
-“And he wants to have a talk with you.”
-
-“Right. Off you go, and I’ll follow.”
-
-“Swab!” said Jude, “are you going to pay them that thousand dollars
-back? I’d sooner chuck it in the lagoon!”
-
-“I’d pay a thousand dollars to see Cark done in the eye,” replied
-Satan. “Where’s the damage? I’ve hived more than two thousand dollars’
-worth of stuff off that blistered derelic’. You leave them cusses to
-me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-THE FIGHT
-
-
-As they watched Sellers pulling back they saw the _Juan_ drop a boat.
-
-“Hullo!” said Satan.
-
-He put the glass to his eye.
-
-“Cark’s coming off. He’s in the sternsheets, him and his patch—what’s
-up now?”
-
-The two boats approached one another, and then hung together, evidently
-in consultation. Then the oars took the water and they approached the
-_Sarah_, Sellers leading. Satan, who had found a piece of chewing gum
-in his pocket, put it into his mouth and began to chew, leisurely, like
-a cow on her cud, while he watched the approaching boats.
-
-“What you want?” shouted Satan when they were in speaking distance.
-
-“Cark says you’re to come aboard right now,” replied Sellers. “You’ve
-played him one trick, and he don’t want you to play him another.”
-
-“Oh, don’t he?”
-
-“No, he don’t.”
-
-Satan spat into the water alongside and leaned comfortably on the rail.
-Carquinez was as close to the _Sarah_ as Sellers, yet he spoke no
-word, leaving his deputy to do the talking, and contenting himself with
-making occasional birdlike noises.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, ruffled, for all his appearances of calm, “you can
-tell him I’ll come when I want to, and that won’t be before tomorrow
-morning, for his damn cheek! Ahoy there, Cark! Ain’t you got a tongue
-in your head?”
-
-“He’s like a blessed canary bird,” cut in Jude. “Hi, there, Sellers!
-what you done with the cage?”
-
-“Is that your ultermatum?” demanded Sellers, ignoring Jude and
-addressing Satan.
-
-“My which matum?”
-
-“Is that all you gotta say?”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no!” said Satan.
-
-“Well, then, out with it!”
-
-Ratcliffe had never seen Satan “het up” till now, as, straightening
-himself and gripping the rail, he let out:
-
-“Gotta say? Why, if I’m sayin’ from now to the end o’ next week, I
-couldn’t say the beginnin’ of my opinion of you, right from the truck
-of Cleary’s old cod boat to the keel o’ that old disgrace you ripped
-of her guts when she was a yacht—you an’ your crew of cockroaches an’
-dagoes—right from the soles of Cleary’s flat feet to the end of your
-bottle nose—you and your ultermatum!
-
-“That’s all. I haven’t time to be wastin’ on you. I’ll come if I have a
-mind to and when I want, without waitin’ for your orders—now scatter
-yourselves!”
-
-“Right,” said Sellers.
-
-He gave an order to the boat’s crew, and the boat turned, and, followed
-by Carquinez, made back to the _Juan_.
-
-Satan, his hand on the rail, watched them, still chewing.
-
-Not a word spoke he, the bulge in his cheek steadfast against the
-skyline and his eyes fixed on the boats.
-
-Then he suddenly turned.
-
-“Them thugs will try to board us now,” said Satan. “We’ve gotta fight.
-There’s Cleary puttin’ off, and we’ll have the whole Noah’s ark on us
-in two ticks. We’ve gotta get the ammunition ready.”
-
-“There are guns down below,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Guns!” said Satan. “God bless you, we don’t want no guns! Cark’s too
-frightened of the law to let any of his men use knives or pistols.
-Jude, where’s that tub of stinkin’ bait—you haven’t hove it over, have
-you?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-“Cart it along. Rat; fetch up them five bottles of whisky,—they’re
-better’n bumshells,—and there’s an old fryin’ pan in the galley with a
-hole in it. Fetch it with the rest. There’s nothin’ like a fryin’ pan
-for beltin’ people—you can’t miss. What you gettin’ at Jude?”
-
-“The mop,” said Jude. “I don’t want nothing better for sweepin’ up
-rubbish!”
-
-“Well, maybe; but they’ll fight better’n you think. Lord! if I only had
-a roll of barb wire! Here they come! Hurry up, Rat!”
-
-The three boats, Sellers and Cleary leading, were in motion and making
-for the _Juan_.
-
-“We’ve only two to reckon with,” said Satan, as Ratcliffe arrived,
-Jude helping him up with the ammunition. “Cark won’t join in: he’s too
-frightened of his skin. Now then, ready with your weapons!”
-
-He was right. Cark’s boat, half a cable length away, backed water while
-the redoubtable Cleary and Sellers rushed like hawks on the prey,
-aiming to board the _Sarah_ to starboard, Cleary forward, Sellers aft.
-
-But the men at the oars were not used to this sort of work. In their
-enthusiasm and despite the curses of their captains, they held on too
-long, nearly smashed the boat’s bows against the side of the _Sarah_,
-and fell into wild confusion trying to get their oars in under the
-bombardment from the deck. Over the clamor of the gulls rose the shrill
-curses and shouts of the dagoes, the whooping of Satan, the smashing of
-bottles, while over all the perfume of bad fish and poisonous whisky
-rose like the fume of the fight; but the attackers held, held by teeth
-and claws and boathooks, while the wily Carquinez, on the fringe of the
-fight, voiceful for once, standing up and clutching his coat together,
-shouted directions—unheeded as unheard.
-
-Twice Sellers was almost on board, and twice Jude’s mop sent him head
-over heels back; but now Cleary had made good forward, backed by two of
-his crew, and while Jude, rushing to Ratcliffe’s aid, drove him back
-with the mop in the pit of his stomach, Sellers, eyes shut, head down,
-and fighting Satan like a mad bull, gained the deck, gripped Satan,
-slipped, fell, and rolled with him in the scuppers. Three dagoes had
-followed Sellers and flung themselves like dogs on the stragglers;
-but now Jude and Ratcliffe, free for a moment, flung themselves on the
-dagoes, broke the fight, freed Satan, and sent the whole lot bundling
-over, Sellers and all—only to find that Cleary had made good again,
-and after Cleary half his boat’s crew.
-
-Led by Satan, who had seized the frying pan, the defenders hurled
-themselves on Cleary.
-
-Satan was right, you can’t miss with a frying pan. Cleary went down
-before it. Ratcliffe, using only his fists, had floored the biggest
-of the dagoes, and the rest were crowding back helter skelter, when a
-shout from Sellers, who had regained the deck, brought the battle to a
-pause.
-
-“Stop fightin’, you damn fools!” cried Sellers.
-
-“Lord! Look!” cried Jude.
-
-The port side of the _Sarah_ was turned to the entrance of the lagoon,
-and into the lagoon was gliding a long, lean destroyer, shearing the
-blue-green water from her fore foot.
-
-Being to starboard, the attackers had not seen her, and the men on deck
-had been too busy.
-
-Carquinez alone had sighted her. The effect was magical. Peace fell
-like a suddenly dropped dish-cover, and over the rail came Carquinez
-and half a dozen more Spaniards from the boats.
-
-“Now we’re done!” said Sellers. “She’s a Britisher, and this damn
-sandbank’s British and we’ll be had to the Bahamas Courts o’ Inquiry
-and Lord knows what all. Referred to Havana for inquiries. They’ve
-seen us at it, no use in denyin’ it. Look at them cusses’ bloody noses
-and Cleary flattened out. Kick him alive, some of you fools! Here they
-come!”
-
-The destroyer had cast anchor and dropped a boat. With the terrible
-precision of a hawk or a warship closing on its prey, she was on to the
-_Sarah_. A blue and gold man held the yoke lines, and the oars of the
-rowers rowed like one.
-
-“Look at that image on the sternsheets,” said Sellers.
-
-“Leave him to me,” said Satan.
-
-“What’s your game?”
-
-“Shut your head! Here he is!”
-
-The boat came alongside. The oars rising like one, fell with a crash,
-the bow oar hooked on, and over the rail came a sublieutenant of the
-British Navy, smooth of face and neat as though just taken from a
-bandbox.
-
-“What the devil are you fellows up to, fighting here?” asked the
-sublieutenant.
-
-Satan broke into a laugh.
-
-“We’re movie men,” said Satan.
-
-“You’re what?”
-
-“Movin’ pictures.”
-
-“Oh—cinematograph?”
-
-“That’s it.”
-
-Ratcliffe, fired with admiration for this Satanic move, joined in
-laughing.
-
-“Did you think we were fighting, really? Well, that’s funny. What’s the
-name of your ship?”
-
-“The _Albatross_,” replied the sublieutenant, completely and roundly
-taken in. “You’re English, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes, I’m English. Joined the show some time ago.”
-
-“What’s that hooker on the sand over there?”
-
-“Oh, that’s part of our show. Boat supposed to have been wrecked—these
-chaps are pirates.”
-
-“Jolly good make-up!” said the other, surveying the pirates and taking
-in Cark, also Cleary, who, resuscitated in time, was leaning over the
-rail chewing and spitting into the water.
-
-The awful question, “Where’s your camera?” never came. If it had, Satan
-would no doubt have met it; but the sublieutenant was new to this sort
-of business and not on the hunt for evidence. The thing was palpable
-and plain. No complaint came from the attacked, and attacked and
-attackers were all seemingly friends. The words “cinematograph company”
-covered the situation completely.
-
-He gave a few words of information about the _Albatross_. She had put
-in for a small repair and would be off again tomorrow morning. Then he
-dropped into his boat and the incident was closed.
-
-“Now, you cusses,” said Satan, “see where you have landed yourselves!
-Where’d you have been only for me?”
-
-“Well, I don’t deny you slipped the hood over that Britisher pretty
-smart,” said Sellers.
-
-Cleary turned his head and looked at Sellers. “_You_ don’t deny! Why,
-you bloody barnacle scraper, I told you to hold off from the business!
-Satan, I forgive you that clap on the head. Lord love me! I’ll never
-carry a derringer again. Give me a fryin’ pan, that’s the weppin; you
-can’t dodge it no more than you can dodge a thunderstorm.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “fryin’ pan back the lot of you, and I’ll be on
-board the _Juan_ inside half an hour and settle my business with you.
-If Cark had kept his mouth shut instead of givin’ me orders, we’d have
-finished it by now and no heads broke.”
-
-“We’ll be waiting for you,” said Sellers.
-
-They tumbled into the boats and rowed off.
-
-“They never drew a knife,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, Cark took their knives from them,” said Satan. “He didn’t want no
-blood spillin’ and trouble,—too much afraid of the law.”
-
-Jude, who had collapsed sitting-wise on the deck, began to laugh
-hysterically.
-
-“What are you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.
-
-“I dunno,” said Jude.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-“I’LL TAK!”
-
-
-Ten minutes later Satan and Ratcliffe boarded the _Juan_. Cleary was
-already on board, down in the cabin with the others; Cark and a bottle
-of gin were presiding at one end of the table. Satan, with a nod to the
-company, came to the table and took his seat; motioning Ratcliffe to
-take the seat opposite to him.
-
-It was like a meeting of a board of directors, and the table just held
-the six comfortably.
-
-What followed struck the unaccustomed Ratcliffe with astonishment,—the
-amiability of it,—it might have been a card party, with Satan the
-loser—momentarily.
-
-“Well, gentlemen,” said Satan, “what’s to pay?”
-
-There were extra glasses on the table and a box of cigars. The cigars
-were pushed along by Sellers as he spoke.
-
-“There’s Cark’s loss of time,” said Sellers, “not to say mine and
-Cleary’s. We tried for you round Rum Cay when you gave us the slip, and
-then there was the run down here. A thousand dollars to us that means,
-and five hundred to Cleary.”
-
-“Makin’ it two thousand five hundred and forty,” said Satan. “I’m
-agreeable—and the derelic’ is mine.”
-
-“Which derelic’?” asked Sellers innocently.
-
-Satan, absolutely disdaining to reply, lit a cigar.
-
-“She’s worth all ten thousand dollars,” said he, “and what’s the
-salvage on that?”
-
-“Y’mean that old dismasted catboat stuck on the sand there?” said
-Cleary. “Not worth five—b’sides she’s our meat.”
-
-Satan dropped Sellers and turned to Carquinez. “You’ll maybe explain,”
-said he. “You know the rights of the law. If you try to collar that
-hooker, I’ll come in with first claim, and here’s a gentleman will back
-me in law expenses. You know him,—Mr. Ratcliffe, Holt & Ratcliffe.”
-
-“I’ll back you,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“And it seems to me law is not your lay, Cark,” went on Satan. “We came
-in here yesterday and boarded and claimed that hooker, and I was fixing
-the tackle for towing when you blew along. The thing’s as clear as
-paint. She’s ours for salvage, and you’re not in it.”
-
-“Look here!” began Sellers violently—then he closed up: Cark had given
-him a kick under the table. Then there was silence for a moment, during
-which these two scoundrels seemed to brood together telepathically.
-
-Then Cark spoke, addressing Satan.
-
-“Will you take the air on deck for wan moment with your friend?” said
-Cark.
-
-“Sure,” said Satan.
-
-A few minutes later they were called down again.
-
-“See here,” said Sellers, acting as spokesman for the others, “we
-don’t want to bear hard on you, but we’ve been at a big loss over this
-business.”
-
-“And who let you in for it?” asked Satan. “Haven’t you been chasin’ me
-since last fall over the _Nombre_? Was it my fault she weren’t there?”
-
-“Well, anyhow we’re losers. But I’m coming to the derelic’. You’ll
-never be able to do the tow with the _Sarah_—why, the _Sarah_ ain’t
-bigger than her, and you’re underhanded anyhow.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan.
-
-“Well, what I propose is this,” said Sellers. “We’ll drop claims for
-the run down here and only ask a thousand and forty of you, and you
-drop claims on the derelic’.”
-
-Satan laughed.
-
-“Maybe you don’t know she’s got an auxiliary in her worth four thousand
-dollars if it’s worth a cent. She’s broke her propeller, but she’s got
-a spare one on board, and if I knew anythin’ of injins I’d drive her
-back on her own power. No, I sticks to the derelic’ if that’s the best
-you can offer and here’s your dollars—though I’ll have to give you my
-check for the extra money.”
-
-He produced a bundle; then, with his hand on it:
-
-“If you choose to take the derelic’ for what she’s worth and call it
-quits. I’ll trade, one or the other. I’m not set on that tow. But there
-you are; you know the chances.”
-
-“I’ll tak!” suddenly broke in Carquinez, and the business was ended.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-THE VANISHED LIGHT
-
-
-A week later, toward sundown, the _Sarah_ came up the half-mile channel
-and dropped her hook in Havana Harbor close to the old anchorage of the
-_Maine_. A Royal Mail boat passing out gave her the kick of its wash
-as she settled down to her moorings, a customs boat dropped alongside,
-and the customs men, hailing Satan as a friend and brother, came aboard
-and transacted business with him in the cabin. The wind blew warm,
-bringing scents and sounds across the vast harbor, fluttering the flags
-of the shipping, and Ratcliffe, standing at the rail, dazzled by the
-brilliance of the scene before him, knew that his cruise was over.
-
-It was like coming to the end of a book,—a volume suddenly handed to
-him by Fate to read, and of which he was condemned to write the sequel.
-
-He remembered the morning at Palm Island when he boarded the _Sarah_
-first, and the picture was still fresh in his mind of the _Haliotis_
-as they had left her in the lagoon at Cormorant, Sellers and Cleary
-and their men swarming about her and tinkering her up. They intended
-to ship the spare propeller and bring her along under her own motive
-power to the nearest port, Nassau in the Bahamas.
-
-They had been so busy with the engines and the hull that they had never
-noticed how completely she had been stripped. They were unconscious of
-the fact that she had been left with her anchor down—unfortunates! He
-could still see them like ants laboring in the sun, at the task set to
-them by the grimly humorous Satan.
-
-Satan had won the game they had forced on him, holding, as he did, a
-thousand and forty dollars, the “tripes” of the _Haliotis_, and the
-secret of the mug trap, to be disposed of, perhaps, later on for a
-consideration. Satan would, no doubt, set other unfortunates digging
-for the _Nombre_ just as he had set Cleary and Sellers tinkering and
-towing at the _Haliotis_, just as he had held up freighters for a bunch
-of bananas, just as he had made Thelusson and his crew careen and
-scrape the _Sarah_, just as he had made Ratcliffe an accomplice in his
-plans and a handy man to help him in his works; yet the funny thing
-about the scamp was the fact that he was absolutely dependable, when
-not dealing with companies or governments or derelicts. Ratcliffe would
-have trusted him with his last penny.
-
-Dependable if you took hold of him by his handle and not by his cutting
-edge! Trustable if you trusted him!
-
-Then Jude came up in her harbor rig; that is to say, boots and a coat.
-
-“Satan’s clacking away with the customs an’ the port doctor man,” said
-Jude. “You can’t see across the cabin with the smoke, and I had to
-change my rig in the galley.”
-
-“You going ashore?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“No,” said Jude, “Satan’s going. I’ve got to keep ship. You going with
-him?”
-
-“I suppose so.”
-
-Appeared Satan, followed by the port men, who tumbled into the boat and
-rowed off.
-
-“Goin’ ashore?” asked Satan. “Well, I’ll row you to the wharf after
-I’ve had a bite of supper. Jude’ll bring the boat back, and we can get
-a shore boat off for half a dollar.”
-
-Half an hour later, just as the electrics were springing alive and the
-anchor lights of the shipping marking the dusk blue sky, they started.
-They stood on the wharf steps for a moment watching Jude row off, then
-they turned to the town.
-
-Havana smells different from any other seaport. She smells of rum and
-garlic and dirt and cigars and the earth of Cuba, which is different
-from the earth anywhere else. The harbor and the town exchange
-bouquets; the negroes help; Spanish cigarettes, Florida water and
-decaying vegetables lend a hand. Satan led the way. He knew the place
-as well as the inside of his pocket, and as he trudged along beside
-Ratcliffe under the electrics across plazas, or through short-cut
-cut-throat-looking byways, he pointed out the notable features of the
-place,—Dutch Pete’s, the Alvarez factory, the great opera house, the
-Calle Commacio, the cathedral.
-
-They passed Florion’s with its marble tables, drinkers, and domino
-players, and Satan suddenly hove to.
-
-“Where d’you want to go now?” said Satan. “D’you want drinks?”
-
-“No, I don’t want drinks,” said Ratcliffe. “Come over here.”
-
-A blazing cinema palace shone across the way, and they entered,
-Ratcliffe paying.
-
-The place was in black darkness. A cowboy shooting up a bar was on the
-screen, and a man with an electric torch led them to their seats.
-
-Then they sat watching the pictures, Satan criticizing the actors
-sometimes, and in a loud voice and not always favorably. The cowboy
-shot himself off the screen, the lights flared up for half a minute,
-went out, and the pictures resumed.
-
-Ratcliffe felt a nudge, and in the darkness Satan’s voice, muted now,
-came in his ear.
-
-“Say,” whispered Satan, “did you see him?”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“The man that dropped you at Pa’m Island.”
-
-“Skelton!”
-
-“That’s him. He’s sittin’ right a front of you.”
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-“Sure as sure.”
-
-Skelton here! But where, then, was the _Dryad_? Had he wrecked her, or
-what?
-
-The words of Satan seemed to alter everything, from the music to the
-picture of John Bunny on the screen.
-
-The darkness, filled with native Havana scents, became tinged with the
-atmosphere of British Respectability. Skelton at the pictures! Why, he
-ought to have been at the opera or one of the theaters or walking on
-the _alameda_ digesting his dinner and thinking of Tariff Reform or
-Anglicanism. It seemed impossible; yet when the light flared up again
-there was Skelton, sure enough, sitting with another man, and now he
-was rising, evidently tired of the show, and passing out, followed by
-his friend, grave as though he had been attending his mother’s funeral
-instead of the marriage of John Bunny to Flora Finch in a Pullman car
-with negro accompaniments.
-
-He wore evening clothes, covered by a light overcoat. Ratcliffe rose
-and, followed by Satan, pursued him, touching him on the shoulder
-outside and in the full blaze of the lamps.
-
-“Good God!” said Skelton. “Ratcliffe!”
-
-“Just got in,” said Ratcliffe. “Had a ripping time. Where’s the
-_Dryad_?”
-
-“Up at the wharf, coaling,” replied Skelton, absorbing Ratcliffe’s
-rough and ready garb, the cloth cap he was wearing, and Satan. “I’m
-staying at the Matanzas; but I go aboard tomorrow morning, and we’re
-off in the evening. What have you been doing with yourself?”
-
-“Oh, having no end of fun. We found an old treasure ship and blew her
-up and found she was full of skulls and bones. You know Satan?”
-
-Skelton, who had ignored Satan, acknowledged his existence by a little
-nod.
-
-“Who’s your friend?” asked Ratcliffe, glancing at Skelton’s companion,
-who had removed himself a few paces.
-
-“Ponsonby—diplomatic service. See here, come on board to lunch
-tomorrow—one-fifteen.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-“I have some gear of yours.”
-
-“Right. I’ll see about it.”
-
-“’Night.”
-
-“’Night.”
-
-Off he went.
-
-They had seen enough of the pictures, and having no inclination for
-cafés or taverns or gambling shops they made back toward the wharves,
-Satan walking in profound silence, Ratcliffe thinking.
-
-The whole evening he had been followed by a miserable sort of
-half-depression. It had attached itself to him first on the deck of
-the _Sarah_, born of his return to civilization; it had managed to
-decolorize the past few weeks and demagnetize Jude.
-
-His conscious mind had never quite gauged the hold that Jude had
-managed to get upon him, and this subconscious devil, rising at the
-touch of civilization, like a gas bubble from his conventional past,
-had burst, with spoiling effect, robbing the _Sarah_ of her romance and
-sea-charm and the past few weeks of their brightness. Jude had dimmed
-with everything else, become part and parcel of what seemed an illusion.
-
-It was while sitting at the pictures, in black darkness, with knowledge
-of Skelton’s presence, that the atmosphere began to clear, the waves to
-beat again on Cormorant Cay, the gulls to fly and call—and Jude come
-back to life.
-
-He heard again that queer little laugh of hers as she removed his hand.
-He felt again the warm body that had rested confidingly against him
-away there on the sandspit.
-
-And then she was out on the black harbor alone in the _Sarah_, while he
-and Satan were watching the pictures! Suppose some lumbering sailing
-craft being towed to her moorings or some incoming mailboat were to
-smash into the _Sarah_—and they were to row off and find nothing—no
-Jude?
-
-The thought almost made him rise from his seat to leave the place. But
-he could not explain to Satan; so he sat on till the lights flared out.
-And all the time, mocking the pictures on the screen, came pictures of
-Jude, all sunlit, real, fresh as herself!
-
-Then, as they pursued their way to the wharf after leaving Skelton,
-the impatience increased; the darkness of the night, the blaze of
-the town, the gay life of the streets, and the revelry of the cafés
-seemed sinister and banded in a conspiracy against him and the lonely
-little figure of Jude. The indifference of Skelton, the way he had gone
-hurriedly off, the way he had ignored Satan, were part of the business,
-blended with the blazing cafés, the moving crowd of Chinks, colored
-men, Spaniards, and Americans, the brilliance and gaiety without heart,
-that seemed like a barrier between him and the humble little _Sarah_
-and Jude away out there in the darkness alone—waiting for him! It came
-to him that Jude was the one sole thing he wanted in the cruel, odd,
-electric-lit world—and he had left her!
-
-They passed through narrow streets like the streets in an evil dream
-and blazing streets hideous with noise. Then at last they reached the
-wharf with its amber lights spilling on the black waving water. Satan
-hired a boat, and they put off, two dagoes rowing and Satan at the
-yoke lines.
-
-The _Sarah_ was anchored a mile out, and the vast three-mile harbor,
-vague in the starlight and circled by the hills, seemed to Ratcliffe
-more immense than when seen by daylight.
-
-Lights, lights everywhere,—scattered lights of shipping, some near,
-some far away, gem-crusted bulks that were great liners at anchor,
-songs and voices, and the creak of the oars in the rowlocks! Then a
-sudden green, red, and white light ahead and a fussy and furious little
-tug that nearly ran them down and left them rocking in her wash.
-
-“Scowbankers!” said Satan. Then: “I can’t make out the light of the
-_Sarah_, nohow.”
-
-A clutch came to Ratcliffe’s heart, the clutch of something cold and
-malign which had seemed following him ever since Skelton’s presence had
-made itself felt like an evil omen.
-
-They were so far out now that the sounds of the town and wharves had
-died to nothing; but still the creak of the oars in the rowlocks kept
-on. Then came Satan’s voice:
-
-“That’s her, over beyond them three lights on the starboard bow.”
-
-Ratcliffe breathed again, and his heart leaped in him as he picked out
-the light.
-
-Satan altered their course.
-
-“Are you sure?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“You gave me the devil of a fright.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I thought she might have been run down by some ship coming in—or
-something.”
-
-“Oh, she’s well out of the track,” said Satan.
-
-“All the same, I didn’t feel easy.”
-
-Then they hung silent, Ratcliffe’s eyes on the light and his hand in
-his pocket feeling for dollars to pay the boatmen.
-
-“What’s there to pay?” asked he.
-
-“A dollar, seeing there’s two of them,” replied Satan. “_Sarah_ ahoy!”
-
-“Ahoy!” came Jude’s voice, and a lantern swung over the side.
-
-Satan bundled on board, and Ratcliffe crammed five dollars into the
-hand of the stern oar; then he followed, and the fellows pushed off.
-
-“Took it without fightin’!” said Satan. “Lord’s sake, what’s come to
-them?” Then he bundled below to make some coffee.
-
-Jude snuffed the lantern out.
-
-She was moving away from the side and away from Ratcliffe, when he
-caught hold of her round the body. She did not resist him. He held her
-close to his heart.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“What is it?” asked Jude, with a sudden catch in her breath and
-speaking in a whisper. “Whacha want?”
-
-Then his lips met hers, full.
-
-Five minutes later Satan, making his coffee over the Primus stove of
-the _Haliotis_, heard a struggling sound, mixed with stifled laughter,
-and Ratcliffe appeared at the cabin door. He was dragging Jude in; she
-was half-resisting, and her face was hid in the crook of her arm.
-
-“Satan,” said Ratcliffe, “I’m going to marry Jude.”
-
-“God help you!” said Satan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-THE WEDDING PRESENT
-
-
-“I’m going to marry Jude!”
-
-The fantastic fact embodied in those words appeared to him folly only
-next day at one o’clock, with the sky to northward breathing hot on
-Havana Harbor like the mouth of a blue oven, flags fluttering to the
-wind, the drum and fife band of an American training ship coming over
-the water, and the _Dryad_ being towed to her moorings half a mile
-shoreward.
-
-The blushing bride-to-be of last night, hiding her nose on Ratcliffe’s
-shoulder, as they sat together on the couch before Satan, while he
-taunted her with the fact that now she’d have to get into skirts, had
-turned back into Jude.
-
-She was busy getting the dinghy ready to row her fiancé off to the
-_Dryad_.
-
-She was over the side in her, busy and humming a tune as she worked,
-baling out water, fixing the cushions, and so on, while Satan watched
-her in a brooding manner over the rail.
-
-A ghastly fear was working in the heart of Satan, the fear that Skelton
-might want the dinghy returned.
-
-“Now, mind you,” said Satan, “and bring the boat back. I’d sooner lose
-me head than that boat. If you come back without her, I’ll chuck you in
-the harbor! I’m talking straight.”
-
-Ratcliffe, who had just come on deck dressed for the occasion, came to
-the rail. Jude looked up at him and laughed.
-
-He had seen her laughing before, he had seen her surly, meditative,
-brooding, weeping, flushed with anger, grumbling; but he had never seen
-her with a look like this,—happy.
-
-Since last night something had come into her eyes that made her, when
-her eyes met his, beautiful. It was as though a lamp had been suddenly
-lit inside her, and the magical thing was the knowledge that he himself
-was the lamplighter.
-
-He had created this new something that spoke to him right out, right to
-his heart, right to his soul!
-
-He got into the dinghy, nodded to Satan, and they started, Jude at the
-sculls, her trousers rolled half-way up to the knees and her old panama
-on the back of her head.
-
-“Go slow,” said he, “there’s lots of time.” Then, when they were out of
-hearing and he was alone with her at last:
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“What?”
-
-“D’you remember yesterday you asked me if I was going away, now the
-anchor was down?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What would you have done if I had?”
-
-“I’d a drowned myself in the harbor,” said Jude without a moment’s
-hesitation. “What’s the good of asking?”
-
-“When did you begin to care for me a bit?”
-
-“D’you remember the sandspit?” asked Jude. “I dunno—maybe it was
-beyond then—remember the cache?”
-
-“When I chased you round the tree and—”
-
-Jude screwed up her lips.
-
-“You gave me an awful bang on the head.”
-
-“You frightened the gizzard out of me,” said Jude, “and I wasn’t the
-same after—that night.”
-
-“I remember, I heard you telling Satan that hants were chasing you.”
-
-“You were the hants.”
-
-“But you didn’t care for me then. Remember you said derricks were only
-good for hoisting fools off ships with.”
-
-“I reckon it was a sort of caring turned inside out,” said Jude. She
-turned her head to see if they were making for the _Dryad_.
-
-“You’re letting her off her course,” said she, “unless you’re making
-for that brig.”
-
-“I’d just as soon make for her as anywhere else,” said he, altering the
-course, “unless it was the sandspit—Jude!”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Imagine if we were alone on the sandspit, you and I, just as we were
-that day, instead of in this rotten old harbor—let’s go there!”
-
-“I’m willing.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“Soon’s you like.”
-
-“We can get a tent and grub, and Satan can take us there and come back
-for us. Damn! here’s the _Dryad_!”
-
-The first officer of the _Dryad_ was leaning over the rail watching
-them. The stage was down, and Jude brought the dinghy alongside.
-
-Then on the stage he watched her rowing off. He waved his hand to her,
-and she replied.
-
-Then, when he reached the deck, he found Skelton also at the rail.
-
-“’Morning,” said Ratcliffe. “That’s Satan’s sister.”
-
-“Which?” asked Skelton. “That—er—person in the boat?”
-
-“Yes. But you saw her on deck down at Palm Island, didn’t you?”
-
-“I had forgotten,” said Skelton, dismissing the subject.
-
-There were no guests. Ponsonby was to have come, but he was indisposed;
-yet the luncheon was just as formal an affair as though a dozen had
-been present instead of two.
-
-Half-way through the meal, however, Ratcliffe’s spirits began to
-brighten under the influence of Perrier Jouet and the harlequin thought
-that began to dance in his head, “I am going for a honeymoon to the
-sandspit with Jude!”
-
-He laughed occasionally at nothing in particular, and Skelton thought
-his manner strange, heady, queer, and began to thank his stars that
-Ponsonby was indisposed. He noticed also that Ratcliffe’s hands,
-despite scrubbing, bore the evidence of hard work not dissociated with
-tar. There was also something queer about his hair.
-
-There was! Satan had barbarized it down at Cormorant with the pair of
-scissors he used on Jude.
-
-Skelton, in asking Ratcliffe on board to luncheon, had considered
-himself a most forgiving individual. Leaving aside their little quarrel
-at Palm Island, remained the fact that Ratcliffe had left his ship,
-deserted him for the company of those Yankee “scowbankers,” and, to
-make matters worse, Ratcliffe seemed to have enjoyed the exchange.
-
-Now, in closer company with the delinquent, he was beginning to regret
-his forgiveness. “The man had deteriorated!”
-
-As a result of this impression his manner had stiffened; he felt
-irritated and bored.
-
-The steward had withdrawn, having placed the dessert on the table,
-and Skelton was in the act of carving a pineapple in the only way a
-pineapple ought to be carved,—that is to say by tearing it into pieces
-with two forks,—when Ratcliffe, who had been staring at the fruit as
-though hypnotized, suddenly broke into a chuckle of laughter.
-
-The pineapple, connecting itself, maybe, with canned pineapples robbed
-from the store room of the _Haliotis_, had suddenly brought up the
-vision of Satan.
-
-Satan in a new guise—Satan as a matchmaker!
-
-All sorts of things, some almost half-forgotten, rushed together to
-clothe Satan in this new garment. He remembered Satan’s solicitude for
-Jude’s future, Satan’s complacency when he and Jude had gone off to the
-sandspit together, his conversations about Jude, the complete absence
-of surprise with which he had taken the business of last night,—a
-hundred things, and all pointing in the same direction and to the fact
-that Satan had wished the business, just as he had wished the dinghy
-away from Skelton, just as he had wished Ratcliffe on board of the
-_Sarah Tyler_.
-
-He, Ratcliffe, was part of the sea-pickings of this gipsy, part and
-parcel with bunches of bananas, pots of paint, sailcloth, mainsheet
-buffers, cringles, and so on! He was annexed to fit Jude just as the
-mast winch of the _Haliotis_ was annexed to fit the _Sarah_!
-
-Jude herself had declared that Satan had brought him on board because
-he “wanted him.”
-
-Skelton paused in his operation on the pineapple and stared at the
-other.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Ratcliffe, “but something has just struck me
-so horribly funny I couldn’t help laughing—anyhow, the joke is against
-myself. Look here, Skelton, I want to tell you something—I’m—m—going
-to marry a girl.”
-
-“Indeed—but what is there horribly funny about that?”
-
-“Nothing—it’s not that, it’s something else; but let’s start with
-that. I’m going to marry that girl who rowed me over here today,
-Satan’s sister.”
-
-Skelton laid down his fork. All his starch had vanished. Surprised
-out of his life, he seemed suddenly to grow younger and more natural
-looking.
-
-“Good God!” said Skelton, staring at the other. “You don’t mean—”
-
-“I do. I don’t know why I am telling you, but there it is. You can’t
-understand in the least—couldn’t hope to make you.”
-
-Now Skelton with his starch off and in an emergency was a sound man,
-with a heart as good as any ordinary mortal’s.
-
-He had an eye that no little detail ever escaped. He had seen Jude
-at Palm Island, he had heard her speak, he had seen her half an hour
-ago, and Ratcliffe’s manner left him in no doubt as to his absolute
-earnestness.
-
-The man was about to commit suicide, social suicide. He had seen men do
-the same thing often in different ways.
-
-He pushed the pineapple away and rose from the table.
-
-“Come into the smoke room,” said he.
-
-In the smoke room he rang for coffee. Not a word about Jude. Dead
-silence.
-
-Then, when the coffee was brought and the door closed, he turned to the
-other.
-
-“Ratcliffe, you can’t do this thing. I know. Let me speak for a moment.
-You are your own master, free to do as you choose; but I must speak. I
-like you. Our temperaments are dead different, and we don’t make good
-companions; but you have many sterling qualities, and I don’t want to
-see you come a mucker. You can do a thing like this in two minutes; but
-two hundred years won’t get you out of it, once it’s done. (Take sugar
-in your coffee? Yes, I remember.) See here! I had a young brother once
-who was going to do just the same,—absolutely ruin himself. I managed
-to stop it, saved his future and his name.”
-
-He picked a cigar out of a box and, coming to a dead stop in his
-remarks, cut the end off.
-
-“My dear fellow,” said Ratcliffe, before he could continue, “I know
-absolutely and exactly how you feel on the subject and what you would
-say. I’ve felt it myself and said it to myself.
-
-“I began to get fond of her almost from the first. If you’d been in my
-shoes, you would have been just the same. No one could help getting
-fond of her. Then after awhile I found how I was drifting, and I said
-to myself, ‘It’s absurd!’ I pictured all my female relations and so
-forth and my position in the wonderful thing you call Society.”
-
-“Don’t sneer at Society,” said Skelton gravely. “That’s the easiest
-sort of cant that ever folly put into a man’s mouth. Go on.”
-
-“You’re right,” said Ratcliffe. “All the same Society galls one at
-times when the thought of it comes up against something alive and fresh
-and free from snobbery like Jude. Well, things went on and on. I hadn’t
-much time for thinking, underhanded as we were; and that was the fatal
-thing, for I absorbed her without thinking,—not her face or body, but
-her character. You know that, underhanded and close together on a tub
-like the _Sarah_, character is the thing that shows and counts, and
-at every hand’s turn hers showed up and got a tighter grip on me. It
-wasn’t a character all jam, either, but it was a thing to count on and
-real as the sea—you can’t understand.”
-
-“I can,” said Skelton, humoring the other, “a fine character.”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no!” said Ratcliffe. “Don’t get away with things. _Real_,
-that’s the word!”
-
-“But, my dear man—”
-
-“I know what you are going to say. She can’t speak King’s
-English—well, I’m going to teach her. She’s dressed like that—well,
-I’m going to dress her properly after awhile.”
-
-Skelton suddenly showed a flash of irritation.
-
-“Come up to the point,” said he. “Are you, after what I’ve said, still
-fixed in your purpose? Are you going to marry her?”
-
-“As soon as ever I can get a priest off to the old _Sarah_,” replied
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“That is your last word?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Very well,” said Skelton. His manner changed. He had done what he
-could: it was useless. Ratcliffe was no relation of his, and now,
-contemplating the thing with as much detachment as though it were a
-losing horse race or boxing encounter on which he had no bet, he lit
-the cigar, which he had been holding unlighted in his fingers, and
-became almost amiable.
-
-“Very well,” said he, “go ahead. After all, it’s not my affair; but
-I’ll be interested to know how you get on. By the way, I have some gear
-of yours on board.”
-
-“Take it back, will you, like a good chap,” said the other, “and leave
-it with the yacht people at Southampton? I’ll pick it up there when I
-return.”
-
-“You are coming back?”
-
-“Oh, rather; but not for a year or so, maybe. I’ve a lot to do, and
-when you see us next maybe you’ll agree—” He stopped short and relit
-his cigar, and they hung silent, each engaged in his own thoughts.
-
-Now; on the warm sea-scented air entering through the open ports, came
-a voice.
-
-It was the voice of the second officer, addressing someone overside.
-
-“Hi, there! Bring her round to the quarter-boat davits; she’s to come
-aboard.”
-
-“That’s the dinghy,” said Skelton. “I told them to bring her aboard.
-I’ll send you back in the pinnace.”
-
-Again came the voice.
-
-“Hi, there! Are you deaf? Bring her round to the quarter-boat davits;
-she’s to come aboard.”
-
-Then Jude’s fresh young voice:
-
-“Gar’n! She’s ours; old Popplecock gave her to Satan. Whacha talking
-about?”
-
-“Very well,” came the other’s. “You wait till Sir William comes on
-deck.”
-
-Skelton with a grim smile turned to the door. He pointed to the clock
-on the bulkhead.
-
-“I’m going on deck,” said he. “See that clock—promise me to stick here
-for two minutes by it and think right over the matter for the last
-time. Don’t let anything I have said weigh with you.”
-
-He went on deck and, keeping clear of the rail, entered into
-conversation with the first officer.
-
-Three minutes passed, and Ratcliffe’s head appeared at the saloon hatch.
-
-“Going?” said Skelton.
-
-“Yes,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Right! You can keep the dinghy—it’s a wedding present. Luck!”
-
-“Same to you!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-He gripped the other’s hand, and the grip was returned. The two men had
-never been so close to each other before, never would be again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two hours later the _Dryad_, queening it over the satin smooth harbor,
-dipped her flag to the humble little _Sarah_, and the _Sarah_ dipped
-her flag to the _Dryad_, and someone in the Wedding Present lying
-alongside the _Sarah_ waved a hat.
-
-Skelton, at the after rail, fixed his binoculars on the hat-waver. It
-was Satan.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences of
-inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.
-
-
-
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATAN ***
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Title, by Author</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Satan<br>
- A Romance of the Bahamas</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Henry De Vere Stacpoole</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 23, 2017 [eBook #55183]<br>
-[Most recently updated: March 6, 2023]</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Roger Frank, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-<br>Revised by Richard Tonsing.</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATAN ***</div>
-
-
-<h1>SATAN<br>
-
-<span class="ph2">A Romance of the Bahamas</span></h1>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller"><i>By</i><br>
-<span class="smcap large">H: De Vere Stacpoole</span><br>
-<span class="smcap">Author of “The Blue Lagoon,” “The Beach<br>
-of Dreams,” Etc.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5.5em;">
-<img src="images/logo.png" width="85" height="124" alt="Publisher's logo">
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 center">NEW YORK<br>
-<span class="larger">ROBERT M. McBRIDE &amp; COMPANY</span><br>
-1921
-</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center wspace">
-Copyright, 1920, by<br>
-<span class="gesperrt"><span class="smcap">Robert M. McBride &amp; Co.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center gesperrt"><i>Printed in the<br>
-United States of America</i></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center gesperrt">Published, · 1921</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="nobreak">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART I</td></tr>
- <tr class="xsmall">
- <td class="tdr">CHAPTER</td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">I</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Palm Island</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">II</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Floating Caravan</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">6</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">III</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Breakfast</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">16</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Pap’s Suit</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">23</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">V</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Portmanteau</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">34</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Skelton Sails</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">58</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Carquinez</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">68</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jude Overdoes It</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">79</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The “Juan” Sails</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">96</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">X</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cuss Words</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">107</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Coming of Cleary</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">116</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Honest Man</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">123</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Problems</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">130</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hants and Other Things</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">136</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Under Way</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">144</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Steersman</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">150</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART II</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lone Reef</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">157</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wreck</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">169</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mutiny</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">174</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sandspit</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">183</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Dished</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">193</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Crabs</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">199</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Return</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">206</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Bottle of Rum</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">215</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">They Fire the Fuse</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">220</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cargo</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">226</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Crockery Ware</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">232</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tide and Current</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">238</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Satan in Paradise</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">243</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Secret of the Sand</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">253</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Go-ashore Hat</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">259</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cleary!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">267</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fight</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">272</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXIV</td>
- <td class="tdl">“<span class="smcap">I’ll Tak!</span>”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">280</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART III</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Vanished Light</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">285</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wedding Present</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">295</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_I"></a>PART I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><span class="larger gesperrt">SATAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">PALM ISLAND</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> sky from sea-line to sea-line was crusted with
-stars, a triumphant, cloudless, tropic night-sky beneath
-which the <i>Dryad</i> rode at her anchor, lifting lazily
-to the swell flowing up from beyond the great Bahama
-bank.</p>
-
-<p>She was Skelton’s boat, a six-hundred-tonner, turbine
-engined, rigged with everything new in the way of sea
-valves and patent gadgets, and she had anchored at sundown
-off Palm Island, a tiny spot, gull haunted, and
-due west of Andros.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was a Christchurch man, Bobby Ratcliffe a
-Brazenose, and Bobby, tonight, as he leaned on the starboard
-rail smoking and listening to the wash of the
-waves on the island beach, was thinking of Skelton, who
-was down below writing up his diary. Before coming
-on this “winter cruise to the West Indies in my yacht”
-Bobby did not know that Skelton kept a diary, that Skelton
-was so awfully Anglican, so precise, so stuffed with
-the convenances, that he dined in dress clothes even in
-a hurricane, that he had a very nasty, naggling temper,
-that he had prayers every Sunday morning in the cabin<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-which the chief steward, the under stewards, and the
-officers off watch were expected to attend—also Bobby.
-Two other men were booked for the cruise, but they
-cried off at the last moment. If they had come, things
-might have been different. As it was, Bobby, to use his
-own language, was pretty much fed up.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was a right good sort, but he was not the man
-with whom to share loneliness, and Bobby, who had
-plenty of money of his own, was thinking how jolly this
-winter cruise would have been if he had only taken it on
-board a passenger liner, with girls and deck quoits and
-cards in the evening, instead of Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>Bobby was only twenty-two, a good-looking clean
-youth, well-balanced enough, but desirous of fun. Oxford
-had not spoiled him a bit. He had no “manner,”—just
-his own naturalness,—and he had shocked Skelton
-at Barbados by getting a great negro washing woman
-on board (she had come alongside in a blue boat) and
-giving her rum, for the fun of the thing. “Debauching a
-native woman with alcohol!” Skelton had called it.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton vetoed shark fishing. It messed his decks.
-He was like an old woman about his decks. “I tell you
-what you ought to do, Skelly,” Bobby had said. “You
-ought to start a blessed laundry!” They had nearly
-quarreled at Guadeloupe over sharks.</p>
-
-<p>And again at St. Pierre, where, lying off the ruins of
-the town, Skelton had likened it to Gomorrah, declaring
-it had been destroyed because of the wickedness of its inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>“And how about the ships in the bay?” had asked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-Bobby. “What had they to do with the business? Why
-weren’t they given notice to quit?”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t argue on the matter,” replied Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>And there was still two months of this blessed cruise
-to be worked out!</p>
-
-<p>He was thinking of this when Skelton came on deck,
-his white shirt-front shining in the starlight. He was in
-an amiable mood tonight and, ranging up beside Bobby,
-he spoke about the beauty of the stars.</p>
-
-<p>It was chiefly on Bobby’s initiative that they had
-dropped the anchor so that they might prospect the island
-on the morrow, and as they smoked and talked the
-conversation passed from stars to desert islands, and
-from desert islands to the old Spaniards of the West
-Indies, bucaneers, filibusters, pirates, and Brethren of
-the Coast.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was the starlight, or the tepid wind blowing
-up from the straits of Florida, or the distant starlit
-palms of Palm Island that set Skelton off and touched
-a vein in his nature hitherto unsuspected: whatever it
-was, he warmed to his subject and for the first time on
-the voyage became interesting. He could talk! Nombre
-de Dios, Carthagena, and Porto Bello,—he touched them
-alive again, set the old plate-ships sailing and the pirates
-overhauling them, sacked cathedrals of gold and jewels,
-showed Bobby Tortuga, the great rendezvous of the
-bucaneers and the Spaniards attacking it, men marooned
-on desolate places like Palm Island, treasure buried—and
-then all of a sudden closed up and became uninteresting
-again. The remnants of the boy in him had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-spoken, the old pirate that lives in most men’s hearts
-had shown his head. Perhaps he was ashamed of his
-warmth and enthusiasm over these old romantic things—who
-knows? At all events, he retired into himself and
-then went below to find a book he was reading, leaving
-the deck to Bobby and the anchor watch.</p>
-
-<p>Then the moon began to rise from beyond the Bahamas,
-a vast, full moon, with the sea seeming to cling to her
-lower limb as she freed herself. Dusky, at first, she
-paled as she rose, and now, in her light, the palms of
-the island and the coral beach showed clear.</p>
-
-<p>Palm Island is a scrub of cactus and bay cedar bushes,
-half a mile long and quarter of a mile broad, with not
-more than forty trees. Crabs and turtles and gulls are
-its only visitors, and desolation sits there visible and
-naked. But in the moonlight, on a night like this and
-seen from the sea, it is fairyland—storyland.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, his mind full of pirates and bucaneers,
-Spaniards and plate-ships, found himself wondering if
-men had ever been marooned here, if Morgan and Van
-Horn and all that crowd had ever had dealings on that
-beach, and what the moon could tell about it all if she
-could remember and speak. He was thinking this when
-the creak of block and cordage struck his ear, and past
-the stern of the <i>Dryad</i> came gliding the fore canvas of
-a small vessel, a thing that seemed no larger than a
-fishing boat.</p>
-
-<p>She had been creeping in from the sea unnoticed by
-them as they talked. Skelton had gone below without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-sighting her, and she was so close that the slap of her
-bow-wash came clearly as she passed.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her gliding shoreward like a phantom, and
-then across the water came a voice, shrill as the voice of
-a bird:</p>
-
-<p>“Seven fathom!”</p>
-
-<p>And on top of that another voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Let go!”</p>
-
-<p>The rumble—tumble—tumble—of an anchor chain followed,
-and then the silence of the night closed in, broken
-only by the far-off wash of the waves on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>This ghost of the sea fascinated Ratcliffe. He could
-see her now riding at anchor against the palms and bay
-cedars of the island.</p>
-
-<p>She was shedding her canvas; and now a glow-worm
-spark, golden in the silver of the moonlight, climbed up
-and became stationary but for the lift and fall of the
-swell as she rode at her moorings. It was her anchor
-light.</p>
-
-<p>He listened for voices. None came. Then he saw a
-lantern being carried along her deck. It vanished, probably
-through a hatch.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went below, and, dropping asleep the instant
-he turned in, dreamt that he was marooned on Palm Island
-with Skelton, and Skelton was trying to hang him
-on a palm tree for a pirate, and the gulls were shouting
-“Seven fathom!—seven fathom—seven fathom!” Then
-came oblivion and the sleep of youth that defies dreams.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">A FLOATING CARAVAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Next</span> morning, an hour after sunrise, Ratcliffe came
-on deck in his pajamas,—gorgeous blue and crimson
-striped pajamas,—a sight for the gods.</p>
-
-<p>The sky was cloudless. The wind of the night before
-had fallen to a tepid breathing scarcely sufficient to stir
-the flag at the jackstaff, and from all that world of new-born
-blue and mirror-calm sea there came not a sound
-but the sound of the gulls crying and quarreling about
-the reef spurs of the island.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the glory of light and color and against the
-palms and white beach lay the ghost of the night before,
-a frowzy-looking yawl-rigged boat of fifty feet or so, a
-true hobo of the sea, with wear and weather written
-all over her and an indescribable something that marked
-her down even to Ratcliffe as disreputable.</p>
-
-<p>Simmons, the second officer, was on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“She must have come in last night,” said Simmons.
-“Some sea scraper or another working between the islands—Spanish
-most likely.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, she’s not Spanish,” said Ratcliffe. “I saw her
-come in and I heard them shouting the soundings in English—look!
-there’s a chap fishing from her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-The flash of a fish being hauled on board had caught
-his eye and fired his passion for sport. They had done
-no fishing from the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He borrowed the dinghy from Simmons and, just as
-he was, put off.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask them to sell some of their fish, if they’ve any to
-spare,” cried Simmons as the dinghy got away.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay!” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>The sea blaze almost blinded him as he rowed with
-the gulls flying round and shouting at him. As he drew
-up to the yawl the fisherman lugged another fish on
-board. The fisherman was a boy, a dirty-faced boy, in
-a guernsey, and as the dinghy came alongside he stared
-at the pajama-clad one as at an apparition.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, there!” cried Ratcliffe, clawing on with the
-boathook.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself!” replied the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Any fish for sale?”</p>
-
-<p>“Any what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fish.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy disappeared. Then came his voice, evidently
-shouting down a hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan, below there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s the funniest guy come alongside wants to know
-if we’ve got fish to sell him. Show a leg!”</p>
-
-<p>“One minute,” replied the second voice.</p>
-
-<p>The boy reappeared at the rail in the burning sunlight.
-“The cap will be up in a minute,” said he. “What in the
-nation are you got up like that for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Them things.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I forgot I was in my pajamas. I must apologize.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s pajamas?”</p>
-
-<p>“My sleeping suit.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sleep in them things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m damned!” said the boy. Then he gave a
-sudden yell of laughter and vanished, sitting down on the
-deck evidently, while another form appeared at the rail,
-a lantern-jawed, long-haired, youthful figure, rubbing
-the sleep out of its eyes. It stared at the occupant of the
-dinghy, then it opened its mouth and uttered one word:</p>
-
-<p>“Moses!”</p>
-
-<p>“He sleeps in them things!” came a half-strangled voice
-from the deck. “Satan, hold me up, I’m dyin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your beastly head!” said Satan. Then to Ratcliffe,
-“Don’t be minding Jude,—Jude’s cracked,—but
-you sure are gotten up—Say, you from that hooker
-over there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Another explosion from the deck, stifled by a kick from
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you doing here, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe explained, Satan leaning comfortably on the
-rail and listening.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-“A yacht—well, we’re the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>. Pap and me
-and Jude used to run the boat. He died last fall. Tyler
-was his name, and Satan Tyler’s mine. He said I
-yelled like Satan when a pup and he put the name on
-me—Say, that’s a dandy boat. I’m wanting a boat like
-that. Will you trade?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s not mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“That don’t matter,” said Tyler with a laugh. “But
-I forgot: you aren’t in our way of business.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your way of business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Shut up, Satan!” came the voice from the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Pap was one thing or another; but we’re respectable,
-ain’t we, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Passons to what Pap was,” agreed the voice in a
-quieter tone, and it came to Ratcliffe that the figure of
-Jude remained invisible, being ashamed to show itself
-after having guyed him.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re out of Havana, and we scratch round and
-make a living,” went on Tyler, “and the boat being ours
-we make out. There’s lots to be had on these seas for
-the looking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you work the boat alone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we had a nigger to help since Pap died. He
-skipped at Pine Island a fortnight ago. Since then we’ve
-made out. Jude’s worth a man and don’t drink—”</p>
-
-<p>“Who says I don’t drink?” Two grimy hands seized
-the rail and the body and face of Jude raised themselves.
-Then the whole apparition hung, resting midriff high<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-across the rail, just balanced, so that a tip from behind
-would have sent it over.</p>
-
-<p>“Who says I don’t drink? How about Havana Harbor
-last trip?”</p>
-
-<p>“They gave her rum,” said Satan gloomily, “gave her
-rum in a doggery down by the waterside—curse the
-swabs! I laid two of them flat and then got her
-aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Blind, wasn’t I?” cut in Jude hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Blind you were,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>Jude grinned. Ratcliffe thought he had never met with
-a stranger couple than these two, especially Jude. Hanging
-on with the boathook, he contemplated the dirty, daring
-face whose fine, gray, long-lashed eyes were the best
-features.</p>
-
-<p>“How old are you?” asked he, addressing it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hundred an’ one,” said Jude. “Ask me another.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s fifteen and a bit,” said Tyler, “and as strong
-as a grown man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she was a boy,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“So I am,” said Jude. “Girls is trash. I’m not never
-goin’ to be a girl. Girls is snots!”</p>
-
-<p>As if to prove her boyhood, she hung over the rail
-so that he feared any moment she might tumble.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a girl, right enough,” said Tyler as if they were
-discussing an animal, “but God help the skirts she ever
-gets into!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d pull them over me head and run down the
-street if anyone ever stuck skirts on me,” said Jude.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-“I’d as soon go about in them pajamas of yours.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was silent for a moment. It amazed him the
-familiarity that had suddenly sprung up between himself
-and these two.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you come aboard and have a look around?”
-asked Tyler, as though suddenly stricken with the sense
-of his own inhospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“But the boat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stream her on a line—over with a line, Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>A line came smack into the dinghy, and Ratcliffe tied
-it to the painter ring. Next moment he was on board,
-and the dinghy, taking the current, drifted astern.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had his feet touched the deck of the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> than he felt himself encircled by a charm. It
-seemed to him that he had never been on board a real
-ship before this. The <i>Dryad</i> was a structure of steel
-and iron, safe and sure as a railway train, a conveyance,
-a mechanism made to pound along against wind
-and sea; as different from this as an aëroplane from a
-bird.</p>
-
-<p>This little deck, these high bulwarks, spars, and
-weather-worn canvas,—all them collectively were the real
-thing. Daring and distance and freedom and the power
-to wander at will, the inconsequence of the gulls,—all
-these were hinted at here. Old man Tyler had built the
-boat, but the sea had worked on her and made her what
-she was, a thing part of the sea as a puffin.</p>
-
-<p>Frowzy looking at a distance, on deck the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>
-showed no sign of disorder. The old planking was
-scrubbed clean and the brass of the little wheel shone.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-There was no raffle about, nothing to cumber the deck
-but a boat,—the funniest-looking boat in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Canvas built,” said Tyler, laying his hand on her;
-“Pap’s invention; no more weight than an umbrella.
-No, she ain’t a collapsible: just canvas and hickory and
-cane. That’s another of Pap’s dodges over there, that
-sea anchor, and there’s ’nother, that jigger for raising the
-mudhook. Takes a bit of time, but half a man could
-work it, and I reckon it would raise a battleship. There’s
-the spare, same as the one that’s in the mud—ever see
-an anchor like that before? Pap’s. It’s a patent, but
-he was done over the patentin’ of it by a shark in
-Boston.”</p>
-
-<p>“He must have been a clever man,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“He was,” said Tyler. “Come below.”</p>
-
-<p>The cabin of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> showed a table in the
-middle, a hanging bunch of bananas, seats upholstered in
-some sort of leather, a telltale compass fixed in the ceiling,
-racks for guns and nautical instruments, and a bookcase
-holding a couple of dozen books. A sleeping cabin
-guarded by a curtain opened aft. Nailed to the bulkhead
-by the bookcase was an old photograph in a frame,
-the photograph of a man with a goatee beard, shaggy
-eyebrows, and a face that seemed stamped out of determination—or
-obstinacy.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was took after Mother bolted,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“She took off with a long-shore Baptis’ minister,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-Jude. “Said she couldn’t stand Pap’s unbelievin’ ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“He made her work for him in a laundry,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“It was at Pensacola, up the gulf, and a year after,
-when we fetched up there again, she came aboard and
-died. Pap went for the Baptis’ man.”</p>
-
-<p>“He wasn’t any more use for a Baptis’ minister when
-Pap had done with him,” said Jude. “That’s his books—Pap’s.
-There’s dead loads more in the spare bunk in
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked at the books. Old man Tyler’s mentality
-interested him almost as much as the history of the
-Tyler family,—“Ben Hur,” Paine’s “Age of Reason” and
-“Rights of Man,” Browne’s “Popular Mechanics,” “The
-Mechanism of the Watch,” “Martin Chuzzlewit,” and
-some moderns, including an American edition of “Jude
-the Obscure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some of those came off a wreck he had the pickin’s
-of,” said Tyler, “a thousand-tonner that went ashore off
-Cat Island.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was before Jude was born,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! how do you know that?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed and pointed to the book. “It’s the
-name on that book,” said he. “I didn’t know: I just
-guessed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you’re right,” said Tyler, opening a locker
-and fetching out cups and saucers and plates and dumping
-them on the table. “Not that it matters much where
-it come from, but you’ve got eyes in your head, that’s
-sure. Say, you’ll stay to breakfast, now you’re
-aboard?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-“I’d like to,” said Ratcliffe, “but I ought to be getting
-back: they won’t know what’s become of me. And besides
-I’m in these.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s easy fixed,” said Tyler. “Jude, tumble up
-and take the boat over to the hooker and say the gentleman
-is stayin’ to breakfast an’ll be back directly after.
-I’ll fix him for clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude vanished, and Tyler, going into the after-cabin,
-rousted out an old white drill suit of “Pap’s” and a pair
-of No. 9 canvas shoes.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re new washed since he wore them,” said Tyler.
-“Slip ’em on over your what’s his names and come along
-and lend me a hand in the galley—can you cook?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Eased in his mind as to the <i>Dryad</i>, the boy in him rose
-to this little adventure, delightful after weeks of routine
-and twenty years of ordered life and high respectability.
-He had caravaned, yachted in a small way, fancied that
-he had at all events touched the fringe of the Free Life—he
-had never been near it. These sea gipsies in their
-grubby old boat were It! A grim suspicion that these
-remains of the Tyler family sailed sometimes pretty close
-to the law and that their sea pickings were, to put it
-mildly, various did not detract in the least from their
-charm. He guessed instinctively they were not rogues
-of a bad sort. The lantern-jawed Satan had not the face
-of a saint. There were indications in it indeed of the
-possibility of a devilish temper no less than a desperate
-daring, but not a trace of meanness. Jude was astonishingly
-and patently honest, while old man Tyler, whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-presence seemed still to linger on in this floating caravan,
-had evident titles, of a sort, to respect.</p>
-
-<p>He was helping to fry fish over the oil-stove in the
-little galley when Jude returned with the information, delivered
-through the shouting of the frying pan, that everything
-was all right, and the message had been delivered
-to a “guy” in a white coat who was hanging his fat head
-over the starboard rail of the <i>Dryad</i>; that he had told her
-to mind his paint; that she had told him not to drop his
-teeth overboard, and he had “sassed” her back; that the
-<i>Dryad</i> was a dandy ship, but would be a lot dandier if
-she were hove up on some beach convenient for pickin’
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Then she started to make the coffee over an auxiliary
-stove, mixing her industry with criticisms of the cookery
-and instructions as to how fish should be fried.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude does the cookin’ mostly,” said Tyler, “and we’d
-have hot rolls only we were under sail last night and
-she hadn’t time to set the dough. We’ll have to make
-out with ship’s bread.”</p>
-
-<p>Considering the condition of Jude’s grubby hands, Ratcliffe
-wasn’t sorry.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">BREAKFAST</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> amount of food those two put away was a revelation
-to Ratcliffe, and from start to finish of the
-meal they never stopped talking. One being silent, the
-other took up the ball. They had cottoned to Ratcliffe,
-evidently from the very first moment, for, at the very
-first moment, Tyler had been communicative about himself
-and his ship and his way of life. An ordinary ship’s
-officer coming alongside would have got fish at a price
-if he had been civil or a fish flung at his head if he had
-given “sass”: Ratcliffe got friendship.</p>
-
-<p>It was maybe his youth and the fact that all young
-people are Freemasons that did the business; the humor
-of the gorgeous pajamas may have helped. Anyhow, the
-fact remained. He had secured something that knowledge
-or position or fortune could not have bought,—the
-good will and conversation of this pair, the history of
-the Tylers, and more than a hint of their life on these
-seas. They had four thousand dollars in the bank at
-Havana left by Pap, not to be touched unless the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> came to smash. They had no house rent or rates;
-no expenses but harbor dues, food, oil, and tobacco, and
-not much expense for food—at least just at present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-Tyler winked across the table at Jude and Jude grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head,” said Jude, “and don’t be givin’
-shows away!” then suddenly to Ratcliffe, “We’ve got
-a cache.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s giving shows away now?” asked Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t split,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on the island here,” said Tyler, “near a ton of
-stuff, canned. A brig went ashore south of Mariguana.
-We picked up the crew and heard their yarn and got the
-location. Then a big freighter came along and took the
-men off us. The wreck was only a hundred and fifty
-miles from our position, and we reckoned the salvage
-men wouldn’t be on the spot for a fortnight or more
-and something was due to us for savin’ that crew; so
-we lit out for the wreck. We had four days’ work on
-her. She was straddled on a reef with twenty fathoms
-under her counter and a flat calm, all but a breathin’ of
-wind. We made fast to her, same as if she’d been a
-wharf. We had the nigger then to help, and we took
-enough grub to last us two years an’ fourteen boxes
-of Havana cigars and a live cat that was most a
-skeleton.”</p>
-
-<p>“She croaked,” put in Jude. “Satan fed her half a
-can of beef cut small, and then she scoffed half a
-bucket of water—that bust her.”</p>
-
-<p>“We wouldn’t have been so free in taking the things
-but for the lie of the hooker on the reef and the weather
-that was sure coming,” said Tyler. “We knew all about
-the weather and the chances. And we didn’t cast off
-from that hooker an hour too soon! We were ridin’ out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-that gale three days, and when we passed the reef again
-making west the brig was gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you cached the stuff here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we hadn’t to make no cache hole,” put in Jude.
-“Pap had one here. It’s among the bushes—and he didn’t
-make it, neither.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all coral rock a foot under the bushes,” said
-Tyler, “and there’s a hole you drop down six foot, that
-leads to a cave as cool as a refrigerator; so the goods
-would keep to the last trumpet. The old Spaniards must
-have cut it to hide their stuff in. Pap dropped on it by
-chance. Said they’d used it for hidin’ gold and such.
-Not that he believed in the buried treasure business—sunk
-ships is different.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, who was hacking open a can of peaches, suddenly
-made an awful face at Satan. It had the effect of
-cutting him short. Ratcliffe refused the peaches. He
-sat watching this pair of cormorants and thinking that
-the cache must be pretty big if it held two years’ provisions
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly he said so, laughing and without giving
-the least offense. Tyler explained that the cache was not
-their only larder: there were fish and turtle and turtle
-eggs, birds sometimes, fruit to be had for next to nothing,
-often for nothing. The only expense was for tobacco,
-and he had not paid ten cents for tobacco since last fall
-and wouldn’t want to for a year to come; clothes, and
-they didn’t want much clothes, Jude did the mending and
-patching; paint, and the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> had ways and means<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-of getting paint and all such, spars and so on. He gave
-a wonderful instance:</p>
-
-<p>Before Christmas last they had chummed up with a
-big yacht on the Florida coast near Cedar Cays. Thelusson
-was the owner, a man from New York. He took a
-fancy to the <i>Sarah</i> and her way of life, and he and his
-crew helped to careen her in a lagoon back of the reefs,
-cleaned her copper (she was dead foul with barnacles
-and weeds), gave her a new main boom and foresail and
-some spare canvas, and all for nix. He had no paint, or
-he would have painted her. He drank champagne by the
-bucket, and he wanted to quit the yacht and go for a
-cruise with them, only his missus who was on board
-wouldn’t let him.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe thought he could visualize Thelusson.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a mutt,” put in Jude, “with a voice like a
-muskeeter.”</p>
-
-<p>“She wanted to ’dopt Jude and stick a skirt on her,”
-said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“Handed me out a lot of sick stuff about sayin’ prayers
-and such,” hurriedly cut in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“And put the nightcap on it by kissin’ her,” finished
-Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s face blazed red like a peony.</p>
-
-<p>“If you chaps have had enough, I’m goin’ to clear,”
-said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Satan, rising, and she cleared, vanishing
-with the swiftness of a rabbit up the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler fetched out a box of cigars. They were Ramon
-Alones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-“She won’t speak to me now for half a day,” said
-Tyler. “If you want to guy Jude, tell her she’s a girl.
-I wouldn’t a told you, only you’re not in our way of life
-and so can’t make trouble. No one knows. There’s not
-a man in any of the ports knows: she goes as me brother.
-But the Thelusson woman spotted her on sight—Come
-on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude was emptying a bucket of refuse overboard, then
-she vanished into the galley, and Ratcliffe, well fed, lazy,
-and smoking his cigar, leaned for a moment over the
-rail before taking his departure, talking to Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>To starboard lay Palm Island, with the sea quietly
-creaming on the coral beach and the palms stirring to the
-morning wind, to port the white <i>Dryad</i> riding to her
-anchor on the near-shore blue, and beyond the <i>Dryad</i> the
-violet of the great depths spreading to the far horizon,
-beyond which lay Andros, and the islands, reefs, and
-banks from Great Abeco to Rum Cay. Not a sail on
-all that sea, nor a stain on all that splendor: nothing but
-the gulls wheeling and crying over the reefs to southward.</p>
-
-<p>But Satan’s mind as he leaned beside Ratcliffe was
-not engaged by the beauty of the morning or the charm
-of the view. Satan was a dealer with the sea and the
-things that came out of the sea or were even to be met
-with floating on the waves. Ratcliffe was one of these
-things.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve never had no call to work?” said Satan tentatively.
-“You’ve lots of money, I s’pect, and can take
-things easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-“Like fishin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ever wants to see good fishin’ and more
-than ordinary folk see of the islands here, drop me a
-word to Havana. Kellerman, marine store dealer,
-Havana, will get me. He’s a pal of mine. I fetch up
-in Havana every six months or so—and there’s more
-than fishin’—”</p>
-
-<p>Tyler stopped short, then he spat overboard and began
-to fill his pipe. He had no use for cigars—much.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean more than fishing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know. We’re underhanded a bit for
-any big job and I wouldn’t trust most men. They don’t
-grow trustable parties in Havana, nor the coast towns—not
-much. I’ve taken a likin’ to you somehow or ’nother,
-and if ever we come together again I’ll tell you maybe
-somethin’ that’s in my mind. You see, between Pap and
-me and the old <i>Sarah</i>, we’ve seen close on thirty years of
-these waters right from Caicos to N’y’Orleans and down
-to Trinidad. Turtle egg huntin’ and fishin’ and tradin’,
-there’s not a reef or cay we don’t know. The old <i>Sarah</i>
-could find her way round blind. Put her before the wind
-with the wheel half a spoke weather helm and leave her,
-and she’d sniff the reefs on her own.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were saying about something more than fishing,”
-persisted Ratcliffe, whose curiosity had been, somehow,
-aroused.</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” said Tyler; “but I’m not free to speak about
-private affairs without Jude, and there’s no use in
-tacklin’ her when she’s snorty. Listen to that!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-Sounds were coming from the galley as of a person
-banging pots and pans about.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s always the same when her dander is up,—she
-starts cleanin’ and dustin’ and makin’ hell of the place.
-Mother was the same. I reckon a woman can’t help
-bein’ a woman, not if she had a hundred pair of breeches
-on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Ratcliffe, “I’d like to come for a cruise,
-and I will some day, I hope. Maybe I’ll see you on the
-island later. I was intending going ashore today to have
-a look round: that’s why we anchored here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’ll see you ashore then,” said Tyler, “but if
-I’m not there, mind and say nothin’ of the cache.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">PAP’S SUIT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Jude, having</span> been fetched out of the galley, the canvas
-boat was got overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had offered to shed Pap’s suit and return in
-his pajamas as he had come, but Tyler vetoed the idea.
-The far-seeing Satan, who had snaffled a careen and clean
-up, not to speak of a main boom and spare canvas, out
-of Thelusson, had an object in view.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no trouble,” said he. “You take the dinghy, and
-we’ll take the boat and fetch the duds back. It’s late in
-the mornin’ for you to be boarding your ship in them
-colored things.”</p>
-
-<p>One of the big fish caught that morning was dropped
-into the boat as a “present for the yacht,” and they
-started.</p>
-
-<p>The accommodation ladder was down and Simmons and
-a quartermaster received Ratcliffe. As he went up the
-side he heard Tyler shouting to Simmons something about
-the fish. There was no sign of Skelton on deck, for
-which he was thankful, then he dived below to change.</p>
-
-<p>Now “Pap’s” suit had been constructed for a man of
-over six feet and broad in proportion and a man, moreover,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-who liked his clothes loose and easy. On Ratcliffe
-they recalled the vesture of Dr. Jekyll on Mr. Hyde.
-The saloon door was closed. He opened it, and found
-himself face to face with Skelton, who was sitting at
-one end of the saloon table reading from a book, while
-Strangways the captain, Norton the first officer, Prosser
-the steward, and sundry others ranged according to their
-degree sat at attention.</p>
-
-<p>It was Sunday morning. He had forgotten that fact,
-and there was no drawing back. He reached his cabin,
-mumbling apologies to the dead silence which seemed
-crystallized round Skelton, closed the door, and stuffed
-his head among the pillows of his bunk to stifle his
-laughter, then he undressed and dressed.</p>
-
-<p>As he dressed he could hear through the open port the
-voice of Tyler from alongside. The voice was pitched in
-a conversational key; it was saying something about a
-lick of white paint. He was talking evidently to Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Then, fully dressed, with the bundle of clothes and the
-canvas shoes under his arm, Ratcliffe peeped into the
-saloon. The service was over and the saloon was empty.
-He reached the deck. It was deserted save for a few
-hands forward and Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came down the accommodation ladder to the
-stage, and handed the clothes over to Satan.</p>
-
-<p>A drum of white paint and a coil of spare rope were
-in the boat close to Jude, and Satan was saying to Simmons
-something about a spare ax.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you haven’t got one, there’s no more to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-said,” finished Satan; then to Ratcliffe, “See you ashore,
-maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude grinned kindly, and they pushed off, the boat a
-strake lower in the water with their loot.</p>
-
-<p>The fat-faced Simmons watched them with the appearance
-of a man just released from mesmerism.</p>
-
-<p>“That chap would talk the hat off one’s head,” said
-he. “I’ll have h—l to pay with Norton over that paint;
-most likely I’ll have to put my hand in my own pocket
-for it. But he’s a decent chap, that fellow, but sharp—the
-way he landed me with that fish for a bait!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s all there,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“So’s the boy,” said Simmons. “Come alongside after
-you’d gone, to say you were staying to breakfast with
-them. Told him to mind and not damage the paint.
-Let out like a bargee at me—and Sir William Skelton
-listening!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Sir William now, Simmons? He wasn’t in
-the saloon when I’d finished dressing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect he’s in his cabin,” said Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe got a book and, taking his seat under the
-double awning sheltering the quarterdeck, tried to read.
-He had chosen a History of the West Indies, the same
-book most likely from which Skelton had “cadged” his
-information of the night before. The printed page was
-dull, however, compared to the spoken word, and he
-found himself wondering how it was that Skelly could
-have warmed him up so to all this stuff and yet be such
-an angular stick-in-the-mud in ordinary life. What made
-him such a superior person? What made him at thirty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-look forty, sometimes fifty, and what made him, Ratcliffe,
-fear Skelly sometimes, just as a schoolboy fears
-a master?</p>
-
-<p>He guessed he was in for a wigging now for cutting
-breakfast and appearing like a guy before the officers,
-and he knew instinctively the form the wigging would
-take,—a chilly manner and studious avoidance of the
-subject, that would be all,—Christchurch on a wet Sunday
-for forty-eight hours, with the Oxford voice and
-the Oxford manner accentuated and thrown in.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Sir William Skelton, Bart., came on
-deck,—a tall, thin man, clean shaved, like a serious-minded
-butler in a yachting suit of immaculate white
-drill. His breeding lay chiefly in his eyes: they were
-half-veiled by heavy lids. He had an open mother-of-pearl-handled
-penknife in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Free of the saloon hatch and not seeing Ratcliffe, he
-stopped dead like a pointer before game and called out
-“Quartermaster!”</p>
-
-<p>A quartermaster came running aft.</p>
-
-<p>Some raffle had been left on the scupper by the companionway,
-a fathom or so of old rope rejected by Tyler
-as not being the quality he was “wantin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He ordered it to be taken forward, then he saw Ratcliffe
-and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“’Morning,” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>He walked to the rail and stood with his hand on it
-for a moment, looking at the island and the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Jude and Satan were at work on something aft. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-a minute it became apparent what they were doing. They
-were rigging an awning in imitation of the <i>Dryad’s</i>, an
-impudent affair made out of old canvas brown with
-weather and patched from wear.</p>
-
-<p>It was like seeing a beggar woman raising a parasol.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton sniffed; then he turned and, leaning with his
-back against the bulwarks, began attending to his left
-little fingernail with the penknife.</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe,” said Skelton suddenly and apparently addressing
-his little finger, “I <em>wish</em> you wouldn’t!” He
-spoke mildly, in a vaguely pained voice. It was as
-though Ratcliffe had acted in some way like a bounder;
-more, and, wonderfully, he actually made Ratcliffe feel
-as though he had acted in some way like a bounder. He
-was Ratcliffe’s host; that gave an extra weight to the
-words. The whole thing was horrible.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t what?” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton had been rather hit in his proprieties by a man
-going off his boat in pajamas and remaining away to
-breakfast on board a thing like the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> in his
-pajamas; but the real cause of offense was “Pap’s” suit
-suddenly appearing at Sunday morning prayers. The
-chief steward had grinned.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, though a good sailor, an excellent shipmaster,
-and as brave as a man need be, was a highly nervous
-individual. A general service on deck for the whole crew
-was beyond him: he compromised by conducting a short
-service in the saloon. Even that was a tax on him. The
-entrance of Ratcliffe in that extraordinary get-up had
-joggled his nervous system.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-“If you can’t understand, I can’t explain,” said Skelton.
-“If our cases had been reversed, I should have
-apologized. However, it doesn’t matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Skelly!” said Ratcliffe. “I’m most awfully
-sorry if I have jumped on your corns, and I’ll
-apologize as much as you want, but the fact of the matter
-is we don’t seem to hit it off exactly, do we? You are
-the best of good people, but we have different temperaments.
-If those other fellows had come along on the
-cruise, it would have mixed matters more. We want to
-be mixed up in a big party more, you and I, if we want
-to get on together.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you before we started I disliked crowds,” said
-Skelton, “and that only Satherthwaite and Magnus were
-coming. Then, when they failed, you said it didn’t
-matter, that we should be freer and more comfortable
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Ratcliffe. “It was my mistake, and
-besides I didn’t want to put you off the cruise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you would not have put me off. I should have
-started alone. I am dependent on no one for society.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you would have been happier alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps,” said Skelton with tight lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, shove me ashore, somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is talking nonsense!” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had risen and was leaning over the rail beside
-the other. His eyes were fixed on the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, the
-disreputable <i>Sarah</i>, and as he looked at her Jude and
-Satan suddenly seemed to him real live free human beings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-and Skelton as being not entirely alive nor, for all
-his wealth, free.</p>
-
-<p>It was Skelton who gave the Tylers a nimbus, extra
-color, fascination, especially Jude. There was a lot of
-fascination about Jude, even without the background of
-Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not talking nonsense a bit,” said he, “and, if you
-can trundle along the rest of the cruise alone, I’ll drop
-you here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Drop you on this island?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I’d like to go for a cruise with those chaps—I
-mean that chap in the mud barge over there. He asked
-me, any time I wanted to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you in earnest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I am. It would be no end of a picnic,
-and I want to shove round these seas. I can get a boat
-back from Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton felt that this was the washerwoman of Barbados
-over again,—irresponsibility—bad form. He was,
-under his courteousness as a host, heartily sick of Ratcliffe
-and his ways and outlook. A solitary by inclination,
-he would not at all have objected to finishing this
-cruise by himself. All the same, he strongly objected
-to the idea just put before him.</p>
-
-<p>What made him object? Was he insulted that the
-<i>Dryad</i> should be turned down in favor of the frowzy, disreputable-looking
-<i>Sarah Tyler</i>, that the companionship
-of the Tylerites should be preferred to his? Did some
-vague instinct tell him they were the better people to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-with if one wanted to have a good time? Was high
-conventionality outraged as though, walking down Piccadilly
-with Ratcliffe, the latter were to seize the arm
-of a dustman?</p>
-
-<p>Who knows? But he bitterly and strongly objected.
-And how and in what words did he show his objection
-and anger?</p>
-
-<p>“Then go, my dear fellow, go!” said he as though with
-all the good will in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But are you sure you don’t
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mind! Why should I mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“One portmanteau full of stuff will do me,” said Ratcliffe,
-“and I have nearly a hundred and fifty in ready
-money and a letter of credit on the Lyonnaise at Havana
-for five hundred. I’ll trundle my stuff over if you’ll
-lend me a boat, and be back for luncheon. You’ll be
-off this evening, I suppose, and I can stay aboard here
-till you get the anchor up. It’s possible I might pick you
-up at Havana on the way back; but don’t worry about
-that. Of course all this depends on whether that fellow
-will take me. I’ll take the portmanteau with me and
-ask.”</p>
-
-<p>He did not in the least see what was going on in Skelton’s
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You will take your things with you in a boat, and
-if this—gentleman refuses to take you, what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I want to be quite clear with you, Ratcliffe,”
-said Skelton. “If you leave my ship like that—for nothing—at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-a whim and for disreputable chance acquaintances—absolute
-scowbankers—the worst sort—I want to be
-clear with you—quite, absolutely definite—I must ask you
-not to come back!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m hanged!” said Ratcliffe, suddenly blazing
-out. “First you say go and then you say don’t! Of
-course that’s enough: you’ve practically fired me off your
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not twist my words,” said the other. “That is
-a subtle form of prevarication I can’t stand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we had better stop this,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m
-going! If I don’t see you again. I’ll say goodby.”</p>
-
-<p>“And please understand,” said the other, who was
-rather white about the mouth, “please understand—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know,” said Ratcliffe. “Goodby!”</p>
-
-<p>He dived below to the saloon and rang for his bedroom
-steward.</p>
-
-<p>Burning with anger and irritation and a feeling that
-he had been sat upon by Skelton, snubbed, sneered at,
-and altogether outrageously used, he could not trust
-himself to do his own packing. He sat on his bunkside
-while the steward stuffed a portmanteau with necessaries,
-and as he sat the thought came to him of what would
-happen were Tyler to refuse to take him. He would
-have to take refuge on Palm Island. It was a comic
-opera sort of idea; yet, such was the state of his mind,
-he actually entertained it.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was no longer “Skelly,” but “that beast Skelton.”
-Then he tipped the steward and the chief steward,
-telling them that he was going for a cruise in that “yawl<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-over there.” On deck he met Norton and Simmons
-and told them the same tale. Skelton had vanished to
-his cabin. He told the first and second officers that he
-had said goodby to his host and asked for a boat to be
-lowered.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll pick you up most likely at Havana,” said he to
-gloze the matter over. “I expect I’ll have a good time,
-but rather rough. I want to do some fishing.”</p>
-
-<p>The whole thing seemed like a dream and not a particularly
-pleasant one. Embarked on this business now,
-he almost wished himself done with it. The yacht was
-comfortable, the cooking splendid; to satisfy any want,
-one had only to touch a bell. There were no bells on
-board the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>. A lavatory and a sort of bathroom
-invented by “Pap” were the only conveniences, and
-the bath was impracticable. It was “Pap’s” only failure,
-for the sea-cock connecting it with the outer ocean was
-so arranged or constituted that as likely as not it would
-let in the Caribbean before you could “stop it off.”</p>
-
-<p>If Skelton now, at the last moment, had asked Ratcliffe
-to come down and have an interview, things might
-have been smoothed over, but Skelton was not the sort
-of man to make advances; neither, in his way, was Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Simmons was directing the lowering of a
-boat. The companionway was still down. The luggage
-was put in, and Simmons, seated by Ratcliffe in the stern
-seats, took the yoke lines. Not a sign of Skelton, not
-even a face at a porthole!</p>
-
-<p>“Give way!” shouted Simmons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-As they drew up to the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, Ratcliffe saw
-Satan leaning over the rail and watching them. Jude
-was nowhere visible.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” said Ratcliffe as they came alongside. “I’ve
-come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was half-expectin’ you,” said Satan with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take me for that cruise right off?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! That your dunnage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan stepped to the cabin companionway and shouted
-down it.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” came Jude’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s come back!”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE PORTMANTEAU</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> Jude came on deck the portmanteau was being
-hoisted on board. Ratcliffe passed down a five-pound
-note to the boat’s crew, and then stood, waving
-to Simmons as the boat put away. Then, turning to
-Satan, he tried to discuss terms, but was instantly silenced
-by Jude and Satan. They would hear nothing of money.
-Used to sea changes and strange happenings, they seemed
-to think nothing of the business, and after the first words
-fell to talking together.</p>
-
-<p>The trend of their talk induced in Ratcliffe a vaguely
-uncanny feeling. It was as though they had already discussed
-his coming on board and the storage of himself
-and his baggage, as though they had known by instinct
-that he would return. The size of the portmanteau
-affected Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t keep that,” said Jude, giving the portmanteau
-a slight kick. “It’s a long sight too big. Say, what
-have you got in it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pajamas?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and lots of other things.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude tilted back the old panama she was wearing and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-took her seat on the portmanteau. Her feet were bare,
-and she twisted her toes in thought as she sat for a
-moment turning matters over in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You can stick the things in the spare locker,” said
-she at last. “You gonna have a gay old time if you
-keep this in the cabin, tumblin’ over it. Better empty
-her here an’ cart the stuff below.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But what shall I do with the
-portmanteau when it’s empty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heave her overboard,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head!” said Tyler, suddenly cutting in.
-“What you talkin’ about? Heave yourself overboard!”
-Then to Ratcliffe, “She’s right, all the same; there’s no
-room for luggage. If you’ll help Jude to get the things
-below, I’ll look after the trunk. When you’ve done with
-the cruise you can get a bag to hold your things.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe opened the portmanteau. The steward of the
-<i>Dryad</i> was an expert: in a past existence he had probably
-been a pack rat. In any given space he could have
-tucked away half as much again as any other ordinary
-mortal. But he certainly had no imagination, or perhaps
-he had been too busy to cast his eye overboard and
-see the manner of craft Ratcliffe was joining, and Ratcliffe
-had been far too much exercised in his mind about
-Skelton to notice what was being packed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude on her knees helped.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this?” asked Jude, coming on a black satin
-lining.</p>
-
-<p>“Confound the fool!” said Ratcliffe. “He needn’t have
-packed that: it’s a dinner jacket.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-“Mean to say you sit down to your dinner in a jacket?”
-Jade choked and snorted while Ratcliffe hurriedly, on his
-knees, hauled out the trousers and waistcoats that went
-with the garments.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the lining—it’s worn the other way about—I
-know it’s tomfoolery. Stick ’em all in one bundle—Lord!
-look at the shirts he’s packed!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got tucks in them,” said Jude, looking at the
-pleated fronts.</p>
-
-<p>“I know. They go with that tomfool dinner suit.
-You can’t knock sense into the head of a bedroom
-steward. Come along and let’s get them down below.”</p>
-
-<p>While they were carting the stuff down, Satan on the
-hatch cover cut himself a chew of tobacco (he sometimes
-chewed) and, with his lantern jaws working regularly
-like the jaws of a cow chewing the cud, contemplated
-the steadily emptying portmanteau.</p>
-
-<p>He had a plan about that portmanteau, a plan to turn
-it to profit. Satan’s plans generally had profit for their
-object. He had taken a genuine liking for Ratcliffe; but
-it was a curious thing with Satan that even his likings
-generally helped him along toward profit,—perhaps because
-they were the outcome of a keen intelligence that
-had been sharpened by knocking about among rascals,
-beachcombers, wharf rats, as well as honest folk.</p>
-
-<p>When Ratcliffe had fetched down the last load and
-come up again, he found Satan and the portmanteau
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas boat had not been brought on board, but
-streamed astern on a line. He looked over the side.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-Satan was in the boat with the portmanteau and in the
-act of pushing off.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m takin’ her back to the yacht,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe nodded.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Jude came on deck blinking and hitching
-up her trousers. She had washed her face and made
-herself a bit more tidy,—perhaps because she had remembered
-it was Sunday or perhaps because company
-had come on board. She had evidently put her whole
-head into the water. It was dripping, and as she stood
-with the old panama in her hand and her cropped hair
-drying in the sun Ratcliffe observed her anew and
-thought that he had never seen a more likable figure.
-Jude would never be pretty, but she was better than
-pretty,—healthy, honest and capable, trusting and fearless,
-easily reflecting laughter, and with a trace of the irresponsibility
-of youth. It was a face entirely original
-and distinctive. Dirty, it was the face of a larrikin;
-washed, a face such as I have attempted to describe; and
-the eyes were extraordinary,—liquid-gray, with a look of
-distance, when she was serious, a look acquired perhaps
-from life among vast sea spaces.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Satan?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe pointed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, shading her eyes, looked. Then she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought he was up to somethin’,” said she. “He’s
-gone to kid that officer man out of some more truck.”</p>
-
-<p>In a flash Ratcliffe saw the reason of Satan’s activities,
-and in another flash he saw again, or seemed to see, in
-Satan and Jude a pair of gipsies of the sea. A gipsies’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-caravan camped close to a neat villa,—that was the relationship
-between the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and the <i>Dryad</i>,—and
-Satan was the caravan man gone round to the villa’s
-back door to return an empty portmanteau and blarney
-the servants out of scraps and old odds and ends not
-wanted, maybe to commandeer a chicken or nick a doormat—heaven
-only knew! He remembered the fancy
-Satan had taken to the dinghy. And he, Ratcliffe, had
-thrown in his lot with these people! Fishing cruise!
-Rubbish! Gipsy patter, sea thimblerigging, wreck-picking,
-and maybe petty larceny from Guadaloupe to dry
-Tortugas,—that was what he had signed on for. Why,
-the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, could she have been hauled into any
-law court, would have stood convicted on her very appearance!
-Jude was honest enough in her way; but her
-way was Satan’s way, and she had owned up with steadfast,
-honest eyes to the plundering of a brig and the
-caching of the plunder. They were “passons to what
-Pap had been,” but they were his offspring, and the law
-to them was no doubt what it had been to him,—a something
-to be avoided or outwitted, like a dangerous animal.</p>
-
-<p>All these thoughts running through his head did not
-disturb him in the least. Far from that! The reckless
-in him had expanded since he had cut the cable connecting
-him with the <i>Dryad</i>, and not for worlds would he
-have changed the <i>Sarah</i> into a vessel of more conventional
-form, or altered Satan from whatever he might be
-into a figure of definite respectability.</p>
-
-<p>He reckoned that if Satan broke the law he would be
-clever enough to avoid the consequences. His tongue<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-alone would get him out of most fixes, and just this touch
-of gipsiness in the business gave a new flavor to life,—the
-flavor boys seek when they raid orchards and hen-roosts
-and go pirating with corked faces and lath swords.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s goin’ aboard her,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The portmanteau had been taken up by one of the
-crew, and now Satan, evidently at the invitation of one
-of the white-clad figures leaning over the rail of the
-<i>Dryad</i>, was going up the accommodation ladder, leaving
-the boat to wash about in the blue water by the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe guessed that one of the white-clad figures was
-Skelton and that it was on Skelton’s invitation he had
-gone on board. He felt vaguely uneasy. What did
-Skelton mean by that? Was he up to any dodge to
-“crab” the cruise?</p>
-
-<p>However, he had no time to bother over this, for Jude,
-who had him now to herself without fear of interruption,
-had opened her batteries.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said Jude, hanging over the rail where the
-awning cast its shadow, speaking without looking at him
-and spitting into the water, “what are you when you’re
-ashore, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m one of the idle rich,” said Ratcliffe, lighting his
-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you won’t be idle aboard here,” said Jude definitely.
-“What was your dad? Was your dad an idle rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he was a ship owner.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many ships did he own?”</p>
-
-<p>“About forty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-“What sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“Steamers.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sizes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, anything from two to five thousand tons.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to see if he were guying her.</p>
-
-<p>“There was another man in the business,” said Ratcliffe,
-“a partner; Ratcliffe &amp; Holt was the same of the
-firm. The governor died intestate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somethin’ wrong with his inside?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he died of a stroke; he was found in his office
-chair dead; he died at his work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did they get the chap that did him in?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it wasn’t a man that struck him; it was apoplexy,
-a disease, and dying without a will, all his money was
-divided up between my two brothers and me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much did you get?”</p>
-
-<p>“Over a hundred thousand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dollars?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, pounds—four hundred thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got ’em still?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the bank?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some; the rest is invested.”</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to lose interest in the money business and
-hung for a moment over the rail, whistling almost noiselessly
-between her teeth and kicking up a bare heel.
-Then she said:</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s the chap you were sailin’ with?”</p>
-
-<p>“Skelton is his name.”</p>
-
-<p>“He owns that hooker?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude suddenly, as if waking from a
-reverie, “this won’t boil potatoes—I’ve got to get dinner
-ready. Come ’long and help if you’re willin’.”</p>
-
-<p>There was half a sack of potatoes in the galley. She
-set the stove going, and then, on her knees before the
-open sack, she sent him to fetch half a bucket of water
-from overboard. He found the bucket with a rope attached,
-brought the water, and filled the potato kettle,
-then he brought more water for the washing of the
-potatoes.</p>
-
-<p>She did the washing squatting on her heels before the
-bucket.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get them from?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Get which?”</p>
-
-<p>“The potatoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bought them,” said Jude; then, as though suddenly
-smitten by rectitude, “No, we didn’t, nuther: we kidooled
-them out of a fruiter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a fruiter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fruit steamer. Satan fixed her.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did he fix her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude, “it’s no harm to hold up a packet
-if you don’t throw her off her course—much. It’s the
-owners pays, and they can stand the racket. The crew
-likes it, and if there’s passengers aboard they just love
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say you hold up steamers?” asked
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-“But how do you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s only now and then. What’s easier than to
-lay in her course with the flag half-mast? Then she
-heaves to.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you board her and ask for potatoes, or whatever
-you want?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much!” said Jude. “They’d boot you off the
-ship. Water’s what you ask for, pretendin’ you’re dying
-of thirst; then you drink till you’re near bustin’ and
-fill the breaker you’ve brought with you. It’s all on the
-square. Satan would never hold a ship unless he had
-some fish to offer them for whatever he wants,—potatoes
-or fruit or tobacco. He’s got the fish in the boat and
-hands it up. They’re always glad of fresh fish and they
-offer to buy it; but he won’t take money, but says, ‘If
-you’ve got a few potatoes handy, I don’t mind takin’ them
-for the fish.’ Sometimes it’s fruit he wants, or other
-things. Then you push off—and if it’s a passenger
-packet the passengers, thinkin’ they’ve saved you from
-dyin’ of thirst, line up and cheer. It’s no end of fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“What flag do you sail under?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Murrican, what else? You see,” went on Jude as
-she put the potatoes into the kettle, “fish costs nothing
-to us and they’re mighty glad of it, but I reckon they’d
-bat our heads off if they knew about the dyin’ of thirst
-business.”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose you struck the same ship twice?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a job one does every day,” said Jude, with
-a trace of contempt in her tone, “and Satan don’t wear
-blinkers, and it’s not a job you could do at all if you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-didn’t know the lie of the fishin’ banks by where the
-ship tracks run. I reckon you’ve got to learn something
-about things.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I have,” said Ratcliffe, laughing, “and I
-bet you’ll teach me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, shy that over to begin with,” said Jude, giving
-him the pail of dirty water.</p>
-
-<p>He flung the water over the side, and as he did so
-he took a glance at the <i>Dryad</i>. Satan was in the boat
-just pushing off. When he returned to the galley with
-the news, Jude was preparing to fry fish: not the early
-morning fish, but some caught just before Ratcliffe had
-come on board.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went to the rail again just as Satan was
-coming alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had a cargo of sorts. His insatiable appetite
-for canvas and rope was evidenced by the bundle in the
-stern, and there were parcels. The return of the empty
-portmanteau had not been waste labor.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s coffee,” said he to Ratcliffe, handing up the
-goods. “We were runnin’ short. And here’s biscuits—catch
-a holt—and here’s some fancy muck in cans and
-c’ndensed milk—I told the chap our cow died yesterday.
-‘Take everything you want,’ says he. ‘Don’t mind me—I’m
-only the owner.’ Offered me the mainsail as I
-was putting off an’ told me to come back for the dinghy.
-I’d told him I was sweet on her—full of fun he was—and
-maybe I will. Claw hold of this bundle of matches—they’re
-a livin’ Godsend—and here’s a case of canned
-t’marters—and that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-Skelton’s irony was evidently quite lost on Satan, or
-put down to his “fun,” but Ratcliffe could appreciate
-it, and the fact that its real target was himself.</p>
-
-<p>The canned t’marters appeared with the food at dinner,
-and during the meal more of Skelton came out.
-He had offered Satan vinous liquors, hoping, so Ratcliffe
-dimly suspected, to send him back a trouble to the
-<i>Sarah Tyler</i> and an object lesson on the keeping of disreputable
-company; but the wily Satan had no use for
-liquor. He was on the water wagon.</p>
-
-<p>“I leave all them sorts of things to Jude,” said he, with
-a grin. He was referring to Jude’s boasted drunk at
-Havana, and Ratcliffe, who was placed opposite to the
-pair of them, across the table, saw Jude’s chin project.
-Why she should boast of a thing one moment and fire
-up at the mention of it at another was beyond him.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment it seemed as if she were going to
-empty the dish of tomatoes over Satan, but she held
-herself in, all but her tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d have been doin’ better work on board here,
-mendin’ the gooseneck of that spare gaff, than wangling
-old canvas an’ rope out of that man,” said she.
-“We’re full up of old truck that’s no more use to us
-than Solomon’s aunt. It’s in the family, I suppose,
-seein’ what Granf’er was—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, put a potato in your mouth!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“He used to peddle truck on the Canada border,” said
-she to Ratcliffe,—“hams—”</p>
-
-<p>“Close up!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“—made out o’ birchwood, and wooden nutmegs—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-“That was Pap’s joke,” said Satan. “And another
-word out of you and I’ll turn you over me knee and
-take down your—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what do you want flingin’ old things in my
-face?” cried Jude, wabbling between anger and tears.
-“Some day I’ll take me hook, same as mother did.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s not a Baptis’ minister would look at you,”
-said Satan, winking at Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn Baptis’ ministers! You may work your old
-hooker yourself. I’ll skip! Two thousand of them dollars
-is mine, and next time we touch Havana I’ll skip!”</p>
-
-<p>“And where’ll you skip to?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll start a la’ndry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’ll have to black your face and wear a turban,
-same as the others—and marry a nigger. I can
-see you comin’ off for the ship’s washin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude began to laugh in a crazy sort of way, then all
-at once she sobered down and went on with her dinner.
-One could never tell how her anger would end,—in tears,
-laughter of a wild sort, or just nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Not another word was said about the family history
-of the Tylers, at least at that meal, and after it was
-over Jude made Ratcliffe help to wash up the plates and
-things in the galley.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s Cap,” said Jude. “He never helps in the
-washin’ or swillin’. Not cold water!—land’s sake! where
-did you learn washin’ up?—hot! I’ve left some in that
-billy on the stove.”</p>
-
-<p>She had taken off her old coat and rolled her guernsey
-sleeves up to the shoulders nearly, and it came to Ratcliffe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-as he helped that, without a word of remonstrance,
-naturally, and as a part adapts itself to the economy of
-a whole, he had sunk into the position of kitchen maid
-and general help to the Tyler family, taken the place
-of the nigger that had skipped; furthermore that Satan
-was less a person than a subtle influence. Satan seemed
-to obtain his ends more by wishing than by willing. He
-wanted an extra hand, and he had somehow put the spell
-of his wish on him, Ratcliffe. He had wished a drum
-of paint out of Simmons—and look at Skelton, the cynical
-and superior Skelton, sending off doles of coffee
-and “t’marters” to the dingy and disreputable <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i>, offering his mainsail to the rapacious Satan as
-a gibe! What had he been but a marionette dancing on
-the string of Satan’s wish?</p>
-
-<p>Only for Jude and the <i>Sarah</i> and the queer new sense
-of freedom from all the associations he had ever known,
-only for something likable about Satan, the something
-that gave him power to wheedle things out of people and
-bend them to his wishes, Ratcliffe might have reacted
-against the Tyler hypnotism. As it was, the whole business
-seemed as jolly as a pantomime, as exciting as a
-new form of novel in which the folk were real and himself
-a character.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Satan and the old <i>Sarah</i> aside, and the extraordinary
-fascination of spars, sails, narrow deck, and
-close sea, catching one’s own fish, cooking one’s own
-food, and dickering with winds, waves, reefs, and lee
-shores for a living,—leaving all these aside, Jude alone
-would have held him; for Jude gave him what he possessed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-when he was nine,—the power of playing again,
-of seeing everything new and fresh. Washing up dishes
-with Jude was a game. To the whole-souled Jude all this
-business was a game,—hauling on the halyards, fishing,
-cooking, hanging on to the beard of a storm by the sea
-anchor, wreck picking and so on,—and she had infected
-him. Already they were good companions and, when
-together, of the same age, about nine—though she was
-fifteen and he over twenty.</p>
-
-<p>“Stick them on that shelf,” said Jude. “Oh, Lord!—butter-fingers!—lemme!
-That’s the gadget to keep them
-from shiftin’ if the ship rolls. Now stick the knives in
-that locker. You don’t mind my tellin’ you, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>They found Satan under the awning, attending to the
-gooseneck of the spare gaff.</p>
-
-<p>Jude sat down on the deck clasping her knees, criticized
-Satan’s handiwork, received instructions to hold
-her tongue, and then collapsed, lying on her back with
-knees up and the back of her hand across her eyes.
-She could sleep at any odd moment.</p>
-
-<p>The horizon had vanished in haze, the crying of the
-gulls had died down, and the washing of the lazy swell
-on the island beach sounded like a lullaby.</p>
-
-<p>A trace of smoke was rising from the yellow funnel
-of the <i>Dryad</i> as she lay like a white painted ship on a
-blue painted ocean. They were firing up.</p>
-
-<p>“How about getting ashore?” asked Ratcliffe. “I want
-to see that cache of yours. Care to come?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-“I’d just as soon leave it till they’re away,” said
-Satan, jerking his hand toward the <i>Dryad</i>. “There’s
-no tellin’, they might be spottin’ us on the location with
-a glass, and they’ll be off tonight—so the chap told me.
-You leave it to me and I’ll show you a cache better nor
-that in a day or two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, Satan!” came a drowsy voice from the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up yourself!” said Satan. “I’m not talkin’ of
-what you mean: I’m talkin’ of the abalone reef—lyin’
-there like a lazy dog and lippin’ your betters!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s me betters?” cried Jude, sitting bang-up
-suddenly, like the corpse in “Thou art the man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m your betters.”</p>
-
-<p>“You!”</p>
-
-<p>“Me!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude broke into a cracked laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to him talkin’!” cried she to the universe in
-general. “Ain’t fit to bile potatoes!” She was on her
-feet, and he was after her with a rope’s end, dodging
-her round the mast. “Touch me and I’ll tell him!” A
-flick of the rope’s end caught her, and next moment she
-was clinging to Ratcliffe and using him as her shield.
-“It’s an old ship sunk south o’ Rum Key!” cried Jude.
-“South o’ Rum Key! I told you I’d tell him if you
-touched me.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan dropped the rope and resumed the gooseneck
-business.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’ve done it!” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Told you I would,” said Jude. She sat down on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-deck again as though nothing had happened and nursed
-her knees.</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t mind me,” said Ratcliffe. “I won’t tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s not that,” said Satan, “but Pap was mighty
-particular about keepin’ close. He located that hooker
-only three months before the fever took him—and he
-didn’t come on it by chance nuther. And now Jude’s
-given the show away!”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you I’d tell him,” said Jude broodily.</p>
-
-<p>“Told me you’d tell him! Why, ever since last fall
-you’ve been at me to keep my tongue in my head about
-it, and then you bring it out bing, first thing, yourself!
-That’s a woman all over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you callin’ a woman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me aunt. Shut your head and give over handlin’
-that ball of yarn, clutch hold of the gaff and keep it
-steady while I fix this ring on her!”</p>
-
-<p>He worked away in silence while Ratcliffe sat watching,
-vaguely intrigued by what had just passed. It was
-less the words than the place and circumstance,—the little
-deck of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, the blue lazy sea, the voice of
-the surf on Palm Island, the figure of Jude and Satan.
-He had seen Rum Cay: They had passed it in a pink
-and pearly dawn. The steward had called him up to
-look at it. South of that lonely and fascinating place
-old man Tyler had located a sunk ship. What sort of
-ship he knew instinctively and that the Tylers were not
-the people to halloo over nothing. The gulls did not
-know these seas better than they. He said nothing, however.
-It was Satan who spoke next.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-“Pap had reckoned to lay for it this spring,” said
-Satan, “but the fever took him. Then we were underhanded.
-Jude and me can make out to work the boat
-and get a livin’, but we’re too underhanded for a big
-job. Why, takin’ that truck off the brig I told you about
-near laid us out, and we had the nigger to help and she
-was hove up so that it was like takin’ cargo off a wharfside.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” said Ratcliffe, “I’ll help if you care to
-go for it. I don’t want any share: just the fun. What’s
-in her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan in a half-hearted way, “maybe we’ll
-have a look at her; but it’s a job that wants more than
-three by rights. Pap was three men in himself; he’d a
-done it. It’s a dynamite job. She’s got to be blasted
-open.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard stories about buried treasure in these
-seas—” began Ratcliffe. Jude turned her head.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s bilge,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Yarns,” said Satan. “Pap used to turn any man
-down that talked of stuff bein’ buried. First he said
-that chaps didn’t bury stuff, second if they did you
-couldn’t find it, what with earthquakes and sand siftin’
-and such, and third that never an ounce of silver, or
-gold for the matter of that, has ever been dug up by the
-tomfools huntin’ for it. Havana is full of tall stories of
-buried treasure—chaps make a livin’ sellin’ locations and
-faked charts and the like of that. It’s a Spanish game,
-and it takes good American money every year. You see,
-Pap was a book-readin’ man,—taught himself to read,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-too, and didn’t start the job till he was near forty,—so
-he had a head on him, but somehow or ’nother he never
-made the money he ought. If he’d stuck in towns and
-places, he’d have been a Rock’feller; but he liked beatin’
-about free, said God’s good air was better than dollars.
-But it stuck in him that he hadn’t made out, somehow.
-Then he turned into unbelievin’ ways, Said he was a soci—what
-was it, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Somethin’ or ’nother,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Socialist?” suggested Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it! Said the time was coming when all the
-guys that were down under would be on top of the chaps
-that were on top, and that there’d be such a hell of a
-rough house money’d be no use anyway; said the time
-was comin’ when eggs would be a dollar apiece and no
-dollars to buy them with, and me and Jude would be
-safest without money gettin’ our livin’ out of the sea.
-He was a proper dirge when he got on that tack. But
-all the same it stuck in him that he wasn’t on top, and
-one night when he was in Diegos’ saloon he heard three
-Spanish chaps layin’ their heads together. He knew the
-lingo well enough to make out their meanin’. They
-were in the bar. Pap wasn’t on the water wagon, but
-he was no boozer. He was sittin’ there that night just
-dead beat, as any man might be after the day’s work
-he’d done, runnin’ the customs—”</p>
-
-<p>“Luff!” said Jude in a warning voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close your head! Think I am talkin’ to a customs
-officer? He don’t care.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit,” said Ratcliffe. “Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-“Well, he was sittin’ with his eyes shut, and he heard
-these guys colludin’ together. He didn’t get more than
-half they said, but he got enough to make him want to
-hear more. Then they quit the bar and went into a back
-room with their lemon juice and cigarettes. Ten minutes
-after hell broke loose in that back room, and when
-Pap and the bartender got the door open there was the
-chaps, one on the floor shot through the head and the
-other two near done in. Two of them had set on the
-guy that was dead; but they hadn’t knocked him out
-before he began to shoot, and he’d pretty well riddled
-them with a Colt automatic pistol—”</p>
-
-<p>“Them’s the things!” said Jude. “I’m savin’ up to
-buy one of them things on my own—twenty-five dollars—”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head! Then they must have knocked it
-out of his hand and used the last shot on him.”</p>
-
-<p>“His brains were all over the floor,” said Jude with
-relish. “Pap said they looked like white of egg beat up
-and enough to fill a puddin’ basin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pap spotted somethin’ else on the floor,” went on
-Satan, “a piece of paper folded double. He put it in
-his pocket while the fellers were bein’ lifted to the hospital,
-where they died that same night. He was on the
-square all right, takin’ that paper, and I’ll tell you why.
-Six months before that we’d spotted a wreck comin’ up
-from Guadaloupe. She’s so placed—as maybe you’ll see
-yourself one day—that a hundred ships might have
-passed her without spottin’ her, and bein’ out of trade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-tracks made her all the safer. These guys had been
-talkin’ about a wreck before they left the bar for the
-back room, and he reckoned it was our find they were
-onto. The piece of paper made him sure of that, and,
-takin’ it with the talk he’d heard, he reckoned he had
-got the biggest thing that ever humped itself in these
-waters. He said there was a hundred thousand dollars
-aboard her.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a fascinating story, yet it seemed to Ratcliffe
-that Satan showed little enthusiasm over the business.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t seem very keen about it,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “it seems a bit too big, and that’s
-the truth. The hooker’s there right enough, but I don’t
-seem to see all that stuff aboard of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s there right enough,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there’s the getting of it,” went on Satan.
-“That’s a tough job to tackle. Months of work, no pay,
-and the chance of bein’ let down at the end of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’d sooner be grubbin’ round after abalones,” said
-Jude. “Bone lazy, that’s what he is! I know the stuff’s
-there, and I’m goin’ to get it if I have to dig it out
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, off with you then,” said the other, “and a good
-riddance you’d be!” Then to Ratcliffe, “We’ll run you
-down there some day and you can see for yourself. If
-you’ve any money to burn, you might like to put it in the
-spec’. We’d want extra help. Jude’s talkin’ through
-her hat. We can’t tackle that business alone, even Pap
-saw that—though he was mighty set on doin’ it single-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>handed.
-And that’s where the bother comes in, for the
-island where she’s lyin’ is Spanish, and the Dagoes would
-claim what we got if they knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’d have to get half a dozen men and give them
-a share,” said Ratcliffe. “That would make them hold
-their tongues; but I see an awful lot of difficulties. Suppose
-you got the stuff, how are you to get rid of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’d have to get it down to a Brazil port,” said
-Satan, “or run it into Caracas. That’s handier. Them
-Venezuelans are the handiest chaps when it comes to
-loose dealin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“For the matter of that,” said Ratcliffe, “one could
-run it straight to England. There are lots of places
-there where we could get it ashore—but we’ve got to
-get it first.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan. “Look! She’s puttin’ a boat
-off.” He pointed to the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A quarter-boat had been lowered and was pulling
-away from the yacht. As she drew closer Ratcliffe saw
-that the man in the sternsheets, steering, was Skelton,—Skelton
-coming either to make trouble or to make friends.</p>
-
-<p>The oars rose up and fell with a crash as the bow oar
-hooked on to the dingy old <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloo!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloo!” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you come on board?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you.” A sniff from Jude. “I just came
-over to say that we are starting.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe saw that he wanted to say a lot, but was
-tongue-tied before the boat’s crew and the Tylers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-“Better come on board,” said he, “and have a chat in
-the cabin before you’re off.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton hesitated a moment, then he came. He gave
-Satan a nod, utterly ignored Jude, and, followed by Ratcliffe,
-passed below. Downstairs his manner changed.
-Standing and refusing a seat, as though fearing to contaminate
-his lily-white ducks, he began to speak as if
-addressing the portrait of old man Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t believe you absolutely mean to do this,” said
-he. “I can understand a moment’s temper, but—but—this
-is a joke carried too far.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Skelton,” said the other, “what’s the good?
-I have the greatest respect for you, but we are dead
-opposites in temperament and we make each other
-unhappy. What’s the good of carrying it on? It’s
-not as if you minded being alone. You like being
-alone, and I like this old tub and her crew. Well, let’s
-each carry out our likings. I’m as happy as anything
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not thinking of your happiness, but of the position.
-You were a guest on my yacht, and you leave me
-like this—I need not embroider on the bare fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want me to go back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least,” said Skelton. “You are a free
-agent, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe’s blood was beginning to rise in temperature.
-He knew quite well Skelton wanted him to go back, but
-was too proud to say so, and he knew quite well that
-Skelton wanted him back, not for any love of him, but
-simply because the <em>position</em> was irregular and people, if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-they heard of all this, might talk; also it might seem
-queer to the yacht’s crew.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, if you don’t specially want me back, I’ll
-stay,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Skelton, “as you please. I wash my
-hands of the affair, and if you come to grief it is your
-own lookout. I will have the remainder of your baggage
-forwarded home to you when I reach England.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll maybe see you at Havana when this cruise is
-over,” said Ratcliffe vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“I doubt it,” said Skelton. “It is quite possible I may
-not call there.” He turned and began to climb the companionway.
-On deck he nodded frigidly to Satan and got
-over the side.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, leaning across the rail, looked down.</p>
-
-<p>“How about that mains’l?” asked Satan jocularly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I have no more spare canvas available,”
-said Skelton, with a veiled dig at the rapacity of the
-lantern-jawed one, “or provisions. Anything else I shall
-be delighted to let you have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “you might send us a loan of
-the dinghy. We’re short of boats.”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have her,” said Skelton with a glance at
-Ratcliffe, who was also leaning over, as though to say,
-“This is the sort of man you have thrown your lot in
-with!”</p>
-
-<p>The boat pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodby!” cried Ratcliffe, half laughing, half angry,
-with Satan, but quite unable to veto the promised gift.</p>
-
-<p>“’By,” replied the other, raising a hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-Jude, who had said not one word, suddenly began to
-giggle.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wrong with you?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” replied Jude, “but there’s somethin’ about
-that guy that makes me want to laugh.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">SKELTON SAILS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> breeze had risen with the declining sun and the
-water round the <i>Dryad</i> looked like a spread of
-smashed sapphires.</p>
-
-<p>They watched Skelton getting on board, and then they
-saw the dinghy lowered and the quarter-boat taking her
-in tow. In five minutes, like a white duckling behind
-a moor-hen, she was streaming on a line behind the <i>Sarah</i>
-and the quarter-boat was pulling back for the yacht.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had got his wish, and Ratcliffe was feeling just
-as Skelton wanted him to feel, under a compliment and
-rather a beast. Then they saw the boat taken on board
-and the hands laying aloft and the canvas shaking out
-to the favoring breeze.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll have the wind right aft, and that’ll save his
-coal,” said Satan. “I reckon if his engines give out he
-wouldn’t bother much, with all that canvas to carry him.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re handlin’ it smart,” said Jude. “There’s the
-anchor goin’ up.”</p>
-
-<p>The flurried sound of the steam winch raising the
-anchor came across the water, then it ceased, and Jude,
-running to the flag locker, fetched out a dingy old American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-flag, bent it on, and ran it up, dipping it as the <i>Dryad</i>
-began to move.</p>
-
-<p>She returned the compliment, gliding away with the
-bow-wash beginning to show and the wake creaming behind
-her. As she passed the southern reefs and shifted
-her helm, squaring her yards to the following wind, a
-blast from her siren raised a blanket of shouting gulls.
-Then the island cut her off and the sea lay desolate.</p>
-
-<p>The sense of his loneliness came on Ratcliffe, sudden
-as the clap of a door. He had cut the painter with
-civilization. The deck of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> seemed smaller
-than ever, Jude and Satan more irresponsible and unaccountable,
-and his own daring a new thing, somewhat
-dubious. He had renounced services and delicacies and
-surety of passage and safety, letters and newspapers,
-everything he had known! The shock scarcely lasted a
-minute, and then, with the breeze across the pansy-blue
-evening sea, came blowing the wind of Adventure and
-Freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Then in a moment some spirit explained to him what
-life really meant,—life as the Argonauts knew it, as the
-gulls know it, freedom in the intense and living moment,
-without a thought of yesterday, with scarcely a care for
-the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>He took his seat in an old chair that Satan had placed
-under the rag of awning and lit his pipe. That delightful
-smoke seemed the culmination of everything in these
-first moments in this new world. As he smoked he
-watched the Tylers, who were so busy with their own
-affairs that they seemed to have forgotten him. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-had hauled the dinghy alongside, then they got into her
-and were lost to sight; but he could hear their voices,
-Jude’s shrill with pleasure and excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“My! Ain’t she a beauty? Ain’t she a dinky boat?
-My! look at the <em>cus</em>hions!” A laugh. “For the love
-of Mike look at the cushions—<em>cus</em>hions in a boat! Heave
-’em on deck!” The cushions came flying over the rail,
-together with the voice of Satan, evidently bending.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave them alone or I’ll bat y’ with the bailer! Well,
-let them lay on deck if they’re there. She’s a duck,
-new built too,—teak, copper fastenin’s, all the best that
-money could buy. Stop rockin’ her and over you get
-after the cushions.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude came clambering on board, beaming in the sunset,
-then she got one of the boat’s cushions and took her
-seat on it on the deck beside Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon old Popplecock’s as soft as his cushions, to
-be wangled out of a boat like that,” said Jude, examining
-the sole of her bare right foot for a fancied splinter.
-“Satan said he was goin’ to try it on him when you were
-down below with him. Didn’t believe he’d do it. That
-chap looked as stiff as his own mainmast—but there’s no
-tellin’—Say, I heard what you said to him when you
-were down below.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t listenin’: I just heard through the skylight.
-I heard you sayin’ you liked us and the old <i>Sarah</i> better’n
-him and his boat—what makes likin’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-“Nuther do I; but we took to you right off, same as
-you to us. Ever done abalone fishin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you won’t want to do it again, once
-you’ve tried. There’ll be a big low tide tomorrow after
-sun-up, and you’ll have a chance of seein’ what it is.
-Finished your pipe? Well, come along and help us to
-get supper.”</p>
-
-<p>For all the work Ratcliffe did, she might have got the
-supper herself. He was mostly in the way; but it was
-the companionship that helped. Brothers aren’t much
-good as companions. Ratcliffe was a new thing, absolutely
-new, from his striped pajamas and dandy clothes to his
-condition of mind, just as she was a new thing to Ratcliffe.
-Never did two beings come together so well or
-create more rapidly a little world of mutual interests out
-of the little things of life, or a weaker being dominate
-more completely the stronger.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you make bread?” asked Jude after he had filled
-the tin kettle for her. “Well, you’ll have to learn.
-That’s the bakin’ powder in that big tin, and the flour’s
-in the starboard locker—What’re you doin’ with the
-tin? Land’s sake! You don’t think I’m goin’ to make
-bread for supper, same as you make tea? Where was
-you born?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hampshire.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it was somewhere like that,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She instructed him in the primitive method of bread
-making as conducted on board the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, finishing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-up with the information that hardtack would be their portion
-at supper that night and breakfast next morning, as
-she was “up to the gunnel” in other business. Among
-the other things was having to put a patch on her
-trousers: not the ones she was wearing, which were her
-next best, but her worst. The old guernsey she was
-wearing was her second best. Coats! Oh, coats were
-good enough on Sunday or for going ashore in, but no
-use much in a ship, except an oilskin for dirty weather.
-Boots the same; stockings the same. You had to wear
-boots, of course, over rocks and through stuff like that
-over there on the island.</p>
-
-<p>“Them pajamas” would be bully things to wear by day,
-only they’d frighten the fish. As for sleeping in such
-things, she’d just as soon seek the arms of Morpheus
-in a top hat. Why didn’t he wear a nighty like her and
-Satan? Pap’s eyes would have bugged out had he seen
-those things. He was “awful old fashioned,”—used to
-make her and Satan put cotton between their teeth every
-night. They did it still. She exhibited a set of dazzling
-white teeth to prove the fact. You just pulled a cotton
-thread between them, and then they never went rotten.
-Also he made them brush their teeth every morning.
-Folks that didn’t do that got toothache.</p>
-
-<p>“Kettle’s boilin’,” suddenly finished Jude. “Now start
-in an’ let’s see you make the tea—said you could do it.
-There’s the can. Ain’t you goin’ to heat the pot first?
-How’re you to heat it? Let me have a hold. Now fling
-the water out. A spoonful a head and one for the pot
-and another one for Satan,—he likes it strong,—and if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-you’ll take it along to the cabin without spillin’ it I’ll be
-after you in a minute with the plates and things.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan, who never put his hand to menial work, maintaining,
-without the least offense, his position as captain
-and owner, came down to supper, flushed with the good
-qualities of the dinghy. He had taken her for a row—and
-it was like hearing a man talking of a stroll with a
-sweetheart—if men ever talk of such things. Before
-going on deck to smoke he pointed out Ratcliffe’s quarters
-for the night. He was to have Pap’s cabin, the
-space divided off with a curtain. Jude and he always
-slept in hammocks swung in the “saloon.” Before going
-on deck he fetched an old canister out of a locker and,
-emptying some dried herbs into a saucer, set fire to them
-and left them smoldering on the table. It was to keep
-the mosquitoes away. Pap had got the receipt from a
-Seminole Indian up near Cedar Cays. It was patent
-stuff. Not a mosquito would come when there was a
-sniff of it in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Then, just as the moon was rising, and after the things
-were washed up, they sat on deck, smoking, listening to
-the waves on the beach, and watching fish jumping in
-the track of the moon. They talked of fish, and to Ratcliffe’s
-mind two things became apparent,—Satan’s profound,
-awful knowledge of the sea and all that lived
-therein, and his absolute indifference to sport. Satan
-fished for food. Tarpon and tarpon fishermen filled him
-with disgust and disdain. You can’t eat tarpon, and the
-guys that came from New York and such places and
-spent their days fighting tarpon with a ten-ounce rod<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-and a twenty-one-thread line seemed to him bereft of
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, sitting on the deck and mending her pants by
-the light of the moon, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s the fun of the thing,” said Ratcliffe; “it’s
-the matching of one’s skill and strength against the fish.”
-He talked of the joys of salmon fishing.</p>
-
-<p>“What bait do you use for them?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Flies.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not live flies,” he explained: “imitation ones.” He
-tried to describe artificial fly-making and finished with a
-sense of failure as of one who had entered the lists in
-defense of a niggling form of business that had yet a
-touch of humor in it.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as they talked, suddenly through the night came
-a sound like the boom of a big gun. Ratcliffe nearly
-dropped his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a fish,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Sea bat,” said Jude indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>“That noise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sea bat jumping. There they go again. Must be a
-circus of them playin’ about beyond the reefs,—big flat
-fish, weigh all of a ton.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tails as long as themselves and eyes like dinner
-plates,” said Jude, “mushy brutes. Tow a ship after
-them if they foul the anchor—won’t they, Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re loudenin’,” said Satan. “They’ll be comin’
-this way with the current. Come forward and have a
-look.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-Leaning over the rail, they watched the moon-shot
-water. The sounds had ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve stopped playin’,” said Satan, as though he
-knew exactly what they were doing.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too shallow for them here,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Shallow! It’s fifty foot of water and a sandy bottom.
-What are you talkin’ about? Told you.”</p>
-
-<p>The depths of the sea suddenly became lit. Down below
-vast forms came drifting like the mainsails of ships
-ablaze with phosphorescent light, drifting and turning
-over as they drifted like gargantuan leaves blown by the
-wind. The whiplike tails could be seen as streaks of
-flame. Glimpses of devilish faces and lambent eyes
-showed as they turned, the fins waving like frills of
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>Then they were gone.</p>
-
-<p>The Tylers showed little concern over the marvelous
-sight; allowing, however, that it was the biggest school
-of “bats” they had ever struck; but to Ratcliffe it was
-as though the sea had disclosed a peep of its true heart
-and real mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Then they went to rest, and as he lay in Pap’s cabin,
-listening to the occasional trickle of the water against the
-planking and the groan of the rudder moved by the lilt
-of the swell, it seemed to him that daring in its everyday
-and cold-blooded form could not have carried a man
-much further than it had carried him. The sea bats had
-underscored the business as far as the mystery of the
-ocean and danger of cruising in such a small boat were
-concerned; the hardness of Pap’s bunk bedding told of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-comforts renounced; while the morals of the Tylers,
-though good enough no doubt, had, as disclosed in their
-conversation, a touch of the free lance and a threat of
-port authority troubles and differences of opinion with
-the customs. Absolute respect for the rights of man,
-partial respect for the rights of shipping companies and
-steamer lines, no respect at all for governments and customs,—that
-was an outline of the Tyler morality. What
-had made him renounce the <i>Dryad</i> for the <i>Sarah?</i>
-What, lying in his hard bunk, made him contented with
-the exchange? The love of adventure and the craving
-for something new contributed, no doubt, but the main
-reason he felt to be the Tylers,—Satan with his strange
-mentality and queer methods; Jude, unlike any other being
-he had ever met.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he lay considering all this, came muted voices
-from the “saloon.” Satan’s voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Have you put the cotton between your teeth?”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s, drowsily:</p>
-
-<p>“Naw—leave a body alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out o’ your hammock, you lazy dog, an’ fix your
-teeth or I’ll let you down by the head!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s voice, dolorous and muffled, “Shut up or
-you’ll be wakin’ him! Cuss my teeth—cayn’t find the
-cotton! Wakin’ a body up like that! Tell you I’m
-<em>lookin’</em> for it—got it—”</p>
-
-<p>A long silence, during which Ratcliffe dropped off,
-to be awakened an hour later by the lamentations of Jude
-and the sounds of Satan prodding her out of a nightmare,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>—a
-gastric nightmare, in which it appeared to her
-troubled soul that she <em>had</em> to fry a sea bat, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">totum terres
-atque rotundum</i>, in the small galley frying pan for breakfast.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">CARQUINEZ</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> tide had begun to draw out with the setting
-stars, and the tune of the waters on the beach had
-sunk to the merest thread of sound.</p>
-
-<p>Then, through the silence from the far reefs to southward,
-came the single, lamentable cry of a gull; then a
-chorus, and away against the vague blue of the east, here
-and there, like leaves blown about a dimly lit window
-showed the wings of the birds already putting out to sea
-for the fishing.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was awakened by Jude calling on him to
-“show a leg.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s on deck,” said Jude, “and if you believe in
-washin’ he’ll give you a swill with a bucket. Hurry up
-and come down again, for I want a swill myself. Swim?
-Not on your life! Sharks, that’s why.”</p>
-
-<p>The voice came from a hammock which he had
-blundered against in the semidarkness. Then on deck
-after his swill, drying himself with an old towel provided
-by Satan, he stood for a moment watching the sun break
-up through the water and the great sea flashing to life
-and the white gulls flying.</p>
-
-<p>The island was sending a faint breeze to them, a tepid
-breeze flavored with earth and cactus and bay cedar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-scents, perfumes that mixed with the tang of the ocean
-and the tar-oakum scents of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And all these scents and sounds and sights, from the
-sun flash on the sea to the trembling palm fronds on
-the shore, seemed like a great bouquet presented by
-youth and morning.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, the splendor of being alive, free, happy, without a
-single care, and the deck of the wandering <i>Sarah</i> under
-foot!</p>
-
-<p>From below through the skylight came a sleep-heavy
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you done yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Coming,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>He dived into his pajamas and came below.</p>
-
-<p>“Get into your cabin an’ shut the door,” commanded
-the yawning voice from the hammock.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, draw the curtain. Oh, Lord! what’s the good
-o’ gettin’ up? I’m near dead asleep!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the voice of Satan descending the companion
-ladder.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you up? Well, you wait one minute!”</p>
-
-<p>A thump on the floor, a scurry up the companion
-ladder, and then shuddery lamentations and the sounds
-of swilling from the deck above, mixed with the admonitions
-of Satan from below.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my! ain’t it cold? Oh, my! ain’t it frizzin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Get on, you mad turkle! You ain’t washin’, you’re
-splashing the water on the deck. Slush it over you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m slushing it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-“Think I don’t know? Why, you ain’t gasped yet!
-Give a gasp, or I’ll be up to you with a rope-end! That’s
-more like it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was!</p>
-
-<p>The sun was high when Ratcliffe got on deck, and a
-light, steady breeze was blowing up from the straits of
-Florida; the gulls looked like snowflakes blowing round
-the far reefs and against the morning blue of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Jude had put the kettle on. She had dressed on deck,
-having carried her “togs” with her, and she was now preparing
-a line for fishing, and, as she bent over it, appeared
-Satan,—Satan rising from the cabin hatch with a
-toothbrush in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve forgot your teeth,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t,” said Jude. “I’ve been fillin’ the kettle—I’ll
-fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fishin’ will wait.” He fetched a pannikin of water.
-“You’re more trouble than a dozen. What’d Pap say if
-he saw you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll fix them now!”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I won’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan put down the pannikin and the brush. She
-evaded him like a flash and skimmed up the mast to the
-crosstrees.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had she got up than she came sliding down,
-seized the toothbrush and pannikin, and began to brush
-her teeth over the scupper with a fire speed and fury
-that seemed born of dementia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-“Sardines comin’,” explained Jude between mouthfuls.
-“Look alive and get a bucket!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked over the sea, where her birdlike sight
-had spotted the sardine shoal being driven like a gray
-cloud under the water by pursuing fish. A fringe of
-dancing silver showed the leaping sardines, and the great
-fish driving the shoal broke up now and then in sword-flashes.</p>
-
-<p>They were coming from south to north, and the left
-wing of the shoal would pass the island beach by a cable
-length.</p>
-
-<p>While Satan stood by with a bucket at the end of a
-rope, Ratcliffe hung over the side watching.</p>
-
-<p>The driven sardines had no eyes for the <i>Sarah</i>. They
-struck her like the blow of a great silvery hand, boiled
-around her, and passed. The army of pursuit followed,
-passed and vanished, leaving the water clear and Satan
-with a dipped up bucket full of quivering silver.</p>
-
-<p>The Tylers, absolutely blind to the wonder of the business,
-fried the sardines just as they were, tossed out of
-the blue sea into the frying pan, and, breakfast over,
-Satan and Ratcliffe took the dinghy to hunt for abalones
-on the uncovered reef.</p>
-
-<p>The reefs to southward formed two spurs divided by
-a creek of blue water, and having got the dinghy into
-this creek Ratcliffe tended the boat while Satan hunted
-for the abalones.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in search of pearls was a sight. Heart, soul,
-and mind bound up in the business, like a dog hunting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-for truffles, every find was announced by a yell or a
-whoop, like the whoop of a Red Indian.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe could see squiggly-wiggly cuttlefish tendrils
-running up Satan’s arms as he delved in some of the
-rock-clefts, and Satan disengaging them and flinging the
-“mushy brutes” away. The big abalones were nearly always
-deep down under the rock ledges and had to be
-chiseled off, wallowing in the water. At these times Ratcliffe
-might have fancied the vanished one lost or
-drowned, but for the profane language that rose and
-floated away on the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, it was dull work for the boat tender.
-Having nothing else to think of, he thought of Jude.
-Her figure chased away dullness.</p>
-
-<p>A man in the bright and early morning is quite a different
-person from the same man at noon, and coming
-across Jude after a long course of Skelton was like stepping
-from a gray afternoon to dawn. Was it possible
-that Skelton and Jude were vertebrates of the same
-species?</p>
-
-<p>Then there was what women would have called the
-pity of it. Ratcliffe did not deal much with the conventions
-as a rule; still, he could not but perceive that all
-life has an aim and ending, and that the end of an old
-sailor was not what life and the fitness of things had
-destined for Jude. What would she grow up into? He
-thought of all the girls he had ever known. There was
-not one so jolly as Jude; still, it was terrible, somehow,
-monstrous. He remembered her threat to pull her skirts
-over her head and run down the street if skirts were ever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-imposed upon her. Her contempt for the feminine rose
-up before him, and against all that her housewifely instincts
-and the fact that, despite Satan’s rope-end and
-mock bluster, she ruled the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> just as a woman
-rules a house.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it was deplorable. Looking away into distance,
-what would become of her?</p>
-
-<p>Vague and fatherly ideas of getting her away from
-this life and having her brought up properly and educated
-came to him, only to be dispelled by Jude. Imagine Jude
-in a girls’ school, at a tea party!</p>
-
-<p>He was aroused from these meditations by Satan,—Satan
-with an armful of abalones, Satan scratched and
-bleeding and soused in sea water, but triumphant.</p>
-
-<p>He reckoned they were the biggest “fish” ever got on
-these reefs. There were a dozen and six all told, and
-when they were collected and put on board the dinghy
-put back.</p>
-
-<p>Coming round the western spur of the reef, they found
-that Jude had left the <i>Sarah</i>—a high crime—and rowed
-herself ashore.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas boat was on the beach, and away amid the
-bay cedars and cactus toward the trees could be seen
-the head and shoulders of the deserter moving about.
-She seemed in search of something.</p>
-
-<p>“God love me!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He beached the dinghy, helped Ratcliffe to run her up,
-and then started, followed by the other, running and
-shouting as he ran.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! chucklehead! Whatcha leave the ship for?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-Didn’t I tell you to stand by her? Whatcha huntin’ for—turkles’
-eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you done with your eyes?” retorted the other.
-“Cayn’t you see?”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly, and by her tone and by some sixth sense,
-Satan was appeased. He seemed suddenly to scent danger.
-He saw the work she had been on, camouflaging
-the cache more effectively. He cast his glance over the
-island, the western sea, turned, and then stood stock-still,
-shading his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Away beyond the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> across the purple blue
-stood a sail. The land wind had died off, and the
-stranger was bringing the sea wind with her. A small
-topsail schooner she showed now, with all sail set, making
-dead for the island.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Spotted him half an hour ago,” said Jude. “He was
-steering nor’-nor’west and shifted his helm when he saw
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>The bay cedar bushes sighed suddenly to the new-risen
-wind, and as Ratcliffe glanced about him the feeling of
-the desolation of the place where he stood came to him
-strong,—strong in the scent of cactus and herbage, the
-tune of the water on the beach, and the rustle of the
-wind in the bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been huntin’ for us,” said Satan, “curse him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is he?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Friend of Pap’s, he was—”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretended to be,” put in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Spanish,” continued Satan, “and ever since Pap gave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-out he’s been pretty much on our heels. Jude and me
-worked the thing out and we came to conclude he’d
-scented, somehow, from Pap, about the hooker I spoke
-of.”</p>
-
-<p>“The wreck?’</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. Pap was keen on gettin’ extra money into the
-business of salvin’ her, and I b’lieve he sounded
-Carquinez,—that’s his name,—and how much he let out
-takin’ his soundin’s the Lord only knows! Cark’s in the
-tobacco line. Does a bit of everythin’,—has a shop in
-the Calle Pedro in Havana and a gamblin’ joint on the
-front, owns ships. That’s one of them, and Matt Sellers
-runs her for him. He don’t trouble handlin’ her: sits
-in the cabin all day smokin’ cigarettes.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been after us ever since Pap died,” said Jude,
-“on and off.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was one of his men got Jude in that doggery down
-by the wharf and filled her up with rum,” said Satan,
-turning the brim of his panama down. “Remember I
-told you—and what she let out the Lord only knows!”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t let out nothin’,” said Jude; “only that we were
-goin’ east this trip, I owns to that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s the result of your jaw,” said Satan.
-“East was good enough for Cark: he’d hunt hell for a
-red cent. And don’t you be sayin’ you didn’t let out
-nothin’. Why, I heard you jawin’ about all the money
-you had when I come in and collared you! Cark believes
-Pap found that stuff and cached it—that’s what he believes,
-or my name’s not Tyler.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let’s get aboard,” said Jude. “If they see us<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-squatting about here, they’ll maybe think the stuff’s hid
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve seen us by this, though it’s too far for them
-to make out who we are,” said Satan, pushing his panama
-farther forward to hide his face. He led the way to
-where the boats were on the sand, and they reëmbarked.</p>
-
-<p>The abalones were got on board, and then they stood
-watching the approach of the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>The white had gone out of her sails. Close in now,
-they showed dingy and patched. She had a low freeboard.
-Then, as she dropped anchor and swung to her
-moorings broadside on to the <i>Sarah</i>, the rake of her masts
-became apparent, and her whole disreputableness spoke
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt like a man who, having got into pleasant
-low company, suddenly finds himself drawn into unpleasant
-low company.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tylers</i> and the old <i>Sarah</i> were all right, but this
-new crowd and that ratty old schooner he felt to be all
-wrong. And the newcomer somehow did not add honesty
-or moral stability to the appearance of the <i>Sarah</i>, nor did
-the half-disclosed character and activities of Cark shed
-luster on old man Tyler or his present representatives.</p>
-
-<p>However, he had gone into this business open-eyed,
-and it was not for him to grumble at the friends or relationships
-of his hosts; besides he had trust in Satan
-and the wit of Satan to preserve them from the law.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had covered the heap of abalones with some sailcloth,
-and he was standing now working his lantern jaws
-on a bit of chewing gum, his eyes fixed on the stranger<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-as though she were made of glass and he could see
-Carquinez sitting smoking his cigarettes in the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“They haven’t shown a sign,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re bluffin’ us to believe they haven’t spotted who
-we are,” said Satan. “Cark doesn’t want us to twig he’s
-been lookin’ for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude, “let’s get the mudhook up and
-put out right away. They won’t have the face to chase
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Satan, “and leave them to hunt the island
-and find the cache! They’d lift the stuff to the last tin
-of beef. They’ve seen us ashore among the bushes.
-You shouldn’t have gone ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“I went to see we hadn’t left no traces.”</p>
-
-<p>“Traces be damned! Cark wants no traces. Once he
-starts to hunt, he’ll turn the durned island upside down
-and shake it. He’ll say to himself, ‘What were they doin’
-here, anyway; what were they pokin’ about them bushes
-for?’ No, we’ve got to sit here till he goes, and that’ll
-be this time next year, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the name of his schooner?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Juan Bango</i>,” replied Satan, “named after the
-tobacco company people. Look, they’re gettin’ a boat off.
-That’s Sellers, and he’s comin’ aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he collapsed, squatting under the bulwarks.
-“Guy them,” said he to Jude. “Tell them I’m down with
-smallpox: that’ll make them shove.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave ’em to me,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>It was Matt Sellers right enough, a big wheezy man
-suggestive of Tammany Hall, but a sure-enough sailor in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-practice. “The biggest blackguard on the coast” was his
-subsidiary title. He was the henchman of Carquinez.
-His career was not without interest and romance of a
-sort. It was he who had bought, with the money of
-Carquinez, the bones of the <i>Isidore</i>, wrecked against the
-sheer cliffs by the black strand of Martinique. Ten
-thousand dollars in gold coin she had on board her, and
-he salved them. That was a straight job, and a wonderful
-bit of work, taking it all together. It was a curiosity,
-too, because it was straight.</p>
-
-<p>The crooked jobs of Matt Sellers would have filled a
-book.</p>
-
-<p>Like old man Tyler, Sellers had no use for people who
-talked of buried treasure, he knew the Caribbean and the
-gulf too well.</p>
-
-<p>If he was keen on the wreck business, then it was because
-he had excellent reasons for his keenness.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat drew near, Ratcliffe noticed the villainous-looking
-crew, Spaniards, some of them with red handkerchiefs
-tied round their heads.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">JUDE OVERDOES IT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Hullo,</span> Kid!” cried Sellers as the boat came
-alongside the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself,” replied Jude. “Where’ve you blown
-in from?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s become of Satan? Ain’t he aboard?” asked
-Sellers, ignoring the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s dead,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Died of the smallpox.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m d—d!” said Sellers, casting his eyes over
-the <i>Sarah</i> and then resting them on Ratcliffe. “When
-was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“A week ago.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers gave a word to the bow oar and the boat pushed
-off a bit, the fellows hanging on their oars.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I saw three of you on deck,” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>“The other chap’s gone below,” replied Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The boat of the <i>Juan</i> hung for a moment as if in meditation.
-She made a striking picture, the blue water
-paling to green under her and the sun-blaze on the red
-topknots of the oarsmen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-Then without a word more she turned back to the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in the scupper seemed preparing to have a fit.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter now?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter? What did you say I was dead
-for? Didn’t I tell you to say I was down with smallpox?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s the difference?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you mutt, wouldn’t you have been snivelin’ and
-cryin’ if I was dead? And you handed that yam out to
-him as ca’m as if you were talking of a tomcat! I didn’t
-believe you myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I told him you was dead a week,” cried Jude.
-“D’you think I’d be snivelin’ and cryin’ a week if you
-was dead? Lord! what you do think of yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan did not reply. He was thinking that he had
-made a false move and that Jude had put the cap on the
-business. Cark would be certain now that there was
-something hidden on the island.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was on the horns of a dilemma. One horn was
-the cache of provisions containing a couple of thousand
-dollars’ worth of stuff, the other horn was the old wreck
-that might contain nothing.</p>
-
-<p>To hang on here was useless, for Cark would hang on
-too. Even if Cark went away, he would be sure to come
-back to hunt.</p>
-
-<p>He sat with his back to the bulwarks, chewing and
-thinking. Then, heedless whether he was seen or not
-from the <i>Juan Bango</i>, he rose to his feet and leaned with
-his back against the rail He had come to a decision.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-Jude, watching him, said nothing, and Ratcliffe waited
-without a word. This little sea comedy interested him
-intensely, and all the more for its setting of loneliness and
-its background of blue sea and quarreling gulls.</p>
-
-<p>It was to Ratcliffe that Satan spoke first
-“Look here!” said Satan. “You’re standin’ out of this,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which—the wreck business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. You’re not keen upon puttin’ money into it and
-havin’ a share?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. If you wanted me to, I’d be glad enough;
-but if you’d rather I stood out, I’ll do so. I’m not keen
-about money, anyway; only I’d like to see the fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see fun enough,” said Satan. “I’m goin’ to
-drag Cark in. First of all, if I don’t, he’ll keep hangin’
-round here and sniff the cache; second, he’ll work the
-job for us with his crew.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll gobble every cent,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked Satan. “We’ll give him half
-shares, and well split on him if he doesn’t play fair. If
-we found stuff there, and once it was known, d’you think
-we’d be let keep it? We’ve got to get help, and isn’t he
-as good as another? If there’s no stuff there, he’ll have
-all his work for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“The thing I can’t make out,” said Ratcliffe, “is the
-way he started out from Havana to find you. How did
-he ever expect to come across you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s this way,” said Satan. “Bein’ in with Pap,
-he knew the lines we worked on; f’rinstance, he knew
-we worked this place for abalones. If he hadn’t sighted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-us here; he’d have tried Little Pine Island, which is lonesomer
-than this place. You see he’s got it in his noddle,
-as far as I can make out, that Pap lifted the stuff and
-cached it, and Pine Island or here would have been the
-likeliest places. He reckoned when we put out of
-Havana this time we were out to lift it for good. Well,
-he’ll do the liftin’ if it’s to be done. Come on, I’m going
-over to see him right off. Jude, you stick here and clean
-up them abalones.”</p>
-
-<p>He got into the dinghy, followed by Ratcliffe, and they
-pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>As they drew closer the <i>Juan Bango</i> showed up more
-distinctly for what she was.</p>
-
-<p>One of the old schooners that used to run in the carrying
-trade between Havana and the Gulf ports, she had
-fallen from commercial honesty; anyhow in appearance,
-perhaps because Carquinez did not bother about appearance.
-You could not have damaged his paint if you
-had tried,—it was sun-blistered and gone green,—but his
-copper showed sharp and clear through the amazing
-brilliance of the water, without trace of weeds or barnacles.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers was hanging over the rail as they came alongside.</p>
-
-<p>If he felt surprise at this resurrection, he did not show
-it much.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers. “Thought you was
-dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark on board?” asked Satan without wasting time
-on explanations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-“He’s down below,” said Sellers, accepting the attitude
-of the other. “Who’s your friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just a gentleman that’s come along for a cruise,”
-said Satan. “So you’ve found me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems so,” said Sellers; “but tie up and come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan tied the painter to a channel plate and got over
-the side, followed by Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>The deck of the <i>Juan</i> sagged, and plank and dowel were
-indistinguishable one from the other by reason of dirt.
-Forward some of the crew were scraping a spare boom,
-and others collected round the foc’sle head were smoking
-cigarettes. The wind had died out into a warm breathing,
-setting aft and bringing with it a faint odor like the
-smell of acetylene. It was garlic.</p>
-
-<p>From the foc’sle came the muffled thrumming of a
-guitar.</p>
-
-<p>It was Ratcliffe’s first experience with a Spaniard.
-He followed Satan, who followed Sellers down a steep
-companionway and then into a cabin where a great shaft
-of sunlight from the skylight above struck down through
-a haze of cigarette smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The place was paneled with bird’s-eye maple; the seats
-were upholstered in thick ribbed silk, worn and stained;
-the carpet was of the best, but threadbare in spots and
-burnt with cigar droppings; the metal fittings far too
-good for a trading schooner of the <i>Juan</i> type.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere lay evidence of splendor that had seen
-better days.</p>
-
-<p>All these fittings had, in fact, been torn out of a yacht
-bought by Carquinez for an old song, and at the end of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-the saloon table, going over some papers with a cigarette
-in his mouth, sat Carquinez himself, a figure to give one
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the left side of this gentleman’s face was
-covered by a green patch. It was said that he had no
-left side to his face, that it had been eaten away by
-disease, and that, were he to unveil himself, the sight
-would frighten the beholder. However that may have
-been, what remained visible was enough to frighten any
-honest man with eyes to behold the nose of a vulture
-above the peaked chin of a money changer.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Cark!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring yourselves to an anchor,” said Sellers, pointing
-out two of the fixed seats on each side of the table and
-taking another close to the owner of the <i>Juan</i>. “What’ll
-you have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Satan. “Something soft will
-suit us, and long.”</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez raised a bird-shrill voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Antonio!”</p>
-
-<p>“Si, Sigñor,” came a response from outside, and on
-the voice a dusky form at the cabin door.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring me two Zin and Zinzibeers for these two
-zentlemen, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“No gin!” cried Satan, Ratcliffe concurring. “Ginger
-beer will do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Zinzibeers,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly all that he said at this interview, the
-trusty Sellers doing the talking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-Said Sellers to Satan, “Well, it’s funny us hittin’ on you
-like this, durned funny! We’d been down to Acklin
-looking up a location Cark was keen about, and comin’
-back I shifted the helm, seein’ you lying here and not
-recognizin’ the old <i>Sarah</i>. I thought it was Gundyman’s
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>Said Satan, taking up the drink just presented by
-Antonio, “Here’s our respects to you both. Thought I
-was Gundyman, did you? Well, I spotted you on sight.
-Didn’t want to see you neither. This gentleman will tell
-you I was squattin’ in the scuppers while Jude was
-handing you that lie about the smallpox.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, was you?” said Sellers with an open and hearty
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so. Let’s cut pretendin’ and play on the square—are
-you willin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“None better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll put my cards out. You and Cark here have
-been after me pretty near since last fall; reason why,
-that wreck Pap told Cark of.”</p>
-
-<p>“W’ich was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said let’s cut pretendin’ and play fair,” said Satan
-sternly.</p>
-
-<p>Cark wilted and raised his fingers in deprecation, and
-Sellers cut in.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we’ll play fair. There was talk of a wreck between
-your dad and us, and I’m not denying we had an
-eye after it. You see I’m open and honest with you.
-Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m comin’ to the point,” said Satan, “and the point<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-is you and Cark between you have got it in your heads
-that you’ve only to follow me, find out where she’s
-located, and claim shares for not tellin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve got it wrong,” went on Satan. “You
-may follow me till the old <i>Juan</i> rots to pieces and you’ll
-never know, not if I don’t want you to know—got that
-clear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear as day,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, here’s something else. If that wreck is
-what she’s taken to be, it’s more than one man’s job to
-shift the boodle and bank it. I’ve got to have help, and
-if we can arrange a deal I’d just as soon have you two
-in the show as anyone else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re talking,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez said nothing, but his hand shook, and Ratcliffe,
-watching him, received a shock. A wreath of
-cigarette smoke was stealing out from beneath the patch
-on his cheek! He wished the conference over and himself
-back on board the healthy <i>Sarah</i>. It came to him all
-at once that he had been drawn into a web of which
-Carquinez was the spider. Satan, too, and Jude had been
-drawn in. He could do nothing, however, at least for the
-moment, but watch and wait, and Satan’s face was worth
-watching as that wily diplomatist sat facing Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I don’t believe you’d kidoodle me over the
-business if you had a chance,” continued Satan. “You
-would, sure; but you see I’ve got the weather gauge of
-you, knowing what I do of you, and that’s more’n I’d
-have with strangers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-“Sure,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “we’ve got that far, and it
-comes to terms. What’s your share to be for helpin’ to
-collar the stuff and dispose of it in Havana?”</p>
-
-<p>“Two dollars out of every three that we make,” said
-Sellers promptly. “There’s the salving, you can’t do that
-alone, or your dad would have done it prompt; then
-there’s the cashing of it, you’re lost men if you try that
-job on by yourselves. Why, there’s not another man in
-Havana could do it only Cark, and even he couldn’t bring
-the stuff into Havana Harbor! It’ll have to be landed
-back of the island, north of Santiago. Lord knows what
-he’ll have to pay!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan cogitated for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll meet you,” said he at last. “I’m not set on big
-money. Anything more?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that’s all,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez nodded approval, and lighting another
-cigarette leaned back in his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“And what’s this gentleman doing in the business?”
-asked Sellers, referring to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s standing out,” said Satan. “He’s just on a
-cruise with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m standing out,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m in it only
-for the fun of the thing, though I’m willing to help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you’ll have fun enough,” said Sellers,
-“if we get foul of the customs, or if some other hooker
-comes poking along while we’re salving. You’re British,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-“I thought so. Come out for a spree?”</p>
-
-<p>“You may put it like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you by any chance come off a big white yacht
-that went west yesterday?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did. What made you guess that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Sellers, “it’s easy to be seen you aren’t
-one of us, and your clothes give you away. It’s easy to
-be seen you haven’t been dough-dishing long in the old
-<i>Sarah</i>. I didn’t get your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“No trade or business?”</p>
-
-<p>“None. My father was Ratcliffe the shipowner, Holt
-&amp; Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord—love—a—duck!” said Sellers. “You’re not
-wanting for money, I reckon. Well, this gets me, it do
-indeed! Holt &amp; Ratcliffe—should think I <em>did</em> know
-them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Antonio!” suddenly piped Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>“Si, Señor.” Antonio appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Pedro Murias,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>Antonio vanished, and reappeared with a box of cigars,
-colossal cigars, worth twenty-five guineas a hundred in
-the London market. They were placed on the table and
-pushed toward Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Satan grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “we’ve fixed things so far,—two out
-of every three dollars to you and no deductions.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“And now we’ve fixed terms,” said Satan, “I want to
-know all about this hooker.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-“Which was you meaning?” asked Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“The wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to him!” cried Sellers. “Mean to say you don’t
-know all about her?”</p>
-
-<p>“N’more than Adam. I’ve heard from Pap she was
-called the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>, and was full of gold plate
-got from churches; but that’s not much more than a name
-and a yarn. I’ve never banked much on the yarn.
-Seems too much of the New Jerusalem touch about it for
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe you’re wrong,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Spit it out,” said Satan. “Tell us what you know
-about her. You’ve got the contrac’; give us the news.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Sellers. “She weren’t no
-ship with gold plates,—your dad got that wrong,—she
-was a big Spanish ship out of Vera Cruz making for
-Spain. She had a cargo of timber, some of them heavy
-foreign timbers that don’t float. She’d got aboard her,
-besides the timber, more’n a million dollars’ worth of
-gold,—Mexican gold most of it, Spanish coin some of it.
-Lopez was the name of the skipper, and he laid to bank
-that gold for himself. He’d been forty years in these
-seas and knew every key and sandbank same as the insides
-of his own pockets.</p>
-
-<p>“Him and the mate were the only men in the know
-about that gold beside a supercargo by name of Perez.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he colluded together with them two guys to
-sink the hooker in six fathom water out of trade tracks,
-give out that she’d sunk in a gale, and come back in a
-year or two and collar the boodle. They had her bored<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-and plugged for the game, and when they got her to the
-location they pulled out the plugs, and she went down
-without a sneeze, natural as a dyin’ Christian.</p>
-
-<p>“They got the boats away in order, and the crew was
-got off to a man; but that crew never got ashore. Maybe
-it was something wrong with the grub or the water,
-there’s no saying, but they never got ashore to turn
-witness. But the grub and water was all right in the
-dinghy. Them three guys had taken the dinghy, and
-they were picked up and landed somewhere on the gulf,
-fat and well.”</p>
-
-<p>All through Sellers’ recitation Carquinez had sat nodding
-his head. He glanced now at Satan and Ratcliffe as
-if measuring its effect upon them, then he half closed
-his eyes again and retired into himself like a tortoise.</p>
-
-<p>“They slung their yarn,” went on Sellers, “and made
-all good, and it was only left for them to wait awhile
-and hire or steal a likely boat to pick up the stuff, when
-the yellow fever took the supercargo and the mate, leaving
-Lopez to fish for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“He got back to Havana, which was his natural home,
-and there he put up with his son, who was a trader in
-tobacco, got a bit of a factory not bigger than a henh’us,
-and turned out a brand of cigars made out of leavin’s
-and brown paper mostly.</p>
-
-<p>“He put the son wise about the wreck; but he
-wouldn’t give the location away till it was time to go
-and pick up the stuff, which wouldn’t be for a year yet.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he up and died, and the son started to hunt for
-the chart and couldn’t find it. The old guy had given<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-him everything but the chart with the location marked on
-it. It wasn’t a proper chart, neither: just a piece of
-paper with the thing done rough, but giving the bearings.
-And it was never found—not by the son. The grandson
-found it—and where do you think? Pasted into the lining
-of an old hat. That wasn’t so long ago, neither, and
-what do you think that fool of a grandson did? Well,
-I’ll tell you what he did. First of all he comes to Cark
-here, and tries to get him onto the job on a ten per cent
-basis, Cark to risk his money and repitation for a lousy
-ten per cent on what might be only the bones of an old
-ship. He let out her name and history and everything
-but the location.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark wasn’t having any on those terms,—was you,
-Cark?—and he told the chap to go to Medicine Hat and
-pick bilberries. The chap goes off, and what does he
-do but tries to get up a syndicate between himself and
-two yeggmen without a keel to their names! Perrira was
-the name of one, and da Silva was the name of the other,
-and they held a board meeting in Diego’s saloon one night
-and shot holes in one another in the back parlor.</p>
-
-<p>“Silva and Perrira had fixed it to lay the grandson
-out and collar the chart for themselves, and they’d have
-done it, only he wasn’t backward with the shooting.
-Your dad was in the bar that night, and he twigged something
-from what they let drop before they went to the
-back parlor to hold their meeting. Then when the shooting
-began he was first into the room, and collared the
-chart, which was lying on the floor. He was always
-quick on the uptake, was your dad. Being a knowledgeable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-man, he reckoned Cark was the only chap in
-Havana to help him take the stuff and clear it. He
-knew the stuff was there by what he’d heard going on in
-the bar before the three chaps had left it for the back
-room, but before he could conclude business with Cark
-he up and died.”</p>
-
-<p>Cark nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“That was so,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “we’ve got the whole yarn now,
-and I’m wishing to be done with the business. I’m pretty
-near sick of you two guys trailing after me, and I’ll
-hand you out my belief for what it’s worth. It don’t
-seem natural to me to find gold in a hooker like that, just
-for the picking up, and I’d sell any man my chances for
-a thousand dollars. I’ve no knowledge of what’s there.
-I’m just talkin’ out of my head. You know what I am,
-I make my livin’, and I’m content to run small. It’s
-maybe that that puts me against big ventures. Anyhow,
-we’ve got to push this thing through, we’ve made the
-contrac’. I don’t want it written down and signed, seein’
-that the law couldn’t help me. I’m only sayin’ that if
-you play me crooked I’ll split. Got that in your heads?”</p>
-
-<p>The high contracting parties on the other side nodded
-assent.</p>
-
-<p>“That bein’ settled,” said Satan, “here’s the chart.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced a metal tobacco box and took from it a
-folded piece of paper, which he laid on the table before
-Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>The effect was magical.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez sprang from his chair like a young man,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-came behind Sellers, and, bending over his shoulder,
-looked. Ratcliffe, though out of the business, was as excited
-as the others. Satan alone was calm.</p>
-
-<p>He had been carrying the thing about so long that it
-had probably lost its freshness of interest.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers, without speaking, stared at the chart before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Rum Cay was shown, and then, southwest of Rum Cay,
-a line of reef marked “Lone Reef,” and in red ink, connected
-to the reef by a red line, the name “Nombre de
-Dios” could be made out, the “Dios” very indistinct at
-the frayed edge of the paper. In the top right hand corner
-the latitude and longitude were written, but so faintly
-that it would have required close study in a strong light
-to make the figures out.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody bothered about them. Lone Reef was on all
-the charts, and the name was enough.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been by there,” said Sellers at last, “and I’ve
-never seen signs of a wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t,” said Satan. “She lies flush with the
-coral in a crik between two arms of reef, not a stump
-of a mast on her. The hull of that reef must have raised
-itself since she was sunk, for the water in the crik doesn’t
-cover her at high tide and low tides it’s pretty near empty.
-But she’s been under right enough, years ago, for the
-decks are coraled over, hatches and all, and the stuff’s
-turned to iron cement with the sun and weather. We’ve
-got to dynamite her open.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Sellers; then, after a moment’s pause,
-“It’ll be a big job, if it’s what you say. I had it in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-mind that she was a diving job in shallow water—never
-thought of the blasted coral.”</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez said nothing. He withdrew to his seat at
-the end of the table and lit another cigarette. To Ratcliffe
-the silence of Carquinez approached the weird.
-The way Sellers, without consulting him, did all the talking
-seemed uncanny as though the pair were telepathic.</p>
-
-<p>One thing certain was gradually being borne in upon
-him,—they were a most atrocious pair of rogues, and the
-marvel to him was the simplicity of Satan in having any
-dealings at all with them. They would surely swindle
-him, take what precautions he might. They would never
-give him a third share of any treasure. They would,
-most likely, murder him before he could split on them, if
-treasure were found. Of this Ratcliffe felt certain. He
-tried to telegraph a warning across the table, but Satan
-seemed blind to winks and frowns.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s there,” said Satan, “near a foot thick.
-You’ve got to drill it, and stick dynamite cartridges in the
-drill-holes and fire them. Got any dynamite aboard?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not an ounce.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might make out with blasting powder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, if we’d got it,” said Sellers. “There ain’t no use
-worrying, we’ve got to shin out of this back to Havana
-and get the explosives. Question is who’ll go for them,
-us or you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan, “not if she was to lie there till
-the last trumpet. We’re underhanded, for one thing, and,
-f’r another, I’m gettin’ little enough out of the job as it
-stands without fetchin’ and carryin’ for you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-“Then we’ll go,” said Sellers. “’Twon’t take us more
-than a week to get there and back. Give us ten days,
-counting accidents, and we’ll pick you up here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not at the reef?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t matter,” said Sellers. “Here or there, it’s all
-the same to us; ain’t it, Cark?”</p>
-
-<p>Cark nodded assent, and Satan, recapturing the chart,
-folded it up and put it back into the tobacco box.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said he, placing the box into his pocket.
-“Here you’ll find us.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE “JUAN” SAILS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">They</span> rose from the conference table, and Carquinez
-stood holding his coat together with a veined and
-knotted hand while the visitors were making their adieux.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t a few feet of galvanized wire aboard?”
-asked Satan as he passed out, following Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on deck,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>On deck he stood listening, while the other passed from
-galvanized wire to the question of spare ring-bolts and
-other trifles he stood desperately in need of. Like a
-hypnotized fowl in the hands of Satan, he made scarcely
-any resistance.</p>
-
-<p>He had no ring-bolts, but the galvanized wire was
-forthcoming, also a little barrel for use as a buoy, some
-Burgundy pitch, an old paintbrush, a small can of turpentine,
-and a couple of pounds of twine.</p>
-
-<p>A small boat-anchor that had raised Satan’s desires
-brought the séance to a conclusion and broke the spell
-that seemed to lie on Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed if Satan wouldn’t be asking for his back teeth
-yet! What did he take the <i>Juan</i> for, a marine store?
-What would he want next, Carquinez?</p>
-
-<p>They rowed off with the spoil, Sellers leaning on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-rail and lovingly pressing on them the acceptance of other
-trifles, including a guitar.</p>
-
-<p>Alongside the <i>Sarah</i> they found Jude waiting to receive
-them. She had been cleaning up the abalones, was
-dissatisfied with the result,—quarter of a matchbox full
-of seed pearls,—and said so.</p>
-
-<p>When her eye lighted on the stuff in the boat that
-Satan had wangled out of Sellers, she laughed in a dreary
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“What you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on an upturned keg while they brought
-the truck on board. Then, nursing her knee and wiggling
-her bare toes to the warmth of the sun, she sat without
-a word, waiting for explanations.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that a critic had come
-on the scene. He had forgotten Jude in relation to the
-deal over the wreck, and he was wondering now how she
-would take it. The female does not always see eye to eye
-with the male, as many a business man has discovered
-on revealing a transaction to the wife of his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning against the rail, he filled his pipe and awaited
-the revelation with interest; but Satan, the revealer,
-seemed in no hurry for the business. He was bustling
-about disposing of the new-gotten “stores,”—the turpentine
-and pitch forward in the hole where paints were
-kept, the galvanized wire in a locker, and the little barrel
-behind the canvas boat.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came aft again and, lighting a pipe, stood beside
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-“Well, what you been doing, anyway?” asked Jude,
-suddenly opening her batteries.</p>
-
-<p>“Doing—which?” asked Satan. “Oh, you mean with
-Cark. Well, I’ve settled things with him, fixed it up so’s
-he’s goin’ to help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, to get the stuff, if it’s there—what else? He’s
-our only chance of doing the thing proper.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he askin’?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean terms?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s this way: He’ll have to do the wreckin’
-business, and then if the stuff’s got he’ll have to run it
-ashore, and after that he’ll have to get rid of it. I’m
-givin’ him two dollars out of every three.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you give him the lot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now look you here!” cried Satan. “I don’t want no
-sass! Who’s runnin’ this show, you or me? How do
-you know what I’ve got up my sleeve? Have you ever
-known me done on a deal yet? Now you take my orders
-where Cark’s concerned and take them smart, with no
-questions! If you don’t—well, then, trade with him
-yourself, take charge of the <i>Sarah</i> and run her yourself!
-Lippin’ your betters!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude took off her old hat and looked into it as if for
-inspiration; then she clapped it on her head again, drew
-up both feet, clasped her arms round her knees, and sat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-on the keg-top speechless and brooding, her eyes fixed on
-the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan turned and went below.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” said Jude, without shifting her
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you had all the money off that old wreck, if
-the money is there, what would you do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good of askin’ me things like that?” said
-Jude. “I’d precious soon do something with it!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you wouldn’t. You’d put it in the bank, and then
-your trouble would begin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’d have it in the bank or invested and it
-would bring you in, say, twenty thousand dollars a year;
-well, you couldn’t spend that on the dock-side, could you?
-You wouldn’t be able to spend it at all unless you gave
-up the <i>Sarah</i> and lived ashore in a fine house with a
-carriage and horses and servants, and to do that you’d
-have to become a lady—or gentleman,” hastily put in
-Ratcliffe, the figure on the keg suddenly threatening to
-turn on him. “You’d have to do that, and you’d have
-to do more than that: you’d have to learn all sorts of
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots. Can you write, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Told me the other day you couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve most forgot. Pap started to learn me, then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-he said he reckoned I was more cut out for makin’
-puddin’s, but he learned me to write my name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ever grow rich, you’ll have to do a lot
-more than write your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to write checks and letters, and, what’s
-more, you’ll have to be able to read them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon,” said the philosophical Jude, “it’ll be
-time enough to bother about that when I’m rich—and
-seems to me I’ll never be rich with them two diddling
-Satan same as they’ve done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you will; you are going to be rich some day,
-as rich as I am. I’m a fortune teller. Show us your
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude held out a hand, and Ratcliffe examined the palm
-where the lines were few but straight and clear cut. It
-was a beautiful little hand, despite the hard work it had
-done, full of character and vigor, and expressing kindliness
-and honesty and capability.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had an instinct for hands. A hand could attract
-or repulse him just as powerfully as a face; more
-so, perhaps, for a hand never lies.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said he, “you are going to be rich, you can’t
-escape it, and you are going to learn reading and writing
-and arithmetic, and you are going to live to be a hundred.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut me throat first!” said Jude. “Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are going to England some day, and you’ll
-turn into a Britisher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damned if I do! Satan!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” came a faint voice from below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-“Rat says I’m goin’ to turn into a Britisher.”</p>
-
-<p>“They wouldn’t own you. Quit foolin’ and get the
-dinner ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude uncurled herself, came down from the keg with
-a thud, ran to the open skylight, and was about to reply
-in kind, when her eye caught sight of something that
-brought her to a halt.</p>
-
-<p>They were handling the canvas on the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s off!” cried she.</p>
-
-<p>Satan came on deck. Across the blue blaze of the sea
-they could hear now the clank of the windlass pawls,—the
-<i>Juan’s</i> anchor was coming up.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought Sellers would have come on board before
-they started,” said Ratcliffe. “They’re in a big hurry,
-aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet,” said Satan with a grin. “He’ll crack on
-everything to get to Havana for that dynamite; won’t
-stop to eat their dinners till they’re back,—that’s what
-they’d have us believe—swabs!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, don’t you think they are going to Havana?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they’re <em>goin’</em> to Havana right enough,” said Satan.
-“You watch and you’ll see them headin’ that way. Look!
-she’s fillin’ to the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>The anchor was home now, and they watched the sails
-filling as she headed on the same course the <i>Dryad</i> had
-taken. She dipped her flag, and they returned the compliment;
-then she drew past the southern reefs, the hull
-vanished, and nothing remained but the topsails far
-against the western blue.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes later, down below at dinner, Jude, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-had said no word about the departure of the <i>Juan</i>, but
-seemed to have been thinking a lot, suddenly spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“You never told me that chap was going to Havana for
-dynamite,” said Jude. “What for—to bust the wreck
-open?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” replied Satan. “Did you think he wanted
-it to eat?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no knowing what a feller may swallow, seeing
-you’ve swallowed that yarn,” said Jude. “He’s gone to
-Havana to sell us, that’s my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! there’s many a way of sellin’ fools.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt that the truth was with Jude, he felt an
-uneasy conviction that they had been done. The hurried
-departure of Carquinez seemed to put a seal on the business.
-He looked at Satan expecting an explosion; but
-Satan was quite calm and helping himself to canned ox
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Seein’ I have the chart,” said he, “where’s the sellin’
-to come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve give him the location,” said Jude. “You
-said yourself that the place was fixed on every chart and
-a chap had only to have Lone Reef in his head to put his
-claws on the wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan; “but the location is no use
-without the chart.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you gettin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m tryin’ to get at your intellects. How often have
-you seen that chart?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dozens of times.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-“Ever noticed anything queer about it? Not you!
-Giving sass to your betters is your lay in life instead
-of usin’ your eyes.” He pushed his plate away, produced
-the tobacco box, and, taking the chart from it, laid
-it on the table.</p>
-
-<p>Jude got up and came behind him to look, while Ratcliffe
-leaned forward.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s the chart,” said Satan. “There’s the reef,
-and there’s the name of the hooker pointin’ at the reef,
-and there’s the latitude and longitude wrote up in the
-corner. Plain, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s plain enough,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, munching a biscuit, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>“Plain enough, ain’t it?” went on Satan. “Give a man
-the name of Lone Reef, and with any old Admiralty
-chart he’ll get there, and he has only to land on the reef
-to find the hooker stuck there in that crik between them
-two arms. Jude has seen her, and I’ve walked over her
-and ’xamined her, and she’d have been broke open maybe
-by this, only chaps don’t land on reefs like that, not
-unless a storm lands them. We struck it huntin’ for
-abalones. Plain enough, ain’t it? Well, I tell you the
-whole business is no use to any man who hasn’t that
-chart in his hand and who can’t read what’s written on
-it secret. Here you are! Take a good long look, and
-I’ll give you ten dollars if you spot what I mean. It’s
-as clear as simple.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe spread the thing before him on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see anything in it,” said he at last, “except
-what’s written plain enough. There’s Rum Cay, there’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-the reef, the name of the wreck with a pointer to the
-reef, and the latitude and longitude up in the corner.
-No, I can’t see anything but that: it all seems plain as
-a pikestaff. I take an interest in cryptograms, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cryptograms? Hidden writing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s what’s before you,” said Satan. “Pap
-never twigged it, nor any of the crowd that had the
-handlin’ of it. It’s only a month ago I spotted it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never said a word to me,” cut in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Get back to your place and don’t be chewin’ in my
-ear,” said Satan, reaching for the chart and pocketing
-it again. “Tell you? Likely! Why, if I had, you’d
-have let it out, same as you did the lie of the reef to
-Rat here the other day. Get on with your dinner!
-Why haven’t we any potatoes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No time to boil them,” said Jude, “cleanin’ up your
-mushy abalones.”</p>
-
-<p>“No time, and you yarnin’ and havin’ your future
-told! I heard you.”</p>
-
-<p>“My fault,” said Ratcliffe. “I began the business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not you,” said Satan. “I heard her start in on it,
-sayin’ what she’d do with a fortune if she had it and
-finishin’ up by mistrustin’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love you for a liar! I only said them two
-guys had done you in over the wreck,” cried Jude.
-“Don’t be stickin’ words in my mouth.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was it you came to spot the cryptogram?”
-asked Ratcliffe, eager to cut the dissension short.</p>
-
-<p>“The which?” asked Satan. “Oh, ay—well, it come<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-natural for me to say to myself, ‘Here’s a thing that’s
-been hid up and kept secret, yet it’s all wrote out as
-plain as my palm.’ I said to myself, ‘It’s too blame
-simple! A man who knows where money is hid doesn’t
-write the location on a bit of paper, to be lost, maybe,
-and picked up by God knows who. Why, drop that chart
-in the streets of Havana, and the first chap with any
-knowledge in his head that picks it up will turn it into
-dollars right off. It’s a sure bait for fools, anyhow,
-and a wreckin’ expedition would be out before the end
-of the week. They’d only have to look up any chart
-that’s been printed the last hundred years to find Lone
-Reef as easy as the Swimmer Rocks.’ Then I said to
-myself, ‘What in the nation did the guy want makin’
-a chart at all for? Why couldn’t he have written on
-a piece of paper, “The Nombre de Dios lies on Lone
-Reef, sou’west of Rum Cay”? That’s all the chart says,
-and yet he must go and make drawin’s; must have
-taken him an hour’s pen scraping to make that chart.’
-Puttin’ the two things together, I says to myself, ‘The
-feller concerned must have been a fool in two ways if
-this thing’s genuine,—a fool to leave the fac’s as plain
-as an ad for liver pills, and a fool to waste his time
-drawin’ his advertisement instead of writin’ it,’ but I
-reckoned he was no fool. Dad was always quotin’ some
-damn ass who said the world was most made up of fools.
-Well, in my ’xperience that don’t hold. Maybe in Europe
-it does, but not in Havana and the Gulf ports, anyway.
-So I says to myself, ‘Let’s try and see what the
-guy was drivin’ at.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-“And you won’t tell us how you did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d just as soon not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said Satan, “I may be wrong; though I’m
-pretty sure I’m right—and I b’lieve in a shut head.”</p>
-
-<p>“You opened your head to Cark, anyhow,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you once and I won’t tell you twice, if I have
-any more chat out of you, I’ll lay into you with a slipper!
-O’ course I opened my head to him! Did you want him
-hanging round here and sniffin’ out the cache? Haven’t
-we got rid of him? I don’t want any more talkin’. I’ve
-my plan laid out and you’ve get to take my orders right
-from now without questions!” He turned to Ratcliffe.
-“You don’t mind helpin’ to work the boat, leavin’ sailing
-directions to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m quite content to help
-and look on, leaving things to you. What’s your first
-move?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ to clear out of this tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I thought you was going to wait for Cark to
-come back,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind what you thought. I’m goin’ to
-clear out of this tomorrow. Meantime, I want more
-stuff from the cache, and you’d better take the dinghy
-and get it right off. I want provisions for a month for
-the three of us.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">CUSS WORDS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> they had washed up and put the plates in
-their rack, Jude commandeered Ratcliffe to help
-with the dinghy. Satan, having given his orders, had
-retired into himself and the business of patching an old
-sail. He was seated at the work under the awning, and
-he seemed scarcely to notice the others as they got the
-boat away.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s got something up his sleeve,” said Jude as
-they pulled for the beach. “I reckon he’s laying low to
-get the better of Cark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ask me,” said Ratcliffe, “I think he has
-got the better of him in some way or another. I don’t
-know how, and I don’t want to. I’d sooner wait and
-see. It’s as interesting as a game of chess.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chess—oh, it’s a game. I’ll show you some day.
-Don’t you ever play games, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet! Why, I won five dollars day before we put
-out buckin’ against the red at Chinese Charlie’s—y’know
-Havana? Well, it’s on the Calle sin Pedro. They play
-faro, but mostly r’lette.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-“Oh, I didn’t mean that sort of games.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which sort did you mean?” asked Jude, as the nose
-of the boat beached on the sand and they scrambled out.
-“Did you mean whisky drinkin’ and cuttin’ and carryin’
-on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no! I meant games, just ordinary games.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, the boat well beached, sat down on the blazing
-sands. It was two hours past noon, and the heat of the
-day had lifted under the freshening wind from the east,
-the tide was on the turn, and the far-off lamentations
-of the gulls around the southern reef-spurs came mixed
-with the fall of the waves,—waves scarcely a foot high,
-crystal clear, less waves than giant ripples.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and her reflection on the water
-lay the violet-colored sea, infinity, and the blue of sky,
-broken only by a gull, spar white in the dazzle.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe sat down beside his companion. Jude, like
-any old salt, had her moments of dead laziness. Active
-as a kitten as a rule, she would suddenly knock off,
-when the fancy took her, “let go all holts,” to use
-Satan’s expression, and laze. You couldn’t kick her out
-of it, Satan said.</p>
-
-<p>She had brought an old pair of boots for going through
-the bay cedar bushes. It wasn’t good to walk among
-the bushes unshod: there were tarantulas there, and scorpions,
-to say nothing of stump cacti. The boots were
-lying beside her on the sand, to be put on only at the
-last moment.</p>
-
-<p>“What you mean by ordinary games?” asked Jude
-suddenly, finishing the inspection of a new variety of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-soft-shell crab she had just caught and flinging it into
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the games people play,” said Ratcliffe, who had
-almost forgotten what they had been talking about. He
-tried to explain, and found it singularly hard, especially
-when cross-examined.</p>
-
-<p>Jude did not seem able to understand grown men and
-women spending half a day “knockin’ a ball about.”</p>
-
-<p>“I used to play ma’bles with Dutch Mike’s kids when
-we were at Pensacola,” said she. “Mike ran a whisky
-joint, and the kids were pretty ornery. When we’d
-done playin’ marbles they’d have a cussin’ bee.”</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve heard of a spellin’ bee—you get a prize
-for spellin’ the best. Well, a cussin’ bee you start cussin’
-each other, and the one that cusses hardest gets the prize.
-Pap never knew till one day he let into me with a strap
-for somethin’ or ’nother and I let fly at him. Then he
-found it was Mike’s children who’d been learnin’ me, and
-he had a dust-up with Mike on the wharf, and left him
-limpin’ for the rest of his natural. Did you cuss when
-you was young?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I learned that later.”</p>
-
-<p>“’R you any good at it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have a try,” said Jude, losing her languor. “Clench
-your fists to it and have a go at me, and then I’ll have
-a go at you—there’s no one listenin’. Pretend you’re
-the skipper and I’m a hand that’s been haulin’ on the
-wrong rope.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m no use at it, and it’s not a
-nice game, anyway. I’d sooner play at something else.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude sniffed. She evidently felt snubbed. “I’m not a
-baby to be playing games,” said she. “You can go and
-play by yourself if you want to.”</p>
-
-<p>She collapsed on her back with her knees up and her
-old hat covering her face; then from under the hat:</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear all the swearin’ you want to in a minute
-from the old hooker.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, the minute he turns his eye ashore and sees us
-lazin’ here instead of workin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, come on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Jude, “not till Satan begins. I’m too
-comfortable. I been working hard all the morning while
-you two was aboard the <i>Juan</i> clackin’ with Sellers and
-havin’ drinks, I bet. I’m going to rest myself—what did
-you have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ginger beer and a cigar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you take notice of Cark’s face?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather!”</p>
-
-<p>“They say he hasn’t any one side to his face where
-the patch is. I’d like to see him with the patch off,
-wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! I saw quite enough of him with it on.
-Come, get up, and let’s get to work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not goin’ to work no more,” mumbled Jude
-drowsily. “I’m dead sick of fetchin’ and carryin’. Let
-Satan go and fetch and carry for himself. I’m going
-to stick here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-“On the island?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“And give up Satan and the <i>Sarah</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what will you do for a living?”</p>
-
-<p>“Start a la’ndry.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s no one here to give you any washing to
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll have all the easier time.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true. It’s a bright idea, and I’ll stay with you
-and carry the laundry basket.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t! I’ll stick here alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, across the water from the <i>Sarah</i> and shattering
-this fantasy, came a voice. It was Satan’s voice,
-distant and borne on the breeze. Ratcliffe thought he
-could make out the words “lazy dog.”</p>
-
-<p>He got up. Jude with the old panama over her face
-had stiffened out as if dead. He tried to turn her over
-with his foot. Then he felt half frightened. Had the
-sun got to her head, and was all that nonsense talk
-delirium?</p>
-
-<p>He knelt down beside her and shook her.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude, what’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>He took the panama from the face. The eyes were
-closed and the features were in repose.</p>
-
-<p>Now, really alarmed, he jumped up, ran down to the
-boat, seized the baling tin, and filled it with sea water.
-He had never seen a case of sunstroke, but he had heard
-cold water on the head was a remedy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-As he turned back with the tin the corpse was sitting
-up putting on its boots.</p>
-
-<p>“What’re you doing with that baling tin?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll jolly soon show you!” said he, making toward
-her. “Shamming dead!”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could reach her she was gone among
-the bushes, one boot on, the other off. Then, flinging
-the baling tin away, he joined her, helped her on with
-the boot, and they started. Jude, as if to make up, put
-her hand into his in a trusting and loving manner. She
-swung his hand as they walked. Then, near their destination,
-she flung it away and made off, hunting like a
-dog among the bushes till she found what she was in
-search of,—a long, knotted rope.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that for?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“You wait and see,” replied Jude. “Here’s the cache.
-Mind where you’re walkin’ or you’ll be into it.”</p>
-
-<p>The cache was well hidden among the bay cedars.
-The opening, eight feet long by six broad, was covered
-over with short poles spread with cut branches gone
-withered with the sun. When they had got the covering
-off, Jude tied one end of the rope to a tree close by
-and dropped the other end into the cache. She swung
-herself down by it, and Ratcliffe followed.</p>
-
-<p>From the floor of this place a step, two feet high, gave
-entrance to the cave.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Jude. “It may rain till it’s black, but
-it never floods the cave. The water drains off before
-it can rise the height of the step.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-There were a candle and some matches inside the cave
-entrance. She lit the candle and led the way.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was astounded, less by the size of the place,
-than the stacks of goods,—canned peaches, condensed
-milk, corned beef, tomatoes, ox tongues, Heinz’s pickles,
-Nabisco wafers. The old brig, making for some gulf
-port, must have been a floating Italian warehouse as far
-as cargo was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder at Satan not wanting Sellers and
-Carquinez to spot all this,” said he. “Why, there must
-be five hundred pounds’ worth of stuff here. Aren’t
-you afraid that nigger who skipped from you at Pine
-Island may split?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sakes, no! He was too much afeared of Satan.
-Satan was always threatening to skin him. Besides, he
-doesn’t know. We told him this place was Turtle Island,
-and that’s a hundred and fifty miles to s’uth’ard. You
-trust Satan to keep a thing dark. Here, catch hold of
-the candle while I collect.”</p>
-
-<p>There were two sacks folded up on the floor. She
-started collecting things, and when the sacks were half-filled
-Jude, clambering out of the pit, hauled them up
-by the rope.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything more?” asked he, from below.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon that will be enough,” said Jude, looking down
-at him. “It’ll take us all our time to carry them to the
-boat, and if Satan ain’t satisfied he can come and fetch
-some more himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then drop the rope; I want to get out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-Jude, kneeling at the cache edge, lowered the rope
-gingerly. He reached up, and was just about to seize
-the loose end when it eluded him.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you catch hold?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t. How could I when you pulled it up again.
-Go on, drop it and don’t play the fool.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s playin’ the fool?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are.”</p>
-
-<p>The rope, instead of descending again, was hauled
-right out of the cache. Then a face appeared, looking
-down and framed against the sky. He had forgotten
-the snub he had given her on the beach, but she hadn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“D’y’r’member what you said down there on the
-beach?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No, what about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cussin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Said I wanted you to play games that wasn’t nice.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never said any such thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t yer? Well, whether you did or you didn’t,
-you’ve got to swear before I let you out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then I’ll stay in. Go on, Jude, don’t be silly.
-It’s cold down here.”</p>
-
-<p>The rope came down, and he was just seizing the end
-when it was whipped out of his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn!” said Ratcliffe wholeheartedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re talkin’,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Like a boy fishing for polliwogs, she lowered the rope
-again and snatched it up suddenly, bringing with it another
-oath.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-But the third time he was too quick for her. Then
-as he came swarming up with skinned knuckles and rage
-in his heart, she bolted. He chased her, dodging here
-and there among the bushes, then he chased her round
-a tree, caught her, and, in his anger and irritation somehow,
-kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>The perfectly amazing smack on the face that followed
-was revelation; it also knocked him off his balance
-so that he sat down as though cut off at the knees.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE COMING OF CLEARY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">She</span> stood for a moment, frightened at her handiwork.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he pulled himself together, she drew away
-a step.</p>
-
-<p>“What ails you?” asked she.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, sitting up with his hand to the top of his
-head, groaned.</p>
-
-<p>She drew a step closer. Then she saw that he was
-laughing, and drew a step back.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up, and don’t be fooling,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Fooling! And who started it?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>Jude made no reply. She turned and went off to the
-cache, lugged the sacks a bit more away from the opening,
-and started to put the poles across. When he joined
-her on the work she wouldn’t speak. She was evidently
-mortally offended.</p>
-
-<p>He knew at once and by some fine instinct what was
-the matter with her. He had trod on her dignity, like
-the Thelusson woman,—treated her like a child, that is
-to say like a girl, for the two things were synonymous
-with Jude, who seemed to have no more idea of the
-realities of sex than a pumpkin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-When she did speak at last, it was to give jeering
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Did you never have to use your hands?
-Which way is that to be sticking the poles? Why, it’d
-take twenty dozen to cover it the way you’re doing!
-Leave a foot and a half between them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Ratcliffe humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t say two foot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now the branches an’ stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>She had reserved one of the poles, for what reason
-soon became apparent.</p>
-
-<p>Each sack was too heavy to be carried by one person,
-so she slung one to the middle of the pole, and they
-started for the beach, Caleb and Joshua fashion, Ratcliffe
-in front.</p>
-
-<p>It was horrible work. They had to keep step, which
-was difficult; owing to the bushes, the going was bad.
-The sack kept slipping toward Jude, owing to the inequality
-of their heights, and the pressure of the pole on
-his shoulder was galling; also the wind had changed and
-was coming from the direction of the gulf, warm and
-moist like the breath from a great mouth.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the beach he sat down. Unused
-to hard work and unused to the climate, he was sweating
-and exhausted. Jude looked comparatively cool and
-fresh.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then, Lazybones!” said Jude. Then she collapsed
-also, sitting down with her knees up and her arms
-round them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-She seemed to have forgotten the sack, Ratcliffe, everything,
-as she sat whistling dreamily between her teeth
-and staring across the water toward the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She had kicked off her boots, and her toes were playing
-with the sand. Uncramped by boots, her feet were
-as expressive as her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear Satan begin to holler in a minute,” said
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him,” said the other, “I’m not going to stir another
-foot till I’ve rested myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t holler at you. It’s me he’ll go for;
-you’re the first-class passenger.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m not: I’m one of the crew.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude laughed in a mirthless manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon myself one, anyhow,” said he. “I
-wouldn’t have come on board unless I was to help in
-working the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Satan won’t mind you helpin’ to work her,”
-replied she; “but he didn’t bring you aboard for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know—and it was awfully decent of him. He just
-thought I’d like the cruise.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you don’t know Satan,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan never does nothing for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did he bring me aboard for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord knows,” said Jude; “but he’s got something up
-his sleeve, sure. Mind you, Satan’s as straight as they
-make them unless he’s dealin’ with law chaps and such,
-and you’d be safe with him if you was blind and dumb<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-and covered with diamonds only waitin’ to be picked off
-you. You see, you’re straight, and anyone that’s straight
-with Satan he’s straight with them. It’s different with
-lawyers, or guys like Cark and Sellers, who’d beat their
-own gran’mothers out of their store teeth. All the same,
-you look out with Satan. He’s got some plan about you,
-sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of plan is it, do you think, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord knows. Nothing to harm you, anyway; maybe
-it’s to go shares in some deal—I dunno.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m up for any deal he likes to propose that
-would benefit him—as much money as he wants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s not set on money,” said Jude, “not in a big
-way. I reckon he’s something like Pap. Pap would
-take no end of trouble making a few dollars, but he was
-never really set on bein’ rich. I reckon he took up that
-old wreck business more for the fun of the thing than
-the dollars. He used to say great riches was only trouble
-to a man, an’ that he only wanted God’s good air and
-’nough to live on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe he was right,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon Satan cottoned to you because he thought
-you was honest,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“He said to me, right off, after you’d gone back to
-the yacht, ‘I reckon that feller’s honest,’ he said.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” went on Jude, “you don’t pick up honest
-parties round these parts, not by the bushel. You might
-rake Havana with a fine-tooth comb lookin’ for fellers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-that wouldn’t do you, but you wouldn’t find none. It’s
-the same all round the gulf, from N’Orleans to Campêche;
-you can’t stick your nose in anywhere without
-being stung—if you’re a softy.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he liked me because he thought I was straight.
-What did you like me for, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! if you don’t fancy yourself! Who told you
-I liked you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You did last night. You said you and Satan took
-to me right off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did I? Well, maybe it was them pajamas—Hullo!”
-The shrill notes of a bo’sn’s whistle came over
-the water. She sprang to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Satan’s form appeared at the rail of the <i>Sarah</i>. He
-was making movements with his arms as though signaling,
-and Jude flung up an arm in answer.</p>
-
-<p>Then, shading her eyes, she looked seaward.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She seized the sack, called on him to help her, and
-between them they ran it down to the water’s edge.
-Then they got the dinghy afloat, the sack on board, and
-started.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” again asked Ratcliffe, as they rowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Sail,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen nothing, perhaps because of the sun-dazzle
-on the water or because he had not looked in the
-right direction. The sensitiveness of the Tylers to the
-approach of strangers and their hawklike vision struck
-him as belonging almost to the uncanny.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-Satan had rigged a tackle, and without a word uttered
-the sack was got aboard and below. Then and not till
-then did Satan speak.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Cleary,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Jude took the old glass he had been using, and examined
-the stranger, then she handed it to Ratcliffe. He
-turned it on the fleck of sail which sprang gigantic into
-the form of a big fore-and-aft-rigged boat, beating up
-for the island, the late afternoon sunlight flashing back
-from the foam at the forefoot and her foam-wet bows.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Cleary?” asked he, handing back the glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s partner,” said Satan, “sort of half and half
-partner. They’re always bestin’ one another. Cleary is
-by way of bein’ a ship breaker and dealer in odds and
-ends; owns a couple of ratty old schooners besides that
-old ketch. Wonder what he’s doin’ down here? Curse
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s after Cark, most likely,” said Jude. “Maybe
-he’s got a smell of the wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” replied Satan. “He’s always spyin’ on Cark.
-There’s nothin’ much that Cleary don’t know, and if he
-got wind that Cark’s on a likely job he’d put out after
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that the old wreck
-lying on that unseen reef might have been likened to a
-carcass in the desert, and that he was watching the
-gathering of the vultures to a feast.</p>
-
-<p>First Carquinez, now Cleary—how many more would
-come circling out of the blue?</p>
-
-<p>He said so, and Satan concurred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-“It’s got out somehow or ’nother,” said Satan, “and
-Lord only knows there may be half a dozen others on
-the hunt. You see, the very fac’ of Cark’s puttin’ to
-sea himself would give suspicions to half Havana; but
-Cleary is the only man beside Cark that knows my ports
-of call. He knows I come here for abalones, and he
-knows I hunt round Pine Island, not to say other places.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan fell into meditation for a moment. Then he
-resumed:</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what the cuss has been doin’. He’s been on
-the hunt for me, same as Cark was, only for different
-reasons. Now you wait and see. Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you cover the cache proper?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet; but there’s a sack of stuff we didn’t manage
-to bring off. It’s among the bushes.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll have to lay there.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the name of Cleary’s boat?” asked Ratcliffe
-as he watched the approaching ketch.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Natchez</i>,” said Satan, “an old cod boat, built
-at Marthas Vineyard. Lord! ain’t they crackin’ on!
-Cleary’s in a hurry. There’s no denyin’ that.”</p>
-
-<p>He whistled contentedly as he leaned on the rail, and
-Ratcliffe, watching his hatchet-sharp profile, wondered
-what was coming next. Of one thing he was beginning
-to feel certain,—Cleary, Carquinez, Sellers, and anything
-else that might come out of Havana on the long trail
-for plunder would find a match in Satan.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">AN HONEST MAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> ketch carried on, heading straight for the <i>Sarah</i>;
-then, spilling the wind from her sails, she came
-round, presenting a full view of her dirty old hull and
-dropping her anchor two cable lengths away.</p>
-
-<p>Almost on the last rasp of the anchor chain she
-dropped a boat, which shoved off for the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cleary,” said Satan, shading his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was, and as Cleary came on board, leg over rail,
-saluting Satan with the affability of old acquaintanceship
-and the quarterdeck with a squirt of tobacco juice, Ratcliffe
-fell to wondering what sort of place Havana might
-be and what else it might give up in the way of detrimentals.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez was bad and Sellers was bad, but Cleary
-was—Cleary. Against the gold and blue of afternoon,
-the sight of this faded man, who looked as though he
-had seen better days, who suggested a broken-down
-schoolmaster, with a slungshot in his pocket, struck Ratcliffe
-with astonishment and depression. It was as
-though the dazzling air had suddenly split to disclose
-a London slum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-“Hullo! Hullo!” said Cleary. “Thought I recognized
-the old hooker. What you doin’ down here away?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude made a dive for the galley, and Ratcliffe could
-hear her choking. The sound banished the feeling of
-depression and repulsion created by the newcomer and
-brightened him somehow.</p>
-
-<p>Here was the comic man of the pantomime come
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p>“What am I doin’?” said Satan. “I’m fishin’ for
-chair-backs. What are you doin’ yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned, spat his quid overboard, and then, leaning
-on the rail, looking seaward, with his back to the
-others, and, just as easy as though he were aboard his
-own ship, laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Fishin’ for chair-backs!” Then, sluing his head half
-round, “How’s the abalone fishin’ gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring up them pearls!”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned, and, leaning with his back against the
-rail, began to fill an old pipe in a languid and leisurely
-manner. Then, when the pearls were produced, he
-turned them from the matchbox into the palm of his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“How much?” asked Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Forty dollars,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Forty which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t worth forty cents.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, who’s askin’ you to deal?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-Cleary carefully poured the pearls into the matchbox,
-closed it, and put it in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Satan did not seem to mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring up them cigars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s the gentleman?” asked Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentleman came aboard for a cruise off a yacht.
-You needn’t mind him; he’s only out for pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary nodded to Ratcliffe, who nodded in return.
-Then things hung for a moment till Jude appeared with
-the cigar-box, and the newcomer, having tapped the tobacco
-out of his pipe, chose a cigar, lit it and, leaning
-with his back against the rail and his thumbs in the
-armholes of his old waistcoat, blew clouds. He seemed
-for a moment far away in thought, and Ratcliffe, watching
-him and Satan,—Jude having vanished again, attacked
-with another fit of choking,—puzzled his head in
-vain to find out the inner meaning of what was going
-on. The wretched pearls were scarcely worth five dollars,
-he had heard Satan say so, and Cleary, evidently
-an expert, was not the man to pay eight times their
-worth, nor was Satan the man to allow the other to
-pocket them.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly Cleary spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s a clever man, don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seein’ he’s your partner, you’re a better judge
-than me,” replied Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe that’s so,” said Cleary. “Partners we
-were, and partners we are till I ketch him and bust him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-“Why, what’s he been doin’ to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I’ll tell you,” said Cleary. “I’m an honest
-man. I don’t say in trade I’m not above shavin’ the barber,
-but between man an’ man I’m honest, and I’m goin’
-to tell you straight out Cark and me has been layin’ for
-you ever since your dad was fool enough to give Cark
-the tip about that treasure business. I wasn’t keen on
-it, same as he was. I allowed there might be somethin’
-in it—but that don’t matter. What gets my monkey
-is Cark he gets fearful thick with Sellers, then he cools
-off on the business of the treasure gettin’, and a matter
-of two weeks ago he rigs up a job for me to see after
-at Pensacola that’d have taken me two months and more.
-I says to myself, ‘There’s somethin’ in this.’ Says nothin’
-to Cark. Off I goes, taking the old <i>Natchez</i>. Hadn’t
-reached the latitood of Key West when back I puts,
-and finds Cark gone with the <i>Juan</i> and Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I knew he’s started to hunt for you again,
-leavin’ me in the lonely cold. He’s been huntin’ you
-ever since last fall, that’s straight; but he’d never let
-me down before. He’d always told me the results. I
-tell you he’s huntin’ for you now, and the surprisin’
-thing is he hasn’t found you, knowing as he does this
-is one of your grounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know he hasn’t found me?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he was here this morning and off not four
-hours ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Christopher!”</p>
-
-<p>“Him and Sellers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-“Holy Mike!”</p>
-
-<p>“You was comin’ up from West, you ought to have
-sighted him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sighted nothin’ but a tank, and her nearly hull
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’d been here a few hours earlier, you’d
-have smelt the old <i>Juan</i> as well as sightin’ her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he here on business?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was,—he was after that wreck Pap told him of.
-You just told me he’s been after me since last fall spyin’
-on me. I know it, and I’m pretty sick of the business.
-B’sides, he’s as good to help in it as anyone else; so
-I’ve made a contrac’ with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sufferin</em>’ Moses!—a contrac’ with Cark!” Cleary
-stood for a moment as though absorbing this news, then
-he laughed, the funniest laugh Ratcliffe had ever heard,—it
-was like the whinny of a pony. He saw Jude’s head
-at the cabin hatch, and the head suddenly duck and vanish,
-as though her body had been doubled up.</p>
-
-<p>“A contrac’ with Cark!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what are you laughin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’. May I ask what terms?”</p>
-
-<p>“We go shares.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the pickin’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“What else?”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you give him the location?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve give him the location and let him slip his
-cable—him and Sellers?”</p>
-
-<p>“What odds? It’ll take a month to bust her open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-and hunt for the stuff. I’ll be after him tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary crossed his arms and stood with the half cigar
-stuck in the corner of his mouth and pointing skyward,
-his eyes fixed on the deck and his left eye half closed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s face had reappeared at the cabin hatch, and the
-grin on it spread to Ratcliffe’s.</p>
-
-<p>Satan alone was unmoved, half-sitting on the keg and
-cutting up some tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Cleary at last, “you’ve made your bargain,
-there’s no gettin’ round that. <em>I’m</em> not wishin’ to
-poke my nose in your business, nor to ask what your
-share is to be, but I’m partners with Cark, and you see
-how he’s let me down—cayn’t you give me a lead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Give me a lead to the location. It won’t make a cent
-difference to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear enough, I don’t want none of your share.
-Cark’s the man I want to tap, having a right to, being
-partners.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan seemed to turn this matter over in his mind for
-a moment. Then he said, “Suppose we come back to
-them pearls?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Cleary in a lively voice. “What’s this
-you was askin’, forty? Well, forty you shall have.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced an old brown pocketbook, counted out
-four ten-dollar notes, and handed them over.</p>
-
-<p>Satan examined each note, back and front, folded
-them, and placed them into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Cleary, “out with the lead!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-“You’ll have it tomorrow,” said Satan. “I’m pickin’
-up my anchor tomorrow mornin’. You’ve only to follow
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rayther have the indications on paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you would, but you won’t. I’ve made my
-bargain with Cark, and there’s nothin’ in the contrac’
-about givin’ the location away to third parties. I can’t
-help you followin’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I take you,” said Cleary.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">PROBLEMS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> sun was nearly touching the horizon when he
-dropped into his boat and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “Are you in earnest
-with that chap?”</p>
-
-<p>“I sure am,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Going to take him down to Lone Reef?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how about Carquinez? We had got to wait for
-him here till he gets back from Havana with the dynamite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Satan, “we’d got to wait here one week,
-or maybe ten days allowin’ for weather—where was you
-born?”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s tried to sell me a pup, that’s how! He’s gone
-to no Havana: he’s crackin’ on for the wreck with every
-stitch he can carry. Reckons to bust her open and scoop
-the boodle while we’re layin’ here rubbin’ our noses and
-waitin’ for him. Mind you,” said Satan, “I may be
-wrong, but that’s my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he sailed off toward Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Hasn’t he a rudder?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-“All the same, would it pay him?”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he played a dirty trick on you like that,
-wouldn’t he be afraid you’d split?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who to?”</p>
-
-<p>“To the authorities at Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember Sellers talkin’ about landin’ the
-stuff,” asked Satan, “sayin’ they’d have to take it round
-to Santiago way? They thought I was drinkin’ all that
-in. If there were any dollars in the business, d’you think
-they’d touch Cuba? Not they! They’d either cache the
-stuff or run it to some likely port. I was laughin’ in my
-hat all the time. Now you may think me a suspicious
-cuss. I’m not; but a feller has to run by compass in this
-world or go off his course, and my compass in this turnout
-is Cark. I say he’s gone down to Lone Reef and
-given me the left leg over the business, and my compass
-is the fac’ that he can’t run straight. Not if he tried to,
-he couldn’t run straight; nor could Sellers nor Cleary.
-If them fellers were straight, I’d match them and give
-them a fair deal. As it is, they’re like a lot of blind
-bally-hoolies playin’ blindman’s buff, runnin’ round and
-round, with me in the middle, tryin’ to kidoodle me and
-bein’ kidoodled themselves. Forty dollars for them
-rotten pearls, and all sorts of fixin’s out of Sellers—<em>and
-I haven’t done with them yet</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>It had seemed to Ratcliffe, on board the <i>Juan</i>, that
-Carquinez was the spider of the web of this business.
-It seemed to him now that the spider was Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He began to wonder was there any wreck at all, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-the treasure story a myth. The idea of these rogues being
-incited to dreams of fortune so that they might be
-plundered of pots of paint and cans of turpentine and
-a few dollars appealed to him immensely. He remembered
-Thelusson and Skelton, he remembered Jude’s yarn
-about fruit steamers being held up, he remembered
-Carquinez and Sellers, and he had just seen Cleary; and
-of a sudden Satan’s ocean-wide activities appeared before
-him in nightmare contrast with their microscopic results.
-Great steamers stopped for a bunch of bananas, yachts
-lying idle to careen the <i>Sarah</i>, ships sailing from Havana
-to hunt for buried treasure—but in reality to supply the
-wandering <i>Sarah</i> with cans of turpentine and a few dollars!
-Was there any treasure, or was the whole thing
-a Tyler fake invented by Pap and handed to his family
-as an heirloom? He could not resist the question.</p>
-
-<p>“That chart you showed us,” said he,—“is there anything
-really in it?”</p>
-
-<p>Satan took him at once.</p>
-
-<p>“The chart’s all right,” said he, “for them that can
-read it. If you mean is it <em>genuine</em>, I reckon it is—for
-them that can read it. We’ll see some day if I’m right
-or wrong; but, honest truth, I’m not botherin’ much about
-it,—the chances are so big, as I told you before, against
-treasure huntin’, and even if we strike it what’s the use
-of barrels of gold to a feller like me? If you ask me, I’m
-botherin’ more about the kid than huntin’ for money.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude. Suppose I was to get a bash on the head from
-one of them cusses, or drop to the smallpox, same<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-as I pretended to Sellers, what’d become of the kid?”</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the “kid” frying fish for supper came
-mixed with the question.</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Ratcliffe, “that’s a problem that must
-often occur to you, I should think.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve seen the sort of crowd Havana’s made of,”
-went on Satan. “It’s hard to tell which is worse, the
-Yanks or the Spaniards, and there’s not a seaport that’s
-not the same, and when I think of me lyin’ dead and her
-driftin’ loose, it gets my goat. It’d be different if she
-was a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides that,” said the other, “she can’t go on always
-as she is now.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, dressed as she is now. She’ll grow up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have to dress differently some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meanin’ skirts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan laughed a hollow laugh. The idea seemed so
-futile that he did not dwell upon it, or seemed not to.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any female relations yourself?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Lots,” replied Ratcliffe, calling up in memory his
-cousins and aunts, females of the highest upper-middle-class
-respectability, and vaguely wondering what they
-would think of Jude could they see her.</p>
-
-<p>“The bother is,” said Satan, “she don’t take to women
-folk; always was against them, and that Thelusson
-woman put the cap on the business, kissin’ her and handin’
-out slop talk. Well, I don’t know. I reckon she’ll have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-to go on bein’ what she is till somethin’ happens; but it
-would have been a lot handier if she’d been born a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned and went below.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had sunk beyond Palm Island, and a violet
-dusk, forerunner of the dark, was spreading through the
-sky. Over beyond the <i>Natchez</i> the sea for a moment became
-hard looking as a floor of beryl, then vague.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, lingering for a moment watching this transformation
-scene, found himself thinking of Jude and her
-problem. The Tylers had taken an extraordinarily firm
-hold upon him. He knew them more intimately than he
-knew his own relations, or fancied so. It seemed to him
-that he had known them for years.</p>
-
-<p>When this cruise was over and he packed up his traps
-and left them, he would probably never see them again.
-Jude and Satan would go their way and he would go his
-way—and what would happen to Jude? Suppose Satan
-were to die, get knocked on the head or “fall to the
-smallpox”? The thought hurt him almost as much as it
-hurt Satan; for Jude had, somehow or another, captured
-his mind and touched his heart, and her youth and absolute
-irresponsibility before the major facts of life had
-infected him in the most extraordinary manner.</p>
-
-<p>Over there on the island, engaged in the serious matter
-of provisioning the <i>Sarah</i>, they had been carrying on like
-children. He had not thought of it then; now, reflecting
-sanely, it rose before him together with the rest of
-this strange cruise, and for a moment the whole business
-seemed mad, absolutely mad. The supersane figure of
-Skelton rose up before him, and beyond Skelton, Oxford,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-the calm, sane English country, where the Tylers would
-have been impossible, the hard bourgeois conventions of
-the upper-upper-middle classes, those uncles, cousins, and
-aunts to whom Class was as holy as Sunday and to whom
-Jude would be absolutely invisible as she was.</p>
-
-<p>He was engaged in these reflections when a voice broke
-the stillness of the evening, a half-tired, half-cantankerous
-voice, the voice of an overworked housekeeper who
-had been frying fish while others have been idling.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ain’t</em> you comin’ to help me?” inquired the voice.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">HANTS AND OTHER THINGS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Down</span> below, at supper, the injured housekeeper was
-still in evidence and rose to a charge that the fish
-was over-fried. Satan was the accuser.</p>
-
-<p>The defendant, “het up” and flushed, replied in the
-language of the sea:</p>
-
-<p>“Go’n fry your head! Clackin’ on deck and leavin’ me
-to do the work—the pair of you! It’s all men’s good
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I thought you was a man!” said Satan. “You
-cut and carry on like a man; scratch you and your tongue
-goes both ends like a woman. Start you on a job, and
-you sit down to it before it’s half done. I saw you
-lazin’ on the beach, and now look where we are,—there’s
-a sack of stuff not brought off and how are we to bring
-it with Cleary messin’ round?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t my fault,” said Jude. Then she checked
-herself and her eyes met Ratcliffe’s.</p>
-
-<p>“It was my fault,” said he. “I got tired.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude looked at him. This defense of her, trifling
-though it was, seemed to make a new relationship between
-them. It seemed to her that Ratcliffe had suddenly
-become different. She could not tell what the difference<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-was or how it had come about in the least, or why she
-half-resented his shielding her, even in this small matter;
-then her eyes fell away and rested on the table before her.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t,” said she. “It was my fault I was foolin’
-when I ought to have been workin’, and now the stuff
-is lyin’ there—” She choked, and then to the horror of
-Satan she pushed her plate away and broke into tears,
-hiding her face on her folded arms. Then, before the
-astonished ones could speak, she rose and dashed out of
-the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“Land’s sake!” cried Satan. “What ails her? Cryin’!
-She’s never done that before—and all over that rotten
-sack—why, let it lay there, cuss the thing!”</p>
-
-<p>He went on with his supper in an irritable manner.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s overtired, maybe,” said Ratcliffe. “Wait and
-I’ll fetch her back.”</p>
-
-<p>He left the cabin and came on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The moon had not risen yet, and the riding light, which
-had been run up before supper, showed yellow against
-the stars.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sign of Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He went forward. There she was, huddled up in the
-bows.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>The bundle sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on down to supper. Satan’s not angry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who the”—sniff—“cares whether’es angry or not?
-You lea’ me alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you crying about?”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ain’t</em> cryin’!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-“Well, what are you lying on the deck for?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause I choose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on down and help to clear the things away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear them yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>He bent down and tried to take her arm. She shook
-him off, rose suddenly like a released spring, ran to the
-side where the dinghy was moored, and got over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>He looked over. She was in the boat unfastening the
-painter.</p>
-
-<p>“Where on earth are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>She pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe came down to the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s gone ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s gone for that sack,” said Satan unconcernedly.
-“Reckons to get it off before moon rise, I expect.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s too heavy for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll do it. You’ve put her monkey up makin’ her
-confess it was her fault. She’s never done that before
-in all her born life. She’s just natural proud and she’d
-as soon cut her tongue out as give in she was in the
-wrong. You’ve made her do more’n I’ve ever made her
-do, and how you’ve done it—well, search me.</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t gettin’ on with your supper,” said Satan
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve had enough. I was wondering if she has her
-boots for going through that bush stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s got them all right. They were in the dinghy:
-she didn’t bring them aboard. You’re worryin’ a lot
-about the kid.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-“Well, maybe. She’s the jolliest kid I ever struck, and
-I don’t want any harm to come to her; the pluckiest, too.
-There’s not many people would go off alone in the dark
-like that in a place like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord bless your soul!” said Satan. “That’s nothin’,
-no more than walkin’ down the street to Jude. Do you
-think sailin’ these seas is all fair-weather work? Why,
-we’ve been rubbin’ our noses in <em>des</em>truction since she was
-born. She don’t know what fear is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could tell that from her face.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s her face that’s troublin’ me,” said Satan. “Pass
-me the water pitcher, will you? She’s begun to take
-after mother. A few months ago she was the homeliest
-little pup ever littered; but she’s beginnin’ to pick up in
-looks, and if she takes after her mother’s side in looks
-and ways—Lord save us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Was your mother good looking?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “I don’t know what you call good
-looks. Pap said she was a nacheral calamity; that was
-after she’d bolted with the Baptis’ man. It wasn’t the
-looks so much as the somethin’ about her that’d make a
-blind man rubber after her if she passed him in the
-street, that’s what Pap said. He never said no prayers,
-but when he was talkin’ of Jude I’ve heard him say time
-and again, ‘Thank the Lord she don’t take after her
-mother!’ and now it’s comin’ out, same as the ace of
-spades a shark has hid up his sleeve—and what’s comin’
-after, Lord only knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I scarce know myself, but Pap said those sort<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-of women couldn’t help bein’ nacheral calamities, attractin’
-chaps and turnin’ the world upside down. He
-said a man, once they’d got the clutch on him, was no
-more use than a hypnotized fowl, whatever that is.
-You’ve heard what Jude said about skirts—well, I’m
-thinkin’ that’s all baby talk, an’ it’s my ’pinion when she
-gets her nacheral sailing orders she’ll be into skirts some
-day, same as a dude takes to water, and hypnotizing
-chaps, same as her mother before her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t be surprised,” said Ratcliffe; “but I don’t
-think she’ll be a natural calamity. I think, from what
-I have seen of her, that she has a fine character, honest
-as the day, good as gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan; “but you never know what a
-woman is, seems to me, till she’s been rubbed against a
-man. Those were Pap’s words and he’d got a headpiece
-on him. Well, I reckon time will tell.”</p>
-
-<p>They went on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The moon had not risen yet, and the island lay like a
-humped shadow in the starlight. To seaward the anchor
-light of the <i>Natchez</i> showed a yellow point, and from the
-beach came the lullaby of little waves falling on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Now if it wasn’t these days,” said Satan, “I’d be in
-two minds about putting out straight now, rather than
-lyin’ all night by that feller Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by these days?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in the old throat-cuttin’ days I reckon Cleary
-would have gone through us, sunk the old <i>Sarah</i>, and
-taken me aboard his hooker with a gun at my head to
-make me show him the way to the wreck; but things is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-different now. Fellers are afraid of the law. Cark’s
-mortally afraid of the law, so’s Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“What time do you start tomorrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“After sun-up, if the wind holds.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be a joke if we find Carquinez at the reef.
-What will he say, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark? Oh, he’ll not mind. There ain’t no shame in
-Cark. He’ll have broke his contrac’ by not goin’ to
-Havana, he’ll stand proved to the eyes as a damn cheat.
-He won’t mind: the contrac’ not bein’ regular, the law
-can’t have him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect Cleary will go for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan. “Then we’ll have some fun.
-There’s Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>Something like a swimming water rat was breaking the
-star shimmer on the sea. It was the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>Jude was sculling it from behind, noiselessly. It came
-alongside to starboard like a ghost, and with it came Jude’s
-voice calling for the tackle. Then the sack came aboard
-and after it Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve done it smart,” said Satan, “and no mistake.
-Now off down with you and have your supper.
-We’ve got to start bright and early in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude said nothing. Her anger and irritability seemed
-to have departed. She kicked off her boots, hitched up
-her trousers, and started down below.</p>
-
-<p>“She never keeps a grudge up,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Away in the middle of the night Ratcliffe was
-awakened by a stifled scream, the voice of Satan promptly
-following.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-“Wake up! What ails you?”</p>
-
-<p>“For the Land’s sake, where am I?”</p>
-
-<p>“In your hammock. What’re you dreamin’ of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee-owsts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants, you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Black faces they had, and they was chasin’ me round
-and round them trees.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what comes of stuffin’ yourself and goin’ to
-bed on top of it. Get off your back and onto your side.
-Wakin’ a body up like that! What was they like?”</p>
-
-<p>“The hants?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t be talkin’ for fear of wakin’ him up.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s asleep. I hear him snorin’. What was they
-like?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’d black faces and tails like cows—an’ I’d rather
-not be talkin’ of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wonder what it means dreamin’ of them things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ good—bad weather, most like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glass is steady.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe we’ll bust on a reef or somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shet your head!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shet yours. I’m wantin’ to get asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe could hear the water outside tickling the ribs
-of the old <i>Sarah</i>. A bigger swell was running, and she
-rose to it with balloon-like buoyancy. A score of little
-voices from the trickle and slap of the sea against the
-timbers to the click of the rudder chain marked her
-movements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-The idea of the ghosts chasing Jude round the dream
-tree reminded him of how he had chased her round the
-real tree and kissed her—kissed her out of irritation.</p>
-
-<p>Something in his half-asleep state told him he had been
-a fool to do that. It was all done in play, just as a little
-boy might kiss a little girl; but he was not a little boy.
-What had prompted him?</p>
-
-<p>Then as he lay dissolving into slumber the groaning
-timbers of the <i>Sarah</i> said something that sounded like
-“nacheral calamity,” and then, the door of sleep flung
-wide, he was walking on a blazing beach with Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Natchez</i> and the <i>Juan</i> were at anchor out on the
-blue dream sea, a great wreck was heaved up on the sands,
-and when they reached it Cleary tapped on the timbers
-and said something about a “nacheral calamity,” and at
-the words a porthole opened and Jude’s fresh young face
-appeared laughing, framed by the timbers of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him the most delightful vision—then it
-popped in and the porthole closed and Carquinez came
-riding up on a horse, saying he was going to “bu’st” the
-wreck open with dynamite to get at the treasure.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">UNDER WAY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was routed out before dawn by Satan. The
-cabin lamp was lit, the table spread, and Jude was
-bringing in coffee. She seemed in a bad temper, and
-as he huddled himself into his clothes he could hear her:</p>
-
-<p>“Knockin’ myself about in the dark! That old slush
-lamp in the galley don’t burn worth a cent. What you
-want haulin’ out this hour for?”</p>
-
-<p>And to her Satan:</p>
-
-<p>“Wind will be up with the sun—where’s them biscuits?
-We’ve got to get the dinghy aboard yet, and all that
-raffle forward stowed, and it’ll be light enough in another
-ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Rat?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s comin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He sat down to table opposite Jude. She scarcely gave
-him good morning. The face that had looked so well
-framed by the porthole of the dream ship was cross, almost
-sullen. He thought for a moment that her ill-temper
-was directed toward Satan as well as himself;
-then, in some subtle way, he knew it wasn’t. Early rising
-may have helped; but he was the cause. What had
-he done? He could not think.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-He remembered how she had acted when he had stood
-up for her the night before. It was just the same this
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>Satan said the coffee was burnt,—tasted like bud
-barley, and ought to be slung in the slush tub. Ratcliffe
-stood up for the coffee, but was cut short by Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it’s beastly,” said Jude; “but I haven’t
-more’n two hands to be gettin’ the things on the table
-and the coffee boiled—and some folks snoring in their
-bunks!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shet up!” said Satan, ruffled at this wanton attack on
-the guest “And talkin’ of snorin’, I reckon you can give
-any man points and beat him, once you lay down to it.
-Why, you shake the ship so that I’ve woke often of
-nights thinkin’ we’d got adrift and was dudderin’ over
-sandbanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love you for a liar!” was all Jude said. She
-refused help in clearing away the things, joining them on
-deck a few minutes later, just as day was coming into
-the eastern sky.</p>
-
-<p>The problem of how to get the dinghy aboard had not
-occurred to Ratcliffe till now. The <i>Sarah Tyler</i> possessed
-no davits, and though the old canvas boat was easy
-to handle as an umbrella, the sturdy little dinghy was a
-different matter.</p>
-
-<p>Standing in the half-dark with a faint wind bringing
-the smell of the early morning sea, sharp as the smell
-of a new-drawn sword, he questioned Satan on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Get her aboard?” said Satan. “Oh, I’ll durn soon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-get her aboard. Davits! God love you! what do you
-want them things for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Except for hoistin’ fools off the ship?” said the voice
-of Jude from the darkness. “<em>Air</em> you goin’ to get a move
-on? You’ve got the old awning to take in and stow.
-Maybe you’ve forgotten it.”</p>
-
-<p>They got the awning down and stowed, and then,
-against a train of fire crawling on the eastern sea-line and
-in a light that made the world like the vestibule of
-Fairyland, Satan set to on the problem of the dinghy.
-He had no doubt half a dozen dodges for the purpose.
-The one he employed was simply to unshackle the main
-halyards and fix them to the ring-bolt on the bow.</p>
-
-<p>As they hauled on the tackle, and as if in answer to the
-creak of block and shrill chantey started by Satan, the
-races of the gulls blazed out. The deep-sea fishing gulls
-had long since started for sea; but the shore gulls, as
-though waiting for a convoy to follow, were round the
-stern of the <i>Sarah</i>. Then, the dinghy secured, the throat
-and peak halyards were manned, and the mainsail rose
-slatting against the splendor of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was over the sea-line now, the wind rising
-to meet him, and to starboard the fresh blue sea flooding
-against the wind showed the <i>Natchez</i>, her canvas
-rising and the fellows swarming at the ropes.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had unlashed the wheel and was standing by it,
-now that the mainsail was set, shouting directions to his
-crew; and to Ratcliffe, as he labored with Jude getting
-the foresail and jib on her, the truth came in a flash
-that this was the real thing. The lazy peace of the last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-couple of days had broken all at once. Activity, Adventure,
-and Danger seemed suddenly to have boarded the
-old <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and delivered her as a prey to enormous
-and unknown forces.</p>
-
-<p>He had never recognized till now the potential energy
-of canvas. The mainsail seemed horribly vast, out of
-all proportion to the hull; the slatting of the jib as they
-raised it spoke of an energy new born, viewless, and
-seeming to have little relationship to the warm and benign
-breeze.</p>
-
-<p>But he had no time to think. The anchor was still
-to be had in, and as he helped with Jude at the windlass—Pap’s
-patent that would have raised a battleship—the
-threshing of the canvas with all sheets slack and the
-voice of Satan came urging speed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the old killick was aboard and the sails
-trimmed, came Peace. With the wind on the starboard
-beam and the canvas hard against the blue the <i>Sarah</i>
-settled down to her work, Palm Island fading to westward,
-and to sou’west the <i>Natchez</i> with all sail set in
-pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s bad temper seemed to have blown away on
-the wind, the surly look had gone from her face, and as
-she stood for a moment by Ratcliffe, looking over the
-weather rail, her mind seemed entirely occupied by
-Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s blowing along,” said Jude; “but he’s feeling our
-pace. Not more than holding his own—and he had the
-cheek to tell me once his old tub could sail circles round
-the <i>Sarah</i>!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-Satan at the wheel cocked his eye over his shoulder
-at the <i>Natchez</i>, spat, and refixed his gaze on the binnacle.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your eyes?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“In my head,” replied Jude. “What you gettin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s overhaulin’ us. Wonder he ain’t aboard! Time
-you was gettin’ that anchor up and handlin’ the jib.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was about to share the blame when, remembering
-the incident of the coffee, he checked himself and
-held his peace.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was right. The <i>Natchez</i> had the pace of the
-<i>Sarah</i>, at least under present wind conditions and under
-plain sail. The two boats had evidently never been
-matched before, and the gloom of the Tylers might have
-been gaged by their silence. Satan did not want to run
-away from Cleary; but he had promised him a “lead,”
-and this impudent display of the better sailing qualities
-of the <i>Natchez</i> was like a derisive underscore to the
-promise.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, in this matter at least, was a very unwise man.
-He should have checked the speed of his boat by mishandling
-her or even trailing a drogher. Instead of that
-he held on, determined, evidently, to take the shine out
-of the <i>Sarah</i> and pour derision on the head of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, little as he knew of boat-craft, felt the situation.
-Being wise, he said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Jude spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s her beams helping her. Try her on a wind and
-we’d knock flinders out of her. Lord! to think of being
-beat by that old cod boat! Say, cayn’t we do nothin’,
-crack on a balloon jib or somethin’?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-Satan laughed a mirthless laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“S’much as to tell the cuss we’re beat. Don’t you
-think Cleary’s got no balloon jibs up his sleeve? Hain’t
-you no sense?”</p>
-
-<p>They held on, the <i>Natchez</i> steadily overhauling them
-till she was dead level half a mile away and drawing
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Then, having demonstrated her superiority, she began
-to reduce sail so as to give the <i>Sarah</i> the lead.</p>
-
-<p>Jude turned away and leaned with her back against the
-rail; then Satan told her to take the wheel and went below
-for a “wash.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE STEERSMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Ratcliffe,</span> taking his seat on the bottom of the
-dinghy, watched her as she steered, the old panama
-on the back of her head and her eyes roving from the
-binnacle to the luff of the mainsail. The following wind
-blew warm, and the gentle creak of a block, the slash of
-the bow-wash, and the occasional click of the rudder
-chain were the only sounds in all the blue world ringing
-them.</p>
-
-<p>A mile or more behind them the <i>Natchez</i> showed, a
-triangle of pearl, Palm Island had vanished, and nothing
-remained in all the wheel of sea but a trace of smoke
-to the southward,—the smoke of some freighter hull down
-on the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>The sturdy little figure at the wheel seemed to have
-forgotten his existence. He was wondering whether the
-grudge was still being kept up against him, and what it
-was all about, and whether this indifference was real or
-assumed, when a voice made him start:</p>
-
-<p>“Say! Have you swallowed your tongue?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I didn’t like to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-“Well, I’ve heard you mustn’t speak to the man at the
-wheel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who stuffed you with that yarn?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve seen it stuck up on steamboats, and besides
-I thought you were in a temper with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you said davits were only good for hoisting
-fools off a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“So they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you meant me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you was a fool, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then last night you got in a wax—Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing—only—we don’t want to quarrel—and we
-haven’t been the same since last night, somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. You wouldn’t let me help to clear
-the things this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t I? Well, you can help to steer the ship
-now. Kin you steer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only a boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s easy learnt, and you’re not much use aboard
-unless you can take your hand at the wheel.”</p>
-
-<p>He said nothing for a minute, admiring the way she
-had steered clear of the subject he had started on.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind,” said he at last. “I’ll learn some time—you
-can teach me.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude let her eyes rest on him. Then suddenly, and
-with the vehemence and force of a Methodist preacher
-driving home a point from the pulpit, she spoke:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-“<em>Air</em> you stuck to the bottom of that dinghy with
-cobbler’s wax?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed and stood up.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” said Jude. “Now come’n take the
-wheel. Some time’s no time! You’ve got to learn to
-handle her now if you want to. Go behind me and look
-over my shoulder—that’s right.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood behind her, wondering what the next command
-would be. It came almost at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Stick your eye on the compass card.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>“S’long as the pointer’s like that she’s on her course.
-Now I’ll let her off a spoke or two—keep your eye on
-the card.”</p>
-
-<p>The pointer altered its indication, and the mainsail
-seemed suddenly attacked by the ague.</p>
-
-<p>“Now she’s on her course again,” said Jude, altering
-the wheel. “Take hold of her. I’ll stand by to give you
-a hand if you want it.”</p>
-
-<p>He took the spokes she had been holding as she relinquished
-them, and the first sensation that came to him
-was the feeling that he had taken hold of something alive,
-something alive and sensitive as a hare. The wheel
-seemed to have a motive power and will of its own, and
-the infernal compass card to take affront at the least
-movement of the helm.</p>
-
-<p>Jude rested her hand on his left hand to show him
-how and give him confidence, and at the touch of her
-firm little hand the stage-fright that comes to every steersman
-when he first takes the wheel left him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-In five minutes he had got the hang of the thing, or
-thought so.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you run her alone?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! It’s as simple as simple.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She drew off and took her seat on the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>“Easy, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Easy as pie.”</p>
-
-<p>The wind freshened a bit, and the <i>Sarah</i>, heeling
-slightly, took matters in her own hand for a moment
-and fell off her course. He put the wheel over too
-much, and like a frightened horse she went plunging
-away in the opposite direction, the wind spilling from
-her sails and the main boom threatening to swing to
-port.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment Jude was beside him, her hands on the
-spokes, and the <i>Sarah</i> on her course again.</p>
-
-<p>A voice came from below, where Satan, like a sensitive
-plant, had evidently felt the alteration in their course.</p>
-
-<p>“What the —— are you doin’ up there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Learning Rat to steer,” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, himself again, retaking the wheel, turned to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake,” said he, “don’t call me that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rat.”</p>
-
-<p>“For the land’s sake what’s the matter with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a beastly name. If you want something short,
-call me what everyone else calls me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-“Bobby.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re lettin’ her off again,” said Jude. “Starboard—that’s
-it. Here’s Satan: he’ll go on learnin’ you. I’m
-goin’ below for a wash.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_II"></a><span class="larger">PART II</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">LONE REEF</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> was the morning of the third day out, somewhere
-about four o’clock. The moon had set, and the
-<i>Sarah</i> was lifting against a gentle head sea, boosting the
-foam from her bows under the light of a million stars.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was at the wheel, Jude below in her hammock,
-and Ratcliffe at the weather rail, close to Satan. He
-was leaning over watching the water,—gouts and lines
-of star-shot foam, planes of ebony blackness, and now
-and then, deep down, the bloom of phosphorus like the
-life in the heart of a black opal.</p>
-
-<p>“What time do you reckon we’ll strike the reef?” asked
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re right on to it now,” replied Satan, “and if it
-wasn’t more’n a five-knot breeze I’d heave her to.”</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t afraid of running on it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! There’s no smell of it yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to say you could smell it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal,” said Satan, “I don’t know if it’s rightly smell
-or hearin’ or what, but I’d know it, even with the wind
-as she is. I reckon it’s maybe the water. Shoal water
-smells different from deep, and it’s shoal water right up
-from four miles to Lone. Feels different too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“More choppy—I dunno—different. Jude would tell
-you the same. Pap had the sense of it too. Western
-ocean folks can smell ice miles off when the bergs are
-cruisin’ about. I reckon it’s the same thing— There’s
-the sun.”</p>
-
-<p>Right ahead, as if touched by a wizard, the stars had
-faded above the sea-line, the sky over there looked sick,
-a stain on the velvety splendor of the night.</p>
-
-<p>A great gull passed the <i>Sarah</i>, flying topmast high, and
-now far off and as though coming through a pinhole
-could be heard a creaky lamentable sound,—the crying
-of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got the smell of her now,” said Satan. “Them
-gulls you’re hearin’ aren’t all of them from Lone.
-There’s a big spit to east’ard, and they’ll be comin’ up
-against the wind. Say, will you take a bet?”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you even dollars Cleary hasn’t held on same
-as we’ve done the last six hours. He was droppin’ astern
-a long way last time I sighted him. He’ll have seen the
-reef on the chart right ahead of him, and his navigation
-is no account: hasn’t no sea sense. He’ll be hove to
-singin’ ‘Lead, kindly light’ and listenin’ for the breakers—What
-you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather bet on the <i>Sarah</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’re right,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>The head sails showed hard now against the east, and
-almost before one could turn and look again the blaze
-had come above a band of opal-tinted mist which passed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-and vanished, leaving on the horizon a train of fire pale
-as guinea gold.</p>
-
-<p>In that moment, far ahead and as if suddenly sketched
-by a pencil against the eastern light, they saw the naked
-spars of a vessel anchored in the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cark,” said Satan. “Told you we’d find him
-here—damn swab!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I couldn’t have believed it,” said Ratcliffe. He
-remembered the sailing of the <i>Juan</i>, presumably for
-Havana, and though he had sized up Sellers and
-Carquinez for what they were worth, still, the evidence
-of their duplicity, here before his eyes, came as a shock.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment it was blotted out by the sun, washed
-away in the blazing, seething ocean of light that sprang
-on them as if to the blast of a trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>Satan swung his head over his shoulders. Ratcliffe
-followed his gaze. The sea to westward was empty, not
-a sign of a sail.</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary’s gone,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’ll be nosin’ along soon,” said Satan. “He’s
-sure to come close enough to see Cark’s topmasts, and
-then he’ll pounce.”</p>
-
-<p>He put the helm over, and the <i>Sarah</i> payed off to the
-north so as to round the northern spur of the reef.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the wreck,” said Satan, “that line like a lump
-of rock.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, shading his eyes, could now see the reef, long
-and foam-flecked, stretching from north to south, the line
-of rock absolutely unsuggestive of a wreck, beyond the
-reef the <i>Juan’s</i> masts and spars, and about the reef-spurs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-the gulls flitting and wheeling; but, despite the movement
-of the gulls and the splendor of the morning, the place
-struck him as the most desolate he had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing stirring,” said Satan, as they rounded the
-north spur and the boom came over. “Them lowsy
-Spaniards are all in their bunks. Rap on the deck for
-Jude. Hi, Jude, y’lazy dog, show a leg! What you
-doin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Comin’,” cried a voice, followed by the sounds of
-thrashing about and inquiries of the Lord to know where
-her clothes were.</p>
-
-<p>Then at the hatch appeared a face blind with sleep.
-She ran with Ratcliffe to get the lashings off the anchor,
-helped to let go the halyards, and as the anchor fell and
-the <i>Sarah</i> swung to her moorings a couple of cable lengths
-from and outside the <i>Juan</i>, down she sat on the deck like
-a person collapsing under a heavy load.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the <i>Juan</i> did not seem to move her at
-all. Like a dormouse suddenly electrified into life and
-movement, the stimulus withdrawn, the mechanism ceased
-to act. She yawned, turned on her side, and hid her face
-in the crook of her arm as if to shut out the sun. Satan,
-whistling between his teeth, stood with his hands on the
-rail looking at the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re wakin’ up,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>A fellow with a red handkerchief round his head had
-appeared on deck. He came and looked over the side
-at the <i>Sarah</i>, then vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone to wake Cark out of his beauty sleep,” said
-Satan. “Look! There’s two more of them movin’ about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-like sick flies. Will you look at the way they’ve stowed
-them sails?—and they’ve got her a sight too close to the
-reef. Get a Western Ocean sea suddenly runnin’ and the
-anchor to drag, where’d they be?”</p>
-
-<p>He turned and contemplated the prostrate figure of
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s another sleepin’ beauty,” said he. “Ought
-a be married to Cark. Well they’d look in the same
-hammock with Sellers fannin’ the flies off them!”</p>
-
-<p>The figure on the deck turned on its back, stretched
-out its arms, yawned, and then sat up holding its knees.</p>
-
-<p>Youth may sneer at Age; but, anyhow, Age knows
-nothing of the weariness of Youth, of a morning.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, satisfied with the semi-resurrection, dropped below,
-and promptly the figure fell on its back again with
-arms outspread.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting— Say!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—ow—yow—ain’t it awful bein’ tired?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be all right when you’re on your feet. Get
-up!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting— Say, d’you know where the fishing
-lines are? Starboard locker. Fetch’m up, an’ that
-chunk of grouper I kep’ for bait—in the tub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>When he returned on deck she was drying her head
-in the sun, having soused it in a bucket of water.</p>
-
-<p>Then they dropped a line.</p>
-
-<p>Away through the diamond-clear water, thirty feet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-down, they could see the slack of the anchor chain like
-a conger on the coral and sponge.</p>
-
-<p>A nurse shark passed like a grisly ghost, then a shoal
-of sardines, then a young whip ray not bigger than a
-soup plate, then a mangrove schnapper that nosed the
-bait, swallowed it, and was hauled on board.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll be enough,” said Jude. “You clean him while
-I get the frying pan ready. Hullo! blest if Cark’s not
-putting off a boat!”</p>
-
-<p>A boat had been dropped on the starboard side of the
-<i>Juan</i> and was rounding her stern.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Sellers,” said Jude, shading her eyes. “Satan!
-Below there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers is coming off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be up in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>The boat came alongside, just as it had come at Palm
-Island,—same boat, same crew, Sellers just the same.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo yourself! Thought you was gone to Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you was to wait for us at Pa’m Island,” said
-Sellers. “Hullo, Satan, that you? How about your contrac’
-with us?”</p>
-
-<p>Satan, who had just come on deck, leaned over the rail
-and contemplated Sellers. Then he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“God A’mighty!” said Satan. He stared at Sellers for
-a moment as one might stare at a prodigy. Then he
-broke out:</p>
-
-<p>“Contrac’! Holy George! <em>What</em> you say, contrac’?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-You daar to hook onto my channel plates, and I’ll buzz
-this fish at y’r head! Shove off! What are you doin’
-here, anyway? Why aren’t you at Havana gettin’ the
-dynamite?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why ain’t you waitin’ for us at Pa’m Island?”
-logically responded Sellers. “If you want to know why
-we’re here. I’ll tell you. It was a bet I had with Cark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I bet him you’d never wait for us at Pa’m Island,
-but’d light out for here to raise the stuff if we went
-foolin’ off to Havana. Seems I was right, don’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The impudence of this made Ratcliffe gasp, but left
-Satan quite unmoved.</p>
-
-<p>“S’pose we quit lyin’,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willin’ to follow soot,” replied Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “follow soot off to the wreck
-an’ get your workin’ party onto the business like hot
-nails. I’ll be over to help you soon’s we’ve had breakfast.
-You’ve no time to waste.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary’s after you.”</p>
-
-<p>This news seemed to take the wind out of Sellers.
-He sat for a moment without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know that?” asked he at length.</p>
-
-<p>“He put into Palm Island not more’n four hours after
-you’d gone; said you and Cark had tricked him and he
-was after your blood. I told him that wasn’t no concern
-of mine. He asked me had I seen you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-“The truth. Think I’d perjure me soul lyin’ for the
-likes of you and Cark? Told him I was goin’ to join
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sufferin’</em> Moses! You’ve put your hoof in it this
-time! Go on and don’t stand waggin’ your tail! What’d
-he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’, didn’t say nothin’, but when I put out he
-put out after me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Followed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. I only lost him last night; but it’s ten to one
-he’ll drop on us. He’ll be bustin’ everywhere round
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“He will,” said Sellers, “and then it’s half shares he’ll
-be wantin’, not to mention Cark’s liver. I’m sweatin’!
-Cark’s let that chap down cruel. I owns it. Did it
-against my advice. Did he have many with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon so. The old <i>Natchez</i> was full as a beehive
-with the toughest-lookin’ crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>The sight of Sellers’ face at this announcement set
-Jude off. She seized the fish and started off to the galley
-with it, while Sellers, having communed with himself
-for a moment, spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Crooked’s a bad course to run,” said this moralist.
-“I’ve always told Cark so. I told you we’d no dynamite
-aboard,—neither we had,—but there’s a keg of powder in
-the hold, and Cark reckoned to sample the goods without
-your help. There, it’s out! You’d have had your
-share as long as I’d a leg to stand on, honest you would,
-s’far as I was concerned, and that’s all I have to say
-pers’nally on the matter. What I’m gettin’ at is this: If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-Cleary turns up, there’ll be hell of a rough house. Will
-you stand for us if there’s fightin’ to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“That depends,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not trustin’ you no more, not without the coin in
-my hand. Cark’s got to plank down something on account,
-if it’s no more’n a thousand dollars. If he don’t,
-I’ll put out for Havana and blow the gaff. You’ve overhauled
-the wreck?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you can judge what the chances are. You hop
-back lively as a flea and tell Cark what I’m sayin’. Gold
-coin and right into my fist this mornin’, or I’ll give the
-show away. It’s his own doin’. If he’d played straight
-with me, I’d have trusted him. Seein’ he’s played
-crooked, he’ll have to pay. One thousand dollars, or I
-go back to Havana and you’ll have a t’pedoboat on top
-of you, to say nothin’ of Cleary!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell him,” said Sellers. “Come over to the reef
-soon as you’re ready and I’ll give you word of what he
-says. I reckon it’ll be all right. One thousand dollars?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gold coin, and tell him it’ll be double after eleven
-o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t kick,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>The boat shoved away.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe remembered what Satan had said about the
-chart and the hidden writing in it and the high probability
-that the bones of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> were lying
-elsewhere than here. More than ever did it seem to him
-that Satan was the spider of this web,—not a malignant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-spider, for the flies he was catching in the form of
-Carquinez and Sellers, and possibly Cleary, were the
-weavers of the web, in which they seemed tangling themselves.
-Satan only fell in with circumstance and took
-toll.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said he. “Suppose Carquinez pays you
-a thousand dollars’ advance, and suppose you don’t find
-any treasure, will you pay him back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I pay him back?” asked Satan. “I’ve
-given him the location, and that’s worth a thousand anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you said there was nothing on the chart, that it
-was a fake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I said no such thing. I said that in my
-’pinion the stuff wasn’t here; but I may be wrong.
-There’s Jude hollering for us to come to breakfast.
-Come along down and I’ll show you my meanin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He scarcely spoke during the meal, and when it was
-over he took the tobacco box from his pocket and opened
-the chart on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Satan, “I’ll show you what I mean by
-sayin’ the stuff may be here, but it’s a big sight larger
-maybe it isn’t. Don’t crowd me. Stand behind me on
-either side and keep your eyes on the chart. Well, now,
-there’s Lone Reef with the creek marked and the name
-of her, and there’s Rum Cay to the left, and there’s the
-latitude and longitude wrote up—all plain, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seein’ Rum Cay is given, and seein’ Lone Reef
-is down on all the charts and as well known as Cuba<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-to any sailor man, what did the man want stickin’ the
-latitude and longitude down for? The chart’s not a
-sailin’ chart. A blind monkey wouldn’t use it nor bother
-about examinin’ the latitude and longitude wrote on it.
-He’d just say, ‘Lone Reef is the place I want to get to,’
-and he’d get there with the ordinary ship’s chart.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “in my opinion the chap that sank
-the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> knew of the old wreck lyin’ over
-there on Lone Reef and used it as a blind, for the latitude
-and longitude wrote there so faint that no man
-would bother to try to read it isn’t the latitude and longitude
-of Lone Reef; it’s a hundred and ten mile out. It’s
-the latitude and longitude of Cormorant Cay, a blasted
-sandbank down to s’uthard, all shoals and gulls, and that’s
-where the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> lies, in my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe whistled.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I may be wrong,” said Satan, “there’s no
-knowin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see what you mean,” said Ratcliffe. “This chap
-reckoned that anyone finding or stealing the chart would
-take the latitude and longitude written there for granted
-as the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef, and not bother
-to examine the figures and verify them; having no cause,
-indeed, to do so, seeing Lone Reef is so well known and
-on all the charts.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s how it seems to me,” said Satan. “I’m not
-sayin’ I’m right, but that’s how it seems to me, and if
-he figured that no one would trouble about readin’ and
-verifyin’ the latitude and longitude as given there he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-right. Pap didn’t, and it was only by chance I did, a
-month ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen Cormorant Cay?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, yes! It’s a lagoon sandspit, and the hooker
-may be in the lagoon for all I know, or under the sand
-for all I know, or I may be wrong all through and that
-may be her on the reef over there. Well, we’ve got to
-see; but it seems to me I’m pretty safe anyway, if I can
-touch Cark for that thousand.”</p>
-
-<p>So thought Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE WRECK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">After</span> breakfast, leaving Jude to keep ship, they
-got the dinghy overboard and rowed for the reef.
-Here to eastward the landing was made easy by a scrap
-of beach a hundred yards long, where the boat of the
-<i>Natchez</i> was lying, having landed Sellers and his working
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, scrambling, led the way over the rocks to the
-central creek between the two reef arms, where, ponded
-round with water, lay the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>The reef, seen from the deck of the <i>Sarah</i>, showed
-little sign of a wreck. One had to land on it to discover
-that the long hogback of rock rising from the creek had
-structure. There was not even the indication of where
-a mast had been, bowsprit there was none, stem and stern
-were almost indistinguishable; yet, standing there, with
-the gulls flying round him and the lonely tune of the sea
-in his ears, Ratcliffe knew that the thing he was gazing
-upon was a ship. Structure speaks! You can destroy
-it, but can scarcely disguise it.</p>
-
-<p>Between the right arm of the reef and the starboard
-bow of the hulk a ridge of rock gave access to the deck,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-and as the others crossed over he took his seat to rest
-for a moment and contemplate the thing before him.</p>
-
-<p>To see the Sphinx properly, one should visit it alone,
-and so with the great wreck of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>,—if
-that were its name,—crouching here, camouflaged with
-rock-growth and weed, swollen, sinister in the blazing
-sunlight, and sung to by the chime and gurgle of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Sunk in shallow water,—so the tale ran,—raised by
-that alteration in level constantly in progress among the
-reefs and islands, freighted with treasure, and guilty of
-the death of many a man—well, the tale here rang true.
-On board the <i>Sarah</i> one might doubt, but here, even in
-face of that chart which seemed faked, one believed,—mainly,
-perhaps, because one wanted to believe.</p>
-
-<p>Here, sitting on the reef, one became part of the story,
-just as when the lights of the theater are lowered one
-becomes part of the play. The flower-blue sky, the
-sapphire sea, the tepid wind, the shouting gulls, all became
-confederates. One saw, in the far past, the <i>Nombre
-de Dios</i> setting sail,—the tragic figure of Lopez on her
-quarterdeck; the sinking of her in shallow, reef-strewn
-water; the escape in the boats; men dying of starvation;
-the lapse of years; Lopez dying with her secret still
-hidden; and Lone Reef rising still higher out of the sea
-to expose more fully the murdered ship.</p>
-
-<p>The reef had always been here, for it was down in the
-oldest charts. Had it really risen? Was that chart, as
-Satan supposed, a lie?</p>
-
-<p>According to Sellers’ story, the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> had
-been sunk in six-fathom water, thirty-six-foot. Well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-if that was so, Satan was right, for the highest point of
-the reef was only six feet above water, and when she was
-sunk the reef would have been thirty feet under water
-and so uncharted.</p>
-
-<p>There was the chance that Lopez might have sailed her
-into the creek, deeper in those days, and that the creek
-bottom might have raised itself to its present level, the
-reef remaining the same. This seemed unlikely.</p>
-
-<p>And yet the decks must have been under water once,
-to account for the old coral deposits.</p>
-
-<p>It was low tide in the creek now: high-tide mark was
-six feet below the deck level. He tried to calculate how
-far she must have been lifted, gave up the attempt, and,
-rising, crossed by the rock bridge to her deck.</p>
-
-<p>This bridge of rock was another factor in the insoluble
-problem. It seemed placed there by some marine architect
-without reason, built up out of huge fragments as if
-from some fallen peak or spire.</p>
-
-<p>“Step careful!” shouted Satan.</p>
-
-<p>The warning came just in time, for the deck was
-slippery as ice in patches where a thin moss had grown,—a
-gray, greasy moss, treacherous as Death, and covering
-the droppings of innumerable sea birds.</p>
-
-<p>He made his way aft, where Sellers was standing with
-Satan and the half-dozen Spaniards that formed the
-working party. Drills and picks lay about, and marks
-showed where work had been started the day before.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a foot thick,” said Sellers, “whatever it is, and
-harder than cement. Rock!—this ain’t coral rock, not
-such as I’ve ever seen. Harveyized steel’s more like it,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-and after that there’s the deck planking to be got
-through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “I told you it was a dynamite job,
-and if you’d played fair and got the stuff we’d have been
-a long sight nearer the end of the business, even if we
-started a week later. But there’s no use in talkin’ now,
-and there’s no use in messin’ about pickin’ holes here and
-there. Your job is to make a hole big enough to sink
-that barrel of powder of yours—take me? Sink it half
-deep and then lay a fuse and fire the whole lot at once
-and risk chances. It’s ten to one you’ll split the deck
-right open at one go. As for sinkin’ little holes and usin’
-small charges, you’ll be ten years on the job.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers rose up and wiped his brow and cast his eyes
-over the sea to westward, evidently with Cleary in his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not sure you aren’t right,” said he. “I’ll
-fix it that way; but it’ll be a long job with the tools we
-have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan. “And now to the question of
-them dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them—I’ve spoke to Cark, and he’s agreeable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is he? Well, then. I’ll go right aboard with you
-now while he’s warm and get them dollars into my hand.
-Set your men at work and you come along with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers hung fire for a moment, then he agreed, gave
-the working party their directions, and led the way off
-the deck across the rock bridge.</p>
-
-<p>He pushed off with Satan in the boat of the <i>Juan</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-Satan asked Ratcliffe to take the dinghy back to the
-<i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t want to be hangin’ about the reef,” said
-Satan; “you’ll be more comfortable aboard ship. And tell
-Jude to be sure and wash that old jumper I left on the
-rail. She’s forgot it, for there it’s hangin’ still.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">MUTINY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> he sculled up alongside the <i>Sarah</i> there was no
-sign of Jude. He tied up the boat and came over
-the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude, where are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” came a surly voice from below.
-She was in the “saloon,” for he could hear her moving
-about.</p>
-
-<p>“You.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you kin go on wantin’. I’m sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>Pause—then the voice came again mixed with sounds
-as of plates being put away.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sick of the hull of this crowd—washing up and
-cooking and you two playin’ about!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come up on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sha’n’t! I’m going to scatter—soon’s I’ve finished
-clearing away. Life of a dog!” indistinct grumbles tailing
-away into silence.</p>
-
-<p>He lit a pipe and waited.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the companionway creaked and a head appeared
-at the cabin hatch. He said nothing while the
-whole body emerged, stood erect on the deck, and shaded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-its eyes toward the <i>Juan</i>. Then, still speechless, it
-leaned on the rail, looking toward the reef and apparently
-lost in thought.</p>
-
-<p>The sleeves of the guernsey were rolled up to mid-arm,
-ill temper seemed to have vanished and to have been replaced
-by sudden laziness, and as she lolled, kicking up a
-bare heel, she whistled.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed utterly unconscious of his presence—or
-pretending to be. Then her eyes fell to the water alongside
-and the dinghy. The whistling ceased and her face
-turned to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said Jude, “where did you learn to tie up
-boats?”</p>
-
-<p>He came beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at present, but give her half an hour and
-she’d work herself free of that tomfool knot.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go down and retie it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No use in troubling, I’m going off in her in a minute,
-and she’ll hang there till I’m ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never <em>you</em> mind! You’ve been playing about on the
-reef, and you’ve got to stick here now and boil the potatoes!
-Me alone here all the morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I wasn’t more than an hour on the reef—and
-I never knew you wanted to go. If I had, I shouldn’t
-have gone, honestly I shouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude contemplated him a moment with a more friendly
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said she, “I’m going, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-“But where to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gulls-nesting.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the reef?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! To the spit away there to east’ard. You
-can’t see it: it’s near seven mile away.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you can’t row there alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t I? You bet I can, there and back by sundown!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what will Satan say?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude laughed. “He’ll be wild—that’s what I want to
-make him. I’ll learn him! Him and his jumpers!”</p>
-
-<p>She took the jumper off the rail, rolled it up and
-threw it on the deck, then she dived below and reappeared
-with a water jar and some provisions done up in a bundle.
-She had evidently been making her preparations.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “If you’re going, I’ll go
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t!” said Jude. “You’ve got to stick here
-and look after the ship—and see how you like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I—I couldn’t face Satan; besides, if you want
-to make him wild really, hell be twice as wild if we
-both go; besides, I’m sick of the ship. Come on: I’ve
-never been gulls-nesting.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, evidently weakening, put down her bundle.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there ain’t enough grub for two,” she complained.
-“I reckon there’s enough water, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, get some more grub.”</p>
-
-<p>She cast her eyes about in indecision, now at Ratcliffe,
-now at the <i>Juan</i>, then, with one of those sudden changes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-so indicative of her, she made up her mind and dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later she reappeared with another small
-bundle.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, during her absence, had torn the back off
-an old letter. He had a pencil in his pocket, and, scrawling
-“gone gulls-nesting on the sandspit” on the paper,
-stuck the missive to the mast with his penknife.</p>
-
-<p>Then, bundling the food and the water jar into the
-dinghy, they started.</p>
-
-<p>He took the sculls at first, Jude steering, her eyes fixed
-ahead under the shade of her old panama. She could
-tell exactly the spot where the spit lay. She could not
-see it, but she could see in the sky now and then over
-there a faint trace like a haze of smoke that formed,
-vanished and reformed,—gulls.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally she looked back where the deserted <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> lay, with the <i>Juan</i> seeming now close beside her
-and the reef behind them. Smaller and smaller they
-grew and more vast the ocean, an infinity of blazing
-lazulite, without horizon, silent, but sonorous with light.</p>
-
-<p>The current was with them.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had made a small mast and lug sail for the
-dinghy. That was the job he had been engaged on while
-Jude and Ratcliffe had landed on Palm Island to get provisions
-from the cache. He had worked with all the
-care of a fond mother making a garment for a beloved
-child. The little mast, scraped and varnished, the sail
-made of an extra special bit of stuff wheedled from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-Thelusson, were in the boat, and, a breeze now springing
-up from the sou’west, Jude gave orders to step the mast.
-Then she took the sheet, he slipped from his seat to the
-bottom of the boat, and the dinghy, bending to the three-knot
-breeze, lifted to the gentle swell.</p>
-
-<p>A great herring hog passed them, plunging like a
-dolphin, and a flying fish with blind, staring eyes missed
-the sail by a hand’s breadth and flickered into the sea
-ahead; then a strange-looking gull swooped toward them
-from nowhere, hung for a moment with domed wings,
-honey-colored against the sun, and passed with a cry into
-the great silence, a silence broken only by the slap and
-tinkle of the water against the planking.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe lit his pipe. Jude, steering, seemed to have
-forgotten her last trace of grudge against him, forgotten
-Satan and the jumper and the fact that she had been
-left to her lonesome while they had been playing on the
-reef and her desire to cut the whole show and start a
-“la’ndry.” She seemed just now a different person, companionable
-and friendly and sane, as though the cooking
-and cleaning and the worries and troubles of the <i>Sarah</i>
-had been lifted like a dish-cover from her prisoned soul.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time they had been really alone together,
-and the companionship that springs from loneliness
-helped.</p>
-
-<p>The gull reminded her of gulls she had seen on the
-Louisiana coast where the cypress swamps come down
-to meet the sea and you could hear “the bullfrogs shoutin’
-all night, ‘Paddy got drunk, Paddy got drunk, Paddy
-got drunk,’ and the other chaps answering up, ‘Bottle of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-rum, bottle of rum, bottle of rum,’ and the ’gaters would
-come alongside grinding against the planking sniffing for
-bits—ever seen a ’gater?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only stuffed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, in museums and places.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, places where they keep stuffed birds and animals.”</p>
-
-<p>“Git a bit more to sta’board to trim the boat; <em>sta</em>’board
-I said, not port! And what in the nation do they want
-keeping them things for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude,” said he lazily.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the jolliest time I ever spent. I’ve never felt
-free before till just now. I’d like to go sailing round and
-round the world in this little dinghy and forget civilization.
-That’s the place where they keep stuffed birds to
-look at, and stuffed animals in museums, and where the
-men and women are stuffed idiots. Do you remember the
-morning I came on board the <i>Sarah</i> first?”</p>
-
-<p>“Them pajamas!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, them pajamas. Only for them you wouldn’t
-have laughed at me, and if you hadn’t laughed at me I
-shouldn’t have come aboard, perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan wanted you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did he? Bless Satan!—he made me young
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! you ain’t so old as all that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-“I’m over twenty-one—and you’re only—”</p>
-
-<p>“Raisin’ sixteen,” said Jude, with steady eyes fixed
-ahead where the gulls above the spit were now well
-visible.</p>
-
-<p>He refilled and lit his pipe, bending under the gunnel.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re mighty fond of that old pipe,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Have a whiff?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me! I had half a cigar once; Dirk Peterson
-dared me. It was one of them wheelings, black, slick-lookin’
-cigars. He and me an’ anuther boy’d gone to look
-at the nigger girls bathin’ and clod them—”</p>
-
-<p>“Where on earth was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Vera Cruz.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, and who was Dirk Peterson?”</p>
-
-<p>“Son of an old feller that run a dridger in the harbor,
-Yankee, half-Dutch, hadn’t only one eye, and wasn’t
-more’n eleven, biggest liar from here to C’necticut. His
-face was all chawed up, and he said he’d got it like that
-and lost his eye fightin’ with a tiger. Confl’ent smallpox
-was what had done him, so Pap said; but the boys
-believed him till that day I was telling you of, he fetched
-out a half cigar he’d stole or picked up somewhere and
-a box of waxios and dared me smoke her—and I lit her
-up, like a durned fool!”</p>
-
-<p>“What happened then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots of things,” said Jude. “First of all the harbor
-begun spinnin’, and then it went on till two tides
-more I’d have been inside out, when Dirk shouts to some
-chaps to come an’ look at Jonah tryin’ to bring up the
-whale. That got my goat, and I laid for him by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-foot and brought him down and near beat the head off
-him. Then I got sick on him again, and he run home
-to his mother, with all the fellers after him wantin’ to
-know about that tiger.”</p>
-
-<p>“He couldn’t fight?”</p>
-
-<p>“N’more than a jewfish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you had many fights with boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me—not with Satan handy to do the fighting.
-I’d only to say to one, ‘You touch me and I’ll put Satan
-on you,’ and he’d shrivel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I shouldn’t care to tackle Satan myself,” admitted
-Ratcliffe. “And Sellers seemed to think a lot of
-him that way, for I heard him asking if he’d stand by if
-Cleary showed fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Garn!” said Jude. “Cleary—he’s no good; Sellers is
-no good, neither. There’s not a man in these seas nowadays
-that’s got the fight of a tomcat in him. That’s
-what Pap used to say. He was great on old times, and
-used to string off yarns about the pirates and the high
-doin’s there used to be, and he said we were nothing but
-a lot of scowbankers now—and that’s the truth! If
-Cleary comes up with Cark, they’ll be shaking hands and
-kissing one another, feeling in each other’s pockets all
-the time to see if they can’t steal five cents. In the old
-days they’d have been cutting each other’s throats.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to be a pirate, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Murdering people?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ask me another.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you like to kiss Cark?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-“How’d you? Hear the gulls!”</p>
-
-<p>The crying of the gulls above the spit was coming up
-against the wind, a lamentable sound across the lone blue
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not more’n a mile away,” said the steersman.
-“You can get a sight of the spit if you raise yourself.
-That’s it, the white line runnin’ north and south; but the
-gulls don’t seem to be as many as they used to be a year
-ago. It’s a bit early for the full laying season, but there’s
-sure to be turkles’ eggs. Better get your shoes and
-stockin’s off and roll up your pants, for it’s shallow beaching
-and we’ll have to run her up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you take down the sail and row her in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me. There’s no sea on and I’ll run her up as
-she is.”</p>
-
-<p>They held on, the gulls shouting over them now, and
-the sigh of the sandspit, fuming to the lazy sea, in their
-ears. It was full tide, and as the keel touched the sand,
-letting the sheet go and the sail to flog in the wind, they
-tumbled over and dragged the little boat high and dry.</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude took down the sail.</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t hungry yet?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No; are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can wait. Well leave the grub and the water
-jar in the boat and cover them with the sail,—keep
-the sun off. Lend’s a hand.”</p>
-
-<p>They covered the provisions, hauled the boat up another
-foot or two to make sure, and, that done, Ratcliffe
-looked around him.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE SANDSPIT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">That</span> was one of the strangest moments in his life.
-He had never seen anything comparable to this long
-white street of sand curbed with emerald waves, leading
-nowhere, lost, useless, desolate, brilliant with a brilliance
-that hit the heart as well as the eye, flown over by the
-white gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The sands fizzed to the sea wind, and away to north
-and south they trembled and waved in the heat; but the
-curious thing was the fact that, despite their loneliness,
-one did not feel alone. The place seemed populous,
-filled with a crowd that for a moment had made itself
-invisible. Perhaps it was the riot of color and the
-brilliance of light: the effect remained.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, looking round, seemed preoccupied about something.
-It was the absence of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“Last time I was here,” said Jude, “it was all over
-gulls’ nests, right here in the middle. Now they seem
-to have gone off to the ends. Wonder what’s come to
-them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it’s too early for them.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bit early, but not much: there’s always early
-breeders. No, they’ve just took their hook—gulls are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-like that. We’ll have to go and hunt at the ends. You
-go north and I’ll go south.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “it’s an awfully long way. Suppose
-we have something to eat first?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>They got the provisions and water jar from the boat
-and sat down on the sands. It was past noon and cooler,
-for the breeze had livened up, the outgoing tide was
-leaving a strip of wet sand glittering like a golden
-sword, and the fume of beach filled the air resonant with
-the gentle rhythm of the waves.</p>
-
-<p>They ate, leaning on their sides like old Athenians.
-They had no cup; so they took it in turns to drink from
-the water jar. Then he lit a pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“This is jolly,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t bad,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She made a pillow of sand for her head, and then, on
-her back with her head on the pillow, lay like a starfish,
-spread-eagled, her hat over her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He followed suit.</p>
-
-<p>“How about those gulls’ nests?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Which ones?” evaded Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“The ones you were going to hunt for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them? Well, I reckon there’s dead loads of
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots—listen to the sand!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the wind blowing it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. All the same this is a rum place. Do you
-know when we landed here, just now, the first thing
-that struck me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-“Naw.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I felt as if the place was full of people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know; people I couldn’t see, ghosts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What made y’ think that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. Somehow it reminded me of a
-story I’d once read.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the story?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a beach over in the Pacific where wizards used
-to go and pick up shells.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chaps that work magic and sell themselves to the
-devil. They can make themselves invisible so’s you can’t
-see them, and they used to come to the beach and pick
-up shells, and then turn the shells into silver dollars.
-You couldn’t see them, but you could hear them rustling
-about, like that sand, and talking to one another,
-and now and then you’d see a little fire blaze up.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, interested, rolled over, rested her chin in her
-palms, and kicked a bare heel to the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you’re not far wrong,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve felt the same way here myself, as if there
-was hants about and if you’d turn your head sharp
-you’d see someone behind you. Now you’ve talked of
-it. I’ll be always thinking it if I come here again. Wish
-you’d kept your head shut.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat up and looked about her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-“Sorry,” said Ratcliffe, raising himself on his arm;
-“but if you come again I’ll come with you, and that’ll
-keep the hants off—unless I’m gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“How d’you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when this cruise is over I’ll have to leave you
-both and go home. I don’t want to go.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude said nothing. Staring over the sea under the
-brim of her hat, she did not seem to have heard him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d much sooner stick on here with you and Satan.
-What’s that thing floating out there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Turkle,” said Jude. “Look, he’s doing a dive!”</p>
-
-<p>He sat up beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“So he has. Well, he’s gone.” He sat with his knees
-up, looking over the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Alone here with Jude she seemed a different person
-from what she had been aboard the <i>Sarah</i>. The strange
-antagonism she had suddenly exhibited, and a trace of
-which had remained up till this morning, seemed to have
-utterly vanished. Perhaps it was the “hants,” or the
-loneliness, or a combination of both, but she seemed
-subdued.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t see what you want going for if you
-don’t want to,” suddenly said Jude, drawing up her
-knees and crossing them with her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, bother!” said he. “Don’t let’s think of it; besides,
-we’ll fix up something. I don’t want to go. I’ve
-never had such a jolly time in my life, and I’m not
-going to lose sight of you and Satan—unless you want
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I don’t want to.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-“Well, that’s all right We’ll stick together, somehow,
-and let the old world go hang, and we’ll go hunting
-abalones and fishing—let’s make plans.”</p>
-
-<p>His arm somehow slipped round her waist, half automatically,
-just as one puts one’s hand on a person’s
-shoulder. When he realized what he had done, he realized,
-at the same time, that she did not seem to mind;
-more than that, she reciprocated in a way by letting her
-shoulder rest more comfortably against his. It was
-companionship, pure and simple, and her mind seemed
-far away, wrapped in the sun-blaze as with a garment,
-and wandering—who knows where?</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead,” said Jude drowsily. “What’s your
-plans?”</p>
-
-<p>“Plans—oh, I’ve lots. Let’s go round the world in the
-old <i>Sarah</i>—get a couple more hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’d you stick them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve got a foc’s’le.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not big enough for a tomcat. The nigger filled it.
-He said he reckoned he’d got to stick his head through
-the hatch to breathe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll get rid of the <i>Sarah</i> and get a bigger
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Don’t you never let Satan hear you say that:
-she’s his skin!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do without extra hands, then, and work her,
-the three of us. I can steer all right now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kin you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know jolly well I can!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the points of the compass? Run ’em off.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-“North—nor’-nor’east, nor’east—um—”</p>
-
-<p>Jude chuckled subduedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>The confiding shoulder rested more heavily against
-him as against a cushion and she began to hum a tune.
-She seemed to have forgotten the points of the compass,
-him, everything, just as a child suddenly forgets everything
-in day-dream land.</p>
-
-<p>The absolute contentment of doing nothing, resting,
-listening to the waves, had fallen upon him too, with a
-something else, a sort of mesmerism born of his companion,
-the strangest feeling as though Jude were a part
-of himself, as though he had put his arm round his own
-waist and a new self,—a much pleasanter self than the
-old one, less stiff, more human, and somehow more alive.</p>
-
-<p>The metronomic rhythm of the little waves falling on
-the sand seemed to mix his thoughts together and blur
-them; but he saw Skelton, Sir William Skelton, Bart.,
-he saw a girl he, Ratcliffe, had been engaged to, he saw
-all sorts of men and all sorts of women, everyone he
-had ever known, it seemed to him, in a nebulous cluster,
-and they all seemed, somehow, not quite alive,—not dead,
-but sleeping in the trance we call civilization, their days
-ordered by the beat of a metronome,—get up—wash—dress—eat—work
-or play—eat—work or play—eat—work
-or play—bed—sleep—get up—wash—dress etc.,—all
-the figures moving like one, their very laughter and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-tears ordered except when they got drunk or went mad.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him that vivid life was not so much a
-question of vitality as of freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Was that the secret Satan had discovered,—Satan,
-who had no hankering after great riches, but was free
-as a gull? Satan and Jude were gulls,—seagulls, untamable
-as seagulls and as far from civilization! It was as
-though his arm were round a bird,—quiescent by some
-miracle and allowing him to handle it, and imparting
-to him, somehow, the knowledge of its vitality,—the
-vitality of freedom.</p>
-
-<p>“What I like about the old <i>Sarah</i>,” said he, “is the
-way she just pots about—with nothing to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to do!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you and Satan can take things easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, can we? That’s news—what d’you call easy?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have no fixed work, you can knock off when
-you like, you haven’t to carry cargo, or be bothered with
-owners, or be up to time. You are as free as the gulls.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude took his hand and removed his arm from around
-her waist just as one removes a belt. She wanted to
-shift her position. She seemed to have lost interest in
-the conversation. Sand had got between her toes, and
-she removed it, running her finger between them. She
-had no handkerchief,—never used one or needed to use
-one: the perfectly healthy animal never does.</p>
-
-<p>Then, crossing her legs like a tailor and squatting in
-front of him, she dived into the right hand pocket of
-her trousers and produced a dollar, a slick, evil, suspicious-looking
-dollar. She seemed utterly to have forgotten<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-the gulls’-nesting business and how the time was
-running on, and having little passion for the business
-he was content not to remind her.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll match you for dollars,” said Jude. She was no
-longer the person of a moment ago. She was the harbor
-larrikin, the clodder of bathing nigger girls, a person to
-be avoided by pious boys with possessions in the form
-of money or land.</p>
-
-<p>The coin spun in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Tails is the bird,” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Heads, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tails! Y’owe me a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>It spun again.</p>
-
-<p>“Heads! We’re quits. Heads again, heads—oh, hell!—what
-you want sticking to heads for? That’s two
-dollars I owe you. Tails—scrumps! that’s three! Tails
-again, that’s four. What you want sticking to tails
-for? Why don’t you wabble about an’ give a body a
-chance? Heads—holy Mike! What’s wrong with the
-durned thing? Five dollars gone on a bang!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not playing right,” said he. “We should call
-alternately.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“One after the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going to play any more,” said Jude. “I’m
-broke. The bank’s bust and I kin’t pay you, not till I
-get to Havana—unless I play you double or quits. You
-call; I’ll toss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heads.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-She sent the coin six feet high and it fell on the sand—heads!</p>
-
-<p>“That settles it,” said Jude. “Ten dollars I owe you.
-You’ll have to wait till we get to Havana, for if Satan
-knew I was tossing for coins he’d sculp me. I can get
-some money out of the bank at Havana, pretending it’s
-for something else. I haven’t a cent, an’ this old dollar’s
-no use: it’s a dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t owe me anything,” said Ratcliffe. “We
-were only tossing for fun.” The words were no sooner
-out of his mouth than he regretted them.</p>
-
-<p>Jude flushed red under her freckles and sunburn.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not taking your money, thank you,” said she;
-then breaking out, “What the blizzard d’you think we’ve
-been playing at, and what you take me for? S’posin’
-I’d won, you’d a paid, wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean anything,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Y’shouldn’t have said it, then,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m sorry—I take it back.”</p>
-
-<p>She played with the dud dollar for a moment, tossing
-it, and catching it; then she put it into her pocket, uncrossed
-her legs, and lay flat; her chin resting on the
-back of her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Her hat was off, lying beside her, and the quarrel
-with him was evidently over; she seemed plunged in
-reverie. Then he noticed that the eyes, upturned under
-their lashes, were steadfastly looking at him. Instantly
-they fell, and her position altered so that her face was
-hidden on her arm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-He lit his pipe and smoked for a moment in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>No answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>Silence. He remembered how she had shammed dead
-on Palm Island, put down his pipe, and crawled toward
-the corpse. It was rigid, and to revive it he began to
-pour sand on its head.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit fooling,” grumbled a voice; then, as if the sand
-had suddenly revived memory and galvanized her to life,
-she scrambled to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Them eggs—and the sun’s getting down and we fooling
-about!” She picked up her hat. “I’ll take this end
-and you go t’other.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I haven’t anything to gather them in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gather them in your hat, and keep a lookout for
-quicksan’s. If you get into one, holler and throw yourself
-on your back. But you’ll easy tell them—they look
-different from the or’nary sands.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno; just different. If you see the sand in front
-of you looking different, keep clear of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Off she went.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">DISHED</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> struck to the north. Over there in the north the
-sea was of a violet blue accentuated by the white
-blaze of the sands.</p>
-
-<p>The sands, once one got moving on them, were full
-of interest, strewn along the sea-edge with all sorts of
-prizes,—colored shells, cuttlefish bones, extraordinary
-seaweeds, bits of wreckage; a few yards out a nautilus
-fleet was steering, with tiny sails set to the wind, the
-oldest ships that ever floated on the sea, unspoiled by
-storm and time, just as they were launched in the morning
-of the world. He watched them for awhile, forgetful
-of gulls’ eggs, or quicksands, or the sun, now sensibly
-declining.</p>
-
-<p>If ever things had purpose, these had. They were
-going somewhere, bound on some business, keeping formation,
-and possessed of charts and compasses and
-barometers as surely as of sails. They made him think
-of God, and then they made him think of Satan,—Satan,
-whose sea sense served him better than all precise knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Then he remembered Jude and glanced back. Away,
-far away to the south, he saw her. The sands dipped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-and rose there, and sometimes she was invisible and his
-heart thumped to the idea that a quicksand had taken
-her, then she reappeared and he went on, and, ever as
-he went, he seemed walking deeper into loneliness, peopled
-with viewless things and half-heard voices.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes a chiming sound like the shattered and
-mingled voices of distant bells filled the air,—it was the
-singing of the sands. He had not noticed it in company
-with Jude, but here alone he noticed it. Sometimes
-laughter, far away in the distance, came distinct, human,
-and startling,—it was the calling of a laughing gull,—and
-always, penetrating all other sounds with the subtlety of
-osmosis, the silky, sinister whisper of the wind playing
-with the sand-grains. He went on. Something nearly
-tripped him. It was a great spar, half sanded over, the
-relic of some ship that had come to grief, maybe, on
-the spit.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of this spar touched everything with a new
-and momentary color. “Gascoign, the Sandal Wood
-Trader,” and other old stories he had read in his boyhood
-came back to him half-remembered, and with them
-came a whiff from a world he had half-forgotten,—a
-breath of the air we breathe at fifteen.</p>
-
-<p>He saw to his satisfaction that the gulls were beyond
-his reach, a broad channel of water cutting the spit in
-two right ahead. He took his seat on the spar for a
-moment to rest and look about, and as he sat the gulls,
-wheeling and crying, kept up around him the elusive
-atmosphere of storyland.</p>
-
-<p>All the money in the world could not have brought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-him that! Nor could he have found it had he landed
-here from a yacht with grown-up companions.</p>
-
-<p>He fell to thinking what an extraordinarily lucky person
-he was, and to plume himself on his instinctive wisdom
-in dropping Skelton and civilization for Jude and
-Satan, who had led him into a world of things he had
-never seen, things he had never imagined, things he had
-half-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez alone was a revelation, to say nothing of
-Sellers and Cleary. There was only one cloud, smaller
-than a man’s hand; but there!—where was it to end?
-It was all very well talking to Jude about sailing round
-the world: you can’t sail out of Time, and the time would
-come—the time would <span class="locked">come—</span></p>
-
-<p>Jude was winding threads round him as a silkworm
-winds a cocoon,—tiny threads but deathly strong. It
-was almost as though she were becoming part of himself,—part
-of himself and part the sun and freedom and
-blue sea. She seemed half built up of those things and
-to have the power to make him one with them. Well,
-there was no use in bothering. So he said to himself,
-and as he said it the cloud no larger than a man’s hand
-swelled and twisted and rolled across the sandspit before
-him, resolving itself into a troupe of female relations,
-male relations, friends,—people as remote from Satan
-and Jude as parrots from seagulls, caged parrots content
-in the great gilded cage of convention.</p>
-
-<p>What would they say about Jude? He had an instinctive
-knowledge of what Jude would say about them, if
-they ever met, which seemed impossible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-Then came the weird recollection that they had, in a
-way, actually met. She had met Skelton, the high priest
-of the whole crowd, Sir William Skelton, Bart. Old
-Popplecock was the label she had affixed to him, and it
-somehow stuck and fitted. What label would she affix
-to his aunts, his two maiden mid-Victorian aunts, should
-she ever meet them?</p>
-
-<p>A faint halloo from the south sent aunts and all other
-considerations flying. He turned. Jude, far away on
-the sands, was coming toward the dinghy. She was
-carrying something and running as if pursued; then he
-saw her trip and fall.</p>
-
-<p>She was on her feet in a second, and the thing pursuing
-her had evidently given up the hunt, for she stood
-examining something she had picked up from the ground,
-and seemed regardless of everything else.</p>
-
-<p>He waited for her by the boat, and as she came up
-he guessed the tragedy. She had been carrying a hatful
-of birds’ eggs and had smashed than when she fell.
-The hat was eloquent.</p>
-
-<p>“Smashed them every one,” said Jude, wading out and
-beginning to wash the hat. “All your fault!”</p>
-
-<p>“My fault! For heaven’s sake how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stuffing me up with them yarns.”</p>
-
-<p>“What yarns?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that what made you run?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was running?”</p>
-
-<p>“You were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, was I? Reckon you’d have run too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-“Did you see anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You never mind.”</p>
-
-<p>She was evidently in a vile, bad temper; so he took
-his seat on the sand waiting for her to cool. Then, hat
-in hand, she came and sat close beside him, more out
-of a desire for company than friendship, he imagined;
-then, placing the hat to dry, she began examining the
-sole of her right foot, spreading the toes apart and
-brushing off the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m awfully sorry,” said he at length. “But
-tell us—what was it you saw, really?”</p>
-
-<p>“A wuzzard.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it like?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’,” then suddenly, and as if unburdening her
-soul, “I hadn’t more’n got the last of the eggs when I
-turned and saw him walking on the sands,—little old
-man with a glass under his arm, dressed queer in a long
-coat, an’ a hat on his head like an I dunno what. I
-wasn’t afraid, thought he was real, and he stuck the
-glass to his eye ’sif he was looking out for a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he went out—puff—like the sniff of a candle—hu—hu—”
-She clung to him.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all my fault,” said he, “talking that nonsense.
-Don’t think of it: it was only an optical illusion.”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t cast a shadow—I remember now.”</p>
-
-<p>“That proves it. I’ve often heard cases like that.
-Sir Walter Scott saw a man like that once, and he knew<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-it was only an illusion. He had some wine handy and
-he drank a glass of it, and the thing disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’d have drunk a barrel of rum if I’d had
-one handy,” said Jude, drawing away a bit. “Let’s get
-off. Lord! Look at the sun—it’s half down. Come’n
-help with the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>They got up, and taking the dinghy by the gunnels
-began to haul her to the water. They had not got her
-more than a couple of yards when Jude straightened up
-as though remembering something and clapped her hand
-to her head.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re dished!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE CRABS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“How</span> do you mean?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>She explained. It was like her to forget and
-spend the precious time lazing and playing about with
-“wuzzards.” The sun was taking his plunge into the
-sea, darkness was upon them, and she could not find her
-way back in the dark. Moon or starlight would be of
-no use. The thriddy spars of the <i>Sarah</i> and <i>Juan</i>, invisible
-from the sandspit even in daylight, would be picked
-up only several miles out. She could not steer by the
-stars, and there was a great sweep of current setting
-sou’east which might take them to Timbuktu. Satan
-would have done the business right enough blindfolded;
-but she was a night-funk, she confessed it. Night put
-her all abroad and mixed up everything in her mind so
-that front seemed back and west seemed east, besides
-filling the world with “hants.” She had “near died” of
-fright fetching that sack from the cache the other night.</p>
-
-<p>All this in a lugubrious voice not far from tears, as
-they stood facing each other, and lit by the remorselessly
-setting sun.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Ratcliffe. “Cheer up. We’ll just
-have to stick here till daybreak. We have some grub<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-left and lots of water. No use pulling the boat farther
-down. But I expect Satan will be in a stew.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he’ll know,” said Jude. “The weather’s all
-right. He’d scent if we were in any trouble, and he’d
-borrow Cark’s boat to hunt for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean ’scent’?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’d smell trouble; he’s awful sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sort of telepathy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mind reading.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno, but I reckon he’s not worrying, and if he
-was he’d be alongside here pronto.”</p>
-
-<p>Her face was like a buttercup in the extraordinary
-light of that sunset. The whole sky was buttercup
-color; the great sea was seething round the great sun,
-now half-gone, churning and washing round him, a blazing
-globe sinking in boiling gold.</p>
-
-<p>Golden gulls, golden sky, golden sea,—all fading at
-last, the purple of night breaking through, rushing dark
-from the west across the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The shipwrecked mariners lost their golden faces and
-hands, and, as they sat down with their backs to the
-dinghy and the remains of the “grub” between them,
-laughing gulls, passing like ghosts in the twilight, hailed
-them, while the stars broke out to look above the darkness
-and the tepid wind.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing like eating to keep up the spirits.
-Jude got less doleful. In the stir of mind caused by the
-new circumstances she had clean forgotten the “hants,”
-nor did she remember them for a moment now, as she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-chatted away in an uplift of spirits caused by the food
-and the recognition that to be downcast was futile.</p>
-
-<p>“I sure am a mutt!” said Jude. “Reckon I was born
-on a Friday—they say mugs are all born on a Friday.
-We should a been off two hours before sundown, and
-there I was talking and listening to your yarns, and
-here we are on the beach—oh, mommer!” Then after
-a long pause:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them stars, do you reckon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Suns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gar’n!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you notice anything looking north before sundown,
-or were you asleep sitting on that spar?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did see something over there; looked like the ghost
-of a cloud.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was Rum Cay, and a sure sign the weather’s
-going to hold. It lifts itself into the sky like that, evening
-times; you can see it from Lone Reef too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had known that and I should have looked
-at it more particularly. I was thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was you thinking about?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. “My people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which people?”</p>
-
-<p>“My relations.”</p>
-
-<p>“What made you think of them for?”</p>
-
-<p>“You.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-“Yes, I was wondering what you’d think of them if
-you saw them, especially my aunts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you take the bun,” said Jude, “you sitting there
-thinking of your aunts and me running with them eggs!”
-She stopped of a sudden; her memory had suddenly conjured
-up the “wuzzard.”</p>
-
-<p>“That cuss!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“The one I saw.” She wriggled close to him till their
-sides touched. “S’posin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“S’posin’ he was to take it into his head to do a walk
-along here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you bother about him,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d
-kick him into the sea—besides, he was only an optical
-illusion. It was my stupid talk did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not bothering,” said Jude, “only it’s a durned
-long time till morning. N’matter,” she rested her hand
-on his shoulder in all the familiarity of companionship;
-then she shifted her hand from his left to his right
-shoulder so that her arm was across his back, and then
-she fell silent and he felt something poking into his left
-shoulder—it was her nose! She had evidently under his
-protection forgotten “hants” and “wuzzards,” forgotten
-him, even, for she was humming a sort of tune under
-her breath.</p>
-
-<p>He knew exactly her mental condition,—mind wandering,—and
-it was a strange feeling to be cuddled like
-that by a person who had half-forgotten his existence,
-except as a protection against fears, especially when he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-remembered her recent antagonism that had developed so
-mysteriously and as mysteriously vanished. He slipped
-his left arm round her to make her more comfortable.
-Then her nose gave place to her cheek against his shoulder
-and she yawned. He could feel her ribs under her
-guernsey and the beat of her heart just beneath the gentle
-swell of her breast. He remembered her coat, which
-was in the dinghy. She had thrown it in as an after-thought
-in case of a change of weather, but had never
-worn it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hadn’t you better put on your coat?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I don’t want no coat.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the night air.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing wrong with it. It’s a Gulf wind an’ as hot
-as a blanket—ain’t you warm enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ever slept out before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only in a tent—have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Slept out before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaps o’ times. But I wouldn’t sleep out in a full
-moon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause I don’t want to wake up with my face twisted
-to one side like a flat fish—mean to say you don’t know?—either
-that or a chap goes loony. But there’s no fear
-tonight; it’s only a half-moon. The only thing I’m
-frightened of is crabs. We’ve gotta keep our eyes
-skinned for crabs. This mayn’t be a crab spit; then
-again, there’s no knowing but it may.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-“What on earth is a crab spit?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude raised her face from his shoulder and sat up a
-bit straighter as though the question had roused her.</p>
-
-<p>“Place where crabs come, hun’erds of millions of them,
-same as Crab Cay. There’s crabs everywhere of course,
-but not in shiploads same as Crab Cay. Three men
-were drifted ashore there once, and after sundown up
-came the crabs and fought them all night, and there was
-nothing but their skeletons left in the morning. We’d
-better take it turn about to keep watch.”</p>
-
-<p>She released herself from his arm and scrambling about
-in the starlight on her hands and knees began to make
-a sand pillow.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are!” said she. “Stick your head on it;
-I’ll take first watch. You be port watch, and I’ll be
-sta’board.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t! I will. I’m not a bit sleepy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither’m I. Stick your head on it. You’ve gotta
-turn in or you’ll be no use tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>He did as he was bid, and Jude took her place sitting
-on the sand close to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us a call if anything happens,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!” replied Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Then he closed his eyes. A moment before and he
-had been leagues away from sleep, but with the compulsory
-closing of his eyes a drowsiness began to steal on
-him. The wind had died to nothing and in the dead
-silence of the night the sound of the waves on the mile
-and a half of spit came loud and low, rhythmical, mesmeric.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-It was as though the tide of sleep were rising
-to drift him off.</p>
-
-<p>Now, suddenly, he was walking in the blazing sunlight
-on the spit, and toward him was walking the “wuzzard,”—a
-little old man in a cocked hat with a spyglass
-under his arm, who vanished, giving place to Jude,
-carrying a hatful of gulls’ eggs.</p>
-
-<p>Then Skelton landed from somewhere, and Jude,
-turning, was calling him a “pesky brute.”</p>
-
-<p>The words broke the dream, and he opened his eyes.
-The moon had just risen, touching the spit, and in her
-light, seated on the sand propped up on its stilts, a
-spirit crab, white as snow with ruby eyes, was staring
-at Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Drugged with weariness and ozone, he closed his eyes
-for one moment, determined to rise up and drive the
-thing away in one moment. When he opened his eyes
-again the sun was rising.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE RETURN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> gulls were mewing and calling and flying above
-him in the blue. He was lying on his back, his left
-arm out, and Jude’s head on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>She had snuggled up beside him for company, and
-then, regardless of spirit crabs, “hants,” and the possibility
-of crustaceans landing in shiploads to devour
-them, had fallen asleep. Her arm was flung over his
-chest. It was the embrace of a tired child, delightful
-to wake up to as the freshness of the air and the new
-life of the world and the innocence of the flower-blue
-sky, delightful as her breath, sweet and warm against
-his cheek. As he moved she stirred, grumbled something
-under her breath, shifted her head so that his arm
-was released, and turned on her other side, with her
-right arm flung out on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>He stood up. The tide was in and the dinghy only
-waiting to be launched. Not a sail or speck upon the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Rum Cay had prophesied right,—the fine weather
-held,—but the water was nearly gone, and the “grub”
-was finished. There was no breakfast till they boarded
-the <i>Sarah</i> again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-He turned to where the starboard watch was lying,
-clinging still to Morpheus, and stirred it gently with his
-foot. Jude moved, turned, grumbled to herself, and
-then, as if electrified, sat up digging her fists into her
-eyes and yawning. Then she sat gazing at the sea as if
-stunned.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve got to be starting.
-All the grub’s gone and nearly all the water. How did
-you sleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Jude. “I’ve been chasin’ round the
-hull night with a hatful of eggs. I’m near dead beat.
-Which way’s the wind? Sou’east. Must a changed in
-the night. It’ll take us back in two ticks.”</p>
-
-<p>She collapsed again comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember,” said he, “the current is against us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it ain’t no distance,” said Jude, “and a few minutes
-more or less don’t count. Wonder what Satan’s
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p>Knowing that it was hopeless to bother till the spirit
-moved her, he sat down on the sand beside her and
-began picking up little shells and casting them into the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness knows!” said he. “I’m wondering what
-he’ll say when we get back.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll start jawing,” said Jude dreamily and fatefully
-and with her eyes closed. “I can hear him as if I was
-listening. He’ll say, ‘What you mean leaving the ship,
-and where’s your eggs?’ No use telling him they’re
-broke. Lord! I’m sick of it all! I’m just going to
-lay here and die.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-He began to drop shells on her chest.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit foolin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then get up and come on. Let’s get it over. It’s
-like having a tooth pulled,—the sooner over the better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did y’ever have a tooth pulled?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s it like?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beastly for a moment, but it’s soon over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did y’spit blood?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! Come on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly she sat up, put on her hat, scrambled
-to her feet, took a glance round the sea, and made for
-the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>“Shove in the water jar,” said Jude. He put the jar
-in, seized the opposite gunnel, and ran her down.</p>
-
-<p>In a minute they were afloat, the sail spread to the
-wind, Jude steering and holding the sheet. Gulls chased
-them out, and the beam wind meeting tide and current
-sent boosts of spray on board. It was a rougher passage
-coming than going, and a more silent one. Ratcliffe,
-squatting in the bottom of the boat, had little else
-to do than smoke and watch Jude. Jude, engaged with
-her own thoughts, and with her eyes keened for the
-indications of Lone Reef, seemed absolutely to have forgotten
-him.</p>
-
-<p>There was no indication of the companion who had
-slept with her arm round him, who had sat almost
-lovingly, half-forgetfully, with her arm across his shoulder
-and his arm round her waist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-It came to him suddenly and with a curious pang that
-Jude would never be more than that,—a warm companion
-if cast alone together, just as she might be with
-Satan, or any stranger her fancy approved of.</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively he felt that there was a barrier,—a curious
-barrier, he seemed to have broken through that
-night he took her part, and when, for the first time in
-her life, she had confessed herself at fault; a barrier,
-that had, however, mended itself. It was as though
-he had injured her independence. Yet Satan was injuring
-her independence all day long with his orders and
-what not. Ay, but Satan was her brother, almost part
-of herself. She would not have banged Satan on the
-head for kissing her.</p>
-
-<p>He gave up thinking, watching her and how well she
-handled the boat. The crying of the gulls round the
-spit had died down; nothing remained but the voice of
-the sea, silent as dumb death from the blue horizon to
-the planking of the dinghy when it spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s her!” suddenly said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lone—I kin see the spars of the <i>Juan</i> an’ the <i>Sarah</i>.
-Rubber and you’ll see them too.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned with his elbow resting on the thwart and
-picked out the spars on the sea-line.</p>
-
-<p>“And the <i>Natchez</i>,” said Jude. “Look, close up to
-the <i>Juan</i>. Cleary’s put in and we not there! I’d forgot
-Cleary; didn’t believe he’d pick up the place so soon.
-There he is. Oh, hell!”</p>
-
-<p>“No matter,” said Ratcliffe; “it can’t be helped.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-“Cuss them gulls! If they’d stuck to their laying
-places, we’d have got the eggs soon’s we’d landed and
-been back last night. Wonder what’s been going on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “Satan’s all right. Cleary has no
-grudge against him. If there has been any bother, it
-has been between Cleary and Sellers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later they were so close up that they could
-see the reef-line and the line of the wreck with fellows
-working on it. Whatever had happened, business was
-going on as usual.</p>
-
-<p>The three vessels, anchored and swinging to the tide,
-looked peaceful enough, and as they drew up to the
-<i>Sarah</i>, Satan, who had just appeared on deck, came and
-stood by the starboard rail watching them.</p>
-
-<p>They fastened up, preparing for an explosion. None
-came.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t get back last night,” said Jude as they came
-on board. “Left it till sundown, and then I was afeard
-of the current.”</p>
-
-<p>“Afeard of the dark,” said Satan. “I reckoned that’d
-be so—whar’s your eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone phut. Smashed the lot. Wasn’t more than a
-hatful. Them rotten gulls had given up nesting, all but
-at the ends—and say, Satan, I saw a wuzzard! I was
-carrying the eggs when I saw him, and then I ran and
-smashed the lot.”</p>
-
-<p>“A which?”</p>
-
-<p>“A hant—little old chap walking on the sands. D’you
-remember the figurehead on that old bark they broke<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-up last year at Havana,—man with a glass under his
-arm and the other arm wavin’ his hat? That was him
-plain as my eye. He up with his glass and I let one
-yelp. Rat’ll tell you: he saw me running.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, git along—git along, you and your hants! I’d
-been countin’ on them eggs, and here you come back like
-a one-eyed skite with your yarns about hants. Why,
-you ought a had a boatful! Didn’t you see no turkles’
-eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, come along down if you want some grub. I
-sighted you more’n an hour ago, and there’s coffee
-waitin’. D’ye see that?” He pointed to a new-washed
-jumper drying in the blazing sun on the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was het up,” said Jude, “or I’d have la’ndered
-it before I started.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come along down,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>It came to Ratcliffe that the quietude of Satan over
-the business came less from natural good temper than
-some other reason. The desertion of the <i>Sarah</i> was
-mutiny and a rank crime. Satan had been left with his
-food to cook and his jumper to wash, his sister had been
-off with an almost stranger for a whole night—yet he
-was not displeased.</p>
-
-<p>If Jude had done the business alone, she most surely
-would have been carpeted. It was evidently his—Ratcliffe’s—participation
-in it that fended off trouble and
-turned wrath into complacence. Why?</p>
-
-<p>Was it because he was a guest? Not a bit! Satan,
-had he been angry, would not have bothered about that.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-He followed down below, and there, over the breakfast
-table, the Cleary business was cleared up.</p>
-
-<p>“He dropped in last night,” said Satan, “an hour before
-sundown, and the anchor hadn’t more than clawed the
-mud before he was aboard the <i>Juan</i>. I expected the
-shootin’ to begin; but there weren’t no fireworks, and
-after dark I lit out for the <i>Juan</i> in the c’lapsible and tied
-up and boarded her. All the men were in the foc’sle,
-eating onions and playin’ tunes on guitars,—no anchor
-watch,—and the Cleary crowd down in the saloon as
-friendly as pie, Cark ladling the liquor and Cleary suckin’
-it down, cigars as big as your leg in their faces, and
-Cleary with his thumbs in the armhulls of his vest
-leanin’ back laughin’. That’s how I found them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you,” said Jude to Ratcliffe, “they’d be kissing
-each other and—”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you shet your head!” said Satan. “I’m
-tellin’ you—there they were sittin’ all colludin’ together
-thick as thick, and I sat for an hour with them and then
-lit out. Sweet as sugar they were; but I tell you this,
-I’m as frightened as hell.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s thet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary. Y’see Cark and Sellers aren’t much by themselves,
-but Cleary is the snake’s tooth an’ poison bug of
-that combination, now that he’s joined in with Cark
-again. Cleary’s Irish gone bad on the father’s side and
-drunk Welsh on the mother’s: I had his pedigree from
-Pap. Pap said he was a sure-enough thoroughbred of
-a hellhound, and he reckoned the roof of his mouth was
-black right down to the heart of him. Well, I’ve had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-forty dollars from Cleary for them rotten pearls and one
-thousand dollars from Cark on account of takin’s. Now
-you see how I am, supposin’ the wreck turns out a dud.
-D’you mean to say they won’t go for me to get their
-money back? Supposin’ the gold is there. D’you mean
-to say they won’t chouse me out of my share?”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I worked the hull thing out last night before I boarded
-them. Seeing there was no fighting, I concluded they’d
-joined up an’ become friends; then I made my plans, I
-didn’t put out no anchor light.</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers, when I was leaving the <i>Juan</i>, said, ‘Whar’s
-your light?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Run short of oil,’ says I. ‘Kin you let me have
-some?’ He thought I was tryin’ to wangle oil out of
-him, and he closed; said he was run short himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was your meaning in not putting out a light?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’ll find out,” said Satan, “if you keep your
-eyes skinned and stop askin’ questions. Well, that’s
-where we are. They’ll have the barrel of gunpowder
-fixed by tomorrow to blow the deck off her, and as soon
-as they put a light to it we’ll know. It’s blastin’ powder
-and ought to split the deck to flinders if they fix it
-proper. I don’t b’lieve it’s coral coverin’ that deck, I
-b’lieve it’s old petrifacted guano, if you ask me; anyhow,
-it’s hard enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” said Ratcliffe. “If that’s so, it bears out
-my theory. I came to the conclusion that the old hooker
-had never been under water according to that yarn Lopez<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-slung; yet I couldn’t account for the coral deposits. I
-believe you’re right. I believe the real wreck is lying
-at that place you said that’s given in the latitude and
-longitude. Well, see here, why not get the anchor up
-and light out right now for the other place. They
-wouldn’t follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t they?” said Satan. “The <i>Natchez</i> would be
-after us like a cat pouncin’. No, I’d rather stick, if it’s
-all the same to you, and see the fireworks. After that
-leave ’em to me. There aren’t many’s got the better of
-me when my dander’s up. Now then, Jude, if you’ve
-done stuffin’ yourself, maybe you’ll lend a hand on deck.
-There’s swabbin’ to be done.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">215</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">A BOTTLE OF RUM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Ratcliffe</span> helped in the swabbing and polishing.
-No housekeeper ever exercised more meticulous
-care in this respect than Satan. He was a fanatic where
-cleanliness was concerned, and polish,—witness the
-brasswork of the wheel, the binnacle and skylight,—even
-paint and varnish were minor gods compared with
-Brasso!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as the Sarahites worked, the <i>Natchez</i> and
-<i>Juan</i>, lying in cynical and sinister neglect and dirt, showed
-little signs of life. The working party on the reef
-seemed busy enough; but the ships, save for a few hands
-lounging at the rails or squatting about the foc’sle head,
-might have been deserted.</p>
-
-<p>About ten o’clock a boat put off from the <i>Natchez</i>.
-Cleary was in the sternsheets, and as she came alongside
-he hailed the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan came to the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers’s going to bust her open today,” said Cleary.
-“Just had word from him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought he wouldn’t be ready till tomorrow,” said
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-“Just had word the hole’s near deep enough and the
-star cuttin’s from it. He’s got the powder off and reckons
-to fire it at noon. Wants you to come an’ help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, does he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a bit bothered about the fuse, not havin’ done
-much of that sort of work, and he reckons you’re an
-ingenious cuss an’ll be able to put him wise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, does he? Well, I’ll be there.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary came over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“No spittin’!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, averting his head in time to send the squirt
-of tobacco juice overside instead of on the deck, looked
-around.</p>
-
-<p>He nodded at Ratcliffe, disregarded Jude, and fixed
-his eye on the blazing binnacle and the glittering rods of
-the skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Dandy ship,” said he. “Whaar you goin’ to take the
-prize?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where your old tub’d be skeered to show her nose.
-How’s the potato crop gettin’ along?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned his quid over and allowed his eyes to
-travel about the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Waal,” said he, speaking with point and consideration,
-“some likes one thing and some likes another, but
-I never did see that fandanglin’ with frills an’ brasswork
-an’ sich lends anythin’ to the <em>sailin’</em> qualities of a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, raising herself up from flemish coiling a rope,
-blazed out:</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it don’t to an old cod boat blowin’ along with
-her own smell,” began Jude.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-“Shet up!” said Satan. Then to Cleary, “Have a
-drink?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willin’,” said Cleary, “but thought you was a dry
-ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan winked, slipped below, and returned with a bottle
-of rum, a glass, and a water jar. There were three
-or four bottles of rum on board. Satan said he kept
-the stuff for “rubbing his corns”; he never drank it.
-There were also a revolver and a rifle on board. He
-never fired them: lethal weapons have their time and
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, having placed the bottle and jar on the deck,
-produced another glass from his pocket, filled out a four-finger
-peg for Cleary and another for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s luck,” said Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s luck—no <em>spittin’</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>They drained glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Mike!” cried Cleary, his eyes bulging and his
-face injected. “What sorter bug-water’s this?”</p>
-
-<p>“British Navy; thirty over proof.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, with one eye shut, seemed turning over in his
-mind the activities going on in his stomach and on the
-whole approving.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “I’ve drunk wasp brandy and one or
-two nigger dopes—they don’t get near it, not in knots. A
-man’d want to be a centipede to carry a bottle of that
-stuff, I reckon. N’more, thanky. Well, I’m off, and
-I’ll fly a flag when Cark gives the signal he’s got the stuff
-ready for the fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-“For the land’s sake, Satan! what made you swallow
-that stuff for?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Satan took his seat on the skylight edge, then he gulped,
-then he hiccupped.</p>
-
-<p>“Get your hind legs under you and cart the bottle and
-the glasses down below,” said Satan. “Strewth!—gimme
-the water jar till I flood my hold.”</p>
-
-<p>He drank till Ratcliffe thought he would never stop,
-then he went to the port rail and canceled matters.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Demerara Black John,” said he apologetically to
-Ratcliffe as he turned, wiping his mouth with the back of
-his hand. “Some likes it, but I’ve no holdin’ with drink.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was about to ask why he had swallowed it,
-but he checked himself. Jude, who had just appeared
-again, put the question.</p>
-
-<p>“What in the nation made you drink that snake-juice?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Satan took a glance at the sun, at the reef, and at the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then,” said he, “finish up clarin’ away that raffle
-and get the dinner ready; I’ve no time to be talkin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He set to sand and canvassing the rail he had been
-working on when Cleary appeared, Jude and Ratcliffe
-took up their jobs, and the ordinary life of the <i>Sarah</i> resumed
-as though the rum incident had never been.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, work could not prevent Ratcliffe from
-pondering the dark problem of Satan and his doings.</p>
-
-<p>Why had he not put out an anchor light last night?
-Why had he pretended to Sellers that he was short of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-oil? Why had he swallowed a glass of rum only to unswallow
-it again?</p>
-
-<p>Then in the monotony of work his mind passed from
-these considerations to a state of pleasant expectancy.
-What would they find in the wreck, and the explosion of
-the barrel of powder, how would it come off?</p>
-
-<p>He felt as pleased as a boy about to fire a brass cannon
-and not sure whether it will burst or not.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">220</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THEY FIRE THE FUSE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Satan</span> used a modification of the deck bear for cleaning
-his decks; that is to say, a box filled with stones
-having a rough mat nailed under it. The deck having
-been sprinkled with sand, the bear had to be pulled backward
-and forward after the fashion of a carpet sweeper.
-This was Ratcliffe’s job, and he was not sorry when it
-was over.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner was served at eight bells, and getting along
-toward one o’clock the <i>Natchez</i> and <i>Juan</i> were flying all
-sorts of flags on the tepid breeze as a signal, evidently,
-that it was time to get to business.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe made out the red and white flag indicating H,
-the triangular blue with the white ball, the red cross on
-a white ground, and the white with the blue square,—H. D. V. S.</p>
-
-<p>“What are they trying to say?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them flags,” replied Satan. “<em>They’re</em> not tryin’
-to say anythin’, only flyin’ to show time’s up. Cark
-hasn’t got a full set of the c’mercial code; wouldn’t know
-how to use them, neither. Now if you’re ready we’ll put
-off. Jude will stick here to keep ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude protested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-“Why, you’ll see the blow-up from here a durned sight
-better than from the boat,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see her innards when the deck’s off,” said
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Lord bless me! you’ll have days to see them
-in,” said Satan, “and there’s no knowin’ what may happen
-when the blow-up comes, what with flyin’ timbers
-and muck. I’ll come back and bring you off when the
-powder’s fired. I can’t say fairer than that.”</p>
-
-<p>They got into the dinghy and shoved off, Jude watching
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers was waiting for them on the reef, and Cleary.
-Their boats were on the strip of beach surrounded by the
-crews, and a couple of fellows on the wreck were putting
-the last touches to the preparation of the charge. Sellers
-was holding what seemed a length of thick white cord in
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s the fuse,” said he. “I had it left over with the
-barrel from that last wrecking business we did in the fall.
-It’s a five-minutes’ fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is it?” said Satan, handling the thing. “And
-where’s your guarantee? S’posin’ it only takes a minute?
-And five minutes is none too much for the man that fires
-it to get clear of the reef and put out.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” said Sellers, “and one of you will have
-to do the firin’ business, seein’ I’m lame.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s lamed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fell on the deck this mornin’ over a slush tub one of
-them damn dagoes left lyin’ in the dark. Near put my
-knee out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-“Then Cleary will do the trick,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary laughed. “Not me! I’m not lame, but it ain’t
-my job. Runnin’ over rocks don’t suit me, and I reckon
-the man that lays a light to that thing will want to be
-a boundin’ kangaroo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Instead of a damned ass like y’self,” said Satan.
-“Come on. I’ll light it, I’m not afeard.”</p>
-
-<p>They clambered over the rocks, crossed the rock bridge,
-and gained the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>The little barrel had been well and truly laid, the top
-almost flush with the level of the stuff covering the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“We got right through the deck plankin’,” said Sellers,
-“or to a crossbeam. Wood’s most dry-rotted, and it’ll
-be a nacheral mercy if the powder don’t blow the whole
-coffee shop to blazes right down to the reef. Here’s the
-hole for the fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>While they were examining the fuse-hole, Ratcliffe took
-notice of the cuts radiating starlike from the charge-hole
-that had been made in the deck-casing. When he turned
-again, Satan, with the aid of Sellers, had fixed the fuse.
-The Spanish sailors who had been at work had taken their
-departure and were already down by the boats, leaving
-only four men on the wreck,—Satan, Sellers, Cleary and
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Satan rose up, clapped the knees of his trousers as if
-to knock dust off them, and produced a yellow box of
-Swedish matches from his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not fair. Let’s
-draw lots who’ll fire the thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan. “I wouldn’t trust one of them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-two with a box of matches, let alone a dollar. Now then,
-scatter for the boats!”</p>
-
-<p>Then to Ratcliffe, as Sellers and Cleary made off,
-“Stand by ready to shove the dinghy off when you see
-me coming.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said the other; “but I’ll stick by you if you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon two don’t run quicker than one,” said Satan.
-“Off with you, and, if I’m blown to blazes, look after
-the kid.”</p>
-
-<p>When Ratcliffe reached the strip of beach the boats
-of the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i> had shoved off. He could see
-the figure of Carquinez at the after rail of the <i>Juan</i> and
-Jude watching from the <i>Sarah</i>. He pulled the dinghy
-down a bit more to the water and then, turning, looked
-at the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was standing against the skyline, now he was
-down on his knees, and now he was up again. The fuse
-had evidently been fired, but he did not move; stood evidently
-looking to see that it was burning properly, and
-then moved off, walking, not running, and not even hurrying
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came clambering over the rocks, reached the
-dinghy, and they pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you are a cool chap,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d have
-run.”</p>
-
-<p>“And broke your leg, maybe. There’s no danger unless
-a spark got at the powder. The durned thing was
-sparkin’ and spittin’ like all possessed when I left it.
-I reckon that’s why Sellers got cold feet. We’re out far<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-enough now.” He ceased rowing, and they hung drifting.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked round. The other boats were much
-farther out. The tepid wind had almost died off, so that
-the flags on the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i> hung in wisps. They
-could hear the wash of the water on the reef and the occasional
-lamentation of a gull. No other sound broke
-the silence of the blue and gorgeous afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like as if everything was listenin’, don’t it?”
-said Satan, wiping his forehead. “The bust ought to
-have come by this. Wonder if the durned thing has
-fizzled out?”</p>
-
-<p>A gull made derisive answer and across the satin
-smooth swell a hail came from the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cark,” said Satan, “makin’ kind inquiries,
-blister him!”</p>
-
-<p>“There she goes!” cried Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>A jet of flame and a column of smoke sprang from the
-reef, followed by a clap of thunder that could have been
-heard at Rum Cay.</p>
-
-<p>Flying filth and deck planking filled the air, and on top
-of all came the yelling of a thousand gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The dinghy jumped as though from the blow of a
-great fist—then silence, and over the reef a filthy dun-colored
-cloud of smoke curling upward like a djin.</p>
-
-<p>Satan seized the sculls and headed for the beach. The
-boats of the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i>, already under way, were
-rowing as if for a wager, but the dinghy had the lead.
-They beached her, hauled her up a foot, and started over
-the rocks, running this time, heedless of broken limbs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-Satan leading like the bounding kangaroo of Cleary’s and
-whooping as he went.</p>
-
-<p>The rock bridge was still intact, but nearly the whole
-of the after part of the deck was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Go careful!” cried Satan. He got down on hands and
-knees and, crawling, followed by Ratcliffe, leaned over
-the break and looked.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe cried out in horror.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">226</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE CARGO</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> that vast and gloomy interior the great beams
-showed like the ribs of some eviscerated monster and
-the honest light of day fell sick upon the cargo,—a cargo
-of skulls, ribs, vertebræ, and entire skeletons, piled high,
-as though five hundred men had struggled aft for exit in
-one mad rush and died heaped one upon the other like
-refuse. A charnel, limy smell rose, poisoning the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan. “What did I tell you? <i>Nombre
-de Dios</i> be sugared! She’s an old slaver, wrecked with
-the men under hatches. Here’s Sellers!”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers, panting, his face all mottled, and followed by
-Cleary, had gained the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, what is it?” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Gold!” cried Satan. “Go careful, for the hull deck’s
-sprung. Get on your hands and knees. Gold bars an’
-di’monds—we’re all rich men!”</p>
-
-<p>The pair of scoundrels, crawling like crabs, stuck their
-heads over the break.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hell!” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary spat. He was the first to laugh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-“This is putting it over on Cark, ain’t it?” said Cleary.
-“How many dollars d’you think it’s cost our firm to blow
-the lid off this damned scrofagus, to say nothin’ of the
-time? And he packed me off to Pensacola to get me out
-of the way! Oh, send for him to have a look!”</p>
-
-<p>“No use sendin’, he’s comin’,” said Satan, pointing to
-where the gig of the <i>Juan</i> was approaching the beach.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez crossed the rock bridge and advanced along
-the deck, clutching his old coat together and making birdlike
-noises. When he reached the break, crouching like
-the others, he looked over.</p>
-
-<p>The sight below did not seem to horrify him.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan for the third time, turning his
-head for a moment from the objects that seemed to
-fascinate him.</p>
-
-<p>“Pst, pst, pst!” said Carquinez. “Vel, I reckon dat is
-so.”</p>
-
-<p>“No gold ship,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe there was gold in the after-cabin,” suddenly
-broke in Cleary, “and the niggers broke through the bulkhead
-and are on top of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your bulkheads?” asked Sellers. “There was
-no after-cabin to the hooker. It was all one cattle boat
-below, with niggers for cattle.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>The old gentleman seemed taking his setback extraordinarily
-well; so, too, seemed Sellers and Cleary. They
-were evidently used to reverses in business, and treasure
-hunting was wildcat anyway, a thousand to one against
-the chance of a colossal fortune.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-“That is so,” said Carquinez. Then he proceeded to
-demonstrate what the hold of a slaver was like,—men
-lying side by side and sometimes on top of one another.
-There was no after-cabin, indeed nothing, no latrines,
-no means of washing, nothing: just one vast sty without
-straw even for the human beasts to lie on.</p>
-
-<p>The officers and crew slept in deckhouses; sometimes
-the crew had nothing to shelter them, sleeping on the bare
-decks.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez knew it all. His grandfather had been in
-the business, and he mentioned the fact with a sort of
-pride.</p>
-
-<p>Then he drew back from the break like a reptile
-balked and retreating; rose to his feet, and stood contemplating
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Satan rose also, as did Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m off,” said Satan. “This boneyard don’t please me
-any. Say, what you goin’ to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Von moment,” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark means how about the contrac’?” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Why, we’re left, left with a cargo of skelentons,
-and you—why, you’ve got a thousand dollars in your
-pocket.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was nothin’ in the contrac’ about handin’ them
-back,” said Satan; “b’sides the contrac’s bust. That
-thousand dollars was on account of findin’s. Is it my
-fault the findin’s is skelentons? But, see here, you give’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-a few hours to turn the thing over, and come aboard the
-<i>Sarah</i> gettin’ along sundown, and we’ll have a clack.
-We’re all in the soup, seems to me, and I’m not wishin’
-to be hard on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll drop aboard,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>After his outburst of laughter he had remained dumb.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m off,” said Satan. “I want a drink and
-that’s the truth. The smell of them skelentons’s enough
-to start a Baptis’ minister on the booze.” Then he turned
-to Carquinez. “What did I tell you, sittin’ in your
-cabin? Told you I didn’t bank on this business, maybe
-you’ll remember that. Blast treasure liftin’! Leavin’
-salvage aside, have you ever seen an ounce of gold raised
-in all these years? There was a hundred million lyin’
-off Dry Tortugas—did they ever get it? How many
-ships has been down to Trinidad huntin’ for the pirates’
-gold? Knight was the last man there—a lot he made of
-it! It’s only the chaps that sell locations to mugs that
-make money over this business, it’s my b’lief. Well, see
-you aboard later on.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went, Ratcliffe following.</p>
-
-<p>As they came alongside the <i>Sarah</i>, Jude was hanging
-over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the luck?” cried Jude as they came aboard.</p>
-
-<p>“Skelentons,” said Satan, “shipload of skulls an’ cross-bones.
-Slaver, that’s what she was; dead men’s bones,
-that’s your treasure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! And I’ve never seen them!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-“Well, there’s nothin’ much to see,” said Satan, with
-the irritating nonchalance of the one who has seen the
-show; “ain’t worth the trouble of lookin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see them skelentons,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell you they ain’t wuth lookin’ at!”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see them—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well then, tumble into the boat, tumble into the
-boat, and I’ll row you over.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe watched while the dinghy passed over to the
-reef. He saw Jude on the wreck, kneeling and poring
-over the cargo, held, evidently, by the fascination that lies
-for youth in the horrible.</p>
-
-<p>Then they returned, and Satan ordered the dinghy to
-be taken on board.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to put out now?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Put out!” said Satan, with a grin. “Why, I’ve asked
-those fellers to come aboard gettin’ on for sundown, and
-whether or no if I raised a foot of chain they’d be on me
-with the first click of the windlass. I tell you we’re in
-a tight place! Cleary said nothin’, you noticed that, but
-he’s goin’ to have his forty dollars back if he knows how,
-and Sellers is the same,—he wants his thousand. We’re
-held for one thousand and forty dollars, and we’re not
-strong enough to fight them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, see here,” said the peacemaker. “Pay them.
-I’ll stand the racket. It’s only a little over two hundred
-pounds, and I’ll give you a check.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t get me,” said Satan. “It’s not the dollars
-I’m thinkin’ of so much as the game. Cark played me a
-low-down trick lightin’ out for here to scoop the boodle,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-and Cleary laughed at me with his old cod boat outsailin’
-us. They’ve got to pay. B’sides, if I was to hand over
-that money, I’d never be able to show my nose again in
-Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, them two would put the laugh on me, and it’d
-be ‘what price skelentons’ wherever I went, see? I’d be
-the mug then. They’re the mugs now, seem’ they’ve paid
-a thousand and forty for what they’ve got.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. But considering that they’ll be after you if
-you move, and that we’re not strong enough to fight them,
-what’s to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “when they come aboard it’ll be
-either to get the dollars back or fight. You’ve noticed I
-asked them to come, seein’ they’d have come whether I
-asked them or not. Well, if I can foozle them into hanging
-on for their answer till tomorrow, I’ll give them the
-slip tonight. Moon’s not up till late.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they’ll hear you getting the anchor up and
-handling the sails!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not with an ear trumpet,” said Satan, “if I can only
-foozle them into waitin’ till tomorrow. Now then, Jude,
-lend a hand with the dinghy.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">232</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">CROCKERY WARE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">An</span> hour before sunset, Jude, on the lookout, gave the
-alarm. “Sellers’s getting ready to come off,” she
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>Satan’s head appeared at the cabin hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“The boat’s alongside the <i>Juan</i> full of dagoes, and
-Sellers and Cleary’s gettin’ in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you stick that bottle of nose-paint?”</p>
-
-<p>“Starboard forward locker.”</p>
-
-<p>“One minute.”</p>
-
-<p>In a minute the head reappeared and an arm holding
-the rum bottle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, mind you, I’m drunk,” said Satan, “fightin’
-drunk, not to be disturbed on no account. They can call
-again tomorrow morning.”</p>
-
-<p>He smashed the rum bottle on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave the pieces lyin’.” He vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Jude looked at Ratcliffe and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Rub your nose and pretend to be cryin’,” came a voice
-from below.</p>
-
-<p>“What for should I be cryin’?” answered Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“God A’mighty! I’ll show you if I get on deck!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-Ain’t I drunk and cuttin’ up? What else would you be
-doin’? <em>I’ll</em> larn you!”</p>
-
-<p>A smash of crockery came from below that made the
-housekeeper spring to the cabin skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit foolin’,” cried she. “I’m willin’ to rub the damn
-nose off my head, but stop smashin’ the plates—what
-have you broke?”</p>
-
-<p>Another plate went.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m rubbin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here they are!” cried Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s nose did not seem to want any rubbing, nor her
-face. Descended from generations of crockery worshipers
-and careful housewives, instinctively hating
-Cleary, Sellers, Cark, and all their belongings, feeling
-with perfect illogic that they had been done out of the
-treasure by the “skelentons” somehow through Cark, she
-was convincing. Satan with rare art had worked her up
-to the part. She was not crying: her mind was raging
-above tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers, as the boat ground alongside
-and a filthy ruffian with a handkerchief twisted round
-his head clawed on with a boathook. “What’s the matter,
-Kid? What’s up with you? Where’s Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’re you kiddin’?” cried Jude, as Sellers came
-aboard, followed by Cleary. “Where the hull are your
-fenders? Comin’ cuttin’ the paint off, you and your
-skullintons! Where’s Satan? He’s down below drunk
-as Billy be damn and cuttin’ the lights out of the
-ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been at the eyewash I was tellin’ you of,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-Cleary. “Look, he’s broke a bottle of it. Lord! don’t
-the place stink?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, drunk or sober, he’s got to bail up,” said Sellers.
-“It’s my belief he’s been spoofin’ us all along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spoofin’ who?” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark an’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark an’ you—that old leather face an’ <em>you</em>! Satan
-been spoofin’ you—pair of yeggmen! Satan’s straight,
-the on’y straight man in Havana! Get off this ship!
-Come in the mornin’ if you want to try an’ rob him. Off
-with you now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” cried Sellers, half laughing, half angry,
-“what’s the matter with the kid? What’s gingerin’ you
-up?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer came from another smashed plate below.</p>
-
-<p>Jude made one spring for a deck-mop standing handy,
-twirled it so that the water sprayed from it in a rainbow,
-and brought it to the charge.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary slipped over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Off with you!” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Put down that mop!” cried Sellers, now suddenly
-furious. “Put down that mop, you braying little bitch!
-Go’n get inter your petticoats! You ain’t a boy! I
-never b’lieved it, not for the last six months, an’ now I
-know. You’ve give yourself away proper. Why, look
-at you, as round as a tub—you’re a wumman!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked on horrified. Jude, flushed and bright-eyed,
-had somehow revealed her sex. In her excitement
-she looked for a moment almost beautiful. Her tongue
-had done the rest. The smashing of the plates had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-brought the woman out of her as a conjurer brings a
-rabbit out of a hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Put down that mop!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude from rose color had turned awfully white; then
-with the élan and dash of a gamecock she charged. The
-wet swab hit the ruffian full in his flat face, and he fell
-on the deck with a bang.</p>
-
-<p>In a second he was up and scrambling over the rail.
-Again she charged, the swab meeting him this time full
-on his stem and sending him over into the boat like a
-bag of oats.</p>
-
-<p>A slush tub, fortunately half-full, and marked by her
-prescient mind, was her next weapon. The contents
-caught Cleary full in the face, and as the boat made off,
-the oars, all at sixes and sevens, wildly rowing, she pursued
-it with the battery of her tongue till it was out of
-range. Then she broke down and cried, sniffed, with her
-arm hiding her face, and then flushed, like a thing of
-shame dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe knew.</p>
-
-<p>Her sex proclaimed aloud by the shameless Sellers was
-as a garment stripped off her publicly. On the very first
-day Satan had stated her case and she didn’t mind, though
-he, Ratcliffe, had been a stranger; but it was different
-now, somehow. It was as if the end of her boyhood
-had come. Sellers would no doubt proclaim the fact in
-Havana.</p>
-
-<p>He heard voices from below.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care if I’d killed him! Wish’t I had! Lea’ me
-alone—for two cents I’d go drown myself! Look at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-them plates! You’ve broke the two blue pattern ones
-an’ the chaney one with the bird on it, the best we had,
-an’ not a cracked one touched! Hain’t you no sense?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind; I’ll get you some more.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not wanting more. Them plates were mother’s—much
-you care! I’ve gone as careful as walking on eggs
-with them, and now they’re broke an’ the old Delf’ ones
-left. If you must be breaking and cutting up, couldn’t
-you a broke the cracked ones? An’ where’s the sense in
-breaking them anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal, I reckoned it’d liven you up hearin’ the
-crockery goin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liven me up! Makes me believe you <em>have</em> been
-getting at the rum to hear you talk. Where’s the sense
-in all your doings,—ship stinking of drink and all the
-crockery broke, and what’s the use?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you after dark. I tell you I want to get
-away from those thugs, and if I hadn’t headed them off
-pretendin’ to be drunk they’d have gone through me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they’ll go through you right enough tomorrow
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, they won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone! Why, first click of the windlass and they’ll be
-aboard us.”</p>
-
-<p>“You leave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wish we’d have went before you broke them
-plates.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cuss the plates!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-“Easy to say that. It makes me just nacheral wild to
-see that old Delf’ plate starin’ me in the face, round and
-sound, and the blue pattern ones gone.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence for a moment, at the end of which Satan’s
-head and bust appeared at the cabin hatch.</p>
-
-<p>He winked at Ratcliffe, and pointed backward with his
-thumb and down below, as if indicating the domestic
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no sign of them swabs comin’ off again?”
-asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Ratcliffe. “They seem to have had enough
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>The rum bottle had broken fairly in two without
-splinters.</p>
-
-<p>“You might heave the bottle over, like a good one,”
-said Satan. “I can’t show on deck for fear of those
-shrimps seein’ me. It’ll be dark in an hour, and then I’ll
-be up. You can wait for your supper till we get away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said Ratcliffe; “I’m in no hurry.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">238</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">TIDE AND CURRENT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> lit a pipe. Having disposed of the fragments of
-the bottle, he got the mop and a bucket of water
-and swabbed the rum-stained deck. Then he took his
-seat forward and watched the sunset.</p>
-
-<p>The great sun, half-shorn of his beams and bulging
-broad as Jupiter, lolled above the reef in a sky of
-laburnum gold fading to aquamarine. Gulls, dark as
-withered leaves, blew about him, and shifting here and
-there to north and south became gulls of gold, while the
-wind blowing up from the gulf and the westward running
-current, meeting the last of the flood, broke the sea surface
-into a million tiny dancing waves, momentary
-mirrors dazzling the eye with shattered light.</p>
-
-<p>Lone Reef seemed well named. Dawn or sunset or
-the blaze of full day could not take from its desolation,
-and this evening the sinister line of the wreck dominated
-everything, turning the blaze of sunset to the light of a
-funeral pyre.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i>, moving to the swell, creaked and whimpered,
-and now and then from below he could hear voices,—Jude’s
-voice and the voice of Satan. Beyond that
-came the murmur of the reef and the clang of the gulls,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-and now and again a snatch of Spanish song from the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Then the sun passed below the reef, the tide began to
-draw out, and the <i>Sarah</i>, swinging to it, brought to his
-view the <i>Juan</i> and the <i>Natchez</i>, ships of dusk in a world
-of dusk powdered with star dust. Presently a light was
-run up on the <i>Natchez</i>, then the <i>Juan</i> put up her riding
-light, then Satan appeared, a dusky form, rising from
-the cabin hatch and followed by Jude.</p>
-
-<p>They came forward. Jude squatted on the deck, and
-Satan drew close to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, if them skunks had any sense in their skulls,
-they’d stick out a guard boat,” said Satan; “but I’ve fair
-put the hood on them, I b’lieve, and they’ve never saw
-what I was after, pretendin’ I had no oil for an anchor
-light. Why, they are only fit to be put out to nuss!
-Half an hour more and we’ll be off.”</p>
-
-<p>“How are you going to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knock the shackle off the anchor chain an’ let her
-drift. Tide an’ current is runnin’ four knots.”</p>
-
-<p>“But even without the anchor light they’ll be able to
-see us by the stars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord bless you! at this distance they won’t be able
-to see mor’n a glimpse of us. We’ll go so gradual they
-won’t notice. If they keep a lookout at all,—which they
-won’t, ten to one,—he’ll see us by believin’ we’re there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I’d love to see their faces in the morning!”
-murmured Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“But won’t they go for you when we get back to
-Havana?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-“Not they,” said Satan. “They’ll say nothin’, seein’ as
-how they’re done and the laugh’s against them. Why,
-Cark will respect me more for this job than if I’d run
-straight with him over the biggest deal. If it’d been the
-other way about and he’d pulled the dollars off me, I’d
-have been nowhere with him. Mind you out here, if I
-was to stick here till tomorrow, they’d be aboard and
-maybe manhandling us if I didn’t bail up; but back in
-Havana the thing will be closed and the accounts wrote
-off.”</p>
-
-<p>The sound of a guitar came through the dusk, crossing
-the warm wind, the lazy, languorous wind of a perfect
-summer’s night. Seville, which he had never seen, rose
-before Ratcliffe, firefly-haunted orange groves, lovely
-women all skewered together by the remembered words of
-a ribald song.</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“When I was a student at Cadiz!”<br></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“There goes old Catguts,” said Satan. “He’s the band
-aboard the <i>Juan</i>,—Antonio, Alonzo, Alphonso—damn his
-name!”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t,” said Jude. “It’s that old copper-patch
-Cleary’s got with him. I’ve heard him in harbor. I gave
-him a plug of tobacco once for getting me some bait, and
-he showed me the thing. It’s got a crack in it or suthin’,
-and makes a noise like a skeeter in a jug,—kind a fizzin’
-noise between the plonks. He’s got an ulster on his leg
-so’s you can see the bone. He took off the rags an’
-showed me—he’s a Portugee.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-“Well, it’s time to get busy,” said Satan. “Here, h’ist
-yourself and lend a hand!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe got more forward while they knocked the
-shackle off the chain. There came a splash. Then the
-meeting resumed.</p>
-
-<p>“If they heard that splash,” said Satan, “they’d put
-it down to a fish jumpin’. Now you watch them lights.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe watched the amber lights of the <i>Natchez</i> and
-<i>Juan</i>. They did not seem to alter position in the least.
-In the first of the starlight and the last of the dusk the
-spars and hulls of the two vessels could just be made out.</p>
-
-<p>Then presently he saw that the lights had drawn a
-bit more aft and seemed closer together. The feel of the
-<i>Sarah</i> was different too, she moved more freely to the
-swell.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the guitar seemed slightly fainter.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then the beguiling sea would give the <i>Sarah</i>
-a little slap, no louder than the slap of a girl’s hand,
-on the low planking as if joking with her over some secret
-shared in common.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the sound of the guitar was fainter, much fainter,
-and the spars and hulls of the vessels now invisible as
-though they had been dissolved in the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>The anchor lights alone marked their places.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all right now,” said Satan; “but I’ll give them
-another five minutes. Got the matches for the binnacle
-light?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes passed, then they got the canvas on her,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-and Satan, at the wheel, taking his bearings from the
-far-off lights of the betrayed ones, turned the spokes.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going to sail for?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Cormorant Cay,” said Satan. “I’ve a fancy to look
-at that place.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">243</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">SATAN IN PARADISE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> had divided Ratcliffe and Jude into watches, port
-and starboard.</p>
-
-<p>Jude turned in first, relieving him somewhere about two
-in the morning. At six, when Ratcliffe turned out and
-came on deck, he found Satan at the wheel, relinquished
-by Jude, and day pursuing the Sarah across a wrinkled
-sea of tourmaline and hinted blue. Away ahead somewhere
-to the south lay Cormorant Cay, the true tomb, if
-the chart indications were correct, of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A strong sailing wind was blowing, and Satan gave
-their speed at seven knots. He refused to hand over the
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had a snooze on deck,” said he, “while the kid
-took charge. We’re nearly sixty miles south of Lone,
-and if this wind holds will be on to Cormorant somewhere
-about eight bells.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a sign of those chaps,” said Ratcliffe, looking
-back over the sea, clear of Cleary and Sellers and their
-dirty crowd.</p>
-
-<p>“Naw; they’ll be just about rousin’ up now and rubbin’
-their eyes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-“You don’t think they’ll try to follow us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not likely, I don’t think. They’re wastin’ time and
-money if they cruise after us. Cark’s got his business
-in Havana to attend to, and Cleary’s the same. What’s
-gettin’ me is the fac’ that Sellers has spotted the kid for
-what she is. It’ll be all over Havana, and she knows it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it had to come out some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Satan!” said Ratcliffe. “I’ve been thinking
-a lot about the girl and what’s to become of her. She
-can’t go on as she is. We must fix up something.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s easy said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve grown fonder of her than any person I’ve
-ever met, that’s the truth. There’s no one like her; she’s
-gold right through.”</p>
-
-<p>“She ain’t bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“This sort of thing was all right when she was a
-child,” went on Ratcliffe; “but she’s growing out of that.
-Why, even in the little time since I’ve come aboard, she
-seems different, somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ask me,” said Satan, “you seem to have
-made a change in her. She’s brightened up, somehow,
-has more sass in her. Y’see, when we were cruisin’
-round since Pap died, me, she, and the nigger, there
-wasn’t much company, and she was gettin’ a bit down-hearted.
-Then, when you came aboard, she picked up.
-She hadn’t laughed for weeks till she saw you in that
-pajama rig; then she chummed onto you.”</p>
-
-<p>“She did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liked you from the first minute she saw you. There’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-no two ways about Jude,—it’s either like or the other
-thing, right off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m pretty much the same—and I don’t want
-to lose sight of her—or you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just that. I’m bothering about when this cruise
-is over. That’s bothering me a lot. Well, we’ll leave
-it at that for the present.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan turned his lantern face to starboard for half a
-moment to expectorate right over the starboard rail—maybe
-also to hide a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it’ll come all right somehow,” said he. “We
-ain’t much in the world, but we’re straight. Reckon
-you’re straight too. That’s all I want. That feller
-Thelusson, y’remember I told you he wanted to come
-for a cruise with us. Well, he was straight enough s’far
-as dollars went, but I wouldn’t have had him on this
-ship, not if he’d paid me a dollar a minute and a bonus
-for every knot we made—not with Jude aboard—Here’s
-the wheel for a sec’, if you’ll take it whiles I get some
-coffee ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon a wreath of gulls in the sky showed
-Cormorant.</p>
-
-<p>Jude was at the wheel, Satan forward on the lookout.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty minutes later Satan came running aft, fetched
-the old glass out of its sling, and went forward with
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a hooker on the sands!” cried he. “Looks
-like a small fruiter or suthin’ hove up.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, standing beside him, could see nothing,—the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">246</a></span>
-sand, owing to their low level, was invisible from the
-deck of the <i>Sarah</i>,—then, straining his eyes, he made
-out a speck on the sea-line.</p>
-
-<p>“Mast’s gone,” said Satan, “white painted, not more’n
-fifty ton, and she’s layin’ in the lagoon. She must have
-come in over the sand where it narrows to the westward.
-There’s a pinch of sand there that’s near under water
-at flood, and the seas come right over it in an east’ard
-gale.”</p>
-
-<p>He handed the glass to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny,” said Ratcliffe, “if you were right about the
-<i>Nombre de Dios</i> being sunk here and we come to have a
-look for her and find another wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t take no shares in the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>,”
-said Satan. “I ran here more for somewhere to run to
-than with any thought of the <i>Nombre</i>. She’s a hundred
-foot under the sand if she’s here at all; but it’s luck all
-the same. There’ll be pickin’s. There was a big blow
-two weeks ago from the east,—that’s what’s done her,—and
-the salvage men won’t be here yet, if they ever come.”</p>
-
-<p>He stuck the glass to his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a yacht, that’s what she is, one of them small
-cruisers, not more’n fifty or sixty, and her fittin’s will
-just do for us, if she’s not been stripped. There’s all
-sorts of folks come from New York and Philadelphia
-and N’ y’Orleans, cruisin’ about these seas in tubs like
-that,—fishin’ mostly.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i> held on, almost due south, with the daring
-of a sea-bird, Satan giving directions to the steersman
-and seeming absolutely regardless of the death and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-dangers around them,—reefs that they shaved, rocks that
-waved fathom-long ribbons of fuci a few feet under
-water,—he avoided them all.</p>
-
-<p>South, east, and west Cormorant Cay is devoid of
-danger. Only here to the north do the reefs and rocks
-show, and it is just here that the only entrance to the
-lagoon lies.</p>
-
-<p>The place consists really of two sandspits widely
-separated to the north so as to form a pondlike harbor
-running from five to ten fathoms deep. Farther south
-the sandspits join so as to form a wide street, like the
-spit to eastward of Lone Reef.</p>
-
-<p>They held on. The sound of the gentle surf on the
-sands came now, and a full view of the lagoon water
-reflecting the sun-blaze like a mirror.</p>
-
-<p>On the still lagoon, with strange stereoscopic effect
-seen between the two sand-arms holding off the wrinkled
-sea, lay the craft, floating on an even keel, and showing
-a stump of mainmast against the skyline. From her
-lines she had been a yacht.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Go’ bless my soul, she’s anchored!” cried
-Satan. “Derelic’ and anchored. The people must have
-got away in a boat or suthin’. There’s not a sign of
-them. Port—hard—port—as you were—steady—so!”</p>
-
-<p>He ran to let go the halyards.</p>
-
-<p>Another anchor had been bent on to some spare
-chain. It was heaved over, and the <i>Sarah</i> came up to it,
-swinging less than fifty yards from the stranger. She
-was a picture, a forty-ton fishing yawl, white painted,
-gracile as a fish, dismasted, abandoned, and swinging to a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">248</a></span>
-taut anchor chain; beyond her and the emerald of the
-lagoon lay the great stretch of sands, running due south,
-blanketing to the heat and showing ponds of aquamarine
-and storms of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The anchor down, Satan stood with his eyes fixed on
-his prey; Jude too. They seemed considering her as a
-butcher might consider a carcass before he cut it up.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you going to board her?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you ever seen a dead b’ar?” asked Satan.
-“Sometimes a b’ar isn’t as dead as he looks, and sometimes
-a derelic’ isn’t as empty as it looks. It’s a common thing
-for men on the Florida coast to hide in a driftin’ canoe
-and rise up and laugh at them that come out to collect it.
-I can’t make out that anchor chain bein’ down, and I’ll
-just give them one hour whiles we have dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>When they came on deck again after the meal, they
-dropped the dinghy, and the three of them put off for
-the derelict.</p>
-
-<p>She must have been dismasted outside the sands, for
-not a spar lay in the water alongside,—dismasted and
-driven over by a big wave, her crew clinging to her.
-On the bow was her name, <i>Haliotis</i>. They tied up
-and scrambled on board. The deck ran flush fore and
-aft. The wheel looked all right, but was jammed and
-immovable; the binnacle glass was smashed.</p>
-
-<p>Satan stood, whistling and looking about him. Then
-he dived below, followed by the others. The cabin had
-been left in good order. It was a bit over-gilded and
-decorated for a plain man’s taste, but everything was of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-the best, and a hanging lamp of solid brass still swung
-over the center-table. The walls were of bird’s-eye maple,
-the cushions of the best blue cloth, and the fittings of
-the tiny sleeping cabins to match.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of stuff lying about,—books, clothes,
-boots. The people had evidently put off in a hurry, not
-caring much what they took as long as they got away.
-Perhaps they had taken advantage of a passing steamer.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe picked up a book, a volume of O. Henry.
-There was a name in it,—J. Seligmann.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, delving in the starboard after-cabin, came out
-holding up something. It was a pair of boots, women’s,
-patent leather with white suede tops and heels three inches
-high.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at them things!” said Jude with a burst of suppressed
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“A girl’s boots,” said Ratcliffe. “Try them on, Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I wore them things,” said Jude, “I’d have to walk
-on my hands. There’s dead loads more of stuff, and the
-place smells as if a polecat had been living there.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe stuck his head into the little cabin. It
-reeked of California poppy as though a bottle of it
-had been upset, California poppy and cosmetic scents.
-Clothes were lying about in disorder; a woman’s white
-yachting cap, deck shoes, lingerie, bursting like froth out
-of a cabin trunk, gave added touch to the hysterical distraction
-of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>One could see her, the woman, rushing about saving
-or collecting her valuables, leaving everything else, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-calling on the gods to witness that she would never set
-foot again on another small yacht for a pleasure cruise
-among the islands.</p>
-
-<p>Jude picked out a frilled garment from the lingerie
-box, looked at it, rolled it up, and cast it with a chuckle
-into the bunk, then she reached up and opened the little
-port.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe left her pursuing her investigations, attracted
-by the whoops of Satan, who seemed pursuing things
-about the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, with his hair wild and his eyes ablaze, had
-rapidly sampled his treasure. Everything he wanted had
-been left. Had he found the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> with gold
-to her hatches, it is doubtful if his excitement would have
-been so intense.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at that!” cried he, pointing to the mast winch.
-“Wantin’ it—should think I had been! Come along and
-see!” He led the way to a heap of raffle and broken
-spars forward. “Look at them gaff jaws, galvanized an’
-covered with hide, and me with old wooden ones
-creakin’ like an old shoe! There’s a mainsheet buffer too!
-Camper Nicholson’s—rubber—cringles—come along to
-the sail room!”</p>
-
-<p>They went to the sail room, then to the galley,—everywhere
-finds, glorious finds, with this rough sum total:</p>
-
-<p>In the sail room, sixty fathoms of new manila rope,
-an eighty-foot otter trawl, harpoons and grains and a
-seine net, a trysail, square sails, two jibs; in the galley,
-cooking gear, an Atkey cooking stove to burn coal or
-coke; in addition to all this some splendid blocks with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-patent sheaves with ball bearings which run so much
-better than dummies, a lower mainsheet block and two
-quarter-blocks, fathoms of galvanized chain, and two
-Nicholson’s patent anchors. Other things included
-lamps, a pair of binoculars, a sextant and a chronometer,
-charts, and lastly, glorious but useless, in a little engine
-room the auxiliary, a 13–15 horse-power petrol-paraffin
-Kelvin engine, two-cylinder, with the shaft running out
-through the quarter, and a spare Bergius propeller,
-which shuts up and opens out automatically when in
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>When they came on deck again after a rapid glance
-at these things a brain-wave came to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said he. “Why not tow her back to
-Havana and claim salvage? She’s worth a lot and she’s
-derelict.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan. “Have you ever claimed salvage?
-First there’s the tow, and we’re underhanded.
-Then there’s the lawyers. What’s to stop this Seligmann
-whoever he is poppin’ up an’ swearin’ against me.
-He’d say he left her with the anchor down in harbor;
-it amounts to that, though she’s derelic’ right enough.
-Not me! I’ll take what I want without no lawyers to
-help me. She’s my meat, by all the laws of the sea, and
-that’s the end of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Appeared Jude from the cabin hatch, carrying as a
-trophy a go-ashore hat she had unearthed from somewhere,
-a crushed-strawberry-colored straw hat—or was
-it a bonnet? It had long strings and a rose stuck on one
-side of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-“Look what that catawampus has left behind her!”
-cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit your foolin’,” cried Satan, “and come along and
-lend a hand. Here, h’ist these things into the dinghy!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude flung the hat down the open skylight, and the
-rank burglary of the <i>Haliotis</i> began.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">253</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">A SECRET OF THE SAND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> seemed to Ratcliffe in the days that followed that
-he had never known what work meant before. That
-he, a wealthy and respected member of the British upper,
-upper-middle classes, an ex-Christ Churchman, and a
-member of Boodles, was assisting Satan Tyler in “tearing
-the tripes” out of another man’s yacht, also occurred to
-him sometimes as a fact, a distorted sort of fact, blurred
-and dimmed by the blazing and brilliant atmosphere in
-which they were working, the absolute and shocking
-loneliness that hemmed them in, Satan’s personality, and
-Jude’s companionship.</p>
-
-<p>By all the laws of the sea, according to Satan, these
-things were the property of the first finder. That was
-all very well according to Satan, and indeed according to
-what seemed common-sense; still, sea law was for all he
-could tell not quite the same thing as the laws of the
-sea, according to Satan. Though belonging to a great
-ship-owning family, he knew nothing of the rights of the
-matter; but the business they were engaged on seemed to
-him sometimes, when he cared to think, most tremendously
-like larceny,—larceny excused by a lot of considerations
-and made picturesque by environment; still, a business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">254</a></span>
-that in the unpicturesque surroundings of the London
-Sessions would undoubtedly have appealed to a judge
-in the voice of Larceny.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he imagined a warship, one of those prying,
-officious little cruisers that do police work, closing up
-with the cay and sending a boat into the lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he fell to wondering what Seligmann was
-like,—an American surely, one of the Gulf haunters, belonging,
-most probably, to one of the numerous clubs on
-the Florida coast, and Mrs. Seligmann—or was it Miss—or
-not even that?</p>
-
-<p>One thing was certain, Seligmann was rich. They
-were not robbing a poor man.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the third day Jude gave out, not from
-weariness, but from distaste.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! haven’t you had enough of this old truck?”
-said Jude. “I don’t feel’s if I ever wanted to see a
-len’th of rope nor a cringle again.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt pretty much the same.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll finish the business myself,” said Satan. “You
-can knock off if you like. Go’n hunt for turkles’ eggs.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come along, too,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Satan ferried them over to the sands. It was about
-two hours before sundown, and an easterly breeze was
-blowing fresh and cool, shivering up the lagoon water
-and whispering among the sand-grains.</p>
-
-<p>Jude walked despondently as they trudged along close
-to the sea edge and discovering nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“D’you know,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve never even started<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">255</a></span>
-to hunt for a sign of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>? I wonder if
-she’s sunk, really, anywhere near here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Jude; “don’t care, nuther. Satan’s
-so full of his pesky old fittings he’s no time to think of
-anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheer up, Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you’re not. What’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots of things.”</p>
-
-<p>“When we get back to Havana—” began Ratcliffe.
-She cut him short.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to go back to Havana,” said she. “Ain’t
-going.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on the sands plump, nursed her knees,
-and stared over the sea, casting her hat beside her. He
-stood for a moment, then he sat down. He knew at once,
-knew what had been working in her mind for days.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re bothering about what Sellers said, dirty
-scoundrel! I’d have punched his head, only the whole
-thing happened so quick and you landed him with that
-mop—don’t worry.”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good?” went on Ratcliffe; then cautiously
-and feeling that he was treading on dangerous ground,
-“See here, there’s no harm in being a girl, no more than
-there is in being a man.”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>A laughing gull passed and jeered at them. Jude followed
-it with her eyes. She seemed almost unconscious
-of his presence and not to have heard his words. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-watched her profile against the sky, noticed the eyelashes
-which seemed longer and more curved up than ever, the
-nice shape of the head, free of the old panama.</p>
-
-<p>Then she turned, leaned on her elbow, and looked up
-at him—then she looked down.</p>
-
-<p>“What made you think I was botherin’ about Sellers?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said Ratcliffe, “I just thought it. I’ve
-been thinking a lot about you—I care for you a lot, that’s
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him again, full in the eyes, and with
-a new expression he had never seen before, a puzzled,
-half-startled look, like that of a person suddenly
-awakened in strange surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>Then her eyes fell away from him.</p>
-
-<p>She took a handful of sand and let the grains fall between
-her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“Just that,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>She was still playing with the sand, letting it fall between
-her fingers carefully as though trying to count
-the grains. Then she threw the stuff away, brushed the
-palm of her hand clean, and sat up. Drawing a little
-closer to her, he put his hand round her waist, just as
-he had done when they were on the sandspit, and just as
-on the sandspit, she let it rest there—for a moment.
-Then, with a queer little laugh, she removed the hand and
-struggled to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>He rose up and they went on, without a word. Then
-presently they began to talk about indifferent matters almost
-as though nothing had occurred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">257</a></span>
-They found a nest of turtles’ eggs, and Jude marked
-it; farther along they came upon something strange, a
-sort of platform half-covered with sand. Jude said it
-was the foretop of a ship sunk and sanded over.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>, maybe,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Jude. “It’s the foretop of an old ship,
-anyhow. See, where the mast’s broke off—she’s thirty
-or forty foot under that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much good to us, even if she is the <i>Nombre de
-Dios</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much.”</p>
-
-<p>The gulls seemed to agree, and the little waves, falling
-crystal clear on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>It was near the end of the spit just here, and the
-sands shelved out, losing themselves in the immeasurable
-loneliness of the sea stretching to Mariguana and the
-Caicos and the northern shoulder of South America.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, on her knees with a bit of driftwood, was scraping
-away the sand from the edge of the sunk foretop,
-when something caught her eye.</p>
-
-<p>A turtle had landed where they had marked the eggs.
-It was so far away that it did not look bigger than a
-threepenny bit.</p>
-
-<p>She flung the bit of driftwood away, rose to her feet,
-and started running, taking the extreme sea-edge where
-the sand was hard. Ratcliffe followed. They were half
-a minute too late, the turtle turning back to the sea and
-leaving them spent and laughing. She got down on her
-knees and hived the eggs in her hat still laughing. He
-helped, filling his hat and his pockets, and then they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-started for the lagoon edge, Jude suddenly in the wildest
-spirits. He had never seen her in such high, good
-spirits. When they got aboard it was just the same.
-Even Satan’s maniacal passion for old junk, expressed at
-supper in the determination to spend two more days
-picking and scraping at the <i>Haliotis</i>, did not depress her,
-it only made her laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be cryin’ before you’ve done if you go on
-laughin’ like that,” said Satan. “What’s possessed you
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough she was. The words acted like a pin on
-a bubble.</p>
-
-<p>She flushed, pushed her plate away, half rose, and then
-sat down again.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re always going on at me! Whatch’a want me
-to do? If I’m crying, I ought to be laughin’, an’ if I’m
-laughin’ I ought to be crying! I’ll laugh as much as I
-want—”</p>
-
-<p>Then, logically, she broke into violent tears, rose, and
-ran on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“What the hell-nation’s the matter with her?” asked
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">259</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE GO-ASHORE HAT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> had time to think over the matter as he lay in
-his bunk that night.</p>
-
-<p>He fell to wondering, among other things, what the
-spell was that drew him toward Jude and held him.</p>
-
-<p>Was it the indefinable attractive quality that had made
-her mother a “nacheral calamity” where men were concerned,
-or just the power of youth? Scarcely the latter.
-He had met lots of youth in his time, and it had not
-attracted him much; besides, when you have only to look
-into the looking-glass to see youth, it is at a discount.</p>
-
-<p>Puzzling over the matter, he came to the bedrock fact
-that Jude, in some extraordinary way, had the power to
-make him feel more alive than he had ever felt before.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving other things aside, there were an honesty,
-faithfulness, and simplicity about Jude that removed her
-from the category of bifurcated beings and raised her to
-the level of a dog.</p>
-
-<p>Instinct told him that this compound quality was worth
-more than all the gold lying under the hatches of the
-<i>Nombre de Dios</i>, more than all the diamonds in the
-Rand, when combined with that other quality speaking in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-her level gaze,—steadfastness, the something that would
-make her keep the wheel in all weathers.</p>
-
-<p>But these excellencies would have been nothing without
-the impossibilities with which they were allied,—social
-and conventual impossibilities. The one reacted on
-the other, making an irresistible whole combined with
-the something else that was Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered the queer little laugh with which she
-had freed herself from his hand round her waist—then
-he fell asleep and dreamt that he and Jude and a lot of
-larrikins were lying in wait by a harbor blue as the sea
-off Jamaica, to clod bathing nigger girls; then he was
-chasing Jude round and round a tree, only to catch her
-and find that she was Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>When he got on deck next morning he found the ship
-deserted. The others were away on the sandbank, and
-he amused himself by fishing till they returned.</p>
-
-<p>Jude showed no traces of the tears of the last night,
-and Satan was elated. He had been examining the
-wreck-wood, and his experienced eye backed the declaration
-of Jude. It was the foretop of a ship, right enough,
-and, a hundred to one, so he declared, the foretop of the
-<i>Nombre</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, wondering vaguely why he seemed so pleased
-over the find, considering the sand conditions, asked him
-the chances of raising her. Then said Satan, seeming
-to turn his gaze inward upon his awful and profound
-knowledge of the sea and its ways:</p>
-
-<p>“If you was to get all the dridgers from H’vana to
-Pensacola and dridged till your eyes bugged out o’ your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-head an’ your tongue hanged down to your heels, you
-wouldn’t clear her—siltin’—but she’s a sure enough mug
-trap.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, with that story and that chart an’ that old
-foretop, I could set half Havana diggin’ like dogs for a
-bone, to say nothin’ of private parties an’ syndikits an’
-such things—maybe I will, too, some day.”</p>
-
-<p>They put out after breakfast for the <i>Haliotis</i> and another
-load of “old junk.” Satan rowed back with it,
-leaving Jude and Ratcliffe on board,—Ratcliffe collecting
-things forward, and Jude grubbing about in the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p>Having collected the odds and ends in a heap, he
-turned his eyes to the <i>Sarah</i>. Satan, having tied up the
-dinghy, was busy transhipping his plunder. Then the
-beauty of the morning sea flooding into the lagoon, held
-him for a moment. He followed the gulls in their flight,
-noted the sudden break from emerald to ultramarine
-deepening to purple, and beyond the reefs the sudden
-glitter of a leaping fish. Then he remembered Jude down
-below.</p>
-
-<p>He came to the companionway and down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin was brilliant with sunlight, with water reflections
-through the open portholes playing on the ceiling
-and polished maple and venesta of the walls. Across
-a pile of truck and bunk bedding heaped on the table he
-caught a glimpse of the upper part of Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, fancying herself entirely alone, and yielding to
-some prompting or other, had picked up the despised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-go-ashore hat and put it on; she was looking at herself
-in the mirror fixed to the after bulkhead. She was looking
-at herself with her head now straight and now tilted
-slightly to one side; then the head turned, but she did
-not see Ratcliffe: her eyes were still fixed on the hat,
-she was looking at it sidewise.</p>
-
-<p>All her unconscious movements might have been those
-of a lady in a milliner’s shop trying on a hat in a critical
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>She had not heard him coming down the companionway,
-owing to the fact that he was in his bare feet, and
-she did not hear him go up again.</p>
-
-<p>On deck he took his seat on an old box upended close
-to the mainmast stump, and considered the thing he had
-just witnessed in a philosophical spirit.</p>
-
-<p>It was like seeing a chrysalis crack and a butterfly’s
-wing protruding.</p>
-
-<p>If Jude had not been admiring herself in that hat, then
-sight was a liar and its evidence worthless. But Jude
-was as honest as the day. She had greeted the thing
-with derision, brought it on deck to show as an object
-of mirth, and flung it down the skylight opening with contempt—yesterday
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>What had happened since then to make her consider
-the thing at all, let alone wear it before a looking-glass?</p>
-
-<p>Had she put it on in derision and to see what a guy
-she looked? Not a bit! She had made friends with
-that hat! Those few movements of the head spoke of
-consideration not derision, in a language old as the earliest
-feather headdress and more universal than Esperanto.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-Then he remembered last evening on the sandspit and
-her sudden passage from despondency to high spirits; he
-remembered her queer little laugh as she removed his
-hand from round her waist,—had that been the sound of
-the rift coming in the chrysalis casing?</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he almost yielded to the desire to go
-below and see if the butterfly had really arrived. Then
-he checked himself. There was time, plenty of time; besides,
-Satan was putting off again in the dinghy for another
-load.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, over this business, like a man in drink or a
-lunatic, had his hot fits and cold fits. A hot fit had suddenly
-come on him.</p>
-
-<p>The petrol-paraffin engine had begun suddenly to shout
-to him that it must be taken. A glorious idea, too, had
-evolved itself in his brain,—why not fit it to the <i>Sarah</i>;
-not there in the lagoon, of course, but in some port?
-All that was required would be some structural alterations
-and a shaft-hole in the quarter; he reckoned the
-fitting would cost under three hundred dollars.</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t want the thing, really,—masts and sails were
-good enough for his pottering-about work,—it was the
-passion of a woman for jewelry. The <i>Sarah</i> would be
-a nobbier boat with an auxiliary,—sea swank, purely, exhibiting
-the only apparent weak spot in his character.</p>
-
-<p>That spare Bergius propeller had begun revolving in
-his mind days ago,—“thrud—thrud—thrud! See me
-drive the <i>Sarah</i>, see me drive the <i>Sarah</i>!” He had examined
-the propeller already attached and found the
-blades all broken. The shaft was intact, and, beaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">264</a></span>
-the <i>Haliotis</i> stern on in that quiet lagoon, it would have
-been possible to fit on the spare one and take her off
-unmasted, as she was under her own motive power.</p>
-
-<p>He had a vague notion of the structure of engines and
-Yankee ingenuity enough to have driven her, but the
-fact of her anchor being down, as before stated, and the
-fact that he had already “torn the tripes” out of her
-plundered the sail room and the store room, removed
-brasswork that would have taken weeks to replace, and
-generally left her like a scooped cheese, prevented an
-idea of salvage.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the <i>Haliotis</i> into port he would have to declare
-her like a box of cigars,—a box of cigars belonging to
-another man and half the cigars gone.</p>
-
-<p>Coming over the rail, Ratcliffe saw the new light in
-his eye and wondered what it portended.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been thinkin’,” said Satan, taking his stand by the
-mast stump and surveying the heap of stuff collected by
-the other, “I’ve been thinkin’ it’s tomfoolery to leave that
-engine.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, brought up by the sound of the dinghy coming
-alongside, appeared at the saloon companionway. She
-wore no hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord!” said Ratcliffe, aghast. “You don’t
-mean to say—but it’s impossible. We haven’t the means
-to take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s enough of the mast left to rig a tackle to,”
-said Satan, “and that hatch leads right down to the
-engine place. The heavy fittin’s are easy raised from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-bed-plates, and they’re not too heavy to go in the dinghy.
-We can tow her with the c’lapsible.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what can you do with the thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fit her to the <i>Sarah</i>, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here, in the lagoon?” asked the horrified Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wouldn’t mind if I had the hands and the
-tools for the job,” replied Satan. “Naw, it’s beyont me.
-I’ll have to take her to a port to have it done,—not
-Havana, neither: there’s too many eyes in Havana and
-people that know my business. Vera Cruz is the place.
-I know a Spanish yard there’ll do the job.”</p>
-
-<p>“The year after next,” put in Jude, “supposing you do
-manage to get it aboard, you know what the dagoes are,
-and you’ll knock the inside of the <i>Sarah</i> to flinders. She
-won’t be the same boat with that old traction injin in
-her—I wish we’d never struck this cay!”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on the combing of the skylight and
-folded her hands. Ratcliffe had never seen her do that
-before. He stood torn between two things,—the desire
-to please Satan and the desire to please Jude. Pulling
-on the side of Jude there was also the sure foreknowledge
-of the heavy work that would be required. That did not
-frighten him; but it did seem to him that they had done
-enough and ought to be satisfied. It was like burglars
-going for the kitchen boiler after having removed the
-plate, furniture, and very bed-linen of a house.</p>
-
-<p>All the same he could not but admire Satan. Time
-was pressing, it was quite possible that a salvage boat
-might poke her nose into the lagoon at any moment.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">266</a></span>
-Satan knew this as well as he, yet it did not move him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a dago yard,” said Satan, evading the traction
-engine dig, “it’s French, and I’ve been wanting an
-auxiliary for years. Pap was with me, only he was
-awful slow over business, and here’s one for nix. I’m
-goin’ down to have a look at her.”</p>
-
-<p>He dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Jude sat brooding.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not a big engine,
-and he and I will be able to do it with a tackle. I’m not
-going to let him put you to work on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not bothering about that,” said Jude fatefully.
-“It’s when it’s fixed up I’m thinking of.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll make me drive the durned thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s to stop him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots of things—leave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>He was cut short by Satan’s voice calling him to come
-below. Down below he had to follow all sorts of details
-pointed out, details proving the desirability of the prize
-and the miraculous ease of its removal.</p>
-
-<p>Then they came on deck and put off for dinner. But
-Satan was never destined to lift that engine. Fate had
-fixed it to its bed-plates more securely than screws and
-nuts could hold it.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">267</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">CLEARY!</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Dinner</span> was over and Jude had run up on deck.
-Suddenly her voice came down through the open
-skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Below there! Cleary’s coming!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan jumped from his place like a man shot. Next
-moment he was on deck. Jude pointed and handed him
-the binoculars she had been using.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s them!” said Satan, after a long look. “Cuss
-the swabs!”</p>
-
-<p>He handed the glasses to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Away to the north two sails cut the sea-line. With
-the aid of the glasses two vessels leaped into view,—a
-topsail schooner and a smaller vessel of fore-and-aft
-rig. Even with the glasses he could not have been sure
-that these were the <i>Natchez</i> and the <i>Juan</i> like a pair
-of evil dogs hunting in company; but Satan was sure,
-so was Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re coming dead for the cay,” said Jude. Satan
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>He had been filling his pipe when the hail came, he
-lit it now, walked to the starboard rail to be alone, and
-stood with his eyes fixed on the <i>Haliotis</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">268</a></span>
-The position was as bad as could be. First of all,
-these ruffians would be sure to make him bail up even
-more than he had had out of them; secondly, they would
-have the laugh at him and post him as a mug all over
-Havana; thirdly, they would give him away about the
-<i>Haliotis</i>, if they discovered how he had plundered her.</p>
-
-<p>Having smoked for a moment in silence, he turned
-to his companions.</p>
-
-<p>It was a boast of Satan’s that he had never lost a
-spar, a fact partly due to luck, partly to his foreseeing
-eye; like a good general, he had plans for all eventualities.</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t be in the lagoon for a couple of hours,”
-said he, “with this wind and all. Come on aboard the
-old tub.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?” asked Jude. “Sink her
-at her moorings?”</p>
-
-<p>“No time; besides, they’d see her on the lagoon floor.
-It’s up anchor and let her drift on the sands.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord! Don’t stand jibberin’! I’ve got my plan.
-Into the dinghy with you!”</p>
-
-<p>They rowed over to the <i>Haliotis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The one thing that Satan had not coveted was, mercifully,
-the winch; it was of the type of the West Country
-winch, and not a spot on Pap’s patent, at least in
-Satan’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>They set to, got the anchor in, secured it, and rowed
-back to the <i>Sarah</i>. Then they watched the <i>Haliotis</i> drift.
-The tide was going out. She was close to the eastern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">269</a></span>
-arm of the spit, and that arm had a bead in it toward
-the narrowing entry.</p>
-
-<p>Satan reckoned she would take the sand a hundred
-yards or so from the entry, and he reckoned right.</p>
-
-<p>But they had no time to watch her. The deck of the
-<i>Sarah</i> was lumbered with stuff that had to be stowed out
-of sight. It took an hour before everything was shipshape
-and snug, and by that time the oncomers were
-close in, their sails big bellied with the wind, beating
-up for the entrance.</p>
-
-<p>They came through, the <i>Juan</i> leading, the <i>Natchez</i>
-some two cable lengths behind; then, with canvas threshing
-and the gulls yelling round them, they dropped their
-anchors, the <i>Juan</i> to starboard of the <i>Sarah</i> and the
-<i>Natchez</i> farther up the lagoon. Ratcliffe had expected
-demonstrations of hostility: there were none.</p>
-
-<p>They could see Sellers directing the fellows forward,
-and they could make out Cleary on the deck of the
-<i>Natchez</i>. Then they saw Sellers drop below, and
-through the binoculars they could see Cleary as though
-he were only a few yards off,—he was smoking and
-giving orders to the hands. Then he came and spat over
-the rail and stood looking toward the <i>Sarah</i> with his eyes
-shaded; having finished this inspection, he too dropped
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d a sight sooner they’d shook their fists at us,” said
-Satan. “They know they’ve got us, sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Sellers reappeared on the deck, and the <i>Juan</i>
-dropped a boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is,” said Jude, “and whether he’s got us or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">270</a></span>
-whether he hasn’t, he ain’t coming aboard this ship!”</p>
-
-<p>She ran forward and fetched the mop from the hole
-where it was stowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Let up!” said Satan. “I don’t want no fightin’: I
-tell you, I’ve got a plan; I don’t want no mops in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He ain’t coming aboard,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat of the <i>Juan</i> came alongside, Sellers, in
-the sternsheets, raised his hand in a lordly fashion and
-slightly, as befitted a superior taking notice of an inferior.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers as the bow oar hooked
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself!” replied Satan. “What you doin’
-down here away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell you when I get aboard,” said Sellers. “Why,
-there’s the kid! Hullo, Kid!”</p>
-
-<p>“Claws off!” cried Jude. “You try to come aboard
-and I’ll land you with this mop! You can talk from
-the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers sat down again in the sternsheets.</p>
-
-<p>“She won’t let you aboard,” said Satan, speaking as
-though Jude were not present. “You shouldn’t have
-sassed her the way you did over there at Lone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I beg your pardon,” said Sellers. “I’m
-trooly sorry to have trod on a female’s sussuptibilities;
-but what I’m wishin’ to say is this, and it’s as easy said
-from here as on deck: You’ve got to come aboard the
-<i>Juan</i>, you and that thousand dollars you’ve had from
-Cark, to say nothin’ of the coin you’ve had from Cleary,
-an’ be tried by C’t Martial, an’ take your sentence. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">271</a></span>
-you don’t, I’ll board you, me and Cleary, an’ go through
-your ship, an’ fling the lot of you in the lagoon—d’you
-take me? I’m not funnin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come,” said Satan. “I want to have a talk with
-Cark anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he wants to have a talk with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right. Off you go, and I’ll follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Swab!” said Jude, “are you going to pay them that
-thousand dollars back? I’d sooner chuck it in the lagoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d pay a thousand dollars to see Cark done in the
-eye,” replied Satan. “Where’s the damage? I’ve hived
-more than two thousand dollars’ worth of stuff off that
-blistered derelic’. You leave them cusses to me.”</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">272</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE FIGHT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> they watched Sellers pulling back they saw the
-<i>Juan</i> drop a boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He put the glass to his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s coming off. He’s in the sternsheets, him and
-his patch—what’s up now?”</p>
-
-<p>The two boats approached one another, and then hung
-together, evidently in consultation. Then the oars took
-the water and they approached the <i>Sarah</i>, Sellers leading.
-Satan, who had found a piece of chewing gum in
-his pocket, put it into his mouth and began to chew,
-leisurely, like a cow on her cud, while he watched the
-approaching boats.</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” shouted Satan when they were in
-speaking distance.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark says you’re to come aboard right now,” replied
-Sellers. “You’ve played him one trick, and he don’t
-want you to play him another.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan spat into the water alongside and leaned comfortably
-on the rail. Carquinez was as close to the <i>Sarah</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">273</a></span>
-as Sellers, yet he spoke no word, leaving his deputy to
-do the talking, and contenting himself with making occasional
-birdlike noises.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, ruffled, for all his appearances of
-calm, “you can tell him I’ll come when I want to, and
-that won’t be before tomorrow morning, for his damn
-cheek! Ahoy there, Cark! Ain’t you got a tongue in
-your head?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s like a blessed canary bird,” cut in Jude. “Hi,
-there, Sellers! what you done with the cage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that your ultermatum?” demanded Sellers, ignoring
-Jude and addressing Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“My which matum?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that all you gotta say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, out with it!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had never seen Satan “het up” till now, as,
-straightening himself and gripping the rail, he let out:</p>
-
-<p>“Gotta say? Why, if I’m sayin’ from now to the
-end o’ next week, I couldn’t say the beginnin’ of my
-opinion of you, right from the truck of Cleary’s old cod
-boat to the keel o’ that old disgrace you ripped of her
-guts when she was a yacht—you an’ your crew of cockroaches
-an’ dagoes—right from the soles of Cleary’s flat
-feet to the end of your bottle nose—you and your ultermatum!</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all. I haven’t time to be wastin’ on you.
-I’ll come if I have a mind to and when I want, without
-waitin’ for your orders—now scatter yourselves!”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-He gave an order to the boat’s crew, and the boat
-turned, and, followed by Carquinez, made back to the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, his hand on the rail, watched them, still
-chewing.</p>
-
-<p>Not a word spoke he, the bulge in his cheek steadfast
-against the skyline and his eyes fixed on the boats.</p>
-
-<p>Then he suddenly turned.</p>
-
-<p>“Them thugs will try to board us now,” said Satan.
-“We’ve gotta fight. There’s Cleary puttin’ off, and we’ll
-have the whole Noah’s ark on us in two ticks. We’ve
-gotta get the ammunition ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are guns down below,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Guns!” said Satan. “God bless you, we don’t want
-no guns! Cark’s too frightened of the law to let any
-of his men use knives or pistols. Jude, where’s that
-tub of stinkin’ bait—you haven’t hove it over, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cart it along. Rat; fetch up them five bottles of
-whisky,—they’re better’n bumshells,—and there’s an old
-fryin’ pan in the galley with a hole in it. Fetch it with
-the rest. There’s nothin’ like a fryin’ pan for beltin’
-people—you can’t miss. What you gettin’ at Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“The mop,” said Jude. “I don’t want nothing better
-for sweepin’ up rubbish!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe; but they’ll fight better’n you think.
-Lord! if I only had a roll of barb wire! Here they
-come! Hurry up, Rat!”</p>
-
-<p>The three boats, Sellers and Cleary leading, were in
-motion and making for the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-“We’ve only two to reckon with,” said Satan, as Ratcliffe
-arrived, Jude helping him up with the ammunition.
-“Cark won’t join in: he’s too frightened of his
-skin. Now then, ready with your weapons!”</p>
-
-<p>He was right. Cark’s boat, half a cable length away,
-backed water while the redoubtable Cleary and Sellers
-rushed like hawks on the prey, aiming to board the
-<i>Sarah</i> to starboard, Cleary forward, Sellers aft.</p>
-
-<p>But the men at the oars were not used to this sort
-of work. In their enthusiasm and despite the curses of
-their captains, they held on too long, nearly smashed
-the boat’s bows against the side of the <i>Sarah</i>, and fell
-into wild confusion trying to get their oars in under
-the bombardment from the deck. Over the clamor of
-the gulls rose the shrill curses and shouts of the dagoes,
-the whooping of Satan, the smashing of bottles, while
-over all the perfume of bad fish and poisonous whisky
-rose like the fume of the fight; but the attackers held,
-held by teeth and claws and boathooks, while the wily
-Carquinez, on the fringe of the fight, voiceful for once,
-standing up and clutching his coat together, shouted directions—unheeded
-as unheard.</p>
-
-<p>Twice Sellers was almost on board, and twice Jude’s
-mop sent him head over heels back; but now Cleary had
-made good forward, backed by two of his crew, and
-while Jude, rushing to Ratcliffe’s aid, drove him back
-with the mop in the pit of his stomach, Sellers, eyes
-shut, head down, and fighting Satan like a mad bull,
-gained the deck, gripped Satan, slipped, fell, and rolled
-with him in the scuppers. Three dagoes had followed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">276</a></span>
-Sellers and flung themselves like dogs on the stragglers;
-but now Jude and Ratcliffe, free for a moment, flung
-themselves on the dagoes, broke the fight, freed Satan,
-and sent the whole lot bundling over, Sellers and all—only
-to find that Cleary had made good again, and after
-Cleary half his boat’s crew.</p>
-
-<p>Led by Satan, who had seized the frying pan, the defenders
-hurled themselves on Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was right, you can’t miss with a frying pan.
-Cleary went down before it. Ratcliffe, using only his
-fists, had floored the biggest of the dagoes, and the rest
-were crowding back helter skelter, when a shout from
-Sellers, who had regained the deck, brought the battle
-to a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop fightin’, you damn fools!” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Look!” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The port side of the <i>Sarah</i> was turned to the entrance
-of the lagoon, and into the lagoon was gliding a long,
-lean destroyer, shearing the blue-green water from her
-fore foot.</p>
-
-<p>Being to starboard, the attackers had not seen her,
-and the men on deck had been too busy.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez alone had sighted her. The effect was
-magical. Peace fell like a suddenly dropped dish-cover,
-and over the rail came Carquinez and half a dozen more
-Spaniards from the boats.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we’re done!” said Sellers. “She’s a Britisher,
-and this damn sandbank’s British and we’ll be had to
-the Bahamas Courts o’ Inquiry and Lord knows what
-all. Referred to Havana for inquiries. They’ve seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-us at it, no use in denyin’ it. Look at them cusses’ bloody
-noses and Cleary flattened out. Kick him alive, some
-of you fools! Here they come!”</p>
-
-<p>The destroyer had cast anchor and dropped a boat.
-With the terrible precision of a hawk or a warship
-closing on its prey, she was on to the <i>Sarah</i>. A blue
-and gold man held the yoke lines, and the oars of the
-rowers rowed like one.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at that image on the sternsheets,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave him to me,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your game?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head! Here he is!”</p>
-
-<p>The boat came alongside. The oars rising like one,
-fell with a crash, the bow oar hooked on, and over the
-rail came a sublieutenant of the British Navy, smooth
-of face and neat as though just taken from a bandbox.</p>
-
-<p>“What the devil are you fellows up to, fighting here?”
-asked the sublieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Satan broke into a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re movie men,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Movin’ pictures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—cinematograph?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, fired with admiration for this Satanic move,
-joined in laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you think we were fighting, really? Well, that’s
-funny. What’s the name of your ship?”</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Albatross</i>,” replied the sublieutenant, completely
-and roundly taken in. “You’re English, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278">278</a></span>
-“Yes, I’m English. Joined the show some time ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that hooker on the sand over there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s part of our show. Boat supposed to have
-been wrecked—these chaps are pirates.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jolly good make-up!” said the other, surveying the
-pirates and taking in Cark, also Cleary, who, resuscitated
-in time, was leaning over the rail chewing and
-spitting into the water.</p>
-
-<p>The awful question, “Where’s your camera?” never
-came. If it had, Satan would no doubt have met it;
-but the sublieutenant was new to this sort of business
-and not on the hunt for evidence. The thing was palpable
-and plain. No complaint came from the attacked,
-and attacked and attackers were all seemingly friends.
-The words “cinematograph company” covered the situation
-completely.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a few words of information about the
-<i>Albatross</i>. She had put in for a small repair and would
-be off again tomorrow morning. Then he dropped into
-his boat and the incident was closed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you cusses,” said Satan, “see where you have
-landed yourselves! Where’d you have been only for
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t deny you slipped the hood over that
-Britisher pretty smart,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned his head and looked at Sellers. “<em>You</em>
-don’t deny! Why, you bloody barnacle scraper, I told
-you to hold off from the business! Satan, I forgive
-you that clap on the head. Lord love me! I’ll never
-carry a derringer again. Give me a fryin’ pan, that’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279">279</a></span>
-the weppin; you can’t dodge it no more than you can
-dodge a thunderstorm.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “fryin’ pan back the lot of you,
-and I’ll be on board the <i>Juan</i> inside half an hour and
-settle my business with you. If Cark had kept his mouth
-shut instead of givin’ me orders, we’d have finished it
-by now and no heads broke.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll be waiting for you,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>They tumbled into the boats and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“They never drew a knife,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Cark took their knives from them,” said Satan.
-“He didn’t want no blood spillin’ and trouble,—too much
-afraid of the law.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, who had collapsed sitting-wise on the deck, began
-to laugh hysterically.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280">280</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">“I’LL TAK!”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Ten</span> minutes later Satan and Ratcliffe boarded the
-<i>Juan</i>. Cleary was already on board, down in the
-cabin with the others; Cark and a bottle of gin were
-presiding at one end of the table. Satan, with a nod
-to the company, came to the table and took his seat;
-motioning Ratcliffe to take the seat opposite to him.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a meeting of a board of directors, and
-the table just held the six comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>What followed struck the unaccustomed Ratcliffe with
-astonishment,—the amiability of it,—it might have been
-a card party, with Satan the loser—momentarily.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, gentlemen,” said Satan, “what’s to pay?”</p>
-
-<p>There were extra glasses on the table and a box of
-cigars. The cigars were pushed along by Sellers as he
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s Cark’s loss of time,” said Sellers, “not to
-say mine and Cleary’s. We tried for you round Rum
-Cay when you gave us the slip, and then there was the
-run down here. A thousand dollars to us that means,
-and five hundred to Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Makin’ it two thousand five hundred and forty,” said
-Satan. “I’m agreeable—and the derelic’ is mine.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281">281</a></span>
-“Which derelic’?” asked Sellers innocently.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, absolutely disdaining to reply, lit a cigar.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s worth all ten thousand dollars,” said he, “and
-what’s the salvage on that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Y’mean that old dismasted catboat stuck on the sand
-there?” said Cleary. “Not worth five—b’sides she’s our
-meat.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan dropped Sellers and turned to Carquinez.
-“You’ll maybe explain,” said he. “You know the rights
-of the law. If you try to collar that hooker, I’ll come
-in with first claim, and here’s a gentleman will back me
-in law expenses. You know him,—Mr. Ratcliffe, Holt
-&amp; Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll back you,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“And it seems to me law is not your lay, Cark,” went
-on Satan. “We came in here yesterday and boarded
-and claimed that hooker, and I was fixing the tackle
-for towing when you blew along. The thing’s as
-clear as paint. She’s ours for salvage, and you’re not
-in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” began Sellers violently—then he closed
-up: Cark had given him a kick under the table. Then
-there was silence for a moment, during which these two
-scoundrels seemed to brood together telepathically.</p>
-
-<p>Then Cark spoke, addressing Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take the air on deck for wan moment with
-your friend?” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later they were called down again.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said Sellers, acting as spokesman for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282">282</a></span>
-others, “we don’t want to bear hard on you, but we’ve
-been at a big loss over this business.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who let you in for it?” asked Satan. “Haven’t
-you been chasin’ me since last fall over the <i>Nombre</i>?
-Was it my fault she weren’t there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, anyhow we’re losers. But I’m coming to the
-derelic’. You’ll never be able to do the tow with the
-<i>Sarah</i>—why, the <i>Sarah</i> ain’t bigger than her, and you’re
-underhanded anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what I propose is this,” said Sellers. “We’ll
-drop claims for the run down here and only ask a thousand
-and forty of you, and you drop claims on the
-derelic’.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you don’t know she’s got an auxiliary in her
-worth four thousand dollars if it’s worth a cent. She’s
-broke her propeller, but she’s got a spare one on board,
-and if I knew anythin’ of injins I’d drive her back on
-her own power. No, I sticks to the derelic’ if that’s
-the best you can offer and here’s your dollars—though
-I’ll have to give you my check for the extra money.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced a bundle; then, with his hand on it:</p>
-
-<p>“If you choose to take the derelic’ for what she’s worth
-and call it quits. I’ll trade, one or the other. I’m not
-set on that tow. But there you are; you know the
-chances.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tak!” suddenly broke in Carquinez, and the business
-was ended.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283">283</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285">285</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_III"></a><span class="larger">PART III</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE VANISHED LIGHT</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A week</span> later, toward sundown, the <i>Sarah</i> came up
-the half-mile channel and dropped her hook in
-Havana Harbor close to the old anchorage of the <i>Maine</i>.
-A Royal Mail boat passing out gave her the kick of its
-wash as she settled down to her moorings, a customs
-boat dropped alongside, and the customs men, hailing
-Satan as a friend and brother, came aboard and transacted
-business with him in the cabin. The wind blew
-warm, bringing scents and sounds across the vast harbor,
-fluttering the flags of the shipping, and Ratcliffe,
-standing at the rail, dazzled by the brilliance of the
-scene before him, knew that his cruise was over.</p>
-
-<p>It was like coming to the end of a book,—a volume
-suddenly handed to him by Fate to read, and of which
-he was condemned to write the sequel.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered the morning at Palm Island when
-he boarded the <i>Sarah</i> first, and the picture was still fresh
-in his mind of the <i>Haliotis</i> as they had left her in the
-lagoon at Cormorant, Sellers and Cleary and their men
-swarming about her and tinkering her up. They intended
-to ship the spare propeller and bring her along<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286">286</a></span>
-under her own motive power to the nearest port, Nassau
-in the Bahamas.</p>
-
-<p>They had been so busy with the engines and the hull
-that they had never noticed how completely she had
-been stripped. They were unconscious of the fact that
-she had been left with her anchor down—unfortunates!
-He could still see them like ants laboring in the sun, at
-the task set to them by the grimly humorous Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had won the game they had forced on him,
-holding, as he did, a thousand and forty dollars, the
-“tripes” of the <i>Haliotis</i>, and the secret of the mug trap,
-to be disposed of, perhaps, later on for a consideration.
-Satan would, no doubt, set other unfortunates digging
-for the <i>Nombre</i> just as he had set Cleary and Sellers
-tinkering and towing at the <i>Haliotis</i>, just as he had held
-up freighters for a bunch of bananas, just as he had
-made Thelusson and his crew careen and scrape the
-<i>Sarah</i>, just as he had made Ratcliffe an accomplice in
-his plans and a handy man to help him in his works;
-yet the funny thing about the scamp was the fact that
-he was absolutely dependable, when not dealing with
-companies or governments or derelicts. Ratcliffe would
-have trusted him with his last penny.</p>
-
-<p>Dependable if you took hold of him by his handle and
-not by his cutting edge! Trustable if you trusted him!</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude came up in her harbor rig; that is to say,
-boots and a coat.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s clacking away with the customs an’ the port
-doctor man,” said Jude. “You can’t see across the cabin<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287">287</a></span>
-with the smoke, and I had to change my rig in the
-galley.”</p>
-
-<p>“You going ashore?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Jude, “Satan’s going. I’ve got to keep
-ship. You going with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>Appeared Satan, followed by the port men, who tumbled
-into the boat and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ ashore?” asked Satan. “Well, I’ll row you to
-the wharf after I’ve had a bite of supper. Jude’ll bring
-the boat back, and we can get a shore boat off for half
-a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, just as the electrics were springing
-alive and the anchor lights of the shipping marking the
-dusk blue sky, they started. They stood on the wharf
-steps for a moment watching Jude row off, then they
-turned to the town.</p>
-
-<p>Havana smells different from any other seaport. She
-smells of rum and garlic and dirt and cigars and the
-earth of Cuba, which is different from the earth anywhere
-else. The harbor and the town exchange bouquets;
-the negroes help; Spanish cigarettes, Florida water
-and decaying vegetables lend a hand. Satan led the
-way. He knew the place as well as the inside of his
-pocket, and as he trudged along beside Ratcliffe under
-the electrics across plazas, or through short-cut cut-throat-looking
-byways, he pointed out the notable features
-of the place,—Dutch Pete’s, the Alvarez factory,
-the great opera house, the Calle Commacio, the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288">288</a></span>
-They passed Florion’s with its marble tables, drinkers,
-and domino players, and Satan suddenly hove to.</p>
-
-<p>“Where d’you want to go now?” said Satan. “D’you
-want drinks?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t want drinks,” said Ratcliffe. “Come over
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>A blazing cinema palace shone across the way, and
-they entered, Ratcliffe paying.</p>
-
-<p>The place was in black darkness. A cowboy shooting
-up a bar was on the screen, and a man with an electric
-torch led them to their seats.</p>
-
-<p>Then they sat watching the pictures, Satan criticizing
-the actors sometimes, and in a loud voice and not always
-favorably. The cowboy shot himself off the screen, the
-lights flared up for half a minute, went out, and the
-pictures resumed.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt a nudge, and in the darkness Satan’s
-voice, muted now, came in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” whispered Satan, “did you see him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“The man that dropped you at Pa’m Island.”</p>
-
-<p>“Skelton!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him. He’s sittin’ right a front of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure as sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton here! But where, then, was the <i>Dryad</i>? Had
-he wrecked her, or what?</p>
-
-<p>The words of Satan seemed to alter everything, from
-the music to the picture of John Bunny on the screen.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness, filled with native Havana scents, became<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289">289</a></span>
-tinged with the atmosphere of British Respectability.
-Skelton at the pictures! Why, he ought to have been
-at the opera or one of the theaters or walking on the
-<i>alameda</i> digesting his dinner and thinking of Tariff
-Reform or Anglicanism. It seemed impossible; yet
-when the light flared up again there was Skelton, sure
-enough, sitting with another man, and now he was rising,
-evidently tired of the show, and passing out, followed
-by his friend, grave as though he had been attending
-his mother’s funeral instead of the marriage of John
-Bunny to Flora Finch in a Pullman car with negro accompaniments.</p>
-
-<p>He wore evening clothes, covered by a light overcoat.
-Ratcliffe rose and, followed by Satan, pursued him,
-touching him on the shoulder outside and in the full
-blaze of the lamps.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” said Skelton. “Ratcliffe!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just got in,” said Ratcliffe. “Had a ripping time.
-Where’s the <i>Dryad</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Up at the wharf, coaling,” replied Skelton, absorbing
-Ratcliffe’s rough and ready garb, the cloth cap he was
-wearing, and Satan. “I’m staying at the Matanzas; but
-I go aboard tomorrow morning, and we’re off in the
-evening. What have you been doing with yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, having no end of fun. We found an old treasure
-ship and blew her up and found she was full of
-skulls and bones. You know Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, who had ignored Satan, acknowledged his existence
-by a little nod.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s your friend?” asked Ratcliffe, glancing at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290">290</a></span>
-Skelton’s companion, who had removed himself a few
-paces.</p>
-
-<p>“Ponsonby—diplomatic service. See here, come on
-board to lunch tomorrow—one-fifteen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have some gear of yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right. I’ll see about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Night.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Night.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went.</p>
-
-<p>They had seen enough of the pictures, and having no
-inclination for cafés or taverns or gambling shops they
-made back toward the wharves, Satan walking in profound
-silence, Ratcliffe thinking.</p>
-
-<p>The whole evening he had been followed by a miserable
-sort of half-depression. It had attached itself
-to him first on the deck of the <i>Sarah</i>, born of his return
-to civilization; it had managed to decolorize the past
-few weeks and demagnetize Jude.</p>
-
-<p>His conscious mind had never quite gauged the hold
-that Jude had managed to get upon him, and this subconscious
-devil, rising at the touch of civilization, like
-a gas bubble from his conventional past, had burst, with
-spoiling effect, robbing the <i>Sarah</i> of her romance and
-sea-charm and the past few weeks of their brightness.
-Jude had dimmed with everything else, become part and
-parcel of what seemed an illusion.</p>
-
-<p>It was while sitting at the pictures, in black darkness,
-with knowledge of Skelton’s presence, that the atmosphere
-began to clear, the waves to beat again on Cormorant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291">291</a></span>
-Cay, the gulls to fly and call—and Jude come
-back to life.</p>
-
-<p>He heard again that queer little laugh of hers as she
-removed his hand. He felt again the warm body that
-had rested confidingly against him away there on the
-sandspit.</p>
-
-<p>And then she was out on the black harbor alone in
-the <i>Sarah</i>, while he and Satan were watching the pictures!
-Suppose some lumbering sailing craft being
-towed to her moorings or some incoming mailboat were
-to smash into the <i>Sarah</i>—and they were to row off and
-find nothing—no Jude?</p>
-
-<p>The thought almost made him rise from his seat to
-leave the place. But he could not explain to Satan;
-so he sat on till the lights flared out. And all the time,
-mocking the pictures on the screen, came pictures of
-Jude, all sunlit, real, fresh as herself!</p>
-
-<p>Then, as they pursued their way to the wharf after
-leaving Skelton, the impatience increased; the darkness
-of the night, the blaze of the town, the gay life of the
-streets, and the revelry of the cafés seemed sinister and
-banded in a conspiracy against him and the lonely little
-figure of Jude. The indifference of Skelton, the way
-he had gone hurriedly off, the way he had ignored
-Satan, were part of the business, blended with the blazing
-cafés, the moving crowd of Chinks, colored men, Spaniards,
-and Americans, the brilliance and gaiety without
-heart, that seemed like a barrier between him and the
-humble little <i>Sarah</i> and Jude away out there in the darkness
-alone—waiting for him! It came to him that Jude<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292">292</a></span>
-was the one sole thing he wanted in the cruel, odd,
-electric-lit world—and he had left her!</p>
-
-<p>They passed through narrow streets like the streets in
-an evil dream and blazing streets hideous with noise.
-Then at last they reached the wharf with its amber
-lights spilling on the black waving water. Satan hired
-a boat, and they put off, two dagoes rowing and Satan
-at the yoke lines.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i> was anchored a mile out, and the vast
-three-mile harbor, vague in the starlight and circled by
-the hills, seemed to Ratcliffe more immense than when
-seen by daylight.</p>
-
-<p>Lights, lights everywhere,—scattered lights of shipping,
-some near, some far away, gem-crusted bulks that
-were great liners at anchor, songs and voices, and the
-creak of the oars in the rowlocks! Then a sudden green,
-red, and white light ahead and a fussy and furious little
-tug that nearly ran them down and left them rocking
-in her wash.</p>
-
-<p>“Scowbankers!” said Satan. Then: “I can’t make
-out the light of the <i>Sarah</i>, nohow.”</p>
-
-<p>A clutch came to Ratcliffe’s heart, the clutch of something
-cold and malign which had seemed following him
-ever since Skelton’s presence had made itself felt like
-an evil omen.</p>
-
-<p>They were so far out now that the sounds of the
-town and wharves had died to nothing; but still the
-creak of the oars in the rowlocks kept on. Then came
-Satan’s voice:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293">293</a></span>
-“That’s her, over beyond them three lights on the
-starboard bow.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe breathed again, and his heart leaped in him
-as he picked out the light.</p>
-
-<p>Satan altered their course.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“You gave me the devil of a fright.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she might have been run down by some
-ship coming in—or something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she’s well out of the track,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“All the same, I didn’t feel easy.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they hung silent, Ratcliffe’s eyes on the light and
-his hand in his pocket feeling for dollars to pay the
-boatmen.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s there to pay?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“A dollar, seeing there’s two of them,” replied Satan.
-“<i>Sarah</i> ahoy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ahoy!” came Jude’s voice, and a lantern swung over
-the side.</p>
-
-<p>Satan bundled on board, and Ratcliffe crammed five
-dollars into the hand of the stern oar; then he followed,
-and the fellows pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Took it without fightin’!” said Satan. “Lord’s sake,
-what’s come to them?” Then he bundled below to make
-some coffee.</p>
-
-<p>Jude snuffed the lantern out.</p>
-
-<p>She was moving away from the side and away from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-Ratcliffe, when he caught hold of her round the body.
-She did not resist him. He held her close to his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Jude, with a sudden catch in her
-breath and speaking in a whisper. “Whacha want?”</p>
-
-<p>Then his lips met hers, full.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later Satan, making his coffee over the
-Primus stove of the <i>Haliotis</i>, heard a struggling sound,
-mixed with stifled laughter, and Ratcliffe appeared at
-the cabin door. He was dragging Jude in; she was half-resisting,
-and her face was hid in the crook of her arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan,” said Ratcliffe, “I’m going to marry Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“God help you!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<hr>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295">295</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI<br>
-
-<span class="subhead">THE WEDDING PRESENT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“I’m</span> going to marry Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>The fantastic fact embodied in those words appeared
-to him folly only next day at one o’clock, with
-the sky to northward breathing hot on Havana Harbor
-like the mouth of a blue oven, flags fluttering to the
-wind, the drum and fife band of an American training
-ship coming over the water, and the <i>Dryad</i> being towed
-to her moorings half a mile shoreward.</p>
-
-<p>The blushing bride-to-be of last night, hiding her nose
-on Ratcliffe’s shoulder, as they sat together on the couch
-before Satan, while he taunted her with the fact that
-now she’d have to get into skirts, had turned back into
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She was busy getting the dinghy ready to row her
-fiancé off to the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She was over the side in her, busy and humming a
-tune as she worked, baling out water, fixing the cushions,
-and so on, while Satan watched her in a brooding manner
-over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>A ghastly fear was working in the heart of Satan,
-the fear that Skelton might want the dinghy returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, mind you,” said Satan, “and bring the boat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296">296</a></span>
-back. I’d sooner lose me head than that boat. If you
-come back without her, I’ll chuck you in the harbor!
-I’m talking straight.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, who had just come on deck dressed for the
-occasion, came to the rail. Jude looked up at him and
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen her laughing before, he had seen her
-surly, meditative, brooding, weeping, flushed with anger,
-grumbling; but he had never seen her with a look like
-this,—happy.</p>
-
-<p>Since last night something had come into her eyes that
-made her, when her eyes met his, beautiful. It was as
-though a lamp had been suddenly lit inside her, and
-the magical thing was the knowledge that he himself was
-the lamplighter.</p>
-
-<p>He had created this new something that spoke to him
-right out, right to his heart, right to his soul!</p>
-
-<p>He got into the dinghy, nodded to Satan, and they
-started, Jude at the sculls, her trousers rolled half-way
-up to the knees and her old panama on the back of her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“Go slow,” said he, “there’s lots of time.” Then,
-when they were out of hearing and he was alone with
-her at last:</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember yesterday you asked me if I was
-going away, now the anchor was down?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you have done if I had?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297">297</a></span>
-“I’d a drowned myself in the harbor,” said Jude without
-a moment’s hesitation. “What’s the good of asking?”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you begin to care for me a bit?”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember the sandspit?” asked Jude. “I dunno—maybe
-it was beyond then—remember the cache?”</p>
-
-<p>“When I chased you round the tree and—”</p>
-
-<p>Jude screwed up her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“You gave me an awful bang on the head.”</p>
-
-<p>“You frightened the gizzard out of me,” said Jude,
-“and I wasn’t the same after—that night.”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember, I heard you telling Satan that hants
-were chasing you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were the hants.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you didn’t care for me then. Remember you
-said derricks were only good for hoisting fools off ships
-with.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it was a sort of caring turned inside out,”
-said Jude. She turned her head to see if they were making
-for the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re letting her off her course,” said she, “unless
-you’re making for that brig.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d just as soon make for her as anywhere else,”
-said he, altering the course, “unless it was the sandspit—Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Imagine if we were alone on the sandspit, you and I,
-just as we were that day, instead of in this rotten old
-harbor—let’s go there!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willing.”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298">298</a></span>
-“Soon’s you like.”</p>
-
-<p>“We can get a tent and grub, and Satan can take us
-there and come back for us. Damn! here’s the <i>Dryad</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The first officer of the <i>Dryad</i> was leaning over the rail
-watching them. The stage was down, and Jude brought
-the dinghy alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Then on the stage he watched her rowing off. He
-waved his hand to her, and she replied.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when he reached the deck, he found Skelton
-also at the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“’Morning,” said Ratcliffe. “That’s Satan’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” asked Skelton. “That—er—person in the
-boat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But you saw her on deck down at Palm Island,
-didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten,” said Skelton, dismissing the subject.</p>
-
-<p>There were no guests. Ponsonby was to have come,
-but he was indisposed; yet the luncheon was just as
-formal an affair as though a dozen had been present
-instead of two.</p>
-
-<p>Half-way through the meal, however, Ratcliffe’s spirits
-began to brighten under the influence of Perrier Jouet
-and the harlequin thought that began to dance in his
-head, “I am going for a honeymoon to the sandspit
-with Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed occasionally at nothing in particular, and
-Skelton thought his manner strange, heady, queer, and
-began to thank his stars that Ponsonby was indisposed.
-He noticed also that Ratcliffe’s hands, despite scrubbing,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299">299</a></span>
-bore the evidence of hard work not dissociated with tar.
-There was also something queer about his hair.</p>
-
-<p>There was! Satan had barbarized it down at Cormorant
-with the pair of scissors he used on Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, in asking Ratcliffe on board to luncheon, had
-considered himself a most forgiving individual. Leaving
-aside their little quarrel at Palm Island, remained
-the fact that Ratcliffe had left his ship, deserted him for
-the company of those Yankee “scowbankers,” and, to
-make matters worse, Ratcliffe seemed to have enjoyed
-the exchange.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in closer company with the delinquent, he was
-beginning to regret his forgiveness. “The man had deteriorated!”</p>
-
-<p>As a result of this impression his manner had stiffened;
-he felt irritated and bored.</p>
-
-<p>The steward had withdrawn, having placed the dessert
-on the table, and Skelton was in the act of carving a
-pineapple in the only way a pineapple ought to be carved,—that
-is to say by tearing it into pieces with two forks,—when
-Ratcliffe, who had been staring at the fruit as
-though hypnotized, suddenly broke into a chuckle of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>The pineapple, connecting itself, maybe, with canned
-pineapples robbed from the store room of the <i>Haliotis</i>,
-had suddenly brought up the vision of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in a new guise—Satan as a matchmaker!</p>
-
-<p>All sorts of things, some almost half-forgotten, rushed
-together to clothe Satan in this new garment. He remembered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300">300</a></span>
-Satan’s solicitude for Jude’s future, Satan’s
-complacency when he and Jude had gone off to the sandspit
-together, his conversations about Jude, the complete
-absence of surprise with which he had taken the business
-of last night,—a hundred things, and all pointing
-in the same direction and to the fact that Satan had
-wished the business, just as he had wished the dinghy
-away from Skelton, just as he had wished Ratcliffe on
-board of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He, Ratcliffe, was part of the sea-pickings of this
-gipsy, part and parcel with bunches of bananas, pots
-of paint, sailcloth, mainsheet buffers, cringles, and so
-on! He was annexed to fit Jude just as the mast winch
-of the <i>Haliotis</i> was annexed to fit the <i>Sarah</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Jude herself had declared that Satan had brought him
-on board because he “wanted him.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton paused in his operation on the pineapple and
-stared at the other.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Ratcliffe, “but something
-has just struck me so horribly funny I couldn’t help
-laughing—anyhow, the joke is against myself. Look
-here, Skelton, I want to tell you something—I’m—m—going
-to marry a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed—but what is there horribly funny about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing—it’s not that, it’s something else; but let’s
-start with that. I’m going to marry that girl who rowed
-me over here today, Satan’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton laid down his fork. All his starch had vanished.
-Surprised out of his life, he seemed suddenly to
-grow younger and more natural looking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301">301</a></span>
-“Good God!” said Skelton, staring at the other. “You
-don’t mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“I do. I don’t know why I am telling you, but there
-it is. You can’t understand in the least—couldn’t hope
-to make you.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Skelton with his starch off and in an emergency
-was a sound man, with a heart as good as any ordinary
-mortal’s.</p>
-
-<p>He had an eye that no little detail ever escaped. He
-had seen Jude at Palm Island, he had heard her speak,
-he had seen her half an hour ago, and Ratcliffe’s manner
-left him in no doubt as to his absolute earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>The man was about to commit suicide, social suicide.
-He had seen men do the same thing often in different
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>He pushed the pineapple away and rose from the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“Come into the smoke room,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>In the smoke room he rang for coffee. Not a word
-about Jude. Dead silence.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the coffee was brought and the door closed,
-he turned to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe, you can’t do this thing. I know. Let me
-speak for a moment. You are your own master, free
-to do as you choose; but I must speak. I like you.
-Our temperaments are dead different, and we don’t make
-good companions; but you have many sterling qualities,
-and I don’t want to see you come a mucker. You can
-do a thing like this in two minutes; but two hundred
-years won’t get you out of it, once it’s done. (Take<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302">302</a></span>
-sugar in your coffee? Yes, I remember.) See here!
-I had a young brother once who was going to do just
-the same,—absolutely ruin himself. I managed to stop
-it, saved his future and his name.”</p>
-
-<p>He picked a cigar out of a box and, coming to a dead
-stop in his remarks, cut the end off.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow,” said Ratcliffe, before he could continue,
-“I know absolutely and exactly how you feel on
-the subject and what you would say. I’ve felt it myself
-and said it to myself.</p>
-
-<p>“I began to get fond of her almost from the first.
-If you’d been in my shoes, you would have been just
-the same. No one could help getting fond of her. Then
-after awhile I found how I was drifting, and I said to
-myself, ‘It’s absurd!’ I pictured all my female relations
-and so forth and my position in the wonderful thing
-you call Society.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t sneer at Society,” said Skelton gravely. “That’s
-the easiest sort of cant that ever folly put into a man’s
-mouth. Go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right,” said Ratcliffe. “All the same Society
-galls one at times when the thought of it comes up
-against something alive and fresh and free from snobbery
-like Jude. Well, things went on and on. I hadn’t
-much time for thinking, underhanded as we were; and
-that was the fatal thing, for I absorbed her without
-thinking,—not her face or body, but her character. You
-know that, underhanded and close together on a tub like
-the <i>Sarah</i>, character is the thing that shows and counts,
-and at every hand’s turn hers showed up and got a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303">303</a></span>
-tighter grip on me. It wasn’t a character all jam, either,
-but it was a thing to count on and real as the sea—you
-can’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can,” said Skelton, humoring the other, “a fine
-character.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no!” said Ratcliffe. “Don’t get away with
-things. <em>Real</em>, that’s the word!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear man—”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you are going to say. She can’t speak
-King’s English—well, I’m going to teach her. She’s
-dressed like that—well, I’m going to dress her properly
-after awhile.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton suddenly showed a flash of irritation.</p>
-
-<p>“Come up to the point,” said he. “Are you, after
-what I’ve said, still fixed in your purpose? Are you
-going to marry her?”</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as ever I can get a priest off to the old
-<i>Sarah</i>,” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“That is your last word?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Skelton. His manner changed. He
-had done what he could: it was useless. Ratcliffe was
-no relation of his, and now, contemplating the thing
-with as much detachment as though it were a losing
-horse race or boxing encounter on which he had no bet,
-he lit the cigar, which he had been holding unlighted
-in his fingers, and became almost amiable.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said he, “go ahead. After all, it’s not
-my affair; but I’ll be interested to know how you get
-on. By the way, I have some gear of yours on board.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304">304</a></span>
-“Take it back, will you, like a good chap,” said the
-other, “and leave it with the yacht people at Southampton?
-I’ll pick it up there when I return.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are coming back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rather; but not for a year or so, maybe. I’ve
-a lot to do, and when you see us next maybe you’ll
-agree—” He stopped short and relit his cigar, and they
-hung silent, each engaged in his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Now; on the warm sea-scented air entering through
-the open ports, came a voice.</p>
-
-<p>It was the voice of the second officer, addressing someone
-overside.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there! Bring her round to the quarter-boat
-davits; she’s to come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the dinghy,” said Skelton. “I told them to
-bring her aboard. I’ll send you back in the pinnace.”</p>
-
-<p>Again came the voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there! Are you deaf? Bring her round to the
-quarter-boat davits; she’s to come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s fresh young voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Gar’n! She’s ours; old Popplecock gave her to
-Satan. Whacha talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” came the other’s. “You wait till Sir
-William comes on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton with a grim smile turned to the door. He
-pointed to the clock on the bulkhead.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going on deck,” said he. “See that clock—promise
-me to stick here for two minutes by it and
-think right over the matter for the last time. Don’t let
-anything I have said weigh with you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-He went on deck and, keeping clear of the rail, entered
-into conversation with the first officer.</p>
-
-<p>Three minutes passed, and Ratcliffe’s head appeared at
-the saloon hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Going?” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Right! You can keep the dinghy—it’s a wedding
-present. Luck!”</p>
-
-<p>“Same to you!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>He gripped the other’s hand, and the grip was returned.
-The two men had never been so close to each
-other before, never would be again.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* <span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">*</span></div>
-
-<p>Two hours later the <i>Dryad</i>, queening it over the satin smooth
-harbor, dipped her flag to the humble little
-<i>Sarah</i>, and the <i>Sarah</i> dipped her flag to the <i>Dryad</i>, and
-someone in the Wedding Present lying alongside the
-<i>Sarah</i> waved a hat.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, at the after rail, fixed his binoculars on the
-hat-waver. It was Satan.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller">THE END</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences
-of inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Satan, by Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Satan
- A Romance of the Bahamas
-
-Author: Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-Release Date: July 23, 2017 [EBook #55183]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATAN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-SATAN
-
-
-
-
- SATAN
-
- A Romance of the Bahamas
-
- _By_
- H: DE VERE STACPOOLE
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE BLUE LAGOON,” “THE BEACH
- OF DREAMS,” ETC.
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- NEW YORK
- ROBERT M. McBRIDE & COMPANY
- 1921
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1920, by
- ROBERT M. McBRIDE & CO.
-
-
- _Printed in the
- United States of America_
-
-
- Published, · 1921
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PART I
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I PALM ISLAND 1
-
- II A FLOATING CARAVAN 6
-
- III BREAKFAST 16
-
- IV PAP’S SUIT 23
-
- V THE PORTMANTEAU 34
-
- VI SKELTON SAILS 58
-
- VII CARQUINEZ 68
-
- VIII JUDE OVERDOES IT 79
-
- IX THE “JUAN” SAILS 96
-
- X CUSS WORDS 107
-
- XI THE COMING OF CLEARY 116
-
- XII AN HONEST MAN 123
-
- XIII PROBLEMS 130
-
- XIV HANTS AND OTHER THINGS 136
-
- XV UNDER WAY 144
-
- XVI THE STEERSMAN 150
-
-
- PART II
-
- XVII LONE REEF 157
-
- XVIII THE WRECK 169
-
- XIX MUTINY 174
-
- XX THE SANDSPIT 183
-
- XXI DISHED 193
-
- XXII THE CRABS 199
-
- XXIII THE RETURN 206
-
- XXIV A BOTTLE OF RUM 215
-
- XXV THEY FIRE THE FUSE 220
-
- XXVI THE CARGO 226
-
- XXVII CROCKERY WARE 232
-
- XXVIII TIDE AND CURRENT 238
-
- XXIX SATAN IN PARADISE 243
-
- XXX A SECRET OF THE SAND 253
-
- XXXI THE GO-ASHORE HAT 259
-
- XXXII CLEARY! 267
-
- XXXIII THE FIGHT 272
-
- XXXIV “I’LL TAK!” 280
-
-
- PART III
-
- XXXV THE VANISHED LIGHT 285
-
- XXXVI THE WEDDING PRESENT 295
-
-
-
-
-PART I
-
-
-
-
-SATAN
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-PALM ISLAND
-
-
-The sky from sea-line to sea-line was crusted with stars, a triumphant,
-cloudless, tropic night-sky beneath which the _Dryad_ rode at her
-anchor, lifting lazily to the swell flowing up from beyond the great
-Bahama bank.
-
-She was Skelton’s boat, a six-hundred-tonner, turbine engined, rigged
-with everything new in the way of sea valves and patent gadgets, and
-she had anchored at sundown off Palm Island, a tiny spot, gull haunted,
-and due west of Andros.
-
-Skelton was a Christchurch man, Bobby Ratcliffe a Brazenose, and Bobby,
-tonight, as he leaned on the starboard rail smoking and listening to
-the wash of the waves on the island beach, was thinking of Skelton,
-who was down below writing up his diary. Before coming on this “winter
-cruise to the West Indies in my yacht” Bobby did not know that Skelton
-kept a diary, that Skelton was so awfully Anglican, so precise, so
-stuffed with the convenances, that he dined in dress clothes even in
-a hurricane, that he had a very nasty, naggling temper, that he had
-prayers every Sunday morning in the cabin which the chief steward,
-the under stewards, and the officers off watch were expected to
-attend--also Bobby. Two other men were booked for the cruise, but they
-cried off at the last moment. If they had come, things might have been
-different. As it was, Bobby, to use his own language, was pretty much
-fed up.
-
-Skelton was a right good sort, but he was not the man with whom to
-share loneliness, and Bobby, who had plenty of money of his own, was
-thinking how jolly this winter cruise would have been if he had only
-taken it on board a passenger liner, with girls and deck quoits and
-cards in the evening, instead of Skelton.
-
-Bobby was only twenty-two, a good-looking clean youth, well-balanced
-enough, but desirous of fun. Oxford had not spoiled him a bit. He had
-no “manner,”--just his own naturalness,--and he had shocked Skelton at
-Barbados by getting a great negro washing woman on board (she had come
-alongside in a blue boat) and giving her rum, for the fun of the thing.
-“Debauching a native woman with alcohol!” Skelton had called it.
-
-Skelton vetoed shark fishing. It messed his decks. He was like an old
-woman about his decks. “I tell you what you ought to do, Skelly,” Bobby
-had said. “You ought to start a blessed laundry!” They had nearly
-quarreled at Guadeloupe over sharks.
-
-And again at St. Pierre, where, lying off the ruins of the town,
-Skelton had likened it to Gomorrah, declaring it had been destroyed
-because of the wickedness of its inhabitants.
-
-“And how about the ships in the bay?” had asked Bobby. “What had they
-to do with the business? Why weren’t they given notice to quit?”
-
-“We won’t argue on the matter,” replied Skelton.
-
-And there was still two months of this blessed cruise to be worked out!
-
-He was thinking of this when Skelton came on deck, his white
-shirt-front shining in the starlight. He was in an amiable mood tonight
-and, ranging up beside Bobby, he spoke about the beauty of the stars.
-
-It was chiefly on Bobby’s initiative that they had dropped the anchor
-so that they might prospect the island on the morrow, and as they
-smoked and talked the conversation passed from stars to desert islands,
-and from desert islands to the old Spaniards of the West Indies,
-bucaneers, filibusters, pirates, and Brethren of the Coast.
-
-Perhaps it was the starlight, or the tepid wind blowing up from the
-straits of Florida, or the distant starlit palms of Palm Island that
-set Skelton off and touched a vein in his nature hitherto unsuspected:
-whatever it was, he warmed to his subject and for the first time on the
-voyage became interesting. He could talk! Nombre de Dios, Carthagena,
-and Porto Bello,--he touched them alive again, set the old plate-ships
-sailing and the pirates overhauling them, sacked cathedrals of gold and
-jewels, showed Bobby Tortuga, the great rendezvous of the bucaneers and
-the Spaniards attacking it, men marooned on desolate places like Palm
-Island, treasure buried--and then all of a sudden closed up and became
-uninteresting again. The remnants of the boy in him had spoken, the
-old pirate that lives in most men’s hearts had shown his head. Perhaps
-he was ashamed of his warmth and enthusiasm over these old romantic
-things--who knows? At all events, he retired into himself and then went
-below to find a book he was reading, leaving the deck to Bobby and the
-anchor watch.
-
-Then the moon began to rise from beyond the Bahamas, a vast, full moon,
-with the sea seeming to cling to her lower limb as she freed herself.
-Dusky, at first, she paled as she rose, and now, in her light, the
-palms of the island and the coral beach showed clear.
-
-Palm Island is a scrub of cactus and bay cedar bushes, half a mile long
-and quarter of a mile broad, with not more than forty trees. Crabs and
-turtles and gulls are its only visitors, and desolation sits there
-visible and naked. But in the moonlight, on a night like this and seen
-from the sea, it is fairyland--storyland.
-
-Ratcliffe, his mind full of pirates and bucaneers, Spaniards and
-plate-ships, found himself wondering if men had ever been marooned
-here, if Morgan and Van Horn and all that crowd had ever had dealings
-on that beach, and what the moon could tell about it all if she could
-remember and speak. He was thinking this when the creak of block and
-cordage struck his ear, and past the stern of the _Dryad_ came gliding
-the fore canvas of a small vessel, a thing that seemed no larger than a
-fishing boat.
-
-She had been creeping in from the sea unnoticed by them as they talked.
-Skelton had gone below without sighting her, and she was so close that
-the slap of her bow-wash came clearly as she passed.
-
-He watched her gliding shoreward like a phantom, and then across the
-water came a voice, shrill as the voice of a bird:
-
-“Seven fathom!”
-
-And on top of that another voice:
-
-“Let go!”
-
-The rumble--tumble--tumble--of an anchor chain followed, and then the
-silence of the night closed in, broken only by the far-off wash of the
-waves on the beach.
-
-This ghost of the sea fascinated Ratcliffe. He could see her now riding
-at anchor against the palms and bay cedars of the island.
-
-She was shedding her canvas; and now a glow-worm spark, golden in the
-silver of the moonlight, climbed up and became stationary but for the
-lift and fall of the swell as she rode at her moorings. It was her
-anchor light.
-
-He listened for voices. None came. Then he saw a lantern being carried
-along her deck. It vanished, probably through a hatch.
-
-Then he went below, and, dropping asleep the instant he turned in,
-dreamt that he was marooned on Palm Island with Skelton, and Skelton
-was trying to hang him on a palm tree for a pirate, and the gulls
-were shouting “Seven fathom!--seven fathom--seven fathom!” Then came
-oblivion and the sleep of youth that defies dreams.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-A FLOATING CARAVAN
-
-
-Next morning, an hour after sunrise, Ratcliffe came on deck in his
-pajamas,--gorgeous blue and crimson striped pajamas,--a sight for the
-gods.
-
-The sky was cloudless. The wind of the night before had fallen to a
-tepid breathing scarcely sufficient to stir the flag at the jackstaff,
-and from all that world of new-born blue and mirror-calm sea there came
-not a sound but the sound of the gulls crying and quarreling about the
-reef spurs of the island.
-
-Amid the glory of light and color and against the palms and white beach
-lay the ghost of the night before, a frowzy-looking yawl-rigged boat of
-fifty feet or so, a true hobo of the sea, with wear and weather written
-all over her and an indescribable something that marked her down even
-to Ratcliffe as disreputable.
-
-Simmons, the second officer, was on deck.
-
-“She must have come in last night,” said Simmons. “Some sea scraper or
-another working between the islands--Spanish most likely.”
-
-“No, she’s not Spanish,” said Ratcliffe. “I saw her come in and I heard
-them shouting the soundings in English--look! there’s a chap fishing
-from her.”
-
-The flash of a fish being hauled on board had caught his eye and fired
-his passion for sport. They had done no fishing from the _Dryad_.
-
-He borrowed the dinghy from Simmons and, just as he was, put off.
-
-“Ask them to sell some of their fish, if they’ve any to spare,” cried
-Simmons as the dinghy got away.
-
-“Ay, ay!” replied Ratcliffe.
-
-The sea blaze almost blinded him as he rowed with the gulls flying
-round and shouting at him. As he drew up to the yawl the fisherman
-lugged another fish on board. The fisherman was a boy, a dirty-faced
-boy, in a guernsey, and as the dinghy came alongside he stared at the
-pajama-clad one as at an apparition.
-
-“Hullo, there!” cried Ratcliffe, clawing on with the boathook.
-
-“Hullo, yourself!” replied the other.
-
-“Any fish for sale?”
-
-“Any what?”
-
-“Fish.”
-
-The boy disappeared. Then came his voice, evidently shouting down a
-hatch.
-
-“Satan, below there!”
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Here’s the funniest guy come alongside wants to know if we’ve got fish
-to sell him. Show a leg!”
-
-“One minute,” replied the second voice.
-
-The boy reappeared at the rail in the burning sunlight. “The cap will
-be up in a minute,” said he. “What in the nation are you got up like
-that for?”
-
-“What?”
-
-“Them things.”
-
-Ratcliffe laughed.
-
-“I forgot I was in my pajamas. I must apologize.”
-
-“What’s pajamas?”
-
-“My sleeping suit.”
-
-“You sleep in them things?”
-
-“Of course.”
-
-“Well, I’m damned!” said the boy. Then he gave a sudden yell of
-laughter and vanished, sitting down on the deck evidently, while
-another form appeared at the rail, a lantern-jawed, long-haired,
-youthful figure, rubbing the sleep out of its eyes. It stared at the
-occupant of the dinghy, then it opened its mouth and uttered one word:
-
-“Moses!”
-
-“He sleeps in them things!” came a half-strangled voice from the deck.
-“Satan, hold me up, I’m dyin’!”
-
-“Shut your beastly head!” said Satan. Then to Ratcliffe, “Don’t be
-minding Jude,--Jude’s cracked,--but you sure are gotten up--Say, you
-from that hooker over there?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What are you?”
-
-“Nothing.”
-
-Another explosion from the deck, stifled by a kick from Satan.
-
-“But what are you doing here, anyway?”
-
-Ratcliffe explained, Satan leaning comfortably on the rail and
-listening.
-
-“A yacht--well, we’re the _Sarah Tyler_. Pap and me and Jude used to
-run the boat. He died last fall. Tyler was his name, and Satan Tyler’s
-mine. He said I yelled like Satan when a pup and he put the name on
-me--Say, that’s a dandy boat. I’m wanting a boat like that. Will you
-trade?”
-
-“She’s not mine.”
-
-“That don’t matter,” said Tyler with a laugh. “But I forgot: you aren’t
-in our way of business.”
-
-“What’s your way of business?”
-
-“Lord! Shut up, Satan!” came the voice from the deck.
-
-“Well, Pap was one thing or another; but we’re respectable, ain’t we,
-Jude?”
-
-“Passons to what Pap was,” agreed the voice in a quieter tone, and it
-came to Ratcliffe that the figure of Jude remained invisible, being
-ashamed to show itself after having guyed him.
-
-“We’re out of Havana, and we scratch round and make a living,” went on
-Tyler, “and the boat being ours we make out. There’s lots to be had on
-these seas for the looking.”
-
-“Do you work the boat alone?”
-
-“Well, we had a nigger to help since Pap died. He skipped at Pine
-Island a fortnight ago. Since then we’ve made out. Jude’s worth a man
-and don’t drink--”
-
-“Who says I don’t drink?” Two grimy hands seized the rail and the body
-and face of Jude raised themselves. Then the whole apparition hung,
-resting midriff high across the rail, just balanced, so that a tip
-from behind would have sent it over.
-
-“Who says I don’t drink? How about Havana Harbor last trip?”
-
-“They gave her rum,” said Satan gloomily, “gave her rum in a doggery
-down by the waterside--curse the swabs! I laid two of them flat and
-then got her aboard.”
-
-“Her!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Blind, wasn’t I?” cut in Jude hurriedly.
-
-“Blind you were,” said Tyler.
-
-Jude grinned. Ratcliffe thought he had never met with a stranger couple
-than these two, especially Jude. Hanging on with the boathook, he
-contemplated the dirty, daring face whose fine, gray, long-lashed eyes
-were the best features.
-
-“How old are you?” asked he, addressing it.
-
-“Hundred an’ one,” said Jude. “Ask me another.”
-
-“She’s fifteen and a bit,” said Tyler, “and as strong as a grown man.”
-
-“I thought she was a boy,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“So I am,” said Jude. “Girls is trash. I’m not never goin’ to be a
-girl. Girls is snots!”
-
-As if to prove her boyhood, she hung over the rail so that he feared
-any moment she might tumble.
-
-“She’s a girl, right enough,” said Tyler as if they were discussing an
-animal, “but God help the skirts she ever gets into!”
-
-“I’d pull them over me head and run down the street if anyone ever
-stuck skirts on me,” said Jude. “I’d as soon go about in them pajamas
-of yours.”
-
-Ratcliffe was silent for a moment. It amazed him the familiarity that
-had suddenly sprung up between himself and these two.
-
-“Won’t you come aboard and have a look around?” asked Tyler, as though
-suddenly stricken with the sense of his own inhospitality.
-
-“But the boat?”
-
-“Stream her on a line--over with a line, Jude!”
-
-A line came smack into the dinghy, and Ratcliffe tied it to the painter
-ring. Next moment he was on board, and the dinghy, taking the current,
-drifted astern.
-
-No sooner had his feet touched the deck of the _Sarah Tyler_ than he
-felt himself encircled by a charm. It seemed to him that he had never
-been on board a real ship before this. The _Dryad_ was a structure
-of steel and iron, safe and sure as a railway train, a conveyance, a
-mechanism made to pound along against wind and sea; as different from
-this as an aëroplane from a bird.
-
-This little deck, these high bulwarks, spars, and weather-worn
-canvas,--all them collectively were the real thing. Daring and distance
-and freedom and the power to wander at will, the inconsequence of the
-gulls,--all these were hinted at here. Old man Tyler had built the
-boat, but the sea had worked on her and made her what she was, a thing
-part of the sea as a puffin.
-
-Frowzy looking at a distance, on deck the _Sarah Tyler_ showed no sign
-of disorder. The old planking was scrubbed clean and the brass of the
-little wheel shone. There was no raffle about, nothing to cumber the
-deck but a boat,--the funniest-looking boat in the world.
-
-“Canvas built,” said Tyler, laying his hand on her; “Pap’s invention;
-no more weight than an umbrella. No, she ain’t a collapsible: just
-canvas and hickory and cane. That’s another of Pap’s dodges over
-there, that sea anchor, and there’s ’nother, that jigger for raising
-the mudhook. Takes a bit of time, but half a man could work it, and I
-reckon it would raise a battleship. There’s the spare, same as the one
-that’s in the mud--ever see an anchor like that before? Pap’s. It’s a
-patent, but he was done over the patentin’ of it by a shark in Boston.”
-
-“He must have been a clever man,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“He was,” said Tyler. “Come below.”
-
-The cabin of the _Sarah Tyler_ showed a table in the middle, a hanging
-bunch of bananas, seats upholstered in some sort of leather, a telltale
-compass fixed in the ceiling, racks for guns and nautical instruments,
-and a bookcase holding a couple of dozen books. A sleeping cabin
-guarded by a curtain opened aft. Nailed to the bulkhead by the bookcase
-was an old photograph in a frame, the photograph of a man with a
-goatee beard, shaggy eyebrows, and a face that seemed stamped out of
-determination--or obstinacy.
-
-“That’s him,” said Jude.
-
-“Your father?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“It was took after Mother bolted,” said Tyler.
-
-“She took off with a long-shore Baptis’ minister,” said Jude. “Said
-she couldn’t stand Pap’s unbelievin’ ways.”
-
-“He made her work for him in a laundry,” said Tyler.
-
-“It was at Pensacola, up the gulf, and a year after, when we fetched up
-there again, she came aboard and died. Pap went for the Baptis’ man.”
-
-“He wasn’t any more use for a Baptis’ minister when Pap had done with
-him,” said Jude. “That’s his books--Pap’s. There’s dead loads more in
-the spare bunk in there.”
-
-Ratcliffe looked at the books. Old man Tyler’s mentality interested him
-almost as much as the history of the Tyler family,--“Ben Hur,” Paine’s
-“Age of Reason” and “Rights of Man,” Browne’s “Popular Mechanics,”
-“The Mechanism of the Watch,” “Martin Chuzzlewit,” and some moderns,
-including an American edition of “Jude the Obscure.”
-
-“Some of those came off a wreck he had the pickin’s of,” said Tyler, “a
-thousand-tonner that went ashore off Cat Island.”
-
-“That was before Jude was born,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Lord! how do you know that?” said Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe laughed and pointed to the book. “It’s the name on that
-book,” said he. “I didn’t know: I just guessed.”
-
-“I reckon you’re right,” said Tyler, opening a locker and fetching out
-cups and saucers and plates and dumping them on the table. “Not that
-it matters much where it come from, but you’ve got eyes in your head,
-that’s sure. Say, you’ll stay to breakfast, now you’re aboard?”
-
-“I’d like to,” said Ratcliffe, “but I ought to be getting back: they
-won’t know what’s become of me. And besides I’m in these.”
-
-“That’s easy fixed,” said Tyler. “Jude, tumble up and take the boat
-over to the hooker and say the gentleman is stayin’ to breakfast an’ll
-be back directly after. I’ll fix him for clothes.”
-
-Jude vanished, and Tyler, going into the after-cabin, rousted out an
-old white drill suit of “Pap’s” and a pair of No. 9 canvas shoes.
-
-“They’re new washed since he wore them,” said Tyler. “Slip ’em on
-over your what’s his names and come along and lend me a hand in the
-galley--can you cook?”
-
-“You bet!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Eased in his mind as to the _Dryad_, the boy in him rose to this little
-adventure, delightful after weeks of routine and twenty years of
-ordered life and high respectability. He had caravaned, yachted in a
-small way, fancied that he had at all events touched the fringe of the
-Free Life--he had never been near it. These sea gipsies in their grubby
-old boat were It! A grim suspicion that these remains of the Tyler
-family sailed sometimes pretty close to the law and that their sea
-pickings were, to put it mildly, various did not detract in the least
-from their charm. He guessed instinctively they were not rogues of a
-bad sort. The lantern-jawed Satan had not the face of a saint. There
-were indications in it indeed of the possibility of a devilish temper
-no less than a desperate daring, but not a trace of meanness. Jude was
-astonishingly and patently honest, while old man Tyler, whose presence
-seemed still to linger on in this floating caravan, had evident titles,
-of a sort, to respect.
-
-He was helping to fry fish over the oil-stove in the little galley when
-Jude returned with the information, delivered through the shouting of
-the frying pan, that everything was all right, and the message had been
-delivered to a “guy” in a white coat who was hanging his fat head over
-the starboard rail of the _Dryad_; that he had told her to mind his
-paint; that she had told him not to drop his teeth overboard, and he
-had “sassed” her back; that the _Dryad_ was a dandy ship, but would be
-a lot dandier if she were hove up on some beach convenient for pickin’
-her.
-
-Then she started to make the coffee over an auxiliary stove, mixing her
-industry with criticisms of the cookery and instructions as to how fish
-should be fried.
-
-“Jude does the cookin’ mostly,” said Tyler, “and we’d have hot rolls
-only we were under sail last night and she hadn’t time to set the
-dough. We’ll have to make out with ship’s bread.”
-
-Considering the condition of Jude’s grubby hands, Ratcliffe wasn’t
-sorry.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-BREAKFAST
-
-
-The amount of food those two put away was a revelation to Ratcliffe,
-and from start to finish of the meal they never stopped talking.
-One being silent, the other took up the ball. They had cottoned to
-Ratcliffe, evidently from the very first moment, for, at the very first
-moment, Tyler had been communicative about himself and his ship and his
-way of life. An ordinary ship’s officer coming alongside would have got
-fish at a price if he had been civil or a fish flung at his head if he
-had given “sass”: Ratcliffe got friendship.
-
-It was maybe his youth and the fact that all young people are
-Freemasons that did the business; the humor of the gorgeous pajamas may
-have helped. Anyhow, the fact remained. He had secured something that
-knowledge or position or fortune could not have bought,--the good will
-and conversation of this pair, the history of the Tylers, and more than
-a hint of their life on these seas. They had four thousand dollars in
-the bank at Havana left by Pap, not to be touched unless the _Sarah
-Tyler_ came to smash. They had no house rent or rates; no expenses but
-harbor dues, food, oil, and tobacco, and not much expense for food--at
-least just at present.
-
-Tyler winked across the table at Jude and Jude grinned.
-
-“Shut your head,” said Jude, “and don’t be givin’ shows away!” then
-suddenly to Ratcliffe, “We’ve got a cache.”
-
-“Who’s giving shows away now?” asked Tyler.
-
-“Oh, he won’t split,” said Jude.
-
-“It’s on the island here,” said Tyler, “near a ton of stuff, canned. A
-brig went ashore south of Mariguana. We picked up the crew and heard
-their yarn and got the location. Then a big freighter came along and
-took the men off us. The wreck was only a hundred and fifty miles from
-our position, and we reckoned the salvage men wouldn’t be on the spot
-for a fortnight or more and something was due to us for savin’ that
-crew; so we lit out for the wreck. We had four days’ work on her. She
-was straddled on a reef with twenty fathoms under her counter and a
-flat calm, all but a breathin’ of wind. We made fast to her, same as if
-she’d been a wharf. We had the nigger then to help, and we took enough
-grub to last us two years an’ fourteen boxes of Havana cigars and a
-live cat that was most a skeleton.”
-
-“She croaked,” put in Jude. “Satan fed her half a can of beef cut
-small, and then she scoffed half a bucket of water--that bust her.”
-
-“We wouldn’t have been so free in taking the things but for the lie
-of the hooker on the reef and the weather that was sure coming,” said
-Tyler. “We knew all about the weather and the chances. And we didn’t
-cast off from that hooker an hour too soon! We were ridin’ out that
-gale three days, and when we passed the reef again making west the brig
-was gone.”
-
-“And you cached the stuff here?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But we hadn’t to make no cache hole,” put in Jude. “Pap had one here.
-It’s among the bushes--and he didn’t make it, neither.”
-
-“It’s all coral rock a foot under the bushes,” said Tyler, “and there’s
-a hole you drop down six foot, that leads to a cave as cool as a
-refrigerator; so the goods would keep to the last trumpet. The old
-Spaniards must have cut it to hide their stuff in. Pap dropped on it
-by chance. Said they’d used it for hidin’ gold and such. Not that he
-believed in the buried treasure business--sunk ships is different.”
-
-Jude, who was hacking open a can of peaches, suddenly made an awful
-face at Satan. It had the effect of cutting him short. Ratcliffe
-refused the peaches. He sat watching this pair of cormorants and
-thinking that the cache must be pretty big if it held two years’
-provisions for them.
-
-Then suddenly he said so, laughing and without giving the least
-offense. Tyler explained that the cache was not their only larder:
-there were fish and turtle and turtle eggs, birds sometimes, fruit to
-be had for next to nothing, often for nothing. The only expense was
-for tobacco, and he had not paid ten cents for tobacco since last fall
-and wouldn’t want to for a year to come; clothes, and they didn’t want
-much clothes, Jude did the mending and patching; paint, and the _Sarah
-Tyler_ had ways and means of getting paint and all such, spars and so
-on. He gave a wonderful instance:
-
-Before Christmas last they had chummed up with a big yacht on the
-Florida coast near Cedar Cays. Thelusson was the owner, a man from New
-York. He took a fancy to the _Sarah_ and her way of life, and he and
-his crew helped to careen her in a lagoon back of the reefs, cleaned
-her copper (she was dead foul with barnacles and weeds), gave her a
-new main boom and foresail and some spare canvas, and all for nix. He
-had no paint, or he would have painted her. He drank champagne by the
-bucket, and he wanted to quit the yacht and go for a cruise with them,
-only his missus who was on board wouldn’t let him.
-
-Ratcliffe thought he could visualize Thelusson.
-
-“She was a mutt,” put in Jude, “with a voice like a muskeeter.”
-
-“She wanted to ’dopt Jude and stick a skirt on her,” said Tyler.
-
-“Handed me out a lot of sick stuff about sayin’ prayers and such,”
-hurriedly cut in Jude.
-
-“And put the nightcap on it by kissin’ her,” finished Tyler.
-
-Jude’s face blazed red like a peony.
-
-“If you chaps have had enough, I’m goin’ to clear,” said Jude.
-
-“Right!” said Satan, rising, and she cleared, vanishing with the
-swiftness of a rabbit up the companionway.
-
-Tyler fetched out a box of cigars. They were Ramon Alones.
-
-“She won’t speak to me now for half a day,” said Tyler. “If you want
-to guy Jude, tell her she’s a girl. I wouldn’t a told you, only you’re
-not in our way of life and so can’t make trouble. No one knows. There’s
-not a man in any of the ports knows: she goes as me brother. But the
-Thelusson woman spotted her on sight--Come on deck.”
-
-Jude was emptying a bucket of refuse overboard, then she vanished into
-the galley, and Ratcliffe, well fed, lazy, and smoking his cigar,
-leaned for a moment over the rail before taking his departure, talking
-to Tyler.
-
-To starboard lay Palm Island, with the sea quietly creaming on the
-coral beach and the palms stirring to the morning wind, to port the
-white _Dryad_ riding to her anchor on the near-shore blue, and beyond
-the _Dryad_ the violet of the great depths spreading to the far
-horizon, beyond which lay Andros, and the islands, reefs, and banks
-from Great Abeco to Rum Cay. Not a sail on all that sea, nor a stain on
-all that splendor: nothing but the gulls wheeling and crying over the
-reefs to southward.
-
-But Satan’s mind as he leaned beside Ratcliffe was not engaged by the
-beauty of the morning or the charm of the view. Satan was a dealer with
-the sea and the things that came out of the sea or were even to be met
-with floating on the waves. Ratcliffe was one of these things.
-
-“You’ve never had no call to work?” said Satan tentatively. “You’ve
-lots of money, I s’pect, and can take things easy.”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so.”
-
-“Like fishin’?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Well, if you ever wants to see good fishin’ and more than ordinary
-folk see of the islands here, drop me a word to Havana. Kellerman,
-marine store dealer, Havana, will get me. He’s a pal of mine. I fetch
-up in Havana every six months or so--and there’s more than fishin’--”
-
-Tyler stopped short, then he spat overboard and began to fill his pipe.
-He had no use for cigars--much.
-
-“How do you mean more than fishing?”
-
-“Well, I don’t know. We’re underhanded a bit for any big job and I
-wouldn’t trust most men. They don’t grow trustable parties in Havana,
-nor the coast towns--not much. I’ve taken a likin’ to you somehow
-or ’nother, and if ever we come together again I’ll tell you maybe
-somethin’ that’s in my mind. You see, between Pap and me and the old
-_Sarah_, we’ve seen close on thirty years of these waters right from
-Caicos to N’y’Orleans and down to Trinidad. Turtle egg huntin’ and
-fishin’ and tradin’, there’s not a reef or cay we don’t know. The old
-_Sarah_ could find her way round blind. Put her before the wind with
-the wheel half a spoke weather helm and leave her, and she’d sniff the
-reefs on her own.”
-
-“You were saying about something more than fishing,” persisted
-Ratcliffe, whose curiosity had been, somehow, aroused.
-
-“I was,” said Tyler; “but I’m not free to speak about private affairs
-without Jude, and there’s no use in tacklin’ her when she’s snorty.
-Listen to that!”
-
-Sounds were coming from the galley as of a person banging pots and pans
-about.
-
-Tyler chuckled.
-
-“It’s always the same when her dander is up,--she starts cleanin’ and
-dustin’ and makin’ hell of the place. Mother was the same. I reckon
-a woman can’t help bein’ a woman, not if she had a hundred pair of
-breeches on.”
-
-“Well,” said Ratcliffe, “I’d like to come for a cruise, and I will some
-day, I hope. Maybe I’ll see you on the island later. I was intending
-going ashore today to have a look round: that’s why we anchored here.”
-
-“Maybe I’ll see you ashore then,” said Tyler, “but if I’m not there,
-mind and say nothin’ of the cache.”
-
-“Right!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-PAP’S SUIT
-
-
-Jude, having been fetched out of the galley, the canvas boat was got
-overboard.
-
-Ratcliffe had offered to shed Pap’s suit and return in his pajamas as
-he had come, but Tyler vetoed the idea. The far-seeing Satan, who had
-snaffled a careen and clean up, not to speak of a main boom and spare
-canvas, out of Thelusson, had an object in view.
-
-“It’s no trouble,” said he. “You take the dinghy, and we’ll take the
-boat and fetch the duds back. It’s late in the mornin’ for you to be
-boarding your ship in them colored things.”
-
-One of the big fish caught that morning was dropped into the boat as a
-“present for the yacht,” and they started.
-
-The accommodation ladder was down and Simmons and a quartermaster
-received Ratcliffe. As he went up the side he heard Tyler shouting to
-Simmons something about the fish. There was no sign of Skelton on deck,
-for which he was thankful, then he dived below to change.
-
-Now “Pap’s” suit had been constructed for a man of over six feet and
-broad in proportion and a man, moreover, who liked his clothes loose
-and easy. On Ratcliffe they recalled the vesture of Dr. Jekyll on Mr.
-Hyde. The saloon door was closed. He opened it, and found himself face
-to face with Skelton, who was sitting at one end of the saloon table
-reading from a book, while Strangways the captain, Norton the first
-officer, Prosser the steward, and sundry others ranged according to
-their degree sat at attention.
-
-It was Sunday morning. He had forgotten that fact, and there was no
-drawing back. He reached his cabin, mumbling apologies to the dead
-silence which seemed crystallized round Skelton, closed the door, and
-stuffed his head among the pillows of his bunk to stifle his laughter,
-then he undressed and dressed.
-
-As he dressed he could hear through the open port the voice of Tyler
-from alongside. The voice was pitched in a conversational key; it was
-saying something about a lick of white paint. He was talking evidently
-to Simmons.
-
-Then, fully dressed, with the bundle of clothes and the canvas shoes
-under his arm, Ratcliffe peeped into the saloon. The service was over
-and the saloon was empty. He reached the deck. It was deserted save for
-a few hands forward and Simmons.
-
-Then he came down the accommodation ladder to the stage, and handed the
-clothes over to Satan.
-
-A drum of white paint and a coil of spare rope were in the boat close
-to Jude, and Satan was saying to Simmons something about a spare ax.
-
-“Well, if you haven’t got one, there’s no more to be said,” finished
-Satan; then to Ratcliffe, “See you ashore, maybe.”
-
-Jude grinned kindly, and they pushed off, the boat a strake lower in
-the water with their loot.
-
-The fat-faced Simmons watched them with the appearance of a man just
-released from mesmerism.
-
-“That chap would talk the hat off one’s head,” said he. “I’ll have h--l
-to pay with Norton over that paint; most likely I’ll have to put my
-hand in my own pocket for it. But he’s a decent chap, that fellow, but
-sharp--the way he landed me with that fish for a bait!”
-
-“He’s all there,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“So’s the boy,” said Simmons. “Come alongside after you’d gone, to
-say you were staying to breakfast with them. Told him to mind and not
-damage the paint. Let out like a bargee at me--and Sir William Skelton
-listening!”
-
-“Where’s Sir William now, Simmons? He wasn’t in the saloon when I’d
-finished dressing.”
-
-“I expect he’s in his cabin,” said Simmons.
-
-Ratcliffe got a book and, taking his seat under the double awning
-sheltering the quarterdeck, tried to read. He had chosen a History
-of the West Indies, the same book most likely from which Skelton had
-“cadged” his information of the night before. The printed page was
-dull, however, compared to the spoken word, and he found himself
-wondering how it was that Skelly could have warmed him up so to all
-this stuff and yet be such an angular stick-in-the-mud in ordinary
-life. What made him such a superior person? What made him at thirty
-look forty, sometimes fifty, and what made him, Ratcliffe, fear Skelly
-sometimes, just as a schoolboy fears a master?
-
-He guessed he was in for a wigging now for cutting breakfast and
-appearing like a guy before the officers, and he knew instinctively the
-form the wigging would take,--a chilly manner and studious avoidance
-of the subject, that would be all,--Christchurch on a wet Sunday
-for forty-eight hours, with the Oxford voice and the Oxford manner
-accentuated and thrown in.
-
-At this moment Sir William Skelton, Bart., came on deck,--a tall, thin
-man, clean shaved, like a serious-minded butler in a yachting suit of
-immaculate white drill. His breeding lay chiefly in his eyes: they
-were half-veiled by heavy lids. He had an open mother-of-pearl-handled
-penknife in his hand.
-
-Free of the saloon hatch and not seeing Ratcliffe, he stopped dead like
-a pointer before game and called out “Quartermaster!”
-
-A quartermaster came running aft.
-
-Some raffle had been left on the scupper by the companionway, a fathom
-or so of old rope rejected by Tyler as not being the quality he was
-“wantin’.”
-
-He ordered it to be taken forrard, then he saw Ratcliffe and nodded.
-
-“’Morning,” said Skelton.
-
-He walked to the rail and stood with his hand on it for a moment,
-looking at the island and the _Sarah Tyler_.
-
-Jude and Satan were at work on something aft. In a minute it became
-apparent what they were doing. They were rigging an awning in imitation
-of the _Dryad’s_, an impudent affair made out of old canvas brown with
-weather and patched from wear.
-
-It was like seeing a beggar woman raising a parasol.
-
-Skelton sniffed; then he turned and, leaning with his back against
-the bulwarks, began attending to his left little fingernail with the
-penknife.
-
-“Ratcliffe,” said Skelton suddenly and apparently addressing his little
-finger, “I _wish_ you wouldn’t!” He spoke mildly, in a vaguely pained
-voice. It was as though Ratcliffe had acted in some way like a bounder;
-more, and, wonderfully, he actually made Ratcliffe feel as though he
-had acted in some way like a bounder. He was Ratcliffe’s host; that
-gave an extra weight to the words. The whole thing was horrible.
-
-“Wouldn’t what?” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Skelton had been rather hit in his proprieties by a man going off his
-boat in pajamas and remaining away to breakfast on board a thing like
-the _Sarah Tyler_ in his pajamas; but the real cause of offense was
-“Pap’s” suit suddenly appearing at Sunday morning prayers. The chief
-steward had grinned.
-
-Skelton, though a good sailor, an excellent shipmaster, and as brave as
-a man need be, was a highly nervous individual. A general service on
-deck for the whole crew was beyond him: he compromised by conducting a
-short service in the saloon. Even that was a tax on him. The entrance
-of Ratcliffe in that extraordinary get-up had joggled his nervous
-system.
-
-“If you can’t understand, I can’t explain,” said Skelton. “If our
-cases had been reversed, I should have apologized. However, it doesn’t
-matter.”
-
-“Look here, Skelly!” said Ratcliffe. “I’m most awfully sorry if I have
-jumped on your corns, and I’ll apologize as much as you want, but the
-fact of the matter is we don’t seem to hit it off exactly, do we? You
-are the best of good people, but we have different temperaments. If
-those other fellows had come along on the cruise, it would have mixed
-matters more. We want to be mixed up in a big party more, you and I, if
-we want to get on together.”
-
-“I told you before we started I disliked crowds,” said Skelton, “and
-that only Satherthwaite and Magnus were coming. Then, when they failed,
-you said it didn’t matter, that we should be freer and more comfortable
-alone.”
-
-“I know,” said Ratcliffe. “It was my mistake, and besides I didn’t want
-to put you off the cruise.”
-
-“Oh, you would not have put me off. I should have started alone. I am
-dependent on no one for society.”
-
-“I believe you would have been happier alone.”
-
-“Perhaps,” said Skelton with tight lips.
-
-“Well then, shove me ashore, somewhere.”
-
-“That is talking nonsense!” said Skelton.
-
-Ratcliffe had risen and was leaning over the rail beside the other. His
-eyes were fixed on the _Sarah Tyler_, the disreputable _Sarah_, and as
-he looked at her Jude and Satan suddenly seemed to him real live free
-human beings and Skelton as being not entirely alive nor, for all his
-wealth, free.
-
-It was Skelton who gave the Tylers a nimbus, extra color, fascination,
-especially Jude. There was a lot of fascination about Jude, even
-without the background of Skelton.
-
-“It’s not talking nonsense a bit,” said he, “and, if you can trundle
-along the rest of the cruise alone, I’ll drop you here.”
-
-“Drop you on this island?”
-
-“No--I’d like to go for a cruise with those chaps--I mean that chap in
-the mud barge over there. He asked me, any time I wanted to.”
-
-“Are you in earnest?”
-
-“Of course I am. It would be no end of a picnic, and I want to shove
-round these seas. I can get a boat back from Havana.”
-
-Skelton felt that this was the washerwoman of Barbados over
-again,--irresponsibility--bad form. He was, under his courteousness as
-a host, heartily sick of Ratcliffe and his ways and outlook. A solitary
-by inclination, he would not at all have objected to finishing this
-cruise by himself. All the same, he strongly objected to the idea just
-put before him.
-
-What made him object? Was he insulted that the _Dryad_ should be turned
-down in favor of the frowzy, disreputable-looking _Sarah Tyler_, that
-the companionship of the Tylerites should be preferred to his? Did
-some vague instinct tell him they were the better people to be with
-if one wanted to have a good time? Was high conventionality outraged
-as though, walking down Piccadilly with Ratcliffe, the latter were to
-seize the arm of a dustman?
-
-Who knows? But he bitterly and strongly objected. And how and in what
-words did he show his objection and anger?
-
-“Then go, my dear fellow, go!” said he as though with all the good will
-in the world.
-
-“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But are you sure you don’t mind?”
-
-“Mind! Why should I mind?”
-
-“One portmanteau full of stuff will do me,” said Ratcliffe, “and I have
-nearly a hundred and fifty in ready money and a letter of credit on
-the Lyonnaise at Havana for five hundred. I’ll trundle my stuff over
-if you’ll lend me a boat, and be back for luncheon. You’ll be off this
-evening, I suppose, and I can stay aboard here till you get the anchor
-up. It’s possible I might pick you up at Havana on the way back; but
-don’t worry about that. Of course all this depends on whether that
-fellow will take me. I’ll take the portmanteau with me and ask.”
-
-He did not in the least see what was going on in Skelton’s mind.
-
-“You will take your things with you in a boat, and if this--gentleman
-refuses to take you, what then?”
-
-“I’ll come back.”
-
-“Now I want to be quite clear with you, Ratcliffe,” said Skelton.
-“If you leave my ship like that--for nothing--at a whim and for
-disreputable chance acquaintances--absolute scowbankers--the worst
-sort--I want to be clear with you--quite, absolutely definite--I must
-ask you not to come back!”
-
-“Well, I’m hanged!” said Ratcliffe, suddenly blazing out. “First
-you say go and then you say don’t! Of course that’s enough: you’ve
-practically fired me off your boat.”
-
-“Do not twist my words,” said the other. “That is a subtle form of
-prevarication I can’t stand.”
-
-“I think we had better stop this,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m going! If I
-don’t see you again. I’ll say goodby.”
-
-“And please understand,” said the other, who was rather white about the
-mouth, “please understand--”
-
-“Oh, I know,” said Ratcliffe. “Goodby!”
-
-He dived below to the saloon and rang for his bedroom steward.
-
-Burning with anger and irritation and a feeling that he had been sat
-upon by Skelton, snubbed, sneered at, and altogether outrageously
-used, he could not trust himself to do his own packing. He sat on his
-bunkside while the steward stuffed a portmanteau with necessaries, and
-as he sat the thought came to him of what would happen were Tyler to
-refuse to take him. He would have to take refuge on Palm Island. It was
-a comic opera sort of idea; yet, such was the state of his mind, he
-actually entertained it.
-
-Skelton was no longer “Skelly,” but “that beast Skelton.” Then he
-tipped the steward and the chief steward, telling them that he was
-going for a cruise in that “yawl over there.” On deck he met Norton
-and Simmons and told them the same tale. Skelton had vanished to his
-cabin. He told the first and second officers that he had said goodby to
-his host and asked for a boat to be lowered.
-
-“I’ll pick you up most likely at Havana,” said he to gloze the matter
-over. “I expect I’ll have a good time, but rather rough. I want to do
-some fishing.”
-
-The whole thing seemed like a dream and not a particularly pleasant
-one. Embarked on this business now, he almost wished himself done with
-it. The yacht was comfortable, the cooking splendid; to satisfy any
-want, one had only to touch a bell. There were no bells on board the
-_Sarah Tyler_. A lavatory and a sort of bathroom invented by “Pap” were
-the only conveniences, and the bath was impracticable. It was “Pap’s”
-only failure, for the sea-cock connecting it with the outer ocean was
-so arranged or constituted that as likely as not it would let in the
-Caribbean before you could “stop it off.”
-
-If Skelton now, at the last moment, had asked Ratcliffe to come down
-and have an interview, things might have been smoothed over, but
-Skelton was not the sort of man to make advances; neither, in his way,
-was Ratcliffe.
-
-Meanwhile, Simmons was directing the lowering of a boat. The
-companionway was still down. The luggage was put in, and Simmons,
-seated by Ratcliffe in the stern seats, took the yoke lines. Not a sign
-of Skelton, not even a face at a porthole!
-
-“Give way!” shouted Simmons.
-
-As they drew up to the _Sarah Tyler_, Ratcliffe saw Satan leaning over
-the rail and watching them. Jude was nowhere visible.
-
-“Hullo!” said Ratcliffe as they came alongside. “I’ve come back.”
-
-“I was half-expectin’ you,” said Satan with a grin.
-
-“Will you take me for that cruise right off?”
-
-“Sure! That your dunnage?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Satan stepped to the cabin companionway and shouted down it.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“Hullo!” came Jude’s voice.
-
-“He’s come back!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-THE PORTMANTEAU
-
-
-As Jude came on deck the portmanteau was being hoisted on board.
-Ratcliffe passed down a five-pound note to the boat’s crew, and then
-stood, waving to Simmons as the boat put away. Then, turning to
-Satan, he tried to discuss terms, but was instantly silenced by Jude
-and Satan. They would hear nothing of money. Used to sea changes and
-strange happenings, they seemed to think nothing of the business, and
-after the first words fell to talking together.
-
-The trend of their talk induced in Ratcliffe a vaguely uncanny feeling.
-It was as though they had already discussed his coming on board and
-the storage of himself and his baggage, as though they had known by
-instinct that he would return. The size of the portmanteau affected
-Jude.
-
-“You can’t keep that,” said Jude, giving the portmanteau a slight kick.
-“It’s a long sight too big. Say, what have you got in it?”
-
-“Clothes.”
-
-“Pajamas?”
-
-“Yes, and lots of other things.”
-
-Jude tilted back the old panama she was wearing and took her seat
-on the portmanteau. Her feet were bare, and she twisted her toes in
-thought as she sat for a moment turning matters over in her mind.
-
-“You can stick the things in the spare locker,” said she at last. “You
-gonna have a gay old time if you keep this in the cabin, tumblin’ over
-it. Better empty her here an’ cart the stuff below.”
-
-“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But what shall I do with the portmanteau when
-it’s empty?”
-
-“Heave her overboard,” said Jude.
-
-“Shut your head!” said Tyler, suddenly cutting in. “What you talkin’
-about? Heave yourself overboard!” Then to Ratcliffe, “She’s right, all
-the same; there’s no room for luggage. If you’ll help Jude to get the
-things below, I’ll look after the trunk. When you’ve done with the
-cruise you can get a bag to hold your things.”
-
-Ratcliffe opened the portmanteau. The steward of the _Dryad_ was an
-expert: in a past existence he had probably been a pack rat. In any
-given space he could have tucked away half as much again as any other
-ordinary mortal. But he certainly had no imagination, or perhaps he had
-been too busy to cast his eye overboard and see the manner of craft
-Ratcliffe was joining, and Ratcliffe had been far too much exercised in
-his mind about Skelton to notice what was being packed.
-
-Jude on her knees helped.
-
-“What’s this?” asked Jude, coming on a black satin lining.
-
-“Confound the fool!” said Ratcliffe. “He needn’t have packed that: it’s
-a dinner jacket.”
-
-“Mean to say you sit down to your dinner in a jacket?” Jade choked
-and snorted while Ratcliffe hurriedly, on his knees, hauled out the
-trousers and waistcoats that went with the garments.
-
-“That’s the lining--it’s worn the other way about--I know it’s
-tomfoolery. Stick ’em all in one bundle--Lord! look at the shirts he’s
-packed!”
-
-“They’ve got tucks in them,” said Jude, looking at the pleated fronts.
-
-“I know. They go with that tomfool dinner suit. You can’t knock sense
-into the head of a bedroom steward. Come along and let’s get them down
-below.”
-
-While they were carting the stuff down, Satan on the hatch cover
-cut himself a chew of tobacco (he sometimes chewed) and, with his
-lantern jaws working regularly like the jaws of a cow chewing the cud,
-contemplated the steadily emptying portmanteau.
-
-He had a plan about that portmanteau, a plan to turn it to profit.
-Satan’s plans generally had profit for their object. He had taken
-a genuine liking for Ratcliffe; but it was a curious thing with
-Satan that even his likings generally helped him along toward
-profit,--perhaps because they were the outcome of a keen intelligence
-that had been sharpened by knocking about among rascals, beachcombers,
-wharf rats, as well as honest folk.
-
-When Ratcliffe had fetched down the last load and come up again, he
-found Satan and the portmanteau gone.
-
-The canvas boat had not been brought on board, but streamed astern
-on a line. He looked over the side. Satan was in the boat with the
-portmanteau and in the act of pushing off.
-
-“I’m takin’ her back to the yacht,” said Satan.
-
-Ratcliffe nodded.
-
-At that moment Jude came on deck blinking and hitching up her trousers.
-She had washed her face and made herself a bit more tidy,--perhaps
-because she had remembered it was Sunday or perhaps because company had
-come on board. She had evidently put her whole head into the water.
-It was dripping, and as she stood with the old panama in her hand
-and her cropped hair drying in the sun Ratcliffe observed her anew
-and thought that he had never seen a more likable figure. Jude would
-never be pretty, but she was better than pretty,--healthy, honest
-and capable, trusting and fearless, easily reflecting laughter, and
-with a trace of the irresponsibility of youth. It was a face entirely
-original and distinctive. Dirty, it was the face of a larrikin;
-washed, a face such as I have attempted to describe; and the eyes were
-extraordinary,--liquid-gray, with a look of distance, when she was
-serious, a look acquired perhaps from life among vast sea spaces.
-
-“Where’s Satan?” asked Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe pointed.
-
-Jude, shading her eyes, looked. Then she laughed.
-
-“Thought he was up to somethin’,” said she. “He’s gone to kid that
-officer man out of some more truck.”
-
-In a flash Ratcliffe saw the reason of Satan’s activities, and in
-another flash he saw again, or seemed to see, in Satan and Jude a
-pair of gipsies of the sea. A gipsies’ caravan camped close to a
-neat villa,--that was the relationship between the _Sarah Tyler_ and
-the _Dryad_,--and Satan was the caravan man gone round to the villa’s
-back door to return an empty portmanteau and blarney the servants out
-of scraps and old odds and ends not wanted, maybe to commandeer a
-chicken or nick a doormat--heaven only knew! He remembered the fancy
-Satan had taken to the dinghy. And he, Ratcliffe, had thrown in his
-lot with these people! Fishing cruise! Rubbish! Gipsy patter, sea
-thimblerigging, wreck-picking, and maybe petty larceny from Guadaloupe
-to dry Tortugas,--that was what he had signed on for. Why, the _Sarah
-Tyler_, could she have been hauled into any law court, would have
-stood convicted on her very appearance! Jude was honest enough in her
-way; but her way was Satan’s way, and she had owned up with steadfast,
-honest eyes to the plundering of a brig and the caching of the plunder.
-They were “passons to what Pap had been,” but they were his offspring,
-and the law to them was no doubt what it had been to him,--a something
-to be avoided or outwitted, like a dangerous animal.
-
-All these thoughts running through his head did not disturb him in the
-least. Far from that! The reckless in him had expanded since he had cut
-the cable connecting him with the _Dryad_, and not for worlds would
-he have changed the _Sarah_ into a vessel of more conventional form,
-or altered Satan from whatever he might be into a figure of definite
-respectability.
-
-He reckoned that if Satan broke the law he would be clever enough to
-avoid the consequences. His tongue alone would get him out of most
-fixes, and just this touch of gipsiness in the business gave a new
-flavor to life,--the flavor boys seek when they raid orchards and
-hen-roosts and go pirating with corked faces and lath swords.
-
-“He’s goin’ aboard her,” said Jude.
-
-The portmanteau had been taken up by one of the crew, and now Satan,
-evidently at the invitation of one of the white-clad figures leaning
-over the rail of the _Dryad_, was going up the accommodation ladder,
-leaving the boat to wash about in the blue water by the stage.
-
-Ratcliffe guessed that one of the white-clad figures was Skelton and
-that it was on Skelton’s invitation he had gone on board. He felt
-vaguely uneasy. What did Skelton mean by that? Was he up to any dodge
-to “crab” the cruise?
-
-However, he had no time to bother over this, for Jude, who had him now
-to herself without fear of interruption, had opened her batteries.
-
-“Say,” said Jude, hanging over the rail where the awning cast its
-shadow, speaking without looking at him and spitting into the water,
-“what are you when you’re ashore, anyway?”
-
-“I’m one of the idle rich,” said Ratcliffe, lighting his pipe.
-
-“Well, you won’t be idle aboard here,” said Jude definitely. “What was
-your dad? Was your dad an idle-rich?”
-
-“No, he was a ship owner.”
-
-“How many ships did he own?”
-
-“About forty.”
-
-“What sort?”
-
-“Steamers.”
-
-“What sizes?”
-
-“Oh, anything from two to five thousand tons.”
-
-She turned to see if he were guying her.
-
-“There was another man in the business,” said Ratcliffe, “a partner;
-Ratcliffe & Holt was the same of the firm. The governor died intestate.”
-
-“Somethin’ wrong with his inside?”
-
-“No, he died of a stroke; he was found in his office chair dead; he
-died at his work.”
-
-“Did they get the chap that did him in?” asked Jude.
-
-“No, it wasn’t a man that struck him; it was apoplexy, a disease, and
-dying without a will, all his money was divided up between my two
-brothers and me.”
-
-“How much did you get?”
-
-“Over a hundred thousand.”
-
-“Dollars?”
-
-“No, pounds--four hundred thousand dollars.”
-
-“Got ’em still?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“In the bank?”
-
-“Some; the rest is invested.”
-
-She seemed to lose interest in the money business and hung for a moment
-over the rail, whistling almost noiselessly between her teeth and
-kicking up a bare heel. Then she said:
-
-“Who’s the chap you were sailin’ with?”
-
-“Skelton is his name.”
-
-“He owns that hooker?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well,” said Jude suddenly, as if waking from a reverie, “this won’t
-boil potatoes--I’ve got to get dinner ready. Come ’long and help if
-you’re willin’.”
-
-There was half a sack of potatoes in the galley. She set the stove
-going, and then, on her knees before the open sack, she sent him to
-fetch half a bucket of water from overboard. He found the bucket with a
-rope attached, brought the water, and filled the potato kettle, then he
-brought more water for the washing of the potatoes.
-
-She did the washing squatting on her heels before the bucket.
-
-“Where did you get them from?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Get which?”
-
-“The potatoes.”
-
-“Bought them,” said Jude; then, as though suddenly smitten by
-rectitude, “No, we didn’t, nuther: we kidooled them out of a fruiter.”
-
-“What’s a fruiter?”
-
-“Fruit steamer. Satan fixed her.”
-
-“How did he fix her?”
-
-“Well,” said Jude, “it’s no harm to hold up a packet if you don’t throw
-her off her course--much. It’s the owners pays, and they can stand the
-racket. The crew likes it, and if there’s passengers aboard they just
-love it.”
-
-“Do you mean to say you hold up steamers?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But how do you do it?”
-
-“Oh, it’s only now and then. What’s easier than to lay in her course
-with the flag half-mast? Then she heaves to.”
-
-“And you board her and ask for potatoes, or whatever you want?”
-
-“Not much!” said Jude. “They’d boot you off the ship. Water’s what you
-ask for, pretendin’ you’re dying of thirst; then you drink till you’re
-near bustin’ and fill the breaker you’ve brought with you. It’s all
-on the square. Satan would never hold a ship unless he had some fish
-to offer them for whatever he wants,--potatoes or fruit or tobacco.
-He’s got the fish in the boat and hands it up. They’re always glad of
-fresh fish and they offer to buy it; but he won’t take money, but says,
-‘If you’ve got a few potatoes handy, I don’t mind takin’ them for the
-fish.’ Sometimes it’s fruit he wants, or other things. Then you push
-off--and if it’s a passenger packet the passengers, thinkin’ they’ve
-saved you from dyin’ of thirst, line up and cheer. It’s no end of fun.”
-
-“What flag do you sail under?”
-
-“’Murrican, what else? You see,” went on Jude as she put the potatoes
-into the kettle, “fish costs nothing to us and they’re mighty glad of
-it, but I reckon they’d bat our heads off if they knew about the dyin’
-of thirst business.”
-
-“But suppose you struck the same ship twice?”
-
-“It’s not a job one does every day,” said Jude, with a trace of
-contempt in her tone, “and Satan don’t wear blinkers, and it’s not a
-job you could do at all if you didn’t know the lie of the fishin’
-banks by where the ship tracks run. I reckon you’ve got to learn
-something about things.”
-
-“I reckon I have,” said Ratcliffe, laughing, “and I bet you’ll teach
-me!”
-
-“Well, shy that over to begin with,” said Jude, giving him the pail of
-dirty water.
-
-He flung the water over the side, and as he did so he took a glance at
-the _Dryad_. Satan was in the boat just pushing off. When he returned
-to the galley with the news, Jude was preparing to fry fish: not the
-early morning fish, but some caught just before Ratcliffe had come on
-board.
-
-Then he went to the rail again just as Satan was coming alongside.
-
-Satan had a cargo of sorts. His insatiable appetite for canvas and rope
-was evidenced by the bundle in the stern, and there were parcels. The
-return of the empty portmanteau had not been waste labor.
-
-“That’s coffee,” said he to Ratcliffe, handing up the goods. “We were
-runnin’ short. And here’s biscuits--catch a holt--and here’s some
-fancy muck in cans and c’ndensed milk--I told the chap our cow died
-yesterday. ‘Take everything you want,’ says he. ‘Don’t mind me--I’m
-only the owner.’ Offered me the mainsail as I was putting off an’
-told me to come back for the dinghy. I’d told him I was sweet on
-her--full of fun he was--and maybe I will. Claw hold of this bundle
-of matches--they’re a livin’ Godsend--and here’s a case of canned
-t’marters--and that’s all.”
-
-Skelton’s irony was evidently quite lost on Satan, or put down to his
-“fun,” but Ratcliffe could appreciate it, and the fact that its real
-target was himself.
-
-The canned t’marters appeared with the food at dinner, and during the
-meal more of Skelton came out. He had offered Satan vinous liquors,
-hoping, so Ratcliffe dimly suspected, to send him back a trouble to
-the _Sarah Tyler_ and an object lesson on the keeping of disreputable
-company; but the wily Satan had no use for liquor. He was on the water
-wagon.
-
-“I leave all them sorts of things to Jude,” said he, with a grin. He
-was referring to Jude’s boasted drunk at Havana, and Ratcliffe, who was
-placed opposite to the pair of them, across the table, saw Jude’s chin
-project. Why she should boast of a thing one moment and fire up at the
-mention of it at another was beyond him.
-
-For a moment it seemed as if she were going to empty the dish of
-tomatoes over Satan, but she held herself in, all but her tongue.
-
-“You’d have been doin’ better work on board here, mendin’ the gooseneck
-of that spare gaff, than wangling old canvas an’ rope out of that man,”
-said she. “We’re full up of old truck that’s no more use to us than
-Solomon’s aunt. It’s in the family, I suppose, seein’ what Granf’er
-was--”
-
-“Oh, put a potato in your mouth!” said Satan.
-
-“He used to peddle truck on the Canada border,” said she to
-Ratcliffe,--“hams--”
-
-“Close up!” said Satan.
-
-“--made out o’ birchwood, and wooden nutmegs--”
-
-“That was Pap’s joke,” said Satan. “And another word out of you and
-I’ll turn you over me knee and take down your--”
-
-“Then what do you want flingin’ old things in my face?” cried Jude,
-wabbling between anger and tears. “Some day I’ll take me hook, same as
-mother did.”
-
-“There’s not a Baptis’ minister would look at you,” said Satan, winking
-at Ratcliffe.
-
-“Damn Baptis’ ministers! You may work your old hooker yourself. I’ll
-skip! Two thousand of them dollars is mine, and next time we touch
-Havana I’ll skip!”
-
-“And where’ll you skip to?”
-
-“I’ll start a la’ndry.”
-
-“Then you’ll have to black your face and wear a turban, same as the
-others--and marry a nigger. I can see you comin’ off for the ship’s
-washin’.”
-
-Jude began to laugh in a crazy sort of way, then all at once she
-sobered down and went on with her dinner. One could never tell how her
-anger would end,--in tears, laughter of a wild sort, or just nothing.
-
-Not another word was said about the family history of the Tylers, at
-least at that meal, and after it was over Jude made Ratcliffe help to
-wash up the plates and things in the galley.
-
-“Satan’s Cap,” said Jude. “He never helps in the washin’ or swillin’.
-Not cold water!--land’s sake! where did you learn washin’ up?--hot!
-I’ve left some in that billy on the stove.”
-
-She had taken off her old coat and rolled her guernsey sleeves up to
-the shoulders nearly, and it came to Ratcliffe as he helped that,
-without a word of remonstrance, naturally, and as a part adapts itself
-to the economy of a whole, he had sunk into the position of kitchen
-maid and general help to the Tyler family, taken the place of the
-nigger that had skipped; furthermore that Satan was less a person
-than a subtle influence. Satan seemed to obtain his ends more by
-wishing than by willing. He wanted an extra hand, and he had somehow
-put the spell of his wish on him, Ratcliffe. He had wished a drum of
-paint out of Simmons--and look at Skelton, the cynical and superior
-Skelton, sending off doles of coffee and “t’marters” to the dingy and
-disreputable _Sarah Tyler_, offering his mainsail to the rapacious
-Satan as a gibe! What had he been but a marionette dancing on the
-string of Satan’s wish?
-
-Only for Jude and the _Sarah_ and the queer new sense of freedom from
-all the associations he had ever known, only for something likable
-about Satan, the something that gave him power to wheedle things out
-of people and bend them to his wishes, Ratcliffe might have reacted
-against the Tyler hypnotism. As it was, the whole business seemed as
-jolly as a pantomime, as exciting as a new form of novel in which the
-folk were real and himself a character.
-
-Leaving Satan and the old _Sarah_ aside, and the extraordinary
-fascination of spars, sails, narrow deck, and close sea, catching one’s
-own fish, cooking one’s own food, and dickering with winds, waves,
-reefs, and lee shores for a living,--leaving all these aside, Jude
-alone would have held him; for Jude gave him what he possessed when
-he was nine,--the power of playing again, of seeing everything new and
-fresh. Washing up dishes with Jude was a game. To the whole-souled
-Jude all this business was a game,--hauling on the halyards, fishing,
-cooking, hanging on to the beard of a storm by the sea anchor, wreck
-picking and so on,--and she had infected him. Already they were good
-companions and, when together, of the same age, about nine--though she
-was fifteen and he over twenty.
-
-“Stick them on that shelf,” said Jude. “Oh,
-Lord!--butter-fingers!--lemme! That’s the gadget to keep them from
-shiftin’ if the ship rolls. Now stick the knives in that locker. You
-don’t mind my tellin’ you, do you?”
-
-“Not a bit.”
-
-“Well, that’s all.”
-
-They found Satan under the awning, attending to the gooseneck of the
-spare gaff.
-
-Jude sat down on the deck clasping her knees, criticized Satan’s
-handiwork, received instructions to hold her tongue, and then
-collapsed, lying on her back with knees up and the back of her hand
-across her eyes. She could sleep at any odd moment.
-
-The horizon had vanished in haze, the crying of the gulls had died
-down, and the washing of the lazy swell on the island beach sounded
-like a lullaby.
-
-A trace of smoke was rising from the yellow funnel of the _Dryad_ as
-she lay like a white painted ship on a blue painted ocean. They were
-firing up.
-
-“How about getting ashore?” asked Ratcliffe. “I want to see that cache
-of yours. Care to come?”
-
-“I’d just as soon leave it till they’re away,” said Satan, jerking his
-hand toward the _Dryad_. “There’s no tellin’, they might be spottin’ us
-on the location with a glass, and they’ll be off tonight--so the chap
-told me. You leave it to me and I’ll show you a cache better nor that
-in a day or two.”
-
-“Shut up, Satan!” came a drowsy voice from the deck.
-
-“Shut up yourself!” said Satan. “I’m not talkin’ of what you mean: I’m
-talkin’ of the abalone reef--lyin’ there like a lazy dog and lippin’
-your betters!”
-
-“Where’s me betters?” cried Jude, sitting bang-up suddenly, like the
-corpse in “Thou art the man.”
-
-“I’m your betters.”
-
-“You!”
-
-“Me!”
-
-Jude broke into a cracked laugh.
-
-“Listen to him talkin’!” cried she to the universe in general. “Ain’t
-fit to bile potatoes!” She was on her feet, and he was after her with a
-rope’s end, dodging her round the mast. “Touch me and I’ll tell him!” A
-flick of the rope’s end caught her, and next moment she was clinging to
-Ratcliffe and using him as her shield. “It’s an old ship sunk south o’
-Rum Key!” cried Jude. “South o’ Rum Key! I told you I’d tell him if you
-touched me.”
-
-Satan dropped the rope and resumed the gooseneck business.
-
-“Now you’ve done it!” said he.
-
-“Told you I would,” said Jude. She sat down on the deck again as
-though nothing had happened and nursed her knees.
-
-“You needn’t mind me,” said Ratcliffe. “I won’t tell.”
-
-“Oh, it’s not that,” said Satan, “but Pap was mighty particular about
-keepin’ close. He located that hooker only three months before the
-fever took him--and he didn’t come on it by chance nuther. And now
-Jude’s given the show away!”
-
-“I told you I’d tell him,” said Jude broodily.
-
-“Told me you’d tell him! Why, ever since last fall you’ve been at me
-to keep my tongue in my head about it, and then you bring it out bing,
-first thing, yourself! That’s a woman all over.”
-
-“Who are you callin’ a woman?”
-
-“Me aunt. Shut your head and give over handlin’ that ball of yarn,
-clutch hold of the gaff and keep it steady while I fix this ring on
-her!”
-
-He worked away in silence while Ratcliffe sat watching, vaguely
-intrigued by what had just passed. It was less the words than the place
-and circumstance,--the little deck of the _Sarah Tyler_, the blue lazy
-sea, the voice of the surf on Palm Island, the figure of Jude and
-Satan. He had seen Rum Cay: They had passed it in a pink and pearly
-dawn. The steward had called him up to look at it. South of that lonely
-and fascinating place old man Tyler had located a sunk ship. What sort
-of ship he knew instinctively and that the Tylers were not the people
-to halloo over nothing. The gulls did not know these seas better than
-they. He said nothing, however. It was Satan who spoke next.
-
-“Pap had reckoned to lay for it this spring,” said Satan, “but the
-fever took him. Then we were underhanded. Jude and me can make out to
-work the boat and get a livin’, but we’re too underhanded for a big
-job. Why, takin’ that truck off the brig I told you about near laid us
-out, and we had the nigger to help and she was hove up so that it was
-like takin’ cargo off a wharfside.”
-
-“Look here,” said Ratcliffe, “I’ll help if you care to go for it. I
-don’t want any share: just the fun. What’s in her?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan in a half-hearted way, “maybe we’ll have a look at
-her; but it’s a job that wants more than three by rights. Pap was three
-men in himself; he’d a done it. It’s a dynamite job. She’s got to be
-blasted open.”
-
-“I’ve heard stories about buried treasure in these seas--” began
-Ratcliffe. Jude turned her head.
-
-“That’s bilge,” said she.
-
-“Yarns,” said Satan. “Pap used to turn any man down that talked of
-stuff bein’ buried. First he said that chaps didn’t bury stuff, second
-if they did you couldn’t find it, what with earthquakes and sand
-siftin’ and such, and third that never an ounce of silver, or gold for
-the matter of that, has ever been dug up by the tomfools huntin’ for
-it. Havana is full of tall stories of buried treasure--chaps make a
-livin’ sellin’ locations and faked charts and the like of that. It’s a
-Spanish game, and it takes good American money every year. You see, Pap
-was a book-readin’ man,--taught himself to read, too, and didn’t start
-the job till he was near forty,--so he had a head on him, but somehow
-or ’nother he never made the money he ought. If he’d stuck in towns and
-places, he’d have been a Rock’feller; but he liked beatin’ about free,
-said God’s good air was better than dollars. But it stuck in him that
-he hadn’t made out, somehow. Then he turned into unbelievin’ ways, Said
-he was a soci--what was it, Jude?”
-
-“Somethin’ or ’nother,” said Jude.
-
-“Socialist?” suggested Ratcliffe.
-
-“That’s it! Said the time was coming when all the guys that were down
-under would be on top of the chaps that were on top, and that there’d
-be such a hell of a rough house money’d be no use anyway; said the
-time was comin’ when eggs would be a dollar apiece and no dollars to
-buy them with, and me and Jude would be safest without money gettin’
-our livin’ out of the sea. He was a proper dirge when he got on that
-tack. But all the same it stuck in him that he wasn’t on top, and one
-night when he was in Diegos’ saloon he heard three Spanish chaps layin’
-their heads together. He knew the lingo well enough to make out their
-meanin’. They were in the bar. Pap wasn’t on the water wagon, but he
-was no boozer. He was sittin’ there that night just dead beat, as any
-man might be after the day’s work he’d done, runnin’ the customs--”
-
-“Luff!” said Jude in a warning voice.
-
-“Oh, close your head! Think I am talkin’ to a customs officer? He don’t
-care.”
-
-“Not a bit,” said Ratcliffe. “Heave ahead.”
-
-“Well, he was sittin’ with his eyes shut, and he heard these guys
-colludin’ together. He didn’t get more than half they said, but he
-got enough to make him want to hear more. Then they quit the bar and
-went into a back room with their lemon juice and cigarettes. Ten
-minutes after hell broke loose in that back room, and when Pap and the
-bartender got the door open there was the chaps, one on the floor shot
-through the head and the other two near done in. Two of them had set
-on the guy that was dead; but they hadn’t knocked him out before he
-began to shoot, and he’d pretty well riddled them with a Colt automatic
-pistol--”
-
-“Them’s the things!” said Jude. “I’m savin’ up to buy one of them
-things on my own--twenty-five dollars--”
-
-“Shut your head! Then they must have knocked it out of his hand and
-used the last shot on him.”
-
-“His brains were all over the floor,” said Jude with relish. “Pap said
-they looked like white of egg beat up and enough to fill a puddin’
-basin.”
-
-“Pap spotted somethin’ else on the floor,” went on Satan, “a piece of
-paper folded double. He put it in his pocket while the fellers were
-bein’ lifted to the hospital, where they died that same night. He was
-on the square all right, takin’ that paper, and I’ll tell you why. Six
-months before that we’d spotted a wreck comin’ up from Guadaloupe.
-She’s so placed--as maybe you’ll see yourself one day--that a hundred
-ships might have passed her without spottin’ her, and bein’ out of
-trade tracks made her all the safer. These guys had been talkin’ about
-a wreck before they left the bar for the back room, and he reckoned it
-was our find they were onto. The piece of paper made him sure of that,
-and, takin’ it with the talk he’d heard, he reckoned he had got the
-biggest thing that ever humped itself in these waters. He said there
-was a hundred thousand dollars aboard her.”
-
-It was a fascinating story, yet it seemed to Ratcliffe that Satan
-showed little enthusiasm over the business.
-
-“You don’t seem very keen about it,” said he.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “it seems a bit too big, and that’s the truth. The
-hooker’s there right enough, but I don’t seem to see all that stuff
-aboard of her.”
-
-“It’s there right enough,” said Jude.
-
-“Then there’s the getting of it,” went on Satan. “That’s a tough job to
-tackle. Months of work, no pay, and the chance of bein’ let down at the
-end of it.”
-
-“Satan’d sooner be grubbin’ round after abalones,” said Jude. “Bone
-lazy, that’s what he is! I know the stuff’s there, and I’m goin’ to get
-it if I have to dig it out myself.”
-
-“Well, off with you then,” said the other, “and a good riddance you’d
-be!” Then to Ratcliffe, “We’ll run you down there some day and you can
-see for yourself. If you’ve any money to burn, you might like to put
-it in the spec’. We’d want extra help. Jude’s talkin’ through her hat.
-We can’t tackle that business alone, even Pap saw that--though he was
-mighty set on doin’ it single-handed. And that’s where the bother
-comes in, for the island where she’s lyin’ is Spanish, and the Dagoes
-would claim what we got if they knew.”
-
-“We’d have to get half a dozen men and give them a share,” said
-Ratcliffe. “That would make them hold their tongues; but I see an awful
-lot of difficulties. Suppose you got the stuff, how are you to get rid
-of it?”
-
-“We’d have to get it down to a Brazil port,” said Satan, “or run it
-into Caracas. That’s handier. Them Venezuelans are the handiest chaps
-when it comes to loose dealin’.”
-
-“For the matter of that,” said Ratcliffe, “one could run it straight
-to England. There are lots of places there where we could get it
-ashore--but we’ve got to get it first.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan. “Look! She’s puttin’ a boat off.” He pointed
-to the _Dryad_.
-
-A quarter-boat had been lowered and was pulling away from the yacht.
-As she drew closer Ratcliffe saw that the man in the sternsheets,
-steering, was Skelton,--Skelton coming either to make trouble or to
-make friends.
-
-The oars rose up and fell with a crash as the bow oar hooked on to the
-dingy old _Sarah_.
-
-“Hulloo!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Hulloo!” said Skelton.
-
-“Won’t you come on board?”
-
-“No, thank you.” A sniff from Jude. “I just came over to say that we
-are starting.”
-
-Ratcliffe saw that he wanted to say a lot, but was tongue-tied before
-the boat’s crew and the Tylers.
-
-“Better come on board,” said he, “and have a chat in the cabin before
-you’re off.”
-
-Skelton hesitated a moment, then he came. He gave Satan a nod, utterly
-ignored Jude, and, followed by Ratcliffe, passed below. Downstairs his
-manner changed. Standing and refusing a seat, as though fearing to
-contaminate his lily-white ducks, he began to speak as if addressing
-the portrait of old man Tyler.
-
-“I can’t believe you absolutely mean to do this,” said he. “I can
-understand a moment’s temper, but--but--this is a joke carried too far.”
-
-“My dear Skelton,” said the other, “what’s the good? I have the
-greatest respect for you, but we are dead opposites in temperament and
-we make each other unhappy. What’s the good of carrying it on? It’s not
-as if you minded being alone. You like being alone, and I like this old
-tub and her crew. Well, let’s each carry out our likings. I’m as happy
-as anything here.”
-
-“I’m not thinking of your happiness, but of the position. You were a
-guest on my yacht, and you leave me like this--I need not embroider on
-the bare fact.”
-
-“Do you want me to go back?”
-
-“Not in the least,” said Skelton. “You are a free agent, I hope.”
-
-Ratcliffe’s blood was beginning to rise in temperature. He knew quite
-well Skelton wanted him to go back, but was too proud to say so, and he
-knew quite well that Skelton wanted him back, not for any love of him,
-but simply because the _position_ was irregular and people, if they
-heard of all this, might talk; also it might seem queer to the yacht’s
-crew.
-
-“Well, then, if you don’t specially want me back, I’ll stay,” said he.
-
-“Very well,” said Skelton, “as you please. I wash my hands of the
-affair, and if you come to grief it is your own lookout. I will have
-the remainder of your baggage forwarded home to you when I reach
-England.”
-
-“I’ll maybe see you at Havana when this cruise is over,” said Ratcliffe
-vaguely.
-
-“I doubt it,” said Skelton. “It is quite possible I may not call
-there.” He turned and began to climb the companionway. On deck he
-nodded frigidly to Satan and got over the side.
-
-Satan, leaning across the rail, looked down.
-
-“How about that mains’l?” asked Satan jocularly.
-
-“I’m afraid I have no more spare canvas available,” said Skelton, with
-a veiled dig at the rapacity of the lantern-jawed one, “or provisions.
-Anything else I shall be delighted to let you have.”
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “you might send us a loan of the dinghy.
-We’re short of boats.”
-
-“You shall have her,” said Skelton with a glance at Ratcliffe, who was
-also leaning over, as though to say, “This is the sort of man you have
-thrown your lot in with!”
-
-The boat pushed off.
-
-“Goodby!” cried Ratcliffe, half laughing, half angry, with Satan, but
-quite unable to veto the promised gift.
-
-“’By,” replied the other, raising a hand.
-
-Jude, who had said not one word, suddenly began to giggle.
-
-“What’s wrong with you?” asked Satan.
-
-“I dunno,” replied Jude, “but there’s somethin’ about that guy that
-makes me want to laugh.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-SKELTON SAILS
-
-
-The breeze had risen with the declining sun and the water round the
-_Dryad_ looked like a spread of smashed sapphires.
-
-They watched Skelton getting on board, and then they saw the dinghy
-lowered and the quarter-boat taking her in tow. In five minutes, like
-a white duckling behind a moor-hen, she was streaming on a line behind
-the _Sarah_ and the quarter-boat was pulling back for the yacht.
-
-Satan had got his wish, and Ratcliffe was feeling just as Skelton
-wanted him to feel, under a compliment and rather a beast. Then they
-saw the boat taken on board and the hands laying aloft and the canvas
-shaking out to the favoring breeze.
-
-“He’ll have the wind right aft, and that’ll save his coal,” said Satan.
-“I reckon if his engines give out he wouldn’t bother much, with all
-that canvas to carry him.”
-
-“They’re handlin’ it smart,” said Jude. “There’s the anchor goin’ up.”
-
-The flurried sound of the steam winch raising the anchor came across
-the water, then it ceased, and Jude, running to the flag locker,
-fetched out a dingy old American flag, bent it on, and ran it up,
-dipping it as the _Dryad_ began to move.
-
-She returned the compliment, gliding away with the bow-wash beginning
-to show and the wake creaming behind her. As she passed the southern
-reefs and shifted her helm, squaring her yards to the following wind,
-a blast from her siren raised a blanket of shouting gulls. Then the
-island cut her off and the sea lay desolate.
-
-The sense of his loneliness came on Ratcliffe, sudden as the clap of a
-door. He had cut the painter with civilization. The deck of the _Sarah
-Tyler_ seemed smaller than ever, Jude and Satan more irresponsible and
-unaccountable, and his own daring a new thing, somewhat dubious. He had
-renounced services and delicacies and surety of passage and safety,
-letters and newspapers, everything he had known! The shock scarcely
-lasted a minute, and then, with the breeze across the pansy-blue
-evening sea, came blowing the wind of Adventure and Freedom.
-
-Then in a moment some spirit explained to him what life really
-meant,--life as the Argonauts knew it, as the gulls know it, freedom
-in the intense and living moment, without a thought of yesterday, with
-scarcely a care for the morrow.
-
-He took his seat in an old chair that Satan had placed under the rag of
-awning and lit his pipe. That delightful smoke seemed the culmination
-of everything in these first moments in this new world. As he smoked he
-watched the Tylers, who were so busy with their own affairs that they
-seemed to have forgotten him. They had hauled the dinghy alongside,
-then they got into her and were lost to sight; but he could hear their
-voices, Jude’s shrill with pleasure and excitement.
-
-“My! Ain’t she a beauty? Ain’t she a dinky boat? My! look at
-the _cus_hions!” A laugh. “For the love of Mike look at the
-cushions--_cus_hions in a boat! Heave ’em on deck!” The cushions came
-flying over the rail, together with the voice of Satan, evidently
-bending.
-
-“Leave them alone or I’ll bat y’ with the bailer! Well, let them lay
-on deck if they’re there. She’s a duck, new built too,--teak, copper
-fastenin’s, all the best that money could buy. Stop rockin’ her and
-over you get after the cushions.”
-
-Jude came clambering on board, beaming in the sunset, then she got
-one of the boat’s cushions and took her seat on it on the deck beside
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“I reckon old Popplecock’s as soft as his cushions, to be wangled out
-of a boat like that,” said Jude, examining the sole of her bare right
-foot for a fancied splinter. “Satan said he was goin’ to try it on him
-when you were down below with him. Didn’t believe he’d do it. That chap
-looked as stiff as his own mainmast--but there’s no tellin’--Say, I
-heard what you said to him when you were down below.”
-
-“Oh, did you?”
-
-“I wasn’t listenin’: I just heard through the skylight. I heard you
-sayin’ you liked us and the old _Sarah_ better’n him and his boat--what
-makes likin’s?”
-
-“I don’t know.”
-
-“Nuther do I; but we took to you right off, same as you to us. Ever
-done abalone fishin’?”
-
-“No.”
-
-“Well, I reckon you won’t want to do it again, once you’ve tried.
-There’ll be a big low tide tomorrow after sun-up, and you’ll have a
-chance of seein’ what it is. Finished your pipe? Well, come along and
-help us to get supper.”
-
-For all the work Ratcliffe did, she might have got the supper herself.
-He was mostly in the way; but it was the companionship that helped.
-Brothers aren’t much good as companions. Ratcliffe was a new thing,
-absolutely new, from his striped pajamas and dandy clothes to his
-condition of mind, just as she was a new thing to Ratcliffe. Never did
-two beings come together so well or create more rapidly a little world
-of mutual interests out of the little things of life, or a weaker being
-dominate more completely the stronger.
-
-“Can you make bread?” asked Jude after he had filled the tin kettle
-for her. “Well, you’ll have to learn. That’s the bakin’ powder in that
-big tin, and the flour’s in the starboard locker--What’re you doin’
-with the tin? Land’s sake! You don’t think I’m goin’ to make bread for
-supper, same as you make tea? Where was you born?”
-
-“Hampshire.”
-
-“I thought it was somewhere like that,” said Jude.
-
-She instructed him in the primitive method of bread making as conducted
-on board the _Sarah Tyler_, finishing up with the information that
-hardtack would be their portion at supper that night and breakfast
-next morning, as she was “up to the gunnel” in other business. Among
-the other things was having to put a patch on her trousers: not the
-ones she was wearing, which were her next best, but her worst. The old
-guernsey she was wearing was her second best. Coats! Oh, coats were
-good enough on Sunday or for going ashore in, but no use much in a
-ship, except an oilskin for dirty weather. Boots the same; stockings
-the same. You had to wear boots, of course, over rocks and through
-stuff like that over there on the island.
-
-“Them pajamas” would be bully things to wear by day, only they’d
-frighten the fish. As for sleeping in such things, she’d just as soon
-seek the arms of Morpheus in a top hat. Why didn’t he wear a nighty
-like her and Satan? Pap’s eyes would have bugged out had he seen those
-things. He was “awful old fashioned,”--used to make her and Satan
-put cotton between their teeth every night. They did it still. She
-exhibited a set of dazzling white teeth to prove the fact. You just
-pulled a cotton thread between them, and then they never went rotten.
-Also he made them brush their teeth every morning. Folks that didn’t do
-that got toothache.
-
-“Kettle’s boilin’,” suddenly finished Jude. “Now start in an’ let’s
-see you make the tea--said you could do it. There’s the can. Ain’t
-you goin’ to heat the pot first? How’re you to heat it? Let me have a
-hold. Now fling the water out. A spoonful a head and one for the pot
-and another one for Satan,--he likes it strong,--and if you’ll take it
-along to the cabin without spillin’ it I’ll be after you in a minute
-with the plates and things.”
-
-Satan, who never put his hand to menial work, maintaining, without
-the least offense, his position as captain and owner, came down to
-supper, flushed with the good qualities of the dinghy. He had taken
-her for a row--and it was like hearing a man talking of a stroll with
-a sweetheart--if men ever talk of such things. Before going on deck
-to smoke he pointed out Ratcliffe’s quarters for the night. He was to
-have Pap’s cabin, the space divided off with a curtain. Jude and he
-always slept in hammocks swung in the “saloon.” Before going on deck he
-fetched an old canister out of a locker and, emptying some dried herbs
-into a saucer, set fire to them and left them smoldering on the table.
-It was to keep the mosquitoes away. Pap had got the receipt from a
-Seminole Indian up near Cedar Cays. It was patent stuff. Not a mosquito
-would come when there was a sniff of it in the air.
-
-Then, just as the moon was rising, and after the things were washed up,
-they sat on deck, smoking, listening to the waves on the beach, and
-watching fish jumping in the track of the moon. They talked of fish,
-and to Ratcliffe’s mind two things became apparent,--Satan’s profound,
-awful knowledge of the sea and all that lived therein, and his absolute
-indifference to sport. Satan fished for food. Tarpon and tarpon
-fishermen filled him with disgust and disdain. You can’t eat tarpon,
-and the guys that came from New York and such places and spent their
-days fighting tarpon with a ten-ounce rod and a twenty-one-thread line
-seemed to him bereft of reason.
-
-Jude, sitting on the deck and mending her pants by the light of the
-moon, concurred.
-
-“But it’s the fun of the thing,” said Ratcliffe; “it’s the matching of
-one’s skill and strength against the fish.” He talked of the joys of
-salmon fishing.
-
-“What bait do you use for them?” asked Satan.
-
-“Flies.”
-
-Jude shrieked.
-
-“Not live flies,” he explained: “imitation ones.” He tried to describe
-artificial fly-making and finished with a sense of failure as of one
-who had entered the lists in defense of a niggling form of business
-that had yet a touch of humor in it.
-
-Then, as they talked, suddenly through the night came a sound like the
-boom of a big gun. Ratcliffe nearly dropped his pipe.
-
-“That’s a fish,” said Satan.
-
-“Sea bat,” said Jude indifferently.
-
-“That noise?”
-
-“Sea bat jumping. There they go again. Must be a circus of them playin’
-about beyond the reefs,--big flat fish, weigh all of a ton.”
-
-“Tails as long as themselves and eyes like dinner plates,” said Jude,
-“mushy brutes. Tow a ship after them if they foul the anchor--won’t
-they, Satan?”
-
-“They’re loudenin’,” said Satan. “They’ll be comin’ this way with the
-current. Come forward and have a look.”
-
-Leaning over the rail, they watched the moon-shot water. The sounds had
-ceased.
-
-“They’ve stopped playin’,” said Satan, as though he knew exactly what
-they were doing.
-
-“It’s too shallow for them here,” said Jude.
-
-“Shallow! It’s fifty foot of water and a sandy bottom. What are you
-talkin’ about? Told you.”
-
-The depths of the sea suddenly became lit. Down below vast forms came
-drifting like the mainsails of ships ablaze with phosphorescent light,
-drifting and turning over as they drifted like gargantuan leaves blown
-by the wind. The whiplike tails could be seen as streaks of flame.
-Glimpses of devilish faces and lambent eyes showed as they turned, the
-fins waving like frills of fire.
-
-Then they were gone.
-
-The Tylers showed little concern over the marvelous sight; allowing,
-however, that it was the biggest school of “bats” they had ever struck;
-but to Ratcliffe it was as though the sea had disclosed a peep of its
-true heart and real mystery.
-
-Then they went to rest, and as he lay in Pap’s cabin, listening to the
-occasional trickle of the water against the planking and the groan of
-the rudder moved by the lilt of the swell, it seemed to him that daring
-in its everyday and cold-blooded form could not have carried a man
-much further than it had carried him. The sea bats had underscored the
-business as far as the mystery of the ocean and danger of cruising in
-such a small boat were concerned; the hardness of Pap’s bunk bedding
-told of comforts renounced; while the morals of the Tylers, though
-good enough no doubt, had, as disclosed in their conversation, a
-touch of the free lance and a threat of port authority troubles and
-differences of opinion with the customs. Absolute respect for the
-rights of man, partial respect for the rights of shipping companies and
-steamer lines, no respect at all for governments and customs,--that
-was an outline of the Tyler morality. What had made him renounce
-the _Dryad_ for the _Sarah?_ What, lying in his hard bunk, made him
-contented with the exchange? The love of adventure and the craving for
-something new contributed, no doubt, but the main reason he felt to be
-the Tylers,--Satan with his strange mentality and queer methods; Jude,
-unlike any other being he had ever met.
-
-Then, as he lay considering all this, came muted voices from the
-“saloon.” Satan’s voice:
-
-“Have you put the cotton between your teeth?”
-
-Then Jude’s, drowsily:
-
-“Naw--leave a body alone!”
-
-“Get out o’ your hammock, you lazy dog, an’ fix your teeth or I’ll let
-you down by the head!”
-
-Then Jude’s voice, dolorous and muffled, “Shut up or you’ll be wakin’
-him! Cuss my teeth--cayn’t find the cotton! Wakin’ a body up like that!
-Tell you I’m _lookin’_ for it--got it--”
-
-A long silence, during which Ratcliffe dropped off, to be awakened an
-hour later by the lamentations of Jude and the sounds of Satan prodding
-her out of a nightmare,--a gastric nightmare, in which it appeared to
-her troubled soul that she _had_ to fry a sea bat, _totum terres atque
-rotundum_, in the small galley frying pan for breakfast.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-CARQUINEZ
-
-
-The tide had begun to draw out with the setting stars, and the tune of
-the waters on the beach had sunk to the merest thread of sound.
-
-Then, through the silence from the far reefs to southward, came the
-single, lamentable cry of a gull; then a chorus, and away against the
-vague blue of the east, here and there, like leaves blown about a dimly
-lit window showed the wings of the birds already putting out to sea for
-the fishing.
-
-Ratcliffe was awakened by Jude calling on him to “show a leg.”
-
-“Satan’s on deck,” said Jude, “and if you believe in washin’ he’ll give
-you a swill with a bucket. Hurry up and come down again, for I want a
-swill myself. Swim? Not on your life! Sharks, that’s why.”
-
-The voice came from a hammock which he had blundered against in the
-semidarkness. Then on deck after his swill, drying himself with an old
-towel provided by Satan, he stood for a moment watching the sun break
-up through the water and the great sea flashing to life and the white
-gulls flying.
-
-The island was sending a faint breeze to them, a tepid breeze flavored
-with earth and cactus and bay cedar scents, perfumes that mixed with
-the tang of the ocean and the tar-oakum scents of the _Sarah Tyler_.
-
-And all these scents and sounds and sights, from the sun flash on the
-sea to the trembling palm fronds on the shore, seemed like a great
-bouquet presented by youth and morning.
-
-Oh, the splendor of being alive, free, happy, without a single care,
-and the deck of the wandering _Sarah_ under foot!
-
-From below through the skylight came a sleep-heavy voice.
-
-“Ain’t you done yet?”
-
-“Coming,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-He dived into his pajamas and came below.
-
-“Get into your cabin an’ shut the door,” commanded the yawning voice
-from the hammock.
-
-“There’s no door.”
-
-“Well, draw the curtain. Oh, Lord! what’s the good o’ gettin’ up? I’m
-near dead asleep!”
-
-Then the voice of Satan descending the companion ladder.
-
-“Ain’t you up? Well, you wait one minute!”
-
-A thump on the floor, a scurry up the companion ladder, and then
-shuddery lamentations and the sounds of swilling from the deck above,
-mixed with the admonitions of Satan from below.
-
-“Oh, my! ain’t it cold? Oh, my! ain’t it frizzin’?”
-
-“Get on, you mad turkle! You ain’t washin’, you’re splashing the water
-on the deck. Slush it over you.”
-
-“I’m slushing it.”
-
-“Think I don’t know? Why, you ain’t gasped yet! Give a gasp, or I’ll be
-up to you with a rope-end! That’s more like it.”
-
-It was!
-
-The sun was high when Ratcliffe got on deck, and a light, steady breeze
-was blowing up from the straits of Florida; the gulls looked like
-snowflakes blowing round the far reefs and against the morning blue of
-the sea.
-
-Jude had put the kettle on. She had dressed on deck, having carried her
-“togs” with her, and she was now preparing a line for fishing, and, as
-she bent over it, appeared Satan,--Satan rising from the cabin hatch
-with a toothbrush in his hand.
-
-“You’ve forgot your teeth,” said Satan.
-
-“No, I haven’t,” said Jude. “I’ve been fillin’ the kettle--I’ll fix
-them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”
-
-“Fishin’ will wait.” He fetched a pannikin of water. “You’re more
-trouble than a dozen. What’d Pap say if he saw you?”
-
-“I’ll fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”
-
-“You’ll fix them now!”
-
-“No. I won’t!”
-
-Satan put down the pannikin and the brush. She evaded him like a flash
-and skimmed up the mast to the crosstrees.
-
-Scarcely had she got up than she came sliding down, seized the
-toothbrush and pannikin, and began to brush her teeth over the scupper
-with a fire speed and fury that seemed born of dementia.
-
-“Sardines comin’,” explained Jude between mouthfuls. “Look alive and
-get a bucket!”
-
-Ratcliffe looked over the sea, where her birdlike sight had spotted
-the sardine shoal being driven like a gray cloud under the water
-by pursuing fish. A fringe of dancing silver showed the leaping
-sardines, and the great fish driving the shoal broke up now and then in
-sword-flashes.
-
-They were coming from south to north, and the left wing of the shoal
-would pass the island beach by a cable length.
-
-While Satan stood by with a bucket at the end of a rope, Ratcliffe hung
-over the side watching.
-
-The driven sardines had no eyes for the _Sarah_. They struck her like
-the blow of a great silvery hand, boiled around her, and passed. The
-army of pursuit followed, passed and vanished, leaving the water clear
-and Satan with a dipped up bucket full of quivering silver.
-
-The Tylers, absolutely blind to the wonder of the business, fried the
-sardines just as they were, tossed out of the blue sea into the frying
-pan, and, breakfast over, Satan and Ratcliffe took the dinghy to hunt
-for abalones on the uncovered reef.
-
-The reefs to southward formed two spurs divided by a creek of blue
-water, and having got the dinghy into this creek Ratcliffe tended the
-boat while Satan hunted for the abalones.
-
-Satan in search of pearls was a sight. Heart, soul, and mind bound
-up in the business, like a dog hunting for truffles, every find was
-announced by a yell or a whoop, like the whoop of a Red Indian.
-
-Ratcliffe could see squiggly-wiggly cuttlefish tendrils running up
-Satan’s arms as he delved in some of the rock-clefts, and Satan
-disengaging them and flinging the “mushy brutes” away. The big abalones
-were nearly always deep down under the rock ledges and had to be
-chiseled off, wallowing in the water. At these times Ratcliffe might
-have fancied the vanished one lost or drowned, but for the profane
-language that rose and floated away on the breeze.
-
-All the same, it was dull work for the boat tender. Having nothing else
-to think of, he thought of Jude. Her figure chased away dullness.
-
-A man in the bright and early morning is quite a different person
-from the same man at noon, and coming across Jude after a long course
-of Skelton was like stepping from a gray afternoon to dawn. Was it
-possible that Skelton and Jude were vertebrates of the same species?
-
-Then there was what women would have called the pity of it. Ratcliffe
-did not deal much with the conventions as a rule; still, he could
-not but perceive that all life has an aim and ending, and that the
-end of an old sailor was not what life and the fitness of things had
-destined for Jude. What would she grow up into? He thought of all the
-girls he had ever known. There was not one so jolly as Jude; still,
-it was terrible, somehow, monstrous. He remembered her threat to pull
-her skirts over her head and run down the street if skirts were ever
-imposed upon her. Her contempt for the feminine rose up before him, and
-against all that her housewifely instincts and the fact that, despite
-Satan’s rope-end and mock bluster, she ruled the _Sarah Tyler_ just as
-a woman rules a house.
-
-Still, it was deplorable. Looking away into distance, what would become
-of her?
-
-Vague and fatherly ideas of getting her away from this life and having
-her brought up properly and educated came to him, only to be dispelled
-by Jude. Imagine Jude in a girls’ school, at a tea party!
-
-He was aroused from these meditations by Satan,--Satan with an armful
-of abalones, Satan scratched and bleeding and soused in sea water, but
-triumphant.
-
-He reckoned they were the biggest “fish” ever got on these reefs. There
-were a dozen and six all told, and when they were collected and put on
-board the dinghy put back.
-
-Coming round the western spur of the reef, they found that Jude had
-left the _Sarah_--a high crime--and rowed herself ashore.
-
-The canvas boat was on the beach, and away amid the bay cedars and
-cactus toward the trees could be seen the head and shoulders of the
-deserter moving about. She seemed in search of something.
-
-“God love me!” cried Satan.
-
-He beached the dinghy, helped Ratcliffe to run her up, and then
-started, followed by the other, running and shouting as he ran.
-
-“Hi! chucklehead! Whatcha leave the ship for? Didn’t I tell you to
-stand by her? Whatcha huntin’ for--turkles’ eggs?”
-
-“What you done with your eyes?” retorted the other. “Cayn’t you see?”
-
-Instantly, and by her tone and by some sixth sense, Satan was appeased.
-He seemed suddenly to scent danger. He saw the work she had been on,
-camouflaging the cache more effectively. He cast his glance over the
-island, the western sea, turned, and then stood stock-still, shading
-his eyes.
-
-Away beyond the _Sarah Tyler_ across the purple blue stood a sail. The
-land wind had died off, and the stranger was bringing the sea wind with
-her. A small topsail schooner she showed now, with all sail set, making
-dead for the island.
-
-“That’s him,” said Satan.
-
-“Spotted him half an hour ago,” said Jude. “He was steering
-nor’-nor’west and shifted his helm when he saw us.”
-
-The bay cedar bushes sighed suddenly to the new-risen wind, and as
-Ratcliffe glanced about him the feeling of the desolation of the place
-where he stood came to him strong,--strong in the scent of cactus and
-herbage, the tune of the water on the beach, and the rustle of the wind
-in the bushes.
-
-“He’s been huntin’ for us,” said Satan, “curse him!”
-
-“Who is he?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Friend of Pap’s, he was--”
-
-“Pretended to be,” put in Jude.
-
-“Spanish,” continued Satan, “and ever since Pap gave out he’s been
-pretty much on our heels. Jude and me worked the thing out and we came
-to conclude he’d scented, somehow, from Pap, about the hooker I spoke
-of.”
-
-“The wreck?’
-
-“Yep. Pap was keen on gettin’ extra money into the business of salvin’
-her, and I b’lieve he sounded Carquinez,--that’s his name,--and how
-much he let out takin’ his soundin’s the Lord only knows! Cark’s in the
-tobacco line. Does a bit of everythin’,--has a shop in the Calle Pedro
-in Havana and a gamblin’ joint on the front, owns ships. That’s one of
-them, and Matt Sellers runs her for him. He don’t trouble handlin’ her:
-sits in the cabin all day smokin’ cigarettes.”
-
-“He’s been after us ever since Pap died,” said Jude, “on and off.”
-
-“It was one of his men got Jude in that doggery down by the wharf and
-filled her up with rum,” said Satan, turning the brim of his panama
-down. “Remember I told you--and what she let out the Lord only knows!”
-
-“I didn’t let out nothin’,” said Jude; “only that we were goin’ east
-this trip, I owns to that.”
-
-“Well, there’s the result of your jaw,” said Satan. “East was good
-enough for Cark: he’d hunt hell for a red cent. And don’t you be sayin’
-you didn’t let out nothin’. Why, I heard you jawin’ about all the money
-you had when I come in and collared you! Cark believes Pap found that
-stuff and cached it--that’s what he believes, or my name’s not Tyler.”
-
-“Well, let’s get aboard,” said Jude. “If they see us squatting about
-here, they’ll maybe think the stuff’s hid here.”
-
-“They’ve seen us by this, though it’s too far for them to make out who
-we are,” said Satan, pushing his panama farther forward to hide his
-face. He led the way to where the boats were on the sand, and they
-reëmbarked.
-
-The abalones were got on board, and then they stood watching the
-approach of the stranger.
-
-The white had gone out of her sails. Close in now, they showed dingy
-and patched. She had a low freeboard. Then, as she dropped anchor and
-swung to her moorings broadside on to the _Sarah_, the rake of her
-masts became apparent, and her whole disreputableness spoke aloud.
-
-Ratcliffe felt like a man who, having got into pleasant low company,
-suddenly finds himself drawn into unpleasant low company.
-
-The _Tylers_ and the old _Sarah_ were all right, but this new crowd
-and that ratty old schooner he felt to be all wrong. And the newcomer
-somehow did not add honesty or moral stability to the appearance of the
-_Sarah_, nor did the half-disclosed character and activities of Cark
-shed luster on old man Tyler or his present representatives.
-
-However, he had gone into this business open-eyed, and it was not for
-him to grumble at the friends or relationships of his hosts; besides he
-had trust in Satan and the wit of Satan to preserve them from the law.
-
-Satan had covered the heap of abalones with some sail-cloth, and he was
-standing now working his lantern jaws on a bit of chewing gum, his eyes
-fixed on the stranger as though she were made of glass and he could
-see Carquinez sitting smoking his cigarettes in the cabin.
-
-“They haven’t shown a sign,” said Jude.
-
-“They’re bluffin’ us to believe they haven’t spotted who we are,” said
-Satan. “Cark doesn’t want us to twig he’s been lookin’ for us.”
-
-“Well,” said Jude, “let’s get the mud-hook up and put out right away.
-They won’t have the face to chase us.”
-
-“Yes,” said Satan, “and leave them to hunt the island and find the
-cache! They’d lift the stuff to the last tin of beef. They’ve seen us
-ashore among the bushes. You shouldn’t have gone ashore.”
-
-“I went to see we hadn’t left no traces.”
-
-“Traces be damned! Cark wants no traces. Once he starts to hunt, he’ll
-turn the durned island upside down and shake it. He’ll say to himself,
-‘What were they doin’ here, anyway; what were they pokin’ about them
-bushes for?’ No, we’ve got to sit here till he goes, and that’ll be
-this time next year, maybe.”
-
-“What’s the name of his schooner?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“The _Juan Bango_,” replied Satan, “named after the tobacco company
-people. Look, they’re gettin’ a boat off. That’s Sellers, and he’s
-comin’ aboard.”
-
-Then he collapsed, squatting under the bulwarks. “Guy them,” said he to
-Jude. “Tell them I’m down with smallpox: that’ll make them shove.”
-
-“Leave ’em to me,” said Jude.
-
-It was Matt Sellers right enough, a big wheezy man suggestive of
-Tammany Hall, but a sure-enough sailor in practice. “The biggest
-blackguard on the coast” was his subsidiary title. He was the henchman
-of Carquinez. His career was not without interest and romance of a
-sort. It was he who had bought, with the money of Carquinez, the bones
-of the _Isidore_, wrecked against the sheer cliffs by the black strand
-of Martinique. Ten thousand dollars in gold coin she had on board her,
-and he salved them. That was a straight job, and a wonderful bit of
-work, taking it all together. It was a curiosity, too, because it was
-straight.
-
-The crooked jobs of Matt Sellers would have filled a book.
-
-Like old man Tyler, Sellers had no use for people who talked of buried
-treasure, he knew the Caribbean and the gulf too well.
-
-If he was keen on the wreck business, then it was because he had
-excellent reasons for his keenness.
-
-As the boat drew near, Ratcliffe noticed the villainous-looking crew,
-Spaniards, some of them with red handkerchiefs tied round their heads.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-JUDE OVERDOES IT
-
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers as the boat came alongside the _Sarah_.
-
-“Hullo, yourself,” replied Jude. “Where’ve you blown in from?”
-
-“What’s become of Satan? Ain’t he aboard?” asked Sellers, ignoring the
-question.
-
-“Satan’s dead,” said Jude.
-
-“Satan’s which?”
-
-“Died of the smallpox.”
-
-“Well, I’m d--d!” said Sellers, casting his eyes over the _Sarah_ and
-then resting them on Ratcliffe. “When was it?”
-
-“A week ago.”
-
-Sellers gave a word to the bow oar and the boat pushed off a bit, the
-fellows hanging on their oars.
-
-“I thought I saw three of you on deck,” he shouted.
-
-“The other chap’s gone below,” replied Jude.
-
-The boat of the _Juan_ hung for a moment as if in meditation. She made
-a striking picture, the blue water paling to green under her and the
-sun-blaze on the red topknots of the oarsmen.
-
-Then without a word more she turned back to the _Juan_.
-
-Satan in the scupper seemed preparing to have a fit.
-
-“What’s the matter now?” asked Jude.
-
-“What’s the matter? What did you say I was dead for? Didn’t I tell you
-to say I was down with smallpox?”
-
-“Well, what’s the difference?”
-
-“Why, you mutt, wouldn’t you have been snivelin’ and cryin’ if I was
-dead? And you handed that yam out to him as ca’m as if you were talking
-of a tomcat! I didn’t believe you myself.”
-
-“Why, I told him you was dead a week,” cried Jude. “D’you think I’d be
-snivelin’ and cryin’ a week if you was dead? Lord! what you do think of
-yourself!”
-
-Satan did not reply. He was thinking that he had made a false move and
-that Jude had put the cap on the business. Cark would be certain now
-that there was something hidden on the island.
-
-Satan was on the horns of a dilemma. One horn was the cache of
-provisions containing a couple of thousand dollars’ worth of stuff, the
-other horn was the old wreck that might contain nothing.
-
-To hang on here was useless, for Cark would hang on too. Even if Cark
-went away, he would be sure to come back to hunt.
-
-He sat with his back to the bulwarks, chewing and thinking. Then,
-heedless whether he was seen or not from the _Juan Bango_, he rose
-to his feet and leaned with his back against the rail He had come to
-a decision. Jude, watching him, said nothing, and Ratcliffe waited
-without a word. This little sea comedy interested him intensely, and
-all the more for its setting of loneliness and its background of blue
-sea and quarreling gulls.
-
-It was to Ratcliffe that Satan spoke first “Look here!” said Satan.
-“You’re standin’ out of this, aren’t you?”
-
-“Which--the wreck business?”
-
-“Yep. You’re not keen upon puttin’ money into it and havin’ a share?”
-
-“Oh, no. If you wanted me to, I’d be glad enough; but if you’d rather I
-stood out, I’ll do so. I’m not keen about money, anyway; only I’d like
-to see the fun.”
-
-“You’ll see fun enough,” said Satan. “I’m goin’ to drag Cark in. First
-of all, if I don’t, he’ll keep hangin’ round here and sniff the cache;
-second, he’ll work the job for us with his crew.”
-
-“He’ll gobble every cent,” said Jude.
-
-“Which way?” asked Satan. “We’ll give him half shares, and well split
-on him if he doesn’t play fair. If we found stuff there, and once it
-was known, d’you think we’d be let keep it? We’ve got to get help, and
-isn’t he as good as another? If there’s no stuff there, he’ll have all
-his work for nothing.”
-
-“The thing I can’t make out,” said Ratcliffe, “is the way he started
-out from Havana to find you. How did he ever expect to come across you?”
-
-“Well, it’s this way,” said Satan. “Bein’ in with Pap, he knew the
-lines we worked on; f’rinstance, he knew we worked this place for
-abalones. If he hadn’t sighted as here; he’d have tried Little Pine
-Island, which is lonesomer than this place. You see he’s got it in his
-noddle, as far as I can make out, that Pap lifted the stuff and cached
-it, and Pine Island or here would have been the likeliest places. He
-reckoned when we put out of Havana this time we were out to lift it
-for good. Well, he’ll do the liftin’ if it’s to be done. Come on, I’m
-going over to see him right off. Jude, you stick here and clean up them
-abalones.”
-
-He got into the dinghy, followed by Ratcliffe, and they pushed off.
-
-As they drew closer the _Juan Bango_ showed up more distinctly for what
-she was.
-
-One of the old schooners that used to run in the carrying trade between
-Havana and the Gulf ports, she had fallen from commercial honesty;
-anyhow in appearance, perhaps because Carquinez did not bother about
-appearance. You could not have damaged his paint if you had tried,--it
-was sun-blistered and gone green,--but his copper showed sharp and
-clear through the amazing brilliance of the water, without trace of
-weeds or barnacles.
-
-Sellers was hanging over the rail as they came alongside.
-
-If he felt surprise at this resurrection, he did not show it much.
-
-“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers. “Thought you was dead.”
-
-“Cark on board?” asked Satan without wasting time on explanations.
-
-“He’s down below,” said Sellers, accepting the attitude of the other.
-“Who’s your friend?”
-
-“Oh, just a gentleman that’s come along for a cruise,” said Satan. “So
-you’ve found me!”
-
-“Seems so,” said Sellers; “but tie up and come aboard.”
-
-Satan tied the painter to a channel plate and got over the side,
-followed by Ratcliffe.
-
-The deck of the _Juan_ sagged, and plank and dowel were
-indistinguishable one from the other by reason of dirt. Forward some
-of the crew were scraping a spare boom, and others collected round the
-foc’sle head were smoking cigarettes. The wind had died out into a warm
-breathing, setting aft and bringing with it a faint odor like the smell
-of acetylene. It was garlic.
-
-From the foc’sle came the muffled thrumming of a guitar.
-
-It was Ratcliffe’s first experience with a Spaniard. He followed Satan,
-who followed Sellers down a steep companionway and then into a cabin
-where a great shaft of sunlight from the skylight above struck down
-through a haze of cigarette smoke.
-
-The place was paneled with bird’s-eye maple; the seats were upholstered
-in thick ribbed silk, worn and stained; the carpet was of the best, but
-threadbare in spots and burnt with cigar droppings; the metal fittings
-far too good for a trading schooner of the _Juan_ type.
-
-Everywhere lay evidence of splendor that had seen better days.
-
-All these fittings had, in fact, been torn out of a yacht bought by
-Carquinez for an old song, and at the end of the saloon table, going
-over some papers with a cigarette in his mouth, sat Carquinez himself,
-a figure to give one pause.
-
-The whole of the left side of this gentleman’s face was covered by a
-green patch. It was said that he had no left side to his face, that it
-had been eaten away by disease, and that, were he to unveil himself,
-the sight would frighten the beholder. However that may have been, what
-remained visible was enough to frighten any honest man with eyes to
-behold the nose of a vulture above the peaked chin of a money changer.
-
-“Hullo, Cark!” said Satan.
-
-“Come in,” said Cark.
-
-“Bring yourselves to an anchor,” said Sellers, pointing out two of the
-fixed seats on each side of the table and taking another close to the
-owner of the _Juan_. “What’ll you have?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” said Satan. “Something soft will suit us, and long.”
-
-Carquinez raised a bird-shrill voice:
-
-“Antonio!”
-
-“Si, Sigñor,” came a response from outside, and on the voice a dusky
-form at the cabin door.
-
-“Bring me two Zin and Zinzibeers for these two zentlemen, please.”
-
-“No gin!” cried Satan, Ratcliffe concurring. “Ginger beer will do.”
-
-“Zinzibeers,” said Carquinez.
-
-It was nearly all that he said at this interview, the trusty Sellers
-doing the talking.
-
-Said Sellers to Satan, “Well, it’s funny us hittin’ on you like this,
-durned funny! We’d been down to Acklin looking up a location Cark was
-keen about, and comin’ back I shifted the helm, seein’ you lying here
-and not recognizin’ the old _Sarah_. I thought it was Gundyman’s boat.”
-
-Said Satan, taking up the drink just presented by Antonio, “Here’s our
-respects to you both. Thought I was Gundyman, did you? Well, I spotted
-you on sight. Didn’t want to see you neither. This gentleman will tell
-you I was squattin’ in the scuppers while Jude was handing you that lie
-about the smallpox.”
-
-“Oh, was you?” said Sellers with an open and hearty laugh.
-
-“I was so. Let’s cut pretendin’ and play on the square--are you
-willin’?”
-
-“None better.”
-
-“Well, I’ll put my cards out. You and Cark here have been after me
-pretty near since last fall; reason why, that wreck Pap told Cark of.”
-
-“W’ich was that?”
-
-“I said let’s cut pretendin’ and play fair,” said Satan sternly.
-
-Cark wilted and raised his fingers in deprecation, and Sellers cut in.
-
-“Yes, we’ll play fair. There was talk of a wreck between your dad and
-us, and I’m not denying we had an eye after it. You see I’m open and
-honest with you. Heave ahead.”
-
-“I’m comin’ to the point,” said Satan, “and the point is you and Cark
-between you have got it in your heads that you’ve only to follow me,
-find out where she’s located, and claim shares for not tellin’.”
-
-“Heave ahead,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, you’ve got it wrong,” went on Satan. “You may follow me till the
-old _Juan_ rots to pieces and you’ll never know, not if I don’t want
-you to know--got that clear?”
-
-“Clear as day,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, then, here’s something else. If that wreck is what she’s taken
-to be, it’s more than one man’s job to shift the boodle and bank it.
-I’ve got to have help, and if we can arrange a deal I’d just as soon
-have you two in the show as anyone else.”
-
-“Now you’re talking,” said Sellers.
-
-Carquinez said nothing, but his hand shook, and Ratcliffe, watching
-him, received a shock. A wreath of cigarette smoke was stealing out
-from beneath the patch on his cheek! He wished the conference over and
-himself back on board the healthy _Sarah_. It came to him all at once
-that he had been drawn into a web of which Carquinez was the spider.
-Satan, too, and Jude had been drawn in. He could do nothing, however,
-at least for the moment, but watch and wait, and Satan’s face was worth
-watching as that wily diplomatist sat facing Sellers.
-
-“Not that I don’t believe you’d kidoodle me over the business if you
-had a chance,” continued Satan. “You would, sure; but you see I’ve got
-the weather gauge of you, knowing what I do of you, and that’s more’n
-I’d have with strangers.”
-
-“Sure,” said Sellers.
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “we’ve got that far, and it comes to terms.
-What’s your share to be for helpin’ to collar the stuff and dispose of
-it in Havana?”
-
-“Two dollars out of every three that we make,” said Sellers promptly.
-“There’s the salving, you can’t do that alone, or your dad would have
-done it prompt; then there’s the cashing of it, you’re lost men if you
-try that job on by yourselves. Why, there’s not another man in Havana
-could do it only Cark, and even he couldn’t bring the stuff into Havana
-Harbor! It’ll have to be landed back of the island, north of Santiago.
-Lord knows what he’ll have to pay!”
-
-Satan cogitated for a moment.
-
-“I’ll meet you,” said he at last. “I’m not set on big money. Anything
-more?”
-
-“No, that’s all,” said Sellers.
-
-Carquinez nodded approval, and lighting another cigarette leaned back
-in his chair.
-
-“And what’s this gentleman doing in the business?” asked Sellers,
-referring to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, he’s standing out,” said Satan. “He’s just on a cruise with us.”
-
-“Yes, I’m standing out,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m in it only for the fun of
-the thing, though I’m willing to help.”
-
-“Well, I reckon you’ll have fun enough,” said Sellers, “if we get foul
-of the customs, or if some other hooker comes poking along while we’re
-salving. You’re British, aren’t you?”
-
-“I am.”
-
-“I thought so. Come out for a spree?”
-
-“You may put it like that.”
-
-“Did you by any chance come off a big white yacht that went west
-yesterday?”
-
-“Yes, I did. What made you guess that?”
-
-“Well,” said Sellers, “it’s easy to be seen you aren’t one of us, and
-your clothes give you away. It’s easy to be seen you haven’t been
-dough-dishing long in the old _Sarah_. I didn’t get your name.”
-
-“Ratcliffe.”
-
-“No trade or business?”
-
-“None. My father was Ratcliffe the shipowner, Holt & Ratcliffe.”
-
-“Lord--love--a--duck!” said Sellers. “You’re not wanting for money,
-I reckon. Well, this gets me, it do indeed! Holt & Ratcliffe--should
-think I _did_ know them!”
-
-“Antonio!” suddenly piped Carquinez.
-
-“Si, Señor.” Antonio appeared.
-
-“Pedro Murias,” said Carquinez.
-
-Antonio vanished, and reappeared with a box of cigars, colossal cigars,
-worth twenty-five guineas a hundred in the London market. They were
-placed on the table and pushed toward Ratcliffe.
-
-Satan grinned.
-
-“Well,” said he, “we’ve fixed things so far,--two out of every three
-dollars to you and no deductions.”
-
-“That’s it,” said Sellers.
-
-“And now we’ve fixed terms,” said Satan, “I want to know all about this
-hooker.”
-
-“Which was you meaning?” asked Sellers.
-
-“The wreck.”
-
-“Listen to him!” cried Sellers. “Mean to say you don’t know all about
-her?”
-
-“N’more than Adam. I’ve heard from Pap she was called the _Nombre de
-Dios_, and was full of gold plate got from churches; but that’s not
-much more than a name and a yarn. I’ve never banked much on the yarn.
-Seems too much of the New Jerusalem touch about it for me.”
-
-“Well, maybe you’re wrong,” said Sellers.
-
-“Spit it out,” said Satan. “Tell us what you know about her. You’ve got
-the contrac’; give us the news.”
-
-“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Sellers. “She weren’t no ship with gold
-plates,--your dad got that wrong,--she was a big Spanish ship out of
-Vera Cruz making for Spain. She had a cargo of timber, some of them
-heavy foreign timbers that don’t float. She’d got aboard her, besides
-the timber, more’n a million dollars’ worth of gold,--Mexican gold most
-of it, Spanish coin some of it. Lopez was the name of the skipper, and
-he laid to bank that gold for himself. He’d been forty years in these
-seas and knew every key and sandbank same as the insides of his own
-pockets.
-
-“Him and the mate were the only men in the know about that gold beside
-a supercargo by name of Perez.
-
-“Well, he colluded together with them two guys to sink the hooker in
-six fathom water out of trade tracks, give out that she’d sunk in a
-gale, and come back in a year or two and collar the boodle. They had
-her bored and plugged for the game, and when they got her to the
-location they pulled out the plugs, and she went down without a sneeze,
-natural as a dyin’ Christian.
-
-“They got the boats away in order, and the crew was got off to a man;
-but that crew never got ashore. Maybe it was something wrong with the
-grub or the water, there’s no saying, but they never got ashore to turn
-witness. But the grub and water was all right in the dinghy. Them three
-guys had taken the dinghy, and they were picked up and landed somewhere
-on the gulf, fat and well.”
-
-All through Sellers’ recitation Carquinez had sat nodding his head.
-He glanced now at Satan and Ratcliffe as if measuring its effect upon
-them, then he half closed his eyes again and retired into himself like
-a tortoise.
-
-“They slung their yarn,” went on Sellers, “and made all good, and it
-was only left for them to wait awhile and hire or steal a likely boat
-to pick up the stuff, when the yellow fever took the supercargo and the
-mate, leaving Lopez to fish for himself.
-
-“He got back to Havana, which was his natural home, and there he put
-up with his son, who was a trader in tobacco, got a bit of a factory
-not bigger than a henh’us, and turned out a brand of cigars made out of
-leavin’s and brown paper mostly.
-
-“He put the son wise about the wreck; but he wouldn’t give the location
-away till it was time to go and pick up the stuff, which wouldn’t be
-for a year yet.
-
-“Then he up and died, and the son started to hunt for the chart and
-couldn’t find it. The old guy had given him everything but the chart
-with the location marked on it. It wasn’t a proper chart, neither: just
-a piece of paper with the thing done rough, but giving the bearings.
-And it was never found--not by the son. The grandson found it--and
-where do you think? Pasted into the lining of an old hat. That wasn’t
-so long ago, neither, and what do you think that fool of a grandson
-did? Well, I’ll tell you what he did. First of all he comes to Cark
-here, and tries to get him onto the job on a ten per cent basis, Cark
-to risk his money and repitation for a lousy ten per cent on what might
-be only the bones of an old ship. He let out her name and history and
-everything but the location.
-
-“Cark wasn’t having any on those terms,--was you, Cark?--and he told
-the chap to go to Medicine Hat and pick bilberries. The chap goes off,
-and what does he do but tries to get up a syndicate between himself and
-two yeggmen without a keel to their names! Perrira was the name of one,
-and da Silva was the name of the other, and they held a board meeting
-in Diego’s saloon one night and shot holes in one another in the back
-parlor.
-
-“Silva and Perrira had fixed it to lay the grandson out and collar the
-chart for themselves, and they’d have done it, only he wasn’t backward
-with the shooting. Your dad was in the bar that night, and he twigged
-something from what they let drop before they went to the back parlor
-to hold their meeting. Then when the shooting began he was first into
-the room, and collared the chart, which was lying on the floor. He was
-always quick on the uptake, was your dad. Being a knowledgeable man,
-he reckoned Cark was the only chap in Havana to help him take the stuff
-and clear it. He knew the stuff was there by what he’d heard going on
-in the bar before the three chaps had left it for the back room, but
-before he could conclude business with Cark he up and died.”
-
-Cark nodded.
-
-“That was so,” said he.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “we’ve got the whole yarn now, and I’m wishing
-to be done with the business. I’m pretty near sick of you two guys
-trailing after me, and I’ll hand you out my belief for what it’s worth.
-It don’t seem natural to me to find gold in a hooker like that, just
-for the picking up, and I’d sell any man my chances for a thousand
-dollars. I’ve no knowledge of what’s there. I’m just talkin’ out of
-my head. You know what I am, I make my livin’, and I’m content to run
-small. It’s maybe that that puts me against big ventures. Anyhow, we’ve
-got to push this thing through, we’ve made the contrac’. I don’t want
-it written down and signed, seein’ that the law couldn’t help me. I’m
-only sayin’ that if you play me crooked I’ll split. Got that in your
-heads?”
-
-The high contracting parties on the other side nodded assent.
-
-“That bein’ settled,” said Satan, “here’s the chart.”
-
-He produced a metal tobacco box and took from it a folded piece of
-paper, which he laid on the table before Sellers.
-
-The effect was magical.
-
-Carquinez sprang from his chair like a young man, came behind Sellers,
-and, bending over his shoulder, looked. Ratcliffe, though out of the
-business, was as excited as the others. Satan alone was calm.
-
-He had been carrying the thing about so long that it had probably lost
-its freshness of interest.
-
-Sellers, without speaking, stared at the chart before him.
-
-Rum Cay was shown, and then, southwest of Rum Cay, a line of reef
-marked “Lone Reef,” and in red ink, connected to the reef by a red
-line, the name “Nombre de Dios” could be made out, the “Dios” very
-indistinct at the frayed edge of the paper. In the top right-hand
-corner the latitude and longitude were written, but so faintly that it
-would have required close study in a strong light to make the figures
-out.
-
-Nobody bothered about them. Lone Reef was on all the charts, and the
-name was enough.
-
-“I’ve been by there,” said Sellers at last, “and I’ve never seen signs
-of a wreck.”
-
-“You wouldn’t,” said Satan. “She lies flush with the coral in a crik
-between two arms of reef, not a stump of a mast on her. The hull of
-that reef must have raised itself since she was sunk, for the water in
-the crik doesn’t cover her at high tide and low tides it’s pretty near
-empty. But she’s been under right enough, years ago, for the decks are
-coraled over, hatches and all, and the stuff’s turned to iron cement
-with the sun and weather. We’ve got to dynamite her open.”
-
-“Sure,” said Sellers; then, after a moment’s pause, “It’ll be a big
-job, if it’s what you say. I had it in my mind that she was a diving
-job in shallow water--never thought of the blasted coral.”
-
-Carquinez said nothing. He withdrew to his seat at the end of the
-table and lit another cigarette. To Ratcliffe the silence of Carquinez
-approached the weird. The way Sellers, without consulting him, did all
-the talking seemed uncanny as though the pair were telepathic.
-
-One thing certain was gradually being borne in upon him,--they were a
-most atrocious pair of rogues, and the marvel to him was the simplicity
-of Satan in having any dealings at all with them. They would surely
-swindle him, take what precautions he might. They would never give
-him a third share of any treasure. They would, most likely, murder
-him before he could split on them, if treasure were found. Of this
-Ratcliffe felt certain. He tried to telegraph a warning across the
-table, but Satan seemed blind to winks and frowns.
-
-“Well, it’s there,” said Satan, “near a foot thick. You’ve got to drill
-it, and stick dynamite cartridges in the drill-holes and fire them. Got
-any dynamite aboard?”
-
-“Not an ounce.”
-
-“We might make out with blasting powder.”
-
-“Yes, if we’d got it,” said Sellers. “There ain’t no use worrying,
-we’ve got to shin out of this back to Havana and get the explosives.
-Question is who’ll go for them, us or you?”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan, “not if she was to lie there till the last
-trumpet. We’re underhanded, for one thing, and, f’r another, I’m
-gettin’ little enough out of the job as it stands without fetchin’ and
-carryin’ for you.”
-
-“Then we’ll go,” said Sellers. “’Twon’t take us more than a week to get
-there and back. Give us ten days, counting accidents, and we’ll pick
-you up here.”
-
-“Why not at the reef?” asked Satan.
-
-“Don’t matter,” said Sellers. “Here or there, it’s all the same to us;
-ain’t it, Cark?”
-
-Cark nodded assent, and Satan, recapturing the chart, folded it up and
-put it back into the tobacco box.
-
-“Right!” said he, placing the box into his pocket. “Here you’ll find
-us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE “JUAN” SAILS
-
-
-They rose from the conference table, and Carquinez stood holding his
-coat together with a veined and knotted hand while the visitors were
-making their adieux.
-
-“You haven’t a few feet of galvanized wire aboard?” asked Satan as he
-passed out, following Sellers.
-
-“Come on deck,” said Sellers.
-
-On deck he stood listening, while the other passed from galvanized
-wire to the question of spare ring-bolts and other trifles he stood
-desperately in need of. Like a hypnotized fowl in the hands of Satan,
-he made scarcely any resistance.
-
-He had no ring-bolts, but the galvanized wire was forthcoming, also
-a little barrel for use as a buoy, some Burgundy pitch, an old
-paintbrush, a small can of turpentine, and a couple of pounds of twine.
-
-A small boat-anchor that had raised Satan’s desires brought the séance
-to a conclusion and broke the spell that seemed to lie on Sellers.
-
-Blessed if Satan wouldn’t be asking for his back teeth yet! What did he
-take the _Juan_ for, a marine store? What would he want next, Carquinez?
-
-They rowed off with the spoil, Sellers leaning on the rail and
-lovingly pressing on them the acceptance of other trifles, including a
-guitar.
-
-Alongside the _Sarah_ they found Jude waiting to receive them.
-She had been cleaning up the abalones, was dissatisfied with the
-result,--quarter of a matchbox full of seed pearls,--and said so.
-
-When her eye lighted on the stuff in the boat that Satan had wangled
-out of Sellers, she laughed in a dreary fashion.
-
-“What you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.
-
-“Nothing,” said Jude.
-
-She sat down on an upturned keg while they brought the truck on board.
-Then, nursing her knee and wiggling her bare toes to the warmth of the
-sun, she sat without a word, waiting for explanations.
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that a critic had come on the scene.
-He had forgotten Jude in relation to the deal over the wreck, and he
-was wondering now how she would take it. The female does not always
-see eye to eye with the male, as many a business man has discovered on
-revealing a transaction to the wife of his bosom.
-
-Leaning against the rail, he filled his pipe and awaited the
-revelation with interest; but Satan, the revealer, seemed in no hurry
-for the business. He was bustling about disposing of the new-gotten
-“stores,”--the turpentine and pitch forward in the hole where paints
-were kept, the galvanized wire in a locker, and the little barrel
-behind the canvas boat.
-
-Then he came aft again and, lighting a pipe, stood beside Ratcliffe.
-
-“Well, what you been doing, anyway?” asked Jude, suddenly opening her
-batteries.
-
-“Doing--which?” asked Satan. “Oh, you mean with Cark. Well, I’ve
-settled things with him, fixed it up so’s he’s goin’ to help.”
-
-“Which way?” asked Jude.
-
-“Why, to get the stuff, if it’s there--what else? He’s our only chance
-of doing the thing proper.”
-
-“What’s he askin’?” said Jude.
-
-“You mean terms?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Well, it’s this way: He’ll have to do the wreckin’ business, and then
-if the stuff’s got he’ll have to run it ashore, and after that he’ll
-have to get rid of it. I’m givin’ him two dollars out of every three.”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Jude.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?”
-
-“Why didn’t you give him the lot?”
-
-“Now look you here!” cried Satan. “I don’t want no sass! Who’s runnin’
-this show, you or me? How do you know what I’ve got up my sleeve?
-Have you ever known me done on a deal yet? Now you take my orders
-where Cark’s concerned and take them smart, with no questions! If you
-don’t--well, then, trade with him yourself, take charge of the _Sarah_
-and run her yourself! Lippin’ your betters!”
-
-Jude took off her old hat and looked into it as if for inspiration;
-then she clapped it on her head again, drew up both feet, clasped her
-arms round her knees, and sat on the keg-top speechless and brooding,
-her eyes fixed on the _Juan_.
-
-Satan turned and went below.
-
-“Jude,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“What you want?” said Jude, without shifting her gaze.
-
-“Suppose you had all the money off that old wreck, if the money is
-there, what would you do with it?”
-
-“What’s the good of askin’ me things like that?” said Jude. “I’d
-precious soon do something with it!”
-
-“No, you wouldn’t. You’d put it in the bank, and then your trouble
-would begin.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Well, you’d have it in the bank or invested and it would bring you
-in, say, twenty thousand dollars a year; well, you couldn’t spend that
-on the dock-side, could you? You wouldn’t be able to spend it at all
-unless you gave up the _Sarah_ and lived ashore in a fine house with a
-carriage and horses and servants, and to do that you’d have to become
-a lady--or gentleman,” hastily put in Ratcliffe, the figure on the keg
-suddenly threatening to turn on him. “You’d have to do that, and you’d
-have to do more than that: you’d have to learn all sorts of things.”
-
-“Which sort?”
-
-“Oh, lots. Can you write, Jude?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Told me the other day you couldn’t.”
-
-“Well, I’ve most forgot. Pap started to learn me, then he said he
-reckoned I was more cut out for makin’ puddin’s, but he learned me to
-write my name.”
-
-“Well, if you ever grow rich, you’ll have to do a lot more than write
-your name.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“You’ll have to write checks and letters, and, what’s more, you’ll have
-to be able to read them.”
-
-“Well, I reckon,” said the philosophical Jude, “it’ll be time enough
-to bother about that when I’m rich--and seems to me I’ll never be rich
-with them two diddling Satan same as they’ve done.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you will; you are going to be rich some day, as rich as I am.
-I’m a fortune teller. Show us your hand.”
-
-Jude held out a hand, and Ratcliffe examined the palm where the lines
-were few but straight and clear cut. It was a beautiful little hand,
-despite the hard work it had done, full of character and vigor, and
-expressing kindliness and honesty and capability.
-
-Ratcliffe had an instinct for hands. A hand could attract or repulse
-him just as powerfully as a face; more so, perhaps, for a hand never
-lies.
-
-“Oh, yes,” said he, “you are going to be rich, you can’t escape it, and
-you are going to learn reading and writing and arithmetic, and you are
-going to live to be a hundred.”
-
-“Cut me throat first!” said Jude. “Heave ahead.”
-
-“And you are going to England some day, and you’ll turn into a
-Britisher.”
-
-“Damned if I do! Satan!”
-
-“Hullo!” came a faint voice from below.
-
-“Rat says I’m goin’ to turn into a Britisher.”
-
-“They wouldn’t own you. Quit foolin’ and get the dinner ready.”
-
-Jude uncurled herself, came down from the keg with a thud, ran to the
-open skylight, and was about to reply in kind, when her eye caught
-sight of something that brought her to a halt.
-
-They were handling the canvas on the _Juan_.
-
-“Cark’s off!” cried she.
-
-Satan came on deck. Across the blue blaze of the sea they could hear
-now the clank of the windlass pawls,--the _Juan’s_ anchor was coming up.
-
-“I thought Sellers would have come on board before they started,” said
-Ratcliffe. “They’re in a big hurry, aren’t they?”
-
-“You bet,” said Satan with a grin. “He’ll crack on everything to get to
-Havana for that dynamite; won’t stop to eat their dinners till they’re
-back,--that’s what they’d have us believe--swabs!”
-
-“Why, don’t you think they are going to Havana?”
-
-“Oh, they’re _goin’_ to Havana right enough,” said Satan. “You watch
-and you’ll see them headin’ that way. Look! she’s fillin’ to the wind.”
-
-The anchor was home now, and they watched the sails filling as she
-headed on the same course the _Dryad_ had taken. She dipped her flag,
-and they returned the compliment; then she drew past the southern
-reefs, the hull vanished, and nothing remained but the topsails far
-against the western blue.
-
-Ten minutes later, down below at dinner, Jude, who had said no word
-about the departure of the _Juan_, but seemed to have been thinking a
-lot, suddenly spoke.
-
-“You never told me that chap was going to Havana for dynamite,” said
-Jude. “What for--to bust the wreck open?”
-
-“That’s it,” replied Satan. “Did you think he wanted it to eat?”
-
-“There’s no knowing what a feller may swallow, seeing you’ve swallowed
-that yarn,” said Jude. “He’s gone to Havana to sell us, that’s my
-’pinion.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Lord! there’s many a way of sellin’ fools.”
-
-Ratcliffe felt that the truth was with Jude, he felt an uneasy
-conviction that they had been done. The hurried departure of Carquinez
-seemed to put a seal on the business. He looked at Satan expecting an
-explosion; but Satan was quite calm and helping himself to canned ox
-tongue.
-
-“Seein’ I have the chart,” said he, “where’s the sellin’ to come in?”
-
-“But you’ve give him the location,” said Jude. “You said yourself that
-the place was fixed on every chart and a chap had only to have Lone
-Reef in his head to put his claws on the wreck.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan; “but the location is no use without the chart.”
-
-“What are you gettin’ at?”
-
-“I’m tryin’ to get at your intellects. How often have you seen that
-chart?”
-
-“Dozens of times.”
-
-“Ever noticed anything queer about it? Not you! Giving sass to your
-betters is your lay in life instead of usin’ your eyes.” He pushed his
-plate away, produced the tobacco box, and, taking the chart from it,
-laid it on the table.
-
-Jude got up and came behind him to look, while Ratcliffe leaned forward.
-
-“There’s the chart,” said Satan. “There’s the reef, and there’s the
-name of the hooker pointin’ at the reef, and there’s the latitude and
-longitude wrote up in the corner. Plain, ain’t it?”
-
-“That’s plain enough,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Jude, munching a biscuit, concurred.
-
-“Plain enough, ain’t it?” went on Satan. “Give a man the name of Lone
-Reef, and with any old Admiralty chart he’ll get there, and he has
-only to land on the reef to find the hooker stuck there in that crik
-between them two arms. Jude has seen her, and I’ve walked over her and
-’xamined her, and she’d have been broke open maybe by this, only chaps
-don’t land on reefs like that, not unless a storm lands them. We struck
-it huntin’ for abalones. Plain enough, ain’t it? Well, I tell you the
-whole business is no use to any man who hasn’t that chart in his hand
-and who can’t read what’s written on it secret. Here you are! Take a
-good long look, and I’ll give you ten dollars if you spot what I mean.
-It’s as clear as simple.”
-
-Ratcliffe spread the thing before him on the table.
-
-“I can’t see anything in it,” said he at last, “except what’s written
-plain enough. There’s Rum Cay, there’s the reef, the name of the wreck
-with a pointer to the reef, and the latitude and longitude up in the
-corner. No, I can’t see anything but that: it all seems plain as a
-pikestaff. I take an interest in cryptograms, too.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Cryptograms? Hidden writing.”
-
-“Well, that’s what’s before you,” said Satan. “Pap never twigged it,
-nor any of the crowd that had the handlin’ of it. It’s only a month ago
-I spotted it.”
-
-“You never said a word to me,” cut in Jude.
-
-“Get back to your place and don’t be chewin’ in my ear,” said Satan,
-reaching for the chart and pocketing it again. “Tell you? Likely! Why,
-if I had, you’d have let it out, same as you did the lie of the reef
-to Rat here the other day. Get on with your dinner! Why haven’t we any
-potatoes?”
-
-“No time to boil them,” said Jude, “cleanin’ up your mushy abalones.”
-
-“No time, and you yarnin’ and havin’ your future told! I heard you.”
-
-“My fault,” said Ratcliffe. “I began the business.”
-
-“Not you,” said Satan. “I heard her start in on it, sayin’ what she’d
-do with a fortune if she had it and finishin’ up by mistrustin’ me.”
-
-“Lord love you for a liar! I only said them two guys had done you in
-over the wreck,” cried Jude. “Don’t be stickin’ words in my mouth.”
-
-“How was it you came to spot the cryptogram?” asked Ratcliffe, eager to
-cut the dissension short.
-
-“The which?” asked Satan. “Oh, ay--well, it come natural for me to
-say to myself, ‘Here’s a thing that’s been hid up and kept secret, yet
-it’s all wrote out as plain as my palm.’ I said to myself, ‘It’s too
-blame simple! A man who knows where money is hid doesn’t write the
-location on a bit of paper, to be lost, maybe, and picked up by God
-knows who. Why, drop that chart in the streets of Havana, and the first
-chap with any knowledge in his head that picks it up will turn it into
-dollars right off. It’s a sure bait for fools, anyhow, and a wreckin’
-expedition would be out before the end of the week. They’d only have to
-look up any chart that’s been printed the last hundred years to find
-Lone Reef as easy as the Swimmer Rocks.’ Then I said to myself, ‘What
-in the nation did the guy want makin’ a chart at all for? Why couldn’t
-he have written on a piece of paper, “The Nombre de Dios lies on Lone
-Reef, sou’west of Rum Cay”? That’s all the chart says, and yet he must
-go and make drawin’s; must have taken him an hour’s pen scraping to
-make that chart.’ Puttin’ the two things together, I says to myself,
-‘The feller concerned must have been a fool in two ways if this thing’s
-genuine,--a fool to leave the fac’s as plain as an ad for liver pills,
-and a fool to waste his time drawin’ his advertisement instead of
-writin’ it,’ but I reckoned he was no fool. Dad was always quotin’ some
-damn ass who said the world was most made up of fools. Well, in my
-’xperience that don’t hold. Maybe in Europe it does, but not in Havana
-and the Gulf ports, anyway. So I says to myself, ‘Let’s try and see
-what the guy was drivin’ at.’”
-
-“And you won’t tell us how you did it?”
-
-“I’d just as soon not.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Because,” said Satan, “I may be wrong; though I’m pretty sure I’m
-right--and I b’lieve in a shut head.”
-
-“You opened your head to Cark, anyhow,” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll tell you once and I won’t tell you twice, if I have any more
-chat out of you, I’ll lay into you with a slipper! O’ course I opened
-my head to him! Did you want him hanging round here and sniffin’ out
-the cache? Haven’t we got rid of him? I don’t want any more talkin’.
-I’ve my plan laid out and you’ve get to take my orders right from now
-without questions!” He turned to Ratcliffe. “You don’t mind helpin’ to
-work the boat, leavin’ sailing directions to me?”
-
-“Not I,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m quite content to help and look on,
-leaving things to you. What’s your first move?”
-
-“I’m goin’ to clear out of this tomorrow.”
-
-“Why, I thought you was going to wait for Cark to come back,” said Jude.
-
-“Never you mind what you thought. I’m goin’ to clear out of this
-tomorrow. Meantime, I want more stuff from the cache, and you’d better
-take the dinghy and get it right off. I want provisions for a month for
-the three of us.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-CUSS WORDS
-
-
-When they had washed up and put the plates in their rack, Jude
-commandeered Ratcliffe to help with the dinghy. Satan, having given
-his orders, had retired into himself and the business of patching an
-old sail. He was seated at the work under the awning, and he seemed
-scarcely to notice the others as they got the boat away.
-
-“Satan’s got something up his sleeve,” said Jude as they pulled for the
-beach. “I reckon he’s laying low to get the better of Cark.”
-
-“Well, if you ask me,” said Ratcliffe, “I think he has got the better
-of him in some way or another. I don’t know how, and I don’t want to.
-I’d sooner wait and see. It’s as interesting as a game of chess.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Chess--oh, it’s a game. I’ll show you some day. Don’t you ever play
-games, Jude?”
-
-“You bet! Why, I won five dollars day before we put out buckin’ against
-the red at Chinese Charlie’s--y’know Havana? Well, it’s on the Calle
-sin Pedro. They play faro, but mostly r’lette.”
-
-“Oh, I didn’t mean that sort of games.”
-
-“Which sort did you mean?” asked Jude, as the nose of the boat beached
-on the sand and they scrambled out. “Did you mean whisky drinkin’ and
-cuttin’ and carryin’ on?”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no! I meant games, just ordinary games.”
-
-Jude, the boat well beached, sat down on the blazing sands. It was
-two hours past noon, and the heat of the day had lifted under the
-freshening wind from the east, the tide was on the turn, and the
-far-off lamentations of the gulls around the southern reef-spurs came
-mixed with the fall of the waves,--waves scarcely a foot high, crystal
-clear, less waves than giant ripples.
-
-Beyond the _Sarah Tyler_ and her reflection on the water lay the
-violet-colored sea, infinity, and the blue of sky, broken only by a
-gull, spar white in the dazzle.
-
-Ratcliffe sat down beside his companion. Jude, like any old salt, had
-her moments of dead laziness. Active as a kitten as a rule, she would
-suddenly knock off, when the fancy took her, “let go all holts,” to use
-Satan’s expression, and laze. You couldn’t kick her out of it, Satan
-said.
-
-She had brought an old pair of boots for going through the bay cedar
-bushes. It wasn’t good to walk among the bushes unshod: there were
-tarantulas there, and scorpions, to say nothing of stump cacti. The
-boots were lying beside her on the sand, to be put on only at the last
-moment.
-
-“What you mean by ordinary games?” asked Jude suddenly, finishing the
-inspection of a new variety of soft-shell crab she had just caught and
-flinging it into the sea.
-
-“Oh, the games people play,” said Ratcliffe, who had almost forgotten
-what they had been talking about. He tried to explain, and found it
-singularly hard, especially when cross-examined.
-
-Jude did not seem able to understand grown men and women spending half
-a day “knockin’ a ball about.”
-
-“I used to play ma’bles with Dutch Mike’s kids when we were at
-Pensacola,” said she. “Mike ran a whisky joint, and the kids were
-pretty ornery. When we’d done playin’ marbles they’d have a cussin’
-bee.”
-
-“What on earth’s that?”
-
-“Well, you’ve heard of a spellin’ bee--you get a prize for spellin’ the
-best. Well, a cussin’ bee you start cussin’ each other, and the one
-that cusses hardest gets the prize. Pap never knew till one day he let
-into me with a strap for somethin’ or ’nother and I let fly at him.
-Then he found it was Mike’s children who’d been learnin’ me, and he had
-a dust-up with Mike on the wharf, and left him limpin’ for the rest of
-his natural. Did you cuss when you was young?”
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I learned that later.”
-
-“’R you any good at it?”
-
-“Upon my word, I don’t know.”
-
-“Have a try,” said Jude, losing her languor. “Clench your fists to
-it and have a go at me, and then I’ll have a go at you--there’s no
-one listenin’. Pretend you’re the skipper and I’m a hand that’s been
-haulin’ on the wrong rope.”
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m no use at it, and it’s not a nice game,
-anyway. I’d sooner play at something else.”
-
-Jude sniffed. She evidently felt snubbed. “I’m not a baby to be playing
-games,” said she. “You can go and play by yourself if you want to.”
-
-She collapsed on her back with her knees up and her old hat covering
-her face; then from under the hat:
-
-“You’ll hear all the swearin’ you want to in a minute from the old
-hooker.”
-
-“You mean Satan?”
-
-“Yep, the minute he turns his eye ashore and sees us lazin’ here
-instead of workin’.”
-
-“Then, come on.”
-
-“Not me,” said Jude, “not till Satan begins. I’m too comfortable. I
-been working hard all the morning while you two was aboard the _Juan_
-clackin’ with Sellers and havin’ drinks, I bet. I’m going to rest
-myself--what did you have?”
-
-“Ginger beer and a cigar.”
-
-“Did you take notice of Cark’s face?”
-
-“Rather!”
-
-“They say he hasn’t any one side to his face where the patch is. I’d
-like to see him with the patch off, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“Lord, no! I saw quite enough of him with it on. Come, get up, and
-let’s get to work.”
-
-“I’m not goin’ to work no more,” mumbled Jude drowsily. “I’m dead sick
-of fetchin’ and carryin’. Let Satan go and fetch and carry for himself.
-I’m going to stick here.”
-
-“On the island?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“And give up Satan and the _Sarah_?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But what will you do for a living?”
-
-“Start a la’ndry.”
-
-“But there’s no one here to give you any washing to do.”
-
-“Then I’ll have all the easier time.”
-
-“That’s true. It’s a bright idea, and I’ll stay with you and carry the
-laundry basket.”
-
-“No, you won’t! I’ll stick here alone.”
-
-Suddenly, across the water from the _Sarah_ and shattering this
-fantasy, came a voice. It was Satan’s voice, distant and borne on the
-breeze. Ratcliffe thought he could make out the words “lazy dog.”
-
-He got up. Jude with the old panama over her face had stiffened out as
-if dead. He tried to turn her over with his foot. Then he felt half
-frightened. Had the sun got to her head, and was all that nonsense talk
-delirium?
-
-He knelt down beside her and shook her.
-
-“Jude, what’s the matter with you?”
-
-No reply.
-
-He took the panama from the face. The eyes were closed and the features
-were in repose.
-
-Now, really alarmed, he jumped up, ran down to the boat, seized the
-baling tin, and filled it with sea water. He had never seen a case of
-sunstroke, but he had heard cold water on the head was a remedy.
-
-As he turned back with the tin the corpse was sitting up putting on its
-boots.
-
-“What’re you doing with that baling tin?” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll jolly soon show you!” said he, making toward her. “Shamming dead!”
-
-But before he could reach her she was gone among the bushes, one boot
-on, the other off. Then, flinging the baling tin away, he joined her,
-helped her on with the boot, and they started. Jude, as if to make up,
-put her hand into his in a trusting and loving manner. She swung his
-hand as they walked. Then, near their destination, she flung it away
-and made off, hunting like a dog among the bushes till she found what
-she was in search of,--a long, knotted rope.
-
-“What’s that for?” asked he.
-
-“You wait and see,” replied Jude. “Here’s the cache. Mind where you’re
-walkin’ or you’ll be into it.”
-
-The cache was well hidden among the bay cedars. The opening, eight feet
-long by six broad, was covered over with short poles spread with cut
-branches gone withered with the sun. When they had got the covering
-off, Jude tied one end of the rope to a tree close by and dropped the
-other end into the cache. She swung herself down by it, and Ratcliffe
-followed.
-
-From the floor of this place a step, two feet high, gave entrance to
-the cave.
-
-“You see,” said Jude. “It may rain till it’s black, but it never floods
-the cave. The water drains off before it can rise the height of the
-step.”
-
-There were a candle and some matches inside the cave entrance. She lit
-the candle and led the way.
-
-Ratcliffe was astounded, less by the size of the place, than the stacks
-of goods,--canned peaches, condensed milk, corned beef, tomatoes, ox
-tongues, Heinz’s pickles, Nabisco wafers. The old brig, making for some
-gulf port, must have been a floating Italian warehouse as far as cargo
-was concerned.
-
-“I don’t wonder at Satan not wanting Sellers and Carquinez to spot all
-this,” said he. “Why, there must be five hundred pounds’ worth of stuff
-here. Aren’t you afraid that nigger who skipped from you at Pine Island
-may split?”
-
-“Sakes, no! He was too much afeared of Satan. Satan was always
-threatening to skin him. Besides, he doesn’t know. We told him this
-place was Turtle Island, and that’s a hundred and fifty miles to
-s’uth’ard. You trust Satan to keep a thing dark. Here, catch hold of
-the candle while I collect.”
-
-There were two sacks folded up on the floor. She started collecting
-things, and when the sacks were half-filled Jude, clambering out of the
-pit, hauled them up by the rope.
-
-“Anything more?” asked he, from below.
-
-“I reckon that will be enough,” said Jude, looking down at him. “It’ll
-take us all our time to carry them to the boat, and if Satan ain’t
-satisfied he can come and fetch some more himself.”
-
-“Then drop the rope; I want to get out.”
-
-Jude, kneeling at the cache edge, lowered the rope gingerly. He reached
-up, and was just about to seize the loose end when it eluded him.
-
-“Why don’t you catch hold?” asked Jude.
-
-“I can’t. How could I when you pulled it up again. Go on, drop it and
-don’t play the fool.”
-
-“Who’s playin’ the fool?”
-
-“You are.”
-
-The rope, instead of descending again, was hauled right out of the
-cache. Then a face appeared, looking down and framed against the sky.
-He had forgotten the snub he had given her on the beach, but she hadn’t.
-
-“D’y’r’member what you said down there on the beach?” asked Jude.
-
-“No, what about?”
-
-“Cussin’.”
-
-“Oh, yes.”
-
-“Said I wanted you to play games that wasn’t nice.”
-
-“I never said any such thing.”
-
-“Didn’t yer? Well, whether you did or you didn’t, you’ve got to swear
-before I let you out.”
-
-“Well, then I’ll stay in. Go on, Jude, don’t be silly. It’s cold down
-here.”
-
-The rope came down, and he was just seizing the end when it was whipped
-out of his hand.
-
-“Damn!” said Ratcliffe wholeheartedly.
-
-“Now you’re talkin’,” said Jude.
-
-Like a boy fishing for polliwogs, she lowered the rope again and
-snatched it up suddenly, bringing with it another oath.
-
-But the third time he was too quick for her. Then as he came swarming
-up with skinned knuckles and rage in his heart, she bolted. He chased
-her, dodging here and there among the bushes, then he chased her round
-a tree, caught her, and, in his anger and irritation somehow, kissed
-her.
-
-The perfectly amazing smack on the face that followed was revelation;
-it also knocked him off his balance so that he sat down as though cut
-off at the knees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-THE COMING OF CLEARY
-
-
-She stood for a moment, frightened at her handiwork.
-
-Then, as he pulled himself together, she drew away a step.
-
-“What ails you?” asked she.
-
-Ratcliffe, sitting up with his hand to the top of his head, groaned.
-
-She drew a step closer. Then she saw that he was laughing, and drew a
-step back.
-
-“Get up, and don’t be fooling,” said she.
-
-“Fooling! And who started it?” asked he.
-
-Jude made no reply. She turned and went off to the cache, lugged the
-sacks a bit more away from the opening, and started to put the poles
-across. When he joined her on the work she wouldn’t speak. She was
-evidently mortally offended.
-
-He knew at once and by some fine instinct what was the matter with her.
-He had trod on her dignity, like the Thelusson woman,--treated her like
-a child, that is to say like a girl, for the two things were synonymous
-with Jude, who seemed to have no more idea of the realities of sex than
-a pumpkin.
-
-When she did speak at last, it was to give jeering orders.
-
-“Lord! Did you never have to use your hands? Which way is that to be
-sticking the poles? Why, it’d take twenty dozen to cover it the way
-you’re doing! Leave a foot and a half between them.”
-
-“Right,” said Ratcliffe humbly.
-
-“I didn’t say two foot.”
-
-“Sorry.”
-
-“Now the branches an’ stuff.”
-
-She had reserved one of the poles, for what reason soon became apparent.
-
-Each sack was too heavy to be carried by one person, so she slung one
-to the middle of the pole, and they started for the beach, Caleb and
-Joshua fashion, Ratcliffe in front.
-
-It was horrible work. They had to keep step, which was difficult; owing
-to the bushes, the going was bad. The sack kept slipping toward Jude,
-owing to the inequality of their heights, and the pressure of the pole
-on his shoulder was galling; also the wind had changed and was coming
-from the direction of the gulf, warm and moist like the breath from a
-great mouth.
-
-When they reached the beach he sat down. Unused to hard work and
-unused to the climate, he was sweating and exhausted. Jude looked
-comparatively cool and fresh.
-
-“Now then, Lazybones!” said Jude. Then she collapsed also, sitting down
-with her knees up and her arms round them.
-
-She seemed to have forgotten the sack, Ratcliffe, everything, as she
-sat whistling dreamily between her teeth and staring across the water
-toward the _Sarah_.
-
-She had kicked off her boots, and her toes were playing with the sand.
-Uncramped by boots, her feet were as expressive as her hands.
-
-“You’ll hear Satan begin to holler in a minute,” said Jude.
-
-“Let him,” said the other, “I’m not going to stir another foot till
-I’ve rested myself.”
-
-“Oh, he won’t holler at you. It’s me he’ll go for; you’re the
-first-class passenger.”
-
-“No, I’m not: I’m one of the crew.”
-
-Jude laughed in a mirthless manner.
-
-“Well, I reckon myself one, anyhow,” said he. “I wouldn’t have come on
-board unless I was to help in working the boat.”
-
-“Oh, Satan won’t mind you helpin’ to work her,” replied she; “but he
-didn’t bring you aboard for that.”
-
-“I know--and it was awfully decent of him. He just thought I’d like the
-cruise.”
-
-Jude sniffed.
-
-“I reckon you don’t know Satan,” said she.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Satan never does nothing for nothing.”
-
-“Well, what did he bring me aboard for?”
-
-“Lord knows,” said Jude; “but he’s got something up his sleeve, sure.
-Mind you, Satan’s as straight as they make them unless he’s dealin’
-with law chaps and such, and you’d be safe with him if you was blind
-and dumb and covered with diamonds only waitin’ to be picked off you.
-You see, you’re straight, and anyone that’s straight with Satan he’s
-straight with them. It’s different with lawyers, or guys like Cark and
-Sellers, who’d beat their own gran’mothers out of their store teeth.
-All the same, you look out with Satan. He’s got some plan about you,
-sure.”
-
-“What sort of plan is it, do you think, Jude?”
-
-“Lord knows. Nothing to harm you, anyway; maybe it’s to go shares in
-some deal--I dunno.”
-
-“Well, I’m up for any deal he likes to propose that would benefit
-him--as much money as he wants.”
-
-“Satan’s not set on money,” said Jude, “not in a big way. I reckon
-he’s something like Pap. Pap would take no end of trouble making a few
-dollars, but he was never really set on bein’ rich. I reckon he took up
-that old wreck business more for the fun of the thing than the dollars.
-He used to say great riches was only trouble to a man, an’ that he only
-wanted God’s good air and ’nough to live on.”
-
-“Well, maybe he was right,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“I reckon Satan cottoned to you because he thought you was honest,”
-said Jude.
-
-“Well, I hope I am.”
-
-“He said to me, right off, after you’d gone back to the yacht, ‘I
-reckon that feller’s honest,’ he said.”
-
-Ratcliffe laughed.
-
-“You see,” went on Jude, “you don’t pick up honest parties round these
-parts, not by the bushel. You might rake Havana with a finetooth comb
-lookin’ for fellers that wouldn’t do you, but you wouldn’t find none.
-It’s the same all round the gulf, from N’Orleans to Campêche; you can’t
-stick your nose in anywhere without being stung--if you’re a softy.”
-
-“So he liked me because he thought I was straight. What did you like me
-for, Jude?”
-
-“Lord! if you don’t fancy yourself! Who told you I liked you?”
-
-“You did last night. You said you and Satan took to me right off.”
-
-“Oh, did I? Well, maybe it was them pajamas--Hullo!” The shrill notes
-of a bo’sn’s whistle came over the water. She sprang to her feet.
-
-Satan’s form appeared at the rail of the _Sarah_. He was making
-movements with his arms as though signaling, and Jude flung up an arm
-in answer.
-
-Then, shading her eyes, she looked seaward.
-
-“What’s up?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Come on!” said Jude.
-
-She seized the sack, called on him to help her, and between them they
-ran it down to the water’s edge. Then they got the dinghy afloat, the
-sack on board, and started.
-
-“What’s up?” again asked Ratcliffe, as they rowed.
-
-“Sail,” said Jude.
-
-He had seen nothing, perhaps because of the sun-dazzle on the water or
-because he had not looked in the right direction. The sensitiveness
-of the Tylers to the approach of strangers and their hawklike vision
-struck him as belonging almost to the uncanny.
-
-Satan had rigged a tackle, and without a word uttered the sack was got
-aboard and below. Then and not till then did Satan speak.
-
-“It’s Cleary,” said he.
-
-Jude took the old glass he had been using, and examined the stranger,
-then she handed it to Ratcliffe. He turned it on the fleck of sail
-which sprang gigantic into the form of a big fore-and-aft-rigged boat,
-beating up for the island, the late afternoon sunlight flashing back
-from the foam at the forefoot and her foam-wet bows.
-
-“Who is Cleary?” asked he, handing back the glass.
-
-“Cark’s partner,” said Satan, “sort of half and half partner. They’re
-always bestin’ one another. Cleary is by way of bein’ a ship breaker
-and dealer in odds and ends; owns a couple of ratty old schooners
-besides that old ketch. Wonder what he’s doin’ down here? Curse him!”
-
-“He’s after Cark, most likely,” said Jude. “Maybe he’s got a smell of
-the wreck.”
-
-“Maybe,” replied Satan. “He’s always spyin’ on Cark. There’s nothin’
-much that Cleary don’t know, and if he got wind that Cark’s on a likely
-job he’d put out after him.”
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that the old wreck lying on that
-unseen reef might have been likened to a carcass in the desert, and
-that he was watching the gathering of the vultures to a feast.
-
-First Carquinez, now Cleary--how many more would come circling out of
-the blue?
-
-He said so, and Satan concurred.
-
-“It’s got out somehow or ’nother,” said Satan, “and Lord only knows
-there may be half a dozen others on the hunt. You see, the very fac’
-of Cark’s puttin’ to sea himself would give suspicions to half Havana;
-but Cleary is the only man beside Cark that knows my ports of call. He
-knows I come here for abalones, and he knows I hunt round Pine Island,
-not to say other places.”
-
-Satan fell into meditation for a moment. Then he resumed:
-
-“That’s what the cuss has been doin’. He’s been on the hunt for me,
-same as Cark was, only for different reasons. Now you wait and see.
-Jude!”
-
-“Hullo,” said Jude.
-
-“Did you cover the cache proper?”
-
-“You bet; but there’s a sack of stuff we didn’t manage to bring off.
-It’s among the bushes.”
-
-“It’ll have to lay there.”
-
-“What’s the name of Cleary’s boat?” asked Ratcliffe as he watched the
-approaching ketch.
-
-“The _Natchez_,” said Satan, “an old cod boat, built at Marthas
-Vineyard. Lord! ain’t they crackin’ on! Cleary’s in a hurry. There’s no
-denyin’ that.”
-
-He whistled contentedly as he leaned on the rail, and Ratcliffe,
-watching his hatchet-sharp profile, wondered what was coming next.
-Of one thing he was beginning to feel certain,--Cleary, Carquinez,
-Sellers, and anything else that might come out of Havana on the long
-trail for plunder would find a match in Satan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-AN HONEST MAN
-
-
-The ketch carried on, heading straight for the _Sarah_; then, spilling
-the wind from her sails, she came round, presenting a full view of her
-dirty old hull and dropping her anchor two cable lengths away.
-
-Almost on the last rasp of the anchor chain she dropped a boat, which
-shoved off for the _Sarah_.
-
-“That’s Cleary,” said Satan, shading his eyes.
-
-It was, and as Cleary came on board, leg over rail, saluting Satan
-with the affability of old acquaintanceship and the quarterdeck with
-a squirt of tobacco juice, Ratcliffe fell to wondering what sort of
-place Havana might be and what else it might give up in the way of
-detrimentals.
-
-Carquinez was bad and Sellers was bad, but Cleary was--Cleary. Against
-the gold and blue of afternoon, the sight of this faded man, who
-looked as though he had seen better days, who suggested a broken-down
-schoolmaster, with a slungshot in his pocket, struck Ratcliffe with
-astonishment and depression. It was as though the dazzling air had
-suddenly split to disclose a London slum.
-
-“Hullo! Hullo!” said Cleary. “Thought I recognized the old hooker. What
-you doin’ down here away?”
-
-Jude made a dive for the galley, and Ratcliffe could hear her choking.
-The sound banished the feeling of depression and repulsion created by
-the newcomer and brightened him somehow.
-
-Here was the comic man of the pantomime come aboard.
-
-“What am I doin’?” said Satan. “I’m fishin’ for chair-backs. What are
-you doin’ yourself?”
-
-Cleary turned, spat his quid overboard, and then, leaning on the rail,
-looking seaward, with his back to the others, and, just as easy as
-though he were aboard his own ship, laughed.
-
-“Fishin’ for chair-backs!” Then, sluing his head half round, “How’s the
-abalone fishin’ gone?”
-
-“Jude!” cried Satan.
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Bring up them pearls!”
-
-Cleary turned, and, leaning with his back against the rail, began to
-fill an old pipe in a languid and leisurely manner. Then, when the
-pearls were produced, he turned them from the matchbox into the palm of
-his hand.
-
-“How much?” asked Cleary.
-
-“Forty dollars,” said Satan.
-
-“Forty which?”
-
-“Dollars.”
-
-“Ain’t worth forty cents.”
-
-“Well, who’s askin’ you to deal?”
-
-Cleary carefully poured the pearls into the matchbox, closed it, and
-put it in his pocket.
-
-Satan did not seem to mind.
-
-“Jude!” said Satan.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Bring up them cigars!”
-
-“Who’s the gentleman?” asked Cleary.
-
-“Gentleman came aboard for a cruise off a yacht. You needn’t mind him;
-he’s only out for pleasure.”
-
-Cleary nodded to Ratcliffe, who nodded in return. Then things hung
-for a moment till Jude appeared with the cigar-box, and the newcomer,
-having tapped the tobacco out of his pipe, chose a cigar, lit it and,
-leaning with his back against the rail and his thumbs in the armholes
-of his old waistcoat, blew clouds. He seemed for a moment far away in
-thought, and Ratcliffe, watching him and Satan,--Jude having vanished
-again, attacked with another fit of choking,--puzzled his head in
-vain to find out the inner meaning of what was going on. The wretched
-pearls were scarcely worth five dollars, he had heard Satan say so, and
-Cleary, evidently an expert, was not the man to pay eight times their
-worth, nor was Satan the man to allow the other to pocket them.
-
-Then suddenly Cleary spoke.
-
-“Cark’s a clever man, don’t you think?”
-
-“Well, seein’ he’s your partner, you’re a better judge than me,”
-replied Satan.
-
-“Well, maybe that’s so,” said Cleary. “Partners we were, and partners
-we are till I ketch him and bust him.”
-
-“Why, what’s he been doin’ to you?”
-
-“Now, I’ll tell you,” said Cleary. “I’m an honest man. I don’t say in
-trade I’m not above shavin’ the barber, but between man an’ man I’m
-honest, and I’m goin’ to tell you straight out Cark and me has been
-layin’ for you ever since your dad was fool enough to give Cark the
-tip about that treasure business. I wasn’t keen on it, same as he
-was. I allowed there might be somethin’ in it--but that don’t matter.
-What gets my monkey is Cark he gets fearful thick with Sellers, then
-he cools off on the business of the treasure gettin’, and a matter of
-two weeks ago he rigs up a job for me to see after at Pensacola that’d
-have taken me two months and more. I says to myself, ‘There’s somethin’
-in this.’ Says nothin’ to Cark. Off I goes, taking the old _Natchez_.
-Hadn’t reached the latitood of Key West when back I puts, and finds
-Cark gone with the _Juan_ and Sellers.
-
-“Then I knew he’s started to hunt for you again, leavin’ me in the
-lonely cold. He’s been huntin’ you ever since last fall, that’s
-straight; but he’d never let me down before. He’d always told me the
-results. I tell you he’s huntin’ for you now, and the surprisin’ thing
-is he hasn’t found you, knowing as he does this is one of your grounds.”
-
-“How do you know he hasn’t found me?”
-
-“What you mean?”
-
-“Why, he was here this morning and off not four hours ago.”
-
-“Christopher!”
-
-“Him and Sellers.”
-
-“Holy Mike!”
-
-“You was comin’ up from West, you ought to have sighted him.”
-
-“Sighted nothin’ but a tank, and her nearly hull down.”
-
-“Well, if you’d been here a few hours earlier, you’d have smelt the old
-_Juan_ as well as sightin’ her.”
-
-“Was he here on business?”
-
-“He was,--he was after that wreck Pap told him of. You just told me
-he’s been after me since last fall spyin’ on me. I know it, and I’m
-pretty sick of the business. B’sides, he’s as good to help in it as
-anyone else; so I’ve made a contrac’ with him.”
-
-“_Sufferin_’ Moses!--a contrac’ with Cark!” Cleary stood for a moment
-as though absorbing this news, then he laughed, the funniest laugh
-Ratcliffe had ever heard,--it was like the whinny of a pony. He saw
-Jude’s head at the cabin hatch, and the head suddenly duck and vanish,
-as though her body had been doubled up.
-
-“A contrac’ with Cark!”
-
-“Well, what are you laughin’ at?”
-
-“Nothin’. May I ask what terms?”
-
-“We go shares.”
-
-“In the pickin’s?”
-
-“What else?”
-
-“Have you give him the location?”
-
-“I have.”
-
-“You’ve give him the location and let him slip his cable--him and
-Sellers?”
-
-“What odds? It’ll take a month to bust her open and hunt for the
-stuff. I’ll be after him tomorrow.”
-
-Cleary crossed his arms and stood with the half-cigar stuck in the
-corner of his mouth and pointing skyward, his eyes fixed on the deck
-and his left eye half closed.
-
-Jude’s face had reappeared at the cabin hatch, and the grin on it
-spread to Ratcliffe’s.
-
-Satan alone was unmoved, half-sitting on the keg and cutting up some
-tobacco.
-
-“Well,” said Cleary at last, “you’ve made your bargain, there’s no
-gettin’ round that. _I’m_ not wishin’ to poke my nose in your business,
-nor to ask what your share is to be, but I’m partners with Cark, and
-you see how he’s let me down--cayn’t you give me a lead?”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Give me a lead to the location. It won’t make a cent difference to
-you.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Clear enough, I don’t want none of your share. Cark’s the man I want
-to tap, having a right to, being partners.”
-
-Satan seemed to turn this matter over in his mind for a moment. Then he
-said, “Suppose we come back to them pearls?”
-
-“Right,” said Cleary in a lively voice. “What’s this you was askin’,
-forty? Well, forty you shall have.”
-
-He produced an old brown pocketbook, counted out four ten-dollar notes,
-and handed them over.
-
-Satan examined each note, back and front, folded them, and placed them
-into his pocket.
-
-“Now,” said Cleary, “out with the lead!”
-
-“You’ll have it tomorrow,” said Satan. “I’m pickin’ up my anchor
-tomorrow mornin’. You’ve only to follow me.”
-
-“I’d rayther have the indications on paper.”
-
-“Maybe you would, but you won’t. I’ve made my bargain with Cark, and
-there’s nothin’ in the contrac’ about givin’ the location away to third
-parties. I can’t help you followin’ me.”
-
-“I take you,” said Cleary.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-PROBLEMS
-
-
-The sun was nearly touching the horizon when he dropped into his boat
-and rowed off.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “Are you in earnest with that chap?”
-
-“I sure am,” said Satan.
-
-“Going to take him down to Lone Reef?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“But how about Carquinez? We had got to wait for him here till he gets
-back from Havana with the dynamite.”
-
-“Yes,” said Satan, “we’d got to wait here one week, or maybe ten days
-allowin’ for weather--where was you born?”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Cark’s tried to sell me a pup, that’s how! He’s gone to no Havana:
-he’s crackin’ on for the wreck with every stitch he can carry. Reckons
-to bust her open and scoop the boodle while we’re layin’ here rubbin’
-our noses and waitin’ for him. Mind you,” said Satan, “I may be wrong,
-but that’s my ’pinion.”
-
-“But he sailed off toward Havana.”
-
-“Lord! Hasn’t he a rudder?”
-
-“All the same, would it pay him?”
-
-“How?”
-
-“Well, if he played a dirty trick on you like that, wouldn’t he be
-afraid you’d split?”
-
-“Who to?”
-
-“To the authorities at Cuba.”
-
-“D’you remember Sellers talkin’ about landin’ the stuff,” asked Satan,
-“sayin’ they’d have to take it round to Santiago way? They thought I
-was drinkin’ all that in. If there were any dollars in the business,
-d’you think they’d touch Cuba? Not they! They’d either cache the stuff
-or run it to some likely port. I was laughin’ in my hat all the time.
-Now you may think me a suspicious cuss. I’m not; but a feller has to
-run by compass in this world or go off his course, and my compass in
-this turnout is Cark. I say he’s gone down to Lone Reef and given me
-the left leg over the business, and my compass is the fac’ that he
-can’t run straight. Not if he tried to, he couldn’t run straight; nor
-could Sellers nor Cleary. If them fellers were straight, I’d match
-them and give them a fair deal. As it is, they’re like a lot of blind
-bally-hoolies playin’ blindman’s buff, runnin’ round and round, with me
-in the middle, tryin’ to kidoodle me and bein’ kidoodled themselves.
-Forty dollars for them rotten pearls, and all sorts of fixin’s out of
-Sellers--_and I haven’t done with them yet_!”
-
-It had seemed to Ratcliffe, on board the _Juan_, that Carquinez was
-the spider of the web of this business. It seemed to him now that the
-spider was Satan.
-
-He began to wonder was there any wreck at all, was the treasure
-story a myth. The idea of these rogues being incited to dreams of
-fortune so that they might be plundered of pots of paint and cans of
-turpentine and a few dollars appealed to him immensely. He remembered
-Thelusson and Skelton, he remembered Jude’s yarn about fruit steamers
-being held up, he remembered Carquinez and Sellers, and he had just
-seen Cleary; and of a sudden Satan’s ocean-wide activities appeared
-before him in nightmare contrast with their microscopic results. Great
-steamers stopped for a bunch of bananas, yachts lying idle to careen
-the _Sarah_, ships sailing from Havana to hunt for buried treasure--but
-in reality to supply the wandering _Sarah_ with cans of turpentine and
-a few dollars! Was there any treasure, or was the whole thing a Tyler
-fake invented by Pap and handed to his family as an heirloom? He could
-not resist the question.
-
-“That chart you showed us,” said he,--“is there anything really in it?”
-
-Satan took him at once.
-
-“The chart’s all right,” said he, “for them that can read it. If you
-mean is it _genuine_, I reckon it is--for them that can read it.
-We’ll see some day if I’m right or wrong; but, honest truth, I’m not
-botherin’ much about it,--the chances are so big, as I told you before,
-against treasure huntin’, and even if we strike it what’s the use of
-barrels of gold to a feller like me? If you ask me, I’m botherin’ more
-about the kid than huntin’ for money.”
-
-“You mean?”
-
-“Jude. Suppose I was to get a bash on the head from one of them cusses,
-or drop to the smallpox, same as I pretended to Sellers, what’d become
-of the kid?”
-
-The sound of the “kid” frying fish for supper came mixed with the
-question.
-
-“I know,” said Ratcliffe, “that’s a problem that must often occur to
-you, I should think.”
-
-“You’ve seen the sort of crowd Havana’s made of,” went on Satan. “It’s
-hard to tell which is worse, the Yanks or the Spaniards, and there’s
-not a seaport that’s not the same, and when I think of me lyin’ dead
-and her driftin’ loose, it gets my goat. It’d be different if she was a
-boy.”
-
-“Besides that,” said the other, “she can’t go on always as she is now.”
-
-“How’d you mean?”
-
-“Well, dressed as she is now. She’ll grow up.”
-
-“Sure,” said Satan.
-
-“She’ll have to dress differently some day.”
-
-“Meanin’ skirts?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-Satan laughed a hollow laugh. The idea seemed so futile that he did not
-dwell upon it, or seemed not to.
-
-“Have you any female relations yourself?” asked he.
-
-“Lots,” replied Ratcliffe, calling up in memory his cousins and aunts,
-females of the highest upper-middle-class respectability, and vaguely
-wondering what they would think of Jude could they see her.
-
-“The bother is,” said Satan, “she don’t take to women folk; always was
-against them, and that Thelusson woman put the cap on the business,
-kissin’ her and handin’ out slop talk. Well, I don’t know. I reckon
-she’ll have to go on bein’ what she is till somethin’ happens; but it
-would have been a lot handier if she’d been born a boy.”
-
-He turned and went below.
-
-The sun had sunk beyond Palm Island, and a violet dusk, forerunner of
-the dark, was spreading through the sky. Over beyond the _Natchez_ the
-sea for a moment became hard looking as a floor of beryl, then vague.
-
-Ratcliffe, lingering for a moment watching this transformation scene,
-found himself thinking of Jude and her problem. The Tylers had taken an
-extraordinarily firm hold upon him. He knew them more intimately than
-he knew his own relations, or fancied so. It seemed to him that he had
-known them for years.
-
-When this cruise was over and he packed up his traps and left them, he
-would probably never see them again. Jude and Satan would go their way
-and he would go his way--and what would happen to Jude? Suppose Satan
-were to die, get knocked on the head or “fall to the smallpox”? The
-thought hurt him almost as much as it hurt Satan; for Jude had, somehow
-or another, captured his mind and touched his heart, and her youth and
-absolute irresponsibility before the major facts of life had infected
-him in the most extraordinary manner.
-
-Over there on the island, engaged in the serious matter of provisioning
-the _Sarah_, they had been carrying on like children. He had not
-thought of it then; now, reflecting sanely, it rose before him together
-with the rest of this strange cruise, and for a moment the whole
-business seemed mad, absolutely mad. The supersane figure of Skelton
-rose up before him, and beyond Skelton, Oxford, the calm, sane
-English country, where the Tylers would have been impossible, the hard
-bourgeois conventions of the upper-upper-middle classes, those uncles,
-cousins, and aunts to whom Class was as holy as Sunday and to whom Jude
-would be absolutely invisible as she was.
-
-He was engaged in these reflections when a voice broke the stillness
-of the evening, a half-tired, half-cantankerous voice, the voice of an
-overworked housekeeper who had been frying fish while others have been
-idling.
-
-“_Ain’t_ you comin’ to help me?” inquired the voice.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-HANTS AND OTHER THINGS
-
-
-Down below, at supper, the injured housekeeper was still in evidence
-and rose to a charge that the fish was overfried. Satan was the accuser.
-
-The defendant, “het up” and flushed, replied in the language of the sea:
-
-“Go’n fry your head! Clackin’ on deck and leavin’ me to do the
-work--the pair of you! It’s all men’s good for.”
-
-“Why, I thought you was a man!” said Satan. “You cut and carry on like
-a man; scratch you and your tongue goes both ends like a woman. Start
-you on a job, and you sit down to it before it’s half done. I saw you
-lazin’ on the beach, and now look where we are,--there’s a sack of
-stuff not brought off and how are we to bring it with Cleary messin’
-round?”
-
-“It wasn’t my fault,” said Jude. Then she checked herself and her eyes
-met Ratcliffe’s.
-
-“It was my fault,” said he. “I got tired.”
-
-Jude looked at him. This defense of her, trifling though it was,
-seemed to make a new relationship between them. It seemed to her that
-Ratcliffe had suddenly become different. She could not tell what the
-difference was or how it had come about in the least, or why she
-half-resented his shielding her, even in this small matter; then her
-eyes fell away and rested on the table before her.
-
-“It wasn’t,” said she. “It was my fault I was foolin’ when I ought to
-have been workin’, and now the stuff is lyin’ there--” She choked, and
-then to the horror of Satan she pushed her plate away and broke into
-tears, hiding her face on her folded arms. Then, before the astonished
-ones could speak, she rose and dashed out of the cabin.
-
-“Land’s sake!” cried Satan. “What ails her? Cryin’! She’s never done
-that before--and all over that rotten sack--why, let it lay there, cuss
-the thing!”
-
-He went on with his supper in an irritable manner.
-
-“She’s overtired, maybe,” said Ratcliffe. “Wait and I’ll fetch her
-back.”
-
-He left the cabin and came on deck.
-
-The moon had not risen yet, and the riding light, which had been run up
-before supper, showed yellow against the stars.
-
-Not a sign of Jude.
-
-He went forward. There she was, huddled up in the bows.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-The bundle sniffed.
-
-“Come on down to supper. Satan’s not angry.”
-
-“Who the”--sniff--“cares whether’es angry or not? You lea’ me alone!”
-
-“But what are you crying about?”
-
-“_Ain’t_ cryin’!”
-
-“Well, what are you lying on the deck for?”
-
-“’Cause I choose.”
-
-“Come on down and help to clear the things away.”
-
-“Clear them yourself!”
-
-He bent down and tried to take her arm. She shook him off, rose
-suddenly like a released spring, ran to the side where the dinghy was
-moored, and got over the rail.
-
-He looked over. She was in the boat unfastening the painter.
-
-“Where on earth are you going?”
-
-“Ashore.”
-
-She pushed off.
-
-Ratcliffe came down to the cabin.
-
-“She’s gone ashore.”
-
-“She’s gone for that sack,” said Satan unconcernedly. “Reckons to get
-it off before moon rise, I expect.”
-
-“But it’s too heavy for one.”
-
-“She’ll do it. You’ve put her monkey up makin’ her confess it was her
-fault. She’s never done that before in all her born life. She’s just
-natural proud and she’d as soon cut her tongue out as give in she was
-in the wrong. You’ve made her do more’n I’ve ever made her do, and how
-you’ve done it--well, search me.
-
-“You aren’t gettin’ on with your supper,” said Satan after a pause.
-
-“Oh, I’ve had enough. I was wondering if she has her boots for going
-through that bush stuff.”
-
-“She’s got them all right. They were in the dinghy: she didn’t bring
-them aboard. You’re worryin’ a lot about the kid.”
-
-“Well, maybe. She’s the jolliest kid I ever struck, and I don’t want
-any harm to come to her; the pluckiest, too. There’s not many people
-would go off alone in the dark like that in a place like this.”
-
-“Lord bless your soul!” said Satan. “That’s nothin’, no more than
-walkin’ down the street to Jude. Do you think sailin’ these seas is all
-fair-weather work? Why, we’ve been rubbin’ our noses in _des_truction
-since she was born. She don’t know what fear is.”
-
-“I could tell that from her face.”
-
-“It’s her face that’s troublin’ me,” said Satan. “Pass me the water
-pitcher, will you? She’s begun to take after mother. A few months ago
-she was the homeliest little pup ever littered; but she’s beginnin’ to
-pick up in looks, and if she takes after her mother’s side in looks and
-ways--Lord save us!”
-
-“Was your mother good looking?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “I don’t know what you call good looks. Pap said
-she was a nacheral calamity; that was after she’d bolted with the
-Baptis’ man. It wasn’t the looks so much as the somethin’ about her
-that’d make a blind man rubber after her if she passed him in the
-street, that’s what Pap said. He never said no prayers, but when he was
-talkin’ of Jude I’ve heard him say time and again, ‘Thank the Lord she
-don’t take after her mother!’ and now it’s comin’ out, same as the ace
-of spades a shark has hid up his sleeve--and what’s comin’ after, Lord
-only knows.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“Well, I scarce know myself, but Pap said those sort of women couldn’t
-help bein’ nacheral calamities, attractin’ chaps and turnin’ the world
-upside down. He said a man, once they’d got the clutch on him, was no
-more use than a hypnotized fowl, whatever that is. You’ve heard what
-Jude said about skirts--well, I’m thinkin’ that’s all baby talk, an’
-it’s my ’pinion when she gets her nacheral sailing orders she’ll be
-into skirts some day, same as a dude takes to water, and hypnotizing
-chaps, same as her mother before her.”
-
-“I wouldn’t be surprised,” said Ratcliffe; “but I don’t think she’ll be
-a natural calamity. I think, from what I have seen of her, that she has
-a fine character, honest as the day, good as gold.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan; “but you never know what a woman is, seems to me,
-till she’s been rubbed against a man. Those were Pap’s words and he’d
-got a headpiece on him. Well, I reckon time will tell.”
-
-They went on deck.
-
-The moon had not risen yet, and the island lay like a humped shadow
-in the starlight. To seaward the anchor light of the _Natchez_ showed
-a yellow point, and from the beach came the lullaby of little waves
-falling on the sand.
-
-“Now if it wasn’t these days,” said Satan, “I’d be in two minds about
-putting out straight now, rather than lyin’ all night by that feller
-Cleary.”
-
-“What do you mean by these days?”
-
-“Well, in the old throat-cuttin’ days I reckon Cleary would have gone
-through us, sunk the old _Sarah_, and taken me aboard his hooker with a
-gun at my head to make me show him the way to the wreck; but things is
-different now. Fellers are afraid of the law. Cark’s mortally afraid of
-the law, so’s Cleary.”
-
-“What time do you start tomorrow?”
-
-“After sun-up, if the wind holds.”
-
-“It will be a joke if we find Carquinez at the reef. What will he say,
-do you think?”
-
-“Cark? Oh, he’ll not mind. There ain’t no shame in Cark. He’ll have
-broke his contrac’ by not goin’ to Havana, he’ll stand proved to the
-eyes as a damn cheat. He won’t mind: the contrac’ not bein’ regular,
-the law can’t have him.”
-
-“I expect Cleary will go for him.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan. “Then we’ll have some fun. There’s Jude.”
-
-Something like a swimming water rat was breaking the star shimmer on
-the sea. It was the dinghy.
-
-Jude was sculling it from behind, noiselessly. It came alongside to
-starboard like a ghost, and with it came Jude’s voice calling for the
-tackle. Then the sack came aboard and after it Jude.
-
-“Well, you’ve done it smart,” said Satan, “and no mistake. Now off down
-with you and have your supper. We’ve got to start bright and early in
-the morning.”
-
-Jude said nothing. Her anger and irritability seemed to have departed.
-She kicked off her boots, hitched up her trousers, and started down
-below.
-
-“She never keeps a grudge up,” said Satan.
-
-Away in the middle of the night Ratcliffe was awakened by a stifled
-scream, the voice of Satan promptly following.
-
-“Wake up! What ails you?”
-
-“For the Land’s sake, where am I?”
-
-“In your hammock. What’re you dreamin’ of?”
-
-“Gee-owsts.”
-
-“Hants, you mean.”
-
-“Black faces they had, and they was chasin’ me round and round them
-trees.”
-
-“That’s what comes of stuffin’ yourself and goin’ to bed on top of it.
-Get off your back and onto your side. Wakin’ a body up like that! What
-was they like?”
-
-“The hants?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“I can’t be talkin’ for fear of wakin’ him up.”
-
-“He’s asleep. I hear him snorin’. What was they like?”
-
-“They’d black faces and tails like cows--an’ I’d rather not be talkin’
-of them.”
-
-“Wonder what it means dreamin’ of them things?”
-
-“Nothin’ good--bad weather, most like.”
-
-“Glass is steady.”
-
-“Well, maybe we’ll bust on a reef or somethin’.”
-
-“Oh, shet your head!”
-
-“Shet yours. I’m wantin’ to get asleep.”
-
-Silence.
-
-Ratcliffe could hear the water outside tickling the ribs of the
-old _Sarah_. A bigger swell was running, and she rose to it with
-balloon-like buoyancy. A score of little voices from the trickle and
-slap of the sea against the timbers to the click of the rudder chain
-marked her movements.
-
-The idea of the ghosts chasing Jude round the dream tree reminded him
-of how he had chased her round the real tree and kissed her--kissed her
-out of irritation.
-
-Something in his half-asleep state told him he had been a fool to do
-that. It was all done in play, just as a little boy might kiss a little
-girl; but he was not a little boy. What had prompted him?
-
-Then as he lay dissolving into slumber the groaning timbers of the
-_Sarah_ said something that sounded like “nacheral calamity,” and then,
-the door of sleep flung wide, he was walking on a blazing beach with
-Cleary.
-
-The _Natchez_ and the _Juan_ were at anchor out on the blue dream
-sea, a great wreck was heaved up on the sands, and when they reached
-it Cleary tapped on the timbers and said something about a “nacheral
-calamity,” and at the words a porthole opened and Jude’s fresh young
-face appeared laughing, framed by the timbers of the wreck.
-
-It seemed to him the most delightful vision--then it popped in and the
-porthole closed and Carquinez came riding up on a horse, saying he was
-going to “bu’st” the wreck open with dynamite to get at the treasure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-UNDER WAY
-
-
-He was routed out before dawn by Satan. The cabin lamp was lit, the
-table spread, and Jude was bringing in coffee. She seemed in a bad
-temper, and as he huddled himself into his clothes he could hear her:
-
-“Knockin’ myself about in the dark! That old slush lamp in the galley
-don’t burn worth a cent. What you want haulin’ out this hour for?”
-
-And to her Satan:
-
-“Wind will be up with the sun--where’s them biscuits? We’ve got to get
-the dinghy aboard yet, and all that raffle forward stowed, and it’ll be
-light enough in another ten minutes.”
-
-“Where’s Rat?”
-
-“He’s comin’.”
-
-He sat down to table opposite Jude. She scarcely gave him good morning.
-The face that had looked so well framed by the porthole of the dream
-ship was cross, almost sullen. He thought for a moment that her
-ill-temper was directed toward Satan as well as himself; then, in some
-subtle way, he knew it wasn’t. Early rising may have helped; but he was
-the cause. What had he done? He could not think.
-
-He remembered how she had acted when he had stood up for her the night
-before. It was just the same this morning.
-
-Satan said the coffee was burnt,--tasted like bud barley, and ought to
-be slung in the slush tub. Ratcliffe stood up for the coffee, but was
-cut short by Jude.
-
-“I reckon it’s beastly,” said Jude; “but I haven’t more’n two hands
-to be gettin’ the things on the table and the coffee boiled--and some
-folks snoring in their bunks!”
-
-“Shet up!” said Satan, ruffled at this wanton attack on the guest “And
-talkin’ of snorin’, I reckon you can give any man points and beat him,
-once you lay down to it Why, you shake the ship so that I’ve woke often
-of nights thinkin’ we’d got adrift and was dudderin’ over sandbanks.”
-
-“Lord love you for a liar!” was all Jude said. She refused help in
-clearing away the things, joining them on deck a few minutes later,
-just as day was coming into the eastern sky.
-
-The problem of how to get the dinghy aboard had not occurred to
-Ratcliffe till now. The _Sarah Tyler_ possessed no davits, and though
-the old canvas boat was easy to handle as an umbrella, the sturdy
-little dinghy was a different matter.
-
-Standing in the half-dark with a faint wind bringing the smell of
-the early morning sea, sharp as the smell of a new-drawn sword, he
-questioned Satan on the subject.
-
-“Get her aboard?” said Satan. “Oh, I’ll durn soon get her aboard.
-Davits! God love you! what do you want them things for?”
-
-“Except for hoistin’ fools off the ship?” said the voice of Jude from
-the darkness. “_Air_ you goin’ to get a move on? You’ve got the old
-awning to take in and stow. Maybe you’ve forgotten it.”
-
-They got the awning down and stowed, and then, against a train of fire
-crawling on the eastern sea-line and in a light that made the world
-like the vestibule of Fairyland, Satan set to on the problem of the
-dinghy. He had no doubt half a dozen dodges for the purpose. The one he
-employed was simply to unshackle the main halyards and fix them to the
-ring-bolt on the bow.
-
-As they hauled on the tackle, and as if in answer to the creak of block
-and shrill chantey started by Satan, the races of the gulls blazed
-out. The deep-sea fishing gulls had long since started for sea; but
-the shore gulls, as though waiting for a convoy to follow, were round
-the stern of the _Sarah_. Then, the dinghy secured, the throat and
-peak halyards were manned, and the mainsail rose slatting against the
-splendor of the morning.
-
-The sun was over the sea-line now, the wind rising to meet him, and
-to starboard the fresh blue sea flooding against the wind showed the
-_Natchez_, her canvas rising and the fellows swarming at the ropes.
-
-Satan had unlashed the wheel and was standing by it, now that the
-mainsail was set, shouting directions to his crew; and to Ratcliffe,
-as he labored with Jude getting the foresail and jib on her, the truth
-came in a flash that this was the real thing. The lazy peace of the
-last couple of days had broken all at once. Activity, Adventure,
-and Danger seemed suddenly to have boarded the old _Sarah Tyler_ and
-delivered her as a prey to enormous and unknown forces.
-
-He had never recognized till now the potential energy of canvas. The
-mainsail seemed horribly vast, out of all proportion to the hull; the
-slatting of the jib as they raised it spoke of an energy new born,
-viewless, and seeming to have little relationship to the warm and
-benign breeze.
-
-But he had no time to think. The anchor was still to be had in, and
-as he helped with Jude at the windlass--Pap’s patent that would have
-raised a battleship--the threshing of the canvas with all sheets slack
-and the voice of Satan came urging speed.
-
-Then, when the old killick was aboard and the sails trimmed, came
-Peace. With the wind on the starboard beam and the canvas hard against
-the blue the _Sarah_ settled down to her work, Palm Island fading to
-westward, and to sou’west the _Natchez_ with all sail set in pursuit.
-
-Jude’s bad temper seemed to have blown away on the wind, the surly look
-had gone from her face, and as she stood for a moment by Ratcliffe,
-looking over the weather rail, her mind seemed entirely occupied by
-Cleary.
-
-“He’s blowing along,” said Jude; “but he’s feeling our pace. Not more
-than holding his own--and he had the cheek to tell me once his old tub
-could sail circles round the _Sarah_!”
-
-Satan at the wheel cocked his eye over his shoulder at the _Natchez_,
-spat, and refixed his gaze on the binnacle.
-
-“Where’s your eyes?” asked Satan.
-
-“In my head,” replied Jude. “What you gettin’ at?”
-
-“He’s overhaulin’ us. Wonder he ain’t aboard! Time you was gettin’ that
-anchor up and handlin’ the jib.”
-
-Ratcliffe was about to share the blame when, remembering the incident
-of the coffee, he checked himself and held his peace.
-
-Satan was right. The _Natchez_ had the pace of the _Sarah_, at least
-under present wind conditions and under plain sail. The two boats had
-evidently never been matched before, and the gloom of the Tylers might
-have been gaged by their silence. Satan did not want to run away from
-Cleary; but he had promised him a “lead,” and this impudent display
-of the better sailing qualities of the _Natchez_ was like a derisive
-underscore to the promise.
-
-Cleary, in this matter at least, was a very unwise man. He should have
-checked the speed of his boat by mishandling her or even trailing a
-drogher. Instead of that he held on, determined, evidently, to take the
-shine out of the _Sarah_ and pour derision on the head of Satan.
-
-Ratcliffe, little as he knew of boatcraft, felt the situation. Being
-wise, he said nothing.
-
-Suddenly Jude spoke.
-
-“It’s her beams helping her. Try her on a wind and we’d knock flinders
-out of her. Lord! to think of being beat by that old cod boat! Say,
-cayn’t we do nothin’, crack on a balloon jib or somethin’?”
-
-Satan laughed a mirthless laugh.
-
-“S’much as to tell the cuss we’re beat. Don’t you think Cleary’s got no
-balloon jibs up his sleeve? Hain’t you no sense?”
-
-They held on, the _Natchez_ steadily overhauling them till she was dead
-level half a mile away and drawing ahead.
-
-Then, having demonstrated her superiority, she began to reduce sail so
-as to give the _Sarah_ the lead.
-
-Jude turned away and leaned with her back against the rail; then Satan
-told her to take the wheel and went below for a “wash.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-THE STEERSMAN
-
-
-Ratcliffe, taking his seat on the bottom of the dinghy, watched her as
-she steered, the old panama on the back of her head and her eyes roving
-from the binnacle to the luff of the mainsail. The following wind blew
-warm, and the gentle creak of a block, the slash of the bow-wash, and
-the occasional click of the rudder chain were the only sounds in all
-the blue world ringing them.
-
-A mile or more behind them the _Natchez_ showed, a triangle of pearl,
-Palm Island had vanished, and nothing remained in all the wheel of sea
-but a trace of smoke to the southward,--the smoke of some freighter
-hull down on the horizon.
-
-The sturdy little figure at the wheel seemed to have forgotten his
-existence. He was wondering whether the grudge was still being kept up
-against him, and what it was all about, and whether this indifference
-was real or assumed, when a voice made him start:
-
-“Say! Have you swallowed your tongue?”
-
-“No, but I didn’t like to speak to you.”
-
-“What for?”
-
-“Well, I’ve heard you mustn’t speak to the man at the wheel.”
-
-“Who stuffed you with that yarn?”
-
-“Oh, I’ve seen it stuck up on steamboats, and besides I thought you
-were in a temper with me.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Well, you said davits were only good for hoisting fools off a ship.”
-
-“So they are.”
-
-“I thought you meant me.”
-
-“Thought you was a fool, did you?”
-
-“Then last night you got in a wax--Jude.”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Nothing--only--we don’t want to quarrel--and we haven’t been the same
-since last night, somehow.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. You wouldn’t let me help to clear the things this
-morning.”
-
-“Wouldn’t I? Well, you can help to steer the ship now. Kin you steer?”
-
-“Only a boat.”
-
-“Well, it’s easy learnt, and you’re not much use aboard unless you can
-take your hand at the wheel.”
-
-He said nothing for a minute, admiring the way she had steered clear of
-the subject he had started on.
-
-“I don’t mind,” said he at last. “I’ll learn some time--you can teach
-me.”
-
-Jude let her eyes rest on him. Then suddenly, and with the vehemence
-and force of a Methodist preacher driving home a point from the pulpit,
-she spoke:
-
-“_Air_ you stuck to the bottom of that dinghy with cobbler’s wax?”
-
-He laughed and stood up.
-
-“That’s right,” said Jude. “Now come’n take the wheel. Some time’s no
-time! You’ve got to learn to handle her now if you want to. Go behind
-me and look over my shoulder--that’s right.”
-
-He stood behind her, wondering what the next command would be. It came
-almost at once.
-
-“Stick your eye on the compass card.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-“S’long as the pointer’s like that she’s on her course. Now I’ll let
-her off a spoke or two--keep your eye on the card.”
-
-The pointer altered its indication, and the mainsail seemed suddenly
-attacked by the ague.
-
-“Now she’s on her course again,” said Jude, altering the wheel. “Take
-hold of her. I’ll stand by to give you a hand if you want it.”
-
-He took the spokes she had been holding as she relinquished them, and
-the first sensation that came to him was the feeling that he had taken
-hold of something alive, something alive and sensitive as a hare.
-The wheel seemed to have a motive power and will of its own, and the
-infernal compass card to take affront at the least movement of the helm.
-
-Jude rested her hand on his left hand to show him how and give him
-confidence, and at the touch of her firm little hand the stage-fright
-that comes to every steersman when he first takes the wheel left him.
-
-In five minutes he had got the hang of the thing, or thought so.
-
-“Can you run her alone?” asked Jude.
-
-“Rather! It’s as simple as simple.”
-
-“Right,” said Jude.
-
-She drew off and took her seat on the dinghy.
-
-“Easy, ain’t it?”
-
-“Easy as pie.”
-
-The wind freshened a bit, and the _Sarah_, heeling slightly, took
-matters in her own hand for a moment and fell off her course. He put
-the wheel over too much, and like a frightened horse she went plunging
-away in the opposite direction, the wind spilling from her sails and
-the main boom threatening to swing to port.
-
-In a moment Jude was beside him, her hands on the spokes, and the
-_Sarah_ on her course again.
-
-A voice came from below, where Satan, like a sensitive plant, had
-evidently felt the alteration in their course.
-
-“What the ---- are you doin’ up there?”
-
-“Learning Rat to steer,” cried Jude.
-
-Ratcliffe, himself again, retaking the wheel, turned to her.
-
-“For God’s sake,” said he, “don’t call me that!”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Rat.”
-
-“For the land’s sake what’s the matter with it?”
-
-“It’s a beastly name. If you want something short, call me what
-everyone else calls me.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“Bobby.”
-
-“You’re lettin’ her off again,” said Jude. “Starboard--that’s it. Here’s
-Satan: he’ll go on learnin’ you. I’m goin’ below for a wash.”
-
-
-
-
-PART II
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-LONE REEF
-
-
-It was the morning of the third day out, somewhere about four o’clock.
-The moon had set, and the _Sarah_ was lifting against a gentle head
-sea, boosting the foam from her bows under the light of a million stars.
-
-Satan was at the wheel, Jude below in her hammock, and Ratcliffe at
-the weather rail, close to Satan. He was leaning over watching the
-water,--gouts and lines of star-shot foam, planes of ebony blackness,
-and now and then, deep down, the bloom of phosphorus like the life in
-the heart of a black opal.
-
-“What time do you reckon we’ll strike the reef?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“We’re right on to it now,” replied Satan, “and if it wasn’t more’n a
-five-knot breeze I’d heave her to.”
-
-“You aren’t afraid of running on it?”
-
-“Lord, no! There’s no smell of it yet.”
-
-“You mean to say you could smell it?”
-
-“Waal,” said Satan, “I don’t know if it’s rightly smell or hearin’ or
-what, but I’d know it, even with the wind as she is. I reckon it’s
-maybe the water. Shoal water smells different from deep, and it’s shoal
-water right up from four miles to Lone. Feels different too.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“More choppy--I dunno--different. Jude would tell you the same. Pap had
-the sense of it too. Western ocean folks can smell ice miles off when
-the bergs are cruisin’ about. I reckon it’s the same thing-- There’s
-the sun.”
-
-Right ahead, as if touched by a wizard, the stars had faded above
-the sea line, the sky over there looked sick, a stain on the velvety
-splendor of the night.
-
-A great gull passed the _Sarah_, flying topmast high, and now far
-off and as though coming through a pinhole could be heard a creaky
-lamentable sound,--the crying of gulls.
-
-“I’ve got the smell of her now,” said Satan. “Them gulls you’re hearin’
-aren’t all of them from Lone. There’s a big spit to east’ard, and
-they’ll be comin’ up against the wind. Say, will you take a bet?”
-
-“What sort?”
-
-“I’ll bet you even dollars Cleary hasn’t held on same as we’ve done the
-last six hours. He was droppin’ astern a long way last time I sighted
-him. He’ll have seen the reef on the chart right ahead of him, and his
-navigation is no account: hasn’t no sea sense. He’ll be hove to singin’
-‘Lead, kindly light’ and listenin’ for the breakers--What you say?”
-
-“I’d rather bet on the _Sarah_.”
-
-“Maybe you’re right,” said Satan.
-
-The head sails showed hard now against the east, and almost before
-one could turn and look again the blaze had come above a band of
-opal-tinted mist which passed and vanished, leaving on the horizon a
-train of fire pale as guinea gold.
-
-In that moment, far ahead and as if suddenly sketched by a pencil
-against the eastern light, they saw the naked spars of a vessel
-anchored in the dawn.
-
-“That’s Cark,” said Satan. “Told you we’d find him here--damn swab!”
-
-“Well, I couldn’t have believed it,” said Ratcliffe. He remembered the
-sailing of the _Juan_, presumably for Havana, and though he had sized
-up Sellers and Carquinez for what they were worth, still, the evidence
-of their duplicity, here before his eyes, came as a shock.
-
-In a moment it was blotted out by the sun, washed away in the blazing,
-seething ocean of light that sprang on them as if to the blast of a
-trumpet.
-
-Satan swung his head over his shoulders. Ratcliffe followed his gaze.
-The sea to westward was empty, not a sign of a sail.
-
-“Cleary’s gone,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, he’ll be nosin’ along soon,” said Satan. “He’s sure to come close
-enough to see Cark’s topmasts, and then he’ll pounce.”
-
-He put the helm over, and the _Sarah_ payed off to the north so as to
-round the northern spur of the reef.
-
-“That’s the wreck,” said Satan, “that line like a lump of rock.”
-
-Ratcliffe, shading his eyes, could now see the reef, long and
-foam-flecked, stretching from north to south, the line of rock
-absolutely unsuggestive of a wreck, beyond the reef the _Juan’s_ masts
-and spars, and about the reef-spurs the gulls flitting and wheeling;
-but, despite the movement of the gulls and the splendor of the morning,
-the place struck him as the most desolate he had ever seen.
-
-“Nothing stirring,” said Satan, as they rounded the north spur and the
-boom came over. “Them lowsy Spaniards are all in their bunks. Rap on
-the deck for Jude. Hi, Jude, y’lazy dog, show a leg! What you doin’!”
-
-“Comin’,” cried a voice, followed by the sounds of thrashing about and
-inquiries of the Lord to know where her clothes were.
-
-Then at the hatch appeared a face blind with sleep. She ran with
-Ratcliffe to get the lashings off the anchor, helped to let go the
-halyards, and as the anchor fell and the _Sarah_ swung to her moorings
-a couple of cable lengths from and outside the _Juan_, down she sat on
-the deck like a person collapsing under a heavy load.
-
-The sight of the _Juan_ did not seem to move her at all. Like a
-dormouse suddenly electrified into life and movement, the stimulus
-withdrawn, the mechanism ceased to act. She yawned, turned on her side,
-and hid her face in the crook of her arm as if to shut out the sun.
-Satan, whistling between his teeth, stood with his hands on the rail
-looking at the _Juan_.
-
-“They’re wakin’ up,” said he.
-
-A fellow with a red handkerchief round his head had appeared on deck.
-He came and looked over the side at the _Sarah_, then vanished.
-
-“Gone to wake Cark out of his beauty sleep,” said Satan. “Look! There’s
-two more of them movin’ about like sick flies. Will you look at the
-way they’ve stowed them sails?--and they’ve got her a sight too close
-to the reef. Get a Western Ocean sea suddenly runnin’ and the anchor to
-drag, where’d they be?”
-
-He turned and contemplated the prostrate figure of Jude.
-
-“There’s another sleepin’ beauty,” said he. “Ought a be married to
-Cark. Well they’d look in the same hammock with Sellers fannin’ the
-flies off them!”
-
-The figure on the deck turned on its back, stretched out its arms,
-yawned, and then sat up holding its knees.
-
-Youth may sneer at Age; but, anyhow, Age knows nothing of the weariness
-of Youth, of a morning.
-
-Satan, satisfied with the semi-resurrection, dropped below, and
-promptly the figure fell on its back again with arms outspread.
-
-“Get up!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“I’m getting-- Say!”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“I--ow--yow--ain’t it awful bein’ tired?”
-
-“You’ll be all right when you’re on your feet. Get up!”
-
-“I’m getting-- Say, d’you know where the fishing lines are? Starboard
-locker. Fetch’m up, an’ that chunk of grouper I kep’ for bait--in the
-tub.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-When he returned on deck she was drying her head in the sun, having
-soused it in a bucket of water.
-
-Then they dropped a line.
-
-Away through the diamond-clear water, thirty feet down, they could see
-the slack of the anchor chain like a conger on the coral and sponge.
-
-A nurse shark passed like a grisly ghost, then a shoal of sardines,
-then a young whip ray not bigger than a soup plate, then a mangrove
-schnapper that nosed the bait, swallowed it, and was hauled on board.
-
-“He’ll be enough,” said Jude. “You clean him while I get the frying pan
-ready. Hullo! blest if Cark’s not putting off a boat!”
-
-A boat had been dropped on the starboard side of the _Juan_ and was
-rounding her stern.
-
-“That’s Sellers,” said Jude, shading her eyes. “Satan! Below there!”
-
-“Hullo!”
-
-“Sellers is coming off.”
-
-“I’ll be up in a minute.”
-
-The boat came alongside, just as it had come at Palm Island,--same
-boat, same crew, Sellers just the same.
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers.
-
-“Hullo yourself! Thought you was gone to Havana.”
-
-“Thought you was to wait for us at Pa’m Island,” said Sellers. “Hullo,
-Satan, that you? How about your contrac’ with us?”
-
-Satan, who had just come on deck, leaned over the rail and contemplated
-Sellers. Then he spoke.
-
-“God A’mighty!” said Satan. He stared at Sellers for a moment as one
-might stare at a prodigy. Then he broke out:
-
-“Contrac’! Holy George! _What_ you say, contrac’? You daar to hook
-onto my channel plates, and I’ll buzz this fish at y’r head! Shove off!
-What are you doin’ here, anyway? Why aren’t you at Havana gettin’ the
-dynamite?”
-
-“Why ain’t you waitin’ for us at Pa’m Island?” logically responded
-Sellers. “If you want to know why we’re here. I’ll tell you. It was a
-bet I had with Cark.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I bet him you’d never wait for us at Pa’m Island, but’d light out for
-here to raise the stuff if we went foolin’ off to Havana. Seems I was
-right, don’t it?”
-
-The impudence of this made Ratcliffe gasp, but left Satan quite unmoved.
-
-“S’pose we quit lyin’,” said he.
-
-“I’m willin’ to follow soot,” replied Sellers.
-
-“Well, then,” said Satan, “follow soot off to the wreck an’ get your
-workin’ party onto the business like hot nails. I’ll be over to help
-you soon’s we’ve had breakfast. You’ve no time to waste.”
-
-“How’s that?”
-
-“Cleary’s after you.”
-
-This news seemed to take the wind out of Sellers. He sat for a moment
-without speaking.
-
-“How do you know that?” asked he at length.
-
-“He put into Palm Island not more’n four hours after you’d gone; said
-you and Cark had tricked him and he was after your blood. I told him
-that wasn’t no concern of mine. He asked me had I seen you.”
-
-“What did you say?”
-
-“The truth. Think I’d perjure me soul lyin’ for the likes of you and
-Cark? Told him I was goin’ to join you.”
-
-“_Sufferin’_ Moses! You’ve put your hoof in it this time! Go on and
-don’t stand waggin’ your tail! What’d he say?”
-
-“Nothin’, didn’t say nothin’, but when I put out he put out after me.”
-
-“Followed you?”
-
-“Yep. I only lost him last night; but it’s ten to one he’ll drop on us.
-He’ll be bustin’ everywhere round here.”
-
-“He will,” said Sellers, “and then it’s half shares he’ll be wantin’,
-not to mention Cark’s liver. I’m sweatin’! Cark’s let that chap down
-cruel. I owns it. Did it against my advice. Did he have many with him?”
-
-“Reckon so. The old _Natchez_ was full as a beehive with the
-toughest-lookin’ crowd.”
-
-The sight of Sellers’ face at this announcement set Jude off. She
-seized the fish and started off to the galley with it, while Sellers,
-having communed with himself for a moment, spoke:
-
-“Crooked’s a bad course to run,” said this moralist. “I’ve always told
-Cark so. I told you we’d no dynamite aboard,--neither we had,--but
-there’s a keg of powder in the hold, and Cark reckoned to sample the
-goods without your help. There, it’s out! You’d have had your share
-as long as I’d a leg to stand on, honest you would, s’far as I was
-concerned, and that’s all I have to say pers’nally on the matter. What
-I’m gettin’ at is this: If Cleary turns up, there’ll be hell of a
-rough-house. Will you stand for us if there’s fightin’ to be done?”
-
-“That depends,” said Satan.
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I’m not trustin’ you no more, not without the coin in my hand. Cark’s
-got to plank down something on account, if it’s no more’n a thousand
-dollars. If he don’t, I’ll put out for Havana and blow the gaff. You’ve
-overhauled the wreck?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Well, you can judge what the chances are. You hop back lively as a
-flea and tell Cark what I’m sayin’. Gold coin and right into my fist
-this mornin’, or I’ll give the show away. It’s his own doin’. If he’d
-played straight with me, I’d have trusted him. Seein’ he’s played
-crooked, he’ll have to pay. One thousand dollars, or I go back to
-Havana and you’ll have a t’pedoboat on top of you, to say nothin’ of
-Cleary!”
-
-“I’ll tell him,” said Sellers. “Come over to the reef soon as you’re
-ready and I’ll give you word of what he says. I reckon it’ll be all
-right. One thousand dollars?”
-
-“Gold coin, and tell him it’ll be double after eleven o’clock.”
-
-“Oh, he won’t kick,” said Sellers.
-
-The boat shoved away.
-
-Ratcliffe remembered what Satan had said about the chart and the hidden
-writing in it and the high probability that the bones of the _Nombre
-de Dios_ were lying elsewhere than here. More than ever did it seem to
-him that Satan was the spider of this web,--not a malignant spider,
-for the flies he was catching in the form of Carquinez and Sellers,
-and possibly Cleary, were the weavers of the web, in which they seemed
-tangling themselves. Satan only fell in with circumstance and took toll.
-
-“Look here!” said he. “Suppose Carquinez pays you a thousand dollars’
-advance, and suppose you don’t find any treasure, will you pay him
-back?”
-
-“Why should I pay him back?” asked Satan. “I’ve given him the location,
-and that’s worth a thousand anyway.”
-
-“But you said there was nothing on the chart, that it was a fake.”
-
-“Lord! I said no such thing. I said that in my ’pinion the stuff wasn’t
-here; but I may be wrong. There’s Jude hollering for us to come to
-breakfast. Come along down and I’ll show you my meanin’.”
-
-He scarcely spoke during the meal, and when it was over he took the
-tobacco box from his pocket and opened the chart on the table.
-
-“Now,” said Satan, “I’ll show you what I mean by sayin’ the stuff may
-be here, but it’s a big sight larger maybe it isn’t. Don’t crowd me.
-Stand behind me on either side and keep your eyes on the chart. Well,
-now, there’s Lone Reef with the creek marked and the name of her, and
-there’s Rum Cay to the left, and there’s the latitude and longitude
-wrote up--all plain, isn’t it?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, seein’ Rum Cay is given, and seein’ Lone Reef is down on all
-the charts and as well known as Cuba to any sailor man, what did the
-man want stickin’ the latitude and longitude down for? The chart’s
-not a sailin’ chart. A blind monkey wouldn’t use it nor bother about
-examinin’ the latitude and longitude wrote on it. He’d just say, ‘Lone
-Reef is the place I want to get to,’ and he’d get there with the
-ordinary ship’s chart.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “in my opinion the chap that sank the _Nombre de
-Dios_ knew of the old wreck lyin’ over there on Lone Reef and used it
-as a blind, for the latitude and longitude wrote there so faint that
-no man would bother to try to read it isn’t the latitude and longitude
-of Lone Reef; it’s a hundred and ten mile out. It’s the latitude and
-longitude of Cormorant Cay, a blasted sandbank down to s’uthard, all
-shoals and gulls, and that’s where the _Nombre de Dios_ lies, in my
-’pinion.”
-
-Ratcliffe whistled.
-
-“Of course I may be wrong,” said Satan, “there’s no knowin’.”
-
-“I see what you mean,” said Ratcliffe. “This chap reckoned that anyone
-finding or stealing the chart would take the latitude and longitude
-written there for granted as the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef,
-and not bother to examine the figures and verify them; having no cause,
-indeed, to do so, seeing Lone Reef is so well known and on all the
-charts.”
-
-“That’s how it seems to me,” said Satan. “I’m not sayin’ I’m right, but
-that’s how it seems to me, and if he figured that no one would trouble
-about readin’ and verifyin’ the latitude and longitude as given there
-he was right. Pap didn’t, and it was only by chance I did, a month
-ago.”
-
-“Have you seen Cormorant Cay?”
-
-“Lord, yes! It’s a lagoon sandspit, and the hooker may be in the lagoon
-for all I know, or under the sand for all I know, or I may be wrong all
-through and that may be her on the reef over there. Well, we’ve got to
-see; but it seems to me I’m pretty safe anyway, if I can touch Cark for
-that thousand.”
-
-So thought Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE WRECK
-
-
-After breakfast, leaving Jude to keep ship, they got the dinghy
-overboard and rowed for the reef. Here to eastward the landing was made
-easy by a scrap of beach a hundred yards long, where the boat of the
-_Natchez_ was lying, having landed Sellers and his working party.
-
-Satan, scrambling, led the way over the rocks to the central creek
-between the two reef arms, where, ponded round with water, lay the
-wreck.
-
-The reef, seen from the deck of the _Sarah_, showed little sign of a
-wreck. One had to land on it to discover that the long hogback of rock
-rising from the creek had structure. There was not even the indication
-of where a mast had been, bowsprit there was none, stem and stern were
-almost indistinguishable; yet, standing there, with the gulls flying
-round him and the lonely tune of the sea in his ears, Ratcliffe knew
-that the thing he was gazing upon was a ship. Structure speaks! You can
-destroy it, but can scarcely disguise it.
-
-Between the right arm of the reef and the starboard bow of the hulk a
-ridge of rock gave access to the deck, and as the others crossed over
-he took his seat to rest for a moment and contemplate the thing before
-him.
-
-To see the Sphinx properly, one should visit it alone, and so with the
-great wreck of the _Nombre de Dios_,--if that were its name,--crouching
-here, camouflaged with rock-growth and weed, swollen, sinister in the
-blazing sunlight, and sung to by the chime and gurgle of the sea.
-
-Sunk in shallow water,--so the tale ran,--raised by that alteration in
-level constantly in progress among the reefs and islands, freighted
-with treasure, and guilty of the death of many a man--well, the tale
-here rang true. On board the _Sarah_ one might doubt, but here, even in
-face of that chart which seemed faked, one believed,--mainly, perhaps,
-because one wanted to believe.
-
-Here, sitting on the reef, one became part of the story, just as when
-the lights of the theater are lowered one becomes part of the play.
-The flower-blue sky, the sapphire sea, the tepid wind, the shouting
-gulls, all became confederates. One saw, in the far past, the _Nombre
-de Dios_ setting sail,--the tragic figure of Lopez on her quarterdeck;
-the sinking of her in shallow, reef-strewn water; the escape in the
-boats; men dying of starvation; the lapse of years; Lopez dying with
-her secret still hidden; and Lone Reef rising still higher out of the
-sea to expose more fully the murdered ship.
-
-The reef had always been here, for it was down in the oldest charts.
-Had it really risen? Was that chart, as Satan supposed, a lie?
-
-According to Sellers’ story, the _Nombre de Dios_ had been sunk in
-six-fathom water, thirty-six-foot. Well, if that was so, Satan was
-right, for the highest point of the reef was only six feet above water,
-and when she was sunk the reef would have been thirty feet under water
-and so uncharted.
-
-There was the chance that Lopez might have sailed her into the creek,
-deeper in those days, and that the creek bottom might have raised
-itself to its present level, the reef remaining the same. This seemed
-unlikely.
-
-And yet the decks must have been under water once, to account for the
-old coral deposits.
-
-It was low tide in the creek now: high-tide mark was six feet below the
-deck level. He tried to calculate how far she must have been lifted,
-gave up the attempt, and, rising, crossed by the rock bridge to her
-deck.
-
-This bridge of rock was another factor in the insoluble problem. It
-seemed placed there by some marine architect without reason, built up
-out of huge fragments as if from some fallen peak or spire.
-
-“Step careful!” shouted Satan.
-
-The warning came just in time, for the deck was slippery as ice in
-patches where a thin moss had grown,--a gray, greasy moss, treacherous
-as Death, and covering the droppings of innumerable sea birds.
-
-He made his way aft, where Sellers was standing with Satan and the
-half-dozen Spaniards that formed the working party. Drills and picks
-lay about, and marks showed where work had been started the day before.
-
-“It’s a foot thick,” said Sellers, “whatever it is, and harder than
-cement. Rock!--this ain’t coral rock, not such as I’ve ever seen.
-Harveyized steel’s more like it, and after that there’s the deck
-planking to be got through.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “I told you it was a dynamite job, and if you’d
-played fair and got the stuff we’d have been a long sight nearer the
-end of the business, even if we started a week later. But there’s no
-use in talkin’ now, and there’s no use in messin’ about pickin’ holes
-here and there. Your job is to make a hole big enough to sink that
-barrel of powder of yours--take me? Sink it half deep and then lay a
-fuse and fire the whole lot at once and risk chances. It’s ten to one
-you’ll split the deck right open at one go. As for sinkin’ little holes
-and usin’ small charges, you’ll be ten years on the job.”
-
-Sellers rose up and wiped his brow and cast his eyes over the sea to
-westward, evidently with Cleary in his mind.
-
-“Well, I’m not sure you aren’t right,” said he. “I’ll fix it that way;
-but it’ll be a long job with the tools we have.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Satan. “And now to the question of them dollars.”
-
-“Oh, them--I’ve spoke to Cark, and he’s agreeable.”
-
-“Oh, is he? Well, then. I’ll go right aboard with you now while he’s
-warm and get them dollars into my hand. Set your men at work and you
-come along with me.”
-
-Sellers hung fire for a moment, then he agreed, gave the working party
-their directions, and led the way off the deck across the rock bridge.
-
-He pushed off with Satan in the boat of the _Juan_. Satan asked
-Ratcliffe to take the dinghy back to the _Sarah_.
-
-“You won’t want to be hangin’ about the reef,” said Satan; “you’ll be
-more comfortable aboard ship. And tell Jude to be sure and wash that
-old jumper I left on the rail. She’s forgot it, for there it’s hangin’
-still.”
-
-“Right,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-MUTINY
-
-
-As he sculled up alongside the _Sarah_ there was no sign of Jude. He
-tied up the boat and came over the rail.
-
-“Jude, where are you?”
-
-“What you want?” came a surly voice from below. She was in the
-“saloon,” for he could hear her moving about.
-
-“You.”
-
-“Well, you kin go on wantin’. I’m sick!”
-
-“What on earth’s the matter with you?”
-
-Pause--then the voice came again mixed with sounds as of plates being
-put away.
-
-“I’m sick of the hull of this crowd--washing up and cooking and you two
-playin’ about!”
-
-“Come up on deck.”
-
-“Sha’n’t! I’m going to scatter--soon’s I’ve finished clearing away.
-Life of a dog!” indistinct grumbles tailing away into silence.
-
-He lit a pipe and waited.
-
-Presently the companionway creaked and a head appeared at the cabin
-hatch. He said nothing while the whole body emerged, stood erect on the
-deck, and shaded its eyes toward the _Juan_. Then, still speechless,
-it leaned on the rail, looking toward the reef and apparently lost in
-thought.
-
-The sleeves of the guernsey were rolled up to mid-arm, ill temper
-seemed to have vanished and to have been replaced by sudden laziness,
-and as she lolled, kicking up a bare heel, she whistled.
-
-She seemed utterly unconscious of his presence--or pretending to be.
-Then her eyes fell to the water alongside and the dinghy. The whistling
-ceased and her face turned to him.
-
-“Say,” said Jude, “where did you learn to tie up boats?”
-
-He came beside her.
-
-“What’s the matter?”
-
-“Nothing at present, but give her half an hour and she’d work herself
-free of that tom-fool knot.”
-
-“I’ll go down and retie it.”
-
-“No use in troubling, I’m going off in her in a minute, and she’ll hang
-there till I’m ready.”
-
-“Where are you going?”
-
-“Never _you_ mind! You’ve been playing about on the reef, and you’ve
-got to stick here now and boil the potatoes! Me alone here all the
-morning!”
-
-“Why, I wasn’t more than an hour on the reef--and I never knew you
-wanted to go. If I had, I shouldn’t have gone, honestly I shouldn’t.”
-
-Jude contemplated him a moment with a more friendly face.
-
-“Well,” said she, “I’m going, anyhow.”
-
-“But where to?”
-
-“Gulls-nesting.”
-
-“On the reef?”
-
-“Lord, no! To the spit away there to east’ard. You can’t see it: it’s
-near seven mile away.”
-
-“But you can’t row there alone.”
-
-“Can’t I? You bet I can, there and back by sundown!”
-
-“But what will Satan say?”
-
-Jude laughed. “He’ll be wild--that’s what I want to make him. I’ll
-learn him! Him and his jumpers!”
-
-She took the jumper off the rail, rolled it up and threw it on the
-deck, then she dived below and reappeared with a water jar and some
-provisions done up in a bundle. She had evidently been making her
-preparations.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “If you’re going, I’ll go too.”
-
-“No, you won’t!” said Jude. “You’ve got to stick here and look after
-the ship--and see how you like it.”
-
-“Not I--I couldn’t face Satan; besides, if you want to make him wild
-really, hell be twice as wild if we both go; besides, I’m sick of the
-ship. Come on: I’ve never been gulls-nesting.”
-
-Jude, evidently weakening, put down her bundle.
-
-“Well, there ain’t enough grub for two,” she complained. “I reckon
-there’s enough water, though.”
-
-“Well, get some more grub.”
-
-She cast her eyes about in indecision, now at Ratcliffe, now at the
-_Juan_, then, with one of those sudden changes so indicative of her,
-she made up her mind and dived below.
-
-Five minutes later she reappeared with another small bundle.
-
-Ratcliffe, during her absence, had torn the back off an old letter. He
-had a pencil in his pocket, and, scrawling “gone gulls-nesting on the
-sandspit” on the paper, stuck the missive to the mast with his penknife.
-
-Then, bundling the food and the water jar into the dinghy, they started.
-
-He took the sculls at first, Jude steering, her eyes fixed ahead under
-the shade of her old panama. She could tell exactly the spot where
-the spit lay. She could not see it, but she could see in the sky now
-and then over there a faint trace like a haze of smoke that formed,
-vanished and reformed,--gulls.
-
-Occasionally she looked back where the deserted _Sarah Tyler_ lay,
-with the _Juan_ seeming now close beside her and the reef behind them.
-Smaller and smaller they grew and more vast the ocean, an infinity of
-blazing lazulite, without horizon, silent, but sonorous with light.
-
-The current was with them.
-
-Satan had made a small mast and lug sail for the dinghy. That was the
-job he had been engaged on while Jude and Ratcliffe had landed on Palm
-Island to get provisions from the cache. He had worked with all the
-care of a fond mother making a garment for a beloved child. The little
-mast, scraped and varnished, the sail made of an extra special bit of
-stuff wheedled from Thelusson, were in the boat, and, a breeze now
-springing up from the sou’west, Jude gave orders to step the mast. Then
-she took the sheet, he slipped from his seat to the bottom of the boat,
-and the dinghy, bending to the three-knot breeze, lifted to the gentle
-swell.
-
-A great herring hog passed them, plunging like a dolphin, and a
-flying fish with blind, staring eyes missed the sail by a hand’s
-breadth and flickered into the sea ahead; then a strange-looking gull
-swooped toward them from nowhere, hung for a moment with domed wings,
-honey-colored against the sun, and passed with a cry into the great
-silence, a silence broken only by the slap and tinkle of the water
-against the planking.
-
-Ratcliffe lit his pipe. Jude, steering, seemed to have forgotten her
-last trace of grudge against him, forgotten Satan and the jumper and
-the fact that she had been left to her lonesome while they had been
-playing on the reef and her desire to cut the whole show and start a
-“la’ndry.” She seemed just now a different person, companionable and
-friendly and sane, as though the cooking and cleaning and the worries
-and troubles of the _Sarah_ had been lifted like a dish-cover from her
-prisoned soul.
-
-It was the first time they had been really alone together, and the
-companionship that springs from loneliness helped.
-
-The gull reminded her of gulls she had seen on the Louisiana coast
-where the cypress swamps come down to meet the sea and you could hear
-“the bullfrogs shoutin’ all night, ‘Paddy got drunk, Paddy got drunk,
-Paddy got drunk,’ and the other chaps answering up, ‘Bottle of rum,
-bottle of rum, bottle of rum,’ and the ’gaters would come alongside
-grinding against the planking sniffing for bits--ever seen a ’gater?”
-
-“Only stuffed.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, in museums and places.”
-
-“What’s them?” asked Jude.
-
-“Oh, places where they keep stuffed birds and animals.”
-
-“Git a bit more to sta’board to trim the boat; _sta_’board I said, not
-port! And what in the nation do they want keeping them things for?”
-
-“Jude,” said he lazily.
-
-“What?”
-
-“This is the jolliest time I ever spent. I’ve never felt free before
-till just now. I’d like to go sailing round and round the world in this
-little dinghy and forget civilization. That’s the place where they keep
-stuffed birds to look at, and stuffed animals in museums, and where the
-men and women are stuffed idiots. Do you remember the morning I came on
-board the _Sarah_ first?”
-
-“Them pajamas!”
-
-“Yes, them pajamas. Only for them you wouldn’t have laughed at me, and
-if you hadn’t laughed at me I shouldn’t have come aboard, perhaps.”
-
-“Oh, yes, you would.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“Satan wanted you.”
-
-“Oh, did he? Bless Satan!--he made me young again.”
-
-“Lord! you ain’t so old as all that.”
-
-“I’m over twenty-one--and you’re only--”
-
-“Raisin’ sixteen,” said Jude, with steady eyes fixed ahead where the
-gulls above the spit were now well visible.
-
-He refilled and lit his pipe, bending under the gunnel.
-
-“You’re mighty fond of that old pipe,” said Jude.
-
-“Have a whiff?”
-
-“Not me! I had half a cigar once; Dirk Peterson dared me. It was one
-of them wheelings, black, slick-lookin’ cigars. He and me an’ anuther
-boy’d gone to look at the nigger girls bathin’ and clod them--”
-
-“Where on earth was that?”
-
-“Vera Cruz.”
-
-“Oh, and who was Dirk Peterson?”
-
-“Son of an old feller that run a dridger in the harbor, Yankee,
-half-Dutch, hadn’t only one eye, and wasn’t more’n eleven, biggest liar
-from here to C’necticut. His face was all chawed up, and he said he’d
-got it like that and lost his eye fightin’ with a tiger. Confl’ent
-smallpox was what had done him, so Pap said; but the boys believed him
-till that day I was telling you of, he fetched out a half cigar he’d
-stole or picked up somewhere and a box of waxios and dared me smoke
-her--and I lit her up, like a durned fool!”
-
-“What happened then?”
-
-“Oh, lots of things,” said Jude. “First of all the harbor begun
-spinnin’, and then it went on till two tides more I’d have been inside
-out, when Dirk shouts to some chaps to come an’ look at Jonah tryin’ to
-bring up the whale. That got my goat, and I laid for him by the foot
-and brought him down and near beat the head off him. Then I got sick on
-him again, and he run home to his mother, with all the fellers after
-him wantin’ to know about that tiger.”
-
-“He couldn’t fight?”
-
-“N’more than a jewfish.”
-
-“Have you had many fights with boys?”
-
-“Not me--not with Satan handy to do the fighting. I’d only to say to
-one, ‘You touch me and I’ll put Satan on you,’ and he’d shrivel.”
-
-“Well, I shouldn’t care to tackle Satan myself,” admitted Ratcliffe.
-“And Sellers seemed to think a lot of him that way, for I heard him
-asking if he’d stand by if Cleary showed fight.”
-
-“Garn!” said Jude. “Cleary--he’s no good; Sellers is no good, neither.
-There’s not a man in these seas nowadays that’s got the fight of a
-tomcat in him. That’s what Pap used to say. He was great on old times,
-and used to string off yarns about the pirates and the high doin’s
-there used to be, and he said we were nothing but a lot of scowbankers
-now--and that’s the truth! If Cleary comes up with Cark, they’ll be
-shaking hands and kissing one another, feeling in each other’s pockets
-all the time to see if they can’t steal five cents. In the old days
-they’d have been cutting each other’s throats.”
-
-“Would you like to be a pirate, Jude?”
-
-“You bet!”
-
-“Murdering people?”
-
-“Oh, ask me another.”
-
-“How’d you like to kiss Cark?”
-
-“How’d you? Hear the gulls!”
-
-The crying of the gulls above the spit was coming up against the wind,
-a lamentable sound across the lone blue sea.
-
-“We’re not more’n a mile away,” said the steersman. “You can get a
-sight of the spit if you raise yourself. That’s it, the white line
-runnin’ north and south; but the gulls don’t seem to be as many as they
-used to be a year ago. It’s a bit early for the full laying season, but
-there’s sure to be turkles’ eggs. Better get your shoes and stockin’s
-off and roll up your pants, for it’s shallow beaching and we’ll have to
-run her up.”
-
-“Won’t you take down the sail and row her in?”
-
-“Not me. There’s no sea on and I’ll run her up as she is.”
-
-They held on, the gulls shouting over them now, and the sigh of the
-sandspit, fuming to the lazy sea, in their ears. It was full tide, and
-as the keel touched the sand, letting the sheet go and the sail to flog
-in the wind, they tumbled over and dragged the little boat high and dry.
-
-Then Jude took down the sail.
-
-“You aren’t hungry yet?” said Jude.
-
-“No; are you?”
-
-“Well, I can wait. Well leave the grub and the water jar in the boat
-and cover them with the sail,--keep the sun off. Lend’s a hand.”
-
-They covered the provisions, hauled the boat up another foot or two to
-make sure, and, that done, Ratcliffe looked around him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-THE SANDSPIT
-
-
-That was one of the strangest moments in his life. He had never seen
-anything comparable to this long white street of sand curbed with
-emerald waves, leading nowhere, lost, useless, desolate, brilliant with
-a brilliance that hit the heart as well as the eye, flown over by the
-white gulls.
-
-The sands fizzed to the sea wind, and away to north and south they
-trembled and waved in the heat; but the curious thing was the fact
-that, despite their loneliness, one did not feel alone. The place
-seemed populous, filled with a crowd that for a moment had made itself
-invisible. Perhaps it was the riot of color and the brilliance of
-light: the effect remained.
-
-Jude, looking round, seemed preoccupied about something. It was the
-absence of gulls.
-
-“Last time I was here,” said Jude, “it was all over gulls’ nests, right
-here in the middle. Now they seem to have gone off to the ends. Wonder
-what’s come to them?”
-
-“Maybe it’s too early for them.”
-
-“It’s a bit early, but not much: there’s always early breeders. No,
-they’ve just took their hook--gulls are like that. We’ll have to go
-and hunt at the ends. You go north and I’ll go south.”
-
-“Well,” said he, “it’s an awfully long way. Suppose we have something
-to eat first?”
-
-“I don’t mind,” said Jude.
-
-They got the provisions and water jar from the boat and sat down on the
-sands. It was past noon and cooler, for the breeze had livened up, the
-outgoing tide was leaving a strip of wet sand glittering like a golden
-sword, and the fume of beach filled the air resonant with the gentle
-rhythm of the waves.
-
-They ate, leaning on their sides like old Athenians. They had no cup;
-so they took it in turns to drink from the water jar. Then he lit a
-pipe.
-
-“This is jolly,” said he.
-
-“Ain’t bad,” said Jude.
-
-She made a pillow of sand for her head, and then, on her back with her
-head on the pillow, lay like a starfish, spread-eagled, her hat over
-her eyes.
-
-He followed suit.
-
-“How about those gulls’ nests?” he asked.
-
-“Which ones?” evaded Jude.
-
-“The ones you were going to hunt for?”
-
-“Oh, them? Well, I reckon there’s dead loads of time.”
-
-“Lots--listen to the sand!”
-
-“It’s the wind blowing it.”
-
-“I know. All the same this is a rum place. Do you know when we landed
-here, just now, the first thing that struck me?”
-
-“Naw.”
-
-“Well, I felt as if the place was full of people.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know; people I couldn’t see, ghosts.”
-
-“Hants?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What made y’ think that?”
-
-“Oh, I don’t know. Somehow it reminded me of a story I’d once read.”
-
-“What was the story?”
-
-“About a beach over in the Pacific where wizards used to go and pick up
-shells.”
-
-“What’s them?”
-
-“Chaps that work magic and sell themselves to the devil. They can make
-themselves invisible so’s you can’t see them, and they used to come
-to the beach and pick up shells, and then turn the shells into silver
-dollars. You couldn’t see them, but you could hear them rustling about,
-like that sand, and talking to one another, and now and then you’d see
-a little fire blaze up.”
-
-Jude, interested, rolled over, rested her chin in her palms, and kicked
-a bare heel to the sun.
-
-“I reckon you’re not far wrong,” said Jude.
-
-“How?”
-
-“Well, I’ve felt the same way here myself, as if there was hants about
-and if you’d turn your head sharp you’d see someone behind you. Now
-you’ve talked of it. I’ll be always thinking it if I come here again.
-Wish you’d kept your head shut.”
-
-She sat up and looked about her.
-
-“Sorry,” said Ratcliffe, raising himself on his arm; “but if you come
-again I’ll come with you, and that’ll keep the hants off--unless I’m
-gone.”
-
-“How d’you mean?”
-
-“Well, when this cruise is over I’ll have to leave you both and go
-home. I don’t want to go.”
-
-Jude said nothing. Staring over the sea under the brim of her hat, she
-did not seem to have heard him.
-
-“I’d much sooner stick on here with you and Satan. What’s that thing
-floating out there?”
-
-“Turkle,” said Jude. “Look, he’s doing a dive!”
-
-He sat up beside her.
-
-“So he has. Well, he’s gone.” He sat with his knees up, looking over
-the sea.
-
-Alone here with Jude she seemed a different person from what she had
-been aboard the _Sarah_. The strange antagonism she had suddenly
-exhibited, and a trace of which had remained up till this morning,
-seemed to have utterly vanished. Perhaps it was the “hants,” or the
-loneliness, or a combination of both, but she seemed subdued.
-
-“Well, I don’t see what you want going for if you don’t want to,”
-suddenly said Jude, drawing up her knees and crossing them with her
-hands.
-
-“Oh, bother!” said he. “Don’t let’s think of it; besides, we’ll fix up
-something. I don’t want to go. I’ve never had such a jolly time in my
-life, and I’m not going to lose sight of you and Satan--unless you want
-to.”
-
-“Lord! I don’t want to.”
-
-“Well, that’s all right We’ll stick together, somehow, and let the old
-world go hang, and we’ll go hunting abalones and fishing--let’s make
-plans.”
-
-His arm somehow slipped round her waist, half automatically, just as
-one puts one’s hand on a person’s shoulder. When he realized what he
-had done, he realized, at the same time, that she did not seem to mind;
-more than that, she reciprocated in a way by letting her shoulder rest
-more comfortably against his. It was companionship, pure and simple,
-and her mind seemed far away, wrapped in the sun-blaze as with a
-garment, and wandering--who knows where?
-
-“Heave ahead,” said Jude drowsily. “What’s your plans?”
-
-“Plans--oh, I’ve lots. Let’s go round the world in the old _Sarah_--get
-a couple more hands.”
-
-“Where’d you stick them?”
-
-“Well, you’ve got a foc’s’le.”
-
-“Not big enough for a tomcat. The nigger filled it. He said he reckoned
-he’d got to stick his head through the hatch to breathe.”
-
-“Well, we’ll get rid of the _Sarah_ and get a bigger boat.”
-
-“Lord! Don’t you never let Satan hear you say that: she’s his skin!”
-
-“We’ll do without extra hands, then, and work her, the three of us. I
-can steer all right now.”
-
-“Kin you?”
-
-“You know jolly well I can!”
-
-“What’s the points of the compass? Run ’em off.”
-
-“North--nor’-nor’east, nor’east--um--”
-
-Jude chuckled subduedly.
-
-“Heave ahead!”
-
-“I’ve forgotten.”
-
-“Never knew.”
-
-“Well, maybe.”
-
-The confiding shoulder rested more heavily against him as against a
-cushion and she began to hum a tune. She seemed to have forgotten
-the points of the compass, him, everything, just as a child suddenly
-forgets everything in day-dream land.
-
-The absolute contentment of doing nothing, resting, listening to the
-waves, had fallen upon him too, with a something else, a sort of
-mesmerism born of his companion, the strangest feeling as though Jude
-were a part of himself, as though he had put his arm round his own
-waist and a new self,--a much pleasanter self than the old one, less
-stiff, more human, and somehow more alive.
-
-The metronomic rhythm of the little waves falling on the sand seemed
-to mix his thoughts together and blur them; but he saw Skelton,
-Sir William Skelton, Bart., he saw a girl he, Ratcliffe, had been
-engaged to, he saw all sorts of men and all sorts of women, everyone
-he had ever known, it seemed to him, in a nebulous cluster, and they
-all seemed, somehow, not quite alive,--not dead, but sleeping in
-the trance we call civilization, their days ordered by the beat of
-a metronome,--get up--wash--dress--eat--work or play--eat--work or
-play--eat--work or play--bed--sleep--get up--wash--dress etc.,--all the
-figures moving like one, their very laughter and tears ordered except
-when they got drunk or went mad.
-
-It seemed to him that vivid life was not so much a question of vitality
-as of freedom.
-
-Was that the secret Satan had discovered,--Satan, who had no hankering
-after great riches, but was free as a gull? Satan and Jude were
-gulls,--seagulls, untamable as seagulls and as far from civilization!
-It was as though his arm were round a bird,--quiescent by some miracle
-and allowing him to handle it, and imparting to him, somehow, the
-knowledge of its vitality,--the vitality of freedom.
-
-“What I like about the old _Sarah_,” said he, “is the way she just pots
-about--with nothing to do.”
-
-“Nothing to do!”
-
-“Well, you and Satan can take things easy.”
-
-“Oh, can we? That’s news--what d’you call easy?”
-
-“You have no fixed work, you can knock off when you like, you haven’t
-to carry cargo, or be bothered with owners, or be up to time. You are
-as free as the gulls.”
-
-Jude took his hand and removed his arm from around her waist just
-as one removes a belt. She wanted to shift her position. She seemed
-to have lost interest in the conversation. Sand had got between her
-toes, and she removed it, running her finger between them. She had
-no handkerchief,--never used one or needed to use one: the perfectly
-healthy animal never does.
-
-Then, crossing her legs like a tailor and squatting in front of him,
-she dived into the right hand pocket of her trousers and produced a
-dollar, a slick, evil, suspicious-looking dollar. She seemed utterly
-to have forgotten the gulls’-nesting business and how the time was
-running on, and having little passion for the business he was content
-not to remind her.
-
-“I’ll match you for dollars,” said Jude. She was no longer the person
-of a moment ago. She was the harbor larrikin, the clodder of bathing
-nigger girls, a person to be avoided by pious boys with possessions in
-the form of money or land.
-
-The coin spun in the air.
-
-“Tails is the bird,” cried Jude.
-
-“Heads, then.”
-
-“Tails! Y’owe me a dollar.”
-
-It spun again.
-
-“Heads! We’re quits. Heads again, heads--oh, hell!--what you want
-sticking to heads for? That’s two dollars I owe you. Tails--scrumps!
-that’s three! Tails again, that’s four. What you want sticking to tails
-for? Why don’t you wabble about an’ give a body a chance? Heads--holy
-Mike! What’s wrong with the durned thing? Five dollars gone on a bang!”
-
-“We’re not playing right,” said he. “We should call alternately.”
-
-“What’s that?”
-
-“One after the other.”
-
-“I’m not going to play any more,” said Jude. “I’m broke. The bank’s
-bust and I kin’t pay you, not till I get to Havana--unless I play you
-double or quits. You call; I’ll toss.”
-
-“Heads.”
-
-She sent the coin six feet high and it fell on the sand--heads!
-
-“That settles it,” said Jude. “Ten dollars I owe you. You’ll have
-to wait till we get to Havana, for if Satan knew I was tossing for
-coins he’d sculp me. I can get some money out of the bank at Havana,
-pretending it’s for something else. I haven’t a cent, an’ this old
-dollar’s no use: it’s a dud.”
-
-“You don’t owe me anything,” said Ratcliffe. “We were only tossing for
-fun.” The words were no sooner out of his mouth than he regretted them.
-
-Jude flushed red under her freckles and sunburn.
-
-“I’m not taking your money, thank you,” said she; then breaking out,
-“What the blizzard d’you think we’ve been playing at, and what you take
-me for? S’posin’ I’d won, you’d a paid, wouldn’t you?”
-
-“I didn’t mean anything,” said he.
-
-“Y’shouldn’t have said it, then,” said she.
-
-“Well, I’m sorry--I take it back.”
-
-She played with the dud dollar for a moment, tossing it, and catching
-it; then she put it into her pocket, uncrossed her legs, and lay flat;
-her chin resting on the back of her hands.
-
-Her hat was off, lying beside her, and the quarrel with him was
-evidently over; she seemed plunged in reverie. Then he noticed that the
-eyes, upturned under their lashes, were steadfastly looking at him.
-Instantly they fell, and her position altered so that her face was
-hidden on her arm.
-
-He lit his pipe and smoked for a moment in silence.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-No answer.
-
-“What’s the matter with you?”
-
-Silence. He remembered how she had shammed dead on Palm Island, put
-down his pipe, and crawled toward the corpse. It was rigid, and to
-revive it he began to pour sand on its head.
-
-“Quit fooling,” grumbled a voice; then, as if the sand had suddenly
-revived memory and galvanized her to life, she scrambled to her feet.
-
-“Them eggs--and the sun’s getting down and we fooling about!” She
-picked up her hat. “I’ll take this end and you go t’other.”
-
-“But I haven’t anything to gather them in.”
-
-“Gather them in your hat, and keep a lookout for quicksan’s. If you get
-into one, holler and throw yourself on your back. But you’ll easy tell
-them--they look different from the or’nary sands.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“I dunno; just different. If you see the sand in front of you looking
-different, keep clear of it.”
-
-Off she went.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-DISHED
-
-
-He struck to the north. Over there in the north the sea was of a violet
-blue accentuated by the white blaze of the sands.
-
-The sands, once one got moving on them, were full of interest,
-strewn along the sea-edge with all sorts of prizes,--colored shells,
-cuttlefish bones, extraordinary seaweeds, bits of wreckage; a few yards
-out a nautilus fleet was steering, with tiny sails set to the wind, the
-oldest ships that ever floated on the sea, unspoiled by storm and time,
-just as they were launched in the morning of the world. He watched them
-for awhile, forgetful of gulls’ eggs, or quicksands, or the sun, now
-sensibly declining.
-
-If ever things had purpose, these had. They were going somewhere,
-bound on some business, keeping formation, and possessed of charts and
-compasses and barometers as surely as of sails. They made him think of
-God, and then they made him think of Satan,--Satan, whose sea sense
-served him better than all precise knowledge.
-
-Then he remembered Jude and glanced back. Away, far away to the south,
-he saw her. The sands dipped and rose there, and sometimes she was
-invisible and his heart thumped to the idea that a quicksand had taken
-her, then she reappeared and he went on, and, ever as he went, he
-seemed walking deeper into loneliness, peopled with viewless things and
-half-heard voices.
-
-Sometimes a chiming sound like the shattered and mingled voices of
-distant bells filled the air,--it was the singing of the sands. He had
-not noticed it in company with Jude, but here alone he noticed it.
-Sometimes laughter, far away in the distance, came distinct, human,
-and startling,--it was the calling of a laughing gull,--and always,
-penetrating all other sounds with the subtlety of osmosis, the silky,
-sinister whisper of the wind playing with the sand-grains. He went on.
-Something nearly tripped him. It was a great spar, half sanded over,
-the relic of some ship that had come to grief, maybe, on the spit.
-
-The sight of this spar touched everything with a new and momentary
-color. “Gascoign, the Sandal Wood Trader,” and other old stories he had
-read in his boyhood came back to him half-remembered, and with them
-came a whiff from a world he had half-forgotten,--a breath of the air
-we breathe at fifteen.
-
-He saw to his satisfaction that the gulls were beyond his reach, a
-broad channel of water cutting the spit in two right ahead. He took his
-seat on the spar for a moment to rest and look about, and as he sat the
-gulls, wheeling and crying, kept up around him the elusive atmosphere
-of storyland.
-
-All the money in the world could not have brought him that! Nor
-could he have found it had he landed here from a yacht with grown-up
-companions.
-
-He fell to thinking what an extraordinarily lucky person he was, and
-to plume himself on his instinctive wisdom in dropping Skelton and
-civilization for Jude and Satan, who had led him into a world of
-things he had never seen, things he had never imagined, things he had
-half-forgotten.
-
-Carquinez alone was a revelation, to say nothing of Sellers and Cleary.
-There was only one cloud, smaller than a man’s hand; but there!--where
-was it to end? It was all very well talking to Jude about sailing round
-the world: you can’t sail out of Time, and the time would come--the
-time would come--
-
-Jude was winding threads round him as a silkworm winds a cocoon,--tiny
-threads but deathly strong. It was almost as though she were becoming
-part of himself,--part of himself and part the sun and freedom and blue
-sea. She seemed half built up of those things and to have the power
-to make him one with them. Well, there was no use in bothering. So he
-said to himself, and as he said it the cloud no larger than a man’s
-hand swelled and twisted and rolled across the sandspit before him,
-resolving itself into a troupe of female relations, male relations,
-friends,--people as remote from Satan and Jude as parrots from
-seagulls, caged parrots content in the great gilded cage of convention.
-
-What would they say about Jude? He had an instinctive knowledge of what
-Jude would say about them, if they ever met, which seemed impossible.
-
-Then came the weird recollection that they had, in a way, actually met.
-She had met Skelton, the high priest of the whole crowd, Sir William
-Skelton, Bart. Old Popplecock was the label she had affixed to him, and
-it somehow stuck and fitted. What label would she affix to his aunts,
-his two maiden mid-Victorian aunts, should she ever meet them?
-
-A faint halloo from the south sent aunts and all other considerations
-flying. He turned. Jude, far away on the sands, was coming toward the
-dinghy. She was carrying something and running as if pursued; then he
-saw her trip and fall.
-
-She was on her feet in a second, and the thing pursuing her had
-evidently given up the hunt, for she stood examining something she had
-picked up from the ground, and seemed regardless of everything else.
-
-He waited for her by the boat, and as she came up he guessed the
-tragedy. She had been carrying a hatful of birds’ eggs and had smashed
-than when she fell. The hat was eloquent.
-
-“Smashed them every one,” said Jude, wading out and beginning to wash
-the hat. “All your fault!”
-
-“My fault! For heaven’s sake how?”
-
-“Stuffing me up with them yarns.”
-
-“What yarns?”
-
-“Hants.”
-
-“Was that what made you run?”
-
-“Who was running?”
-
-“You were.”
-
-“Oh, was I? Reckon you’d have run too.”
-
-“Did you see anything?”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“What was it?”
-
-“You never mind.”
-
-She was evidently in a vile, bad temper; so he took his seat on the
-sand waiting for her to cool. Then, hat in hand, she came and sat
-close beside him, more out of a desire for company than friendship, he
-imagined; then, placing the hat to dry, she began examining the sole of
-her right foot, spreading the toes apart and brushing off the sand.
-
-“Well, I’m awfully sorry,” said he at length. “But tell us--what was it
-you saw, really?”
-
-“A wuzzard.”
-
-“What was it like?”
-
-“Nothin’,” then suddenly, and as if unburdening her soul, “I hadn’t
-more’n got the last of the eggs when I turned and saw him walking on
-the sands,--little old man with a glass under his arm, dressed queer
-in a long coat, an’ a hat on his head like an I dunno what. I wasn’t
-afraid, thought he was real, and he stuck the glass to his eye ’sif he
-was looking out for a ship.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Then he went out--puff--like the sniff of a candle--hu--hu--” She
-clung to him.
-
-“It was all my fault,” said he, “talking that nonsense. Don’t think of
-it: it was only an optical illusion.”
-
-“He didn’t cast a shadow--I remember now.”
-
-“That proves it. I’ve often heard cases like that. Sir Walter Scott saw
-a man like that once, and he knew it was only an illusion. He had some
-wine handy and he drank a glass of it, and the thing disappeared.”
-
-“I reckon I’d have drunk a barrel of rum if I’d had one handy,” said
-Jude, drawing away a bit. “Let’s get off. Lord! Look at the sun--it’s
-half down. Come’n help with the boat.”
-
-They got up, and taking the dinghy by the gunnels began to haul her to
-the water. They had not got her more than a couple of yards when Jude
-straightened up as though remembering something and clapped her hand to
-her head.
-
-“We’re dished!” said Jude.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THE CRABS
-
-
-“How do you mean?” said he.
-
-She explained. It was like her to forget and spend the precious time
-lazing and playing about with “wuzzards.” The sun was taking his plunge
-into the sea, darkness was upon them, and she could not find her way
-back in the dark. Moon or starlight would be of no use. The thriddy
-spars of the _Sarah_ and _Juan_, invisible from the sandspit even in
-daylight, would be picked up only several miles out. She could not
-steer by the stars, and there was a great sweep of current setting
-sou’east which might take them to Timbuktu. Satan would have done
-the business right enough blindfolded; but she was a night-funk, she
-confessed it. Night put her all abroad and mixed up everything in her
-mind so that front seemed back and west seemed east, besides filling
-the world with “hants.” She had “near died” of fright fetching that
-sack from the cache the other night.
-
-All this in a lugubrious voice not far from tears, as they stood facing
-each other, and lit by the remorselessly setting sun.
-
-“All right,” said Ratcliffe. “Cheer up. We’ll just have to stick here
-till daybreak. We have some grub left and lots of water. No use
-pulling the boat farther down. But I expect Satan will be in a stew.”
-
-“I reckon he’ll know,” said Jude. “The weather’s all right. He’d scent
-if we were in any trouble, and he’d borrow Cark’s boat to hunt for us.”
-
-“How do you mean ’scent’?”
-
-“He’d smell trouble; he’s awful sharp.”
-
-“Sort of telepathy.”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Mind reading.”
-
-“I dunno, but I reckon he’s not worrying, and if he was he’d be
-alongside here pronto.”
-
-Her face was like a buttercup in the extraordinary light of that
-sunset. The whole sky was buttercup color; the great sea was seething
-round the great sun, now half-gone, churning and washing round him, a
-blazing globe sinking in boiling gold.
-
-Golden gulls, golden sky, golden sea,--all fading at last, the purple
-of night breaking through, rushing dark from the west across the sea.
-
-The shipwrecked mariners lost their golden faces and hands, and,
-as they sat down with their backs to the dinghy and the remains of
-the “grub” between them, laughing gulls, passing like ghosts in the
-twilight, hailed them, while the stars broke out to look above the
-darkness and the tepid wind.
-
-There is nothing like eating to keep up the spirits. Jude got less
-doleful. In the stir of mind caused by the new circumstances she had
-clean forgotten the “hants,” nor did she remember them for a moment
-now, as she chatted away in an uplift of spirits caused by the food
-and the recognition that to be downcast was futile.
-
-“I sure am a mutt!” said Jude. “Reckon I was born on a Friday--they say
-mugs are all born on a Friday. We should a been off two hours before
-sundown, and there I was talking and listening to your yarns, and here
-we are on the beach--oh, mommer!” Then after a long pause:
-
-“What’s them stars, do you reckon?”
-
-“Suns.”
-
-“Gar’n!”
-
-“It’s so.”
-
-“Say!”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Did you notice anything looking north before sundown, or were you
-asleep sitting on that spar?”
-
-“I did see something over there; looked like the ghost of a cloud.”
-
-“That was Rum Cay, and a sure sign the weather’s going to hold. It
-lifts itself into the sky like that, evening times; you can see it from
-Lone Reef too.”
-
-“I wish I had known that and I should have looked at it more
-particularly. I was thinking.”
-
-“What was you thinking about?”
-
-He laughed. “My people.”
-
-“Which people?”
-
-“My relations.”
-
-“What made you think of them for?”
-
-“You.”
-
-“Me?”
-
-“Yes, I was wondering what you’d think of them if you saw them,
-especially my aunts.”
-
-“Well, you take the bun,” said Jude, “you sitting there thinking of
-your aunts and me running with them eggs!” She stopped of a sudden; her
-memory had suddenly conjured up the “wuzzard.”
-
-“That cuss!” said Jude.
-
-“Which?”
-
-“The one I saw.” She wriggled close to him till their sides touched.
-“S’posin’?”
-
-“Yes?”
-
-“S’posin’ he was to take it into his head to do a walk along here?”
-
-“Don’t you bother about him,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d kick him into the
-sea--besides, he was only an optical illusion. It was my stupid talk
-did it.”
-
-“I’m not bothering,” said Jude, “only it’s a durned long time till
-morning. N’matter,” she rested her hand on his shoulder in all the
-familiarity of companionship; then she shifted her hand from his left
-to his right shoulder so that her arm was across his back, and then she
-fell silent and he felt something poking into his left shoulder--it was
-her nose! She had evidently under his protection forgotten “hants” and
-“wuzzards,” forgotten him, even, for she was humming a sort of tune
-under her breath.
-
-He knew exactly her mental condition,--mind wandering,--and it
-was a strange feeling to be cuddled like that by a person who had
-half-forgotten his existence, except as a protection against fears,
-especially when he remembered her recent antagonism that had developed
-so mysteriously and as mysteriously vanished. He slipped his left arm
-round her to make her more comfortable. Then her nose gave place to her
-cheek against his shoulder and she yawned. He could feel her ribs under
-her guernsey and the beat of her heart just beneath the gentle swell of
-her breast. He remembered her coat, which was in the dinghy. She had
-thrown it in as an after-thought in case of a change of weather, but
-had never worn it.
-
-“Hadn’t you better put on your coat?” asked he.
-
-“Lord! I don’t want no coat.”
-
-“But the night air.”
-
-“Nothing wrong with it. It’s a Gulf wind an’ as hot as a blanket--ain’t
-you warm enough?”
-
-“Lots.”
-
-“Ever slept out before?”
-
-“Only in a tent--have you?”
-
-“Which?”
-
-“Slept out before?”
-
-“Heaps o’ times. But I wouldn’t sleep out in a full moon.”
-
-“Why?”
-
-“’Cause I don’t want to wake up with my face twisted to one side like
-a flat fish--mean to say you don’t know?--either that or a chap goes
-loony. But there’s no fear tonight; it’s only a half-moon. The only
-thing I’m frightened of is crabs. We’ve gotta keep our eyes skinned for
-crabs. This mayn’t be a crab spit; then again, there’s no knowing but
-it may.”
-
-“What on earth is a crab spit?”
-
-Jude raised her face from his shoulder and sat up a bit straighter as
-though the question had roused her.
-
-“Place where crabs come, hun’erds of millions of them, same as Crab
-Cay. There’s crabs everywhere of course, but not in shiploads same as
-Crab Cay. Three men were drifted ashore there once, and after sundown
-up came the crabs and fought them all night, and there was nothing but
-their skeletons left in the morning. We’d better take it turn about to
-keep watch.”
-
-She released herself from his arm and scrambling about in the starlight
-on her hands and knees began to make a sand pillow.
-
-“There you are!” said she. “Stick your head on it; I’ll take first
-watch. You be port watch, and I’ll be sta’board.”
-
-“No, you won’t! I will. I’m not a bit sleepy.”
-
-“Neither’m I. Stick your head on it. You’ve gotta turn in or you’ll be
-no use tomorrow.”
-
-He did as he was bid, and Jude took her place sitting on the sand close
-to him.
-
-“Give us a call if anything happens,” said he.
-
-“You bet!” replied Jude.
-
-Then he closed his eyes. A moment before and he had been leagues away
-from sleep, but with the compulsory closing of his eyes a drowsiness
-began to steal on him. The wind had died to nothing and in the dead
-silence of the night the sound of the waves on the mile and a half of
-spit came loud and low, rhythmical, mesmeric. It was as though the
-tide of sleep were rising to drift him off.
-
-Now, suddenly, he was walking in the blazing sunlight on the spit, and
-toward him was walking the “wuzzard,”--a little old man in a cocked
-hat with a spyglass under his arm, who vanished, giving place to Jude,
-carrying a hatful of gulls’ eggs.
-
-Then Skelton landed from somewhere, and Jude, turning, was calling him
-a “pesky brute.”
-
-The words broke the dream, and he opened his eyes. The moon had just
-risen, touching the spit, and in her light, seated on the sand propped
-up on its stilts, a spirit crab, white as snow with ruby eyes, was
-staring at Jude.
-
-Drugged with weariness and ozone, he closed his eyes for one moment,
-determined to rise up and drive the thing away in one moment. When he
-opened his eyes again the sun was rising.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-THE RETURN
-
-
-The gulls were mewing and calling and flying above him in the blue.
-He was lying on his back, his left arm out, and Jude’s head on his
-shoulder.
-
-She had snuggled up beside him for company, and then, regardless of
-spirit crabs, “hants,” and the possibility of crustaceans landing in
-shiploads to devour them, had fallen asleep. Her arm was flung over
-his chest. It was the embrace of a tired child, delightful to wake up
-to as the freshness of the air and the new life of the world and the
-innocence of the flower-blue sky, delightful as her breath, sweet and
-warm against his cheek. As he moved she stirred, grumbled something
-under her breath, shifted her head so that his arm was released, and
-turned on her other side, with her right arm flung out on the sand.
-
-He stood up. The tide was in and the dinghy only waiting to be
-launched. Not a sail or speck upon the sea.
-
-Rum Cay had prophesied right,--the fine weather held,--but the water
-was nearly gone, and the “grub” was finished. There was no breakfast
-till they boarded the _Sarah_ again.
-
-He turned to where the starboard watch was lying, clinging still to
-Morpheus, and stirred it gently with his foot. Jude moved, turned,
-grumbled to herself, and then, as if electrified, sat up digging her
-fists into her eyes and yawning. Then she sat gazing at the sea as if
-stunned.
-
-“Come on,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve got to be starting. All the grub’s
-gone and nearly all the water. How did you sleep?”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Jude. “I’ve been chasin’ round the hull night with a
-hatful of eggs. I’m near dead beat. Which way’s the wind? Sou’east.
-Must a changed in the night. It’ll take us back in two ticks.”
-
-She collapsed again comfortably.
-
-“Remember,” said he, “the current is against us.”
-
-“Oh, it ain’t no distance,” said Jude, “and a few minutes more or less
-don’t count. Wonder what Satan’s doing?”
-
-Knowing that it was hopeless to bother till the spirit moved her, he
-sat down on the sand beside her and began picking up little shells and
-casting them into the sea.
-
-“Goodness knows!” said he. “I’m wondering what he’ll say when we get
-back.”
-
-“He’ll start jawing,” said Jude dreamily and fatefully and with her
-eyes closed. “I can hear him as if I was listening. He’ll say, ‘What
-you mean leaving the ship, and where’s your eggs?’ No use telling him
-they’re broke. Lord! I’m sick of it all! I’m just going to lay here and
-die.”
-
-He began to drop shells on her chest.
-
-“Quit foolin’.”
-
-“Then get up and come on. Let’s get it over. It’s like having a tooth
-pulled,--the sooner over the better.”
-
-“Did y’ever have a tooth pulled?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What’s it like?”
-
-“Beastly for a moment, but it’s soon over.”
-
-“Did y’spit blood?”
-
-“Rather! Come on.”
-
-“I’m coming in a minute.”
-
-Then suddenly she sat up, put on her hat, scrambled to her feet, took a
-glance round the sea, and made for the dinghy.
-
-“Shove in the water jar,” said Jude. He put the jar in, seized the
-opposite gunnel, and ran her down.
-
-In a minute they were afloat, the sail spread to the wind, Jude
-steering and holding the sheet. Gulls chased them out, and the beam
-wind meeting tide and current sent boosts of spray on board. It was a
-rougher passage coming than going, and a more silent one. Ratcliffe,
-squatting in the bottom of the boat, had little else to do than smoke
-and watch Jude. Jude, engaged with her own thoughts, and with her eyes
-keened for the indications of Lone Reef, seemed absolutely to have
-forgotten him.
-
-There was no indication of the companion who had slept with her arm
-round him, who had sat almost lovingly, half-forgetfully, with her arm
-across his shoulder and his arm round her waist.
-
-It came to him suddenly and with a curious pang that Jude would never
-be more than that,--a warm companion if cast alone together, just as
-she might be with Satan, or any stranger her fancy approved of.
-
-Instinctively he felt that there was a barrier,--a curious barrier, he
-seemed to have broken through that night he took her part, and when,
-for the first time in her life, she had confessed herself at fault;
-a barrier, that had, however, mended itself. It was as though he had
-injured her independence. Yet Satan was injuring her independence all
-day long with his orders and what not. Ay, but Satan was her brother,
-almost part of herself. She would not have banged Satan on the head for
-kissing her.
-
-He gave up thinking, watching her and how well she handled the boat.
-The crying of the gulls round the spit had died down; nothing remained
-but the voice of the sea, silent as dumb death from the blue horizon to
-the planking of the dinghy when it spoke.
-
-“That’s her!” suddenly said Jude.
-
-“What?”
-
-“Lone--I kin see the spars of the _Juan_ an’ the _Sarah_. Rubber and
-you’ll see them too.”
-
-He turned with his elbow resting on the thwart and picked out the spars
-on the sea-line.
-
-“And the _Natchez_,” said Jude. “Look, close up to the _Juan_. Cleary’s
-put in and we not there! I’d forgot Cleary; didn’t believe he’d pick up
-the place so soon. There he is. Oh, hell!”
-
-“No matter,” said Ratcliffe; “it can’t be helped.”
-
-“Cuss them gulls! If they’d stuck to their laying places, we’d have got
-the eggs soon’s we’d landed and been back last night. Wonder what’s
-been going on?”
-
-“Well,” said he, “Satan’s all right. Cleary has no grudge against him.
-If there has been any bother, it has been between Cleary and Sellers.”
-
-“Maybe,” said Jude.
-
-An hour later they were so close up that they could see the reef-line
-and the line of the wreck with fellows working on it. Whatever had
-happened, business was going on as usual.
-
-The three vessels, anchored and swinging to the tide, looked peaceful
-enough, and as they drew up to the _Sarah_, Satan, who had just
-appeared on deck, came and stood by the starboard rail watching them.
-
-They fastened up, preparing for an explosion. None came.
-
-“Couldn’t get back last night,” said Jude as they came on board. “Left
-it till sundown, and then I was afeard of the current.”
-
-“Afeard of the dark,” said Satan. “I reckoned that’d be so--whar’s your
-eggs?”
-
-“Gone phut. Smashed the lot. Wasn’t more than a hatful. Them rotten
-gulls had given up nesting, all but at the ends--and say, Satan, I saw
-a wuzzard! I was carrying the eggs when I saw him, and then I ran and
-smashed the lot.”
-
-“A which?”
-
-“A hant--little old chap walking on the sands. D’you remember the
-figurehead on that old bark they broke up last year at Havana,--man
-with a glass under his arm and the other arm wavin’ his hat? That was
-him plain as my eye. He up with his glass and I let one yelp. Rat’ll
-tell you: he saw me running.”
-
-“Oh, git along--git along, you and your hants! I’d been countin’ on
-them eggs, and here you come back like a one-eyed skite with your yarns
-about hants. Why, you ought a had a boatful! Didn’t you see no turkles’
-eggs?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-“Well, come along down if you want some grub. I sighted you more’n an
-hour ago, and there’s coffee waitin’. D’ye see that?” He pointed to a
-new-washed jumper drying in the blazing sun on the rail.
-
-“Well, I was het up,” said Jude, “or I’d have la’ndered it before I
-started.”
-
-“Come along down,” said Satan.
-
-It came to Ratcliffe that the quietude of Satan over the business came
-less from natural good temper than some other reason. The desertion of
-the _Sarah_ was mutiny and a rank crime. Satan had been left with his
-food to cook and his jumper to wash, his sister had been off with an
-almost stranger for a whole night--yet he was not displeased.
-
-If Jude had done the business alone, she most surely would have been
-carpeted. It was evidently his--Ratcliffe’s--participation in it that
-fended off trouble and turned wrath into complacence. Why?
-
-Was it because he was a guest? Not a bit! Satan, had he been angry,
-would not have bothered about that. He followed down below, and there,
-over the breakfast table, the Cleary business was cleared up.
-
-“He dropped in last night,” said Satan, “an hour before sundown,
-and the anchor hadn’t more than clawed the mud before he was aboard
-the _Juan_. I expected the shootin’ to begin; but there weren’t no
-fireworks, and after dark I lit out for the _Juan_ in the c’lapsible
-and tied up and boarded her. All the men were in the foc’sle, eating
-onions and playin’ tunes on guitars,--no anchor watch,--and the Cleary
-crowd down in the saloon as friendly as pie, Cark ladling the liquor
-and Cleary suckin’ it down, cigars as big as your leg in their faces,
-and Cleary with his thumbs in the armhulls of his vest leanin’ back
-laughin’. That’s how I found them.”
-
-“I told you,” said Jude to Ratcliffe, “they’d be kissing each other
-and--”
-
-“Suppose you shet your head!” said Satan. “I’m tellin’ you--there they
-were sittin’ all colludin’ together thick as thick, and I sat for an
-hour with them and then lit out. Sweet as sugar they were; but I tell
-you this, I’m as frightened as hell.”
-
-“How’s thet?”
-
-“Cleary. Y’see Cark and Sellers aren’t much by themselves, but Cleary
-is the snake’s tooth an’ poison bug of that combination, now that he’s
-joined in with Cark again. Cleary’s Irish gone bad on the father’s
-side and drunk Welsh on the mother’s: I had his pedigree from Pap. Pap
-said he was a sure-enough thoroughbred of a hellhound, and he reckoned
-the roof of his mouth was black right down to the heart of him. Well,
-I’ve had forty dollars from Cleary for them rotten pearls and one
-thousand dollars from Cark on account of takin’s. Now you see how I am,
-supposin’ the wreck turns out a dud. D’you mean to say they won’t go
-for me to get their money back? Supposin’ the gold is there. D’you mean
-to say they won’t chouse me out of my share?”
-
-“What are you going to do?”
-
-“I worked the hull thing out last night before I boarded them. Seeing
-there was no fighting, I concluded they’d joined up an’ become friends;
-then I made my plans, I didn’t put out no anchor light.
-
-“Sellers, when I was leaving the _Juan_, said, ‘Whar’s your light?’
-
-“‘Run short of oil,’ says I. ‘Kin you let me have some?’ He thought I
-was tryin’ to wangle oil out of him, and he closed; said he was run
-short himself.”
-
-“What was your meaning in not putting out a light?” asked Jude.
-
-“Maybe you’ll find out,” said Satan, “if you keep your eyes skinned
-and stop askin’ questions. Well, that’s where we are. They’ll have the
-barrel of gunpowder fixed by tomorrow to blow the deck off her, and as
-soon as they put a light to it we’ll know. It’s blastin’ powder and
-ought to split the deck to flinders if they fix it proper. I don’t
-b’lieve it’s coral coverin’ that deck, I b’lieve it’s old petrifacted
-guano, if you ask me; anyhow, it’s hard enough.”
-
-“By Jove!” said Ratcliffe. “If that’s so, it bears out my theory. I
-came to the conclusion that the old hooker had never been under water
-according to that yarn Lopez slung; yet I couldn’t account for the
-coral deposits. I believe you’re right. I believe the real wreck
-is lying at that place you said that’s given in the latitude and
-longitude. Well, see here, why not get the anchor up and light out
-right now for the other place. They wouldn’t follow.”
-
-“Wouldn’t they?” said Satan. “The _Natchez_ would be after us like a
-cat pouncin’. No, I’d rather stick, if it’s all the same to you, and
-see the fireworks. After that leave ’em to me. There aren’t many’s got
-the better of me when my dander’s up. Now then, Jude, if you’ve done
-stuffin’ yourself, maybe you’ll lend a hand on deck. There’s swabbin’
-to be done.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-A BOTTLE OF RUM
-
-
-Ratcliffe helped in the swabbing and polishing. No housekeeper ever
-exercised more meticulous care in this respect than Satan. He was a
-fanatic where cleanliness was concerned, and polish,--witness the
-brasswork of the wheel, the binnacle and skylight,--even paint and
-varnish were minor gods compared with Brasso!
-
-Meanwhile, as the Sarahites worked, the _Natchez_ and _Juan_, lying in
-cynical and sinister neglect and dirt, showed little signs of life. The
-working party on the reef seemed busy enough; but the ships, save for
-a few hands lounging at the rails or squatting about the foc’sle head,
-might have been deserted.
-
-About ten o’clock a boat put off from the _Natchez_. Cleary was in the
-sternsheets, and as she came alongside he hailed the _Sarah_.
-
-Satan came to the rail.
-
-“Sellers’s going to bust her open today,” said Cleary. “Just had word
-from him.”
-
-“I thought he wouldn’t be ready till tomorrow,” said Satan.
-
-“Just had word the hole’s near deep enough and the star cuttin’s from
-it. He’s got the powder off and reckons to fire it at noon. Wants you
-to come an’ help.”
-
-“Oh, does he?”
-
-“He’s a bit bothered about the fuse, not havin’ done much of that sort
-of work, and he reckons you’re an ingenious cuss an’ll be able to put
-him wise.”
-
-“Oh, does he? Well, I’ll be there.”
-
-Cleary came over the rail.
-
-“No spittin’!” cried Satan.
-
-Cleary, averting his head in time to send the squirt of tobacco juice
-overside instead of on the deck, looked around.
-
-He nodded at Ratcliffe, disregarded Jude, and fixed his eye on the
-blazing binnacle and the glittering rods of the skylight.
-
-“Dandy ship,” said he. “Whaar you goin’ to take the prize?”
-
-“Where your old tub’d be skeered to show her nose. How’s the potato
-crop gettin’ along?”
-
-Cleary turned his quid over and allowed his eyes to travel about the
-deck.
-
-“Waal,” said he, speaking with point and consideration, “some likes one
-thing and some likes another, but I never did see that fandanglin’ with
-frills an’ brasswork an’ sich lends anythin’ to the _sailin’_ qualities
-of a ship.”
-
-Jude, raising herself up from flemish coiling a rope, blazed out:
-
-“Maybe it don’t to an old cod boat blowin’ along with her own smell,”
-began Jude.
-
-“Shet up!” said Satan. Then to Cleary, “Have a drink?”
-
-“I’m willin’,” said Cleary, “but thought you was a dry ship.”
-
-Satan winked, slipped below, and returned with a bottle of rum, a
-glass, and a water jar. There were three or four bottles of rum on
-board. Satan said he kept the stuff for “rubbing his corns”; he never
-drank it. There were also a revolver and a rifle on board. He never
-fired them: lethal weapons have their time and place.
-
-Satan, having placed the bottle and jar on the deck, produced another
-glass from his pocket, filled out a four-finger peg for Cleary and
-another for himself.
-
-“Here’s luck,” said Cleary.
-
-“Here’s luck--no _spittin’_!”
-
-They drained glasses.
-
-“Holy Mike!” cried Cleary, his eyes bulging and his face injected.
-“What sorter bug-water’s this?”
-
-“British Navy; thirty over proof.”
-
-Cleary, with one eye shut, seemed turning over in his mind the
-activities going on in his stomach and on the whole approving.
-
-“Well,” said he, “I’ve drunk wasp brandy and one or two nigger
-dopes--they don’t get near it, not in knots. A man’d want to be a
-centipede to carry a bottle of that stuff, I reckon. N’more, thanky.
-Well, I’m off, and I’ll fly a flag when Cark gives the signal he’s got
-the stuff ready for the fuse.”
-
-Off he went.
-
-“For the land’s sake, Satan! what made you swallow that stuff for?”
-said Jude.
-
-Satan took his seat on the skylight edge, then he gulped, then he
-hiccupped.
-
-“Get your hind legs under you and cart the bottle and the glasses down
-below,” said Satan. “Strewth!--gimme the water jar till I flood my
-hold.”
-
-He drank till Ratcliffe thought he would never stop, then he went to
-the port rail and canceled matters.
-
-“It’s Demerara Black John,” said he apologetically to Ratcliffe as he
-turned, wiping his mouth with the back of his hand. “Some likes it, but
-I’ve no holdin’ with drink.”
-
-Ratcliffe was about to ask why he had swallowed it, but he checked
-himself. Jude, who had just appeared again, put the question.
-
-“What in the nation made you drink that snake-juice?” asked Jude.
-
-Satan took a glance at the sun, at the reef, and at the _Juan_.
-
-“Now then,” said he, “finish up clarin’ away that raffle and get the
-dinner ready; I’ve no time to be talkin’.”
-
-He set to sand and canvassing the rail he had been working on when
-Cleary appeared, Jude and Ratcliffe took up their jobs, and the
-ordinary life of the _Sarah_ resumed as though the rum incident had
-never been.
-
-All the same, work could not prevent Ratcliffe from pondering the dark
-problem of Satan and his doings.
-
-Why had he not put out an anchor light last night? Why had he pretended
-to Sellers that he was short of oil? Why had he swallowed a glass of
-rum only to unswallow it again?
-
-Then in the monotony of work his mind passed from these considerations
-to a state of pleasant expectancy. What would they find in the wreck,
-and the explosion of the barrel of powder, how would it come off?
-
-He felt as pleased as a boy about to fire a brass cannon and not sure
-whether it will burst or not.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THEY FIRE THE FUSE
-
-
-Satan used a modification of the deck bear for cleaning his decks; that
-is to say, a box filled with stones having a rough mat nailed under it.
-The deck having been sprinkled with sand, the bear had to be pulled
-backward and forward after the fashion of a carpet sweeper. This was
-Ratcliffe’s job, and he was not sorry when it was over.
-
-Dinner was served at eight bells, and getting along toward one o’clock
-the _Natchez_ and _Juan_ were flying all sorts of flags on the tepid
-breeze as a signal, evidently, that it was time to get to business.
-
-Ratcliffe made out the red and white flag indicating H, the triangular
-blue with the white ball, the red cross on a white ground, and the
-white with the blue square,--H. D. V. S.
-
-“What are they trying to say?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, them flags,” replied Satan. “_They’re_ not tryin’ to say anythin’,
-only flyin’ to show time’s up. Cark hasn’t got a full set of the
-c’mercial code; wouldn’t know how to use them, neither. Now if you’re
-ready we’ll put off. Jude will stick here to keep ship.”
-
-Jude protested.
-
-“Why, you’ll see the blow-up from here a durned sight better than from
-the boat,” said Satan.
-
-“I want to see her innards when the deck’s off,” said Jude.
-
-“Why, Lord bless me! you’ll have days to see them in,” said Satan, “and
-there’s no knowin’ what may happen when the blow-up comes, what with
-flyin’ timbers and muck. I’ll come back and bring you off when the
-powder’s fired. I can’t say fairer than that.”
-
-They got into the dinghy and shoved off, Jude watching them.
-
-Sellers was waiting for them on the reef, and Cleary. Their boats were
-on the strip of beach surrounded by the crews, and a couple of fellows
-on the wreck were putting the last touches to the preparation of the
-charge. Sellers was holding what seemed a length of thick white cord in
-his hand.
-
-“Here’s the fuse,” said he. “I had it left over with the barrel from
-that last wrecking business we did in the fall. It’s a five-minutes’
-fuse.”
-
-“Oh, is it?” said Satan, handling the thing. “And where’s your
-guarantee? S’posin’ it only takes a minute? And five minutes is none
-too much for the man that fires it to get clear of the reef and put
-out.”
-
-“That’s true,” said Sellers, “and one of you will have to do the firin’
-business, seein’ I’m lame.”
-
-“What’s lamed you?”
-
-“Fell on the deck this mornin’ over a slush tub one of them damn dagoes
-left lyin’ in the dark. Near put my knee out.”
-
-“Then Cleary will do the trick,” said Satan.
-
-Cleary laughed. “Not me! I’m not lame, but it ain’t my job. Runnin’
-over rocks don’t suit me, and I reckon the man that lays a light to
-that thing will want to be a boundin’ kangaroo.”
-
-“Instead of a damned ass like y’self,” said Satan. “Come on. I’ll light
-it, I’m not afeard.”
-
-They clambered over the rocks, crossed the rock bridge, and gained the
-wreck.
-
-The little barrel had been well and truly laid, the top almost flush
-with the level of the stuff covering the deck.
-
-“We got right through the deck plankin’,” said Sellers, “or to a
-crossbeam. Wood’s most dry-rotted, and it’ll be a nacheral mercy if the
-powder don’t blow the whole coffee shop to blazes right down to the
-reef. Here’s the hole for the fuse.”
-
-While they were examining the fuse-hole, Ratcliffe took notice of the
-cuts radiating starlike from the charge-hole that had been made in the
-deck-casing. When he turned again, Satan, with the aid of Sellers, had
-fixed the fuse. The Spanish sailors who had been at work had taken
-their departure and were already down by the boats, leaving only four
-men on the wreck,--Satan, Sellers, Cleary and himself.
-
-Satan rose up, clapped the knees of his trousers as if to knock dust
-off them, and produced a yellow box of Swedish matches from his pocket.
-
-“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not fair. Let’s draw lots who’ll
-fire the thing.”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan. “I wouldn’t trust one of them two with a box of
-matches, let alone a dollar. Now then, scatter for the boats!”
-
-Then to Ratcliffe, as Sellers and Cleary made off, “Stand by ready to
-shove the dinghy off when you see me coming.”
-
-“All right,” said the other; “but I’ll stick by you if you like.”
-
-“I reckon two don’t run quicker than one,” said Satan. “Off with you,
-and, if I’m blown to blazes, look after the kid.”
-
-When Ratcliffe reached the strip of beach the boats of the _Juan_ and
-_Natchez_ had shoved off. He could see the figure of Carquinez at the
-after-rail of the _Juan_ and Jude watching from the _Sarah_. He pulled
-the dinghy down a bit more to the water and then, turning, looked at
-the wreck.
-
-Satan was standing against the skyline, now he was down on his knees,
-and now he was up again. The fuse had evidently been fired, but he did
-not move; stood evidently looking to see that it was burning properly,
-and then moved off, walking, not running, and not even hurrying himself.
-
-Then he came clambering over the rocks, reached the dinghy, and they
-pushed off.
-
-“Well, you are a cool chap,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d have run.”
-
-“And broke your leg, maybe. There’s no danger unless a spark got at the
-powder. The durned thing was sparkin’ and spittin’ like all possessed
-when I left it. I reckon that’s why Sellers got cold feet. We’re out
-far enough now.” He ceased rowing, and they hung drifting.
-
-Ratcliffe looked round. The other boats were much farther out. The
-tepid wind had almost died off, so that the flags on the _Juan_ and
-_Natchez_ hung in wisps. They could hear the wash of the water on the
-reef and the occasional lamentation of a gull. No other sound broke the
-silence of the blue and gorgeous afternoon.
-
-“Seems like as if everything was listenin’, don’t it?” said Satan,
-wiping his forehead. “The bust ought to have come by this. Wonder if
-the durned thing has fizzled out?”
-
-A gull made derisive answer and across the satin smooth swell a hail
-came from the _Juan_.
-
-“That’s Cark,” said Satan, “makin’ kind inquiries, blister him!”
-
-“There she goes!” cried Ratcliffe.
-
-A jet of flame and a column of smoke sprang from the reef, followed by
-a clap of thunder that could have been heard at Rum Cay.
-
-Flying filth and deck planking filled the air, and on top of all came
-the yelling of a thousand gulls.
-
-The dinghy jumped as though from the blow of a great fist--then
-silence, and over the reef a filthy dun-colored cloud of smoke curling
-upward like a djin.
-
-Satan seized the sculls and headed for the beach. The boats of the
-_Juan_ and _Natchez_, already under way, were rowing as if for a
-wager, but the dinghy had the lead. They beached her, hauled her up
-a foot, and started over the rocks, running this time, heedless of
-broken limbs, Satan leading like the bounding kangaroo of Cleary’s and
-whooping as he went.
-
-The rock bridge was still intact, but nearly the whole of the after
-part of the deck was gone.
-
-“Go careful!” cried Satan. He got down on hands and knees and,
-crawling, followed by Ratcliffe, leaned over the break and looked.
-
-Ratcliffe cried out in horror.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE CARGO
-
-
-In that vast and gloomy interior the great beams showed like the ribs
-of some eviscerated monster and the honest light of day fell sick upon
-the cargo,--a cargo of skulls, ribs, vertebræ, and entire skeletons,
-piled high, as though five hundred men had struggled aft for exit in
-one mad rush and died heaped one upon the other like refuse. A charnel,
-limy smell rose, poisoning the air.
-
-“Good God!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan. “What did I tell you? _Nombre de Dios_ be
-sugared! She’s an old slaver, wrecked with the men under hatches.
-Here’s Sellers!”
-
-Sellers, panting, his face all mottled, and followed by Cleary, had
-gained the deck.
-
-“Boys, what is it?” cried Sellers.
-
-“Gold!” cried Satan. “Go careful, for the hull deck’s sprung. Get on
-your hands and knees. Gold bars an’ di’monds--we’re all rich men!”
-
-The pair of scoundrels, crawling like crabs, stuck their heads over the
-break.
-
-“Oh, hell!” said Sellers.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan.
-
-Cleary spat. He was the first to laugh.
-
-“This is putting it over on Cark, ain’t it?” said Cleary. “How many
-dollars d’you think it’s cost our firm to blow the lid off this
-damned scrofagus, to say nothin’ of the time? And he packed me off to
-Pensacola to get me out of the way! Oh, send for him to have a look!”
-
-“No use sendin’, he’s comin’,” said Satan, pointing to where the gig of
-the _Juan_ was approaching the beach.
-
-Carquinez crossed the rock-bridge and advanced along the deck,
-clutching his old coat together and making birdlike noises. When he
-reached the break, crouching like the others, he looked over.
-
-The sight below did not seem to horrify him.
-
-“Slaver,” said Satan for the third time, turning his head for a moment
-from the objects that seemed to fascinate him.
-
-“Pst, pst, pst!” said Carquinez. “Vel, I reckon dat is so.”
-
-“No gold ship,” said Sellers.
-
-“Maybe there was gold in the after-cabin,” suddenly broke in Cleary,
-“and the niggers broke through the bulkhead and are on top of it.”
-
-“Where’s your bulkheads?” asked Sellers. “There was no after-cabin to
-the hooker. It was all one cattle boat below, with niggers for cattle.”
-
-“That is so,” said Carquinez.
-
-The old gentleman seemed taking his setback extraordinarily well; so,
-too, seemed Sellers and Cleary. They were evidently used to reverses in
-business, and treasure hunting was wildcat anyway, a thousand to one
-against the chance of a colossal fortune.
-
-“That is so,” said Carquinez. Then he proceeded to demonstrate what the
-hold of a slaver was like,--men lying side by side and sometimes on top
-of one another. There was no after-cabin, indeed nothing, no latrines,
-no means of washing, nothing: just one vast sty without straw even for
-the human beasts to lie on.
-
-The officers and crew slept in deckhouses; sometimes the crew had
-nothing to shelter them, sleeping on the bare decks.
-
-Carquinez knew it all. His grandfather had been in the business, and he
-mentioned the fact with a sort of pride.
-
-Then he drew back from the break like a reptile balked and retreating;
-rose to his feet, and stood contemplating the sea.
-
-Satan rose also, as did Ratcliffe.
-
-“I’m off,” said Satan. “This boneyard don’t please me any. Say, what
-you goin’ to do?”
-
-“Von moment,” said Cark.
-
-“Which?” asked Satan.
-
-“Cark means how about the contrac’?” said Sellers.
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“Lord! Why, we’re left, left with a cargo of skelentons, and you--why,
-you’ve got a thousand dollars in your pocket.”
-
-“There was nothin’ in the contrac’ about handin’ them back,” said
-Satan; “b’sides the contrac’s bust. That thousand dollars was on
-account of findin’s. Is it my fault the findin’s is skelentons? But,
-see here, you give’s a few hours to turn the thing over, and come
-aboard the _Sarah_ gettin’ along sundown, and we’ll have a clack. We’re
-all in the soup, seems to me, and I’m not wishin’ to be hard on you.”
-
-“We’ll drop aboard,” said Sellers.
-
-Cleary said nothing.
-
-After his outburst of laughter he had remained dumb.
-
-“Well, I’m off,” said Satan. “I want a drink and that’s the truth. The
-smell of them skelentons’s enough to start a Baptis’ minister on the
-booze.” Then he turned to Carquinez. “What did I tell you, sittin’
-in your cabin? Told you I didn’t bank on this business, maybe you’ll
-remember that. Blast treasure liftin’! Leavin’ salvage aside, have
-you ever seen an ounce of gold raised in all these years? There was a
-hundred million lyin’ off Dry Tortugas--did they ever get it? How many
-ships has been down to Trinidad huntin’ for the pirates’ gold? Knight
-was the last man there--a lot he made of it! It’s only the chaps that
-sell locations to mugs that make money over this business, it’s my
-b’lief. Well, see you aboard later on.”
-
-Off he went, Ratcliffe following.
-
-As they came alongside the _Sarah_, Jude was hanging over the rail.
-
-“What’s the luck?” cried Jude as they came aboard.
-
-“Skelentons,” said Satan, “shipload of skulls an’ cross-bones. Slaver,
-that’s what she was; dead men’s bones, that’s your treasure.”
-
-“Lord! And I’ve never seen them!”
-
-“Well, there’s nothin’ much to see,” said Satan, with the irritating
-nonchalance of the one who has seen the show; “ain’t worth the trouble
-of lookin’.”
-
-“I want to see them skelentons,” said Jude.
-
-“Tell you they ain’t wuth lookin’ at!”
-
-“I want to see them--”
-
-“Oh, well then, tumble into the boat, tumble into the boat, and I’ll
-row you over.”
-
-Ratcliffe watched while the dinghy passed over to the reef. He saw Jude
-on the wreck, kneeling and poring over the cargo, held, evidently, by
-the fascination that lies for youth in the horrible.
-
-Then they returned, and Satan ordered the dinghy to be taken on board.
-
-“Are you going to put out now?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Put out!” said Satan, with a grin. “Why, I’ve asked those fellers to
-come aboard gettin’ on for sundown, and whether or no if I raised a
-foot of chain they’d be on me with the first click of the windlass.
-I tell you we’re in a tight place! Cleary said nothin’, you noticed
-that, but he’s goin’ to have his forty dollars back if he knows how,
-and Sellers is the same,--he wants his thousand. We’re held for one
-thousand and forty dollars, and we’re not strong enough to fight them.”
-
-“Well, see here,” said the peacemaker. “Pay them. I’ll stand the
-racket. It’s only a little over two hundred pounds, and I’ll give you a
-check.”
-
-“You don’t get me,” said Satan. “It’s not the dollars I’m thinkin’ of
-so much as the game. Cark played me a low-down trick lightin’ out for
-here to scoop the boodle, and Cleary laughed at me with his old cod
-boat outsailin’ us. They’ve got to pay. B’sides, if I was to hand over
-that money, I’d never be able to show my nose again in Havana.”
-
-“How so?”
-
-“Why, them two would put the laugh on me, and it’d be ‘what price
-skelentons’ wherever I went, see? I’d be the mug then. They’re the mugs
-now, seem’ they’ve paid a thousand and forty for what they’ve got.”
-
-“I see. But considering that they’ll be after you if you move, and that
-we’re not strong enough to fight them, what’s to be done?”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “when they come aboard it’ll be either to get the
-dollars back or fight. You’ve noticed I asked them to come, seein’
-they’d have come whether I asked them or not. Well, if I can foozle
-them into hanging on for their answer till tomorrow, I’ll give them the
-slip tonight. Moon’s not up till late.”
-
-“But they’ll hear you getting the anchor up and handling the sails!”
-
-“Not with an ear trumpet,” said Satan, “if I can only foozle them into
-waitin’ till tomorrow. Now then, Jude, lend a hand with the dinghy.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-CROCKERY WARE
-
-
-An hour before sunset, Jude, on the lookout, gave the alarm. “Sellers’s
-getting ready to come off,” she cried.
-
-Satan’s head appeared at the cabin hatch.
-
-“Sure?”
-
-“The boat’s alongside the _Juan_ full of dagoes, and Sellers and
-Cleary’s gettin’ in.”
-
-“Where did you stick that bottle of nose-paint?”
-
-“Starboard forward locker.”
-
-“One minute.”
-
-In a minute the head reappeared and an arm holding the rum bottle.
-
-“Now, mind you, I’m drunk,” said Satan, “fightin’ drunk, not to be
-disturbed on no account. They can call again tomorrow morning.”
-
-He smashed the rum bottle on the deck.
-
-“Leave the pieces lyin’.” He vanished.
-
-Jude looked at Ratcliffe and grinned.
-
-“Rub your nose and pretend to be cryin’,” came a voice from below.
-
-“What for should I be cryin’?” answered Jude.
-
-“God A’mighty! I’ll show you if I get on deck! Ain’t I drunk and
-cuttin’ up? What else would you be doin’? _I’ll_ larn you!”
-
-A smash of crockery came from below that made the housekeeper spring to
-the cabin skylight.
-
-“Quit foolin’,” cried she. “I’m willin’ to rub the damn nose off my
-head, but stop smashin’ the plates--what have you broke?”
-
-Another plate went.
-
-“I’m rubbin’.”
-
-“Here they are!” cried Ratcliffe.
-
-Jude’s nose did not seem to want any rubbing, nor her face. Descended
-from generations of crockery worshipers and careful housewives,
-instinctively hating Cleary, Sellers, Cark, and all their belongings,
-feeling with perfect illogic that they had been done out of the
-treasure by the “skelentons” somehow through Cark, she was convincing.
-Satan with rare art had worked her up to the part. She was not crying:
-her mind was raging above tears.
-
-“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers, as the boat ground alongside and a filthy
-ruffian with a handkerchief twisted round his head clawed on with a
-boathook. “What’s the matter, Kid? What’s up with you? Where’s Satan?”
-
-“Who’re you kiddin’?” cried Jude, as Sellers came aboard, followed by
-Cleary. “Where the hull are your fenders? Comin’ cuttin’ the paint off,
-you and your skullintons! Where’s Satan? He’s down below drunk as Billy
-be damn and cuttin’ the lights out of the ship.”
-
-“He’s been at the eyewash I was tellin’ you of,” said Cleary. “Look,
-he’s broke a bottle of it. Lord! don’t the place stink?”
-
-“Well, drunk or sober, he’s got to bail up,” said Sellers. “It’s my
-belief he’s been spoofin’ us all along.”
-
-“Spoofin’ who?” cried Jude.
-
-“Cark an’ me.”
-
-“Cark an’ you--that old leather face an’ _you_! Satan been spoofin’
-you--pair of yeggmen! Satan’s straight, the on’y straight man in
-Havana! Get off this ship! Come in the mornin’ if you want to try an’
-rob him. Off with you now!”
-
-“Why,” cried Sellers, half-laughing, half-angry, “what’s the matter
-with the kid? What’s gingerin’ you up?”
-
-The answer came from another smashed plate below.
-
-Jude made one spring for a deck-mop standing handy, twirled it so that
-the water sprayed from it in a rainbow, and brought it to the charge.
-
-Cleary slipped over the rail.
-
-“Off with you!” cried Jude.
-
-“Put down that mop!” cried Sellers, now suddenly furious. “Put down
-that mop, you braying little bitch! Go’n get inter your petticoats! You
-ain’t a boy! I never b’lieved it, not for the last six months, an’ now
-I know. You’ve give yourself away proper. Why, look at you, as round as
-a tub--you’re a wumman!”
-
-Ratcliffe looked on horrified. Jude, flushed and bright-eyed, had
-somehow revealed her sex. In her excitement she looked for a moment
-almost beautiful. Her tongue had done the rest. The smashing of the
-plates had brought the woman out of her as a conjurer brings a rabbit
-out of a hat.
-
-“Put down that mop!”
-
-Jude from rose color had turned awfully white; then with the élan and
-dash of a gamecock she charged. The wet swab hit the ruffian full in
-his flat face, and he fell on the deck with a bang.
-
-In a second he was up and scrambling over the rail. Again she charged,
-the swab meeting him this time full on his stem and sending him over
-into the boat like a bag of oats.
-
-A slush tub, fortunately half-full, and marked by her prescient mind,
-was her next weapon. The contents caught Cleary full in the face, and
-as the boat made off, the oars, all at sixes and sevens, wildly rowing,
-she pursued it with the battery of her tongue till it was out of range.
-Then she broke down and cried, sniffed, with her arm hiding her face,
-and then flushed, like a thing of shame dived below.
-
-Ratcliffe knew.
-
-Her sex proclaimed aloud by the shameless Sellers was as a garment
-stripped off her publicly. On the very first day Satan had stated her
-case and she didn’t mind, though he, Ratcliffe, had been a stranger;
-but it was different now, somehow. It was as if the end of her boyhood
-had come. Sellers would no doubt proclaim the fact in Havana.
-
-He heard voices from below.
-
-“I don’t care if I’d killed him! Wish’t I had! Lea’ me alone--for two
-cents I’d go drown myself! Look at them plates! You’ve broke the two
-blue pattern ones an’ the chaney one with the bird on it, the best we
-had, an’ not a cracked one touched! Hain’t you no sense?”
-
-“Never you mind; I’ll get you some more.”
-
-“I’m not wanting more. Them plates were mother’s--much you care! I’ve
-gone as careful as walking on eggs with them, and now they’re broke
-an’ the old Delf’ ones left. If you must be breaking and cutting
-up, couldn’t you a broke the cracked ones? An’ where’s the sense in
-breaking them anyhow?”
-
-“Waal, I reckoned it’d liven you up hearin’ the crockery goin’.”
-
-“Liven me up! Makes me believe you _have_ been getting at the rum to
-hear you talk. Where’s the sense in all your doings,--ship stinking of
-drink and all the crockery broke, and what’s the use?”
-
-“I’ll show you after dark. I tell you I want to get away from those
-thugs, and if I hadn’t headed them off pretendin’ to be drunk they’d
-have gone through me.”
-
-“Well, they’ll go through you right enough tomorrow morning.”
-
-“No, they won’t.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I’ll be gone.”
-
-“Gone! Why, first click of the windlass and they’ll be aboard us.”
-
-“You leave it to me.”
-
-“Well, I wish we’d have went before you broke them plates.”
-
-“Oh, cuss the plates!”
-
-“Easy to say that. It makes me just nacheral wild to see that old Delf’
-plate starin’ me in the face, round and sound, and the blue pattern
-ones gone.”
-
-Silence for a moment, at the end of which Satan’s head and bust
-appeared at the cabin hatch.
-
-He winked at Ratcliffe, and pointed backward with his thumb and down
-below, as if indicating the domestic trouble.
-
-“There’s no sign of them swabs comin’ off again?” asked he.
-
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “They seem to have had enough of it.”
-
-The rum bottle had broken fairly in two without splinters.
-
-“You might heave the bottle over, like a good one,” said Satan. “I
-can’t show on deck for fear of those shrimps seein’ me. It’ll be dark
-in an hour, and then I’ll be up. You can wait for your supper till we
-get away?”
-
-“Oh, yes,” said Ratcliffe; “I’m in no hurry.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-TIDE AND CURRENT
-
-
-He lit a pipe. Having disposed of the fragments of the bottle, he got
-the mop and a bucket of water and swabbed the rum-stained deck. Then he
-took his seat forward and watched the sunset.
-
-The great sun, half-shorn of his beams and bulging broad as Jupiter,
-lolled above the reef in a sky of laburnum gold fading to aquamarine.
-Gulls, dark as withered leaves, blew about him, and shifting here and
-there to north and south became gulls of gold, while the wind blowing
-up from the gulf and the westward running current, meeting the last of
-the flood, broke the sea surface into a million tiny dancing waves,
-momentary mirrors dazzling the eye with shattered light.
-
-Lone Reef seemed well named. Dawn or sunset or the blaze of full day
-could not take from its desolation, and this evening the sinister line
-of the wreck dominated everything, turning the blaze of sunset to the
-light of a funeral pyre.
-
-The _Sarah_, moving to the swell, creaked and whimpered, and now and
-then from below he could hear voices,--Jude’s voice and the voice of
-Satan. Beyond that came the murmur of the reef and the clang of the
-gulls, and now and again a snatch of Spanish song from the _Juan_.
-
-Then the sun passed below the reef, the tide began to draw out, and
-the _Sarah_, swinging to it, brought to his view the _Juan_ and the
-_Natchez_, ships of dusk in a world of dusk powdered with star dust.
-Presently a light was run up on the _Natchez_, then the _Juan_ put up
-her riding light, then Satan appeared, a dusky form, rising from the
-cabin hatch and followed by Jude.
-
-They came forward. Jude squatted on the deck, and Satan drew close to
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“Now, if them skunks had any sense in their skulls, they’d stick out
-a guard boat,” said Satan; “but I’ve fair put the hood on them, I
-b’lieve, and they’ve never saw what I was after, pretendin’ I had no
-oil for an anchor light. Why, they are only fit to be put out to nuss!
-Half an hour more and we’ll be off.”
-
-“How are you going to do it?”
-
-“Knock the shackle off the anchor chain an’ let her drift. Tide an’
-current is runnin’ four knots.”
-
-“But even without the anchor light they’ll be able to see us by the
-stars.”
-
-“Lord bless you! at this distance they won’t be able to see mor’n a
-glimpse of us. We’ll go so gradual they won’t notice. If they keep
-a lookout at all,--which they won’t, ten to one,--he’ll see us by
-believin’ we’re there.”
-
-“Lord! I’d love to see their faces in the morning!” murmured Jude.
-
-“But won’t they go for you when we get back to Havana?” asked
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“Not they,” said Satan. “They’ll say nothin’, seein’ as how they’re
-done and the laugh’s against them. Why, Cark will respect me more for
-this job than if I’d run straight with him over the biggest deal. If
-it’d been the other way about and he’d pulled the dollars off me, I’d
-have been nowhere with him. Mind you out here, if I was to stick here
-till tomorrow, they’d be aboard and maybe manhandling us if I didn’t
-bail up; but back in Havana the thing will be closed and the accounts
-wrote off.”
-
-The sound of a guitar came through the dusk, crossing the warm wind,
-the lazy, languorous wind of a perfect summer’s night. Seville, which
-he had never seen, rose before Ratcliffe, firefly-haunted orange
-groves, lovely women all skewered together by the remembered words of a
-ribald song.
-
- “When I was a student at Cadiz!”
-
-“There goes old Catguts,” said Satan. “He’s the band aboard the
-_Juan_,--Antonio, Alonzo, Alphonso--damn his name!”
-
-“It ain’t,” said Jude. “It’s that old copper-patch Cleary’s got with
-him. I’ve heard him in harbor. I gave him a plug of tobacco once for
-getting me some bait, and he showed me the thing. It’s got a crack
-in it or suthin’, and makes a noise like a skeeter in a jug,--kind
-a fizzin’ noise between the plonks. He’s got an ulster on his leg
-so’s you can see the bone. He took off the rags an’ showed me--he’s a
-Portugee.”
-
-“Well, it’s time to get busy,” said Satan. “Here, h’ist yourself and
-lend a hand!”
-
-Ratcliffe got more forward while they knocked the shackle off the
-chain. There came a splash. Then the meeting resumed.
-
-“If they heard that splash,” said Satan, “they’d put it down to a fish
-jumpin’. Now you watch them lights.”
-
-Ratcliffe watched the amber lights of the _Natchez_ and _Juan_. They
-did not seem to alter position in the least. In the first of the
-starlight and the last of the dusk the spars and hulls of the two
-vessels could just be made out.
-
-Then presently he saw that the lights had drawn a bit more aft and
-seemed closer together. The feel of the _Sarah_ was different too, she
-moved more freely to the swell.
-
-The sound of the guitar seemed slightly fainter.
-
-Now and then the beguiling sea would give the _Sarah_ a little slap, no
-louder than the slap of a girl’s hand, on the low planking as if joking
-with her over some secret shared in common.
-
-Yes, the sound of the guitar was fainter, much fainter, and the
-spars and hulls of the vessels now invisible as though they had been
-dissolved in the gloom.
-
-The anchor lights alone marked their places.
-
-“We’re all right now,” said Satan; “but I’ll give them another five
-minutes. Got the matches for the binnacle light?”
-
-“Yes,” said Jude.
-
-Five minutes passed, then they got the canvas on her, and Satan, at
-the wheel, taking his bearings from the far-off lights of the betrayed
-ones, turned the spokes.
-
-“Where are you going to sail for?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Cormorant Cay,” said Satan. “I’ve a fancy to look at that place.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-SATAN IN PARADISE
-
-
-He had divided Ratcliffe and Jude into watches, port and starboard.
-
-Jude turned in first, relieving him somewhere about two in the morning.
-At six, when Ratcliffe turned out and came on deck, he found Satan at
-the wheel, relinquished by Jude, and day pursuing the Sarah across a
-wrinkled sea of tourmaline and hinted blue. Away ahead somewhere to the
-south lay Cormorant Cay, the true tomb, if the chart indications were
-correct, of the _Nombre de Dios_.
-
-A strong sailing wind was blowing, and Satan gave their speed at seven
-knots. He refused to hand over the wheel.
-
-“I’ve had a snooze on deck,” said he, “while the kid took charge. We’re
-nearly sixty miles south of Lone, and if this wind holds will be on to
-Cormorant somewhere about eight bells.”
-
-“Not a sign of those chaps,” said Ratcliffe, looking back over the sea,
-clear of Cleary and Sellers and their dirty crowd.
-
-“Naw; they’ll be just about rousin’ up now and rubbin’ their eyes.”
-
-“You don’t think they’ll try to follow us?”
-
-“Not likely, I don’t think. They’re wastin’ time and money if they
-cruise after us. Cark’s got his business in Havana to attend to, and
-Cleary’s the same. What’s gettin’ me is the fac’ that Sellers has
-spotted the kid for what she is. It’ll be all over Havana, and she
-knows it.”
-
-“Well, it had to come out some time.”
-
-“Maybe.”
-
-“Look here, Satan!” said Ratcliffe. “I’ve been thinking a lot about the
-girl and what’s to become of her. She can’t go on as she is. We must
-fix up something.”
-
-“That’s easy said.”
-
-“Well, I’ve grown fonder of her than any person I’ve ever met, that’s
-the truth. There’s no one like her; she’s gold right through.”
-
-“She ain’t bad.”
-
-“This sort of thing was all right when she was a child,” went on
-Ratcliffe; “but she’s growing out of that. Why, even in the little time
-since I’ve come aboard, she seems different, somehow.”
-
-“Well, if you ask me,” said Satan, “you seem to have made a change in
-her. She’s brightened up, somehow, has more sass in her. Y’see, when
-we were cruisin’ round since Pap died, me, she, and the nigger, there
-wasn’t much company, and she was gettin’ a bit down-hearted. Then, when
-you came aboard, she picked up. She hadn’t laughed for weeks till she
-saw you in that pajama rig; then she chummed onto you.”
-
-“She did.”
-
-“Liked you from the first minute she saw you. There’s no two ways
-about Jude,--it’s either like or the other thing, right off.”
-
-“Well, I’m pretty much the same--and I don’t want to lose sight of
-her--or you.”
-
-“How’d you mean?”
-
-“Oh, just that. I’m bothering about when this cruise is over. That’s
-bothering me a lot. Well, we’ll leave it at that for the present.”
-
-Satan turned his lantern face to starboard for half a moment to
-expectorate right over the starboard rail--maybe also to hide a grin.
-
-“I reckon it’ll come all right somehow,” said he. “We ain’t much in
-the world, but we’re straight. Reckon you’re straight too. That’s all
-I want. That feller Thelusson, y’remember I told you he wanted to come
-for a cruise with us. Well, he was straight enough s’far as dollars
-went, but I wouldn’t have had him on this ship, not if he’d paid me
-a dollar a minute and a bonus for every knot we made--not with Jude
-aboard--Here’s the wheel for a sec’, if you’ll take it whiles I get
-some coffee ready.”
-
-Toward noon a wreath of gulls in the sky showed Cormorant.
-
-Jude was at the wheel, Satan forward on the lookout.
-
-Twenty minutes later Satan came running aft, fetched the old glass out
-of its sling, and went forward with it.
-
-“There’s a hooker on the sands!” cried he. “Looks like a small fruiter
-or suthin’ hove up.”
-
-Ratcliffe, standing beside him, could see nothing,--the sand, owing
-to their low level, was invisible from the deck of the _Sarah_,--then,
-straining his eyes, he made out a speck on the sea-line.
-
-“Mast’s gone,” said Satan, “white painted, not more’n fifty ton, and
-she’s layin’ in the lagoon. She must have come in over the sand where
-it narrows to the westward. There’s a pinch of sand there that’s near
-under water at flood, and the seas come right over it in an east’ard
-gale.”
-
-He handed the glass to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Funny,” said Ratcliffe, “if you were right about the _Nombre de Dios_
-being sunk here and we come to have a look for her and find another
-wreck.”
-
-“Well, I don’t take no shares in the _Nombre de Dios_,” said Satan.
-“I ran here more for somewhere to run to than with any thought of the
-_Nombre_. She’s a hundred foot under the sand if she’s here at all; but
-it’s luck all the same. There’ll be pickin’s. There was a big blow two
-weeks ago from the east,--that’s what’s done her,--and the salvage men
-won’t be here yet, if they ever come.”
-
-He stuck the glass to his eye.
-
-“She’s a yacht, that’s what she is, one of them small cruisers, not
-more’n fifty or sixty, and her fittin’s will just do for us, if she’s
-not been stripped. There’s all sorts of folks come from New York and
-Philadelphia and N’ y’Orleans, cruisin’ about these seas in tubs like
-that,--fishin’ mostly.”
-
-The _Sarah_ held on, almost due south, with the daring of a sea-bird,
-Satan giving directions to the steersman and seeming absolutely
-regardless of the death and dangers around them,--reefs that they
-shaved, rocks that waved fathom-long ribbons of fuci a few feet under
-water,--he avoided them all.
-
-South, east, and west Cormorant Cay is devoid of danger. Only here to
-the north do the reefs and rocks show, and it is just here that the
-only entrance to the lagoon lies.
-
-The place consists really of two sandspits widely separated to the
-north so as to form a pondlike harbor running from five to ten fathoms
-deep. Farther south the sandspits join so as to form a wide street,
-like the spit to eastward of Lone Reef.
-
-They held on. The sound of the gentle surf on the sands came now, and a
-full view of the lagoon water reflecting the sun blaze like a mirror.
-
-On the still lagoon, with strange stereoscopic effect seen between the
-two sand-arms holding off the wrinkled sea, lay the craft, floating on
-an even keel, and showing a stump of mainmast against the skyline. From
-her lines she had been a yacht.
-
-“Why, Go’ bless my soul, she’s anchored!” cried Satan. “Derelic’ and
-anchored. The people must have got away in a boat or suthin’. There’s
-not a sign of them. Port--hard--port--as you were--steady--so!”
-
-He ran to let go the halyards.
-
-Another anchor had been bent on to some spare chain. It was heaved
-over, and the _Sarah_ came up to it, swinging less than fifty yards
-from the stranger. She was a picture, a forty-ton fishing yawl, white
-painted, gracile as a fish, dismasted, abandoned, and swinging to a
-taut anchor chain; beyond her and the emerald of the lagoon lay the
-great stretch of sands, running due south, blanketing to the heat and
-showing ponds of aquamarine and storms of gulls.
-
-The anchor down, Satan stood with his eyes fixed on his prey; Jude
-too. They seemed considering her as a butcher might consider a carcass
-before he cut it up.
-
-“Aren’t you going to board her?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Have you ever seen a dead b’ar?” asked Satan. “Sometimes a b’ar isn’t
-as dead as he looks, and sometimes a derelic’ isn’t as empty as it
-looks. It’s a common thing for men on the Florida coast to hide in a
-driftin’ canoe and rise up and laugh at them that come out to collect
-it. I can’t make out that anchor chain bein’ down, and I’ll just give
-them one hour whiles we have dinner.”
-
-When they came on deck again after the meal, they dropped the dinghy,
-and the three of them put off for the derelict.
-
-She must have been dismasted outside the sands, for not a spar lay in
-the water alongside,--dismasted and driven over by a big wave, her crew
-clinging to her. On the bow was her name, _Haliotis_. They tied up and
-scrambled on board. The deck ran flush fore and aft. The wheel looked
-all right, but was jammed and immovable; the binnacle glass was smashed.
-
-Satan stood, whistling and looking about him. Then he dived below,
-followed by the others. The cabin had been left in good order. It was a
-bit over-gilded and decorated for a plain man’s taste, but everything
-was of the best, and a hanging lamp of solid brass still swung over
-the center-table. The walls were of bird’s-eye maple, the cushions of
-the best blue cloth, and the fittings of the tiny sleeping cabins to
-match.
-
-There was plenty of stuff lying about,--books, clothes, boots. The
-people had evidently put off in a hurry, not caring much what they took
-as long as they got away. Perhaps they had taken advantage of a passing
-steamer.
-
-Ratcliffe picked up a book, a volume of O. Henry. There was a name in
-it,--J. Seligmann.
-
-Jude, delving in the starboard after-cabin, came out holding up
-something. It was a pair of boots, women’s, patent leather with white
-suede tops and heels three inches high.
-
-“Look at them things!” said Jude with a burst of suppressed laughter.
-
-“A girl’s boots,” said Ratcliffe. “Try them on, Jude.”
-
-“If I wore them things,” said Jude, “I’d have to walk on my hands.
-There’s dead loads more of stuff, and the place smells as if a polecat
-had been living there.”
-
-Ratcliffe stuck his head into the little cabin. It reeked of California
-poppy as though a bottle of it had been upset, California poppy and
-cosmetic scents. Clothes were lying about in disorder; a woman’s white
-yachting cap, deck shoes, lingerie, bursting like froth out of a cabin
-trunk, gave added touch to the hysterical distraction of the scene.
-
-One could see her, the woman, rushing about saving or collecting her
-valuables, leaving everything else, and calling on the gods to witness
-that she would never set foot again on another small yacht for a
-pleasure cruise among the islands.
-
-Jude picked out a frilled garment from the lingerie box, looked at
-it, rolled it up, and cast it with a chuckle into the bunk, then she
-reached up and opened the little port.
-
-Ratcliffe left her pursuing her investigations, attracted by the whoops
-of Satan, who seemed pursuing things about the deck.
-
-Satan, with his hair wild and his eyes ablaze, had rapidly sampled his
-treasure. Everything he wanted had been left. Had he found the _Nombre
-de Dios_ with gold to her hatches, it is doubtful if his excitement
-would have been so intense.
-
-“Look at that!” cried he, pointing to the mast winch. “Wantin’
-it--should think I had been! Come along and see!” He led the way
-to a heap of raffle and broken spars forward. “Look at them gaff
-jaws, galvanized an’ covered with hide, and me with old wooden ones
-creakin’ like an old shoe! There’s a mainsheet buffer too! Camper
-Nicholson’s--rubber--cringles--come along to the sail room!”
-
-They went to the sail room, then to the galley,--everywhere finds,
-glorious finds, with this rough sum total:
-
-In the sail room, sixty fathoms of new manila rope, an eighty-foot
-otter trawl, harpoons and grains and a seine net, a trysail, square
-sails, two jibs; in the galley, cooking gear, an Atkey cooking stove
-to burn coal or coke; in addition to all this some splendid blocks
-with patent sheaves with ball bearings which run so much better than
-dummies, a lower mainsheet block and two quarter-blocks, fathoms of
-galvanized chain, and two Nicholson’s patent anchors. Other things
-included lamps, a pair of binoculars, a sextant and a chronometer,
-charts, and lastly, glorious but useless, in a little engine room
-the auxiliary, a 13-15 horse-power petrol-paraffin Kelvin engine,
-two-cylinder, with the shaft running out through the quarter, and a
-spare Bergius propeller, which shuts up and opens out automatically
-when in motion.
-
-When they came on deck again after a rapid glance at these things a
-brain-wave came to Ratcliffe.
-
-“Look here!” said he. “Why not tow her back to Havana and claim
-salvage? She’s worth a lot and she’s derelict.”
-
-“Not me,” said Satan. “Have you ever claimed salvage? First there’s
-the tow, and we’re underhanded. Then there’s the lawyers. What’s to
-stop this Seligmann whoever he is poppin’ up an’ swearin’ against me.
-He’d say he left her with the anchor down in harbor; it amounts to
-that, though she’s derelic’ right enough. Not me! I’ll take what I want
-without no lawyers to help me. She’s my meat, by all the laws of the
-sea, and that’s the end of it.”
-
-Appeared Jude from the cabin hatch, carrying as a trophy a go-ashore
-hat she had unearthed from somewhere, a crushed-strawberry-colored
-straw hat--or was it a bonnet? It had long strings and a rose stuck on
-one side of it.
-
-“Look what that catawampus has left behind her!” cried Jude.
-
-“Quit your foolin’,” cried Satan, “and come along and lend a hand.
-Here, h’ist these things into the dinghy!”
-
-Jude flung the hat down the open skylight, and the rank burglary of the
-_Haliotis_ began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX
-
-A SECRET OF THE SAND
-
-
-It seemed to Ratcliffe in the days that followed that he had never
-known what work meant before. That he, a wealthy and respected member
-of the British upper, upper-middle classes, an ex-Christ Churchman, and
-a member of Boodles, was assisting Satan Tyler in “tearing the tripes”
-out of another man’s yacht, also occurred to him sometimes as a fact, a
-distorted sort of fact, blurred and dimmed by the blazing and brilliant
-atmosphere in which they were working, the absolute and shocking
-loneliness that hemmed them in, Satan’s personality, and Jude’s
-companionship.
-
-By all the laws of the sea, according to Satan, these things were the
-property of the first finder. That was all very well according to
-Satan, and indeed according to what seemed common-sense; still, sea
-law was for all he could tell not quite the same thing as the laws of
-the sea, according to Satan. Though belonging to a great ship-owning
-family, he knew nothing of the rights of the matter; but the business
-they were engaged on seemed to him sometimes, when he cared to
-think, most tremendously like larceny,--larceny excused by a lot of
-considerations and made picturesque by environment; still, a business
-that in the unpicturesque surroundings of the London Sessions would
-undoubtedly have appealed to a judge in the voice of Larceny.
-
-Sometimes he imagined a warship, one of those prying, officious little
-cruisers that do police work, closing up with the cay and sending a
-boat into the lagoon.
-
-Sometimes he fell to wondering what Seligmann was like,--an American
-surely, one of the Gulf haunters, belonging, most probably, to one of
-the numerous clubs on the Florida coast, and Mrs. Seligmann--or was it
-Miss--or not even that?
-
-One thing was certain, Seligmann was rich. They were not robbing a poor
-man.
-
-At the end of the third day Jude gave out, not from weariness, but from
-distaste.
-
-“Lord! haven’t you had enough of this old truck?” said Jude. “I don’t
-feel’s if I ever wanted to see a len’th of rope nor a cringle again.”
-
-Ratcliffe felt pretty much the same.
-
-“I’ll finish the business myself,” said Satan. “You can knock off if
-you like. Go’n hunt for turkles’ eggs.”
-
-“I’m going,” said Jude.
-
-“I’ll come along, too,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-Satan ferried them over to the sands. It was about two hours before
-sundown, and an easterly breeze was blowing fresh and cool, shivering
-up the lagoon water and whispering among the sand-grains.
-
-Jude walked despondently as they trudged along close to the sea edge
-and discovering nothing.
-
-“D’you know,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve never even started to hunt for a
-sign of the _Nombre de Dios_? I wonder if she’s sunk, really, anywhere
-near here?”
-
-“I dunno,” said Jude; “don’t care, nuther. Satan’s so full of his pesky
-old fittings he’s no time to think of anything else.”
-
-“Cheer up, Jude.”
-
-“I’m all right.”
-
-“No, you’re not. What’s wrong?”
-
-“Lots of things.”
-
-“When we get back to Havana--” began Ratcliffe. She cut him short.
-
-“I don’t want to go back to Havana,” said she. “Ain’t going.”
-
-She sat down on the sands plump, nursed her knees, and stared over the
-sea, casting her hat beside her. He stood for a moment, then he sat
-down. He knew at once, knew what had been working in her mind for days.
-
-“You’re bothering about what Sellers said, dirty scoundrel! I’d have
-punched his head, only the whole thing happened so quick and you landed
-him with that mop--don’t worry.”
-
-No reply.
-
-“What’s the good?” went on Ratcliffe; then cautiously and feeling that
-he was treading on dangerous ground, “See here, there’s no harm in
-being a girl, no more than there is in being a man.”
-
-No reply.
-
-A laughing gull passed and jeered at them. Jude followed it with her
-eyes. She seemed almost unconscious of his presence and not to have
-heard his words. He watched her profile against the sky, noticed the
-eyelashes which seemed longer and more carved up than ever, the nice
-shape of the head, free of the old panama.
-
-Then she turned, leaned on her elbow, and looked up at him--then she
-looked down.
-
-“What made you think I was botherin’ about Sellers?” asked Jude.
-
-“I don’t know,” said Ratcliffe, “I just thought it. I’ve been thinking
-a lot about you--I care for you a lot, that’s about it.”
-
-She looked up at him again, full in the eyes, and with a new expression
-he had never seen before, a puzzled, half-startled look, like that of a
-person suddenly awakened in strange surroundings.
-
-Then her eyes fell away from him.
-
-She took a handful of sand and let the grains fall between her fingers.
-
-“Just that,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-She was still playing with the sand, letting it fall between her
-fingers carefully as though trying to count the grains. Then she threw
-the stuff away, brushed the palm of her hand clean, and sat up. Drawing
-a little closer to her, he put his hand round her waist, just as he had
-done when they were on the sandspit, and just as on the sandspit, she
-let it rest there--for a moment. Then, with a queer little laugh, she
-removed the hand and struggled to her feet.
-
-He rose up and they went on, without a word. Then presently they
-began to talk about indifferent matters almost as though nothing had
-occurred.
-
-They found a nest of turtles’ eggs, and Jude marked it; farther along
-they came upon something strange, a sort of platform half-covered with
-sand. Jude said it was the foretop of a ship sunk and sanded over.
-
-“It’s the _Nombre de Dios_, maybe,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Maybe,” said Jude. “It’s the foretop of an old ship, anyhow. See,
-where the mast’s broke off--she’s thirty or forty foot under that.”
-
-“Not much good to us, even if she is the _Nombre de Dios_.”
-
-“Not much.”
-
-The gulls seemed to agree, and the little waves, falling crystal clear
-on the beach.
-
-It was near the end of the spit just here, and the sands shelved out,
-losing themselves in the immeasurable loneliness of the sea stretching
-to Mariguana and the Caicos and the northern shoulder of South America.
-
-Jude, on her knees with a bit of driftwood, was scraping away the sand
-from the edge of the sunk foretop, when something caught her eye.
-
-A turtle had landed where they had marked the eggs. It was so far away
-that it did not look bigger than a threepenny bit.
-
-She flung the bit of driftwood away, rose to her feet, and started
-running, taking the extreme sea-edge where the sand was hard. Ratcliffe
-followed. They were half a minute too late, the turtle turning back to
-the sea and leaving them spent and laughing. She got down on her knees
-and hived the eggs in her hat still laughing. He helped, filling his
-hat and his pockets, and then they started for the lagoon edge, Jude
-suddenly in the wildest spirits. He had never seen her in such high,
-good spirits. When they got aboard it was just the same. Even Satan’s
-maniacal passion for old junk, expressed at supper in the determination
-to spend two more days picking and scraping at the _Haliotis_, did not
-depress her, it only made her laugh.
-
-“You’ll be cryin’ before you’ve done if you go on laughin’ like that,”
-said Satan. “What’s possessed you eh?”
-
-Sure enough she was. The words acted like a pin on a bubble.
-
-She flushed, pushed her plate away, half rose, and then sat down again.
-
-“You’re always going on at me! Whatch’a want me to do? If I’m crying,
-I ought to be laughin’, an’ if I’m laughin’ I ought to be crying! I’ll
-laugh as much as I want--”
-
-Then, logically, she broke into violent tears, rose, and ran on deck.
-
-“What the hell-nation’s the matter with her?” asked Satan.
-
-“I don’t know,” replied Ratcliffe.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI
-
-THE GO-ASHORE HAT
-
-
-He had time to think over the matter as he lay in his bunk that night.
-
-He fell to wondering, among other things, what the spell was that drew
-him toward Jude and held him.
-
-Was it the indefinable attractive quality that had made her mother a
-“nacheral calamity” where men were concerned, or just the power of
-youth? Scarcely the latter. He had met lots of youth in his time, and
-it had not attracted him much; besides, when you have only to look into
-the looking-glass to see youth, it is at a discount.
-
-Puzzling over the matter, he came to the bedrock fact that Jude, in
-some extraordinary way, had the power to make him feel more alive than
-he had ever felt before.
-
-Leaving other things aside, there were an honesty, faithfulness, and
-simplicity about Jude that removed her from the category of bifurcated
-beings and raised her to the level of a dog.
-
-Instinct told him that this compound quality was worth more than all
-the gold lying under the hatches of the _Nombre de Dios_, more than
-all the diamonds in the Rand, when combined with that other quality
-speaking in her level gaze,--steadfastness, the something that would
-make her keep the wheel in all weathers.
-
-But these excellencies would have been nothing without the
-impossibilities with which they were allied,--social and conventual
-impossibilities. The one reacted on the other, making an irresistible
-whole combined with the something else that was Jude.
-
-He remembered the queer little laugh with which she had freed herself
-from his hand round her waist--then he fell asleep and dreamt that he
-and Jude and a lot of larrikins were lying in wait by a harbor blue as
-the sea off Jamaica, to clod bathing nigger girls; then he was chasing
-Jude round and round a tree, only to catch her and find that she was
-Carquinez.
-
-When he got on deck next morning he found the ship deserted. The others
-were away on the sandbank, and he amused himself by fishing till they
-returned.
-
-Jude showed no traces of the tears of the last night, and Satan was
-elated. He had been examining the wreck-wood, and his experienced eye
-backed the declaration of Jude. It was the foretop of a ship, right
-enough, and, a hundred to one, so he declared, the foretop of the
-_Nombre_.
-
-Ratcliffe, wondering vaguely why he seemed so pleased over the find,
-considering the sand conditions, asked him the chances of raising her.
-Then said Satan, seeming to turn his gaze inward upon his awful and
-profound knowledge of the sea and its ways:
-
-“If you was to get all the dridgers from H’vana to Pensacola and
-dridged till your eyes bugged out o’ your head an’ your tongue hanged
-down to your heels, you wouldn’t clear her--siltin’--but she’s a sure
-enough mug trap.”
-
-“How do you mean?”
-
-“Why, with that story and that chart an’ that old foretop, I could set
-half Havana diggin’ like dogs for a bone, to say nothin’ of private
-parties an’ syndikits an’ such things--maybe I will, too, some day.”
-
-They put out after breakfast for the _Haliotis_ and another load of
-“old junk.” Satan rowed back with it, leaving Jude and Ratcliffe on
-board,--Ratcliffe collecting things forward, and Jude grubbing about in
-the saloon.
-
-Having collected the odds and ends in a heap, he turned his eyes to the
-_Sarah_. Satan, having tied up the dinghy, was busy transhipping his
-plunder. Then the beauty of the morning sea flooding into the lagoon,
-held him for a moment. He followed the gulls in their flight, noted
-the sudden break from emerald to ultramarine deepening to purple,
-and beyond the reefs the sudden glitter of a leaping fish. Then he
-remembered Jude down below.
-
-He came to the companionway and down the stairs.
-
-The cabin was brilliant with sunlight, with water reflections through
-the open portholes playing on the ceiling and polished maple and
-venesta of the walls. Across a pile of truck and bunk bedding heaped on
-the table he caught a glimpse of the upper part of Jude.
-
-Jude, fancying herself entirely alone, and yielding to some prompting
-or other, had picked up the despised go-ashore hat and put it on;
-she was looking at herself in the mirror fixed to the after bulkhead.
-She was looking at herself with her head now straight and now tilted
-slightly to one side; then the head turned, but she did not see
-Ratcliffe: her eyes were still fixed on the hat, she was looking at it
-sidewise.
-
-All her unconscious movements might have been those of a lady in a
-milliner’s shop trying on a hat in a critical spirit.
-
-She had not heard him coming down the companionway, owing to the fact
-that he was in his bare feet, and she did not hear him go up again.
-
-On deck he took his seat on an old box upended close to the
-mainmast stump, and considered the thing he had just witnessed in a
-philosophical spirit.
-
-It was like seeing a chrysalis crack and a butterfly’s wing protruding.
-
-If Jude had not been admiring herself in that hat, then sight was a
-liar and its evidence worthless. But Jude was as honest as the day.
-She had greeted the thing with derision, brought it on deck to show
-as an object of mirth, and flung it down the skylight opening with
-contempt--yesterday morning.
-
-What had happened since then to make her consider the thing at all, let
-alone wear it before a looking-glass?
-
-Had she put it on in derision and to see what a guy she looked? Not a
-bit! She had made friends with that hat! Those few movements of the
-head spoke of consideration not derision, in a language old as the
-earliest feather headdress and more universal than Esperanto.
-
-Then he remembered last evening on the sandspit and her sudden passage
-from despondency to high spirits; he remembered her queer little laugh
-as she removed his hand from round her waist,--had that been the sound
-of the rift coming in the chrysalis casing?
-
-For a moment he almost yielded to the desire to go below and see if the
-butterfly had really arrived. Then he checked himself. There was time,
-plenty of time; besides, Satan was putting off again in the dinghy for
-another load.
-
-Satan, over this business, like a man in drink or a lunatic, had his
-hot fits and cold fits. A hot fit had suddenly come on him.
-
-The petrol-paraffin engine had begun suddenly to shout to him that
-it must be taken. A glorious idea, too, had evolved itself in his
-brain,--why not fit it to the _Sarah_; not there in the lagoon,
-of course, but in some port? All that was required would be some
-structural alterations and a shaft-hole in the quarter; he reckoned the
-fitting would cost under three hundred dollars.
-
-He didn’t want the thing, really,--masts and sails were good enough for
-his pottering-about work,--it was the passion of a woman for jewelry.
-The _Sarah_ would be a nobbier boat with an auxiliary,--sea swank,
-purely, exhibiting the only apparent weak spot in his character.
-
-That spare Bergius propeller had begun revolving in his mind days
-ago,--“thrud--thrud--thrud! See me drive the _Sarah_, see me drive the
-_Sarah_!” He had examined the propeller already attached and found the
-blades all broken. The shaft was intact, and, beaching the _Haliotis_
-stern on in that quiet lagoon, it would have been possible to fit on
-the spare one and take her off unmasted, as she was under her own
-motive power.
-
-He had a vague notion of the structure of engines and Yankee ingenuity
-enough to have driven her, but the fact of her anchor being down, as
-before stated, and the fact that he had already “torn the tripes” out
-of her plundered the sail room and the store room, removed brasswork
-that would have taken weeks to replace, and generally left her like a
-scooped cheese, prevented an idea of salvage.
-
-Taking the _Haliotis_ into port he would have to declare her like a
-box of cigars,--a box of cigars belonging to another man and half the
-cigars gone.
-
-Coming over the rail, Ratcliffe saw the new light in his eye and
-wondered what it portended.
-
-“I’ve been thinkin’,” said Satan, taking his stand by the mast stump
-and surveying the heap of stuff collected by the other, “I’ve been
-thinkin’ it’s tomfoolery to leave that engine.”
-
-Jude, brought up by the sound of the dinghy coming alongside, appeared
-at the saloon companionway. She wore no hat.
-
-“Good Lord!” said Ratcliffe, aghast. “You don’t mean to say--but it’s
-impossible. We haven’t the means to take it.”
-
-“There’s enough of the mast left to rig a tackle to,” said Satan, “and
-that hatch leads right down to the engine place. The heavy fittin’s are
-easy raised from the bed-plates, and they’re not too heavy to go in
-the dinghy. We can tow her with the c’lapsible.”
-
-“But what can you do with the thing?”
-
-“Fit her to the _Sarah_, of course.”
-
-“Here, in the lagoon?” asked the horrified Ratcliffe.
-
-“Well, I wouldn’t mind if I had the hands and the tools for the job,”
-replied Satan. “Naw, it’s beyont me. I’ll have to take her to a port to
-have it done,--not Havana, neither: there’s too many eyes in Havana and
-people that know my business. Vera Cruz is the place. I know a Spanish
-yard there’ll do the job.”
-
-“The year after next,” put in Jude, “supposing you do manage to get
-it aboard, you know what the dagoes are, and you’ll knock the inside
-of the _Sarah_ to flinders. She won’t be the same boat with that old
-traction injin in her--I wish we’d never struck this cay!”
-
-She sat down on the combing of the skylight and folded her hands.
-Ratcliffe had never seen her do that before. He stood torn between two
-things,--the desire to please Satan and the desire to please Jude.
-Pulling on the side of Jude there was also the sure foreknowledge of
-the heavy work that would be required. That did not frighten him; but
-it did seem to him that they had done enough and ought to be satisfied.
-It was like burglars going for the kitchen boiler after having removed
-the plate, furniture, and very bed-linen of a house.
-
-All the same he could not but admire Satan. Time was pressing, it was
-quite possible that a salvage boat might poke her nose into the lagoon
-at any moment. Satan knew this as well as he, yet it did not move him.
-
-“It’s not a dago yard,” said Satan, evading the traction engine dig,
-“it’s French, and I’ve been wanting an auxiliary for years. Pap was
-with me, only he was awful slow over business, and here’s one for nix.
-I’m goin’ down to have a look at her.”
-
-He dived below.
-
-Jude sat brooding.
-
-“Never mind,” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not a big engine, and he and I will
-be able to do it with a tackle. I’m not going to let him put you to
-work on it.”
-
-“I’m not bothering about that,” said Jude fatefully. “It’s when it’s
-fixed up I’m thinking of.”
-
-“How?”
-
-“He’ll make me drive the durned thing.”
-
-“No, he won’t.”
-
-“What’s to stop him?”
-
-“Oh, lots of things--leave it to me.”
-
-He was cut short by Satan’s voice calling him to come below. Down below
-he had to follow all sorts of details pointed out, details proving the
-desirability of the prize and the miraculous ease of its removal.
-
-Then they came on deck and put off for dinner. But Satan was never
-destined to lift that engine. Fate had fixed it to its bed-plates more
-securely than screws and nuts could hold it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII
-
-CLEARY!
-
-
-Dinner was over and Jude had run up on deck. Suddenly her voice came
-down through the open skylight.
-
-“Below there! Cleary’s coming!”
-
-Satan jumped from his place like a man shot. Next moment he was on
-deck. Jude pointed and handed him the binoculars she had been using.
-
-“That’s them!” said Satan, after a long look. “Cuss the swabs!”
-
-He handed the glasses to Ratcliffe.
-
-Away to the north two sails cut the sea-line. With the aid of the
-glasses two vessels leaped into view,--a topsail schooner and a smaller
-vessel of fore-and-aft rig. Even with the glasses he could not have
-been sure that these were the _Natchez_ and the _Juan_ like a pair of
-evil dogs hunting in company; but Satan was sure, so was Jude.
-
-“They’re coming dead for the cay,” said Jude. Satan said nothing.
-
-He had been filling his pipe when the hail came, he lit it now, walked
-to the starboard rail to be alone, and stood with his eyes fixed on the
-_Haliotis_.
-
-The position was as bad as could be. First of all, these ruffians would
-be sure to make him bail up even more than he had had out of them;
-secondly, they would have the laugh at him and post him as a mug all
-over Havana; thirdly, they would give him away about the _Haliotis_, if
-they discovered how he had plundered her.
-
-Having smoked for a moment in silence, he turned to his companions.
-
-It was a boast of Satan’s that he had never lost a spar, a fact partly
-due to luck, partly to his foreseeing eye; like a good general, he had
-plans for all eventualities.
-
-“They won’t be in the lagoon for a couple of hours,” said he, “with
-this wind and all. Come on aboard the old tub.”
-
-“What are you going to do?” asked Jude. “Sink her at her moorings?”
-
-“No time; besides, they’d see her on the lagoon floor. It’s up anchor
-and let her drift on the sands.”
-
-“What’s the good of that?”
-
-“Oh, Lord! Don’t stand jibberin’! I’ve got my plan. Into the dinghy
-with you!”
-
-They rowed over to the _Haliotis_.
-
-The one thing that Satan had not coveted was, mercifully, the winch;
-it was of the type of the West Country winch, and not a spot on Pap’s
-patent, at least in Satan’s eyes.
-
-They set to, got the anchor in, secured it, and rowed back to the
-_Sarah_. Then they watched the _Haliotis_ drift. The tide was going
-out. She was close to the eastern arm of the spit, and that arm had a
-bead in it toward the narrowing entry.
-
-Satan reckoned she would take the sand a hundred yards or so from the
-entry, and he reckoned right.
-
-But they had no time to watch her. The deck of the _Sarah_ was lumbered
-with stuff that bad to be stowed out of sight. It took an hour before
-everything was shipshape and snug, and by that time the oncomers were
-close in, their sails big bellied with the wind, beating up for the
-entrance.
-
-They came through, the _Juan_ leading, the _Natchez_ some two cable
-lengths behind; then, with canvas threshing and the gulls yelling
-round them, they dropped their anchors, the _Juan_ to starboard of the
-_Sarah_ and the _Natchez_ farther up the lagoon. Ratcliffe had expected
-demonstrations of hostility: there were none.
-
-They could see Sellers directing the fellows forward, and they could
-make out Cleary on the deck of the _Natchez_. Then they saw Sellers
-drop below, and through the binoculars they could see Cleary as though
-he were only a few yards off,--he was smoking and giving orders to the
-hands. Then he came and spat over the rail and stood looking toward the
-_Sarah_ with his eyes shaded; having finished this inspection, he too
-dropped below.
-
-“I’d a sight sooner they’d shook their fists at us,” said Satan. “They
-know they’ve got us, sure.”
-
-Then Sellers reappeared on the deck, and the _Juan_ dropped a boat.
-
-“Here he is,” said Jude, “and whether he’s got us or whether he
-hasn’t, he ain’t coming aboard this ship!”
-
-She ran forward and fetched the mop from the hole where it was stowed.
-
-“Let up!” said Satan. “I don’t want no fightin’: I tell you, I’ve got a
-plan; I don’t want no mops in it.”
-
-“He ain’t coming aboard,” said Jude.
-
-As the boat of the _Juan_ came alongside, Sellers, in the sternsheets,
-raised his hand in a lordly fashion and slightly, as befitted a
-superior taking notice of an inferior.
-
-“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers as the bow oar hooked on.
-
-“Hullo, yourself!” replied Satan. “What you doin’ down here away?”
-
-“Tell you when I get aboard,” said Sellers. “Why, there’s the kid!
-Hullo, Kid!”
-
-“Claws off!” cried Jude. “You try to come aboard and I’ll land you with
-this mop! You can talk from the boat.”
-
-Sellers sat down again in the sternsheets.
-
-“She won’t let you aboard,” said Satan, speaking as though Jude were
-not present. “You shouldn’t have sassed her the way you did over there
-at Lone.”
-
-“I’m sure I beg your pardon,” said Sellers. “I’m trooly sorry to have
-trod on a female’s sussuptibilities; but what I’m wishin’ to say is
-this, and it’s as easy said from here as on deck: You’ve got to come
-aboard the _Juan_, you and that thousand dollars you’ve had from Cark,
-to say nothin’ of the coin you’ve had from Cleary, an’ be tried by C’t
-Martial, an’ take your sentence. If you don’t, I’ll board you, me
-and Cleary, an’ go through your ship, an’ fling the lot of you in the
-lagoon--d’you take me? I’m not funnin’.”
-
-“I’ll come,” said Satan. “I want to have a talk with Cark anyhow.”
-
-“And he wants to have a talk with you.”
-
-“Right. Off you go, and I’ll follow.”
-
-“Swab!” said Jude, “are you going to pay them that thousand dollars
-back? I’d sooner chuck it in the lagoon!”
-
-“I’d pay a thousand dollars to see Cark done in the eye,” replied
-Satan. “Where’s the damage? I’ve hived more than two thousand dollars’
-worth of stuff off that blistered derelic’. You leave them cusses to
-me.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII
-
-THE FIGHT
-
-
-As they watched Sellers pulling back they saw the _Juan_ drop a boat.
-
-“Hullo!” said Satan.
-
-He put the glass to his eye.
-
-“Cark’s coming off. He’s in the sternsheets, him and his patch--what’s
-up now?”
-
-The two boats approached one another, and then hung together, evidently
-in consultation. Then the oars took the water and they approached the
-_Sarah_, Sellers leading. Satan, who had found a piece of chewing-gum
-in his pocket, put it into his mouth and began to chew, leisurely, like
-a cow on her cud, while he watched the approaching boats.
-
-“What you want?” shouted Satan when they were in speaking distance.
-
-“Cark says you’re to come aboard right now,” replied Sellers. “You’ve
-played him one trick, and he don’t want you to play him another.”
-
-“Oh, don’t he?”
-
-“No, he don’t.”
-
-Satan spat into the water alongside and leaned comfortably on the rail.
-Carquinez was as close to the _Sarah_ as Sellers, yet he spoke no
-word, leaving his deputy to do the talking, and contenting himself with
-making occasional birdlike noises.
-
-“Well,” said Satan, ruffled, for all his appearances of calm, “you can
-tell him I’ll come when I want to, and that won’t be before tomorrow
-morning, for his damn cheek! Ahoy there, Cark! Ain’t you got a tongue
-in your head?”
-
-“He’s like a blessed canary bird,” cut in Jude. “Hi, there, Sellers!
-what you done with the cage?”
-
-“Is that your ultermatum?” demanded Sellers, ignoring Jude and
-addressing Satan.
-
-“My which matum?”
-
-“Is that all you gotta say?”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no!” said Satan.
-
-“Well, then, out with it!”
-
-Ratcliffe had never seen Satan “het up” till now, as, straightening
-himself and gripping the rail, he let out:
-
-“Gotta say? Why, if I’m sayin’ from now to the end o’ next week, I
-couldn’t say the beginnin’ of my opinion of you, right from the truck
-of Cleary’s old cod boat to the keel o’ that old disgrace you ripped
-of her guts when she was a yacht--you an’ your crew of cockroaches an’
-dagoes--right from the soles of Cleary’s flat feet to the end of your
-bottle nose--you and your ultermatum!
-
-“That’s all. I haven’t time to be wastin’ on you. I’ll come if I have a
-mind to and when I want, without waitin’ for your orders--now scatter
-yourselves!”
-
-“Right,” said Sellers.
-
-He gave an order to the boat’s crew, and the boat turned, and, followed
-by Carquinez, made back to the _Juan_.
-
-Satan, his hand on the rail, watched them, still chewing.
-
-Not a word spoke he, the bulge in his cheek steadfast against the
-skyline and his eyes fixed on the boats.
-
-Then he suddenly turned.
-
-“Them thugs will try to board us now,” said Satan. “We’ve gotta fight.
-There’s Cleary puttin’ off, and we’ll have the whole Noah’s ark on us
-in two ticks. We’ve gotta get the ammunition ready.”
-
-“There are guns down below,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Guns!” said Satan. “God bless you, we don’t want no guns! Cark’s too
-frightened of the law to let any of his men use knives or pistols.
-Jude, where’s that tub of stinkin’ bait--you haven’t hove it over, have
-you?”
-
-“Nope.”
-
-“Cart it along. Rat; fetch up them five bottles of whisky,--they’re
-better’n bumshells,--and there’s an old fryin’ pan in the galley with a
-hole in it. Fetch it with the rest. There’s nothin’ like a fryin’ pan
-for beltin’ people--you can’t miss. What you gettin’ at Jude?”
-
-“The mop,” said Jude. “I don’t want nothing better for sweepin’ up
-rubbish!”
-
-“Well, maybe; but they’ll fight better’n you think. Lord! if I only had
-a roll of barb wire! Here they come! Hurry up, Rat!”
-
-The three boats, Sellers and Cleary leading, were in motion and making
-for the _Juan_.
-
-“We’ve only two to reckon with,” said Satan, as Ratcliffe arrived,
-Jude helping him up with the ammunition. “Cark won’t join in: he’s too
-frightened of his skin. Now then, ready with your weapons!”
-
-He was right. Cark’s boat, half a cable-length away, backed water while
-the redoubtable Cleary and Sellers rushed like hawks on the prey,
-aiming to board the _Sarah_ to starboard, Cleary forward, Sellers aft.
-
-But the men at the oars were not used to this sort of work. In their
-enthusiasm and despite the curses of their captains, they held on too
-long, nearly smashed the boat’s bows against the side of the _Sarah_,
-and fell into wild confusion trying to get their oars in under the
-bombardment from the deck. Over the clamor of the gulls rose the shrill
-curses and shouts of the dagoes, the whooping of Satan, the smashing of
-bottles, while over all the perfume of bad fish and poisonous whisky
-rose like the fume of the fight; but the attackers held, held by teeth
-and claws and boathooks, while the wily Carquinez, on the fringe of the
-fight, voiceful for once, standing up and clutching his coat together,
-shouted directions--unheeded as unheard.
-
-Twice Sellers was almost on board, and twice Jude’s mop sent him head
-over heels back; but now Cleary had made good forward, backed by two of
-his crew, and while Jude, rushing to Ratcliffe’s aid, drove him back
-with the mop in the pit of his stomach, Sellers, eyes shut, head down,
-and fighting Satan like a mad bull, gained the deck, gripped Satan,
-slipped, fell, and rolled with him in the scuppers. Three dagoes had
-followed Sellers and flung themselves like dogs on the stragglers;
-but now Jude and Ratcliffe, free for a moment, flung themselves on the
-dagoes, broke the fight, freed Satan, and sent the whole lot bundling
-over, Sellers and all--only to find that Cleary had made good again,
-and after Cleary half his boat’s crew.
-
-Led by Satan, who had seized the frying pan, the defenders hurled
-themselves on Cleary.
-
-Satan was right, you can’t miss with a frying pan. Cleary went down
-before it. Ratcliffe, using only his fists, had floored the biggest
-of the dagoes, and the rest were crowding back helter skelter, when a
-shout from Sellers, who had regained the deck, brought the battle to a
-pause.
-
-“Stop fightin’, you damn fools!” cried Sellers.
-
-“Lord! Look!” cried Jude.
-
-The port side of the _Sarah_ was turned to the entrance of the lagoon,
-and into the lagoon was gliding a long, lean destroyer, shearing the
-blue-green water from her fore foot.
-
-Being to starboard, the attackers had not seen her, and the men on deck
-had been too busy.
-
-Carquinez alone had sighted her. The effect was magical. Peace fell
-like a suddenly dropped dish-cover, and over the rail came Carquinez
-and half a dozen more Spaniards from the boats.
-
-“Now we’re done!” said Sellers. “She’s a Britisher, and this damn
-sandbank’s British and we’ll be had to the Bahamas Courts o’ Inquiry
-and Lord knows what all. Referred to Havana for inquiries. They’ve
-seen us at it, no use in denyin’ it. Look at them cusses’ bloody noses
-and Cleary flattened out. Kick him alive, some of you fools! Here they
-come!”
-
-The destroyer had cast anchor and dropped a boat. With the terrible
-precision of a hawk or a warship closing on its prey, she was on to the
-_Sarah_. A blue and gold man held the yoke lines, and the oars of the
-rowers rowed like one.
-
-“Look at that image on the sternsheets,” said Sellers.
-
-“Leave him to me,” said Satan.
-
-“What’s your game?”
-
-“Shut your head! Here he is!”
-
-The boat came alongside. The oars rising like one, fell with a crash,
-the bow oar hooked on, and over the rail came a sublieutenant of the
-British Navy, smooth of face and neat as though just taken from a
-bandbox.
-
-“What the devil are you fellows up to, fighting here?” asked the
-sublieutenant.
-
-Satan broke into a laugh.
-
-“We’re movie men,” said Satan.
-
-“You’re what?”
-
-“Movin’ pictures.”
-
-“Oh--cinematograph?”
-
-“That’s it.”
-
-Ratcliffe, fired with admiration for this Satanic move, joined in
-laughing.
-
-“Did you think we were fighting, really? Well, that’s funny. What’s the
-name of your ship?”
-
-“The _Albatross_,” replied the sublieutenant, completely and roundly
-taken in. “You’re English, aren’t you?”
-
-“Yes, I’m English. Joined the show some time ago.”
-
-“What’s that hooker on the sand over there?”
-
-“Oh, that’s part of our show. Boat supposed to have been wrecked--these
-chaps are pirates.”
-
-“Jolly good make-up!” said the other, surveying the pirates and taking
-in Cark, also Cleary, who, resuscitated in time, was leaning over the
-rail chewing and spitting into the water.
-
-The awful question, “Where’s your camera?” never came. If it had, Satan
-would no doubt have met it; but the sublieutenant was new to this sort
-of business and not on the hunt for evidence. The thing was palpable
-and plain. No complaint came from the attacked, and attacked and
-attackers were all seemingly friends. The words “cinematograph company”
-covered the situation completely.
-
-He gave a few words of information about the _Albatross_. She had put
-in for a small repair and would be off again tomorrow morning. Then he
-dropped into his boat and the incident was closed.
-
-“Now, you cusses,” said Satan, “see where you have landed yourselves!
-Where’d you have been only for me?”
-
-“Well, I don’t deny you slipped the hood over that Britisher pretty
-smart,” said Sellers.
-
-Cleary turned his head and looked at Sellers. “_You_ don’t deny! Why,
-you bloody barnacle scraper, I told you to hold off from the business!
-Satan, I forgive you that clap on the head. Lord love me! I’ll never
-carry a derringer again. Give me a fryin’ pan, that’s the weppin; you
-can’t dodge it no more than you can dodge a thunderstorm.”
-
-“Well,” said Satan, “fryin’ pan back the lot of you, and I’ll be on
-board the _Juan_ inside half an hour and settle my business with you.
-If Cark had kept his mouth shut instead of givin’ me orders, we’d have
-finished it by now and no heads broke.”
-
-“We’ll be waiting for you,” said Sellers.
-
-They tumbled into the boats and rowed off.
-
-“They never drew a knife,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Oh, Cark took their knives from them,” said Satan. “He didn’t want no
-blood spillin’ and trouble,--too much afraid of the law.”
-
-Jude, who had collapsed sitting-wise on the deck, began to laugh
-hysterically.
-
-“What are you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.
-
-“I dunno,” said Jude.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV
-
-“I’LL TAK!”
-
-
-Ten minutes later Satan and Ratcliffe boarded the _Juan_. Cleary was
-already on board, down in the cabin with the others; Cark and a bottle
-of gin were presiding at one end of the table. Satan, with a nod to the
-company, came to the table and took his seat; motioning Ratcliffe to
-take the seat opposite to him.
-
-It was like a meeting of a board of directors, and the table just held
-the six comfortably.
-
-What followed struck the unaccustomed Ratcliffe with astonishment,--the
-amiability of it,--it might have been a card party, with Satan the
-loser--momentarily.
-
-“Well, gentlemen,” said Satan, “what’s to pay?”
-
-There were extra glasses on the table and a box of cigars. The cigars
-were pushed along by Sellers as he spoke.
-
-“There’s Cark’s loss of time,” said Sellers, “not to say mine and
-Cleary’s. We tried for you round Rum Cay when you gave us the slip, and
-then there was the run down here. A thousand dollars to us that means,
-and five hundred to Cleary.”
-
-“Makin’ it two thousand five hundred and forty,” said Satan. “I’m
-agreeable--and the derelic’ is mine.”
-
-“Which derelic’?” asked Sellers innocently.
-
-Satan, absolutely disdaining to reply, lit a cigar.
-
-“She’s worth all ten thousand dollars,” said he, “and what’s the
-salvage on that?”
-
-“Y’mean that old dismasted catboat stuck on the sand there?” said
-Cleary. “Not worth five--b’sides she’s our meat.”
-
-Satan dropped Sellers and turned to Carquinez. “You’ll maybe explain,”
-said he. “You know the rights of the law. If you try to collar that
-hooker, I’ll come in with first claim, and here’s a gentleman will back
-me in law expenses. You know him,--Mr. Ratcliffe, Holt & Ratcliffe.”
-
-“I’ll back you,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“And it seems to me law is not your lay, Cark,” went on Satan. “We came
-in here yesterday and boarded and claimed that hooker, and I was fixing
-the tackle for towing when you blew along. The thing’s as clear as
-paint. She’s ours for salvage, and you’re not in it.”
-
-“Look here!” began Sellers violently--then he closed up: Cark had given
-him a kick under the table. Then there was silence for a moment, during
-which these two scoundrels seemed to brood together telepathically.
-
-Then Cark spoke, addressing Satan.
-
-“Will you take the air on deck for wan moment with your friend?” said
-Cark.
-
-“Sure,” said Satan.
-
-A few minutes later they were called down again.
-
-“See here,” said Sellers, acting as spokesman for the others, “we
-don’t want to bear hard on you, but we’ve been at a big loss over this
-business.”
-
-“And who let you in for it?” asked Satan. “Haven’t you been chasin’ me
-since last fall over the _Nombre_? Was it my fault she weren’t there?”
-
-“Well, anyhow we’re losers. But I’m coming to the derelic’. You’ll
-never be able to do the tow with the _Sarah_--why, the _Sarah_ ain’t
-bigger than her, and you’re underhanded anyhow.”
-
-“That’s so,” said Satan.
-
-“Well, what I propose is this,” said Sellers. “We’ll drop claims for
-the run down here and only ask a thousand and forty of you, and you
-drop claims on the derelic’.”
-
-Satan laughed.
-
-“Maybe you don’t know she’s got an auxiliary in her worth four thousand
-dollars if it’s worth a cent. She’s broke her propeller, but she’s got
-a spare one on board, and if I knew anythin’ of injins I’d drive her
-back on her own power. No, I sticks to the derelic’ if that’s the best
-you can offer and here’s your dollars--though I’ll have to give you my
-check for the extra money.”
-
-He produced a bundle; then, with his hand on it:
-
-“If you choose to take the derelic’ for what she’s worth and call it
-quits. I’ll trade, one or the other. I’m not set on that tow. But there
-you are; you know the chances.”
-
-“I’ll tak!” suddenly broke in Carquinez, and the business was ended.
-
-
-
-
-PART III
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV
-
-THE VANISHED LIGHT
-
-
-A week later, toward sundown, the _Sarah_ came up the half-mile channel
-and dropped her hook in Havana Harbor close to the old anchorage of the
-_Maine_. A Royal Mail boat passing out gave her the kick of its wash
-as she settled down to her moorings, a customs boat dropped alongside,
-and the customs men, hailing Satan as a friend and brother, came aboard
-and transacted business with him in the cabin. The wind blew warm,
-bringing scents and sounds across the vast harbor, fluttering the flags
-of the shipping, and Ratcliffe, standing at the rail, dazzled by the
-brilliance of the scene before him, knew that his cruise was over.
-
-It was like coming to the end of a book,--a volume suddenly handed to
-him by Fate to read, and of which he was condemned to write the sequel.
-
-He remembered the morning at Palm Island when he boarded the _Sarah_
-first, and the picture was still fresh in his mind of the _Haliotis_
-as they had left her in the lagoon at Cormorant, Sellers and Cleary
-and their men swarming about her and tinkering her up. They intended
-to ship the spare propeller and bring her along under her own motive
-power to the nearest port, Nassau in the Bahamas.
-
-They had been so busy with the engines and the hull that they had never
-noticed how completely she had been stripped. They were unconscious of
-the fact that she had been left with her anchor down--unfortunates! He
-could still see them like ants laboring in the sun, at the task set to
-them by the grimly humorous Satan.
-
-Satan had won the game they had forced on him, holding, as he did, a
-thousand and forty dollars, the “tripes” of the _Haliotis_, and the
-secret of the mug trap, to be disposed of, perhaps, later on for a
-consideration. Satan would, no doubt, set other unfortunates digging
-for the _Nombre_ just as he had set Cleary and Sellers tinkering and
-towing at the _Haliotis_, just as he had held up freighters for a bunch
-of bananas, just as he had made Thelusson and his crew careen and
-scrape the _Sarah_, just as he had made Ratcliffe an accomplice in his
-plans and a handy man to help him in his works; yet the funny thing
-about the scamp was the fact that he was absolutely dependable, when
-not dealing with companies or governments or derelicts. Ratcliffe would
-have trusted him with his last penny.
-
-Dependable if you took hold of him by his handle and not by his cutting
-edge! Trustable if you trusted him!
-
-Then Jude came up in her harbor rig; that is to say, boots and a coat.
-
-“Satan’s clacking away with the customs an’ the port doctor man,” said
-Jude. “You can’t see across the cabin with the smoke, and I had to
-change my rig in the galley.”
-
-“You going ashore?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“No,” said Jude, “Satan’s going. I’ve got to keep ship. You going with
-him?”
-
-“I suppose so.”
-
-Appeared Satan, followed by the port men, who tumbled into the boat and
-rowed off.
-
-“Goin’ ashore?” asked Satan. “Well, I’ll row you to the wharf after
-I’ve had a bite of supper. Jude’ll bring the boat back, and we can get
-a shore boat off for half a dollar.”
-
-Half an hour later, just as the electrics were springing alive and the
-anchor lights of the shipping marking the dusk blue sky, they started.
-They stood on the wharf steps for a moment watching Jude row off, then
-they turned to the town.
-
-Havana smells different from any other seaport. She smells of rum and
-garlic and dirt and cigars and the earth of Cuba, which is different
-from the earth anywhere else. The harbor and the town exchange
-bouquets; the negroes help; Spanish cigarettes, Florida water and
-decaying vegetables lend a hand. Satan led the way. He knew the place
-as well as the inside of his pocket, and as he trudged along beside
-Ratcliffe under the electrics across plazas, or through short-cut
-cut-throat-looking byways, he pointed out the notable features of the
-place,--Dutch Pete’s, the Alvarez factory, the great opera house, the
-Calle Commacio, the cathedral.
-
-They passed Florion’s with its marble tables, drinkers, and domino
-players, and Satan suddenly hove to.
-
-“Where d’you want to go now?” said Satan. “D’you want drinks?”
-
-“No, I don’t want drinks,” said Ratcliffe. “Come over here.”
-
-A blazing cinema palace shone across the way, and they entered,
-Ratcliffe paying.
-
-The place was in black darkness. A cowboy shooting up a bar was on the
-screen, and a man with an electric torch led them to their seats.
-
-Then they sat watching the pictures, Satan criticizing the actors
-sometimes, and in a loud voice and not always favorably. The cowboy
-shot himself off the screen, the lights flared up for half a minute,
-went out, and the pictures resumed.
-
-Ratcliffe felt a nudge, and in the darkness Satan’s voice, muted now,
-came in his ear.
-
-“Say,” whispered Satan, “did you see him?”
-
-“Who?”
-
-“The man that dropped you at Pa’m Island.”
-
-“Skelton!”
-
-“That’s him. He’s sittin’ right a front of you.”
-
-“Are you sure?”
-
-“Sure as sure.”
-
-Skelton here! But where, then, was the _Dryad_? Had he wrecked her, or
-what?
-
-The words of Satan seemed to alter everything, from the music to the
-picture of John Bunny on the screen.
-
-The darkness, filled with native Havana scents, became tinged with the
-atmosphere of British Respectability. Skelton at the pictures! Why, he
-ought to have been at the opera or one of the theaters or walking on
-the _alameda_ digesting his dinner and thinking of Tariff Reform or
-Anglicanism. It seemed impossible; yet when the light flared up again
-there was Skelton, sure enough, sitting with another man, and now he
-was rising, evidently tired of the show, and passing out, followed by
-his friend, grave as though he had been attending his mother’s funeral
-instead of the marriage of John Bunny to Flora Finch in a Pullman car
-with negro accompaniments.
-
-He wore evening clothes, covered by a light overcoat. Ratcliffe rose
-and, followed by Satan, pursued him, touching him on the shoulder
-outside and in the full blaze of the lamps.
-
-“Good God!” said Skelton. “Ratcliffe!”
-
-“Just got in,” said Ratcliffe. “Had a ripping time. Where’s the
-_Dryad_?”
-
-“Up at the wharf, coaling,” replied Skelton, absorbing Ratcliffe’s
-rough and ready garb, the cloth cap he was wearing, and Satan. “I’m
-staying at the Matanzas; but I go aboard tomorrow morning, and we’re
-off in the evening. What have you been doing with yourself?”
-
-“Oh, having no end of fun. We found an old treasure ship and blew her
-up and found she was full of skulls and bones. You know Satan?”
-
-Skelton, who had ignored Satan, acknowledged his existence by a little
-nod.
-
-“Who’s your friend?” asked Ratcliffe, glancing at Skelton’s companion,
-who had removed himself a few paces.
-
-“Ponsonby--diplomatic service. See here, come on board to lunch
-tomorrow--one-fifteen.”
-
-“Right.”
-
-“I have some gear of yours.”
-
-“Right. I’ll see about it.”
-
-“’Night.”
-
-“’Night.”
-
-Off he went.
-
-They had seen enough of the pictures, and having no inclination for
-cafés or taverns or gambling shops they made back toward the wharves,
-Satan walking in profound silence, Ratcliffe thinking.
-
-The whole evening he had been followed by a miserable sort of
-half-depression. It had attached itself to him first on the deck of
-the _Sarah_, born of his return to civilization; it had managed to
-decolorize the past few weeks and demagnetize Jude.
-
-His conscious mind had never quite gauged the hold that Jude had
-managed to get upon him, and this subconscious devil, rising at the
-touch of civilization, like a gas bubble from his conventional past,
-had burst, with spoiling effect, robbing the _Sarah_ of her romance and
-sea-charm and the past few weeks of their brightness. Jude had dimmed
-with everything else, become part and parcel of what seemed an illusion.
-
-It was while sitting at the pictures, in black darkness, with knowledge
-of Skelton’s presence, that the atmosphere began to clear, the waves to
-beat again on Cormorant Cay, the gulls to fly and call--and Jude come
-back to life.
-
-He heard again that queer little laugh of hers as she removed his hand.
-He felt again the warm body that had rested confidingly against him
-away there on the sandspit.
-
-And then she was out on the black harbor alone in the _Sarah_, while he
-and Satan were watching the pictures! Suppose some lumbering sailing
-craft being towed to her moorings or some incoming mailboat were to
-smash into the _Sarah_--and they were to row off and find nothing--no
-Jude?
-
-The thought almost made him rise from his seat to leave the place. But
-he could not explain to Satan; so he sat on till the lights flared out.
-And all the time, mocking the pictures on the screen, came pictures of
-Jude, all sunlit, real, fresh as herself!
-
-Then, as they pursued their way to the wharf after leaving Skelton,
-the impatience increased; the darkness of the night, the blaze of
-the town, the gay life of the streets, and the revelry of the cafés
-seemed sinister and banded in a conspiracy against him and the lonely
-little figure of Jude. The indifference of Skelton, the way he had gone
-hurriedly off, the way he had ignored Satan, were part of the business,
-blended with the blazing cafés, the moving crowd of Chinks, colored
-men, Spaniards, and Americans, the brilliance and gaiety without heart,
-that seemed like a barrier between him and the humble little _Sarah_
-and Jude away out there in the darkness alone--waiting for him! It came
-to him that Jude was the one sole thing he wanted in the cruel, odd,
-electric-lit world--and he had left her!
-
-They passed through narrow streets like the streets in an evil dream
-and blazing streets hideous with noise. Then at last they reached the
-wharf with its amber lights spilling on the black waving water. Satan
-hired a boat, and they put off, two dagoes rowing and Satan at the
-yoke-lines.
-
-The _Sarah_ was anchored a mile out, and the vast three-mile harbor,
-vague in the starlight and circled by the hills, seemed to Ratcliffe
-more immense than when seen by daylight.
-
-Lights, lights everywhere,--scattered lights of shipping, some near,
-some far away, gem-crusted bulks that were great liners at anchor,
-songs and voices, and the creak of the oars in the rowlocks! Then a
-sudden green, red, and white light ahead and a fussy and furious little
-tug that nearly ran them down and left them rocking in her wash.
-
-“Scowbankers!” said Satan. Then: “I can’t make out the light of the
-_Sarah_, nohow.”
-
-A clutch came to Ratcliffe’s heart, the clutch of something cold and
-malign which had seemed following him ever since Skelton’s presence had
-made itself felt like an evil omen.
-
-They were so far out now that the sounds of the town and wharves had
-died to nothing; but still the creak of the oars in the rowlocks kept
-on. Then came Satan’s voice:
-
-“That’s her, over beyond them three lights on the starboard bow.”
-
-Ratcliffe breathed again, and his heart leaped in him as he picked out
-the light.
-
-Satan altered their course.
-
-“Are you sure?” asked Ratcliffe.
-
-“Sure.”
-
-“You gave me the devil of a fright.”
-
-“Which way?”
-
-“I thought she might have been run down by some ship coming in--or
-something.”
-
-“Oh, she’s well out of the track,” said Satan.
-
-“All the same, I didn’t feel easy.”
-
-Then they hung silent, Ratcliffe’s eyes on the light and his hand in
-his pocket feeling for dollars to pay the boatmen.
-
-“What’s there to pay?” asked he.
-
-“A dollar, seeing there’s two of them,” replied Satan. “_Sarah_ ahoy!”
-
-“Ahoy!” came Jude’s voice, and a lantern swung over the side.
-
-Satan bundled on board, and Ratcliffe crammed five dollars into the
-hand of the stern oar; then he followed, and the fellows pushed off.
-
-“Took it without fightin’!” said Satan. “Lord’s sake, what’s come to
-them?” Then he bundled below to make some coffee.
-
-Jude snuffed the lantern out.
-
-She was moving away from the side and away from Ratcliffe, when he
-caught hold of her round the body. She did not resist him. He held her
-close to his heart.
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“What is it?” asked Jude, with a sudden catch in her breath and
-speaking in a whisper. “Whacha want?”
-
-Then his lips met hers, full.
-
-Five minutes later Satan, making his coffee over the Primus stove of
-the _Haliotis_, heard a struggling sound, mixed with stifled laughter,
-and Ratcliffe appeared at the cabin door. He was dragging Jude in; she
-was half-resisting, and her face was hid in the crook of her arm.
-
-“Satan,” said Ratcliffe, “I’m going to marry Jude.”
-
-“God help you!” said Satan.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI
-
-THE WEDDING PRESENT
-
-
-“I’m going to marry Jude!”
-
-The fantastic fact embodied in those words appeared to him folly only
-next day at one o’clock, with the sky to northward breathing hot on
-Havana Harbor like the mouth of a blue oven, flags fluttering to the
-wind, the drum and fife band of an American training ship coming over
-the water, and the _Dryad_ being towed to her moorings half a mile
-shoreward.
-
-The blushing bride-to-be of last night, hiding her nose on Ratcliffe’s
-shoulder, as they sat together on the couch before Satan, while he
-taunted her with the fact that now she’d have to get into skirts, had
-turned back into Jude.
-
-She was busy getting the dinghy ready to row her fiancé off to the
-_Dryad_.
-
-She was over the side in her, busy and humming a tune as she worked,
-baling out water, fixing the cushions, and so on, while Satan watched
-her in a brooding manner over the rail.
-
-A ghastly fear was working in the heart of Satan, the fear that Skelton
-might want the dinghy returned.
-
-“Now, mind you,” said Satan, “and bring the boat back. I’d sooner lose
-me head than that boat. If you come back without her, I’ll chuck you in
-the harbor! I’m talking straight.”
-
-Ratcliffe, who had just come on deck dressed for the occasion, came to
-the rail. Jude looked up at him and laughed.
-
-He had seen her laughing before, he had seen her surly, meditative,
-brooding, weeping, flushed with anger, grumbling; but he had never seen
-her with a look like this,--happy.
-
-Since last night something had come into her eyes that made her, when
-her eyes met his, beautiful. It was as though a lamp had been suddenly
-lit inside her, and the magical thing was the knowledge that he himself
-was the lamplighter.
-
-He had created this new something that spoke to him right out, right to
-his heart, right to his soul!
-
-He got into the dinghy, nodded to Satan, and they started, Jude at the
-sculls, her trousers rolled half-way up to the knees and her old panama
-on the back of her head.
-
-“Go slow,” said he, “there’s lots of time.” Then, when they were out of
-hearing and he was alone with her at last:
-
-“Jude!”
-
-“What?”
-
-“D’you remember yesterday you asked me if I was going away, now the
-anchor was down?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“What would you have done if I had?”
-
-“I’d a drowned myself in the harbor,” said Jude without a moment’s
-hesitation. “What’s the good of asking?”
-
-“When did you begin to care for me a bit?”
-
-“D’you remember the sandspit?” asked Jude. “I dunno--maybe it was
-beyond then--remember the cache?”
-
-“When I chased you round the tree and--”
-
-Jude screwed up her lips.
-
-“You gave me an awful bang on the head.”
-
-“You frightened the gizzard out of me,” said Jude, “and I wasn’t the
-same after--that night.”
-
-“I remember, I heard you telling Satan that hants were chasing you.”
-
-“You were the hants.”
-
-“But you didn’t care for me then. Remember you said derricks were only
-good for hoisting fools off ships with.”
-
-“I reckon it was a sort of caring turned inside out,” said Jude. She
-turned her head to see if they were making for the _Dryad_.
-
-“You’re letting her off her course,” said she, “unless you’re making
-for that brig.”
-
-“I’d just as soon make for her as anywhere else,” said he, altering the
-course, “unless it was the sandspit--Jude!”
-
-“Yep.”
-
-“Imagine if we were alone on the sandspit, you and I, just as we were
-that day, instead of in this rotten old harbor--let’s go there!”
-
-“I’m willing.”
-
-“When?”
-
-“Soon’s you like.”
-
-“We can get a tent and grub, and Satan can take us there and come back
-for us. Damn! here’s the _Dryad_!”
-
-The first officer of the _Dryad_ was leaning over the rail watching
-them. The stage was down, and Jude brought the dinghy alongside.
-
-Then on the stage he watched her rowing off. He waved his hand to her,
-and she replied.
-
-Then, when he reached the deck, he found Skelton also at the rail.
-
-“’Morning,” said Ratcliffe. “That’s Satan’s sister.”
-
-“Which?” asked Skelton. “That--er--person in the boat?”
-
-“Yes. But you saw her on deck down at Palm Island, didn’t you?”
-
-“I had forgotten,” said Skelton, dismissing the subject.
-
-There were no guests. Ponsonby was to have come, but he was indisposed;
-yet the luncheon was just as formal an affair as though a dozen had
-been present instead of two.
-
-Half-way through the meal, however, Ratcliffe’s spirits began to
-brighten under the influence of Perrier Jouet and the harlequin thought
-that began to dance in his head, “I am going for a honeymoon to the
-sandspit with Jude!”
-
-He laughed occasionally at nothing in particular, and Skelton thought
-his manner strange, heady, queer, and began to thank his stars that
-Ponsonby was indisposed. He noticed also that Ratcliffe’s hands,
-despite scrubbing, bore the evidence of hard work not dissociated with
-tar. There was also something queer about his hair.
-
-There was! Satan had barbarized it down at Cormorant with the pair of
-scissors he used on Jude.
-
-Skelton, in asking Ratcliffe on board to luncheon, had considered
-himself a most forgiving individual. Leaving aside their little quarrel
-at Palm Island, remained the fact that Ratcliffe had left his ship,
-deserted him for the company of those Yankee “scowbankers,” and, to
-make matters worse, Ratcliffe seemed to have enjoyed the exchange.
-
-Now, in closer company with the delinquent, he was beginning to regret
-his forgiveness. “The man had deteriorated!”
-
-As a result of this impression his manner had stiffened; he felt
-irritated and bored.
-
-The steward had withdrawn, having placed the dessert on the table,
-and Skelton was in the act of carving a pineapple in the only way a
-pineapple ought to be carved,--that is to say by tearing it into pieces
-with two forks,--when Ratcliffe, who had been staring at the fruit as
-though hypnotized, suddenly broke into a chuckle of laughter.
-
-The pineapple, connecting itself, maybe, with canned pineapples robbed
-from the store room of the _Haliotis_, had suddenly brought up the
-vision of Satan.
-
-Satan in a new guise--Satan as a matchmaker!
-
-All sorts of things, some almost half-forgotten, rushed together to
-clothe Satan in this new garment. He remembered Satan’s solicitude for
-Jude’s future, Satan’s complacency when he and Jude had gone off to the
-sandspit together, his conversations about Jude, the complete absence
-of surprise with which he had taken the business of last night,--a
-hundred things, and all pointing in the same direction and to the fact
-that Satan had wished the business, just as he had wished the dinghy
-away from Skelton, just as he had wished Ratcliffe on board of the
-_Sarah Tyler_.
-
-He, Ratcliffe, was part of the sea-pickings of this gipsy, part and
-parcel with bunches of bananas, pots of paint, sailcloth, mainsheet
-buffers, cringles, and so on! He was annexed to fit Jude just as the
-mast-winch of the _Haliotis_ was annexed to fit the _Sarah_!
-
-Jude herself had declared that Satan had brought him on board because
-he “wanted him.”
-
-Skelton paused in his operation on the pineapple and stared at the
-other.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” said Ratcliffe, “but something has just struck me
-so horribly funny I couldn’t help laughing--anyhow, the joke is against
-myself. Look here, Skelton, I want to tell you something--I’m--m--going
-to marry a girl.”
-
-“Indeed--but what is there horribly funny about that?”
-
-“Nothing--it’s not that, it’s something else; but let’s start with
-that. I’m going to marry that girl who rowed me over here today,
-Satan’s sister.”
-
-Skelton laid down his fork. All his starch had vanished. Surprised
-out of his life, he seemed suddenly to grow younger and more natural
-looking.
-
-“Good God!” said Skelton, staring at the other. “You don’t mean--”
-
-“I do. I don’t know why I am telling you, but there it is. You can’t
-understand in the least--couldn’t hope to make you.”
-
-Now Skelton with his starch off and in an emergency was a sound man,
-with a heart as good as any ordinary mortal’s.
-
-He had an eye that no little detail ever escaped. He had seen Jude
-at Palm Island, he had heard her speak, he had seen her half an hour
-ago, and Ratcliffe’s manner left him in no doubt as to his absolute
-earnestness.
-
-The man was about to commit suicide, social suicide. He had seen men do
-the same thing often in different ways.
-
-He pushed the pineapple away and rose from the table.
-
-“Come into the smoke room,” said he.
-
-In the smoke room he rang for coffee. Not a word about Jude. Dead
-silence.
-
-Then, when the coffee was brought and the door closed, he turned to the
-other.
-
-“Ratcliffe, you can’t do this thing. I know. Let me speak for a moment.
-You are your own master, free to do as you choose; but I must speak. I
-like you. Our temperaments are dead different, and we don’t make good
-companions; but you have many sterling qualities, and I don’t want to
-see you come a mucker. You can do a thing like this in two minutes; but
-two hundred years won’t get you out of it, once it’s done. (Take sugar
-in your coffee? Yes, I remember.) See here! I had a young brother once
-who was going to do just the same,--absolutely ruin himself. I managed
-to stop it, saved his future and his name.”
-
-He picked a cigar out of a box and, coming to a dead stop in his
-remarks, cut the end off.
-
-“My dear fellow,” said Ratcliffe, before he could continue, “I know
-absolutely and exactly how you feel on the subject and what you would
-say. I’ve felt it myself and said it to myself.
-
-“I began to get fond of her almost from the first. If you’d been in my
-shoes, you would have been just the same. No one could help getting
-fond of her. Then after awhile I found how I was drifting, and I said
-to myself, ‘It’s absurd!’ I pictured all my female relations and so
-forth and my position in the wonderful thing you call Society.”
-
-“Don’t sneer at Society,” said Skelton gravely. “That’s the easiest
-sort of cant that ever folly put into a man’s mouth. Go on.”
-
-“You’re right,” said Ratcliffe. “All the same Society galls one at
-times when the thought of it comes up against something alive and fresh
-and free from snobbery like Jude. Well, things went on and on. I hadn’t
-much time for thinking, underhanded as we were; and that was the fatal
-thing, for I absorbed her without thinking,--not her face or body, but
-her character. You know that, underhanded and close together on a tub
-like the _Sarah_, character is the thing that shows and counts, and
-at every hand’s turn hers showed up and got a tighter grip on me. It
-wasn’t a character all jam, either, but it was a thing to count on and
-real as the sea--you can’t understand.”
-
-“I can,” said Skelton, humoring the other, “a fine character.”
-
-“Oh, Lord, no!” said Ratcliffe. “Don’t get away with things. _Real_,
-that’s the word!”
-
-“But, my dear man--”
-
-“I know what you are going to say. She can’t speak King’s
-English--well, I’m going to teach her. She’s dressed like that--well,
-I’m going to dress her properly after awhile.”
-
-Skelton suddenly showed a flash of irritation.
-
-“Come up to the point,” said he. “Are you, after what I’ve said, still
-fixed in your purpose? Are you going to marry her?”
-
-“As soon as ever I can get a priest off to the old _Sarah_,” replied
-Ratcliffe.
-
-“That is your last word?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Very well,” said Skelton. His manner changed. He had done what he
-could: it was useless. Ratcliffe was no relation of his, and now,
-contemplating the thing with as much detachment as though it were a
-losing horse race or boxing encounter on which he had no bet, he lit
-the cigar, which he had been holding unlighted in his fingers, and
-became almost amiable.
-
-“Very well,” said he, “go ahead. After all, it’s not my affair; but
-I’ll be interested to know how you get on. By the way, I have some gear
-of yours on board.”
-
-“Take it back, will you, like a good chap,” said the other, “and leave
-it with the yacht people at Southampton? I’ll pick it up there when I
-return.”
-
-“You are coming back?”
-
-“Oh, rather; but not for a year or so, maybe. I’ve a lot to do, and
-when you see us next maybe you’ll agree--” He stopped short and relit
-his cigar, and they hung silent, each engaged in his own thoughts.
-
-Now; on the warm sea-scented air entering through the open ports, came
-a voice.
-
-It was the voice of the second officer, addressing someone over-side.
-
-“Hi, there! Bring her round to the quarter-boat davits; she’s to come
-aboard.”
-
-“That’s the dinghy,” said Skelton. “I told them to bring her aboard.
-I’ll send you back in the pinnace.”
-
-Again came the voice.
-
-“Hi, there! Are you deaf? Bring her round to the quarter-boat davits;
-she’s to come aboard.”
-
-Then Jude’s fresh young voice:
-
-“Gar’n! She’s ours; old Popplecock gave her to Satan. Whacha talking
-about?”
-
-“Very well,” came the other’s. “You wait till Sir William comes on
-deck.”
-
-Skelton with a grim smile turned to the door. He pointed to the clock
-on the bulkhead.
-
-“I’m going on deck,” said he. “See that clock--promise me to stick here
-for two minutes by it and think right over the matter for the last
-time. Don’t let anything I have said weigh with you.”
-
-He went on deck and, keeping clear of the rail, entered into
-conversation with the first officer.
-
-Three minutes passed, and Ratcliffe’s head appeared at the saloon hatch.
-
-“Going?” said Skelton.
-
-“Yes,” said Ratcliffe.
-
-“Right! You can keep the dinghy--it’s a wedding present. Luck!”
-
-“Same to you!” said Ratcliffe.
-
-He gripped the other’s hand, and the grip was returned. The two men had
-never been so close to each other before, never would be again.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Two hours later the _Dryad_, queening it over the satin-smooth harbor,
-dipped her flag to the humble little _Sarah_, and the _Sarah_ dipped
-her flag to the _Dryad_, and someone in the Wedding Present lying
-alongside the _Sarah_ waved a hat.
-
-Skelton, at the after rail, fixed his binoculars on the hat-waver. It
-was Satan.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences of
-inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Satan, by Henry De Vere Stacpoole
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Satan, by Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Satan
- A Romance of the Bahamas
-
-Author: Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
-Release Date: July 23, 2017 [EBook #55183]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SATAN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Roger Frank, Charlie Howard, and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
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-
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-
-</pre>
-
-
-<h1>SATAN</h1>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center xxlarge bold">
-<span class="large">SATAN</span></p>
-
-<p class="p0 center larger">A Romance of the Bahamas</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller"><i>By</i><br />
-<span class="smcap large">H: De Vere Stacpoole</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Author of “The Blue Lagoon,” “The Beach<br />
-of Dreams,” Etc.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="max-width: 5.5em;">
-<img src="images/logo.png" width="85" height="124" alt="Publisher's logo" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2 center">NEW YORK<br />
-<span class="larger">ROBERT M. McBRIDE &amp; COMPANY</span><br />
-1921
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center wspace">
-Copyright, 1920, by<br />
-<span class="gesperrt"><span class="smcap">Robert M. McBride &amp; Co.</span></span></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center gesperrt"><i>Printed in the<br />
-United States of America</i></p>
-
-<p class="p2 center gesperrt">Published, · 1921</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class="nobreak" summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART I</td></tr>
- <tr class="xsmall">
- <td class="tdr">CHAPTER</td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">I</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Palm Island</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">II</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Floating Caravan</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">6</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">III</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Breakfast</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">16</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Pap’s Suit</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">23</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">V</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Portmanteau</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">34</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Skelton Sails</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">58</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Carquinez</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">68</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jude Overdoes It</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">79</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The “Juan” Sails</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">96</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">X</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cuss Words</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">107</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Coming of Cleary</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">116</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">An Honest Man</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">123</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Problems</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">130</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Hants and Other Things</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">136</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Under Way</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">144</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Steersman</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">150</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART II</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Lone Reef</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">157</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wreck</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">169</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Mutiny</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">174</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sandspit</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">183</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Dished</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">193</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Crabs</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">199</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Return</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">206</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Bottle of Rum</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">215</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">They Fire the Fuse</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">220</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cargo</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">226</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Crockery Ware</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">232</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXVIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Tide and Current</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">238</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXIX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Satan in Paradise</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">243</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXX</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Secret of the Sand</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">253</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Go-ashore Hat</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">259</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Cleary!</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">267</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXIII</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Fight</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">272</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXIV</td>
- <td class="tdl">“<span class="smcap">I’ll Tak!</span>”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">280</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="3">PART III</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXV</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Vanished Light</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">285</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XXXVI</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Wedding Present</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">295</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_I"></a>PART I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><span class="larger gesperrt">SATAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">PALM ISLAND</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> sky from sea-line to sea-line was crusted with
-stars, a triumphant, cloudless, tropic night-sky beneath
-which the <i>Dryad</i> rode at her anchor, lifting lazily
-to the swell flowing up from beyond the great Bahama
-bank.</p>
-
-<p>She was Skelton’s boat, a six-hundred-tonner, turbine
-engined, rigged with everything new in the way of sea
-valves and patent gadgets, and she had anchored at sundown
-off Palm Island, a tiny spot, gull haunted, and
-due west of Andros.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was a Christchurch man, Bobby Ratcliffe a
-Brazenose, and Bobby, tonight, as he leaned on the starboard
-rail smoking and listening to the wash of the
-waves on the island beach, was thinking of Skelton, who
-was down below writing up his diary. Before coming
-on this “winter cruise to the West Indies in my yacht”
-Bobby did not know that Skelton kept a diary, that Skelton
-was so awfully Anglican, so precise, so stuffed with
-the convenances, that he dined in dress clothes even in
-a hurricane, that he had a very nasty, naggling temper,
-that he had prayers every Sunday morning in the cabin<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2">2</a></span>
-which the chief steward, the under stewards, and the
-officers off watch were expected to attend—also Bobby.
-Two other men were booked for the cruise, but they
-cried off at the last moment. If they had come, things
-might have been different. As it was, Bobby, to use his
-own language, was pretty much fed up.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was a right good sort, but he was not the man
-with whom to share loneliness, and Bobby, who had
-plenty of money of his own, was thinking how jolly this
-winter cruise would have been if he had only taken it on
-board a passenger liner, with girls and deck quoits and
-cards in the evening, instead of Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>Bobby was only twenty-two, a good-looking clean
-youth, well-balanced enough, but desirous of fun. Oxford
-had not spoiled him a bit. He had no “manner,”—just
-his own naturalness,—and he had shocked Skelton
-at Barbados by getting a great negro washing woman
-on board (she had come alongside in a blue boat) and
-giving her rum, for the fun of the thing. “Debauching a
-native woman with alcohol!” Skelton had called it.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton vetoed shark fishing. It messed his decks.
-He was like an old woman about his decks. “I tell you
-what you ought to do, Skelly,” Bobby had said. “You
-ought to start a blessed laundry!” They had nearly
-quarreled at Guadeloupe over sharks.</p>
-
-<p>And again at St. Pierre, where, lying off the ruins of
-the town, Skelton had likened it to Gomorrah, declaring
-it had been destroyed because of the wickedness of its inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>“And how about the ships in the bay?” had asked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3">3</a></span>
-Bobby. “What had they to do with the business? Why
-weren’t they given notice to quit?”</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t argue on the matter,” replied Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>And there was still two months of this blessed cruise
-to be worked out!</p>
-
-<p>He was thinking of this when Skelton came on deck,
-his white shirt-front shining in the starlight. He was in
-an amiable mood tonight and, ranging up beside Bobby,
-he spoke about the beauty of the stars.</p>
-
-<p>It was chiefly on Bobby’s initiative that they had
-dropped the anchor so that they might prospect the island
-on the morrow, and as they smoked and talked the
-conversation passed from stars to desert islands, and
-from desert islands to the old Spaniards of the West
-Indies, bucaneers, filibusters, pirates, and Brethren of
-the Coast.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was the starlight, or the tepid wind blowing
-up from the straits of Florida, or the distant starlit
-palms of Palm Island that set Skelton off and touched
-a vein in his nature hitherto unsuspected: whatever it
-was, he warmed to his subject and for the first time on
-the voyage became interesting. He could talk! Nombre
-de Dios, Carthagena, and Porto Bello,—he touched them
-alive again, set the old plate-ships sailing and the pirates
-overhauling them, sacked cathedrals of gold and jewels,
-showed Bobby Tortuga, the great rendezvous of the
-bucaneers and the Spaniards attacking it, men marooned
-on desolate places like Palm Island, treasure buried—and
-then all of a sudden closed up and became uninteresting
-again. The remnants of the boy in him had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4">4</a></span>
-spoken, the old pirate that lives in most men’s hearts
-had shown his head. Perhaps he was ashamed of his
-warmth and enthusiasm over these old romantic things—who
-knows? At all events, he retired into himself and
-then went below to find a book he was reading, leaving
-the deck to Bobby and the anchor watch.</p>
-
-<p>Then the moon began to rise from beyond the Bahamas,
-a vast, full moon, with the sea seeming to cling to her
-lower limb as she freed herself. Dusky, at first, she
-paled as she rose, and now, in her light, the palms of
-the island and the coral beach showed clear.</p>
-
-<p>Palm Island is a scrub of cactus and bay cedar bushes,
-half a mile long and quarter of a mile broad, with not
-more than forty trees. Crabs and turtles and gulls are
-its only visitors, and desolation sits there visible and
-naked. But in the moonlight, on a night like this and
-seen from the sea, it is fairyland—storyland.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, his mind full of pirates and bucaneers,
-Spaniards and plate-ships, found himself wondering if
-men had ever been marooned here, if Morgan and Van
-Horn and all that crowd had ever had dealings on that
-beach, and what the moon could tell about it all if she
-could remember and speak. He was thinking this when
-the creak of block and cordage struck his ear, and past
-the stern of the <i>Dryad</i> came gliding the fore canvas of
-a small vessel, a thing that seemed no larger than a
-fishing boat.</p>
-
-<p>She had been creeping in from the sea unnoticed by
-them as they talked. Skelton had gone below without<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5">5</a></span>
-sighting her, and she was so close that the slap of her
-bow-wash came clearly as she passed.</p>
-
-<p>He watched her gliding shoreward like a phantom, and
-then across the water came a voice, shrill as the voice of
-a bird:</p>
-
-<p>“Seven fathom!”</p>
-
-<p>And on top of that another voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Let go!”</p>
-
-<p>The rumble—tumble—tumble—of an anchor chain followed,
-and then the silence of the night closed in, broken
-only by the far-off wash of the waves on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>This ghost of the sea fascinated Ratcliffe. He could
-see her now riding at anchor against the palms and bay
-cedars of the island.</p>
-
-<p>She was shedding her canvas; and now a glow-worm
-spark, golden in the silver of the moonlight, climbed up
-and became stationary but for the lift and fall of the
-swell as she rode at her moorings. It was her anchor
-light.</p>
-
-<p>He listened for voices. None came. Then he saw a
-lantern being carried along her deck. It vanished, probably
-through a hatch.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went below, and, dropping asleep the instant
-he turned in, dreamt that he was marooned on Palm Island
-with Skelton, and Skelton was trying to hang him
-on a palm tree for a pirate, and the gulls were shouting
-“Seven fathom!—seven fathom—seven fathom!” Then
-came oblivion and the sleep of youth that defies dreams.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6">6</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">A FLOATING CARAVAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Next</span> morning, an hour after sunrise, Ratcliffe came
-on deck in his pajamas,—gorgeous blue and crimson
-striped pajamas,—a sight for the gods.</p>
-
-<p>The sky was cloudless. The wind of the night before
-had fallen to a tepid breathing scarcely sufficient to stir
-the flag at the jackstaff, and from all that world of new-born
-blue and mirror-calm sea there came not a sound
-but the sound of the gulls crying and quarreling about
-the reef spurs of the island.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the glory of light and color and against the
-palms and white beach lay the ghost of the night before,
-a frowzy-looking yawl-rigged boat of fifty feet or so, a
-true hobo of the sea, with wear and weather written
-all over her and an indescribable something that marked
-her down even to Ratcliffe as disreputable.</p>
-
-<p>Simmons, the second officer, was on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“She must have come in last night,” said Simmons.
-“Some sea scraper or another working between the islands—Spanish
-most likely.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, she’s not Spanish,” said Ratcliffe. “I saw her
-come in and I heard them shouting the soundings in English—look!
-there’s a chap fishing from her.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7">7</a></span>
-The flash of a fish being hauled on board had caught
-his eye and fired his passion for sport. They had done
-no fishing from the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He borrowed the dinghy from Simmons and, just as
-he was, put off.</p>
-
-<p>“Ask them to sell some of their fish, if they’ve any to
-spare,” cried Simmons as the dinghy got away.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay!” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>The sea blaze almost blinded him as he rowed with
-the gulls flying round and shouting at him. As he drew
-up to the yawl the fisherman lugged another fish on
-board. The fisherman was a boy, a dirty-faced boy, in
-a guernsey, and as the dinghy came alongside he stared
-at the pajama-clad one as at an apparition.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, there!” cried Ratcliffe, clawing on with the
-boathook.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself!” replied the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Any fish for sale?”</p>
-
-<p>“Any what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fish.”</p>
-
-<p>The boy disappeared. Then came his voice, evidently
-shouting down a hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan, below there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s the funniest guy come alongside wants to know
-if we’ve got fish to sell him. Show a leg!”</p>
-
-<p>“One minute,” replied the second voice.</p>
-
-<p>The boy reappeared at the rail in the burning sunlight.
-“The cap will be up in a minute,” said he. “What in the
-nation are you got up like that for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8">8</a></span>
-“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Them things.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“I forgot I was in my pajamas. I must apologize.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s pajamas?”</p>
-
-<p>“My sleeping suit.”</p>
-
-<p>“You sleep in them things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m damned!” said the boy. Then he gave a
-sudden yell of laughter and vanished, sitting down on the
-deck evidently, while another form appeared at the rail,
-a lantern-jawed, long-haired, youthful figure, rubbing
-the sleep out of its eyes. It stared at the occupant of the
-dinghy, then it opened its mouth and uttered one word:</p>
-
-<p>“Moses!”</p>
-
-<p>“He sleeps in them things!” came a half-strangled voice
-from the deck. “Satan, hold me up, I’m dyin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your beastly head!” said Satan. Then to Ratcliffe,
-“Don’t be minding Jude,—Jude’s cracked,—but
-you sure are gotten up—Say, you from that hooker
-over there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>Another explosion from the deck, stifled by a kick from
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you doing here, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe explained, Satan leaning comfortably on the
-rail and listening.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9">9</a></span>
-“A yacht—well, we’re the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>. Pap and me
-and Jude used to run the boat. He died last fall. Tyler
-was his name, and Satan Tyler’s mine. He said I
-yelled like Satan when a pup and he put the name on
-me—Say, that’s a dandy boat. I’m wanting a boat like
-that. Will you trade?”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s not mine.”</p>
-
-<p>“That don’t matter,” said Tyler with a laugh. “But
-I forgot: you aren’t in our way of business.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your way of business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Shut up, Satan!” came the voice from the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Pap was one thing or another; but we’re respectable,
-ain’t we, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Passons to what Pap was,” agreed the voice in a
-quieter tone, and it came to Ratcliffe that the figure of
-Jude remained invisible, being ashamed to show itself
-after having guyed him.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re out of Havana, and we scratch round and
-make a living,” went on Tyler, “and the boat being ours
-we make out. There’s lots to be had on these seas for
-the looking.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you work the boat alone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we had a nigger to help since Pap died. He
-skipped at Pine Island a fortnight ago. Since then we’ve
-made out. Jude’s worth a man and don’t drink—”</p>
-
-<p>“Who says I don’t drink?” Two grimy hands seized
-the rail and the body and face of Jude raised themselves.
-Then the whole apparition hung, resting midriff high<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10">10</a></span>
-across the rail, just balanced, so that a tip from behind
-would have sent it over.</p>
-
-<p>“Who says I don’t drink? How about Havana Harbor
-last trip?”</p>
-
-<p>“They gave her rum,” said Satan gloomily, “gave her
-rum in a doggery down by the waterside—curse the
-swabs! I laid two of them flat and then got her
-aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Her!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Blind, wasn’t I?” cut in Jude hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Blind you were,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>Jude grinned. Ratcliffe thought he had never met with
-a stranger couple than these two, especially Jude. Hanging
-on with the boathook, he contemplated the dirty, daring
-face whose fine, gray, long-lashed eyes were the best
-features.</p>
-
-<p>“How old are you?” asked he, addressing it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hundred an’ one,” said Jude. “Ask me another.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s fifteen and a bit,” said Tyler, “and as strong
-as a grown man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she was a boy,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“So I am,” said Jude. “Girls is trash. I’m not never
-goin’ to be a girl. Girls is snots!”</p>
-
-<p>As if to prove her boyhood, she hung over the rail
-so that he feared any moment she might tumble.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a girl, right enough,” said Tyler as if they were
-discussing an animal, “but God help the skirts she ever
-gets into!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d pull them over me head and run down the
-street if anyone ever stuck skirts on me,” said Jude.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11">11</a></span>
-“I’d as soon go about in them pajamas of yours.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was silent for a moment. It amazed him the
-familiarity that had suddenly sprung up between himself
-and these two.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you come aboard and have a look around?”
-asked Tyler, as though suddenly stricken with the sense
-of his own inhospitality.</p>
-
-<p>“But the boat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stream her on a line—over with a line, Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>A line came smack into the dinghy, and Ratcliffe tied
-it to the painter ring. Next moment he was on board,
-and the dinghy, taking the current, drifted astern.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner had his feet touched the deck of the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> than he felt himself encircled by a charm. It
-seemed to him that he had never been on board a real
-ship before this. The <i>Dryad</i> was a structure of steel
-and iron, safe and sure as a railway train, a conveyance,
-a mechanism made to pound along against wind
-and sea; as different from this as an aëroplane from a
-bird.</p>
-
-<p>This little deck, these high bulwarks, spars, and
-weather-worn canvas,—all them collectively were the real
-thing. Daring and distance and freedom and the power
-to wander at will, the inconsequence of the gulls,—all
-these were hinted at here. Old man Tyler had built the
-boat, but the sea had worked on her and made her what
-she was, a thing part of the sea as a puffin.</p>
-
-<p>Frowzy looking at a distance, on deck the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>
-showed no sign of disorder. The old planking was
-scrubbed clean and the brass of the little wheel shone.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12">12</a></span>
-There was no raffle about, nothing to cumber the deck
-but a boat,—the funniest-looking boat in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Canvas built,” said Tyler, laying his hand on her;
-“Pap’s invention; no more weight than an umbrella.
-No, she ain’t a collapsible: just canvas and hickory and
-cane. That’s another of Pap’s dodges over there, that
-sea anchor, and there’s ’nother, that jigger for raising the
-mudhook. Takes a bit of time, but half a man could
-work it, and I reckon it would raise a battleship. There’s
-the spare, same as the one that’s in the mud—ever see
-an anchor like that before? Pap’s. It’s a patent, but
-he was done over the patentin’ of it by a shark in
-Boston.”</p>
-
-<p>“He must have been a clever man,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“He was,” said Tyler. “Come below.”</p>
-
-<p>The cabin of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> showed a table in the
-middle, a hanging bunch of bananas, seats upholstered in
-some sort of leather, a telltale compass fixed in the ceiling,
-racks for guns and nautical instruments, and a bookcase
-holding a couple of dozen books. A sleeping cabin
-guarded by a curtain opened aft. Nailed to the bulkhead
-by the bookcase was an old photograph in a frame,
-the photograph of a man with a goatee beard, shaggy
-eyebrows, and a face that seemed stamped out of determination—or
-obstinacy.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Your father?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was took after Mother bolted,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“She took off with a long-shore Baptis’ minister,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13">13</a></span>
-Jude. “Said she couldn’t stand Pap’s unbelievin’ ways.”</p>
-
-<p>“He made her work for him in a laundry,” said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“It was at Pensacola, up the gulf, and a year after,
-when we fetched up there again, she came aboard and
-died. Pap went for the Baptis’ man.”</p>
-
-<p>“He wasn’t any more use for a Baptis’ minister when
-Pap had done with him,” said Jude. “That’s his books—Pap’s.
-There’s dead loads more in the spare bunk in
-there.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked at the books. Old man Tyler’s mentality
-interested him almost as much as the history of the
-Tyler family,—“Ben Hur,” Paine’s “Age of Reason” and
-“Rights of Man,” Browne’s “Popular Mechanics,” “The
-Mechanism of the Watch,” “Martin Chuzzlewit,” and
-some moderns, including an American edition of “Jude
-the Obscure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Some of those came off a wreck he had the pickin’s
-of,” said Tyler, “a thousand-tonner that went ashore off
-Cat Island.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was before Jude was born,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! how do you know that?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed and pointed to the book. “It’s the
-name on that book,” said he. “I didn’t know: I just
-guessed.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you’re right,” said Tyler, opening a locker
-and fetching out cups and saucers and plates and dumping
-them on the table. “Not that it matters much where
-it come from, but you’ve got eyes in your head, that’s
-sure. Say, you’ll stay to breakfast, now you’re
-aboard?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14">14</a></span>
-“I’d like to,” said Ratcliffe, “but I ought to be getting
-back: they won’t know what’s become of me. And besides
-I’m in these.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s easy fixed,” said Tyler. “Jude, tumble up
-and take the boat over to the hooker and say the gentleman
-is stayin’ to breakfast an’ll be back directly after.
-I’ll fix him for clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude vanished, and Tyler, going into the after-cabin,
-rousted out an old white drill suit of “Pap’s” and a pair
-of No. 9 canvas shoes.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re new washed since he wore them,” said Tyler.
-“Slip ’em on over your what’s his names and come along
-and lend me a hand in the galley—can you cook?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Eased in his mind as to the <i>Dryad</i>, the boy in him rose
-to this little adventure, delightful after weeks of routine
-and twenty years of ordered life and high respectability.
-He had caravaned, yachted in a small way, fancied that
-he had at all events touched the fringe of the Free Life—he
-had never been near it. These sea gipsies in their
-grubby old boat were It! A grim suspicion that these
-remains of the Tyler family sailed sometimes pretty close
-to the law and that their sea pickings were, to put it
-mildly, various did not detract in the least from their
-charm. He guessed instinctively they were not rogues
-of a bad sort. The lantern-jawed Satan had not the face
-of a saint. There were indications in it indeed of the
-possibility of a devilish temper no less than a desperate
-daring, but not a trace of meanness. Jude was astonishingly
-and patently honest, while old man Tyler, whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15">15</a></span>
-presence seemed still to linger on in this floating caravan,
-had evident titles, of a sort, to respect.</p>
-
-<p>He was helping to fry fish over the oil-stove in the
-little galley when Jude returned with the information, delivered
-through the shouting of the frying pan, that everything
-was all right, and the message had been delivered
-to a “guy” in a white coat who was hanging his fat head
-over the starboard rail of the <i>Dryad</i>; that he had told her
-to mind his paint; that she had told him not to drop his
-teeth overboard, and he had “sassed” her back; that the
-<i>Dryad</i> was a dandy ship, but would be a lot dandier if
-she were hove up on some beach convenient for pickin’
-her.</p>
-
-<p>Then she started to make the coffee over an auxiliary
-stove, mixing her industry with criticisms of the cookery
-and instructions as to how fish should be fried.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude does the cookin’ mostly,” said Tyler, “and we’d
-have hot rolls only we were under sail last night and
-she hadn’t time to set the dough. We’ll have to make
-out with ship’s bread.”</p>
-
-<p>Considering the condition of Jude’s grubby hands, Ratcliffe
-wasn’t sorry.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16">16</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">BREAKFAST</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> amount of food those two put away was a revelation
-to Ratcliffe, and from start to finish of the
-meal they never stopped talking. One being silent, the
-other took up the ball. They had cottoned to Ratcliffe,
-evidently from the very first moment, for, at the very
-first moment, Tyler had been communicative about himself
-and his ship and his way of life. An ordinary ship’s
-officer coming alongside would have got fish at a price
-if he had been civil or a fish flung at his head if he had
-given “sass”: Ratcliffe got friendship.</p>
-
-<p>It was maybe his youth and the fact that all young
-people are Freemasons that did the business; the humor
-of the gorgeous pajamas may have helped. Anyhow, the
-fact remained. He had secured something that knowledge
-or position or fortune could not have bought,—the
-good will and conversation of this pair, the history of
-the Tylers, and more than a hint of their life on these
-seas. They had four thousand dollars in the bank at
-Havana left by Pap, not to be touched unless the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> came to smash. They had no house rent or rates;
-no expenses but harbor dues, food, oil, and tobacco, and
-not much expense for food—at least just at present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17">17</a></span>
-Tyler winked across the table at Jude and Jude grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head,” said Jude, “and don’t be givin’
-shows away!” then suddenly to Ratcliffe, “We’ve got
-a cache.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s giving shows away now?” asked Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t split,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s on the island here,” said Tyler, “near a ton of
-stuff, canned. A brig went ashore south of Mariguana.
-We picked up the crew and heard their yarn and got the
-location. Then a big freighter came along and took the
-men off us. The wreck was only a hundred and fifty
-miles from our position, and we reckoned the salvage
-men wouldn’t be on the spot for a fortnight or more
-and something was due to us for savin’ that crew; so
-we lit out for the wreck. We had four days’ work on
-her. She was straddled on a reef with twenty fathoms
-under her counter and a flat calm, all but a breathin’ of
-wind. We made fast to her, same as if she’d been a
-wharf. We had the nigger then to help, and we took
-enough grub to last us two years an’ fourteen boxes
-of Havana cigars and a live cat that was most a
-skeleton.”</p>
-
-<p>“She croaked,” put in Jude. “Satan fed her half a
-can of beef cut small, and then she scoffed half a
-bucket of water—that bust her.”</p>
-
-<p>“We wouldn’t have been so free in taking the things
-but for the lie of the hooker on the reef and the weather
-that was sure coming,” said Tyler. “We knew all about
-the weather and the chances. And we didn’t cast off
-from that hooker an hour too soon! We were ridin’ out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18">18</a></span>
-that gale three days, and when we passed the reef again
-making west the brig was gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you cached the stuff here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But we hadn’t to make no cache hole,” put in Jude.
-“Pap had one here. It’s among the bushes—and he didn’t
-make it, neither.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all coral rock a foot under the bushes,” said
-Tyler, “and there’s a hole you drop down six foot, that
-leads to a cave as cool as a refrigerator; so the goods
-would keep to the last trumpet. The old Spaniards must
-have cut it to hide their stuff in. Pap dropped on it by
-chance. Said they’d used it for hidin’ gold and such.
-Not that he believed in the buried treasure business—sunk
-ships is different.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, who was hacking open a can of peaches, suddenly
-made an awful face at Satan. It had the effect of
-cutting him short. Ratcliffe refused the peaches. He
-sat watching this pair of cormorants and thinking that
-the cache must be pretty big if it held two years’ provisions
-for them.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly he said so, laughing and without giving
-the least offense. Tyler explained that the cache was not
-their only larder: there were fish and turtle and turtle
-eggs, birds sometimes, fruit to be had for next to nothing,
-often for nothing. The only expense was for tobacco,
-and he had not paid ten cents for tobacco since last fall
-and wouldn’t want to for a year to come; clothes, and
-they didn’t want much clothes, Jude did the mending and
-patching; paint, and the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> had ways and means<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19">19</a></span>
-of getting paint and all such, spars and so on. He gave
-a wonderful instance:</p>
-
-<p>Before Christmas last they had chummed up with a
-big yacht on the Florida coast near Cedar Cays. Thelusson
-was the owner, a man from New York. He took a
-fancy to the <i>Sarah</i> and her way of life, and he and his
-crew helped to careen her in a lagoon back of the reefs,
-cleaned her copper (she was dead foul with barnacles
-and weeds), gave her a new main boom and foresail and
-some spare canvas, and all for nix. He had no paint, or
-he would have painted her. He drank champagne by the
-bucket, and he wanted to quit the yacht and go for a
-cruise with them, only his missus who was on board
-wouldn’t let him.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe thought he could visualize Thelusson.</p>
-
-<p>“She was a mutt,” put in Jude, “with a voice like a
-muskeeter.”</p>
-
-<p>“She wanted to ’dopt Jude and stick a skirt on her,”
-said Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“Handed me out a lot of sick stuff about sayin’ prayers
-and such,” hurriedly cut in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“And put the nightcap on it by kissin’ her,” finished
-Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s face blazed red like a peony.</p>
-
-<p>“If you chaps have had enough, I’m goin’ to clear,”
-said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Satan, rising, and she cleared, vanishing
-with the swiftness of a rabbit up the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler fetched out a box of cigars. They were Ramon
-Alones.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20">20</a></span>
-“She won’t speak to me now for half a day,” said
-Tyler. “If you want to guy Jude, tell her she’s a girl.
-I wouldn’t a told you, only you’re not in our way of life
-and so can’t make trouble. No one knows. There’s not
-a man in any of the ports knows: she goes as me brother.
-But the Thelusson woman spotted her on sight—Come
-on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude was emptying a bucket of refuse overboard, then
-she vanished into the galley, and Ratcliffe, well fed, lazy,
-and smoking his cigar, leaned for a moment over the
-rail before taking his departure, talking to Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>To starboard lay Palm Island, with the sea quietly
-creaming on the coral beach and the palms stirring to the
-morning wind, to port the white <i>Dryad</i> riding to her
-anchor on the near-shore blue, and beyond the <i>Dryad</i> the
-violet of the great depths spreading to the far horizon,
-beyond which lay Andros, and the islands, reefs, and
-banks from Great Abeco to Rum Cay. Not a sail on
-all that sea, nor a stain on all that splendor: nothing but
-the gulls wheeling and crying over the reefs to southward.</p>
-
-<p>But Satan’s mind as he leaned beside Ratcliffe was
-not engaged by the beauty of the morning or the charm
-of the view. Satan was a dealer with the sea and the
-things that came out of the sea or were even to be met
-with floating on the waves. Ratcliffe was one of these
-things.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve never had no call to work?” said Satan tentatively.
-“You’ve lots of money, I s’pect, and can take
-things easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21">21</a></span>
-“Like fishin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ever wants to see good fishin’ and more
-than ordinary folk see of the islands here, drop me a
-word to Havana. Kellerman, marine store dealer,
-Havana, will get me. He’s a pal of mine. I fetch up
-in Havana every six months or so—and there’s more
-than fishin’—”</p>
-
-<p>Tyler stopped short, then he spat overboard and began
-to fill his pipe. He had no use for cigars—much.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean more than fishing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t know. We’re underhanded a bit for
-any big job and I wouldn’t trust most men. They don’t
-grow trustable parties in Havana, nor the coast towns—not
-much. I’ve taken a likin’ to you somehow or ’nother,
-and if ever we come together again I’ll tell you maybe
-somethin’ that’s in my mind. You see, between Pap and
-me and the old <i>Sarah</i>, we’ve seen close on thirty years of
-these waters right from Caicos to N’y’Orleans and down
-to Trinidad. Turtle egg huntin’ and fishin’ and tradin’,
-there’s not a reef or cay we don’t know. The old <i>Sarah</i>
-could find her way round blind. Put her before the wind
-with the wheel half a spoke weather helm and leave her,
-and she’d sniff the reefs on her own.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were saying about something more than fishing,”
-persisted Ratcliffe, whose curiosity had been, somehow,
-aroused.</p>
-
-<p>“I was,” said Tyler; “but I’m not free to speak about
-private affairs without Jude, and there’s no use in
-tacklin’ her when she’s snorty. Listen to that!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22">22</a></span>
-Sounds were coming from the galley as of a person
-banging pots and pans about.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler chuckled.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s always the same when her dander is up,—she
-starts cleanin’ and dustin’ and makin’ hell of the place.
-Mother was the same. I reckon a woman can’t help
-bein’ a woman, not if she had a hundred pair of breeches
-on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Ratcliffe, “I’d like to come for a cruise,
-and I will some day, I hope. Maybe I’ll see you on the
-island later. I was intending going ashore today to have
-a look round: that’s why we anchored here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe I’ll see you ashore then,” said Tyler, “but if
-I’m not there, mind and say nothin’ of the cache.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23">23</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">PAP’S SUIT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Jude, having</span> been fetched out of the galley, the canvas
-boat was got overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had offered to shed Pap’s suit and return in
-his pajamas as he had come, but Tyler vetoed the idea.
-The far-seeing Satan, who had snaffled a careen and clean
-up, not to speak of a main boom and spare canvas, out
-of Thelusson, had an object in view.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s no trouble,” said he. “You take the dinghy, and
-we’ll take the boat and fetch the duds back. It’s late in
-the mornin’ for you to be boarding your ship in them
-colored things.”</p>
-
-<p>One of the big fish caught that morning was dropped
-into the boat as a “present for the yacht,” and they
-started.</p>
-
-<p>The accommodation ladder was down and Simmons and
-a quartermaster received Ratcliffe. As he went up the
-side he heard Tyler shouting to Simmons something about
-the fish. There was no sign of Skelton on deck, for
-which he was thankful, then he dived below to change.</p>
-
-<p>Now “Pap’s” suit had been constructed for a man of
-over six feet and broad in proportion and a man, moreover,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24">24</a></span>
-who liked his clothes loose and easy. On Ratcliffe
-they recalled the vesture of Dr. Jekyll on Mr. Hyde.
-The saloon door was closed. He opened it, and found
-himself face to face with Skelton, who was sitting at
-one end of the saloon table reading from a book, while
-Strangways the captain, Norton the first officer, Prosser
-the steward, and sundry others ranged according to their
-degree sat at attention.</p>
-
-<p>It was Sunday morning. He had forgotten that fact,
-and there was no drawing back. He reached his cabin,
-mumbling apologies to the dead silence which seemed
-crystallized round Skelton, closed the door, and stuffed
-his head among the pillows of his bunk to stifle his
-laughter, then he undressed and dressed.</p>
-
-<p>As he dressed he could hear through the open port the
-voice of Tyler from alongside. The voice was pitched in
-a conversational key; it was saying something about a
-lick of white paint. He was talking evidently to Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Then, fully dressed, with the bundle of clothes and the
-canvas shoes under his arm, Ratcliffe peeped into the
-saloon. The service was over and the saloon was empty.
-He reached the deck. It was deserted save for a few
-hands forward and Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came down the accommodation ladder to the
-stage, and handed the clothes over to Satan.</p>
-
-<p>A drum of white paint and a coil of spare rope were
-in the boat close to Jude, and Satan was saying to Simmons
-something about a spare ax.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you haven’t got one, there’s no more to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25">25</a></span>
-said,” finished Satan; then to Ratcliffe, “See you ashore,
-maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude grinned kindly, and they pushed off, the boat a
-strake lower in the water with their loot.</p>
-
-<p>The fat-faced Simmons watched them with the appearance
-of a man just released from mesmerism.</p>
-
-<p>“That chap would talk the hat off one’s head,” said
-he. “I’ll have h—l to pay with Norton over that paint;
-most likely I’ll have to put my hand in my own pocket
-for it. But he’s a decent chap, that fellow, but sharp—the
-way he landed me with that fish for a bait!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s all there,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“So’s the boy,” said Simmons. “Come alongside after
-you’d gone, to say you were staying to breakfast with
-them. Told him to mind and not damage the paint.
-Let out like a bargee at me—and Sir William Skelton
-listening!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Sir William now, Simmons? He wasn’t in
-the saloon when I’d finished dressing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect he’s in his cabin,” said Simmons.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe got a book and, taking his seat under the
-double awning sheltering the quarterdeck, tried to read.
-He had chosen a History of the West Indies, the same
-book most likely from which Skelton had “cadged” his
-information of the night before. The printed page was
-dull, however, compared to the spoken word, and he
-found himself wondering how it was that Skelly could
-have warmed him up so to all this stuff and yet be such
-an angular stick-in-the-mud in ordinary life. What made
-him such a superior person? What made him at thirty<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26">26</a></span>
-look forty, sometimes fifty, and what made him, Ratcliffe,
-fear Skelly sometimes, just as a schoolboy fears
-a master?</p>
-
-<p>He guessed he was in for a wigging now for cutting
-breakfast and appearing like a guy before the officers,
-and he knew instinctively the form the wigging would
-take,—a chilly manner and studious avoidance of the
-subject, that would be all,—Christchurch on a wet Sunday
-for forty-eight hours, with the Oxford voice and
-the Oxford manner accentuated and thrown in.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Sir William Skelton, Bart., came on
-deck,—a tall, thin man, clean shaved, like a serious-minded
-butler in a yachting suit of immaculate white
-drill. His breeding lay chiefly in his eyes: they were
-half-veiled by heavy lids. He had an open mother-of-pearl-handled
-penknife in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>Free of the saloon hatch and not seeing Ratcliffe, he
-stopped dead like a pointer before game and called out
-“Quartermaster!”</p>
-
-<p>A quartermaster came running aft.</p>
-
-<p>Some raffle had been left on the scupper by the companionway,
-a fathom or so of old rope rejected by Tyler
-as not being the quality he was “wantin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He ordered it to be taken forrard, then he saw Ratcliffe
-and nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“’Morning,” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>He walked to the rail and stood with his hand on it
-for a moment, looking at the island and the <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Jude and Satan were at work on something aft. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27">27</a></span>
-a minute it became apparent what they were doing. They
-were rigging an awning in imitation of the <i>Dryad’s</i>, an
-impudent affair made out of old canvas brown with
-weather and patched from wear.</p>
-
-<p>It was like seeing a beggar woman raising a parasol.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton sniffed; then he turned and, leaning with his
-back against the bulwarks, began attending to his left
-little fingernail with the penknife.</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe,” said Skelton suddenly and apparently addressing
-his little finger, “I <em>wish</em> you wouldn’t!” He
-spoke mildly, in a vaguely pained voice. It was as
-though Ratcliffe had acted in some way like a bounder;
-more, and, wonderfully, he actually made Ratcliffe feel
-as though he had acted in some way like a bounder. He
-was Ratcliffe’s host; that gave an extra weight to the
-words. The whole thing was horrible.</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t what?” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton had been rather hit in his proprieties by a man
-going off his boat in pajamas and remaining away to
-breakfast on board a thing like the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> in his
-pajamas; but the real cause of offense was “Pap’s” suit
-suddenly appearing at Sunday morning prayers. The
-chief steward had grinned.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, though a good sailor, an excellent shipmaster,
-and as brave as a man need be, was a highly nervous
-individual. A general service on deck for the whole crew
-was beyond him: he compromised by conducting a short
-service in the saloon. Even that was a tax on him. The
-entrance of Ratcliffe in that extraordinary get-up had
-joggled his nervous system.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28">28</a></span>
-“If you can’t understand, I can’t explain,” said Skelton.
-“If our cases had been reversed, I should have
-apologized. However, it doesn’t matter.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Skelly!” said Ratcliffe. “I’m most awfully
-sorry if I have jumped on your corns, and I’ll
-apologize as much as you want, but the fact of the matter
-is we don’t seem to hit it off exactly, do we? You are
-the best of good people, but we have different temperaments.
-If those other fellows had come along on the
-cruise, it would have mixed matters more. We want to
-be mixed up in a big party more, you and I, if we want
-to get on together.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you before we started I disliked crowds,” said
-Skelton, “and that only Satherthwaite and Magnus were
-coming. Then, when they failed, you said it didn’t
-matter, that we should be freer and more comfortable
-alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Ratcliffe. “It was my mistake, and
-besides I didn’t want to put you off the cruise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, you would not have put me off. I should have
-started alone. I am dependent on no one for society.”</p>
-
-<p>“I believe you would have been happier alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Perhaps,” said Skelton with tight lips.</p>
-
-<p>“Well then, shove me ashore, somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is talking nonsense!” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had risen and was leaning over the rail beside
-the other. His eyes were fixed on the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, the
-disreputable <i>Sarah</i>, and as he looked at her Jude and
-Satan suddenly seemed to him real live free human beings<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29">29</a></span>
-and Skelton as being not entirely alive nor, for all
-his wealth, free.</p>
-
-<p>It was Skelton who gave the Tylers a nimbus, extra
-color, fascination, especially Jude. There was a lot of
-fascination about Jude, even without the background of
-Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not talking nonsense a bit,” said he, “and, if you
-can trundle along the rest of the cruise alone, I’ll drop
-you here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Drop you on this island?”</p>
-
-<p>“No—I’d like to go for a cruise with those chaps—I
-mean that chap in the mud barge over there. He asked
-me, any time I wanted to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you in earnest?”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I am. It would be no end of a picnic,
-and I want to shove round these seas. I can get a boat
-back from Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton felt that this was the washerwoman of Barbados
-over again,—irresponsibility—bad form. He was,
-under his courteousness as a host, heartily sick of Ratcliffe
-and his ways and outlook. A solitary by inclination,
-he would not at all have objected to finishing this
-cruise by himself. All the same, he strongly objected
-to the idea just put before him.</p>
-
-<p>What made him object? Was he insulted that the
-<i>Dryad</i> should be turned down in favor of the frowzy, disreputable-looking
-<i>Sarah Tyler</i>, that the companionship
-of the Tylerites should be preferred to his? Did some
-vague instinct tell him they were the better people to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30">30</a></span>
-with if one wanted to have a good time? Was high
-conventionality outraged as though, walking down Piccadilly
-with Ratcliffe, the latter were to seize the arm
-of a dustman?</p>
-
-<p>Who knows? But he bitterly and strongly objected.
-And how and in what words did he show his objection
-and anger?</p>
-
-<p>“Then go, my dear fellow, go!” said he as though with
-all the good will in the world.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But are you sure you don’t
-mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mind! Why should I mind?”</p>
-
-<p>“One portmanteau full of stuff will do me,” said Ratcliffe,
-“and I have nearly a hundred and fifty in ready
-money and a letter of credit on the Lyonnaise at Havana
-for five hundred. I’ll trundle my stuff over if you’ll
-lend me a boat, and be back for luncheon. You’ll be
-off this evening, I suppose, and I can stay aboard here
-till you get the anchor up. It’s possible I might pick you
-up at Havana on the way back; but don’t worry about
-that. Of course all this depends on whether that fellow
-will take me. I’ll take the portmanteau with me and
-ask.”</p>
-
-<p>He did not in the least see what was going on in Skelton’s
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You will take your things with you in a boat, and
-if this—gentleman refuses to take you, what then?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now I want to be quite clear with you, Ratcliffe,”
-said Skelton. “If you leave my ship like that—for nothing—at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31">31</a></span>
-a whim and for disreputable chance acquaintances—absolute
-scowbankers—the worst sort—I want to be
-clear with you—quite, absolutely definite—I must ask you
-not to come back!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m hanged!” said Ratcliffe, suddenly blazing
-out. “First you say go and then you say don’t! Of
-course that’s enough: you’ve practically fired me off your
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do not twist my words,” said the other. “That is
-a subtle form of prevarication I can’t stand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I think we had better stop this,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m
-going! If I don’t see you again. I’ll say goodby.”</p>
-
-<p>“And please understand,” said the other, who was
-rather white about the mouth, “please understand—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I know,” said Ratcliffe. “Goodby!”</p>
-
-<p>He dived below to the saloon and rang for his bedroom
-steward.</p>
-
-<p>Burning with anger and irritation and a feeling that
-he had been sat upon by Skelton, snubbed, sneered at,
-and altogether outrageously used, he could not trust
-himself to do his own packing. He sat on his bunkside
-while the steward stuffed a portmanteau with necessaries,
-and as he sat the thought came to him of what would
-happen were Tyler to refuse to take him. He would
-have to take refuge on Palm Island. It was a comic
-opera sort of idea; yet, such was the state of his mind,
-he actually entertained it.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton was no longer “Skelly,” but “that beast Skelton.”
-Then he tipped the steward and the chief steward,
-telling them that he was going for a cruise in that “yawl<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32">32</a></span>
-over there.” On deck he met Norton and Simmons
-and told them the same tale. Skelton had vanished to
-his cabin. He told the first and second officers that he
-had said goodby to his host and asked for a boat to be
-lowered.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll pick you up most likely at Havana,” said he to
-gloze the matter over. “I expect I’ll have a good time,
-but rather rough. I want to do some fishing.”</p>
-
-<p>The whole thing seemed like a dream and not a particularly
-pleasant one. Embarked on this business now,
-he almost wished himself done with it. The yacht was
-comfortable, the cooking splendid; to satisfy any want,
-one had only to touch a bell. There were no bells on
-board the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>. A lavatory and a sort of bathroom
-invented by “Pap” were the only conveniences, and
-the bath was impracticable. It was “Pap’s” only failure,
-for the sea-cock connecting it with the outer ocean was
-so arranged or constituted that as likely as not it would
-let in the Caribbean before you could “stop it off.”</p>
-
-<p>If Skelton now, at the last moment, had asked Ratcliffe
-to come down and have an interview, things might
-have been smoothed over, but Skelton was not the sort
-of man to make advances; neither, in his way, was Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Simmons was directing the lowering of a
-boat. The companionway was still down. The luggage
-was put in, and Simmons, seated by Ratcliffe in the stern
-seats, took the yoke lines. Not a sign of Skelton, not
-even a face at a porthole!</p>
-
-<p>“Give way!” shouted Simmons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33">33</a></span>
-As they drew up to the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, Ratcliffe saw
-Satan leaning over the rail and watching them. Jude
-was nowhere visible.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” said Ratcliffe as they came alongside. “I’ve
-come back.”</p>
-
-<p>“I was half-expectin’ you,” said Satan with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take me for that cruise right off?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure! That your dunnage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan stepped to the cabin companionway and shouted
-down it.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” came Jude’s voice.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s come back!”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34">34</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE PORTMANTEAU</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> Jude came on deck the portmanteau was being
-hoisted on board. Ratcliffe passed down a five-pound
-note to the boat’s crew, and then stood, waving
-to Simmons as the boat put away. Then, turning to
-Satan, he tried to discuss terms, but was instantly silenced
-by Jude and Satan. They would hear nothing of money.
-Used to sea changes and strange happenings, they seemed
-to think nothing of the business, and after the first words
-fell to talking together.</p>
-
-<p>The trend of their talk induced in Ratcliffe a vaguely
-uncanny feeling. It was as though they had already discussed
-his coming on board and the storage of himself
-and his baggage, as though they had known by instinct
-that he would return. The size of the portmanteau
-affected Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“You can’t keep that,” said Jude, giving the portmanteau
-a slight kick. “It’s a long sight too big. Say, what
-have you got in it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pajamas?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, and lots of other things.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude tilted back the old panama she was wearing and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35">35</a></span>
-took her seat on the portmanteau. Her feet were bare,
-and she twisted her toes in thought as she sat for a
-moment turning matters over in her mind.</p>
-
-<p>“You can stick the things in the spare locker,” said
-she at last. “You gonna have a gay old time if you
-keep this in the cabin, tumblin’ over it. Better empty
-her here an’ cart the stuff below.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said Ratcliffe. “But what shall I do with the
-portmanteau when it’s empty?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heave her overboard,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head!” said Tyler, suddenly cutting in.
-“What you talkin’ about? Heave yourself overboard!”
-Then to Ratcliffe, “She’s right, all the same; there’s no
-room for luggage. If you’ll help Jude to get the things
-below, I’ll look after the trunk. When you’ve done with
-the cruise you can get a bag to hold your things.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe opened the portmanteau. The steward of the
-<i>Dryad</i> was an expert: in a past existence he had probably
-been a pack rat. In any given space he could have
-tucked away half as much again as any other ordinary
-mortal. But he certainly had no imagination, or perhaps
-he had been too busy to cast his eye overboard and
-see the manner of craft Ratcliffe was joining, and Ratcliffe
-had been far too much exercised in his mind about
-Skelton to notice what was being packed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude on her knees helped.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s this?” asked Jude, coming on a black satin
-lining.</p>
-
-<p>“Confound the fool!” said Ratcliffe. “He needn’t have
-packed that: it’s a dinner jacket.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36">36</a></span>
-“Mean to say you sit down to your dinner in a jacket?”
-Jade choked and snorted while Ratcliffe hurriedly, on his
-knees, hauled out the trousers and waistcoats that went
-with the garments.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the lining—it’s worn the other way about—I
-know it’s tomfoolery. Stick ’em all in one bundle—Lord!
-look at the shirts he’s packed!”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve got tucks in them,” said Jude, looking at the
-pleated fronts.</p>
-
-<p>“I know. They go with that tomfool dinner suit.
-You can’t knock sense into the head of a bedroom
-steward. Come along and let’s get them down below.”</p>
-
-<p>While they were carting the stuff down, Satan on the
-hatch cover cut himself a chew of tobacco (he sometimes
-chewed) and, with his lantern jaws working regularly
-like the jaws of a cow chewing the cud, contemplated
-the steadily emptying portmanteau.</p>
-
-<p>He had a plan about that portmanteau, a plan to turn
-it to profit. Satan’s plans generally had profit for their
-object. He had taken a genuine liking for Ratcliffe; but
-it was a curious thing with Satan that even his likings
-generally helped him along toward profit,—perhaps because
-they were the outcome of a keen intelligence that
-had been sharpened by knocking about among rascals,
-beachcombers, wharf rats, as well as honest folk.</p>
-
-<p>When Ratcliffe had fetched down the last load and
-come up again, he found Satan and the portmanteau
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas boat had not been brought on board, but
-streamed astern on a line. He looked over the side.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37">37</a></span>
-Satan was in the boat with the portmanteau and in the
-act of pushing off.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m takin’ her back to the yacht,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe nodded.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment Jude came on deck blinking and hitching
-up her trousers. She had washed her face and made
-herself a bit more tidy,—perhaps because she had remembered
-it was Sunday or perhaps because company
-had come on board. She had evidently put her whole
-head into the water. It was dripping, and as she stood
-with the old panama in her hand and her cropped hair
-drying in the sun Ratcliffe observed her anew and
-thought that he had never seen a more likable figure.
-Jude would never be pretty, but she was better than
-pretty,—healthy, honest and capable, trusting and fearless,
-easily reflecting laughter, and with a trace of the irresponsibility
-of youth. It was a face entirely original
-and distinctive. Dirty, it was the face of a larrikin;
-washed, a face such as I have attempted to describe; and
-the eyes were extraordinary,—liquid-gray, with a look of
-distance, when she was serious, a look acquired perhaps
-from life among vast sea spaces.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Satan?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe pointed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, shading her eyes, looked. Then she laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Thought he was up to somethin’,” said she. “He’s
-gone to kid that officer man out of some more truck.”</p>
-
-<p>In a flash Ratcliffe saw the reason of Satan’s activities,
-and in another flash he saw again, or seemed to see, in
-Satan and Jude a pair of gipsies of the sea. A gipsies’<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38">38</a></span>
-caravan camped close to a neat villa,—that was the relationship
-between the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and the <i>Dryad</i>,—and
-Satan was the caravan man gone round to the villa’s
-back door to return an empty portmanteau and blarney
-the servants out of scraps and old odds and ends not
-wanted, maybe to commandeer a chicken or nick a doormat—heaven
-only knew! He remembered the fancy
-Satan had taken to the dinghy. And he, Ratcliffe, had
-thrown in his lot with these people! Fishing cruise!
-Rubbish! Gipsy patter, sea thimblerigging, wreck-picking,
-and maybe petty larceny from Guadaloupe to dry
-Tortugas,—that was what he had signed on for. Why,
-the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, could she have been hauled into any
-law court, would have stood convicted on her very appearance!
-Jude was honest enough in her way; but her
-way was Satan’s way, and she had owned up with steadfast,
-honest eyes to the plundering of a brig and the
-caching of the plunder. They were “passons to what
-Pap had been,” but they were his offspring, and the law
-to them was no doubt what it had been to him,—a something
-to be avoided or outwitted, like a dangerous animal.</p>
-
-<p>All these thoughts running through his head did not
-disturb him in the least. Far from that! The reckless
-in him had expanded since he had cut the cable connecting
-him with the <i>Dryad</i>, and not for worlds would he
-have changed the <i>Sarah</i> into a vessel of more conventional
-form, or altered Satan from whatever he might be
-into a figure of definite respectability.</p>
-
-<p>He reckoned that if Satan broke the law he would be
-clever enough to avoid the consequences. His tongue<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39">39</a></span>
-alone would get him out of most fixes, and just this touch
-of gipsiness in the business gave a new flavor to life,—the
-flavor boys seek when they raid orchards and hen-roosts
-and go pirating with corked faces and lath swords.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s goin’ aboard her,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The portmanteau had been taken up by one of the
-crew, and now Satan, evidently at the invitation of one
-of the white-clad figures leaning over the rail of the
-<i>Dryad</i>, was going up the accommodation ladder, leaving
-the boat to wash about in the blue water by the stage.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe guessed that one of the white-clad figures was
-Skelton and that it was on Skelton’s invitation he had
-gone on board. He felt vaguely uneasy. What did
-Skelton mean by that? Was he up to any dodge to
-“crab” the cruise?</p>
-
-<p>However, he had no time to bother over this, for Jude,
-who had him now to herself without fear of interruption,
-had opened her batteries.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said Jude, hanging over the rail where the
-awning cast its shadow, speaking without looking at him
-and spitting into the water, “what are you when you’re
-ashore, anyway?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m one of the idle rich,” said Ratcliffe, lighting his
-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you won’t be idle aboard here,” said Jude definitely.
-“What was your dad? Was your dad an idle-rich?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he was a ship owner.”</p>
-
-<p>“How many ships did he own?”</p>
-
-<p>“About forty.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40">40</a></span>
-“What sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“Steamers.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sizes?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, anything from two to five thousand tons.”</p>
-
-<p>She turned to see if he were guying her.</p>
-
-<p>“There was another man in the business,” said Ratcliffe,
-“a partner; Ratcliffe &amp; Holt was the same of the
-firm. The governor died intestate.”</p>
-
-<p>“Somethin’ wrong with his inside?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he died of a stroke; he was found in his office
-chair dead; he died at his work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did they get the chap that did him in?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it wasn’t a man that struck him; it was apoplexy,
-a disease, and dying without a will, all his money was
-divided up between my two brothers and me.”</p>
-
-<p>“How much did you get?”</p>
-
-<p>“Over a hundred thousand.”</p>
-
-<p>“Dollars?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, pounds—four hundred thousand dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Got ’em still?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the bank?”</p>
-
-<p>“Some; the rest is invested.”</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to lose interest in the money business and
-hung for a moment over the rail, whistling almost noiselessly
-between her teeth and kicking up a bare heel.
-Then she said:</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s the chap you were sailin’ with?”</p>
-
-<p>“Skelton is his name.”</p>
-
-<p>“He owns that hooker?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41">41</a></span>
-“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude suddenly, as if waking from a
-reverie, “this won’t boil potatoes—I’ve got to get dinner
-ready. Come ’long and help if you’re willin’.”</p>
-
-<p>There was half a sack of potatoes in the galley. She
-set the stove going, and then, on her knees before the
-open sack, she sent him to fetch half a bucket of water
-from overboard. He found the bucket with a rope attached,
-brought the water, and filled the potato kettle,
-then he brought more water for the washing of the
-potatoes.</p>
-
-<p>She did the washing squatting on her heels before the
-bucket.</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you get them from?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Get which?”</p>
-
-<p>“The potatoes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Bought them,” said Jude; then, as though suddenly
-smitten by rectitude, “No, we didn’t, nuther: we kidooled
-them out of a fruiter.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s a fruiter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fruit steamer. Satan fixed her.”</p>
-
-<p>“How did he fix her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude, “it’s no harm to hold up a packet
-if you don’t throw her off her course—much. It’s the
-owners pays, and they can stand the racket. The crew
-likes it, and if there’s passengers aboard they just love
-it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you mean to say you hold up steamers?” asked
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42">42</a></span>
-“But how do you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s only now and then. What’s easier than to
-lay in her course with the flag half-mast? Then she
-heaves to.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you board her and ask for potatoes, or whatever
-you want?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much!” said Jude. “They’d boot you off the
-ship. Water’s what you ask for, pretendin’ you’re dying
-of thirst; then you drink till you’re near bustin’ and
-fill the breaker you’ve brought with you. It’s all on the
-square. Satan would never hold a ship unless he had
-some fish to offer them for whatever he wants,—potatoes
-or fruit or tobacco. He’s got the fish in the boat and
-hands it up. They’re always glad of fresh fish and they
-offer to buy it; but he won’t take money, but says, ‘If
-you’ve got a few potatoes handy, I don’t mind takin’ them
-for the fish.’ Sometimes it’s fruit he wants, or other
-things. Then you push off—and if it’s a passenger
-packet the passengers, thinkin’ they’ve saved you from
-dyin’ of thirst, line up and cheer. It’s no end of fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“What flag do you sail under?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Murrican, what else? You see,” went on Jude as
-she put the potatoes into the kettle, “fish costs nothing
-to us and they’re mighty glad of it, but I reckon they’d
-bat our heads off if they knew about the dyin’ of thirst
-business.”</p>
-
-<p>“But suppose you struck the same ship twice?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a job one does every day,” said Jude, with
-a trace of contempt in her tone, “and Satan don’t wear
-blinkers, and it’s not a job you could do at all if you<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43">43</a></span>
-didn’t know the lie of the fishin’ banks by where the
-ship tracks run. I reckon you’ve got to learn something
-about things.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I have,” said Ratcliffe, laughing, “and I
-bet you’ll teach me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, shy that over to begin with,” said Jude, giving
-him the pail of dirty water.</p>
-
-<p>He flung the water over the side, and as he did so
-he took a glance at the <i>Dryad</i>. Satan was in the boat
-just pushing off. When he returned to the galley with
-the news, Jude was preparing to fry fish: not the early
-morning fish, but some caught just before Ratcliffe had
-come on board.</p>
-
-<p>Then he went to the rail again just as Satan was
-coming alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had a cargo of sorts. His insatiable appetite
-for canvas and rope was evidenced by the bundle in the
-stern, and there were parcels. The return of the empty
-portmanteau had not been waste labor.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s coffee,” said he to Ratcliffe, handing up the
-goods. “We were runnin’ short. And here’s biscuits—catch
-a holt—and here’s some fancy muck in cans and
-c’ndensed milk—I told the chap our cow died yesterday.
-‘Take everything you want,’ says he. ‘Don’t mind me—I’m
-only the owner.’ Offered me the mainsail as I
-was putting off an’ told me to come back for the dinghy.
-I’d told him I was sweet on her—full of fun he was—and
-maybe I will. Claw hold of this bundle of matches—they’re
-a livin’ Godsend—and here’s a case of canned
-t’marters—and that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44">44</a></span>
-Skelton’s irony was evidently quite lost on Satan, or
-put down to his “fun,” but Ratcliffe could appreciate
-it, and the fact that its real target was himself.</p>
-
-<p>The canned t’marters appeared with the food at dinner,
-and during the meal more of Skelton came out.
-He had offered Satan vinous liquors, hoping, so Ratcliffe
-dimly suspected, to send him back a trouble to the
-<i>Sarah Tyler</i> and an object lesson on the keeping of disreputable
-company; but the wily Satan had no use for
-liquor. He was on the water wagon.</p>
-
-<p>“I leave all them sorts of things to Jude,” said he, with
-a grin. He was referring to Jude’s boasted drunk at
-Havana, and Ratcliffe, who was placed opposite to the
-pair of them, across the table, saw Jude’s chin project.
-Why she should boast of a thing one moment and fire
-up at the mention of it at another was beyond him.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment it seemed as if she were going to
-empty the dish of tomatoes over Satan, but she held
-herself in, all but her tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“You’d have been doin’ better work on board here,
-mendin’ the gooseneck of that spare gaff, than wangling
-old canvas an’ rope out of that man,” said she.
-“We’re full up of old truck that’s no more use to us
-than Solomon’s aunt. It’s in the family, I suppose,
-seein’ what Granf’er was—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, put a potato in your mouth!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“He used to peddle truck on the Canada border,” said
-she to Ratcliffe,—“hams—”</p>
-
-<p>“Close up!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“—made out o’ birchwood, and wooden nutmegs—”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45">45</a></span>
-“That was Pap’s joke,” said Satan. “And another
-word out of you and I’ll turn you over me knee and
-take down your—”</p>
-
-<p>“Then what do you want flingin’ old things in my
-face?” cried Jude, wabbling between anger and tears.
-“Some day I’ll take me hook, same as mother did.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s not a Baptis’ minister would look at you,”
-said Satan, winking at Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn Baptis’ ministers! You may work your old
-hooker yourself. I’ll skip! Two thousand of them dollars
-is mine, and next time we touch Havana I’ll skip!”</p>
-
-<p>“And where’ll you skip to?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll start a la’ndry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then you’ll have to black your face and wear a turban,
-same as the others—and marry a nigger. I can
-see you comin’ off for the ship’s washin’.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude began to laugh in a crazy sort of way, then all
-at once she sobered down and went on with her dinner.
-One could never tell how her anger would end,—in tears,
-laughter of a wild sort, or just nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Not another word was said about the family history
-of the Tylers, at least at that meal, and after it was
-over Jude made Ratcliffe help to wash up the plates and
-things in the galley.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s Cap,” said Jude. “He never helps in the
-washin’ or swillin’. Not cold water!—land’s sake! where
-did you learn washin’ up?—hot! I’ve left some in that
-billy on the stove.”</p>
-
-<p>She had taken off her old coat and rolled her guernsey
-sleeves up to the shoulders nearly, and it came to Ratcliffe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46">46</a></span>
-as he helped that, without a word of remonstrance,
-naturally, and as a part adapts itself to the economy of
-a whole, he had sunk into the position of kitchen maid
-and general help to the Tyler family, taken the place
-of the nigger that had skipped; furthermore that Satan
-was less a person than a subtle influence. Satan seemed
-to obtain his ends more by wishing than by willing. He
-wanted an extra hand, and he had somehow put the spell
-of his wish on him, Ratcliffe. He had wished a drum
-of paint out of Simmons—and look at Skelton, the cynical
-and superior Skelton, sending off doles of coffee
-and “t’marters” to the dingy and disreputable <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i>, offering his mainsail to the rapacious Satan as
-a gibe! What had he been but a marionette dancing on
-the string of Satan’s wish?</p>
-
-<p>Only for Jude and the <i>Sarah</i> and the queer new sense
-of freedom from all the associations he had ever known,
-only for something likable about Satan, the something
-that gave him power to wheedle things out of people and
-bend them to his wishes, Ratcliffe might have reacted
-against the Tyler hypnotism. As it was, the whole business
-seemed as jolly as a pantomime, as exciting as a
-new form of novel in which the folk were real and himself
-a character.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Satan and the old <i>Sarah</i> aside, and the extraordinary
-fascination of spars, sails, narrow deck, and
-close sea, catching one’s own fish, cooking one’s own
-food, and dickering with winds, waves, reefs, and lee
-shores for a living,—leaving all these aside, Jude alone
-would have held him; for Jude gave him what he possessed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47">47</a></span>
-when he was nine,—the power of playing again,
-of seeing everything new and fresh. Washing up dishes
-with Jude was a game. To the whole-souled Jude all this
-business was a game,—hauling on the halyards, fishing,
-cooking, hanging on to the beard of a storm by the sea
-anchor, wreck picking and so on,—and she had infected
-him. Already they were good companions and, when
-together, of the same age, about nine—though she was
-fifteen and he over twenty.</p>
-
-<p>“Stick them on that shelf,” said Jude. “Oh, Lord!—butter-fingers!—lemme!
-That’s the gadget to keep them
-from shiftin’ if the ship rolls. Now stick the knives in
-that locker. You don’t mind my tellin’ you, do you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p>They found Satan under the awning, attending to the
-gooseneck of the spare gaff.</p>
-
-<p>Jude sat down on the deck clasping her knees, criticized
-Satan’s handiwork, received instructions to hold
-her tongue, and then collapsed, lying on her back with
-knees up and the back of her hand across her eyes.
-She could sleep at any odd moment.</p>
-
-<p>The horizon had vanished in haze, the crying of the
-gulls had died down, and the washing of the lazy swell
-on the island beach sounded like a lullaby.</p>
-
-<p>A trace of smoke was rising from the yellow funnel
-of the <i>Dryad</i> as she lay like a white painted ship on a
-blue painted ocean. They were firing up.</p>
-
-<p>“How about getting ashore?” asked Ratcliffe. “I want
-to see that cache of yours. Care to come?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48">48</a></span>
-“I’d just as soon leave it till they’re away,” said
-Satan, jerking his hand toward the <i>Dryad</i>. “There’s
-no tellin’, they might be spottin’ us on the location with
-a glass, and they’ll be off tonight—so the chap told me.
-You leave it to me and I’ll show you a cache better nor
-that in a day or two.”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up, Satan!” came a drowsy voice from the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Shut up yourself!” said Satan. “I’m not talkin’ of
-what you mean: I’m talkin’ of the abalone reef—lyin’
-there like a lazy dog and lippin’ your betters!”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s me betters?” cried Jude, sitting bang-up
-suddenly, like the corpse in “Thou art the man.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m your betters.”</p>
-
-<p>“You!”</p>
-
-<p>“Me!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude broke into a cracked laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to him talkin’!” cried she to the universe in
-general. “Ain’t fit to bile potatoes!” She was on her
-feet, and he was after her with a rope’s end, dodging
-her round the mast. “Touch me and I’ll tell him!” A
-flick of the rope’s end caught her, and next moment she
-was clinging to Ratcliffe and using him as her shield.
-“It’s an old ship sunk south o’ Rum Key!” cried Jude.
-“South o’ Rum Key! I told you I’d tell him if you
-touched me.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan dropped the rope and resumed the gooseneck
-business.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’ve done it!” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Told you I would,” said Jude. She sat down on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49">49</a></span>
-deck again as though nothing had happened and nursed
-her knees.</p>
-
-<p>“You needn’t mind me,” said Ratcliffe. “I won’t tell.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it’s not that,” said Satan, “but Pap was mighty
-particular about keepin’ close. He located that hooker
-only three months before the fever took him—and he
-didn’t come on it by chance nuther. And now Jude’s
-given the show away!”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you I’d tell him,” said Jude broodily.</p>
-
-<p>“Told me you’d tell him! Why, ever since last fall
-you’ve been at me to keep my tongue in my head about
-it, and then you bring it out bing, first thing, yourself!
-That’s a woman all over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who are you callin’ a woman?”</p>
-
-<p>“Me aunt. Shut your head and give over handlin’
-that ball of yarn, clutch hold of the gaff and keep it
-steady while I fix this ring on her!”</p>
-
-<p>He worked away in silence while Ratcliffe sat watching,
-vaguely intrigued by what had just passed. It was
-less the words than the place and circumstance,—the little
-deck of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, the blue lazy sea, the voice of
-the surf on Palm Island, the figure of Jude and Satan.
-He had seen Rum Cay: They had passed it in a pink
-and pearly dawn. The steward had called him up to
-look at it. South of that lonely and fascinating place
-old man Tyler had located a sunk ship. What sort of
-ship he knew instinctively and that the Tylers were not
-the people to halloo over nothing. The gulls did not
-know these seas better than they. He said nothing, however.
-It was Satan who spoke next.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50">50</a></span>
-“Pap had reckoned to lay for it this spring,” said
-Satan, “but the fever took him. Then we were underhanded.
-Jude and me can make out to work the boat
-and get a livin’, but we’re too underhanded for a big
-job. Why, takin’ that truck off the brig I told you about
-near laid us out, and we had the nigger to help and she
-was hove up so that it was like takin’ cargo off a wharfside.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” said Ratcliffe, “I’ll help if you care to
-go for it. I don’t want any share: just the fun. What’s
-in her?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan in a half-hearted way, “maybe we’ll
-have a look at her; but it’s a job that wants more than
-three by rights. Pap was three men in himself; he’d a
-done it. It’s a dynamite job. She’s got to be blasted
-open.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve heard stories about buried treasure in these
-seas—” began Ratcliffe. Jude turned her head.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s bilge,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Yarns,” said Satan. “Pap used to turn any man
-down that talked of stuff bein’ buried. First he said
-that chaps didn’t bury stuff, second if they did you
-couldn’t find it, what with earthquakes and sand siftin’
-and such, and third that never an ounce of silver, or
-gold for the matter of that, has ever been dug up by the
-tomfools huntin’ for it. Havana is full of tall stories of
-buried treasure—chaps make a livin’ sellin’ locations and
-faked charts and the like of that. It’s a Spanish game,
-and it takes good American money every year. You see,
-Pap was a book-readin’ man,—taught himself to read,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51">51</a></span>
-too, and didn’t start the job till he was near forty,—so
-he had a head on him, but somehow or ’nother he never
-made the money he ought. If he’d stuck in towns and
-places, he’d have been a Rock’feller; but he liked beatin’
-about free, said God’s good air was better than dollars.
-But it stuck in him that he hadn’t made out, somehow.
-Then he turned into unbelievin’ ways, Said he was a soci—what
-was it, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Somethin’ or ’nother,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Socialist?” suggested Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it! Said the time was coming when all the
-guys that were down under would be on top of the chaps
-that were on top, and that there’d be such a hell of a
-rough house money’d be no use anyway; said the time
-was comin’ when eggs would be a dollar apiece and no
-dollars to buy them with, and me and Jude would be
-safest without money gettin’ our livin’ out of the sea.
-He was a proper dirge when he got on that tack. But
-all the same it stuck in him that he wasn’t on top, and
-one night when he was in Diegos’ saloon he heard three
-Spanish chaps layin’ their heads together. He knew the
-lingo well enough to make out their meanin’. They
-were in the bar. Pap wasn’t on the water wagon, but
-he was no boozer. He was sittin’ there that night just
-dead beat, as any man might be after the day’s work
-he’d done, runnin’ the customs—”</p>
-
-<p>“Luff!” said Jude in a warning voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, close your head! Think I am talkin’ to a customs
-officer? He don’t care.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a bit,” said Ratcliffe. “Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52">52</a></span>
-“Well, he was sittin’ with his eyes shut, and he heard
-these guys colludin’ together. He didn’t get more than
-half they said, but he got enough to make him want to
-hear more. Then they quit the bar and went into a back
-room with their lemon juice and cigarettes. Ten minutes
-after hell broke loose in that back room, and when
-Pap and the bartender got the door open there was the
-chaps, one on the floor shot through the head and the
-other two near done in. Two of them had set on the
-guy that was dead; but they hadn’t knocked him out
-before he began to shoot, and he’d pretty well riddled
-them with a Colt automatic pistol—”</p>
-
-<p>“Them’s the things!” said Jude. “I’m savin’ up to
-buy one of them things on my own—twenty-five dollars—”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head! Then they must have knocked it
-out of his hand and used the last shot on him.”</p>
-
-<p>“His brains were all over the floor,” said Jude with
-relish. “Pap said they looked like white of egg beat up
-and enough to fill a puddin’ basin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Pap spotted somethin’ else on the floor,” went on
-Satan, “a piece of paper folded double. He put it in
-his pocket while the fellers were bein’ lifted to the hospital,
-where they died that same night. He was on the
-square all right, takin’ that paper, and I’ll tell you why.
-Six months before that we’d spotted a wreck comin’ up
-from Guadaloupe. She’s so placed—as maybe you’ll see
-yourself one day—that a hundred ships might have
-passed her without spottin’ her, and bein’ out of trade<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53">53</a></span>
-tracks made her all the safer. These guys had been
-talkin’ about a wreck before they left the bar for the
-back room, and he reckoned it was our find they were
-onto. The piece of paper made him sure of that, and,
-takin’ it with the talk he’d heard, he reckoned he had
-got the biggest thing that ever humped itself in these
-waters. He said there was a hundred thousand dollars
-aboard her.”</p>
-
-<p>It was a fascinating story, yet it seemed to Ratcliffe
-that Satan showed little enthusiasm over the business.</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t seem very keen about it,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “it seems a bit too big, and that’s
-the truth. The hooker’s there right enough, but I don’t
-seem to see all that stuff aboard of her.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s there right enough,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Then there’s the getting of it,” went on Satan.
-“That’s a tough job to tackle. Months of work, no pay,
-and the chance of bein’ let down at the end of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’d sooner be grubbin’ round after abalones,” said
-Jude. “Bone lazy, that’s what he is! I know the stuff’s
-there, and I’m goin’ to get it if I have to dig it out
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, off with you then,” said the other, “and a good
-riddance you’d be!” Then to Ratcliffe, “We’ll run you
-down there some day and you can see for yourself. If
-you’ve any money to burn, you might like to put it in the
-spec’. We’d want extra help. Jude’s talkin’ through
-her hat. We can’t tackle that business alone, even Pap
-saw that—though he was mighty set on doin’ it single-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54">54</a></span>handed.
-And that’s where the bother comes in, for the
-island where she’s lyin’ is Spanish, and the Dagoes would
-claim what we got if they knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’d have to get half a dozen men and give them
-a share,” said Ratcliffe. “That would make them hold
-their tongues; but I see an awful lot of difficulties. Suppose
-you got the stuff, how are you to get rid of it?”</p>
-
-<p>“We’d have to get it down to a Brazil port,” said
-Satan, “or run it into Caracas. That’s handier. Them
-Venezuelans are the handiest chaps when it comes to
-loose dealin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“For the matter of that,” said Ratcliffe, “one could
-run it straight to England. There are lots of places
-there where we could get it ashore—but we’ve got to
-get it first.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan. “Look! She’s puttin’ a boat
-off.” He pointed to the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A quarter-boat had been lowered and was pulling
-away from the yacht. As she drew closer Ratcliffe saw
-that the man in the sternsheets, steering, was Skelton,—Skelton
-coming either to make trouble or to make friends.</p>
-
-<p>The oars rose up and fell with a crash as the bow oar
-hooked on to the dingy old <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloo!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Hulloo!” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you come on board?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, thank you.” A sniff from Jude. “I just came
-over to say that we are starting.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe saw that he wanted to say a lot, but was
-tongue-tied before the boat’s crew and the Tylers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55">55</a></span>
-“Better come on board,” said he, “and have a chat in
-the cabin before you’re off.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton hesitated a moment, then he came. He gave
-Satan a nod, utterly ignored Jude, and, followed by Ratcliffe,
-passed below. Downstairs his manner changed.
-Standing and refusing a seat, as though fearing to contaminate
-his lily-white ducks, he began to speak as if
-addressing the portrait of old man Tyler.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t believe you absolutely mean to do this,” said
-he. “I can understand a moment’s temper, but—but—this
-is a joke carried too far.”</p>
-
-<p>“My dear Skelton,” said the other, “what’s the good?
-I have the greatest respect for you, but we are dead
-opposites in temperament and we make each other
-unhappy. What’s the good of carrying it on? It’s
-not as if you minded being alone. You like being
-alone, and I like this old tub and her crew. Well, let’s
-each carry out our likings. I’m as happy as anything
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not thinking of your happiness, but of the position.
-You were a guest on my yacht, and you leave me
-like this—I need not embroider on the bare fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you want me to go back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not in the least,” said Skelton. “You are a free
-agent, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe’s blood was beginning to rise in temperature.
-He knew quite well Skelton wanted him to go back, but
-was too proud to say so, and he knew quite well that
-Skelton wanted him back, not for any love of him, but
-simply because the <em>position</em> was irregular and people, if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56">56</a></span>
-they heard of all this, might talk; also it might seem
-queer to the yacht’s crew.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, if you don’t specially want me back, I’ll
-stay,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Skelton, “as you please. I wash my
-hands of the affair, and if you come to grief it is your
-own lookout. I will have the remainder of your baggage
-forwarded home to you when I reach England.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll maybe see you at Havana when this cruise is
-over,” said Ratcliffe vaguely.</p>
-
-<p>“I doubt it,” said Skelton. “It is quite possible I may
-not call there.” He turned and began to climb the companionway.
-On deck he nodded frigidly to Satan and got
-over the side.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, leaning across the rail, looked down.</p>
-
-<p>“How about that mains’l?” asked Satan jocularly.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m afraid I have no more spare canvas available,”
-said Skelton, with a veiled dig at the rapacity of the
-lantern-jawed one, “or provisions. Anything else I shall
-be delighted to let you have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “you might send us a loan of
-the dinghy. We’re short of boats.”</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have her,” said Skelton with a glance at
-Ratcliffe, who was also leaning over, as though to say,
-“This is the sort of man you have thrown your lot in
-with!”</p>
-
-<p>The boat pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodby!” cried Ratcliffe, half laughing, half angry,
-with Satan, but quite unable to veto the promised gift.</p>
-
-<p>“’By,” replied the other, raising a hand.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57">57</a></span>
-Jude, who had said not one word, suddenly began to
-giggle.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s wrong with you?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” replied Jude, “but there’s somethin’ about
-that guy that makes me want to laugh.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58">58</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SKELTON SAILS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> breeze had risen with the declining sun and the
-water round the <i>Dryad</i> looked like a spread of
-smashed sapphires.</p>
-
-<p>They watched Skelton getting on board, and then they
-saw the dinghy lowered and the quarter-boat taking her
-in tow. In five minutes, like a white duckling behind
-a moor-hen, she was streaming on a line behind the <i>Sarah</i>
-and the quarter-boat was pulling back for the yacht.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had got his wish, and Ratcliffe was feeling just
-as Skelton wanted him to feel, under a compliment and
-rather a beast. Then they saw the boat taken on board
-and the hands laying aloft and the canvas shaking out
-to the favoring breeze.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll have the wind right aft, and that’ll save his
-coal,” said Satan. “I reckon if his engines give out he
-wouldn’t bother much, with all that canvas to carry him.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re handlin’ it smart,” said Jude. “There’s the
-anchor goin’ up.”</p>
-
-<p>The flurried sound of the steam winch raising the
-anchor came across the water, then it ceased, and Jude,
-running to the flag locker, fetched out a dingy old American<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59">59</a></span>
-flag, bent it on, and ran it up, dipping it as the <i>Dryad</i>
-began to move.</p>
-
-<p>She returned the compliment, gliding away with the
-bow-wash beginning to show and the wake creaming behind
-her. As she passed the southern reefs and shifted
-her helm, squaring her yards to the following wind, a
-blast from her siren raised a blanket of shouting gulls.
-Then the island cut her off and the sea lay desolate.</p>
-
-<p>The sense of his loneliness came on Ratcliffe, sudden
-as the clap of a door. He had cut the painter with
-civilization. The deck of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> seemed smaller
-than ever, Jude and Satan more irresponsible and unaccountable,
-and his own daring a new thing, somewhat
-dubious. He had renounced services and delicacies and
-surety of passage and safety, letters and newspapers,
-everything he had known! The shock scarcely lasted a
-minute, and then, with the breeze across the pansy-blue
-evening sea, came blowing the wind of Adventure and
-Freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Then in a moment some spirit explained to him what
-life really meant,—life as the Argonauts knew it, as the
-gulls know it, freedom in the intense and living moment,
-without a thought of yesterday, with scarcely a care for
-the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>He took his seat in an old chair that Satan had placed
-under the rag of awning and lit his pipe. That delightful
-smoke seemed the culmination of everything in these
-first moments in this new world. As he smoked he
-watched the Tylers, who were so busy with their own
-affairs that they seemed to have forgotten him. They<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60">60</a></span>
-had hauled the dinghy alongside, then they got into her
-and were lost to sight; but he could hear their voices,
-Jude’s shrill with pleasure and excitement.</p>
-
-<p>“My! Ain’t she a beauty? Ain’t she a dinky boat?
-My! look at the <em>cus</em>hions!” A laugh. “For the love
-of Mike look at the cushions—<em>cus</em>hions in a boat! Heave
-’em on deck!” The cushions came flying over the rail,
-together with the voice of Satan, evidently bending.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave them alone or I’ll bat y’ with the bailer! Well,
-let them lay on deck if they’re there. She’s a duck,
-new built too,—teak, copper fastenin’s, all the best that
-money could buy. Stop rockin’ her and over you get
-after the cushions.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude came clambering on board, beaming in the sunset,
-then she got one of the boat’s cushions and took her
-seat on it on the deck beside Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon old Popplecock’s as soft as his cushions, to
-be wangled out of a boat like that,” said Jude, examining
-the sole of her bare right foot for a fancied splinter.
-“Satan said he was goin’ to try it on him when you were
-down below with him. Didn’t believe he’d do it. That
-chap looked as stiff as his own mainmast—but there’s no
-tellin’—Say, I heard what you said to him when you
-were down below.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I wasn’t listenin’: I just heard through the skylight.
-I heard you sayin’ you liked us and the old <i>Sarah</i> better’n
-him and his boat—what makes likin’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61">61</a></span>
-“Nuther do I; but we took to you right off, same as
-you to us. Ever done abalone fishin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“No.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you won’t want to do it again, once
-you’ve tried. There’ll be a big low tide tomorrow after
-sun-up, and you’ll have a chance of seein’ what it is.
-Finished your pipe? Well, come along and help us to
-get supper.”</p>
-
-<p>For all the work Ratcliffe did, she might have got the
-supper herself. He was mostly in the way; but it was
-the companionship that helped. Brothers aren’t much
-good as companions. Ratcliffe was a new thing, absolutely
-new, from his striped pajamas and dandy clothes to his
-condition of mind, just as she was a new thing to Ratcliffe.
-Never did two beings come together so well or
-create more rapidly a little world of mutual interests out
-of the little things of life, or a weaker being dominate
-more completely the stronger.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you make bread?” asked Jude after he had filled
-the tin kettle for her. “Well, you’ll have to learn.
-That’s the bakin’ powder in that big tin, and the flour’s
-in the starboard locker—What’re you doin’ with the
-tin? Land’s sake! You don’t think I’m goin’ to make
-bread for supper, same as you make tea? Where was
-you born?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hampshire.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought it was somewhere like that,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She instructed him in the primitive method of bread
-making as conducted on board the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>, finishing<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62">62</a></span>
-up with the information that hardtack would be their portion
-at supper that night and breakfast next morning, as
-she was “up to the gunnel” in other business. Among
-the other things was having to put a patch on her
-trousers: not the ones she was wearing, which were her
-next best, but her worst. The old guernsey she was
-wearing was her second best. Coats! Oh, coats were
-good enough on Sunday or for going ashore in, but no
-use much in a ship, except an oilskin for dirty weather.
-Boots the same; stockings the same. You had to wear
-boots, of course, over rocks and through stuff like that
-over there on the island.</p>
-
-<p>“Them pajamas” would be bully things to wear by day,
-only they’d frighten the fish. As for sleeping in such
-things, she’d just as soon seek the arms of Morpheus
-in a top hat. Why didn’t he wear a nighty like her and
-Satan? Pap’s eyes would have bugged out had he seen
-those things. He was “awful old fashioned,”—used to
-make her and Satan put cotton between their teeth every
-night. They did it still. She exhibited a set of dazzling
-white teeth to prove the fact. You just pulled a cotton
-thread between them, and then they never went rotten.
-Also he made them brush their teeth every morning.
-Folks that didn’t do that got toothache.</p>
-
-<p>“Kettle’s boilin’,” suddenly finished Jude. “Now start
-in an’ let’s see you make the tea—said you could do it.
-There’s the can. Ain’t you goin’ to heat the pot first?
-How’re you to heat it? Let me have a hold. Now fling
-the water out. A spoonful a head and one for the pot
-and another one for Satan,—he likes it strong,—and if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63">63</a></span>
-you’ll take it along to the cabin without spillin’ it I’ll be
-after you in a minute with the plates and things.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan, who never put his hand to menial work, maintaining,
-without the least offense, his position as captain
-and owner, came down to supper, flushed with the good
-qualities of the dinghy. He had taken her for a row—and
-it was like hearing a man talking of a stroll with a
-sweetheart—if men ever talk of such things. Before
-going on deck to smoke he pointed out Ratcliffe’s quarters
-for the night. He was to have Pap’s cabin, the
-space divided off with a curtain. Jude and he always
-slept in hammocks swung in the “saloon.” Before going
-on deck he fetched an old canister out of a locker and,
-emptying some dried herbs into a saucer, set fire to them
-and left them smoldering on the table. It was to keep
-the mosquitoes away. Pap had got the receipt from a
-Seminole Indian up near Cedar Cays. It was patent
-stuff. Not a mosquito would come when there was a
-sniff of it in the air.</p>
-
-<p>Then, just as the moon was rising, and after the things
-were washed up, they sat on deck, smoking, listening to
-the waves on the beach, and watching fish jumping in
-the track of the moon. They talked of fish, and to Ratcliffe’s
-mind two things became apparent,—Satan’s profound,
-awful knowledge of the sea and all that lived
-therein, and his absolute indifference to sport. Satan
-fished for food. Tarpon and tarpon fishermen filled him
-with disgust and disdain. You can’t eat tarpon, and the
-guys that came from New York and such places and
-spent their days fighting tarpon with a ten-ounce rod<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64">64</a></span>
-and a twenty-one-thread line seemed to him bereft of
-reason.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, sitting on the deck and mending her pants by
-the light of the moon, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s the fun of the thing,” said Ratcliffe; “it’s
-the matching of one’s skill and strength against the fish.”
-He talked of the joys of salmon fishing.</p>
-
-<p>“What bait do you use for them?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Flies.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude shrieked.</p>
-
-<p>“Not live flies,” he explained: “imitation ones.” He
-tried to describe artificial fly-making and finished with a
-sense of failure as of one who had entered the lists in
-defense of a niggling form of business that had yet a
-touch of humor in it.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as they talked, suddenly through the night came
-a sound like the boom of a big gun. Ratcliffe nearly
-dropped his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s a fish,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Sea bat,” said Jude indifferently.</p>
-
-<p>“That noise?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sea bat jumping. There they go again. Must be a
-circus of them playin’ about beyond the reefs,—big flat
-fish, weigh all of a ton.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tails as long as themselves and eyes like dinner
-plates,” said Jude, “mushy brutes. Tow a ship after
-them if they foul the anchor—won’t they, Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’re loudenin’,” said Satan. “They’ll be comin’
-this way with the current. Come forward and have a
-look.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65">65</a></span>
-Leaning over the rail, they watched the moon-shot
-water. The sounds had ceased.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve stopped playin’,” said Satan, as though he
-knew exactly what they were doing.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s too shallow for them here,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Shallow! It’s fifty foot of water and a sandy bottom.
-What are you talkin’ about? Told you.”</p>
-
-<p>The depths of the sea suddenly became lit. Down below
-vast forms came drifting like the mainsails of ships
-ablaze with phosphorescent light, drifting and turning
-over as they drifted like gargantuan leaves blown by the
-wind. The whiplike tails could be seen as streaks of
-flame. Glimpses of devilish faces and lambent eyes
-showed as they turned, the fins waving like frills of
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>Then they were gone.</p>
-
-<p>The Tylers showed little concern over the marvelous
-sight; allowing, however, that it was the biggest school
-of “bats” they had ever struck; but to Ratcliffe it was
-as though the sea had disclosed a peep of its true heart
-and real mystery.</p>
-
-<p>Then they went to rest, and as he lay in Pap’s cabin,
-listening to the occasional trickle of the water against the
-planking and the groan of the rudder moved by the lilt
-of the swell, it seemed to him that daring in its everyday
-and cold-blooded form could not have carried a man
-much further than it had carried him. The sea bats had
-underscored the business as far as the mystery of the
-ocean and danger of cruising in such a small boat were
-concerned; the hardness of Pap’s bunk bedding told of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66">66</a></span>
-comforts renounced; while the morals of the Tylers,
-though good enough no doubt, had, as disclosed in their
-conversation, a touch of the free lance and a threat of
-port authority troubles and differences of opinion with
-the customs. Absolute respect for the rights of man,
-partial respect for the rights of shipping companies and
-steamer lines, no respect at all for governments and customs,—that
-was an outline of the Tyler morality. What
-had made him renounce the <i>Dryad</i> for the <i>Sarah?</i>
-What, lying in his hard bunk, made him contented with
-the exchange? The love of adventure and the craving
-for something new contributed, no doubt, but the main
-reason he felt to be the Tylers,—Satan with his strange
-mentality and queer methods; Jude, unlike any other being
-he had ever met.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he lay considering all this, came muted voices
-from the “saloon.” Satan’s voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Have you put the cotton between your teeth?”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s, drowsily:</p>
-
-<p>“Naw—leave a body alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“Get out o’ your hammock, you lazy dog, an’ fix your
-teeth or I’ll let you down by the head!”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s voice, dolorous and muffled, “Shut up or
-you’ll be wakin’ him! Cuss my teeth—cayn’t find the
-cotton! Wakin’ a body up like that! Tell you I’m
-<em>lookin’</em> for it—got it—”</p>
-
-<p>A long silence, during which Ratcliffe dropped off,
-to be awakened an hour later by the lamentations of Jude
-and the sounds of Satan prodding her out of a nightmare,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67">67</a></span>—a
-gastric nightmare, in which it appeared to her
-troubled soul that she <em>had</em> to fry a sea bat, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">totum terres
-atque rotundum</i>, in the small galley frying pan for breakfast.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68">68</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CARQUINEZ</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> tide had begun to draw out with the setting
-stars, and the tune of the waters on the beach had
-sunk to the merest thread of sound.</p>
-
-<p>Then, through the silence from the far reefs to southward,
-came the single, lamentable cry of a gull; then a
-chorus, and away against the vague blue of the east, here
-and there, like leaves blown about a dimly lit window
-showed the wings of the birds already putting out to sea
-for the fishing.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was awakened by Jude calling on him to
-“show a leg.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s on deck,” said Jude, “and if you believe in
-washin’ he’ll give you a swill with a bucket. Hurry up
-and come down again, for I want a swill myself. Swim?
-Not on your life! Sharks, that’s why.”</p>
-
-<p>The voice came from a hammock which he had
-blundered against in the semidarkness. Then on deck
-after his swill, drying himself with an old towel provided
-by Satan, he stood for a moment watching the sun break
-up through the water and the great sea flashing to life
-and the white gulls flying.</p>
-
-<p>The island was sending a faint breeze to them, a tepid
-breeze flavored with earth and cactus and bay cedar<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69">69</a></span>
-scents, perfumes that mixed with the tang of the ocean
-and the tar-oakum scents of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And all these scents and sounds and sights, from the
-sun flash on the sea to the trembling palm fronds on
-the shore, seemed like a great bouquet presented by
-youth and morning.</p>
-
-<p>Oh, the splendor of being alive, free, happy, without a
-single care, and the deck of the wandering <i>Sarah</i> under
-foot!</p>
-
-<p>From below through the skylight came a sleep-heavy
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you done yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Coming,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>He dived into his pajamas and came below.</p>
-
-<p>“Get into your cabin an’ shut the door,” commanded
-the yawning voice from the hammock.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no door.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, draw the curtain. Oh, Lord! what’s the good
-o’ gettin’ up? I’m near dead asleep!”</p>
-
-<p>Then the voice of Satan descending the companion
-ladder.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t you up? Well, you wait one minute!”</p>
-
-<p>A thump on the floor, a scurry up the companion
-ladder, and then shuddery lamentations and the sounds
-of swilling from the deck above, mixed with the admonitions
-of Satan from below.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, my! ain’t it cold? Oh, my! ain’t it frizzin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Get on, you mad turkle! You ain’t washin’, you’re
-splashing the water on the deck. Slush it over you.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m slushing it.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70">70</a></span>
-“Think I don’t know? Why, you ain’t gasped yet!
-Give a gasp, or I’ll be up to you with a rope-end! That’s
-more like it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was!</p>
-
-<p>The sun was high when Ratcliffe got on deck, and a
-light, steady breeze was blowing up from the straits of
-Florida; the gulls looked like snowflakes blowing round
-the far reefs and against the morning blue of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Jude had put the kettle on. She had dressed on deck,
-having carried her “togs” with her, and she was now preparing
-a line for fishing, and, as she bent over it, appeared
-Satan,—Satan rising from the cabin hatch with a
-toothbrush in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve forgot your teeth,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“No, I haven’t,” said Jude. “I’ve been fillin’ the kettle—I’ll
-fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fishin’ will wait.” He fetched a pannikin of water.
-“You’re more trouble than a dozen. What’d Pap say if
-he saw you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll fix them when I’ve done with the fishin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll fix them now!”</p>
-
-<p>“No. I won’t!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan put down the pannikin and the brush. She
-evaded him like a flash and skimmed up the mast to the
-crosstrees.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had she got up than she came sliding down,
-seized the toothbrush and pannikin, and began to brush
-her teeth over the scupper with a fire speed and fury
-that seemed born of dementia.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71">71</a></span>
-“Sardines comin’,” explained Jude between mouthfuls.
-“Look alive and get a bucket!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked over the sea, where her birdlike sight
-had spotted the sardine shoal being driven like a gray
-cloud under the water by pursuing fish. A fringe of
-dancing silver showed the leaping sardines, and the great
-fish driving the shoal broke up now and then in sword-flashes.</p>
-
-<p>They were coming from south to north, and the left
-wing of the shoal would pass the island beach by a cable
-length.</p>
-
-<p>While Satan stood by with a bucket at the end of a
-rope, Ratcliffe hung over the side watching.</p>
-
-<p>The driven sardines had no eyes for the <i>Sarah</i>. They
-struck her like the blow of a great silvery hand, boiled
-around her, and passed. The army of pursuit followed,
-passed and vanished, leaving the water clear and Satan
-with a dipped up bucket full of quivering silver.</p>
-
-<p>The Tylers, absolutely blind to the wonder of the business,
-fried the sardines just as they were, tossed out of
-the blue sea into the frying pan, and, breakfast over,
-Satan and Ratcliffe took the dinghy to hunt for abalones
-on the uncovered reef.</p>
-
-<p>The reefs to southward formed two spurs divided by
-a creek of blue water, and having got the dinghy into
-this creek Ratcliffe tended the boat while Satan hunted
-for the abalones.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in search of pearls was a sight. Heart, soul,
-and mind bound up in the business, like a dog hunting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72">72</a></span>
-for truffles, every find was announced by a yell or a
-whoop, like the whoop of a Red Indian.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe could see squiggly-wiggly cuttlefish tendrils
-running up Satan’s arms as he delved in some of the
-rock-clefts, and Satan disengaging them and flinging the
-“mushy brutes” away. The big abalones were nearly always
-deep down under the rock ledges and had to be
-chiseled off, wallowing in the water. At these times Ratcliffe
-might have fancied the vanished one lost or
-drowned, but for the profane language that rose and
-floated away on the breeze.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, it was dull work for the boat tender.
-Having nothing else to think of, he thought of Jude.
-Her figure chased away dullness.</p>
-
-<p>A man in the bright and early morning is quite a different
-person from the same man at noon, and coming
-across Jude after a long course of Skelton was like stepping
-from a gray afternoon to dawn. Was it possible
-that Skelton and Jude were vertebrates of the same
-species?</p>
-
-<p>Then there was what women would have called the
-pity of it. Ratcliffe did not deal much with the conventions
-as a rule; still, he could not but perceive that all
-life has an aim and ending, and that the end of an old
-sailor was not what life and the fitness of things had
-destined for Jude. What would she grow up into? He
-thought of all the girls he had ever known. There was
-not one so jolly as Jude; still, it was terrible, somehow,
-monstrous. He remembered her threat to pull her skirts
-over her head and run down the street if skirts were ever<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73">73</a></span>
-imposed upon her. Her contempt for the feminine rose
-up before him, and against all that her housewifely instincts
-and the fact that, despite Satan’s rope-end and
-mock bluster, she ruled the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> just as a woman
-rules a house.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it was deplorable. Looking away into distance,
-what would become of her?</p>
-
-<p>Vague and fatherly ideas of getting her away from
-this life and having her brought up properly and educated
-came to him, only to be dispelled by Jude. Imagine Jude
-in a girls’ school, at a tea party!</p>
-
-<p>He was aroused from these meditations by Satan,—Satan
-with an armful of abalones, Satan scratched and
-bleeding and soused in sea water, but triumphant.</p>
-
-<p>He reckoned they were the biggest “fish” ever got on
-these reefs. There were a dozen and six all told, and
-when they were collected and put on board the dinghy
-put back.</p>
-
-<p>Coming round the western spur of the reef, they found
-that Jude had left the <i>Sarah</i>—a high crime—and rowed
-herself ashore.</p>
-
-<p>The canvas boat was on the beach, and away amid the
-bay cedars and cactus toward the trees could be seen
-the head and shoulders of the deserter moving about.
-She seemed in search of something.</p>
-
-<p>“God love me!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He beached the dinghy, helped Ratcliffe to run her up,
-and then started, followed by the other, running and
-shouting as he ran.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi! chucklehead! Whatcha leave the ship for?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74">74</a></span>
-Didn’t I tell you to stand by her? Whatcha huntin’ for—turkles’
-eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you done with your eyes?” retorted the other.
-“Cayn’t you see?”</p>
-
-<p>Instantly, and by her tone and by some sixth sense,
-Satan was appeased. He seemed suddenly to scent danger.
-He saw the work she had been on, camouflaging
-the cache more effectively. He cast his glance over the
-island, the western sea, turned, and then stood stock-still,
-shading his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Away beyond the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> across the purple blue
-stood a sail. The land wind had died off, and the
-stranger was bringing the sea wind with her. A small
-topsail schooner she showed now, with all sail set, making
-dead for the island.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Spotted him half an hour ago,” said Jude. “He was
-steering nor’-nor’west and shifted his helm when he saw
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>The bay cedar bushes sighed suddenly to the new-risen
-wind, and as Ratcliffe glanced about him the feeling of
-the desolation of the place where he stood came to him
-strong,—strong in the scent of cactus and herbage, the
-tune of the water on the beach, and the rustle of the
-wind in the bushes.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been huntin’ for us,” said Satan, “curse him!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is he?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Friend of Pap’s, he was—”</p>
-
-<p>“Pretended to be,” put in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Spanish,” continued Satan, “and ever since Pap gave<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75">75</a></span>
-out he’s been pretty much on our heels. Jude and me
-worked the thing out and we came to conclude he’d
-scented, somehow, from Pap, about the hooker I spoke
-of.”</p>
-
-<p>“The wreck?’</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. Pap was keen on gettin’ extra money into the
-business of salvin’ her, and I b’lieve he sounded
-Carquinez,—that’s his name,—and how much he let out
-takin’ his soundin’s the Lord only knows! Cark’s in the
-tobacco line. Does a bit of everythin’,—has a shop in
-the Calle Pedro in Havana and a gamblin’ joint on the
-front, owns ships. That’s one of them, and Matt Sellers
-runs her for him. He don’t trouble handlin’ her: sits
-in the cabin all day smokin’ cigarettes.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been after us ever since Pap died,” said Jude,
-“on and off.”</p>
-
-<p>“It was one of his men got Jude in that doggery down
-by the wharf and filled her up with rum,” said Satan,
-turning the brim of his panama down. “Remember I
-told you—and what she let out the Lord only knows!”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t let out nothin’,” said Jude; “only that we were
-goin’ east this trip, I owns to that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there’s the result of your jaw,” said Satan.
-“East was good enough for Cark: he’d hunt hell for a
-red cent. And don’t you be sayin’ you didn’t let out
-nothin’. Why, I heard you jawin’ about all the money
-you had when I come in and collared you! Cark believes
-Pap found that stuff and cached it—that’s what he believes,
-or my name’s not Tyler.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, let’s get aboard,” said Jude. “If they see us<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76">76</a></span>
-squatting about here, they’ll maybe think the stuff’s hid
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“They’ve seen us by this, though it’s too far for them
-to make out who we are,” said Satan, pushing his panama
-farther forward to hide his face. He led the way to
-where the boats were on the sand, and they reëmbarked.</p>
-
-<p>The abalones were got on board, and then they stood
-watching the approach of the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>The white had gone out of her sails. Close in now,
-they showed dingy and patched. She had a low freeboard.
-Then, as she dropped anchor and swung to her
-moorings broadside on to the <i>Sarah</i>, the rake of her masts
-became apparent, and her whole disreputableness spoke
-aloud.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt like a man who, having got into pleasant
-low company, suddenly finds himself drawn into unpleasant
-low company.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tylers</i> and the old <i>Sarah</i> were all right, but this
-new crowd and that ratty old schooner he felt to be all
-wrong. And the newcomer somehow did not add honesty
-or moral stability to the appearance of the <i>Sarah</i>, nor did
-the half-disclosed character and activities of Cark shed
-luster on old man Tyler or his present representatives.</p>
-
-<p>However, he had gone into this business open-eyed,
-and it was not for him to grumble at the friends or relationships
-of his hosts; besides he had trust in Satan
-and the wit of Satan to preserve them from the law.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had covered the heap of abalones with some sail-cloth,
-and he was standing now working his lantern jaws
-on a bit of chewing gum, his eyes fixed on the stranger<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77">77</a></span>
-as though she were made of glass and he could see
-Carquinez sitting smoking his cigarettes in the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“They haven’t shown a sign,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re bluffin’ us to believe they haven’t spotted who
-we are,” said Satan. “Cark doesn’t want us to twig he’s
-been lookin’ for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Jude, “let’s get the mud-hook up and
-put out right away. They won’t have the face to chase
-us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Satan, “and leave them to hunt the island
-and find the cache! They’d lift the stuff to the last tin
-of beef. They’ve seen us ashore among the bushes.
-You shouldn’t have gone ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“I went to see we hadn’t left no traces.”</p>
-
-<p>“Traces be damned! Cark wants no traces. Once he
-starts to hunt, he’ll turn the durned island upside down
-and shake it. He’ll say to himself, ‘What were they doin’
-here, anyway; what were they pokin’ about them bushes
-for?’ No, we’ve got to sit here till he goes, and that’ll
-be this time next year, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the name of his schooner?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Juan Bango</i>,” replied Satan, “named after the
-tobacco company people. Look, they’re gettin’ a boat off.
-That’s Sellers, and he’s comin’ aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he collapsed, squatting under the bulwarks.
-“Guy them,” said he to Jude. “Tell them I’m down with
-smallpox: that’ll make them shove.”</p>
-
-<p>“Leave ’em to me,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>It was Matt Sellers right enough, a big wheezy man
-suggestive of Tammany Hall, but a sure-enough sailor in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78">78</a></span>
-practice. “The biggest blackguard on the coast” was his
-subsidiary title. He was the henchman of Carquinez.
-His career was not without interest and romance of a
-sort. It was he who had bought, with the money of
-Carquinez, the bones of the <i>Isidore</i>, wrecked against the
-sheer cliffs by the black strand of Martinique. Ten
-thousand dollars in gold coin she had on board her, and
-he salved them. That was a straight job, and a wonderful
-bit of work, taking it all together. It was a curiosity,
-too, because it was straight.</p>
-
-<p>The crooked jobs of Matt Sellers would have filled a
-book.</p>
-
-<p>Like old man Tyler, Sellers had no use for people who
-talked of buried treasure, he knew the Caribbean and the
-gulf too well.</p>
-
-<p>If he was keen on the wreck business, then it was because
-he had excellent reasons for his keenness.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat drew near, Ratcliffe noticed the villainous-looking
-crew, Spaniards, some of them with red handkerchiefs
-tied round their heads.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79">79</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">JUDE OVERDOES IT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“Hullo,</span> Kid!” cried Sellers as the boat came
-alongside the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself,” replied Jude. “Where’ve you blown
-in from?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s become of Satan? Ain’t he aboard?” asked
-Sellers, ignoring the question.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s dead,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Died of the smallpox.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m d—d!” said Sellers, casting his eyes over
-the <i>Sarah</i> and then resting them on Ratcliffe. “When
-was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“A week ago.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers gave a word to the bow oar and the boat pushed
-off a bit, the fellows hanging on their oars.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought I saw three of you on deck,” he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>“The other chap’s gone below,” replied Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The boat of the <i>Juan</i> hung for a moment as if in meditation.
-She made a striking picture, the blue water
-paling to green under her and the sun-blaze on the red
-topknots of the oarsmen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80">80</a></span>
-Then without a word more she turned back to the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in the scupper seemed preparing to have a fit.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter now?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter? What did you say I was dead
-for? Didn’t I tell you to say I was down with smallpox?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what’s the difference?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, you mutt, wouldn’t you have been snivelin’ and
-cryin’ if I was dead? And you handed that yam out to
-him as ca’m as if you were talking of a tomcat! I didn’t
-believe you myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I told him you was dead a week,” cried Jude.
-“D’you think I’d be snivelin’ and cryin’ a week if you
-was dead? Lord! what you do think of yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan did not reply. He was thinking that he had
-made a false move and that Jude had put the cap on the
-business. Cark would be certain now that there was
-something hidden on the island.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was on the horns of a dilemma. One horn was
-the cache of provisions containing a couple of thousand
-dollars’ worth of stuff, the other horn was the old wreck
-that might contain nothing.</p>
-
-<p>To hang on here was useless, for Cark would hang on
-too. Even if Cark went away, he would be sure to come
-back to hunt.</p>
-
-<p>He sat with his back to the bulwarks, chewing and
-thinking. Then, heedless whether he was seen or not
-from the <i>Juan Bango</i>, he rose to his feet and leaned with
-his back against the rail He had come to a decision.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81">81</a></span>
-Jude, watching him, said nothing, and Ratcliffe waited
-without a word. This little sea comedy interested him
-intensely, and all the more for its setting of loneliness and
-its background of blue sea and quarreling gulls.</p>
-
-<p>It was to Ratcliffe that Satan spoke first
-“Look here!” said Satan. “You’re standin’ out of this,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which—the wreck business?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. You’re not keen upon puttin’ money into it and
-havin’ a share?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, no. If you wanted me to, I’d be glad enough;
-but if you’d rather I stood out, I’ll do so. I’m not keen
-about money, anyway; only I’d like to see the fun.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll see fun enough,” said Satan. “I’m goin’ to
-drag Cark in. First of all, if I don’t, he’ll keep hangin’
-round here and sniff the cache; second, he’ll work the
-job for us with his crew.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll gobble every cent,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked Satan. “We’ll give him half
-shares, and well split on him if he doesn’t play fair. If
-we found stuff there, and once it was known, d’you think
-we’d be let keep it? We’ve got to get help, and isn’t he
-as good as another? If there’s no stuff there, he’ll have
-all his work for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“The thing I can’t make out,” said Ratcliffe, “is the
-way he started out from Havana to find you. How did
-he ever expect to come across you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s this way,” said Satan. “Bein’ in with Pap,
-he knew the lines we worked on; f’rinstance, he knew
-we worked this place for abalones. If he hadn’t sighted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82">82</a></span>
-as here; he’d have tried Little Pine Island, which is lonesomer
-than this place. You see he’s got it in his noddle,
-as far as I can make out, that Pap lifted the stuff and
-cached it, and Pine Island or here would have been the
-likeliest places. He reckoned when we put out of
-Havana this time we were out to lift it for good. Well,
-he’ll do the liftin’ if it’s to be done. Come on, I’m going
-over to see him right off. Jude, you stick here and clean
-up them abalones.”</p>
-
-<p>He got into the dinghy, followed by Ratcliffe, and they
-pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>As they drew closer the <i>Juan Bango</i> showed up more
-distinctly for what she was.</p>
-
-<p>One of the old schooners that used to run in the carrying
-trade between Havana and the Gulf ports, she had
-fallen from commercial honesty; anyhow in appearance,
-perhaps because Carquinez did not bother about appearance.
-You could not have damaged his paint if you
-had tried,—it was sun-blistered and gone green,—but his
-copper showed sharp and clear through the amazing
-brilliance of the water, without trace of weeds or barnacles.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers was hanging over the rail as they came alongside.</p>
-
-<p>If he felt surprise at this resurrection, he did not show
-it much.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers. “Thought you was
-dead.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark on board?” asked Satan without wasting time
-on explanations.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83">83</a></span>
-“He’s down below,” said Sellers, accepting the attitude
-of the other. “Who’s your friend?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just a gentleman that’s come along for a cruise,”
-said Satan. “So you’ve found me!”</p>
-
-<p>“Seems so,” said Sellers; “but tie up and come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan tied the painter to a channel plate and got over
-the side, followed by Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>The deck of the <i>Juan</i> sagged, and plank and dowel were
-indistinguishable one from the other by reason of dirt.
-Forward some of the crew were scraping a spare boom,
-and others collected round the foc’sle head were smoking
-cigarettes. The wind had died out into a warm breathing,
-setting aft and bringing with it a faint odor like the
-smell of acetylene. It was garlic.</p>
-
-<p>From the foc’sle came the muffled thrumming of a
-guitar.</p>
-
-<p>It was Ratcliffe’s first experience with a Spaniard.
-He followed Satan, who followed Sellers down a steep
-companionway and then into a cabin where a great shaft
-of sunlight from the skylight above struck down through
-a haze of cigarette smoke.</p>
-
-<p>The place was paneled with bird’s-eye maple; the seats
-were upholstered in thick ribbed silk, worn and stained;
-the carpet was of the best, but threadbare in spots and
-burnt with cigar droppings; the metal fittings far too
-good for a trading schooner of the <i>Juan</i> type.</p>
-
-<p>Everywhere lay evidence of splendor that had seen
-better days.</p>
-
-<p>All these fittings had, in fact, been torn out of a yacht
-bought by Carquinez for an old song, and at the end of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84">84</a></span>
-the saloon table, going over some papers with a cigarette
-in his mouth, sat Carquinez himself, a figure to give one
-pause.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the left side of this gentleman’s face was
-covered by a green patch. It was said that he had no
-left side to his face, that it had been eaten away by
-disease, and that, were he to unveil himself, the sight
-would frighten the beholder. However that may have
-been, what remained visible was enough to frighten any
-honest man with eyes to behold the nose of a vulture
-above the peaked chin of a money changer.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Cark!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Come in,” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring yourselves to an anchor,” said Sellers, pointing
-out two of the fixed seats on each side of the table and
-taking another close to the owner of the <i>Juan</i>. “What’ll
-you have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Satan. “Something soft will
-suit us, and long.”</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez raised a bird-shrill voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Antonio!”</p>
-
-<p>“Si, Sigñor,” came a response from outside, and on
-the voice a dusky form at the cabin door.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring me two Zin and Zinzibeers for these two
-zentlemen, please.”</p>
-
-<p>“No gin!” cried Satan, Ratcliffe concurring. “Ginger
-beer will do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Zinzibeers,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>It was nearly all that he said at this interview, the
-trusty Sellers doing the talking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85">85</a></span>
-Said Sellers to Satan, “Well, it’s funny us hittin’ on you
-like this, durned funny! We’d been down to Acklin
-looking up a location Cark was keen about, and comin’
-back I shifted the helm, seein’ you lying here and not
-recognizin’ the old <i>Sarah</i>. I thought it was Gundyman’s
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>Said Satan, taking up the drink just presented by
-Antonio, “Here’s our respects to you both. Thought I
-was Gundyman, did you? Well, I spotted you on sight.
-Didn’t want to see you neither. This gentleman will tell
-you I was squattin’ in the scuppers while Jude was
-handing you that lie about the smallpox.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, was you?” said Sellers with an open and hearty
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“I was so. Let’s cut pretendin’ and play on the square—are
-you willin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“None better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll put my cards out. You and Cark here have
-been after me pretty near since last fall; reason why,
-that wreck Pap told Cark of.”</p>
-
-<p>“W’ich was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“I said let’s cut pretendin’ and play fair,” said Satan
-sternly.</p>
-
-<p>Cark wilted and raised his fingers in deprecation, and
-Sellers cut in.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, we’ll play fair. There was talk of a wreck between
-your dad and us, and I’m not denying we had an
-eye after it. You see I’m open and honest with you.
-Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m comin’ to the point,” said Satan, “and the point<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86">86</a></span>
-is you and Cark between you have got it in your heads
-that you’ve only to follow me, find out where she’s
-located, and claim shares for not tellin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve got it wrong,” went on Satan. “You
-may follow me till the old <i>Juan</i> rots to pieces and you’ll
-never know, not if I don’t want you to know—got that
-clear?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear as day,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, here’s something else. If that wreck is
-what she’s taken to be, it’s more than one man’s job to
-shift the boodle and bank it. I’ve got to have help, and
-if we can arrange a deal I’d just as soon have you two
-in the show as anyone else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re talking,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez said nothing, but his hand shook, and Ratcliffe,
-watching him, received a shock. A wreath of
-cigarette smoke was stealing out from beneath the patch
-on his cheek! He wished the conference over and himself
-back on board the healthy <i>Sarah</i>. It came to him all
-at once that he had been drawn into a web of which
-Carquinez was the spider. Satan, too, and Jude had been
-drawn in. He could do nothing, however, at least for the
-moment, but watch and wait, and Satan’s face was worth
-watching as that wily diplomatist sat facing Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Not that I don’t believe you’d kidoodle me over the
-business if you had a chance,” continued Satan. “You
-would, sure; but you see I’ve got the weather gauge of
-you, knowing what I do of you, and that’s more’n I’d
-have with strangers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87">87</a></span>
-“Sure,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “we’ve got that far, and it
-comes to terms. What’s your share to be for helpin’ to
-collar the stuff and dispose of it in Havana?”</p>
-
-<p>“Two dollars out of every three that we make,” said
-Sellers promptly. “There’s the salving, you can’t do that
-alone, or your dad would have done it prompt; then
-there’s the cashing of it, you’re lost men if you try that
-job on by yourselves. Why, there’s not another man in
-Havana could do it only Cark, and even he couldn’t bring
-the stuff into Havana Harbor! It’ll have to be landed
-back of the island, north of Santiago. Lord knows what
-he’ll have to pay!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan cogitated for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll meet you,” said he at last. “I’m not set on big
-money. Anything more?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, that’s all,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez nodded approval, and lighting another
-cigarette leaned back in his chair.</p>
-
-<p>“And what’s this gentleman doing in the business?”
-asked Sellers, referring to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’s standing out,” said Satan. “He’s just on a
-cruise with us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I’m standing out,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m in it only
-for the fun of the thing, though I’m willing to help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon you’ll have fun enough,” said Sellers,
-“if we get foul of the customs, or if some other hooker
-comes poking along while we’re salving. You’re British,
-aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88">88</a></span>
-“I thought so. Come out for a spree?”</p>
-
-<p>“You may put it like that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you by any chance come off a big white yacht
-that went west yesterday?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, I did. What made you guess that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Sellers, “it’s easy to be seen you aren’t
-one of us, and your clothes give you away. It’s easy to
-be seen you haven’t been dough-dishing long in the old
-<i>Sarah</i>. I didn’t get your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“No trade or business?”</p>
-
-<p>“None. My father was Ratcliffe the shipowner, Holt
-&amp; Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord—love—a—duck!” said Sellers. “You’re not
-wanting for money, I reckon. Well, this gets me, it do
-indeed! Holt &amp; Ratcliffe—should think I <em>did</em> know
-them!”</p>
-
-<p>“Antonio!” suddenly piped Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>“Si, Señor.” Antonio appeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Pedro Murias,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>Antonio vanished, and reappeared with a box of cigars,
-colossal cigars, worth twenty-five guineas a hundred in
-the London market. They were placed on the table and
-pushed toward Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Satan grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “we’ve fixed things so far,—two out
-of every three dollars to you and no deductions.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“And now we’ve fixed terms,” said Satan, “I want to
-know all about this hooker.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89">89</a></span>
-“Which was you meaning?” asked Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“The wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen to him!” cried Sellers. “Mean to say you don’t
-know all about her?”</p>
-
-<p>“N’more than Adam. I’ve heard from Pap she was
-called the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>, and was full of gold plate
-got from churches; but that’s not much more than a name
-and a yarn. I’ve never banked much on the yarn.
-Seems too much of the New Jerusalem touch about it for
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe you’re wrong,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Spit it out,” said Satan. “Tell us what you know
-about her. You’ve got the contrac’; give us the news.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ll tell you,” said Sellers. “She weren’t no
-ship with gold plates,—your dad got that wrong,—she
-was a big Spanish ship out of Vera Cruz making for
-Spain. She had a cargo of timber, some of them heavy
-foreign timbers that don’t float. She’d got aboard her,
-besides the timber, more’n a million dollars’ worth of
-gold,—Mexican gold most of it, Spanish coin some of it.
-Lopez was the name of the skipper, and he laid to bank
-that gold for himself. He’d been forty years in these
-seas and knew every key and sandbank same as the insides
-of his own pockets.</p>
-
-<p>“Him and the mate were the only men in the know
-about that gold beside a supercargo by name of Perez.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he colluded together with them two guys to
-sink the hooker in six fathom water out of trade tracks,
-give out that she’d sunk in a gale, and come back in a
-year or two and collar the boodle. They had her bored<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90">90</a></span>
-and plugged for the game, and when they got her to the
-location they pulled out the plugs, and she went down
-without a sneeze, natural as a dyin’ Christian.</p>
-
-<p>“They got the boats away in order, and the crew was
-got off to a man; but that crew never got ashore. Maybe
-it was something wrong with the grub or the water,
-there’s no saying, but they never got ashore to turn
-witness. But the grub and water was all right in the
-dinghy. Them three guys had taken the dinghy, and
-they were picked up and landed somewhere on the gulf,
-fat and well.”</p>
-
-<p>All through Sellers’ recitation Carquinez had sat nodding
-his head. He glanced now at Satan and Ratcliffe as
-if measuring its effect upon them, then he half closed
-his eyes again and retired into himself like a tortoise.</p>
-
-<p>“They slung their yarn,” went on Sellers, “and made
-all good, and it was only left for them to wait awhile
-and hire or steal a likely boat to pick up the stuff, when
-the yellow fever took the supercargo and the mate, leaving
-Lopez to fish for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“He got back to Havana, which was his natural home,
-and there he put up with his son, who was a trader in
-tobacco, got a bit of a factory not bigger than a henh’us,
-and turned out a brand of cigars made out of leavin’s
-and brown paper mostly.</p>
-
-<p>“He put the son wise about the wreck; but he
-wouldn’t give the location away till it was time to go
-and pick up the stuff, which wouldn’t be for a year yet.</p>
-
-<p>“Then he up and died, and the son started to hunt for
-the chart and couldn’t find it. The old guy had given<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91">91</a></span>
-him everything but the chart with the location marked on
-it. It wasn’t a proper chart, neither: just a piece of
-paper with the thing done rough, but giving the bearings.
-And it was never found—not by the son. The grandson
-found it—and where do you think? Pasted into the lining
-of an old hat. That wasn’t so long ago, neither, and
-what do you think that fool of a grandson did? Well,
-I’ll tell you what he did. First of all he comes to Cark
-here, and tries to get him onto the job on a ten per cent
-basis, Cark to risk his money and repitation for a lousy
-ten per cent on what might be only the bones of an old
-ship. He let out her name and history and everything
-but the location.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark wasn’t having any on those terms,—was you,
-Cark?—and he told the chap to go to Medicine Hat and
-pick bilberries. The chap goes off, and what does he
-do but tries to get up a syndicate between himself and
-two yeggmen without a keel to their names! Perrira was
-the name of one, and da Silva was the name of the other,
-and they held a board meeting in Diego’s saloon one night
-and shot holes in one another in the back parlor.</p>
-
-<p>“Silva and Perrira had fixed it to lay the grandson
-out and collar the chart for themselves, and they’d have
-done it, only he wasn’t backward with the shooting.
-Your dad was in the bar that night, and he twigged something
-from what they let drop before they went to the
-back parlor to hold their meeting. Then when the shooting
-began he was first into the room, and collared the
-chart, which was lying on the floor. He was always
-quick on the uptake, was your dad. Being a knowledgeable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92">92</a></span>
-man, he reckoned Cark was the only chap in
-Havana to help him take the stuff and clear it. He
-knew the stuff was there by what he’d heard going on in
-the bar before the three chaps had left it for the back
-room, but before he could conclude business with Cark
-he up and died.”</p>
-
-<p>Cark nodded.</p>
-
-<p>“That was so,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “we’ve got the whole yarn now,
-and I’m wishing to be done with the business. I’m pretty
-near sick of you two guys trailing after me, and I’ll
-hand you out my belief for what it’s worth. It don’t
-seem natural to me to find gold in a hooker like that, just
-for the picking up, and I’d sell any man my chances for
-a thousand dollars. I’ve no knowledge of what’s there.
-I’m just talkin’ out of my head. You know what I am,
-I make my livin’, and I’m content to run small. It’s
-maybe that that puts me against big ventures. Anyhow,
-we’ve got to push this thing through, we’ve made the
-contrac’. I don’t want it written down and signed, seein’
-that the law couldn’t help me. I’m only sayin’ that if
-you play me crooked I’ll split. Got that in your heads?”</p>
-
-<p>The high contracting parties on the other side nodded
-assent.</p>
-
-<p>“That bein’ settled,” said Satan, “here’s the chart.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced a metal tobacco box and took from it a
-folded piece of paper, which he laid on the table before
-Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>The effect was magical.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez sprang from his chair like a young man,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93">93</a></span>
-came behind Sellers, and, bending over his shoulder,
-looked. Ratcliffe, though out of the business, was as excited
-as the others. Satan alone was calm.</p>
-
-<p>He had been carrying the thing about so long that it
-had probably lost its freshness of interest.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers, without speaking, stared at the chart before
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Rum Cay was shown, and then, southwest of Rum Cay,
-a line of reef marked “Lone Reef,” and in red ink, connected
-to the reef by a red line, the name “Nombre de
-Dios” could be made out, the “Dios” very indistinct at
-the frayed edge of the paper. In the top right-hand corner
-the latitude and longitude were written, but so faintly
-that it would have required close study in a strong light
-to make the figures out.</p>
-
-<p>Nobody bothered about them. Lone Reef was on all
-the charts, and the name was enough.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been by there,” said Sellers at last, “and I’ve
-never seen signs of a wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“You wouldn’t,” said Satan. “She lies flush with the
-coral in a crik between two arms of reef, not a stump
-of a mast on her. The hull of that reef must have raised
-itself since she was sunk, for the water in the crik doesn’t
-cover her at high tide and low tides it’s pretty near empty.
-But she’s been under right enough, years ago, for the
-decks are coraled over, hatches and all, and the stuff’s
-turned to iron cement with the sun and weather. We’ve
-got to dynamite her open.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Sellers; then, after a moment’s pause,
-“It’ll be a big job, if it’s what you say. I had it in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94">94</a></span>
-mind that she was a diving job in shallow water—never
-thought of the blasted coral.”</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez said nothing. He withdrew to his seat at
-the end of the table and lit another cigarette. To Ratcliffe
-the silence of Carquinez approached the weird.
-The way Sellers, without consulting him, did all the talking
-seemed uncanny as though the pair were telepathic.</p>
-
-<p>One thing certain was gradually being borne in upon
-him,—they were a most atrocious pair of rogues, and the
-marvel to him was the simplicity of Satan in having any
-dealings at all with them. They would surely swindle
-him, take what precautions he might. They would never
-give him a third share of any treasure. They would,
-most likely, murder him before he could split on them, if
-treasure were found. Of this Ratcliffe felt certain. He
-tried to telegraph a warning across the table, but Satan
-seemed blind to winks and frowns.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s there,” said Satan, “near a foot thick.
-You’ve got to drill it, and stick dynamite cartridges in the
-drill-holes and fire them. Got any dynamite aboard?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not an ounce.”</p>
-
-<p>“We might make out with blasting powder.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, if we’d got it,” said Sellers. “There ain’t no use
-worrying, we’ve got to shin out of this back to Havana
-and get the explosives. Question is who’ll go for them,
-us or you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan, “not if she was to lie there till
-the last trumpet. We’re underhanded, for one thing, and,
-f’r another, I’m gettin’ little enough out of the job as it
-stands without fetchin’ and carryin’ for you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95">95</a></span>
-“Then we’ll go,” said Sellers. “’Twon’t take us more
-than a week to get there and back. Give us ten days,
-counting accidents, and we’ll pick you up here.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why not at the reef?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t matter,” said Sellers. “Here or there, it’s all
-the same to us; ain’t it, Cark?”</p>
-
-<p>Cark nodded assent, and Satan, recapturing the chart,
-folded it up and put it back into the tobacco box.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said he, placing the box into his pocket.
-“Here you’ll find us.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96">96</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE “JUAN” SAILS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">They</span> rose from the conference table, and Carquinez
-stood holding his coat together with a veined and
-knotted hand while the visitors were making their adieux.</p>
-
-<p>“You haven’t a few feet of galvanized wire aboard?”
-asked Satan as he passed out, following Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on deck,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>On deck he stood listening, while the other passed from
-galvanized wire to the question of spare ring-bolts and
-other trifles he stood desperately in need of. Like a
-hypnotized fowl in the hands of Satan, he made scarcely
-any resistance.</p>
-
-<p>He had no ring-bolts, but the galvanized wire was
-forthcoming, also a little barrel for use as a buoy, some
-Burgundy pitch, an old paintbrush, a small can of turpentine,
-and a couple of pounds of twine.</p>
-
-<p>A small boat-anchor that had raised Satan’s desires
-brought the séance to a conclusion and broke the spell
-that seemed to lie on Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Blessed if Satan wouldn’t be asking for his back teeth
-yet! What did he take the <i>Juan</i> for, a marine store?
-What would he want next, Carquinez?</p>
-
-<p>They rowed off with the spoil, Sellers leaning on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97">97</a></span>
-rail and lovingly pressing on them the acceptance of other
-trifles, including a guitar.</p>
-
-<p>Alongside the <i>Sarah</i> they found Jude waiting to receive
-them. She had been cleaning up the abalones, was
-dissatisfied with the result,—quarter of a matchbox full
-of seed pearls,—and said so.</p>
-
-<p>When her eye lighted on the stuff in the boat that
-Satan had wangled out of Sellers, she laughed in a dreary
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“What you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on an upturned keg while they brought
-the truck on board. Then, nursing her knee and wiggling
-her bare toes to the warmth of the sun, she sat without
-a word, waiting for explanations.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that a critic had come
-on the scene. He had forgotten Jude in relation to the
-deal over the wreck, and he was wondering now how she
-would take it. The female does not always see eye to eye
-with the male, as many a business man has discovered
-on revealing a transaction to the wife of his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>Leaning against the rail, he filled his pipe and awaited
-the revelation with interest; but Satan, the revealer,
-seemed in no hurry for the business. He was bustling
-about disposing of the new-gotten “stores,”—the turpentine
-and pitch forward in the hole where paints were
-kept, the galvanized wire in a locker, and the little barrel
-behind the canvas boat.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came aft again and, lighting a pipe, stood beside
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98">98</a></span>
-“Well, what you been doing, anyway?” asked Jude,
-suddenly opening her batteries.</p>
-
-<p>“Doing—which?” asked Satan. “Oh, you mean with
-Cark. Well, I’ve settled things with him, fixed it up so’s
-he’s goin’ to help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, to get the stuff, if it’s there—what else? He’s
-our only chance of doing the thing proper.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s he askin’?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“You mean terms?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s this way: He’ll have to do the wreckin’
-business, and then if the stuff’s got he’ll have to run it
-ashore, and after that he’ll have to get rid of it. I’m
-givin’ him two dollars out of every three.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why didn’t you give him the lot?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now look you here!” cried Satan. “I don’t want no
-sass! Who’s runnin’ this show, you or me? How do
-you know what I’ve got up my sleeve? Have you ever
-known me done on a deal yet? Now you take my orders
-where Cark’s concerned and take them smart, with no
-questions! If you don’t—well, then, trade with him
-yourself, take charge of the <i>Sarah</i> and run her yourself!
-Lippin’ your betters!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude took off her old hat and looked into it as if for
-inspiration; then she clapped it on her head again, drew
-up both feet, clasped her arms round her knees, and sat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99">99</a></span>
-on the keg-top speechless and brooding, her eyes fixed on
-the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan turned and went below.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” said Jude, without shifting her
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you had all the money off that old wreck, if
-the money is there, what would you do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good of askin’ me things like that?” said
-Jude. “I’d precious soon do something with it!”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you wouldn’t. You’d put it in the bank, and then
-your trouble would begin.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’d have it in the bank or invested and it
-would bring you in, say, twenty thousand dollars a year;
-well, you couldn’t spend that on the dock-side, could you?
-You wouldn’t be able to spend it at all unless you gave
-up the <i>Sarah</i> and lived ashore in a fine house with a
-carriage and horses and servants, and to do that you’d
-have to become a lady—or gentleman,” hastily put in
-Ratcliffe, the figure on the keg suddenly threatening to
-turn on him. “You’d have to do that, and you’d have
-to do more than that: you’d have to learn all sorts of
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots. Can you write, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Told me the other day you couldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve most forgot. Pap started to learn me, then<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100">100</a></span>
-he said he reckoned I was more cut out for makin’
-puddin’s, but he learned me to write my name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ever grow rich, you’ll have to do a lot
-more than write your name.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll have to write checks and letters, and, what’s
-more, you’ll have to be able to read them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon,” said the philosophical Jude, “it’ll be
-time enough to bother about that when I’m rich—and
-seems to me I’ll never be rich with them two diddling
-Satan same as they’ve done.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you will; you are going to be rich some day,
-as rich as I am. I’m a fortune teller. Show us your
-hand.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude held out a hand, and Ratcliffe examined the palm
-where the lines were few but straight and clear cut. It
-was a beautiful little hand, despite the hard work it had
-done, full of character and vigor, and expressing kindliness
-and honesty and capability.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had an instinct for hands. A hand could attract
-or repulse him just as powerfully as a face; more
-so, perhaps, for a hand never lies.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said he, “you are going to be rich, you can’t
-escape it, and you are going to learn reading and writing
-and arithmetic, and you are going to live to be a hundred.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut me throat first!” said Jude. “Heave ahead.”</p>
-
-<p>“And you are going to England some day, and you’ll
-turn into a Britisher.”</p>
-
-<p>“Damned if I do! Satan!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” came a faint voice from below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101">101</a></span>
-“Rat says I’m goin’ to turn into a Britisher.”</p>
-
-<p>“They wouldn’t own you. Quit foolin’ and get the
-dinner ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude uncurled herself, came down from the keg with
-a thud, ran to the open skylight, and was about to reply
-in kind, when her eye caught sight of something that
-brought her to a halt.</p>
-
-<p>They were handling the canvas on the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s off!” cried she.</p>
-
-<p>Satan came on deck. Across the blue blaze of the sea
-they could hear now the clank of the windlass pawls,—the
-<i>Juan’s</i> anchor was coming up.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought Sellers would have come on board before
-they started,” said Ratcliffe. “They’re in a big hurry,
-aren’t they?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet,” said Satan with a grin. “He’ll crack on
-everything to get to Havana for that dynamite; won’t
-stop to eat their dinners till they’re back,—that’s what
-they’d have us believe—swabs!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, don’t you think they are going to Havana?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, they’re <em>goin’</em> to Havana right enough,” said Satan.
-“You watch and you’ll see them headin’ that way. Look!
-she’s fillin’ to the wind.”</p>
-
-<p>The anchor was home now, and they watched the sails
-filling as she headed on the same course the <i>Dryad</i> had
-taken. She dipped her flag, and they returned the compliment;
-then she drew past the southern reefs, the hull
-vanished, and nothing remained but the topsails far
-against the western blue.</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes later, down below at dinner, Jude, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102">102</a></span>
-had said no word about the departure of the <i>Juan</i>, but
-seemed to have been thinking a lot, suddenly spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“You never told me that chap was going to Havana for
-dynamite,” said Jude. “What for—to bust the wreck
-open?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it,” replied Satan. “Did you think he wanted
-it to eat?”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no knowing what a feller may swallow, seeing
-you’ve swallowed that yarn,” said Jude. “He’s gone to
-Havana to sell us, that’s my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! there’s many a way of sellin’ fools.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt that the truth was with Jude, he felt an
-uneasy conviction that they had been done. The hurried
-departure of Carquinez seemed to put a seal on the business.
-He looked at Satan expecting an explosion; but
-Satan was quite calm and helping himself to canned ox
-tongue.</p>
-
-<p>“Seein’ I have the chart,” said he, “where’s the sellin’
-to come in?”</p>
-
-<p>“But you’ve give him the location,” said Jude. “You
-said yourself that the place was fixed on every chart and
-a chap had only to have Lone Reef in his head to put his
-claws on the wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan; “but the location is no use
-without the chart.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you gettin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m tryin’ to get at your intellects. How often have
-you seen that chart?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dozens of times.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103">103</a></span>
-“Ever noticed anything queer about it? Not you!
-Giving sass to your betters is your lay in life instead
-of usin’ your eyes.” He pushed his plate away, produced
-the tobacco box, and, taking the chart from it, laid
-it on the table.</p>
-
-<p>Jude got up and came behind him to look, while Ratcliffe
-leaned forward.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s the chart,” said Satan. “There’s the reef,
-and there’s the name of the hooker pointin’ at the reef,
-and there’s the latitude and longitude wrote up in the
-corner. Plain, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s plain enough,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, munching a biscuit, concurred.</p>
-
-<p>“Plain enough, ain’t it?” went on Satan. “Give a man
-the name of Lone Reef, and with any old Admiralty
-chart he’ll get there, and he has only to land on the reef
-to find the hooker stuck there in that crik between them
-two arms. Jude has seen her, and I’ve walked over her
-and ’xamined her, and she’d have been broke open maybe
-by this, only chaps don’t land on reefs like that, not
-unless a storm lands them. We struck it huntin’ for
-abalones. Plain enough, ain’t it? Well, I tell you the
-whole business is no use to any man who hasn’t that
-chart in his hand and who can’t read what’s written on
-it secret. Here you are! Take a good long look, and
-I’ll give you ten dollars if you spot what I mean. It’s
-as clear as simple.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe spread the thing before him on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t see anything in it,” said he at last, “except
-what’s written plain enough. There’s Rum Cay, there’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104">104</a></span>
-the reef, the name of the wreck with a pointer to the
-reef, and the latitude and longitude up in the corner.
-No, I can’t see anything but that: it all seems plain as
-a pikestaff. I take an interest in cryptograms, too.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cryptograms? Hidden writing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, that’s what’s before you,” said Satan. “Pap
-never twigged it, nor any of the crowd that had the
-handlin’ of it. It’s only a month ago I spotted it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You never said a word to me,” cut in Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Get back to your place and don’t be chewin’ in my
-ear,” said Satan, reaching for the chart and pocketing
-it again. “Tell you? Likely! Why, if I had, you’d
-have let it out, same as you did the lie of the reef to
-Rat here the other day. Get on with your dinner!
-Why haven’t we any potatoes?”</p>
-
-<p>“No time to boil them,” said Jude, “cleanin’ up your
-mushy abalones.”</p>
-
-<p>“No time, and you yarnin’ and havin’ your future
-told! I heard you.”</p>
-
-<p>“My fault,” said Ratcliffe. “I began the business.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not you,” said Satan. “I heard her start in on it,
-sayin’ what she’d do with a fortune if she had it and
-finishin’ up by mistrustin’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love you for a liar! I only said them two
-guys had done you in over the wreck,” cried Jude.
-“Don’t be stickin’ words in my mouth.”</p>
-
-<p>“How was it you came to spot the cryptogram?”
-asked Ratcliffe, eager to cut the dissension short.</p>
-
-<p>“The which?” asked Satan. “Oh, ay—well, it come<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105">105</a></span>
-natural for me to say to myself, ‘Here’s a thing that’s
-been hid up and kept secret, yet it’s all wrote out as
-plain as my palm.’ I said to myself, ‘It’s too blame
-simple! A man who knows where money is hid doesn’t
-write the location on a bit of paper, to be lost, maybe,
-and picked up by God knows who. Why, drop that chart
-in the streets of Havana, and the first chap with any
-knowledge in his head that picks it up will turn it into
-dollars right off. It’s a sure bait for fools, anyhow,
-and a wreckin’ expedition would be out before the end
-of the week. They’d only have to look up any chart
-that’s been printed the last hundred years to find Lone
-Reef as easy as the Swimmer Rocks.’ Then I said to
-myself, ‘What in the nation did the guy want makin’
-a chart at all for? Why couldn’t he have written on
-a piece of paper, “The Nombre de Dios lies on Lone
-Reef, sou’west of Rum Cay”? That’s all the chart says,
-and yet he must go and make drawin’s; must have
-taken him an hour’s pen scraping to make that chart.’
-Puttin’ the two things together, I says to myself, ‘The
-feller concerned must have been a fool in two ways if
-this thing’s genuine,—a fool to leave the fac’s as plain
-as an ad for liver pills, and a fool to waste his time
-drawin’ his advertisement instead of writin’ it,’ but I
-reckoned he was no fool. Dad was always quotin’ some
-damn ass who said the world was most made up of fools.
-Well, in my ’xperience that don’t hold. Maybe in Europe
-it does, but not in Havana and the Gulf ports, anyway.
-So I says to myself, ‘Let’s try and see what the
-guy was drivin’ at.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106">106</a></span>
-“And you won’t tell us how you did it?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d just as soon not.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Because,” said Satan, “I may be wrong; though I’m
-pretty sure I’m right—and I b’lieve in a shut head.”</p>
-
-<p>“You opened your head to Cark, anyhow,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you once and I won’t tell you twice, if I have
-any more chat out of you, I’ll lay into you with a slipper!
-O’ course I opened my head to him! Did you want him
-hanging round here and sniffin’ out the cache? Haven’t
-we got rid of him? I don’t want any more talkin’. I’ve
-my plan laid out and you’ve get to take my orders right
-from now without questions!” He turned to Ratcliffe.
-“You don’t mind helpin’ to work the boat, leavin’ sailing
-directions to me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m quite content to help
-and look on, leaving things to you. What’s your first
-move?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m goin’ to clear out of this tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I thought you was going to wait for Cark to
-come back,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind what you thought. I’m goin’ to
-clear out of this tomorrow. Meantime, I want more
-stuff from the cache, and you’d better take the dinghy
-and get it right off. I want provisions for a month for
-the three of us.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CUSS WORDS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> they had washed up and put the plates in
-their rack, Jude commandeered Ratcliffe to help
-with the dinghy. Satan, having given his orders, had
-retired into himself and the business of patching an old
-sail. He was seated at the work under the awning, and
-he seemed scarcely to notice the others as they got the
-boat away.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s got something up his sleeve,” said Jude as
-they pulled for the beach. “I reckon he’s laying low to
-get the better of Cark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ask me,” said Ratcliffe, “I think he has
-got the better of him in some way or another. I don’t
-know how, and I don’t want to. I’d sooner wait and
-see. It’s as interesting as a game of chess.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chess—oh, it’s a game. I’ll show you some day.
-Don’t you ever play games, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet! Why, I won five dollars day before we put
-out buckin’ against the red at Chinese Charlie’s—y’know
-Havana? Well, it’s on the Calle sin Pedro. They play
-faro, but mostly r’lette.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108">108</a></span>
-“Oh, I didn’t mean that sort of games.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which sort did you mean?” asked Jude, as the nose
-of the boat beached on the sand and they scrambled out.
-“Did you mean whisky drinkin’ and cuttin’ and carryin’
-on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no! I meant games, just ordinary games.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, the boat well beached, sat down on the blazing
-sands. It was two hours past noon, and the heat of the
-day had lifted under the freshening wind from the east,
-the tide was on the turn, and the far-off lamentations
-of the gulls around the southern reef-spurs came mixed
-with the fall of the waves,—waves scarcely a foot high,
-crystal clear, less waves than giant ripples.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond the <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and her reflection on the water
-lay the violet-colored sea, infinity, and the blue of sky,
-broken only by a gull, spar white in the dazzle.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe sat down beside his companion. Jude, like
-any old salt, had her moments of dead laziness. Active
-as a kitten as a rule, she would suddenly knock off,
-when the fancy took her, “let go all holts,” to use
-Satan’s expression, and laze. You couldn’t kick her out
-of it, Satan said.</p>
-
-<p>She had brought an old pair of boots for going through
-the bay cedar bushes. It wasn’t good to walk among
-the bushes unshod: there were tarantulas there, and scorpions,
-to say nothing of stump cacti. The boots were
-lying beside her on the sand, to be put on only at the
-last moment.</p>
-
-<p>“What you mean by ordinary games?” asked Jude
-suddenly, finishing the inspection of a new variety of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109">109</a></span>
-soft-shell crab she had just caught and flinging it into
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, the games people play,” said Ratcliffe, who had
-almost forgotten what they had been talking about. He
-tried to explain, and found it singularly hard, especially
-when cross-examined.</p>
-
-<p>Jude did not seem able to understand grown men and
-women spending half a day “knockin’ a ball about.”</p>
-
-<p>“I used to play ma’bles with Dutch Mike’s kids when
-we were at Pensacola,” said she. “Mike ran a whisky
-joint, and the kids were pretty ornery. When we’d
-done playin’ marbles they’d have a cussin’ bee.”</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve heard of a spellin’ bee—you get a prize
-for spellin’ the best. Well, a cussin’ bee you start cussin’
-each other, and the one that cusses hardest gets the prize.
-Pap never knew till one day he let into me with a strap
-for somethin’ or ’nother and I let fly at him. Then he
-found it was Mike’s children who’d been learnin’ me, and
-he had a dust-up with Mike on the wharf, and left him
-limpin’ for the rest of his natural. Did you cuss when
-you was young?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I learned that later.”</p>
-
-<p>“’R you any good at it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Upon my word, I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have a try,” said Jude, losing her languor. “Clench
-your fists to it and have a go at me, and then I’ll have
-a go at you—there’s no one listenin’. Pretend you’re
-the skipper and I’m a hand that’s been haulin’ on the
-wrong rope.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110">110</a></span>
-“No,” said Ratcliffe. “I’m no use at it, and it’s not a
-nice game, anyway. I’d sooner play at something else.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude sniffed. She evidently felt snubbed. “I’m not a
-baby to be playing games,” said she. “You can go and
-play by yourself if you want to.”</p>
-
-<p>She collapsed on her back with her knees up and her
-old hat covering her face; then from under the hat:</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear all the swearin’ you want to in a minute
-from the old hooker.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep, the minute he turns his eye ashore and sees us
-lazin’ here instead of workin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, come on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Jude, “not till Satan begins. I’m too
-comfortable. I been working hard all the morning while
-you two was aboard the <i>Juan</i> clackin’ with Sellers and
-havin’ drinks, I bet. I’m going to rest myself—what did
-you have?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ginger beer and a cigar.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you take notice of Cark’s face?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather!”</p>
-
-<p>“They say he hasn’t any one side to his face where
-the patch is. I’d like to see him with the patch off,
-wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! I saw quite enough of him with it on.
-Come, get up, and let’s get to work.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not goin’ to work no more,” mumbled Jude
-drowsily. “I’m dead sick of fetchin’ and carryin’. Let
-Satan go and fetch and carry for himself. I’m going
-to stick here.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111">111</a></span>
-“On the island?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“And give up Satan and the <i>Sarah</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what will you do for a living?”</p>
-
-<p>“Start a la’ndry.”</p>
-
-<p>“But there’s no one here to give you any washing to
-do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then I’ll have all the easier time.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true. It’s a bright idea, and I’ll stay with you
-and carry the laundry basket.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t! I’ll stick here alone.”</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, across the water from the <i>Sarah</i> and shattering
-this fantasy, came a voice. It was Satan’s voice,
-distant and borne on the breeze. Ratcliffe thought he
-could make out the words “lazy dog.”</p>
-
-<p>He got up. Jude with the old panama over her face
-had stiffened out as if dead. He tried to turn her over
-with his foot. Then he felt half frightened. Had the
-sun got to her head, and was all that nonsense talk
-delirium?</p>
-
-<p>He knelt down beside her and shook her.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude, what’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>He took the panama from the face. The eyes were
-closed and the features were in repose.</p>
-
-<p>Now, really alarmed, he jumped up, ran down to the
-boat, seized the baling tin, and filled it with sea water.
-He had never seen a case of sunstroke, but he had heard
-cold water on the head was a remedy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112">112</a></span>
-As he turned back with the tin the corpse was sitting
-up putting on its boots.</p>
-
-<p>“What’re you doing with that baling tin?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll jolly soon show you!” said he, making toward
-her. “Shamming dead!”</p>
-
-<p>But before he could reach her she was gone among
-the bushes, one boot on, the other off. Then, flinging
-the baling tin away, he joined her, helped her on with
-the boot, and they started. Jude, as if to make up, put
-her hand into his in a trusting and loving manner. She
-swung his hand as they walked. Then, near their destination,
-she flung it away and made off, hunting like a
-dog among the bushes till she found what she was in
-search of,—a long, knotted rope.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that for?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“You wait and see,” replied Jude. “Here’s the cache.
-Mind where you’re walkin’ or you’ll be into it.”</p>
-
-<p>The cache was well hidden among the bay cedars.
-The opening, eight feet long by six broad, was covered
-over with short poles spread with cut branches gone
-withered with the sun. When they had got the covering
-off, Jude tied one end of the rope to a tree close by
-and dropped the other end into the cache. She swung
-herself down by it, and Ratcliffe followed.</p>
-
-<p>From the floor of this place a step, two feet high, gave
-entrance to the cave.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” said Jude. “It may rain till it’s black, but
-it never floods the cave. The water drains off before
-it can rise the height of the step.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113">113</a></span>
-There were a candle and some matches inside the cave
-entrance. She lit the candle and led the way.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was astounded, less by the size of the place,
-than the stacks of goods,—canned peaches, condensed
-milk, corned beef, tomatoes, ox tongues, Heinz’s pickles,
-Nabisco wafers. The old brig, making for some gulf
-port, must have been a floating Italian warehouse as far
-as cargo was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t wonder at Satan not wanting Sellers and
-Carquinez to spot all this,” said he. “Why, there must
-be five hundred pounds’ worth of stuff here. Aren’t
-you afraid that nigger who skipped from you at Pine
-Island may split?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sakes, no! He was too much afeared of Satan.
-Satan was always threatening to skin him. Besides, he
-doesn’t know. We told him this place was Turtle Island,
-and that’s a hundred and fifty miles to s’uth’ard. You
-trust Satan to keep a thing dark. Here, catch hold of
-the candle while I collect.”</p>
-
-<p>There were two sacks folded up on the floor. She
-started collecting things, and when the sacks were half-filled
-Jude, clambering out of the pit, hauled them up
-by the rope.</p>
-
-<p>“Anything more?” asked he, from below.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon that will be enough,” said Jude, looking down
-at him. “It’ll take us all our time to carry them to the
-boat, and if Satan ain’t satisfied he can come and fetch
-some more himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then drop the rope; I want to get out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114">114</a></span>
-Jude, kneeling at the cache edge, lowered the rope
-gingerly. He reached up, and was just about to seize
-the loose end when it eluded him.</p>
-
-<p>“Why don’t you catch hold?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t. How could I when you pulled it up again.
-Go on, drop it and don’t play the fool.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s playin’ the fool?”</p>
-
-<p>“You are.”</p>
-
-<p>The rope, instead of descending again, was hauled
-right out of the cache. Then a face appeared, looking
-down and framed against the sky. He had forgotten
-the snub he had given her on the beach, but she hadn’t.</p>
-
-<p>“D’y’r’member what you said down there on the
-beach?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No, what about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cussin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Said I wanted you to play games that wasn’t nice.”</p>
-
-<p>“I never said any such thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t yer? Well, whether you did or you didn’t,
-you’ve got to swear before I let you out.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then I’ll stay in. Go on, Jude, don’t be silly.
-It’s cold down here.”</p>
-
-<p>The rope came down, and he was just seizing the end
-when it was whipped out of his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Damn!” said Ratcliffe wholeheartedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Now you’re talkin’,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Like a boy fishing for polliwogs, she lowered the rope
-again and snatched it up suddenly, bringing with it another
-oath.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115">115</a></span>
-But the third time he was too quick for her. Then
-as he came swarming up with skinned knuckles and rage
-in his heart, she bolted. He chased her, dodging here
-and there among the bushes, then he chased her round
-a tree, caught her, and, in his anger and irritation somehow,
-kissed her.</p>
-
-<p>The perfectly amazing smack on the face that followed
-was revelation; it also knocked him off his balance
-so that he sat down as though cut off at the knees.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116">116</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE COMING OF CLEARY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">She</span> stood for a moment, frightened at her handiwork.</p>
-
-<p>Then, as he pulled himself together, she drew away
-a step.</p>
-
-<p>“What ails you?” asked she.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, sitting up with his hand to the top of his
-head, groaned.</p>
-
-<p>She drew a step closer. Then she saw that he was
-laughing, and drew a step back.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up, and don’t be fooling,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Fooling! And who started it?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>Jude made no reply. She turned and went off to the
-cache, lugged the sacks a bit more away from the opening,
-and started to put the poles across. When he joined
-her on the work she wouldn’t speak. She was evidently
-mortally offended.</p>
-
-<p>He knew at once and by some fine instinct what was
-the matter with her. He had trod on her dignity, like
-the Thelusson woman,—treated her like a child, that is
-to say like a girl, for the two things were synonymous
-with Jude, who seemed to have no more idea of the
-realities of sex than a pumpkin.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117">117</a></span>
-When she did speak at last, it was to give jeering
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Did you never have to use your hands?
-Which way is that to be sticking the poles? Why, it’d
-take twenty dozen to cover it the way you’re doing!
-Leave a foot and a half between them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Ratcliffe humbly.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t say two foot.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sorry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Now the branches an’ stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>She had reserved one of the poles, for what reason
-soon became apparent.</p>
-
-<p>Each sack was too heavy to be carried by one person,
-so she slung one to the middle of the pole, and they
-started for the beach, Caleb and Joshua fashion, Ratcliffe
-in front.</p>
-
-<p>It was horrible work. They had to keep step, which
-was difficult; owing to the bushes, the going was bad.
-The sack kept slipping toward Jude, owing to the inequality
-of their heights, and the pressure of the pole on
-his shoulder was galling; also the wind had changed and
-was coming from the direction of the gulf, warm and
-moist like the breath from a great mouth.</p>
-
-<p>When they reached the beach he sat down. Unused
-to hard work and unused to the climate, he was sweating
-and exhausted. Jude looked comparatively cool and
-fresh.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then, Lazybones!” said Jude. Then she collapsed
-also, sitting down with her knees up and her arms
-round them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118">118</a></span>
-She seemed to have forgotten the sack, Ratcliffe, everything,
-as she sat whistling dreamily between her teeth
-and staring across the water toward the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She had kicked off her boots, and her toes were playing
-with the sand. Uncramped by boots, her feet were
-as expressive as her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll hear Satan begin to holler in a minute,” said
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Let him,” said the other, “I’m not going to stir another
-foot till I’ve rested myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t holler at you. It’s me he’ll go for;
-you’re the first-class passenger.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I’m not: I’m one of the crew.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude laughed in a mirthless manner.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I reckon myself one, anyhow,” said he. “I
-wouldn’t have come on board unless I was to help in
-working the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Satan won’t mind you helpin’ to work her,”
-replied she; “but he didn’t bring you aboard for that.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know—and it was awfully decent of him. He just
-thought I’d like the cruise.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you don’t know Satan,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan never does nothing for nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what did he bring me aboard for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord knows,” said Jude; “but he’s got something up
-his sleeve, sure. Mind you, Satan’s as straight as they
-make them unless he’s dealin’ with law chaps and such,
-and you’d be safe with him if you was blind and dumb<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119">119</a></span>
-and covered with diamonds only waitin’ to be picked off
-you. You see, you’re straight, and anyone that’s straight
-with Satan he’s straight with them. It’s different with
-lawyers, or guys like Cark and Sellers, who’d beat their
-own gran’mothers out of their store teeth. All the same,
-you look out with Satan. He’s got some plan about you,
-sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort of plan is it, do you think, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord knows. Nothing to harm you, anyway; maybe
-it’s to go shares in some deal—I dunno.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m up for any deal he likes to propose that
-would benefit him—as much money as he wants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s not set on money,” said Jude, “not in a big
-way. I reckon he’s something like Pap. Pap would
-take no end of trouble making a few dollars, but he was
-never really set on bein’ rich. I reckon he took up that
-old wreck business more for the fun of the thing than
-the dollars. He used to say great riches was only trouble
-to a man, an’ that he only wanted God’s good air and
-’nough to live on.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe he was right,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon Satan cottoned to you because he thought
-you was honest,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I hope I am.”</p>
-
-<p>“He said to me, right off, after you’d gone back to
-the yacht, ‘I reckon that feller’s honest,’ he said.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” went on Jude, “you don’t pick up honest
-parties round these parts, not by the bushel. You might
-rake Havana with a finetooth comb lookin’ for fellers<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120">120</a></span>
-that wouldn’t do you, but you wouldn’t find none. It’s
-the same all round the gulf, from N’Orleans to Campêche;
-you can’t stick your nose in anywhere without
-being stung—if you’re a softy.”</p>
-
-<p>“So he liked me because he thought I was straight.
-What did you like me for, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! if you don’t fancy yourself! Who told you
-I liked you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You did last night. You said you and Satan took
-to me right off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did I? Well, maybe it was them pajamas—Hullo!”
-The shrill notes of a bo’sn’s whistle came over
-the water. She sprang to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Satan’s form appeared at the rail of the <i>Sarah</i>. He
-was making movements with his arms as though signaling,
-and Jude flung up an arm in answer.</p>
-
-<p>Then, shading her eyes, she looked seaward.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She seized the sack, called on him to help her, and
-between them they ran it down to the water’s edge.
-Then they got the dinghy afloat, the sack on board, and
-started.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s up?” again asked Ratcliffe, as they rowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Sail,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen nothing, perhaps because of the sun-dazzle
-on the water or because he had not looked in the
-right direction. The sensitiveness of the Tylers to the
-approach of strangers and their hawklike vision struck
-him as belonging almost to the uncanny.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121">121</a></span>
-Satan had rigged a tackle, and without a word uttered
-the sack was got aboard and below. Then and not till
-then did Satan speak.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Cleary,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>Jude took the old glass he had been using, and examined
-the stranger, then she handed it to Ratcliffe. He
-turned it on the fleck of sail which sprang gigantic into
-the form of a big fore-and-aft-rigged boat, beating up
-for the island, the late afternoon sunlight flashing back
-from the foam at the forefoot and her foam-wet bows.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Cleary?” asked he, handing back the glass.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s partner,” said Satan, “sort of half and half
-partner. They’re always bestin’ one another. Cleary is
-by way of bein’ a ship breaker and dealer in odds and
-ends; owns a couple of ratty old schooners besides that
-old ketch. Wonder what he’s doin’ down here? Curse
-him!”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s after Cark, most likely,” said Jude. “Maybe
-he’s got a smell of the wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” replied Satan. “He’s always spyin’ on Cark.
-There’s nothin’ much that Cleary don’t know, and if he
-got wind that Cark’s on a likely job he’d put out after
-him.”</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to Ratcliffe all at once that the old wreck
-lying on that unseen reef might have been likened to a
-carcass in the desert, and that he was watching the
-gathering of the vultures to a feast.</p>
-
-<p>First Carquinez, now Cleary—how many more would
-come circling out of the blue?</p>
-
-<p>He said so, and Satan concurred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122">122</a></span>
-“It’s got out somehow or ’nother,” said Satan, “and
-Lord only knows there may be half a dozen others on
-the hunt. You see, the very fac’ of Cark’s puttin’ to
-sea himself would give suspicions to half Havana; but
-Cleary is the only man beside Cark that knows my ports
-of call. He knows I come here for abalones, and he
-knows I hunt round Pine Island, not to say other places.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan fell into meditation for a moment. Then he
-resumed:</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what the cuss has been doin’. He’s been on
-the hunt for me, same as Cark was, only for different
-reasons. Now you wait and see. Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you cover the cache proper?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet; but there’s a sack of stuff we didn’t manage
-to bring off. It’s among the bushes.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’ll have to lay there.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the name of Cleary’s boat?” asked Ratcliffe
-as he watched the approaching ketch.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Natchez</i>,” said Satan, “an old cod boat, built
-at Marthas Vineyard. Lord! ain’t they crackin’ on!
-Cleary’s in a hurry. There’s no denyin’ that.”</p>
-
-<p>He whistled contentedly as he leaned on the rail, and
-Ratcliffe, watching his hatchet-sharp profile, wondered
-what was coming next. Of one thing he was beginning
-to feel certain,—Cleary, Carquinez, Sellers, and anything
-else that might come out of Havana on the long trail
-for plunder would find a match in Satan.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123">123</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">AN HONEST MAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> ketch carried on, heading straight for the <i>Sarah</i>;
-then, spilling the wind from her sails, she came
-round, presenting a full view of her dirty old hull and
-dropping her anchor two cable lengths away.</p>
-
-<p>Almost on the last rasp of the anchor chain she
-dropped a boat, which shoved off for the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cleary,” said Satan, shading his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>It was, and as Cleary came on board, leg over rail,
-saluting Satan with the affability of old acquaintanceship
-and the quarterdeck with a squirt of tobacco juice, Ratcliffe
-fell to wondering what sort of place Havana might
-be and what else it might give up in the way of detrimentals.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez was bad and Sellers was bad, but Cleary
-was—Cleary. Against the gold and blue of afternoon,
-the sight of this faded man, who looked as though he
-had seen better days, who suggested a broken-down
-schoolmaster, with a slungshot in his pocket, struck Ratcliffe
-with astonishment and depression. It was as
-though the dazzling air had suddenly split to disclose
-a London slum.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124">124</a></span>
-“Hullo! Hullo!” said Cleary. “Thought I recognized
-the old hooker. What you doin’ down here away?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude made a dive for the galley, and Ratcliffe could
-hear her choking. The sound banished the feeling of
-depression and repulsion created by the newcomer and
-brightened him somehow.</p>
-
-<p>Here was the comic man of the pantomime come
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p>“What am I doin’?” said Satan. “I’m fishin’ for
-chair-backs. What are you doin’ yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned, spat his quid overboard, and then, leaning
-on the rail, looking seaward, with his back to the
-others, and, just as easy as though he were aboard his
-own ship, laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Fishin’ for chair-backs!” Then, sluing his head half
-round, “How’s the abalone fishin’ gone?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring up them pearls!”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned, and, leaning with his back against the
-rail, began to fill an old pipe in a languid and leisurely
-manner. Then, when the pearls were produced, he
-turned them from the matchbox into the palm of his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“How much?” asked Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Forty dollars,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Forty which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t worth forty cents.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, who’s askin’ you to deal?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125">125</a></span>
-Cleary carefully poured the pearls into the matchbox,
-closed it, and put it in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>Satan did not seem to mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Bring up them cigars!”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s the gentleman?” asked Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentleman came aboard for a cruise off a yacht.
-You needn’t mind him; he’s only out for pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary nodded to Ratcliffe, who nodded in return.
-Then things hung for a moment till Jude appeared with
-the cigar-box, and the newcomer, having tapped the tobacco
-out of his pipe, chose a cigar, lit it and, leaning
-with his back against the rail and his thumbs in the
-armholes of his old waistcoat, blew clouds. He seemed
-for a moment far away in thought, and Ratcliffe, watching
-him and Satan,—Jude having vanished again, attacked
-with another fit of choking,—puzzled his head in
-vain to find out the inner meaning of what was going
-on. The wretched pearls were scarcely worth five dollars,
-he had heard Satan say so, and Cleary, evidently
-an expert, was not the man to pay eight times their
-worth, nor was Satan the man to allow the other to
-pocket them.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly Cleary spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s a clever man, don’t you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seein’ he’s your partner, you’re a better judge
-than me,” replied Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe that’s so,” said Cleary. “Partners we
-were, and partners we are till I ketch him and bust him.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126">126</a></span>
-“Why, what’s he been doin’ to you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Now, I’ll tell you,” said Cleary. “I’m an honest
-man. I don’t say in trade I’m not above shavin’ the barber,
-but between man an’ man I’m honest, and I’m goin’
-to tell you straight out Cark and me has been layin’ for
-you ever since your dad was fool enough to give Cark
-the tip about that treasure business. I wasn’t keen on
-it, same as he was. I allowed there might be somethin’
-in it—but that don’t matter. What gets my monkey
-is Cark he gets fearful thick with Sellers, then he cools
-off on the business of the treasure gettin’, and a matter
-of two weeks ago he rigs up a job for me to see after
-at Pensacola that’d have taken me two months and more.
-I says to myself, ‘There’s somethin’ in this.’ Says nothin’
-to Cark. Off I goes, taking the old <i>Natchez</i>. Hadn’t
-reached the latitood of Key West when back I puts,
-and finds Cark gone with the <i>Juan</i> and Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Then I knew he’s started to hunt for you again,
-leavin’ me in the lonely cold. He’s been huntin’ you
-ever since last fall, that’s straight; but he’d never let
-me down before. He’d always told me the results. I
-tell you he’s huntin’ for you now, and the surprisin’
-thing is he hasn’t found you, knowing as he does this
-is one of your grounds.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know he hasn’t found me?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, he was here this morning and off not four
-hours ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Christopher!”</p>
-
-<p>“Him and Sellers.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127">127</a></span>
-“Holy Mike!”</p>
-
-<p>“You was comin’ up from West, you ought to have
-sighted him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sighted nothin’ but a tank, and her nearly hull
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you’d been here a few hours earlier, you’d
-have smelt the old <i>Juan</i> as well as sightin’ her.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was he here on business?”</p>
-
-<p>“He was,—he was after that wreck Pap told him of.
-You just told me he’s been after me since last fall spyin’
-on me. I know it, and I’m pretty sick of the business.
-B’sides, he’s as good to help in it as anyone else; so
-I’ve made a contrac’ with him.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sufferin</em>’ Moses!—a contrac’ with Cark!” Cleary
-stood for a moment as though absorbing this news, then
-he laughed, the funniest laugh Ratcliffe had ever heard,—it
-was like the whinny of a pony. He saw Jude’s head
-at the cabin hatch, and the head suddenly duck and vanish,
-as though her body had been doubled up.</p>
-
-<p>“A contrac’ with Cark!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what are you laughin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’. May I ask what terms?”</p>
-
-<p>“We go shares.”</p>
-
-<p>“In the pickin’s?”</p>
-
-<p>“What else?”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you give him the location?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve give him the location and let him slip his
-cable—him and Sellers?”</p>
-
-<p>“What odds? It’ll take a month to bust her open<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128">128</a></span>
-and hunt for the stuff. I’ll be after him tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary crossed his arms and stood with the half-cigar
-stuck in the corner of his mouth and pointing skyward,
-his eyes fixed on the deck and his left eye half closed.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s face had reappeared at the cabin hatch, and the
-grin on it spread to Ratcliffe’s.</p>
-
-<p>Satan alone was unmoved, half-sitting on the keg and
-cutting up some tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Cleary at last, “you’ve made your bargain,
-there’s no gettin’ round that. <em>I’m</em> not wishin’ to
-poke my nose in your business, nor to ask what your
-share is to be, but I’m partners with Cark, and you see
-how he’s let me down—cayn’t you give me a lead?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Give me a lead to the location. It won’t make a cent
-difference to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear enough, I don’t want none of your share.
-Cark’s the man I want to tap, having a right to, being
-partners.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan seemed to turn this matter over in his mind for
-a moment. Then he said, “Suppose we come back to
-them pearls?”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Cleary in a lively voice. “What’s this
-you was askin’, forty? Well, forty you shall have.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced an old brown pocketbook, counted out
-four ten-dollar notes, and handed them over.</p>
-
-<p>Satan examined each note, back and front, folded
-them, and placed them into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Cleary, “out with the lead!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129">129</a></span>
-“You’ll have it tomorrow,” said Satan. “I’m pickin’
-up my anchor tomorrow mornin’. You’ve only to follow
-me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rayther have the indications on paper.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you would, but you won’t. I’ve made my
-bargain with Cark, and there’s nothin’ in the contrac’
-about givin’ the location away to third parties. I can’t
-help you followin’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I take you,” said Cleary.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130">130</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">PROBLEMS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> sun was nearly touching the horizon when he
-dropped into his boat and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “Are you in earnest
-with that chap?”</p>
-
-<p>“I sure am,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Going to take him down to Lone Reef?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“But how about Carquinez? We had got to wait for
-him here till he gets back from Havana with the dynamite.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Satan, “we’d got to wait here one week,
-or maybe ten days allowin’ for weather—where was you
-born?”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s tried to sell me a pup, that’s how! He’s gone
-to no Havana: he’s crackin’ on for the wreck with every
-stitch he can carry. Reckons to bust her open and scoop
-the boodle while we’re layin’ here rubbin’ our noses and
-waitin’ for him. Mind you,” said Satan, “I may be
-wrong, but that’s my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>“But he sailed off toward Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Hasn’t he a rudder?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131">131</a></span>
-“All the same, would it pay him?”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if he played a dirty trick on you like that,
-wouldn’t he be afraid you’d split?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who to?”</p>
-
-<p>“To the authorities at Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember Sellers talkin’ about landin’ the
-stuff,” asked Satan, “sayin’ they’d have to take it round
-to Santiago way? They thought I was drinkin’ all that
-in. If there were any dollars in the business, d’you think
-they’d touch Cuba? Not they! They’d either cache the
-stuff or run it to some likely port. I was laughin’ in my
-hat all the time. Now you may think me a suspicious
-cuss. I’m not; but a feller has to run by compass in this
-world or go off his course, and my compass in this turnout
-is Cark. I say he’s gone down to Lone Reef and
-given me the left leg over the business, and my compass
-is the fac’ that he can’t run straight. Not if he tried to,
-he couldn’t run straight; nor could Sellers nor Cleary.
-If them fellers were straight, I’d match them and give
-them a fair deal. As it is, they’re like a lot of blind
-bally-hoolies playin’ blindman’s buff, runnin’ round and
-round, with me in the middle, tryin’ to kidoodle me and
-bein’ kidoodled themselves. Forty dollars for them
-rotten pearls, and all sorts of fixin’s out of Sellers—<em>and
-I haven’t done with them yet</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>It had seemed to Ratcliffe, on board the <i>Juan</i>, that
-Carquinez was the spider of the web of this business.
-It seemed to him now that the spider was Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He began to wonder was there any wreck at all, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132">132</a></span>
-the treasure story a myth. The idea of these rogues being
-incited to dreams of fortune so that they might be
-plundered of pots of paint and cans of turpentine and
-a few dollars appealed to him immensely. He remembered
-Thelusson and Skelton, he remembered Jude’s yarn
-about fruit steamers being held up, he remembered
-Carquinez and Sellers, and he had just seen Cleary; and
-of a sudden Satan’s ocean-wide activities appeared before
-him in nightmare contrast with their microscopic results.
-Great steamers stopped for a bunch of bananas, yachts
-lying idle to careen the <i>Sarah</i>, ships sailing from Havana
-to hunt for buried treasure—but in reality to supply the
-wandering <i>Sarah</i> with cans of turpentine and a few dollars!
-Was there any treasure, or was the whole thing
-a Tyler fake invented by Pap and handed to his family
-as an heirloom? He could not resist the question.</p>
-
-<p>“That chart you showed us,” said he,—“is there anything
-really in it?”</p>
-
-<p>Satan took him at once.</p>
-
-<p>“The chart’s all right,” said he, “for them that can
-read it. If you mean is it <em>genuine</em>, I reckon it is—for
-them that can read it. We’ll see some day if I’m right
-or wrong; but, honest truth, I’m not botherin’ much about
-it,—the chances are so big, as I told you before, against
-treasure huntin’, and even if we strike it what’s the use
-of barrels of gold to a feller like me? If you ask me, I’m
-botherin’ more about the kid than huntin’ for money.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude. Suppose I was to get a bash on the head from
-one of them cusses, or drop to the smallpox, same<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133">133</a></span>
-as I pretended to Sellers, what’d become of the kid?”</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the “kid” frying fish for supper came
-mixed with the question.</p>
-
-<p>“I know,” said Ratcliffe, “that’s a problem that must
-often occur to you, I should think.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve seen the sort of crowd Havana’s made of,”
-went on Satan. “It’s hard to tell which is worse, the
-Yanks or the Spaniards, and there’s not a seaport that’s
-not the same, and when I think of me lyin’ dead and her
-driftin’ loose, it gets my goat. It’d be different if she
-was a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Besides that,” said the other, “she can’t go on always
-as she is now.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, dressed as she is now. She’ll grow up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have to dress differently some day.”</p>
-
-<p>“Meanin’ skirts?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan laughed a hollow laugh. The idea seemed so
-futile that he did not dwell upon it, or seemed not to.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you any female relations yourself?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Lots,” replied Ratcliffe, calling up in memory his
-cousins and aunts, females of the highest upper-middle-class
-respectability, and vaguely wondering what they
-would think of Jude could they see her.</p>
-
-<p>“The bother is,” said Satan, “she don’t take to women
-folk; always was against them, and that Thelusson
-woman put the cap on the business, kissin’ her and handin’
-out slop talk. Well, I don’t know. I reckon she’ll have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134">134</a></span>
-to go on bein’ what she is till somethin’ happens; but it
-would have been a lot handier if she’d been born a boy.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned and went below.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had sunk beyond Palm Island, and a violet
-dusk, forerunner of the dark, was spreading through the
-sky. Over beyond the <i>Natchez</i> the sea for a moment became
-hard looking as a floor of beryl, then vague.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, lingering for a moment watching this transformation
-scene, found himself thinking of Jude and her
-problem. The Tylers had taken an extraordinarily firm
-hold upon him. He knew them more intimately than he
-knew his own relations, or fancied so. It seemed to him
-that he had known them for years.</p>
-
-<p>When this cruise was over and he packed up his traps
-and left them, he would probably never see them again.
-Jude and Satan would go their way and he would go his
-way—and what would happen to Jude? Suppose Satan
-were to die, get knocked on the head or “fall to the
-smallpox”? The thought hurt him almost as much as it
-hurt Satan; for Jude had, somehow or another, captured
-his mind and touched his heart, and her youth and absolute
-irresponsibility before the major facts of life had
-infected him in the most extraordinary manner.</p>
-
-<p>Over there on the island, engaged in the serious matter
-of provisioning the <i>Sarah</i>, they had been carrying on like
-children. He had not thought of it then; now, reflecting
-sanely, it rose before him together with the rest of
-this strange cruise, and for a moment the whole business
-seemed mad, absolutely mad. The supersane figure of
-Skelton rose up before him, and beyond Skelton, Oxford,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135">135</a></span>
-the calm, sane English country, where the Tylers would
-have been impossible, the hard bourgeois conventions of
-the upper-upper-middle classes, those uncles, cousins, and
-aunts to whom Class was as holy as Sunday and to whom
-Jude would be absolutely invisible as she was.</p>
-
-<p>He was engaged in these reflections when a voice broke
-the stillness of the evening, a half-tired, half-cantankerous
-voice, the voice of an overworked housekeeper who
-had been frying fish while others have been idling.</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ain’t</em> you comin’ to help me?” inquired the voice.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136">136</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">HANTS AND OTHER THINGS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Down</span> below, at supper, the injured housekeeper was
-still in evidence and rose to a charge that the fish
-was overfried. Satan was the accuser.</p>
-
-<p>The defendant, “het up” and flushed, replied in the
-language of the sea:</p>
-
-<p>“Go’n fry your head! Clackin’ on deck and leavin’ me
-to do the work—the pair of you! It’s all men’s good
-for.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I thought you was a man!” said Satan. “You
-cut and carry on like a man; scratch you and your tongue
-goes both ends like a woman. Start you on a job, and
-you sit down to it before it’s half done. I saw you
-lazin’ on the beach, and now look where we are,—there’s
-a sack of stuff not brought off and how are we to bring
-it with Cleary messin’ round?”</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t my fault,” said Jude. Then she checked
-herself and her eyes met Ratcliffe’s.</p>
-
-<p>“It was my fault,” said he. “I got tired.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude looked at him. This defense of her, trifling
-though it was, seemed to make a new relationship between
-them. It seemed to her that Ratcliffe had suddenly
-become different. She could not tell what the difference<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137">137</a></span>
-was or how it had come about in the least, or why she
-half-resented his shielding her, even in this small matter;
-then her eyes fell away and rested on the table before her.</p>
-
-<p>“It wasn’t,” said she. “It was my fault I was foolin’
-when I ought to have been workin’, and now the stuff
-is lyin’ there—” She choked, and then to the horror of
-Satan she pushed her plate away and broke into tears,
-hiding her face on her folded arms. Then, before the
-astonished ones could speak, she rose and dashed out of
-the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“Land’s sake!” cried Satan. “What ails her? Cryin’!
-She’s never done that before—and all over that rotten
-sack—why, let it lay there, cuss the thing!”</p>
-
-<p>He went on with his supper in an irritable manner.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s overtired, maybe,” said Ratcliffe. “Wait and
-I’ll fetch her back.”</p>
-
-<p>He left the cabin and came on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The moon had not risen yet, and the riding light, which
-had been run up before supper, showed yellow against
-the stars.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sign of Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He went forward. There she was, huddled up in the
-bows.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>The bundle sniffed.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on down to supper. Satan’s not angry.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who the”—sniff—“cares whether’es angry or not?
-You lea’ me alone!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what are you crying about?”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ain’t</em> cryin’!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138">138</a></span>
-“Well, what are you lying on the deck for?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause I choose.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come on down and help to clear the things away.”</p>
-
-<p>“Clear them yourself!”</p>
-
-<p>He bent down and tried to take her arm. She shook
-him off, rose suddenly like a released spring, ran to the
-side where the dinghy was moored, and got over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>He looked over. She was in the boat unfastening the
-painter.</p>
-
-<p>“Where on earth are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>She pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe came down to the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s gone ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s gone for that sack,” said Satan unconcernedly.
-“Reckons to get it off before moon rise, I expect.”</p>
-
-<p>“But it’s too heavy for one.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll do it. You’ve put her monkey up makin’ her
-confess it was her fault. She’s never done that before
-in all her born life. She’s just natural proud and she’d
-as soon cut her tongue out as give in she was in the
-wrong. You’ve made her do more’n I’ve ever made her
-do, and how you’ve done it—well, search me.</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t gettin’ on with your supper,” said Satan
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve had enough. I was wondering if she has her
-boots for going through that bush stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>“She’s got them all right. They were in the dinghy:
-she didn’t bring them aboard. You’re worryin’ a lot
-about the kid.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139">139</a></span>
-“Well, maybe. She’s the jolliest kid I ever struck, and
-I don’t want any harm to come to her; the pluckiest, too.
-There’s not many people would go off alone in the dark
-like that in a place like this.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord bless your soul!” said Satan. “That’s nothin’,
-no more than walkin’ down the street to Jude. Do you
-think sailin’ these seas is all fair-weather work? Why,
-we’ve been rubbin’ our noses in <em>des</em>truction since she was
-born. She don’t know what fear is.”</p>
-
-<p>“I could tell that from her face.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s her face that’s troublin’ me,” said Satan. “Pass
-me the water pitcher, will you? She’s begun to take
-after mother. A few months ago she was the homeliest
-little pup ever littered; but she’s beginnin’ to pick up in
-looks, and if she takes after her mother’s side in looks
-and ways—Lord save us!”</p>
-
-<p>“Was your mother good looking?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “I don’t know what you call good
-looks. Pap said she was a nacheral calamity; that was
-after she’d bolted with the Baptis’ man. It wasn’t the
-looks so much as the somethin’ about her that’d make a
-blind man rubber after her if she passed him in the
-street, that’s what Pap said. He never said no prayers,
-but when he was talkin’ of Jude I’ve heard him say time
-and again, ‘Thank the Lord she don’t take after her
-mother!’ and now it’s comin’ out, same as the ace of
-spades a shark has hid up his sleeve—and what’s comin’
-after, Lord only knows.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I scarce know myself, but Pap said those sort<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140">140</a></span>
-of women couldn’t help bein’ nacheral calamities, attractin’
-chaps and turnin’ the world upside down. He
-said a man, once they’d got the clutch on him, was no
-more use than a hypnotized fowl, whatever that is.
-You’ve heard what Jude said about skirts—well, I’m
-thinkin’ that’s all baby talk, an’ it’s my ’pinion when she
-gets her nacheral sailing orders she’ll be into skirts some
-day, same as a dude takes to water, and hypnotizing
-chaps, same as her mother before her.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wouldn’t be surprised,” said Ratcliffe; “but I don’t
-think she’ll be a natural calamity. I think, from what
-I have seen of her, that she has a fine character, honest
-as the day, good as gold.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan; “but you never know what a
-woman is, seems to me, till she’s been rubbed against a
-man. Those were Pap’s words and he’d got a headpiece
-on him. Well, I reckon time will tell.”</p>
-
-<p>They went on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The moon had not risen yet, and the island lay like a
-humped shadow in the starlight. To seaward the anchor
-light of the <i>Natchez</i> showed a yellow point, and from the
-beach came the lullaby of little waves falling on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Now if it wasn’t these days,” said Satan, “I’d be in
-two minds about putting out straight now, rather than
-lyin’ all night by that feller Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean by these days?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, in the old throat-cuttin’ days I reckon Cleary
-would have gone through us, sunk the old <i>Sarah</i>, and
-taken me aboard his hooker with a gun at my head to
-make me show him the way to the wreck; but things is<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141">141</a></span>
-different now. Fellers are afraid of the law. Cark’s
-mortally afraid of the law, so’s Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“What time do you start tomorrow?”</p>
-
-<p>“After sun-up, if the wind holds.”</p>
-
-<p>“It will be a joke if we find Carquinez at the reef.
-What will he say, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark? Oh, he’ll not mind. There ain’t no shame in
-Cark. He’ll have broke his contrac’ by not goin’ to
-Havana, he’ll stand proved to the eyes as a damn cheat.
-He won’t mind: the contrac’ not bein’ regular, the law
-can’t have him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I expect Cleary will go for him.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan. “Then we’ll have some fun.
-There’s Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>Something like a swimming water rat was breaking the
-star shimmer on the sea. It was the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>Jude was sculling it from behind, noiselessly. It came
-alongside to starboard like a ghost, and with it came Jude’s
-voice calling for the tackle. Then the sack came aboard
-and after it Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve done it smart,” said Satan, “and no mistake.
-Now off down with you and have your supper.
-We’ve got to start bright and early in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude said nothing. Her anger and irritability seemed
-to have departed. She kicked off her boots, hitched up
-her trousers, and started down below.</p>
-
-<p>“She never keeps a grudge up,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Away in the middle of the night Ratcliffe was
-awakened by a stifled scream, the voice of Satan promptly
-following.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142">142</a></span>
-“Wake up! What ails you?”</p>
-
-<p>“For the Land’s sake, where am I?”</p>
-
-<p>“In your hammock. What’re you dreamin’ of?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gee-owsts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants, you mean.”</p>
-
-<p>“Black faces they had, and they was chasin’ me round
-and round them trees.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what comes of stuffin’ yourself and goin’ to
-bed on top of it. Get off your back and onto your side.
-Wakin’ a body up like that! What was they like?”</p>
-
-<p>“The hants?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can’t be talkin’ for fear of wakin’ him up.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s asleep. I hear him snorin’. What was they
-like?”</p>
-
-<p>“They’d black faces and tails like cows—an’ I’d rather
-not be talkin’ of them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wonder what it means dreamin’ of them things?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’ good—bad weather, most like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Glass is steady.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe we’ll bust on a reef or somethin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, shet your head!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shet yours. I’m wantin’ to get asleep.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe could hear the water outside tickling the ribs
-of the old <i>Sarah</i>. A bigger swell was running, and she
-rose to it with balloon-like buoyancy. A score of little
-voices from the trickle and slap of the sea against the
-timbers to the click of the rudder chain marked her
-movements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143">143</a></span>
-The idea of the ghosts chasing Jude round the dream
-tree reminded him of how he had chased her round the
-real tree and kissed her—kissed her out of irritation.</p>
-
-<p>Something in his half-asleep state told him he had been
-a fool to do that. It was all done in play, just as a little
-boy might kiss a little girl; but he was not a little boy.
-What had prompted him?</p>
-
-<p>Then as he lay dissolving into slumber the groaning
-timbers of the <i>Sarah</i> said something that sounded like
-“nacheral calamity,” and then, the door of sleep flung
-wide, he was walking on a blazing beach with Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Natchez</i> and the <i>Juan</i> were at anchor out on the
-blue dream sea, a great wreck was heaved up on the sands,
-and when they reached it Cleary tapped on the timbers
-and said something about a “nacheral calamity,” and at
-the words a porthole opened and Jude’s fresh young face
-appeared laughing, framed by the timbers of the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him the most delightful vision—then it
-popped in and the porthole closed and Carquinez came
-riding up on a horse, saying he was going to “bu’st” the
-wreck open with dynamite to get at the treasure.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144">144</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">UNDER WAY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was routed out before dawn by Satan. The
-cabin lamp was lit, the table spread, and Jude was
-bringing in coffee. She seemed in a bad temper, and
-as he huddled himself into his clothes he could hear her:</p>
-
-<p>“Knockin’ myself about in the dark! That old slush
-lamp in the galley don’t burn worth a cent. What you
-want haulin’ out this hour for?”</p>
-
-<p>And to her Satan:</p>
-
-<p>“Wind will be up with the sun—where’s them biscuits?
-We’ve got to get the dinghy aboard yet, and all that
-raffle forward stowed, and it’ll be light enough in another
-ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s Rat?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s comin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He sat down to table opposite Jude. She scarcely gave
-him good morning. The face that had looked so well
-framed by the porthole of the dream ship was cross, almost
-sullen. He thought for a moment that her ill-temper
-was directed toward Satan as well as himself;
-then, in some subtle way, he knew it wasn’t. Early rising
-may have helped; but he was the cause. What had
-he done? He could not think.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145">145</a></span>
-He remembered how she had acted when he had stood
-up for her the night before. It was just the same this
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>Satan said the coffee was burnt,—tasted like bud
-barley, and ought to be slung in the slush tub. Ratcliffe
-stood up for the coffee, but was cut short by Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it’s beastly,” said Jude; “but I haven’t
-more’n two hands to be gettin’ the things on the table
-and the coffee boiled—and some folks snoring in their
-bunks!”</p>
-
-<p>“Shet up!” said Satan, ruffled at this wanton attack on
-the guest “And talkin’ of snorin’, I reckon you can give
-any man points and beat him, once you lay down to it
-Why, you shake the ship so that I’ve woke often of
-nights thinkin’ we’d got adrift and was dudderin’ over
-sandbanks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord love you for a liar!” was all Jude said. She
-refused help in clearing away the things, joining them on
-deck a few minutes later, just as day was coming into
-the eastern sky.</p>
-
-<p>The problem of how to get the dinghy aboard had not
-occurred to Ratcliffe till now. The <i>Sarah Tyler</i> possessed
-no davits, and though the old canvas boat was easy
-to handle as an umbrella, the sturdy little dinghy was a
-different matter.</p>
-
-<p>Standing in the half-dark with a faint wind bringing
-the smell of the early morning sea, sharp as the smell
-of a new-drawn sword, he questioned Satan on the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>“Get her aboard?” said Satan. “Oh, I’ll durn soon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146">146</a></span>
-get her aboard. Davits! God love you! what do you
-want them things for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Except for hoistin’ fools off the ship?” said the voice
-of Jude from the darkness. “<em>Air</em> you goin’ to get a move
-on? You’ve got the old awning to take in and stow.
-Maybe you’ve forgotten it.”</p>
-
-<p>They got the awning down and stowed, and then,
-against a train of fire crawling on the eastern sea-line and
-in a light that made the world like the vestibule of
-Fairyland, Satan set to on the problem of the dinghy.
-He had no doubt half a dozen dodges for the purpose.
-The one he employed was simply to unshackle the main
-halyards and fix them to the ring-bolt on the bow.</p>
-
-<p>As they hauled on the tackle, and as if in answer to the
-creak of block and shrill chantey started by Satan, the
-races of the gulls blazed out. The deep-sea fishing gulls
-had long since started for sea; but the shore gulls, as
-though waiting for a convoy to follow, were round the
-stern of the <i>Sarah</i>. Then, the dinghy secured, the throat
-and peak halyards were manned, and the mainsail rose
-slatting against the splendor of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was over the sea-line now, the wind rising
-to meet him, and to starboard the fresh blue sea flooding
-against the wind showed the <i>Natchez</i>, her canvas
-rising and the fellows swarming at the ropes.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had unlashed the wheel and was standing by it,
-now that the mainsail was set, shouting directions to his
-crew; and to Ratcliffe, as he labored with Jude getting
-the foresail and jib on her, the truth came in a flash
-that this was the real thing. The lazy peace of the last<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147">147</a></span>
-couple of days had broken all at once. Activity, Adventure,
-and Danger seemed suddenly to have boarded the
-old <i>Sarah Tyler</i> and delivered her as a prey to enormous
-and unknown forces.</p>
-
-<p>He had never recognized till now the potential energy
-of canvas. The mainsail seemed horribly vast, out of
-all proportion to the hull; the slatting of the jib as they
-raised it spoke of an energy new born, viewless, and
-seeming to have little relationship to the warm and benign
-breeze.</p>
-
-<p>But he had no time to think. The anchor was still
-to be had in, and as he helped with Jude at the windlass—Pap’s
-patent that would have raised a battleship—the
-threshing of the canvas with all sheets slack and the
-voice of Satan came urging speed.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the old killick was aboard and the sails
-trimmed, came Peace. With the wind on the starboard
-beam and the canvas hard against the blue the <i>Sarah</i>
-settled down to her work, Palm Island fading to westward,
-and to sou’west the <i>Natchez</i> with all sail set in
-pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s bad temper seemed to have blown away on
-the wind, the surly look had gone from her face, and as
-she stood for a moment by Ratcliffe, looking over the
-weather rail, her mind seemed entirely occupied by
-Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“He’s blowing along,” said Jude; “but he’s feeling our
-pace. Not more than holding his own—and he had the
-cheek to tell me once his old tub could sail circles round
-the <i>Sarah</i>!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148">148</a></span>
-Satan at the wheel cocked his eye over his shoulder
-at the <i>Natchez</i>, spat, and refixed his gaze on the binnacle.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your eyes?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“In my head,” replied Jude. “What you gettin’ at?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s overhaulin’ us. Wonder he ain’t aboard! Time
-you was gettin’ that anchor up and handlin’ the jib.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was about to share the blame when, remembering
-the incident of the coffee, he checked himself and
-held his peace.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was right. The <i>Natchez</i> had the pace of the
-<i>Sarah</i>, at least under present wind conditions and under
-plain sail. The two boats had evidently never been
-matched before, and the gloom of the Tylers might have
-been gaged by their silence. Satan did not want to run
-away from Cleary; but he had promised him a “lead,”
-and this impudent display of the better sailing qualities
-of the <i>Natchez</i> was like a derisive underscore to the
-promise.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, in this matter at least, was a very unwise man.
-He should have checked the speed of his boat by mishandling
-her or even trailing a drogher. Instead of that
-he held on, determined, evidently, to take the shine out
-of the <i>Sarah</i> and pour derision on the head of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, little as he knew of boatcraft, felt the situation.
-Being wise, he said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Jude spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s her beams helping her. Try her on a wind and
-we’d knock flinders out of her. Lord! to think of being
-beat by that old cod boat! Say, cayn’t we do nothin’,
-crack on a balloon jib or somethin’?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149">149</a></span>
-Satan laughed a mirthless laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“S’much as to tell the cuss we’re beat. Don’t you
-think Cleary’s got no balloon jibs up his sleeve? Hain’t
-you no sense?”</p>
-
-<p>They held on, the <i>Natchez</i> steadily overhauling them
-till she was dead level half a mile away and drawing
-ahead.</p>
-
-<p>Then, having demonstrated her superiority, she began
-to reduce sail so as to give the <i>Sarah</i> the lead.</p>
-
-<p>Jude turned away and leaned with her back against the
-rail; then Satan told her to take the wheel and went below
-for a “wash.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150">150</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE STEERSMAN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Ratcliffe,</span> taking his seat on the bottom of the
-dinghy, watched her as she steered, the old panama
-on the back of her head and her eyes roving from the
-binnacle to the luff of the mainsail. The following wind
-blew warm, and the gentle creak of a block, the slash of
-the bow-wash, and the occasional click of the rudder
-chain were the only sounds in all the blue world ringing
-them.</p>
-
-<p>A mile or more behind them the <i>Natchez</i> showed, a
-triangle of pearl, Palm Island had vanished, and nothing
-remained in all the wheel of sea but a trace of smoke
-to the southward,—the smoke of some freighter hull down
-on the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>The sturdy little figure at the wheel seemed to have
-forgotten his existence. He was wondering whether the
-grudge was still being kept up against him, and what it
-was all about, and whether this indifference was real or
-assumed, when a voice made him start:</p>
-
-<p>“Say! Have you swallowed your tongue?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but I didn’t like to speak to you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What for?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151">151</a></span>
-“Well, I’ve heard you mustn’t speak to the man at the
-wheel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Who stuffed you with that yarn?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I’ve seen it stuck up on steamboats, and besides
-I thought you were in a temper with me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you said davits were only good for hoisting
-fools off a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“So they are.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you meant me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you was a fool, did you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Then last night you got in a wax—Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing—only—we don’t want to quarrel—and we
-haven’t been the same since last night, somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. You wouldn’t let me help to clear
-the things this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t I? Well, you can help to steer the ship
-now. Kin you steer?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only a boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it’s easy learnt, and you’re not much use aboard
-unless you can take your hand at the wheel.”</p>
-
-<p>He said nothing for a minute, admiring the way she
-had steered clear of the subject he had started on.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind,” said he at last. “I’ll learn some time—you
-can teach me.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude let her eyes rest on him. Then suddenly, and
-with the vehemence and force of a Methodist preacher
-driving home a point from the pulpit, she spoke:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152">152</a></span>
-“<em>Air</em> you stuck to the bottom of that dinghy with
-cobbler’s wax?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed and stood up.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s right,” said Jude. “Now come’n take the
-wheel. Some time’s no time! You’ve got to learn to
-handle her now if you want to. Go behind me and look
-over my shoulder—that’s right.”</p>
-
-<p>He stood behind her, wondering what the next command
-would be. It came almost at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Stick your eye on the compass card.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>“S’long as the pointer’s like that she’s on her course.
-Now I’ll let her off a spoke or two—keep your eye on
-the card.”</p>
-
-<p>The pointer altered its indication, and the mainsail
-seemed suddenly attacked by the ague.</p>
-
-<p>“Now she’s on her course again,” said Jude, altering
-the wheel. “Take hold of her. I’ll stand by to give you
-a hand if you want it.”</p>
-
-<p>He took the spokes she had been holding as she relinquished
-them, and the first sensation that came to him
-was the feeling that he had taken hold of something alive,
-something alive and sensitive as a hare. The wheel
-seemed to have a motive power and will of its own, and
-the infernal compass card to take affront at the least
-movement of the helm.</p>
-
-<p>Jude rested her hand on his left hand to show him
-how and give him confidence, and at the touch of her
-firm little hand the stage-fright that comes to every steersman
-when he first takes the wheel left him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153">153</a></span>
-In five minutes he had got the hang of the thing, or
-thought so.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you run her alone?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! It’s as simple as simple.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She drew off and took her seat on the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>“Easy, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Easy as pie.”</p>
-
-<p>The wind freshened a bit, and the <i>Sarah</i>, heeling
-slightly, took matters in her own hand for a moment
-and fell off her course. He put the wheel over too
-much, and like a frightened horse she went plunging
-away in the opposite direction, the wind spilling from
-her sails and the main boom threatening to swing to
-port.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment Jude was beside him, her hands on the
-spokes, and the <i>Sarah</i> on her course again.</p>
-
-<p>A voice came from below, where Satan, like a sensitive
-plant, had evidently felt the alteration in their course.</p>
-
-<p>“What the —— are you doin’ up there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Learning Rat to steer,” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, himself again, retaking the wheel, turned to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>“For God’s sake,” said he, “don’t call me that!”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rat.”</p>
-
-<p>“For the land’s sake what’s the matter with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a beastly name. If you want something short,
-call me what everyone else calls me.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154">154</a></span>
-“Bobby.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re lettin’ her off again,” said Jude. “Starboard—that’s
-it. Here’s Satan: he’ll go on learnin’ you. I’m
-goin’ below for a wash.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155">155</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157">157</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_II"></a><span class="larger">PART II</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">LONE REEF</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> was the morning of the third day out, somewhere
-about four o’clock. The moon had set, and the
-<i>Sarah</i> was lifting against a gentle head sea, boosting the
-foam from her bows under the light of a million stars.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was at the wheel, Jude below in her hammock,
-and Ratcliffe at the weather rail, close to Satan. He
-was leaning over watching the water,—gouts and lines
-of star-shot foam, planes of ebony blackness, and now
-and then, deep down, the bloom of phosphorus like the
-life in the heart of a black opal.</p>
-
-<p>“What time do you reckon we’ll strike the reef?” asked
-Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re right on to it now,” replied Satan, “and if it
-wasn’t more’n a five-knot breeze I’d heave her to.”</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t afraid of running on it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! There’s no smell of it yet.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean to say you could smell it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal,” said Satan, “I don’t know if it’s rightly smell
-or hearin’ or what, but I’d know it, even with the wind
-as she is. I reckon it’s maybe the water. Shoal water
-smells different from deep, and it’s shoal water right up
-from four miles to Lone. Feels different too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158">158</a></span>
-“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“More choppy—I dunno—different. Jude would tell
-you the same. Pap had the sense of it too. Western
-ocean folks can smell ice miles off when the bergs are
-cruisin’ about. I reckon it’s the same thing— There’s
-the sun.”</p>
-
-<p>Right ahead, as if touched by a wizard, the stars had
-faded above the sea line, the sky over there looked sick,
-a stain on the velvety splendor of the night.</p>
-
-<p>A great gull passed the <i>Sarah</i>, flying topmast high, and
-now far off and as though coming through a pinhole
-could be heard a creaky lamentable sound,—the crying
-of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve got the smell of her now,” said Satan. “Them
-gulls you’re hearin’ aren’t all of them from Lone.
-There’s a big spit to east’ard, and they’ll be comin’ up
-against the wind. Say, will you take a bet?”</p>
-
-<p>“What sort?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll bet you even dollars Cleary hasn’t held on same
-as we’ve done the last six hours. He was droppin’ astern
-a long way last time I sighted him. He’ll have seen the
-reef on the chart right ahead of him, and his navigation
-is no account: hasn’t no sea sense. He’ll be hove to
-singin’ ‘Lead, kindly light’ and listenin’ for the breakers—What
-you say?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather bet on the <i>Sarah</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’re right,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>The head sails showed hard now against the east, and
-almost before one could turn and look again the blaze
-had come above a band of opal-tinted mist which passed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159">159</a></span>
-and vanished, leaving on the horizon a train of fire pale
-as guinea gold.</p>
-
-<p>In that moment, far ahead and as if suddenly sketched
-by a pencil against the eastern light, they saw the naked
-spars of a vessel anchored in the dawn.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cark,” said Satan. “Told you we’d find him
-here—damn swab!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I couldn’t have believed it,” said Ratcliffe. He
-remembered the sailing of the <i>Juan</i>, presumably for
-Havana, and though he had sized up Sellers and
-Carquinez for what they were worth, still, the evidence
-of their duplicity, here before his eyes, came as a shock.</p>
-
-<p>In a moment it was blotted out by the sun, washed
-away in the blazing, seething ocean of light that sprang
-on them as if to the blast of a trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>Satan swung his head over his shoulders. Ratcliffe
-followed his gaze. The sea to westward was empty, not
-a sign of a sail.</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary’s gone,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he’ll be nosin’ along soon,” said Satan. “He’s
-sure to come close enough to see Cark’s topmasts, and
-then he’ll pounce.”</p>
-
-<p>He put the helm over, and the <i>Sarah</i> payed off to the
-north so as to round the northern spur of the reef.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the wreck,” said Satan, “that line like a lump
-of rock.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, shading his eyes, could now see the reef, long
-and foam-flecked, stretching from north to south, the line
-of rock absolutely unsuggestive of a wreck, beyond the
-reef the <i>Juan’s</i> masts and spars, and about the reef-spurs<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160">160</a></span>
-the gulls flitting and wheeling; but, despite the movement
-of the gulls and the splendor of the morning, the place
-struck him as the most desolate he had ever seen.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing stirring,” said Satan, as they rounded the
-north spur and the boom came over. “Them lowsy
-Spaniards are all in their bunks. Rap on the deck for
-Jude. Hi, Jude, y’lazy dog, show a leg! What you
-doin’!”</p>
-
-<p>“Comin’,” cried a voice, followed by the sounds of
-thrashing about and inquiries of the Lord to know where
-her clothes were.</p>
-
-<p>Then at the hatch appeared a face blind with sleep.
-She ran with Ratcliffe to get the lashings off the anchor,
-helped to let go the halyards, and as the anchor fell and
-the <i>Sarah</i> swung to her moorings a couple of cable lengths
-from and outside the <i>Juan</i>, down she sat on the deck like
-a person collapsing under a heavy load.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the <i>Juan</i> did not seem to move her at
-all. Like a dormouse suddenly electrified into life and
-movement, the stimulus withdrawn, the mechanism ceased
-to act. She yawned, turned on her side, and hid her face
-in the crook of her arm as if to shut out the sun. Satan,
-whistling between his teeth, stood with his hands on the
-rail looking at the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re wakin’ up,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>A fellow with a red handkerchief round his head had
-appeared on deck. He came and looked over the side
-at the <i>Sarah</i>, then vanished.</p>
-
-<p>“Gone to wake Cark out of his beauty sleep,” said
-Satan. “Look! There’s two more of them movin’ about<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161">161</a></span>
-like sick flies. Will you look at the way they’ve stowed
-them sails?—and they’ve got her a sight too close to the
-reef. Get a Western Ocean sea suddenly runnin’ and the
-anchor to drag, where’d they be?”</p>
-
-<p>He turned and contemplated the prostrate figure of
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s another sleepin’ beauty,” said he. “Ought
-a be married to Cark. Well they’d look in the same
-hammock with Sellers fannin’ the flies off them!”</p>
-
-<p>The figure on the deck turned on its back, stretched
-out its arms, yawned, and then sat up holding its knees.</p>
-
-<p>Youth may sneer at Age; but, anyhow, Age knows
-nothing of the weariness of Youth, of a morning.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, satisfied with the semi-resurrection, dropped below,
-and promptly the figure fell on its back again with
-arms outspread.</p>
-
-<p>“Get up!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting— Say!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“I—ow—yow—ain’t it awful bein’ tired?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be all right when you’re on your feet. Get
-up!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m getting— Say, d’you know where the fishing
-lines are? Starboard locker. Fetch’m up, an’ that
-chunk of grouper I kep’ for bait—in the tub.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>When he returned on deck she was drying her head
-in the sun, having soused it in a bucket of water.</p>
-
-<p>Then they dropped a line.</p>
-
-<p>Away through the diamond-clear water, thirty feet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162">162</a></span>
-down, they could see the slack of the anchor chain like
-a conger on the coral and sponge.</p>
-
-<p>A nurse shark passed like a grisly ghost, then a shoal
-of sardines, then a young whip ray not bigger than a
-soup plate, then a mangrove schnapper that nosed the
-bait, swallowed it, and was hauled on board.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll be enough,” said Jude. “You clean him while
-I get the frying pan ready. Hullo! blest if Cark’s not
-putting off a boat!”</p>
-
-<p>A boat had been dropped on the starboard side of the
-<i>Juan</i> and was rounding her stern.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Sellers,” said Jude, shading her eyes. “Satan!
-Below there!”</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!”</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers is coming off.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be up in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>The boat came alongside, just as it had come at Palm
-Island,—same boat, same crew, Sellers just the same.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo yourself! Thought you was gone to Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thought you was to wait for us at Pa’m Island,” said
-Sellers. “Hullo, Satan, that you? How about your contrac’
-with us?”</p>
-
-<p>Satan, who had just come on deck, leaned over the rail
-and contemplated Sellers. Then he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“God A’mighty!” said Satan. He stared at Sellers for
-a moment as one might stare at a prodigy. Then he
-broke out:</p>
-
-<p>“Contrac’! Holy George! <em>What</em> you say, contrac’?<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163">163</a></span>
-You daar to hook onto my channel plates, and I’ll buzz
-this fish at y’r head! Shove off! What are you doin’
-here, anyway? Why aren’t you at Havana gettin’ the
-dynamite?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why ain’t you waitin’ for us at Pa’m Island?”
-logically responded Sellers. “If you want to know why
-we’re here. I’ll tell you. It was a bet I had with Cark.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I bet him you’d never wait for us at Pa’m Island,
-but’d light out for here to raise the stuff if we went
-foolin’ off to Havana. Seems I was right, don’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>The impudence of this made Ratcliffe gasp, but left
-Satan quite unmoved.</p>
-
-<p>“S’pose we quit lyin’,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willin’ to follow soot,” replied Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then,” said Satan, “follow soot off to the wreck
-an’ get your workin’ party onto the business like hot
-nails. I’ll be over to help you soon’s we’ve had breakfast.
-You’ve no time to waste.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary’s after you.”</p>
-
-<p>This news seemed to take the wind out of Sellers.
-He sat for a moment without speaking.</p>
-
-<p>“How do you know that?” asked he at length.</p>
-
-<p>“He put into Palm Island not more’n four hours after
-you’d gone; said you and Cark had tricked him and he
-was after your blood. I told him that wasn’t no concern
-of mine. He asked me had I seen you.”</p>
-
-<p>“What did you say?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164">164</a></span>
-“The truth. Think I’d perjure me soul lyin’ for the
-likes of you and Cark? Told him I was goin’ to join
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Sufferin’</em> Moses! You’ve put your hoof in it this
-time! Go on and don’t stand waggin’ your tail! What’d
-he say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’, didn’t say nothin’, but when I put out he
-put out after me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Followed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep. I only lost him last night; but it’s ten to one
-he’ll drop on us. He’ll be bustin’ everywhere round
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>“He will,” said Sellers, “and then it’s half shares he’ll
-be wantin’, not to mention Cark’s liver. I’m sweatin’!
-Cark’s let that chap down cruel. I owns it. Did it
-against my advice. Did he have many with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Reckon so. The old <i>Natchez</i> was full as a beehive
-with the toughest-lookin’ crowd.”</p>
-
-<p>The sight of Sellers’ face at this announcement set
-Jude off. She seized the fish and started off to the galley
-with it, while Sellers, having communed with himself
-for a moment, spoke:</p>
-
-<p>“Crooked’s a bad course to run,” said this moralist.
-“I’ve always told Cark so. I told you we’d no dynamite
-aboard,—neither we had,—but there’s a keg of powder in
-the hold, and Cark reckoned to sample the goods without
-your help. There, it’s out! You’d have had your
-share as long as I’d a leg to stand on, honest you would,
-s’far as I was concerned, and that’s all I have to say
-pers’nally on the matter. What I’m gettin’ at is this: If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165">165</a></span>
-Cleary turns up, there’ll be hell of a rough-house. Will
-you stand for us if there’s fightin’ to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“That depends,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not trustin’ you no more, not without the coin in
-my hand. Cark’s got to plank down something on account,
-if it’s no more’n a thousand dollars. If he don’t,
-I’ll put out for Havana and blow the gaff. You’ve overhauled
-the wreck?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you can judge what the chances are. You hop
-back lively as a flea and tell Cark what I’m sayin’. Gold
-coin and right into my fist this mornin’, or I’ll give the
-show away. It’s his own doin’. If he’d played straight
-with me, I’d have trusted him. Seein’ he’s played
-crooked, he’ll have to pay. One thousand dollars, or I
-go back to Havana and you’ll have a t’pedoboat on top
-of you, to say nothin’ of Cleary!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell him,” said Sellers. “Come over to the reef
-soon as you’re ready and I’ll give you word of what he
-says. I reckon it’ll be all right. One thousand dollars?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gold coin, and tell him it’ll be double after eleven
-o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, he won’t kick,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>The boat shoved away.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe remembered what Satan had said about the
-chart and the hidden writing in it and the high probability
-that the bones of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> were lying
-elsewhere than here. More than ever did it seem to him
-that Satan was the spider of this web,—not a malignant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166">166</a></span>
-spider, for the flies he was catching in the form of
-Carquinez and Sellers, and possibly Cleary, were the
-weavers of the web, in which they seemed tangling themselves.
-Satan only fell in with circumstance and took
-toll.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said he. “Suppose Carquinez pays you
-a thousand dollars’ advance, and suppose you don’t find
-any treasure, will you pay him back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why should I pay him back?” asked Satan. “I’ve
-given him the location, and that’s worth a thousand anyway.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you said there was nothing on the chart, that it
-was a fake.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I said no such thing. I said that in my
-’pinion the stuff wasn’t here; but I may be wrong.
-There’s Jude hollering for us to come to breakfast.
-Come along down and I’ll show you my meanin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He scarcely spoke during the meal, and when it was
-over he took the tobacco box from his pocket and opened
-the chart on the table.</p>
-
-<p>“Now,” said Satan, “I’ll show you what I mean by
-sayin’ the stuff may be here, but it’s a big sight larger
-maybe it isn’t. Don’t crowd me. Stand behind me on
-either side and keep your eyes on the chart. Well, now,
-there’s Lone Reef with the creek marked and the name
-of her, and there’s Rum Cay to the left, and there’s the
-latitude and longitude wrote up—all plain, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, seein’ Rum Cay is given, and seein’ Lone Reef
-is down on all the charts and as well known as Cuba<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167">167</a></span>
-to any sailor man, what did the man want stickin’ the
-latitude and longitude down for? The chart’s not a
-sailin’ chart. A blind monkey wouldn’t use it nor bother
-about examinin’ the latitude and longitude wrote on it.
-He’d just say, ‘Lone Reef is the place I want to get to,’
-and he’d get there with the ordinary ship’s chart.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “in my opinion the chap that sank
-the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> knew of the old wreck lyin’ over
-there on Lone Reef and used it as a blind, for the latitude
-and longitude wrote there so faint that no man
-would bother to try to read it isn’t the latitude and longitude
-of Lone Reef; it’s a hundred and ten mile out. It’s
-the latitude and longitude of Cormorant Cay, a blasted
-sandbank down to s’uthard, all shoals and gulls, and that’s
-where the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> lies, in my ’pinion.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe whistled.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course I may be wrong,” said Satan, “there’s no
-knowin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see what you mean,” said Ratcliffe. “This chap
-reckoned that anyone finding or stealing the chart would
-take the latitude and longitude written there for granted
-as the latitude and longitude of Lone Reef, and not bother
-to examine the figures and verify them; having no cause,
-indeed, to do so, seeing Lone Reef is so well known and
-on all the charts.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s how it seems to me,” said Satan. “I’m not
-sayin’ I’m right, but that’s how it seems to me, and if
-he figured that no one would trouble about readin’ and
-verifyin’ the latitude and longitude as given there he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168">168</a></span>
-right. Pap didn’t, and it was only by chance I did, a
-month ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you seen Cormorant Cay?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, yes! It’s a lagoon sandspit, and the hooker
-may be in the lagoon for all I know, or under the sand
-for all I know, or I may be wrong all through and that
-may be her on the reef over there. Well, we’ve got to
-see; but it seems to me I’m pretty safe anyway, if I can
-touch Cark for that thousand.”</p>
-
-<p>So thought Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169">169</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE WRECK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">After</span> breakfast, leaving Jude to keep ship, they
-got the dinghy overboard and rowed for the reef.
-Here to eastward the landing was made easy by a scrap
-of beach a hundred yards long, where the boat of the
-<i>Natchez</i> was lying, having landed Sellers and his working
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, scrambling, led the way over the rocks to the
-central creek between the two reef arms, where, ponded
-round with water, lay the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>The reef, seen from the deck of the <i>Sarah</i>, showed
-little sign of a wreck. One had to land on it to discover
-that the long hogback of rock rising from the creek had
-structure. There was not even the indication of where
-a mast had been, bowsprit there was none, stem and stern
-were almost indistinguishable; yet, standing there, with
-the gulls flying round him and the lonely tune of the sea
-in his ears, Ratcliffe knew that the thing he was gazing
-upon was a ship. Structure speaks! You can destroy
-it, but can scarcely disguise it.</p>
-
-<p>Between the right arm of the reef and the starboard
-bow of the hulk a ridge of rock gave access to the deck,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170">170</a></span>
-and as the others crossed over he took his seat to rest
-for a moment and contemplate the thing before him.</p>
-
-<p>To see the Sphinx properly, one should visit it alone,
-and so with the great wreck of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>,—if
-that were its name,—crouching here, camouflaged with
-rock-growth and weed, swollen, sinister in the blazing
-sunlight, and sung to by the chime and gurgle of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Sunk in shallow water,—so the tale ran,—raised by
-that alteration in level constantly in progress among the
-reefs and islands, freighted with treasure, and guilty of
-the death of many a man—well, the tale here rang true.
-On board the <i>Sarah</i> one might doubt, but here, even in
-face of that chart which seemed faked, one believed,—mainly,
-perhaps, because one wanted to believe.</p>
-
-<p>Here, sitting on the reef, one became part of the story,
-just as when the lights of the theater are lowered one
-becomes part of the play. The flower-blue sky, the
-sapphire sea, the tepid wind, the shouting gulls, all became
-confederates. One saw, in the far past, the <i>Nombre
-de Dios</i> setting sail,—the tragic figure of Lopez on her
-quarterdeck; the sinking of her in shallow, reef-strewn
-water; the escape in the boats; men dying of starvation;
-the lapse of years; Lopez dying with her secret still
-hidden; and Lone Reef rising still higher out of the sea
-to expose more fully the murdered ship.</p>
-
-<p>The reef had always been here, for it was down in the
-oldest charts. Had it really risen? Was that chart, as
-Satan supposed, a lie?</p>
-
-<p>According to Sellers’ story, the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> had
-been sunk in six-fathom water, thirty-six-foot. Well,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171">171</a></span>
-if that was so, Satan was right, for the highest point of
-the reef was only six feet above water, and when she was
-sunk the reef would have been thirty feet under water
-and so uncharted.</p>
-
-<p>There was the chance that Lopez might have sailed her
-into the creek, deeper in those days, and that the creek
-bottom might have raised itself to its present level, the
-reef remaining the same. This seemed unlikely.</p>
-
-<p>And yet the decks must have been under water once,
-to account for the old coral deposits.</p>
-
-<p>It was low tide in the creek now: high-tide mark was
-six feet below the deck level. He tried to calculate how
-far she must have been lifted, gave up the attempt, and,
-rising, crossed by the rock bridge to her deck.</p>
-
-<p>This bridge of rock was another factor in the insoluble
-problem. It seemed placed there by some marine architect
-without reason, built up out of huge fragments as if
-from some fallen peak or spire.</p>
-
-<p>“Step careful!” shouted Satan.</p>
-
-<p>The warning came just in time, for the deck was
-slippery as ice in patches where a thin moss had grown,—a
-gray, greasy moss, treacherous as Death, and covering
-the droppings of innumerable sea birds.</p>
-
-<p>He made his way aft, where Sellers was standing with
-Satan and the half-dozen Spaniards that formed the
-working party. Drills and picks lay about, and marks
-showed where work had been started the day before.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a foot thick,” said Sellers, “whatever it is, and
-harder than cement. Rock!—this ain’t coral rock, not
-such as I’ve ever seen. Harveyized steel’s more like it,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172">172</a></span>
-and after that there’s the deck planking to be got
-through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “I told you it was a dynamite job,
-and if you’d played fair and got the stuff we’d have been
-a long sight nearer the end of the business, even if we
-started a week later. But there’s no use in talkin’ now,
-and there’s no use in messin’ about pickin’ holes here and
-there. Your job is to make a hole big enough to sink
-that barrel of powder of yours—take me? Sink it half
-deep and then lay a fuse and fire the whole lot at once
-and risk chances. It’s ten to one you’ll split the deck
-right open at one go. As for sinkin’ little holes and usin’
-small charges, you’ll be ten years on the job.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers rose up and wiped his brow and cast his eyes
-over the sea to westward, evidently with Cleary in his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m not sure you aren’t right,” said he. “I’ll
-fix it that way; but it’ll be a long job with the tools we
-have.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Satan. “And now to the question of
-them dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them—I’ve spoke to Cark, and he’s agreeable.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is he? Well, then. I’ll go right aboard with you
-now while he’s warm and get them dollars into my hand.
-Set your men at work and you come along with me.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers hung fire for a moment, then he agreed, gave
-the working party their directions, and led the way off
-the deck across the rock bridge.</p>
-
-<p>He pushed off with Satan in the boat of the <i>Juan</i>.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173">173</a></span>
-Satan asked Ratcliffe to take the dinghy back to the
-<i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t want to be hangin’ about the reef,” said
-Satan; “you’ll be more comfortable aboard ship. And tell
-Jude to be sure and wash that old jumper I left on the
-rail. She’s forgot it, for there it’s hangin’ still.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174">174</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">MUTINY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> he sculled up alongside the <i>Sarah</i> there was no
-sign of Jude. He tied up the boat and came over
-the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude, where are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” came a surly voice from below.
-She was in the “saloon,” for he could hear her moving
-about.</p>
-
-<p>“You.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you kin go on wantin’. I’m sick!”</p>
-
-<p>“What on earth’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>Pause—then the voice came again mixed with sounds
-as of plates being put away.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sick of the hull of this crowd—washing up and
-cooking and you two playin’ about!”</p>
-
-<p>“Come up on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sha’n’t! I’m going to scatter—soon’s I’ve finished
-clearing away. Life of a dog!” indistinct grumbles tailing
-away into silence.</p>
-
-<p>He lit a pipe and waited.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the companionway creaked and a head appeared
-at the cabin hatch. He said nothing while the
-whole body emerged, stood erect on the deck, and shaded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175">175</a></span>
-its eyes toward the <i>Juan</i>. Then, still speechless, it
-leaned on the rail, looking toward the reef and apparently
-lost in thought.</p>
-
-<p>The sleeves of the guernsey were rolled up to mid-arm,
-ill temper seemed to have vanished and to have been replaced
-by sudden laziness, and as she lolled, kicking up a
-bare heel, she whistled.</p>
-
-<p>She seemed utterly unconscious of his presence—or
-pretending to be. Then her eyes fell to the water alongside
-and the dinghy. The whistling ceased and her face
-turned to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” said Jude, “where did you learn to tie up
-boats?”</p>
-
-<p>He came beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing at present, but give her half an hour and
-she’d work herself free of that tom-fool knot.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go down and retie it.”</p>
-
-<p>“No use in troubling, I’m going off in her in a minute,
-and she’ll hang there till I’m ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never <em>you</em> mind! You’ve been playing about on the
-reef, and you’ve got to stick here now and boil the potatoes!
-Me alone here all the morning!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I wasn’t more than an hour on the reef—and
-I never knew you wanted to go. If I had, I shouldn’t
-have gone, honestly I shouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude contemplated him a moment with a more friendly
-face.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said she, “I’m going, anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176">176</a></span>
-“But where to?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gulls-nesting.”</p>
-
-<p>“On the reef?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord, no! To the spit away there to east’ard. You
-can’t see it: it’s near seven mile away.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you can’t row there alone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t I? You bet I can, there and back by sundown!”</p>
-
-<p>“But what will Satan say?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude laughed. “He’ll be wild—that’s what I want to
-make him. I’ll learn him! Him and his jumpers!”</p>
-
-<p>She took the jumper off the rail, rolled it up and
-threw it on the deck, then she dived below and reappeared
-with a water jar and some provisions done up in a bundle.
-She had evidently been making her preparations.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “If you’re going, I’ll go
-too.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t!” said Jude. “You’ve got to stick here
-and look after the ship—and see how you like it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not I—I couldn’t face Satan; besides, if you want
-to make him wild really, hell be twice as wild if we
-both go; besides, I’m sick of the ship. Come on: I’ve
-never been gulls-nesting.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, evidently weakening, put down her bundle.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, there ain’t enough grub for two,” she complained.
-“I reckon there’s enough water, though.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, get some more grub.”</p>
-
-<p>She cast her eyes about in indecision, now at Ratcliffe,
-now at the <i>Juan</i>, then, with one of those sudden changes<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177">177</a></span>
-so indicative of her, she made up her mind and dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later she reappeared with another small
-bundle.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, during her absence, had torn the back off
-an old letter. He had a pencil in his pocket, and, scrawling
-“gone gulls-nesting on the sandspit” on the paper,
-stuck the missive to the mast with his penknife.</p>
-
-<p>Then, bundling the food and the water jar into the
-dinghy, they started.</p>
-
-<p>He took the sculls at first, Jude steering, her eyes fixed
-ahead under the shade of her old panama. She could
-tell exactly the spot where the spit lay. She could not
-see it, but she could see in the sky now and then over
-there a faint trace like a haze of smoke that formed,
-vanished and reformed,—gulls.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally she looked back where the deserted <i>Sarah
-Tyler</i> lay, with the <i>Juan</i> seeming now close beside her
-and the reef behind them. Smaller and smaller they
-grew and more vast the ocean, an infinity of blazing
-lazulite, without horizon, silent, but sonorous with light.</p>
-
-<p>The current was with them.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had made a small mast and lug sail for the
-dinghy. That was the job he had been engaged on while
-Jude and Ratcliffe had landed on Palm Island to get provisions
-from the cache. He had worked with all the
-care of a fond mother making a garment for a beloved
-child. The little mast, scraped and varnished, the sail
-made of an extra special bit of stuff wheedled from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178">178</a></span>
-Thelusson, were in the boat, and, a breeze now springing
-up from the sou’west, Jude gave orders to step the mast.
-Then she took the sheet, he slipped from his seat to the
-bottom of the boat, and the dinghy, bending to the three-knot
-breeze, lifted to the gentle swell.</p>
-
-<p>A great herring hog passed them, plunging like a
-dolphin, and a flying fish with blind, staring eyes missed
-the sail by a hand’s breadth and flickered into the sea
-ahead; then a strange-looking gull swooped toward them
-from nowhere, hung for a moment with domed wings,
-honey-colored against the sun, and passed with a cry into
-the great silence, a silence broken only by the slap and
-tinkle of the water against the planking.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe lit his pipe. Jude, steering, seemed to have
-forgotten her last trace of grudge against him, forgotten
-Satan and the jumper and the fact that she had been
-left to her lonesome while they had been playing on the
-reef and her desire to cut the whole show and start a
-“la’ndry.” She seemed just now a different person, companionable
-and friendly and sane, as though the cooking
-and cleaning and the worries and troubles of the <i>Sarah</i>
-had been lifted like a dish-cover from her prisoned soul.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first time they had been really alone together,
-and the companionship that springs from loneliness
-helped.</p>
-
-<p>The gull reminded her of gulls she had seen on the
-Louisiana coast where the cypress swamps come down
-to meet the sea and you could hear “the bullfrogs shoutin’
-all night, ‘Paddy got drunk, Paddy got drunk, Paddy
-got drunk,’ and the other chaps answering up, ‘Bottle of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179">179</a></span>
-rum, bottle of rum, bottle of rum,’ and the ’gaters would
-come alongside grinding against the planking sniffing for
-bits—ever seen a ’gater?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only stuffed.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, in museums and places.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them?” asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, places where they keep stuffed birds and animals.”</p>
-
-<p>“Git a bit more to sta’board to trim the boat; <em>sta</em>’board
-I said, not port! And what in the nation do they want
-keeping them things for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Jude,” said he lazily.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“This is the jolliest time I ever spent. I’ve never felt
-free before till just now. I’d like to go sailing round and
-round the world in this little dinghy and forget civilization.
-That’s the place where they keep stuffed birds to
-look at, and stuffed animals in museums, and where the
-men and women are stuffed idiots. Do you remember the
-morning I came on board the <i>Sarah</i> first?”</p>
-
-<p>“Them pajamas!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, them pajamas. Only for them you wouldn’t
-have laughed at me, and if you hadn’t laughed at me I
-shouldn’t have come aboard, perhaps.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes, you would.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“Satan wanted you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, did he? Bless Satan!—he made me young
-again.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! you ain’t so old as all that.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180">180</a></span>
-“I’m over twenty-one—and you’re only—”</p>
-
-<p>“Raisin’ sixteen,” said Jude, with steady eyes fixed
-ahead where the gulls above the spit were now well
-visible.</p>
-
-<p>He refilled and lit his pipe, bending under the gunnel.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re mighty fond of that old pipe,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Have a whiff?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me! I had half a cigar once; Dirk Peterson
-dared me. It was one of them wheelings, black, slick-lookin’
-cigars. He and me an’ anuther boy’d gone to look
-at the nigger girls bathin’ and clod them—”</p>
-
-<p>“Where on earth was that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Vera Cruz.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, and who was Dirk Peterson?”</p>
-
-<p>“Son of an old feller that run a dridger in the harbor,
-Yankee, half-Dutch, hadn’t only one eye, and wasn’t
-more’n eleven, biggest liar from here to C’necticut. His
-face was all chawed up, and he said he’d got it like that
-and lost his eye fightin’ with a tiger. Confl’ent smallpox
-was what had done him, so Pap said; but the boys
-believed him till that day I was telling you of, he fetched
-out a half cigar he’d stole or picked up somewhere and
-a box of waxios and dared me smoke her—and I lit her
-up, like a durned fool!”</p>
-
-<p>“What happened then?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots of things,” said Jude. “First of all the harbor
-begun spinnin’, and then it went on till two tides
-more I’d have been inside out, when Dirk shouts to some
-chaps to come an’ look at Jonah tryin’ to bring up the
-whale. That got my goat, and I laid for him by the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181">181</a></span>
-foot and brought him down and near beat the head off
-him. Then I got sick on him again, and he run home
-to his mother, with all the fellers after him wantin’ to
-know about that tiger.”</p>
-
-<p>“He couldn’t fight?”</p>
-
-<p>“N’more than a jewfish.”</p>
-
-<p>“Have you had many fights with boys?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me—not with Satan handy to do the fighting.
-I’d only to say to one, ‘You touch me and I’ll put Satan
-on you,’ and he’d shrivel.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I shouldn’t care to tackle Satan myself,” admitted
-Ratcliffe. “And Sellers seemed to think a lot of
-him that way, for I heard him asking if he’d stand by if
-Cleary showed fight.”</p>
-
-<p>“Garn!” said Jude. “Cleary—he’s no good; Sellers is
-no good, neither. There’s not a man in these seas nowadays
-that’s got the fight of a tomcat in him. That’s
-what Pap used to say. He was great on old times, and
-used to string off yarns about the pirates and the high
-doin’s there used to be, and he said we were nothing but
-a lot of scowbankers now—and that’s the truth! If
-Cleary comes up with Cark, they’ll be shaking hands and
-kissing one another, feeling in each other’s pockets all
-the time to see if they can’t steal five cents. In the old
-days they’d have been cutting each other’s throats.”</p>
-
-<p>“Would you like to be a pirate, Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!”</p>
-
-<p>“Murdering people?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, ask me another.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you like to kiss Cark?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182">182</a></span>
-“How’d you? Hear the gulls!”</p>
-
-<p>The crying of the gulls above the spit was coming up
-against the wind, a lamentable sound across the lone blue
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not more’n a mile away,” said the steersman.
-“You can get a sight of the spit if you raise yourself.
-That’s it, the white line runnin’ north and south; but the
-gulls don’t seem to be as many as they used to be a year
-ago. It’s a bit early for the full laying season, but there’s
-sure to be turkles’ eggs. Better get your shoes and
-stockin’s off and roll up your pants, for it’s shallow beaching
-and we’ll have to run her up.”</p>
-
-<p>“Won’t you take down the sail and row her in?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me. There’s no sea on and I’ll run her up as
-she is.”</p>
-
-<p>They held on, the gulls shouting over them now, and
-the sigh of the sandspit, fuming to the lazy sea, in their
-ears. It was full tide, and as the keel touched the sand,
-letting the sheet go and the sail to flog in the wind, they
-tumbled over and dragged the little boat high and dry.</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude took down the sail.</p>
-
-<p>“You aren’t hungry yet?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“No; are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I can wait. Well leave the grub and the water
-jar in the boat and cover them with the sail,—keep
-the sun off. Lend’s a hand.”</p>
-
-<p>They covered the provisions, hauled the boat up another
-foot or two to make sure, and, that done, Ratcliffe
-looked around him.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183">183</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XX"></a>CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE SANDSPIT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">That</span> was one of the strangest moments in his life.
-He had never seen anything comparable to this long
-white street of sand curbed with emerald waves, leading
-nowhere, lost, useless, desolate, brilliant with a brilliance
-that hit the heart as well as the eye, flown over by the
-white gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The sands fizzed to the sea wind, and away to north
-and south they trembled and waved in the heat; but the
-curious thing was the fact that, despite their loneliness,
-one did not feel alone. The place seemed populous,
-filled with a crowd that for a moment had made itself
-invisible. Perhaps it was the riot of color and the
-brilliance of light: the effect remained.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, looking round, seemed preoccupied about something.
-It was the absence of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>“Last time I was here,” said Jude, “it was all over
-gulls’ nests, right here in the middle. Now they seem
-to have gone off to the ends. Wonder what’s come to
-them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it’s too early for them.”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s a bit early, but not much: there’s always early
-breeders. No, they’ve just took their hook—gulls are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184">184</a></span>
-like that. We’ll have to go and hunt at the ends. You
-go north and I’ll go south.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “it’s an awfully long way. Suppose
-we have something to eat first?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mind,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>They got the provisions and water jar from the boat
-and sat down on the sands. It was past noon and cooler,
-for the breeze had livened up, the outgoing tide was
-leaving a strip of wet sand glittering like a golden
-sword, and the fume of beach filled the air resonant with
-the gentle rhythm of the waves.</p>
-
-<p>They ate, leaning on their sides like old Athenians.
-They had no cup; so they took it in turns to drink from
-the water jar. Then he lit a pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“This is jolly,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Ain’t bad,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She made a pillow of sand for her head, and then, on
-her back with her head on the pillow, lay like a starfish,
-spread-eagled, her hat over her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He followed suit.</p>
-
-<p>“How about those gulls’ nests?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Which ones?” evaded Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“The ones you were going to hunt for?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them? Well, I reckon there’s dead loads of
-time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots—listen to the sand!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the wind blowing it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I know. All the same this is a rum place. Do you
-know when we landed here, just now, the first thing
-that struck me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185">185</a></span>
-“Naw.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I felt as if the place was full of people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know; people I couldn’t see, ghosts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What made y’ think that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, I don’t know. Somehow it reminded me of a
-story I’d once read.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was the story?”</p>
-
-<p>“About a beach over in the Pacific where wizards used
-to go and pick up shells.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Chaps that work magic and sell themselves to the
-devil. They can make themselves invisible so’s you can’t
-see them, and they used to come to the beach and pick
-up shells, and then turn the shells into silver dollars.
-You couldn’t see them, but you could hear them rustling
-about, like that sand, and talking to one another,
-and now and then you’d see a little fire blaze up.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, interested, rolled over, rested her chin in her
-palms, and kicked a bare heel to the sun.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon you’re not far wrong,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve felt the same way here myself, as if there
-was hants about and if you’d turn your head sharp
-you’d see someone behind you. Now you’ve talked of
-it. I’ll be always thinking it if I come here again. Wish
-you’d kept your head shut.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat up and looked about her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186">186</a></span>
-“Sorry,” said Ratcliffe, raising himself on his arm;
-“but if you come again I’ll come with you, and that’ll
-keep the hants off—unless I’m gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“How d’you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, when this cruise is over I’ll have to leave you
-both and go home. I don’t want to go.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude said nothing. Staring over the sea under the
-brim of her hat, she did not seem to have heard him.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d much sooner stick on here with you and Satan.
-What’s that thing floating out there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Turkle,” said Jude. “Look, he’s doing a dive!”</p>
-
-<p>He sat up beside her.</p>
-
-<p>“So he has. Well, he’s gone.” He sat with his knees
-up, looking over the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Alone here with Jude she seemed a different person
-from what she had been aboard the <i>Sarah</i>. The strange
-antagonism she had suddenly exhibited, and a trace of
-which had remained up till this morning, seemed to have
-utterly vanished. Perhaps it was the “hants,” or the
-loneliness, or a combination of both, but she seemed
-subdued.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t see what you want going for if you
-don’t want to,” suddenly said Jude, drawing up her
-knees and crossing them with her hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, bother!” said he. “Don’t let’s think of it; besides,
-we’ll fix up something. I don’t want to go. I’ve
-never had such a jolly time in my life, and I’m not
-going to lose sight of you and Satan—unless you want
-to.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I don’t want to.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187">187</a></span>
-“Well, that’s all right We’ll stick together, somehow,
-and let the old world go hang, and we’ll go hunting
-abalones and fishing—let’s make plans.”</p>
-
-<p>His arm somehow slipped round her waist, half automatically,
-just as one puts one’s hand on a person’s
-shoulder. When he realized what he had done, he realized,
-at the same time, that she did not seem to mind;
-more than that, she reciprocated in a way by letting her
-shoulder rest more comfortably against his. It was
-companionship, pure and simple, and her mind seemed
-far away, wrapped in the sun-blaze as with a garment,
-and wandering—who knows where?</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead,” said Jude drowsily. “What’s your
-plans?”</p>
-
-<p>“Plans—oh, I’ve lots. Let’s go round the world in the
-old <i>Sarah</i>—get a couple more hands.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’d you stick them?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you’ve got a foc’s’le.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not big enough for a tomcat. The nigger filled it.
-He said he reckoned he’d got to stick his head through
-the hatch to breathe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, we’ll get rid of the <i>Sarah</i> and get a bigger
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Don’t you never let Satan hear you say that:
-she’s his skin!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll do without extra hands, then, and work her,
-the three of us. I can steer all right now.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kin you?”</p>
-
-<p>“You know jolly well I can!”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the points of the compass? Run ’em off.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188">188</a></span>
-“North—nor’-nor’east, nor’east—um—”</p>
-
-<p>Jude chuckled subduedly.</p>
-
-<p>“Heave ahead!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve forgotten.”</p>
-
-<p>“Never knew.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>The confiding shoulder rested more heavily against
-him as against a cushion and she began to hum a tune.
-She seemed to have forgotten the points of the compass,
-him, everything, just as a child suddenly forgets everything
-in day-dream land.</p>
-
-<p>The absolute contentment of doing nothing, resting,
-listening to the waves, had fallen upon him too, with a
-something else, a sort of mesmerism born of his companion,
-the strangest feeling as though Jude were a part
-of himself, as though he had put his arm round his own
-waist and a new self,—a much pleasanter self than the
-old one, less stiff, more human, and somehow more alive.</p>
-
-<p>The metronomic rhythm of the little waves falling on
-the sand seemed to mix his thoughts together and blur
-them; but he saw Skelton, Sir William Skelton, Bart.,
-he saw a girl he, Ratcliffe, had been engaged to, he saw
-all sorts of men and all sorts of women, everyone he
-had ever known, it seemed to him, in a nebulous cluster,
-and they all seemed, somehow, not quite alive,—not dead,
-but sleeping in the trance we call civilization, their days
-ordered by the beat of a metronome,—get up—wash—dress—eat—work
-or play—eat—work or play—eat—work
-or play—bed—sleep—get up—wash—dress etc.,—all
-the figures moving like one, their very laughter and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189">189</a></span>
-tears ordered except when they got drunk or went mad.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed to him that vivid life was not so much a
-question of vitality as of freedom.</p>
-
-<p>Was that the secret Satan had discovered,—Satan,
-who had no hankering after great riches, but was free
-as a gull? Satan and Jude were gulls,—seagulls, untamable
-as seagulls and as far from civilization! It was as
-though his arm were round a bird,—quiescent by some
-miracle and allowing him to handle it, and imparting
-to him, somehow, the knowledge of its vitality,—the
-vitality of freedom.</p>
-
-<p>“What I like about the old <i>Sarah</i>,” said he, “is the
-way she just pots about—with nothing to do.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing to do!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you and Satan can take things easy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, can we? That’s news—what d’you call easy?”</p>
-
-<p>“You have no fixed work, you can knock off when
-you like, you haven’t to carry cargo, or be bothered with
-owners, or be up to time. You are as free as the gulls.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude took his hand and removed his arm from around
-her waist just as one removes a belt. She wanted to
-shift her position. She seemed to have lost interest in
-the conversation. Sand had got between her toes, and
-she removed it, running her finger between them. She
-had no handkerchief,—never used one or needed to use
-one: the perfectly healthy animal never does.</p>
-
-<p>Then, crossing her legs like a tailor and squatting in
-front of him, she dived into the right hand pocket of
-her trousers and produced a dollar, a slick, evil, suspicious-looking
-dollar. She seemed utterly to have forgotten<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190">190</a></span>
-the gulls’-nesting business and how the time was
-running on, and having little passion for the business
-he was content not to remind her.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll match you for dollars,” said Jude. She was no
-longer the person of a moment ago. She was the harbor
-larrikin, the clodder of bathing nigger girls, a person to
-be avoided by pious boys with possessions in the form
-of money or land.</p>
-
-<p>The coin spun in the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Tails is the bird,” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Heads, then.”</p>
-
-<p>“Tails! Y’owe me a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>It spun again.</p>
-
-<p>“Heads! We’re quits. Heads again, heads—oh, hell!—what
-you want sticking to heads for? That’s two
-dollars I owe you. Tails—scrumps! that’s three! Tails
-again, that’s four. What you want sticking to tails
-for? Why don’t you wabble about an’ give a body a
-chance? Heads—holy Mike! What’s wrong with the
-durned thing? Five dollars gone on a bang!”</p>
-
-<p>“We’re not playing right,” said he. “We should call
-alternately.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that?”</p>
-
-<p>“One after the other.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not going to play any more,” said Jude. “I’m
-broke. The bank’s bust and I kin’t pay you, not till I
-get to Havana—unless I play you double or quits. You
-call; I’ll toss.”</p>
-
-<p>“Heads.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191">191</a></span>
-She sent the coin six feet high and it fell on the sand—heads!</p>
-
-<p>“That settles it,” said Jude. “Ten dollars I owe you.
-You’ll have to wait till we get to Havana, for if Satan
-knew I was tossing for coins he’d sculp me. I can get
-some money out of the bank at Havana, pretending it’s
-for something else. I haven’t a cent, an’ this old dollar’s
-no use: it’s a dud.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t owe me anything,” said Ratcliffe. “We
-were only tossing for fun.” The words were no sooner
-out of his mouth than he regretted them.</p>
-
-<p>Jude flushed red under her freckles and sunburn.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not taking your money, thank you,” said she;
-then breaking out, “What the blizzard d’you think we’ve
-been playing at, and what you take me for? S’posin’
-I’d won, you’d a paid, wouldn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t mean anything,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“Y’shouldn’t have said it, then,” said she.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m sorry—I take it back.”</p>
-
-<p>She played with the dud dollar for a moment, tossing
-it, and catching it; then she put it into her pocket, uncrossed
-her legs, and lay flat; her chin resting on the
-back of her hands.</p>
-
-<p>Her hat was off, lying beside her, and the quarrel
-with him was evidently over; she seemed plunged in
-reverie. Then he noticed that the eyes, upturned under
-their lashes, were steadfastly looking at him. Instantly
-they fell, and her position altered so that her face was
-hidden on her arm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192">192</a></span>
-He lit his pipe and smoked for a moment in silence.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>No answer.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p>Silence. He remembered how she had shammed dead
-on Palm Island, put down his pipe, and crawled toward
-the corpse. It was rigid, and to revive it he began to
-pour sand on its head.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit fooling,” grumbled a voice; then, as if the sand
-had suddenly revived memory and galvanized her to life,
-she scrambled to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>“Them eggs—and the sun’s getting down and we fooling
-about!” She picked up her hat. “I’ll take this end
-and you go t’other.”</p>
-
-<p>“But I haven’t anything to gather them in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gather them in your hat, and keep a lookout for
-quicksan’s. If you get into one, holler and throw yourself
-on your back. But you’ll easy tell them—they look
-different from the or’nary sands.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno; just different. If you see the sand in front
-of you looking different, keep clear of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Off she went.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193">193</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXI"></a>CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DISHED</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> struck to the north. Over there in the north the
-sea was of a violet blue accentuated by the white
-blaze of the sands.</p>
-
-<p>The sands, once one got moving on them, were full
-of interest, strewn along the sea-edge with all sorts of
-prizes,—colored shells, cuttlefish bones, extraordinary
-seaweeds, bits of wreckage; a few yards out a nautilus
-fleet was steering, with tiny sails set to the wind, the
-oldest ships that ever floated on the sea, unspoiled by
-storm and time, just as they were launched in the morning
-of the world. He watched them for awhile, forgetful
-of gulls’ eggs, or quicksands, or the sun, now sensibly
-declining.</p>
-
-<p>If ever things had purpose, these had. They were
-going somewhere, bound on some business, keeping formation,
-and possessed of charts and compasses and
-barometers as surely as of sails. They made him think
-of God, and then they made him think of Satan,—Satan,
-whose sea sense served him better than all precise knowledge.</p>
-
-<p>Then he remembered Jude and glanced back. Away,
-far away to the south, he saw her. The sands dipped<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194">194</a></span>
-and rose there, and sometimes she was invisible and his
-heart thumped to the idea that a quicksand had taken
-her, then she reappeared and he went on, and, ever as
-he went, he seemed walking deeper into loneliness, peopled
-with viewless things and half-heard voices.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes a chiming sound like the shattered and
-mingled voices of distant bells filled the air,—it was the
-singing of the sands. He had not noticed it in company
-with Jude, but here alone he noticed it. Sometimes
-laughter, far away in the distance, came distinct, human,
-and startling,—it was the calling of a laughing gull,—and
-always, penetrating all other sounds with the subtlety of
-osmosis, the silky, sinister whisper of the wind playing
-with the sand-grains. He went on. Something nearly
-tripped him. It was a great spar, half sanded over, the
-relic of some ship that had come to grief, maybe, on
-the spit.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of this spar touched everything with a new
-and momentary color. “Gascoign, the Sandal Wood
-Trader,” and other old stories he had read in his boyhood
-came back to him half-remembered, and with them
-came a whiff from a world he had half-forgotten,—a
-breath of the air we breathe at fifteen.</p>
-
-<p>He saw to his satisfaction that the gulls were beyond
-his reach, a broad channel of water cutting the spit in
-two right ahead. He took his seat on the spar for a
-moment to rest and look about, and as he sat the gulls,
-wheeling and crying, kept up around him the elusive
-atmosphere of storyland.</p>
-
-<p>All the money in the world could not have brought<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195">195</a></span>
-him that! Nor could he have found it had he landed
-here from a yacht with grown-up companions.</p>
-
-<p>He fell to thinking what an extraordinarily lucky person
-he was, and to plume himself on his instinctive wisdom
-in dropping Skelton and civilization for Jude and
-Satan, who had led him into a world of things he had
-never seen, things he had never imagined, things he had
-half-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez alone was a revelation, to say nothing of
-Sellers and Cleary. There was only one cloud, smaller
-than a man’s hand; but there!—where was it to end?
-It was all very well talking to Jude about sailing round
-the world: you can’t sail out of Time, and the time would
-come—the time would <span class="locked">come—</span></p>
-
-<p>Jude was winding threads round him as a silkworm
-winds a cocoon,—tiny threads but deathly strong. It
-was almost as though she were becoming part of himself,—part
-of himself and part the sun and freedom and
-blue sea. She seemed half built up of those things and
-to have the power to make him one with them. Well,
-there was no use in bothering. So he said to himself,
-and as he said it the cloud no larger than a man’s hand
-swelled and twisted and rolled across the sandspit before
-him, resolving itself into a troupe of female relations,
-male relations, friends,—people as remote from Satan
-and Jude as parrots from seagulls, caged parrots content
-in the great gilded cage of convention.</p>
-
-<p>What would they say about Jude? He had an instinctive
-knowledge of what Jude would say about them, if
-they ever met, which seemed impossible.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196">196</a></span>
-Then came the weird recollection that they had, in a
-way, actually met. She had met Skelton, the high priest
-of the whole crowd, Sir William Skelton, Bart. Old
-Popplecock was the label she had affixed to him, and it
-somehow stuck and fitted. What label would she affix
-to his aunts, his two maiden mid-Victorian aunts, should
-she ever meet them?</p>
-
-<p>A faint halloo from the south sent aunts and all other
-considerations flying. He turned. Jude, far away on
-the sands, was coming toward the dinghy. She was
-carrying something and running as if pursued; then he
-saw her trip and fall.</p>
-
-<p>She was on her feet in a second, and the thing pursuing
-her had evidently given up the hunt, for she stood
-examining something she had picked up from the ground,
-and seemed regardless of everything else.</p>
-
-<p>He waited for her by the boat, and as she came up
-he guessed the tragedy. She had been carrying a hatful
-of birds’ eggs and had smashed than when she fell.
-The hat was eloquent.</p>
-
-<p>“Smashed them every one,” said Jude, wading out and
-beginning to wash the hat. “All your fault!”</p>
-
-<p>“My fault! For heaven’s sake how?”</p>
-
-<p>“Stuffing me up with them yarns.”</p>
-
-<p>“What yarns?”</p>
-
-<p>“Hants.”</p>
-
-<p>“Was that what made you run?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who was running?”</p>
-
-<p>“You were.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, was I? Reckon you’d have run too.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197">197</a></span>
-“Did you see anything?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it?”</p>
-
-<p>“You never mind.”</p>
-
-<p>She was evidently in a vile, bad temper; so he took
-his seat on the sand waiting for her to cool. Then, hat
-in hand, she came and sat close beside him, more out
-of a desire for company than friendship, he imagined;
-then, placing the hat to dry, she began examining the
-sole of her right foot, spreading the toes apart and
-brushing off the sand.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m awfully sorry,” said he at length. “But
-tell us—what was it you saw, really?”</p>
-
-<p>“A wuzzard.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was it like?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’,” then suddenly, and as if unburdening her
-soul, “I hadn’t more’n got the last of the eggs when I
-turned and saw him walking on the sands,—little old
-man with a glass under his arm, dressed queer in a long
-coat, an’ a hat on his head like an I dunno what. I
-wasn’t afraid, thought he was real, and he stuck the
-glass to his eye ’sif he was looking out for a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then he went out—puff—like the sniff of a candle—hu—hu—”
-She clung to him.</p>
-
-<p>“It was all my fault,” said he, “talking that nonsense.
-Don’t think of it: it was only an optical illusion.”</p>
-
-<p>“He didn’t cast a shadow—I remember now.”</p>
-
-<p>“That proves it. I’ve often heard cases like that.
-Sir Walter Scott saw a man like that once, and he knew<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198">198</a></span>
-it was only an illusion. He had some wine handy and
-he drank a glass of it, and the thing disappeared.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon I’d have drunk a barrel of rum if I’d had
-one handy,” said Jude, drawing away a bit. “Let’s get
-off. Lord! Look at the sun—it’s half down. Come’n
-help with the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>They got up, and taking the dinghy by the gunnels
-began to haul her to the water. They had not got her
-more than a couple of yards when Jude straightened up
-as though remembering something and clapped her hand
-to her head.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re dished!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199">199</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXII"></a>CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE CRABS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“How</span> do you mean?” said he.</p>
-
-<p>She explained. It was like her to forget and
-spend the precious time lazing and playing about with
-“wuzzards.” The sun was taking his plunge into the
-sea, darkness was upon them, and she could not find her
-way back in the dark. Moon or starlight would be of
-no use. The thriddy spars of the <i>Sarah</i> and <i>Juan</i>, invisible
-from the sandspit even in daylight, would be picked
-up only several miles out. She could not steer by the
-stars, and there was a great sweep of current setting
-sou’east which might take them to Timbuktu. Satan
-would have done the business right enough blindfolded;
-but she was a night-funk, she confessed it. Night put
-her all abroad and mixed up everything in her mind so
-that front seemed back and west seemed east, besides
-filling the world with “hants.” She had “near died” of
-fright fetching that sack from the cache the other night.</p>
-
-<p>All this in a lugubrious voice not far from tears, as
-they stood facing each other, and lit by the remorselessly
-setting sun.</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said Ratcliffe. “Cheer up. We’ll just
-have to stick here till daybreak. We have some grub<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200">200</a></span>
-left and lots of water. No use pulling the boat farther
-down. But I expect Satan will be in a stew.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon he’ll know,” said Jude. “The weather’s all
-right. He’d scent if we were in any trouble, and he’d
-borrow Cark’s boat to hunt for us.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean ’scent’?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’d smell trouble; he’s awful sharp.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sort of telepathy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Mind reading.”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno, but I reckon he’s not worrying, and if he
-was he’d be alongside here pronto.”</p>
-
-<p>Her face was like a buttercup in the extraordinary
-light of that sunset. The whole sky was buttercup
-color; the great sea was seething round the great sun,
-now half-gone, churning and washing round him, a blazing
-globe sinking in boiling gold.</p>
-
-<p>Golden gulls, golden sky, golden sea,—all fading at
-last, the purple of night breaking through, rushing dark
-from the west across the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The shipwrecked mariners lost their golden faces and
-hands, and, as they sat down with their backs to the
-dinghy and the remains of the “grub” between them,
-laughing gulls, passing like ghosts in the twilight, hailed
-them, while the stars broke out to look above the darkness
-and the tepid wind.</p>
-
-<p>There is nothing like eating to keep up the spirits.
-Jude got less doleful. In the stir of mind caused by the
-new circumstances she had clean forgotten the “hants,”
-nor did she remember them for a moment now, as she<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201">201</a></span>
-chatted away in an uplift of spirits caused by the food
-and the recognition that to be downcast was futile.</p>
-
-<p>“I sure am a mutt!” said Jude. “Reckon I was born
-on a Friday—they say mugs are all born on a Friday.
-We should a been off two hours before sundown, and
-there I was talking and listening to your yarns, and
-here we are on the beach—oh, mommer!” Then after
-a long pause:</p>
-
-<p>“What’s them stars, do you reckon?”</p>
-
-<p>“Suns.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gar’n!”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s so.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did you notice anything looking north before sundown,
-or were you asleep sitting on that spar?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did see something over there; looked like the ghost
-of a cloud.”</p>
-
-<p>“That was Rum Cay, and a sure sign the weather’s
-going to hold. It lifts itself into the sky like that, evening
-times; you can see it from Lone Reef too.”</p>
-
-<p>“I wish I had known that and I should have looked
-at it more particularly. I was thinking.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was you thinking about?”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed. “My people.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which people?”</p>
-
-<p>“My relations.”</p>
-
-<p>“What made you think of them for?”</p>
-
-<p>“You.”</p>
-
-<p>“Me?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202">202</a></span>
-“Yes, I was wondering what you’d think of them if
-you saw them, especially my aunts.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you take the bun,” said Jude, “you sitting there
-thinking of your aunts and me running with them eggs!”
-She stopped of a sudden; her memory had suddenly conjured
-up the “wuzzard.”</p>
-
-<p>“That cuss!” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“The one I saw.” She wriggled close to him till their
-sides touched. “S’posin’?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes?”</p>
-
-<p>“S’posin’ he was to take it into his head to do a walk
-along here?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t you bother about him,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d
-kick him into the sea—besides, he was only an optical
-illusion. It was my stupid talk did it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not bothering,” said Jude, “only it’s a durned
-long time till morning. N’matter,” she rested her hand
-on his shoulder in all the familiarity of companionship;
-then she shifted her hand from his left to his right
-shoulder so that her arm was across his back, and then
-she fell silent and he felt something poking into his left
-shoulder—it was her nose! She had evidently under his
-protection forgotten “hants” and “wuzzards,” forgotten
-him, even, for she was humming a sort of tune under
-her breath.</p>
-
-<p>He knew exactly her mental condition,—mind wandering,—and
-it was a strange feeling to be cuddled like
-that by a person who had half-forgotten his existence,
-except as a protection against fears, especially when he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203">203</a></span>
-remembered her recent antagonism that had developed so
-mysteriously and as mysteriously vanished. He slipped
-his left arm round her to make her more comfortable.
-Then her nose gave place to her cheek against his shoulder
-and she yawned. He could feel her ribs under her
-guernsey and the beat of her heart just beneath the gentle
-swell of her breast. He remembered her coat, which
-was in the dinghy. She had thrown it in as an after-thought
-in case of a change of weather, but had never
-worn it.</p>
-
-<p>“Hadn’t you better put on your coat?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I don’t want no coat.”</p>
-
-<p>“But the night air.”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing wrong with it. It’s a Gulf wind an’ as hot
-as a blanket—ain’t you warm enough?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ever slept out before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Only in a tent—have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?”</p>
-
-<p>“Slept out before?”</p>
-
-<p>“Heaps o’ times. But I wouldn’t sleep out in a full
-moon.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Cause I don’t want to wake up with my face twisted
-to one side like a flat fish—mean to say you don’t know?—either
-that or a chap goes loony. But there’s no fear
-tonight; it’s only a half-moon. The only thing I’m
-frightened of is crabs. We’ve gotta keep our eyes
-skinned for crabs. This mayn’t be a crab spit; then
-again, there’s no knowing but it may.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204">204</a></span>
-“What on earth is a crab spit?”</p>
-
-<p>Jude raised her face from his shoulder and sat up a
-bit straighter as though the question had roused her.</p>
-
-<p>“Place where crabs come, hun’erds of millions of them,
-same as Crab Cay. There’s crabs everywhere of course,
-but not in shiploads same as Crab Cay. Three men
-were drifted ashore there once, and after sundown up
-came the crabs and fought them all night, and there was
-nothing but their skeletons left in the morning. We’d
-better take it turn about to keep watch.”</p>
-
-<p>She released herself from his arm and scrambling about
-in the starlight on her hands and knees began to make
-a sand pillow.</p>
-
-<p>“There you are!” said she. “Stick your head on it;
-I’ll take first watch. You be port watch, and I’ll be
-sta’board.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you won’t! I will. I’m not a bit sleepy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Neither’m I. Stick your head on it. You’ve gotta
-turn in or you’ll be no use tomorrow.”</p>
-
-<p>He did as he was bid, and Jude took her place sitting
-on the sand close to him.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us a call if anything happens,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“You bet!” replied Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Then he closed his eyes. A moment before and he
-had been leagues away from sleep, but with the compulsory
-closing of his eyes a drowsiness began to steal on
-him. The wind had died to nothing and in the dead
-silence of the night the sound of the waves on the mile
-and a half of spit came loud and low, rhythmical, mesmeric.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205">205</a></span>
-It was as though the tide of sleep were rising
-to drift him off.</p>
-
-<p>Now, suddenly, he was walking in the blazing sunlight
-on the spit, and toward him was walking the “wuzzard,”—a
-little old man in a cocked hat with a spyglass
-under his arm, who vanished, giving place to Jude,
-carrying a hatful of gulls’ eggs.</p>
-
-<p>Then Skelton landed from somewhere, and Jude,
-turning, was calling him a “pesky brute.”</p>
-
-<p>The words broke the dream, and he opened his eyes.
-The moon had just risen, touching the spit, and in her
-light, seated on the sand propped up on its stilts, a
-spirit crab, white as snow with ruby eyes, was staring
-at Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Drugged with weariness and ozone, he closed his eyes
-for one moment, determined to rise up and drive the
-thing away in one moment. When he opened his eyes
-again the sun was rising.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206">206</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE RETURN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> gulls were mewing and calling and flying above
-him in the blue. He was lying on his back, his left
-arm out, and Jude’s head on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>She had snuggled up beside him for company, and
-then, regardless of spirit crabs, “hants,” and the possibility
-of crustaceans landing in shiploads to devour
-them, had fallen asleep. Her arm was flung over his
-chest. It was the embrace of a tired child, delightful
-to wake up to as the freshness of the air and the new
-life of the world and the innocence of the flower-blue
-sky, delightful as her breath, sweet and warm against
-his cheek. As he moved she stirred, grumbled something
-under her breath, shifted her head so that his arm
-was released, and turned on her other side, with her
-right arm flung out on the sand.</p>
-
-<p>He stood up. The tide was in and the dinghy only
-waiting to be launched. Not a sail or speck upon the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Rum Cay had prophesied right,—the fine weather
-held,—but the water was nearly gone, and the “grub”
-was finished. There was no breakfast till they boarded
-the <i>Sarah</i> again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207">207</a></span>
-He turned to where the starboard watch was lying,
-clinging still to Morpheus, and stirred it gently with his
-foot. Jude moved, turned, grumbled to herself, and
-then, as if electrified, sat up digging her fists into her
-eyes and yawning. Then she sat gazing at the sea as if
-stunned.</p>
-
-<p>“Come on,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve got to be starting.
-All the grub’s gone and nearly all the water. How did
-you sleep?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Jude. “I’ve been chasin’ round the
-hull night with a hatful of eggs. I’m near dead beat.
-Which way’s the wind? Sou’east. Must a changed in
-the night. It’ll take us back in two ticks.”</p>
-
-<p>She collapsed again comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>“Remember,” said he, “the current is against us.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, it ain’t no distance,” said Jude, “and a few minutes
-more or less don’t count. Wonder what Satan’s
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p>Knowing that it was hopeless to bother till the spirit
-moved her, he sat down on the sand beside her and
-began picking up little shells and casting them into the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Goodness knows!” said he. “I’m wondering what
-he’ll say when we get back.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll start jawing,” said Jude dreamily and fatefully
-and with her eyes closed. “I can hear him as if I was
-listening. He’ll say, ‘What you mean leaving the ship,
-and where’s your eggs?’ No use telling him they’re
-broke. Lord! I’m sick of it all! I’m just going to
-lay here and die.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208">208</a></span>
-He began to drop shells on her chest.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit foolin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then get up and come on. Let’s get it over. It’s
-like having a tooth pulled,—the sooner over the better.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did y’ever have a tooth pulled?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s it like?”</p>
-
-<p>“Beastly for a moment, but it’s soon over.”</p>
-
-<p>“Did y’spit blood?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rather! Come on.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m coming in a minute.”</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly she sat up, put on her hat, scrambled
-to her feet, took a glance round the sea, and made for
-the dinghy.</p>
-
-<p>“Shove in the water jar,” said Jude. He put the jar
-in, seized the opposite gunnel, and ran her down.</p>
-
-<p>In a minute they were afloat, the sail spread to the
-wind, Jude steering and holding the sheet. Gulls chased
-them out, and the beam wind meeting tide and current
-sent boosts of spray on board. It was a rougher passage
-coming than going, and a more silent one. Ratcliffe,
-squatting in the bottom of the boat, had little else
-to do than smoke and watch Jude. Jude, engaged with
-her own thoughts, and with her eyes keened for the
-indications of Lone Reef, seemed absolutely to have forgotten
-him.</p>
-
-<p>There was no indication of the companion who had
-slept with her arm round him, who had sat almost
-lovingly, half-forgetfully, with her arm across his shoulder
-and his arm round her waist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209">209</a></span>
-It came to him suddenly and with a curious pang that
-Jude would never be more than that,—a warm companion
-if cast alone together, just as she might be with
-Satan, or any stranger her fancy approved of.</p>
-
-<p>Instinctively he felt that there was a barrier,—a curious
-barrier, he seemed to have broken through that
-night he took her part, and when, for the first time in
-her life, she had confessed herself at fault; a barrier,
-that had, however, mended itself. It was as though
-he had injured her independence. Yet Satan was injuring
-her independence all day long with his orders and
-what not. Ay, but Satan was her brother, almost part
-of herself. She would not have banged Satan on the
-head for kissing her.</p>
-
-<p>He gave up thinking, watching her and how well she
-handled the boat. The crying of the gulls round the
-spit had died down; nothing remained but the voice of
-the sea, silent as dumb death from the blue horizon to
-the planking of the dinghy when it spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s her!” suddenly said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lone—I kin see the spars of the <i>Juan</i> an’ the <i>Sarah</i>.
-Rubber and you’ll see them too.”</p>
-
-<p>He turned with his elbow resting on the thwart and
-picked out the spars on the sea-line.</p>
-
-<p>“And the <i>Natchez</i>,” said Jude. “Look, close up to
-the <i>Juan</i>. Cleary’s put in and we not there! I’d forgot
-Cleary; didn’t believe he’d pick up the place so soon.
-There he is. Oh, hell!”</p>
-
-<p>“No matter,” said Ratcliffe; “it can’t be helped.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210">210</a></span>
-“Cuss them gulls! If they’d stuck to their laying
-places, we’d have got the eggs soon’s we’d landed and
-been back last night. Wonder what’s been going on?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “Satan’s all right. Cleary has no
-grudge against him. If there has been any bother, it
-has been between Cleary and Sellers.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>An hour later they were so close up that they could
-see the reef-line and the line of the wreck with fellows
-working on it. Whatever had happened, business was
-going on as usual.</p>
-
-<p>The three vessels, anchored and swinging to the tide,
-looked peaceful enough, and as they drew up to the
-<i>Sarah</i>, Satan, who had just appeared on deck, came and
-stood by the starboard rail watching them.</p>
-
-<p>They fastened up, preparing for an explosion. None
-came.</p>
-
-<p>“Couldn’t get back last night,” said Jude as they came
-on board. “Left it till sundown, and then I was afeard
-of the current.”</p>
-
-<p>“Afeard of the dark,” said Satan. “I reckoned that’d
-be so—whar’s your eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone phut. Smashed the lot. Wasn’t more than a
-hatful. Them rotten gulls had given up nesting, all but
-at the ends—and say, Satan, I saw a wuzzard! I was
-carrying the eggs when I saw him, and then I ran and
-smashed the lot.”</p>
-
-<p>“A which?”</p>
-
-<p>“A hant—little old chap walking on the sands. D’you
-remember the figurehead on that old bark they broke<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211">211</a></span>
-up last year at Havana,—man with a glass under his
-arm and the other arm wavin’ his hat? That was him
-plain as my eye. He up with his glass and I let one
-yelp. Rat’ll tell you: he saw me running.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, git along—git along, you and your hants! I’d
-been countin’ on them eggs, and here you come back like
-a one-eyed skite with your yarns about hants. Why,
-you ought a had a boatful! Didn’t you see no turkles’
-eggs?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, come along down if you want some grub. I
-sighted you more’n an hour ago, and there’s coffee
-waitin’. D’ye see that?” He pointed to a new-washed
-jumper drying in the blazing sun on the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I was het up,” said Jude, “or I’d have la’ndered
-it before I started.”</p>
-
-<p>“Come along down,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>It came to Ratcliffe that the quietude of Satan over
-the business came less from natural good temper than
-some other reason. The desertion of the <i>Sarah</i> was
-mutiny and a rank crime. Satan had been left with his
-food to cook and his jumper to wash, his sister had been
-off with an almost stranger for a whole night—yet he
-was not displeased.</p>
-
-<p>If Jude had done the business alone, she most surely
-would have been carpeted. It was evidently his—Ratcliffe’s—participation
-in it that fended off trouble and
-turned wrath into complacence. Why?</p>
-
-<p>Was it because he was a guest? Not a bit! Satan,
-had he been angry, would not have bothered about that.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212">212</a></span>
-He followed down below, and there, over the breakfast
-table, the Cleary business was cleared up.</p>
-
-<p>“He dropped in last night,” said Satan, “an hour before
-sundown, and the anchor hadn’t more than clawed the
-mud before he was aboard the <i>Juan</i>. I expected the
-shootin’ to begin; but there weren’t no fireworks, and
-after dark I lit out for the <i>Juan</i> in the c’lapsible and tied
-up and boarded her. All the men were in the foc’sle,
-eating onions and playin’ tunes on guitars,—no anchor
-watch,—and the Cleary crowd down in the saloon as
-friendly as pie, Cark ladling the liquor and Cleary suckin’
-it down, cigars as big as your leg in their faces, and
-Cleary with his thumbs in the armhulls of his vest
-leanin’ back laughin’. That’s how I found them.”</p>
-
-<p>“I told you,” said Jude to Ratcliffe, “they’d be kissing
-each other and—”</p>
-
-<p>“Suppose you shet your head!” said Satan. “I’m
-tellin’ you—there they were sittin’ all colludin’ together
-thick as thick, and I sat for an hour with them and then
-lit out. Sweet as sugar they were; but I tell you this,
-I’m as frightened as hell.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’s thet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Cleary. Y’see Cark and Sellers aren’t much by themselves,
-but Cleary is the snake’s tooth an’ poison bug of
-that combination, now that he’s joined in with Cark
-again. Cleary’s Irish gone bad on the father’s side and
-drunk Welsh on the mother’s: I had his pedigree from
-Pap. Pap said he was a sure-enough thoroughbred of
-a hellhound, and he reckoned the roof of his mouth was
-black right down to the heart of him. Well, I’ve had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213">213</a></span>
-forty dollars from Cleary for them rotten pearls and one
-thousand dollars from Cark on account of takin’s. Now
-you see how I am, supposin’ the wreck turns out a dud.
-D’you mean to say they won’t go for me to get their
-money back? Supposin’ the gold is there. D’you mean
-to say they won’t chouse me out of my share?”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“I worked the hull thing out last night before I boarded
-them. Seeing there was no fighting, I concluded they’d
-joined up an’ become friends; then I made my plans, I
-didn’t put out no anchor light.</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers, when I was leaving the <i>Juan</i>, said, ‘Whar’s
-your light?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Run short of oil,’ says I. ‘Kin you let me have
-some?’ He thought I was tryin’ to wangle oil out of
-him, and he closed; said he was run short himself.”</p>
-
-<p>“What was your meaning in not putting out a light?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you’ll find out,” said Satan, “if you keep your
-eyes skinned and stop askin’ questions. Well, that’s
-where we are. They’ll have the barrel of gunpowder
-fixed by tomorrow to blow the deck off her, and as soon
-as they put a light to it we’ll know. It’s blastin’ powder
-and ought to split the deck to flinders if they fix it
-proper. I don’t b’lieve it’s coral coverin’ that deck, I
-b’lieve it’s old petrifacted guano, if you ask me; anyhow,
-it’s hard enough.”</p>
-
-<p>“By Jove!” said Ratcliffe. “If that’s so, it bears out
-my theory. I came to the conclusion that the old hooker
-had never been under water according to that yarn Lopez<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214">214</a></span>
-slung; yet I couldn’t account for the coral deposits. I
-believe you’re right. I believe the real wreck is lying
-at that place you said that’s given in the latitude and
-longitude. Well, see here, why not get the anchor up
-and light out right now for the other place. They
-wouldn’t follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Wouldn’t they?” said Satan. “The <i>Natchez</i> would be
-after us like a cat pouncin’. No, I’d rather stick, if it’s
-all the same to you, and see the fireworks. After that
-leave ’em to me. There aren’t many’s got the better of
-me when my dander’s up. Now then, Jude, if you’ve
-done stuffin’ yourself, maybe you’ll lend a hand on deck.
-There’s swabbin’ to be done.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215">215</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">A BOTTLE OF RUM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Ratcliffe</span> helped in the swabbing and polishing.
-No housekeeper ever exercised more meticulous
-care in this respect than Satan. He was a fanatic where
-cleanliness was concerned, and polish,—witness the
-brasswork of the wheel, the binnacle and skylight,—even
-paint and varnish were minor gods compared with
-Brasso!</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as the Sarahites worked, the <i>Natchez</i> and
-<i>Juan</i>, lying in cynical and sinister neglect and dirt, showed
-little signs of life. The working party on the reef
-seemed busy enough; but the ships, save for a few hands
-lounging at the rails or squatting about the foc’sle head,
-might have been deserted.</p>
-
-<p>About ten o’clock a boat put off from the <i>Natchez</i>.
-Cleary was in the sternsheets, and as she came alongside
-he hailed the <i>Sarah</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan came to the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Sellers’s going to bust her open today,” said Cleary.
-“Just had word from him.”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought he wouldn’t be ready till tomorrow,” said
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216">216</a></span>
-“Just had word the hole’s near deep enough and the
-star cuttin’s from it. He’s got the powder off and reckons
-to fire it at noon. Wants you to come an’ help.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, does he?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s a bit bothered about the fuse, not havin’ done
-much of that sort of work, and he reckons you’re an
-ingenious cuss an’ll be able to put him wise.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, does he? Well, I’ll be there.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary came over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“No spittin’!” cried Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, averting his head in time to send the squirt
-of tobacco juice overside instead of on the deck, looked
-around.</p>
-
-<p>He nodded at Ratcliffe, disregarded Jude, and fixed
-his eye on the blazing binnacle and the glittering rods of
-the skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Dandy ship,” said he. “Whaar you goin’ to take the
-prize?”</p>
-
-<p>“Where your old tub’d be skeered to show her nose.
-How’s the potato crop gettin’ along?”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned his quid over and allowed his eyes to
-travel about the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Waal,” said he, speaking with point and consideration,
-“some likes one thing and some likes another, but
-I never did see that fandanglin’ with frills an’ brasswork
-an’ sich lends anythin’ to the <em>sailin’</em> qualities of a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, raising herself up from flemish coiling a rope,
-blazed out:</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe it don’t to an old cod boat blowin’ along with
-her own smell,” began Jude.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217">217</a></span>
-“Shet up!” said Satan. Then to Cleary, “Have a
-drink?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willin’,” said Cleary, “but thought you was a dry
-ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan winked, slipped below, and returned with a bottle
-of rum, a glass, and a water jar. There were three
-or four bottles of rum on board. Satan said he kept
-the stuff for “rubbing his corns”; he never drank it.
-There were also a revolver and a rifle on board. He
-never fired them: lethal weapons have their time and
-place.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, having placed the bottle and jar on the deck,
-produced another glass from his pocket, filled out a four-finger
-peg for Cleary and another for himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s luck,” said Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s luck—no <em>spittin’</em>!”</p>
-
-<p>They drained glasses.</p>
-
-<p>“Holy Mike!” cried Cleary, his eyes bulging and his
-face injected. “What sorter bug-water’s this?”</p>
-
-<p>“British Navy; thirty over proof.”</p>
-
-<p>Cleary, with one eye shut, seemed turning over in his
-mind the activities going on in his stomach and on the
-whole approving.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said he, “I’ve drunk wasp brandy and one or
-two nigger dopes—they don’t get near it, not in knots. A
-man’d want to be a centipede to carry a bottle of that
-stuff, I reckon. N’more, thanky. Well, I’m off, and
-I’ll fly a flag when Cark gives the signal he’s got the stuff
-ready for the fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218">218</a></span>
-“For the land’s sake, Satan! what made you swallow
-that stuff for?” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Satan took his seat on the skylight edge, then he gulped,
-then he hiccupped.</p>
-
-<p>“Get your hind legs under you and cart the bottle and
-the glasses down below,” said Satan. “Strewth!—gimme
-the water jar till I flood my hold.”</p>
-
-<p>He drank till Ratcliffe thought he would never stop,
-then he went to the port rail and canceled matters.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s Demerara Black John,” said he apologetically to
-Ratcliffe as he turned, wiping his mouth with the back of
-his hand. “Some likes it, but I’ve no holdin’ with drink.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe was about to ask why he had swallowed it,
-but he checked himself. Jude, who had just appeared
-again, put the question.</p>
-
-<p>“What in the nation made you drink that snake-juice?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Satan took a glance at the sun, at the reef, and at the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then,” said he, “finish up clarin’ away that raffle
-and get the dinner ready; I’ve no time to be talkin’.”</p>
-
-<p>He set to sand and canvassing the rail he had been
-working on when Cleary appeared, Jude and Ratcliffe
-took up their jobs, and the ordinary life of the <i>Sarah</i> resumed
-as though the rum incident had never been.</p>
-
-<p>All the same, work could not prevent Ratcliffe from
-pondering the dark problem of Satan and his doings.</p>
-
-<p>Why had he not put out an anchor light last night?
-Why had he pretended to Sellers that he was short of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219">219</a></span>
-oil? Why had he swallowed a glass of rum only to unswallow
-it again?</p>
-
-<p>Then in the monotony of work his mind passed from
-these considerations to a state of pleasant expectancy.
-What would they find in the wreck, and the explosion of
-the barrel of powder, how would it come off?</p>
-
-<p>He felt as pleased as a boy about to fire a brass cannon
-and not sure whether it will burst or not.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220">220</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXV"></a>CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THEY FIRE THE FUSE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap b"><span class="smcap1">Satan</span> used a modification of the deck bear for cleaning
-his decks; that is to say, a box filled with stones
-having a rough mat nailed under it. The deck having
-been sprinkled with sand, the bear had to be pulled backward
-and forward after the fashion of a carpet sweeper.
-This was Ratcliffe’s job, and he was not sorry when it
-was over.</p>
-
-<p>Dinner was served at eight bells, and getting along
-toward one o’clock the <i>Natchez</i> and <i>Juan</i> were flying all
-sorts of flags on the tepid breeze as a signal, evidently,
-that it was time to get to business.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe made out the red and white flag indicating H,
-the triangular blue with the white ball, the red cross on
-a white ground, and the white with the blue square,—H.&nbsp;D.&nbsp;V.&nbsp;S.</p>
-
-<p>“What are they trying to say?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, them flags,” replied Satan. “<em>They’re</em> not tryin’
-to say anythin’, only flyin’ to show time’s up. Cark
-hasn’t got a full set of the c’mercial code; wouldn’t know
-how to use them, neither. Now if you’re ready we’ll put
-off. Jude will stick here to keep ship.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude protested.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221">221</a></span>
-“Why, you’ll see the blow-up from here a durned sight
-better than from the boat,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see her innards when the deck’s off,” said
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Lord bless me! you’ll have days to see them
-in,” said Satan, “and there’s no knowin’ what may happen
-when the blow-up comes, what with flyin’ timbers
-and muck. I’ll come back and bring you off when the
-powder’s fired. I can’t say fairer than that.”</p>
-
-<p>They got into the dinghy and shoved off, Jude watching
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Sellers was waiting for them on the reef, and Cleary.
-Their boats were on the strip of beach surrounded by the
-crews, and a couple of fellows on the wreck were putting
-the last touches to the preparation of the charge. Sellers
-was holding what seemed a length of thick white cord in
-his hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Here’s the fuse,” said he. “I had it left over with the
-barrel from that last wrecking business we did in the fall.
-It’s a five-minutes’ fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, is it?” said Satan, handling the thing. “And
-where’s your guarantee? S’posin’ it only takes a minute?
-And five minutes is none too much for the man that fires
-it to get clear of the reef and put out.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s true,” said Sellers, “and one of you will have
-to do the firin’ business, seein’ I’m lame.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s lamed you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fell on the deck this mornin’ over a slush tub one of
-them damn dagoes left lyin’ in the dark. Near put my
-knee out.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222">222</a></span>
-“Then Cleary will do the trick,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary laughed. “Not me! I’m not lame, but it ain’t
-my job. Runnin’ over rocks don’t suit me, and I reckon
-the man that lays a light to that thing will want to be
-a boundin’ kangaroo.”</p>
-
-<p>“Instead of a damned ass like y’self,” said Satan.
-“Come on. I’ll light it, I’m not afeard.”</p>
-
-<p>They clambered over the rocks, crossed the rock bridge,
-and gained the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>The little barrel had been well and truly laid, the top
-almost flush with the level of the stuff covering the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“We got right through the deck plankin’,” said Sellers,
-“or to a crossbeam. Wood’s most dry-rotted, and it’ll
-be a nacheral mercy if the powder don’t blow the whole
-coffee shop to blazes right down to the reef. Here’s the
-hole for the fuse.”</p>
-
-<p>While they were examining the fuse-hole, Ratcliffe took
-notice of the cuts radiating starlike from the charge-hole
-that had been made in the deck-casing. When he turned
-again, Satan, with the aid of Sellers, had fixed the fuse.
-The Spanish sailors who had been at work had taken their
-departure and were already down by the boats, leaving
-only four men on the wreck,—Satan, Sellers, Cleary and
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Satan rose up, clapped the knees of his trousers as if
-to knock dust off them, and produced a yellow box of
-Swedish matches from his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not fair. Let’s
-draw lots who’ll fire the thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan. “I wouldn’t trust one of them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223">223</a></span>
-two with a box of matches, let alone a dollar. Now then,
-scatter for the boats!”</p>
-
-<p>Then to Ratcliffe, as Sellers and Cleary made off,
-“Stand by ready to shove the dinghy off when you see
-me coming.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right,” said the other; “but I’ll stick by you if you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon two don’t run quicker than one,” said Satan.
-“Off with you, and, if I’m blown to blazes, look after
-the kid.”</p>
-
-<p>When Ratcliffe reached the strip of beach the boats
-of the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i> had shoved off. He could see
-the figure of Carquinez at the after-rail of the <i>Juan</i> and
-Jude watching from the <i>Sarah</i>. He pulled the dinghy
-down a bit more to the water and then, turning, looked
-at the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was standing against the skyline, now he was
-down on his knees, and now he was up again. The fuse
-had evidently been fired, but he did not move; stood evidently
-looking to see that it was burning properly, and
-then moved off, walking, not running, and not even hurrying
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>Then he came clambering over the rocks, reached the
-dinghy, and they pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, you are a cool chap,” said Ratcliffe. “I’d have
-run.”</p>
-
-<p>“And broke your leg, maybe. There’s no danger unless
-a spark got at the powder. The durned thing was
-sparkin’ and spittin’ like all possessed when I left it.
-I reckon that’s why Sellers got cold feet. We’re out far<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224">224</a></span>
-enough now.” He ceased rowing, and they hung drifting.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked round. The other boats were much
-farther out. The tepid wind had almost died off, so that
-the flags on the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i> hung in wisps. They
-could hear the wash of the water on the reef and the occasional
-lamentation of a gull. No other sound broke
-the silence of the blue and gorgeous afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems like as if everything was listenin’, don’t it?”
-said Satan, wiping his forehead. “The bust ought to
-have come by this. Wonder if the durned thing has
-fizzled out?”</p>
-
-<p>A gull made derisive answer and across the satin
-smooth swell a hail came from the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s Cark,” said Satan, “makin’ kind inquiries,
-blister him!”</p>
-
-<p>“There she goes!” cried Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>A jet of flame and a column of smoke sprang from the
-reef, followed by a clap of thunder that could have been
-heard at Rum Cay.</p>
-
-<p>Flying filth and deck planking filled the air, and on top
-of all came the yelling of a thousand gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The dinghy jumped as though from the blow of a
-great fist—then silence, and over the reef a filthy dun-colored
-cloud of smoke curling upward like a djin.</p>
-
-<p>Satan seized the sculls and headed for the beach. The
-boats of the <i>Juan</i> and <i>Natchez</i>, already under way, were
-rowing as if for a wager, but the dinghy had the lead.
-They beached her, hauled her up a foot, and started over
-the rocks, running this time, heedless of broken limbs,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225">225</a></span>
-Satan leading like the bounding kangaroo of Cleary’s and
-whooping as he went.</p>
-
-<p>The rock bridge was still intact, but nearly the whole
-of the after part of the deck was gone.</p>
-
-<p>“Go careful!” cried Satan. He got down on hands and
-knees and, crawling, followed by Ratcliffe, leaned over
-the break and looked.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe cried out in horror.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226">226</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE CARGO</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> that vast and gloomy interior the great beams
-showed like the ribs of some eviscerated monster and
-the honest light of day fell sick upon the cargo,—a cargo
-of skulls, ribs, vertebræ, and entire skeletons, piled high,
-as though five hundred men had struggled aft for exit in
-one mad rush and died heaped one upon the other like
-refuse. A charnel, limy smell rose, poisoning the air.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan. “What did I tell you? <i>Nombre
-de Dios</i> be sugared! She’s an old slaver, wrecked with
-the men under hatches. Here’s Sellers!”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers, panting, his face all mottled, and followed by
-Cleary, had gained the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Boys, what is it?” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Gold!” cried Satan. “Go careful, for the hull deck’s
-sprung. Get on your hands and knees. Gold bars an’
-di’monds—we’re all rich men!”</p>
-
-<p>The pair of scoundrels, crawling like crabs, stuck their
-heads over the break.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hell!” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary spat. He was the first to laugh.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227">227</a></span>
-“This is putting it over on Cark, ain’t it?” said Cleary.
-“How many dollars d’you think it’s cost our firm to blow
-the lid off this damned scrofagus, to say nothin’ of the
-time? And he packed me off to Pensacola to get me out
-of the way! Oh, send for him to have a look!”</p>
-
-<p>“No use sendin’, he’s comin’,” said Satan, pointing to
-where the gig of the <i>Juan</i> was approaching the beach.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez crossed the rock-bridge and advanced along
-the deck, clutching his old coat together and making birdlike
-noises. When he reached the break, crouching like
-the others, he looked over.</p>
-
-<p>The sight below did not seem to horrify him.</p>
-
-<p>“Slaver,” said Satan for the third time, turning his
-head for a moment from the objects that seemed to
-fascinate him.</p>
-
-<p>“Pst, pst, pst!” said Carquinez. “Vel, I reckon dat is
-so.”</p>
-
-<p>“No gold ship,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe there was gold in the after-cabin,” suddenly
-broke in Cleary, “and the niggers broke through the bulkhead
-and are on top of it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s your bulkheads?” asked Sellers. “There was
-no after-cabin to the hooker. It was all one cattle boat
-below, with niggers for cattle.”</p>
-
-<p>“That is so,” said Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>The old gentleman seemed taking his setback extraordinarily
-well; so, too, seemed Sellers and Cleary. They
-were evidently used to reverses in business, and treasure
-hunting was wildcat anyway, a thousand to one against
-the chance of a colossal fortune.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228">228</a></span>
-“That is so,” said Carquinez. Then he proceeded to
-demonstrate what the hold of a slaver was like,—men
-lying side by side and sometimes on top of one another.
-There was no after-cabin, indeed nothing, no latrines,
-no means of washing, nothing: just one vast sty without
-straw even for the human beasts to lie on.</p>
-
-<p>The officers and crew slept in deckhouses; sometimes
-the crew had nothing to shelter them, sleeping on the bare
-decks.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez knew it all. His grandfather had been in
-the business, and he mentioned the fact with a sort of
-pride.</p>
-
-<p>Then he drew back from the break like a reptile
-balked and retreating; rose to his feet, and stood contemplating
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Satan rose also, as did Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m off,” said Satan. “This boneyard don’t please me
-any. Say, what you goin’ to do?”</p>
-
-<p>“Von moment,” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” asked Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark means how about the contrac’?” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Why, we’re left, left with a cargo of skelentons,
-and you—why, you’ve got a thousand dollars in your
-pocket.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was nothin’ in the contrac’ about handin’ them
-back,” said Satan; “b’sides the contrac’s bust. That
-thousand dollars was on account of findin’s. Is it my
-fault the findin’s is skelentons? But, see here, you give’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229">229</a></span>
-a few hours to turn the thing over, and come aboard the
-<i>Sarah</i> gettin’ along sundown, and we’ll have a clack.
-We’re all in the soup, seems to me, and I’m not wishin’
-to be hard on you.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll drop aboard,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>After his outburst of laughter he had remained dumb.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m off,” said Satan. “I want a drink and
-that’s the truth. The smell of them skelentons’s enough
-to start a Baptis’ minister on the booze.” Then he turned
-to Carquinez. “What did I tell you, sittin’ in your
-cabin? Told you I didn’t bank on this business, maybe
-you’ll remember that. Blast treasure liftin’! Leavin’
-salvage aside, have you ever seen an ounce of gold raised
-in all these years? There was a hundred million lyin’
-off Dry Tortugas—did they ever get it? How many
-ships has been down to Trinidad huntin’ for the pirates’
-gold? Knight was the last man there—a lot he made of
-it! It’s only the chaps that sell locations to mugs that
-make money over this business, it’s my b’lief. Well, see
-you aboard later on.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went, Ratcliffe following.</p>
-
-<p>As they came alongside the <i>Sarah</i>, Jude was hanging
-over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the luck?” cried Jude as they came aboard.</p>
-
-<p>“Skelentons,” said Satan, “shipload of skulls an’ cross-bones.
-Slaver, that’s what she was; dead men’s bones,
-that’s your treasure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! And I’ve never seen them!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230">230</a></span>
-“Well, there’s nothin’ much to see,” said Satan, with
-the irritating nonchalance of the one who has seen the
-show; “ain’t worth the trouble of lookin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see them skelentons,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell you they ain’t wuth lookin’ at!”</p>
-
-<p>“I want to see them—”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well then, tumble into the boat, tumble into the
-boat, and I’ll row you over.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe watched while the dinghy passed over to the
-reef. He saw Jude on the wreck, kneeling and poring
-over the cargo, held, evidently, by the fascination that lies
-for youth in the horrible.</p>
-
-<p>Then they returned, and Satan ordered the dinghy to
-be taken on board.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you going to put out now?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Put out!” said Satan, with a grin. “Why, I’ve asked
-those fellers to come aboard gettin’ on for sundown, and
-whether or no if I raised a foot of chain they’d be on me
-with the first click of the windlass. I tell you we’re in
-a tight place! Cleary said nothin’, you noticed that, but
-he’s goin’ to have his forty dollars back if he knows how,
-and Sellers is the same,—he wants his thousand. We’re
-held for one thousand and forty dollars, and we’re not
-strong enough to fight them.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, see here,” said the peacemaker. “Pay them.
-I’ll stand the racket. It’s only a little over two hundred
-pounds, and I’ll give you a check.”</p>
-
-<p>“You don’t get me,” said Satan. “It’s not the dollars
-I’m thinkin’ of so much as the game. Cark played me a
-low-down trick lightin’ out for here to scoop the boodle,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231">231</a></span>
-and Cleary laughed at me with his old cod boat outsailin’
-us. They’ve got to pay. B’sides, if I was to hand over
-that money, I’d never be able to show my nose again in
-Havana.”</p>
-
-<p>“How so?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, them two would put the laugh on me, and it’d
-be ‘what price skelentons’ wherever I went, see? I’d be
-the mug then. They’re the mugs now, seem’ they’ve paid
-a thousand and forty for what they’ve got.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see. But considering that they’ll be after you if
-you move, and that we’re not strong enough to fight them,
-what’s to be done?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “when they come aboard it’ll be
-either to get the dollars back or fight. You’ve noticed I
-asked them to come, seein’ they’d have come whether I
-asked them or not. Well, if I can foozle them into hanging
-on for their answer till tomorrow, I’ll give them the
-slip tonight. Moon’s not up till late.”</p>
-
-<p>“But they’ll hear you getting the anchor up and
-handling the sails!”</p>
-
-<p>“Not with an ear trumpet,” said Satan, “if I can only
-foozle them into waitin’ till tomorrow. Now then, Jude,
-lend a hand with the dinghy.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232">232</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></a>CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CROCKERY WARE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">An</span> hour before sunset, Jude, on the lookout, gave the
-alarm. “Sellers’s getting ready to come off,” she
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>Satan’s head appeared at the cabin hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“The boat’s alongside the <i>Juan</i> full of dagoes, and
-Sellers and Cleary’s gettin’ in.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where did you stick that bottle of nose-paint?”</p>
-
-<p>“Starboard forward locker.”</p>
-
-<p>“One minute.”</p>
-
-<p>In a minute the head reappeared and an arm holding
-the rum bottle.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, mind you, I’m drunk,” said Satan, “fightin’
-drunk, not to be disturbed on no account. They can call
-again tomorrow morning.”</p>
-
-<p>He smashed the rum bottle on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave the pieces lyin’.” He vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Jude looked at Ratcliffe and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“Rub your nose and pretend to be cryin’,” came a voice
-from below.</p>
-
-<p>“What for should I be cryin’?” answered Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“God A’mighty! I’ll show you if I get on deck!<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233">233</a></span>
-Ain’t I drunk and cuttin’ up? What else would you be
-doin’? <em>I’ll</em> larn you!”</p>
-
-<p>A smash of crockery came from below that made the
-housekeeper spring to the cabin skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit foolin’,” cried she. “I’m willin’ to rub the damn
-nose off my head, but stop smashin’ the plates—what
-have you broke?”</p>
-
-<p>Another plate went.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m rubbin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here they are!” cried Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Jude’s nose did not seem to want any rubbing, nor her
-face. Descended from generations of crockery worshipers
-and careful housewives, instinctively hating
-Cleary, Sellers, Cark, and all their belongings, feeling
-with perfect illogic that they had been done out of the
-treasure by the “skelentons” somehow through Cark, she
-was convincing. Satan with rare art had worked her up
-to the part. She was not crying: her mind was raging
-above tears.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Kid!” cried Sellers, as the boat ground alongside
-and a filthy ruffian with a handkerchief twisted round
-his head clawed on with a boathook. “What’s the matter,
-Kid? What’s up with you? Where’s Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who’re you kiddin’?” cried Jude, as Sellers came
-aboard, followed by Cleary. “Where the hull are your
-fenders? Comin’ cuttin’ the paint off, you and your
-skullintons! Where’s Satan? He’s down below drunk
-as Billy be damn and cuttin’ the lights out of the
-ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s been at the eyewash I was tellin’ you of,” said<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234">234</a></span>
-Cleary. “Look, he’s broke a bottle of it. Lord! don’t
-the place stink?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, drunk or sober, he’s got to bail up,” said Sellers.
-“It’s my belief he’s been spoofin’ us all along.”</p>
-
-<p>“Spoofin’ who?” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark an’ me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cark an’ you—that old leather face an’ <em>you</em>! Satan
-been spoofin’ you—pair of yeggmen! Satan’s straight,
-the on’y straight man in Havana! Get off this ship!
-Come in the mornin’ if you want to try an’ rob him. Off
-with you now!”</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” cried Sellers, half-laughing, half-angry,
-“what’s the matter with the kid? What’s gingerin’ you
-up?”</p>
-
-<p>The answer came from another smashed plate below.</p>
-
-<p>Jude made one spring for a deck-mop standing handy,
-twirled it so that the water sprayed from it in a rainbow,
-and brought it to the charge.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary slipped over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Off with you!” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Put down that mop!” cried Sellers, now suddenly
-furious. “Put down that mop, you braying little bitch!
-Go’n get inter your petticoats! You ain’t a boy! I
-never b’lieved it, not for the last six months, an’ now I
-know. You’ve give yourself away proper. Why, look
-at you, as round as a tub—you’re a wumman!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe looked on horrified. Jude, flushed and bright-eyed,
-had somehow revealed her sex. In her excitement
-she looked for a moment almost beautiful. Her tongue
-had done the rest. The smashing of the plates had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235">235</a></span>
-brought the woman out of her as a conjurer brings a
-rabbit out of a hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Put down that mop!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude from rose color had turned awfully white; then
-with the élan and dash of a gamecock she charged. The
-wet swab hit the ruffian full in his flat face, and he fell
-on the deck with a bang.</p>
-
-<p>In a second he was up and scrambling over the rail.
-Again she charged, the swab meeting him this time full
-on his stem and sending him over into the boat like a
-bag of oats.</p>
-
-<p>A slush tub, fortunately half-full, and marked by her
-prescient mind, was her next weapon. The contents
-caught Cleary full in the face, and as the boat made off,
-the oars, all at sixes and sevens, wildly rowing, she pursued
-it with the battery of her tongue till it was out of
-range. Then she broke down and cried, sniffed, with her
-arm hiding her face, and then flushed, like a thing of
-shame dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe knew.</p>
-
-<p>Her sex proclaimed aloud by the shameless Sellers was
-as a garment stripped off her publicly. On the very first
-day Satan had stated her case and she didn’t mind, though
-he, Ratcliffe, had been a stranger; but it was different
-now, somehow. It was as if the end of her boyhood
-had come. Sellers would no doubt proclaim the fact in
-Havana.</p>
-
-<p>He heard voices from below.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t care if I’d killed him! Wish’t I had! Lea’ me
-alone—for two cents I’d go drown myself! Look at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236">236</a></span>
-them plates! You’ve broke the two blue pattern ones
-an’ the chaney one with the bird on it, the best we had,
-an’ not a cracked one touched! Hain’t you no sense?”</p>
-
-<p>“Never you mind; I’ll get you some more.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not wanting more. Them plates were mother’s—much
-you care! I’ve gone as careful as walking on eggs
-with them, and now they’re broke an’ the old Delf’ ones
-left. If you must be breaking and cutting up, couldn’t
-you a broke the cracked ones? An’ where’s the sense in
-breaking them anyhow?”</p>
-
-<p>“Waal, I reckoned it’d liven you up hearin’ the
-crockery goin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liven me up! Makes me believe you <em>have</em> been
-getting at the rum to hear you talk. Where’s the sense
-in all your doings,—ship stinking of drink and all the
-crockery broke, and what’s the use?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you after dark. I tell you I want to get
-away from those thugs, and if I hadn’t headed them off
-pretendin’ to be drunk they’d have gone through me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, they’ll go through you right enough tomorrow
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, they won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll be gone.”</p>
-
-<p>“Gone! Why, first click of the windlass and they’ll be
-aboard us.”</p>
-
-<p>“You leave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wish we’d have went before you broke them
-plates.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, cuss the plates!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237">237</a></span>
-“Easy to say that. It makes me just nacheral wild to
-see that old Delf’ plate starin’ me in the face, round and
-sound, and the blue pattern ones gone.”</p>
-
-<p>Silence for a moment, at the end of which Satan’s
-head and bust appeared at the cabin hatch.</p>
-
-<p>He winked at Ratcliffe, and pointed backward with his
-thumb and down below, as if indicating the domestic
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s no sign of them swabs comin’ off again?”
-asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Ratcliffe. “They seem to have had enough
-of it.”</p>
-
-<p>The rum bottle had broken fairly in two without
-splinters.</p>
-
-<p>“You might heave the bottle over, like a good one,”
-said Satan. “I can’t show on deck for fear of those
-shrimps seein’ me. It’ll be dark in an hour, and then I’ll
-be up. You can wait for your supper till we get away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said Ratcliffe; “I’m in no hurry.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238">238</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXVIII"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">TIDE AND CURRENT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> lit a pipe. Having disposed of the fragments of
-the bottle, he got the mop and a bucket of water
-and swabbed the rum-stained deck. Then he took his
-seat forward and watched the sunset.</p>
-
-<p>The great sun, half-shorn of his beams and bulging
-broad as Jupiter, lolled above the reef in a sky of
-laburnum gold fading to aquamarine. Gulls, dark as
-withered leaves, blew about him, and shifting here and
-there to north and south became gulls of gold, while the
-wind blowing up from the gulf and the westward running
-current, meeting the last of the flood, broke the sea surface
-into a million tiny dancing waves, momentary
-mirrors dazzling the eye with shattered light.</p>
-
-<p>Lone Reef seemed well named. Dawn or sunset or
-the blaze of full day could not take from its desolation,
-and this evening the sinister line of the wreck dominated
-everything, turning the blaze of sunset to the light of a
-funeral pyre.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i>, moving to the swell, creaked and whimpered,
-and now and then from below he could hear voices,—Jude’s
-voice and the voice of Satan. Beyond that
-came the murmur of the reef and the clang of the gulls,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239">239</a></span>
-and now and again a snatch of Spanish song from the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Then the sun passed below the reef, the tide began to
-draw out, and the <i>Sarah</i>, swinging to it, brought to his
-view the <i>Juan</i> and the <i>Natchez</i>, ships of dusk in a world
-of dusk powdered with star dust. Presently a light was
-run up on the <i>Natchez</i>, then the <i>Juan</i> put up her riding
-light, then Satan appeared, a dusky form, rising from
-the cabin hatch and followed by Jude.</p>
-
-<p>They came forward. Jude squatted on the deck, and
-Satan drew close to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, if them skunks had any sense in their skulls,
-they’d stick out a guard boat,” said Satan; “but I’ve fair
-put the hood on them, I b’lieve, and they’ve never saw
-what I was after, pretendin’ I had no oil for an anchor
-light. Why, they are only fit to be put out to nuss!
-Half an hour more and we’ll be off.”</p>
-
-<p>“How are you going to do it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Knock the shackle off the anchor chain an’ let her
-drift. Tide an’ current is runnin’ four knots.”</p>
-
-<p>“But even without the anchor light they’ll be able to
-see us by the stars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord bless you! at this distance they won’t be able
-to see mor’n a glimpse of us. We’ll go so gradual they
-won’t notice. If they keep a lookout at all,—which they
-won’t, ten to one,—he’ll see us by believin’ we’re there.”</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! I’d love to see their faces in the morning!”
-murmured Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“But won’t they go for you when we get back to
-Havana?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240">240</a></span>
-“Not they,” said Satan. “They’ll say nothin’, seein’ as
-how they’re done and the laugh’s against them. Why,
-Cark will respect me more for this job than if I’d run
-straight with him over the biggest deal. If it’d been the
-other way about and he’d pulled the dollars off me, I’d
-have been nowhere with him. Mind you out here, if I
-was to stick here till tomorrow, they’d be aboard and
-maybe manhandling us if I didn’t bail up; but back in
-Havana the thing will be closed and the accounts wrote
-off.”</p>
-
-<p>The sound of a guitar came through the dusk, crossing
-the warm wind, the lazy, languorous wind of a perfect
-summer’s night. Seville, which he had never seen, rose
-before Ratcliffe, firefly-haunted orange groves, lovely
-women all skewered together by the remembered words of
-a ribald song.</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">“When I was a student at Cadiz!”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>“There goes old Catguts,” said Satan. “He’s the band
-aboard the <i>Juan</i>,—Antonio, Alonzo, Alphonso—damn his
-name!”</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t,” said Jude. “It’s that old copper-patch
-Cleary’s got with him. I’ve heard him in harbor. I gave
-him a plug of tobacco once for getting me some bait, and
-he showed me the thing. It’s got a crack in it or suthin’,
-and makes a noise like a skeeter in a jug,—kind a fizzin’
-noise between the plonks. He’s got an ulster on his leg
-so’s you can see the bone. He took off the rags an’
-showed me—he’s a Portugee.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241">241</a></span>
-“Well, it’s time to get busy,” said Satan. “Here, h’ist
-yourself and lend a hand!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe got more forward while they knocked the
-shackle off the chain. There came a splash. Then the
-meeting resumed.</p>
-
-<p>“If they heard that splash,” said Satan, “they’d put
-it down to a fish jumpin’. Now you watch them lights.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe watched the amber lights of the <i>Natchez</i> and
-<i>Juan</i>. They did not seem to alter position in the least.
-In the first of the starlight and the last of the dusk the
-spars and hulls of the two vessels could just be made out.</p>
-
-<p>Then presently he saw that the lights had drawn a
-bit more aft and seemed closer together. The feel of the
-<i>Sarah</i> was different too, she moved more freely to the
-swell.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the guitar seemed slightly fainter.</p>
-
-<p>Now and then the beguiling sea would give the <i>Sarah</i>
-a little slap, no louder than the slap of a girl’s hand,
-on the low planking as if joking with her over some secret
-shared in common.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, the sound of the guitar was fainter, much fainter,
-and the spars and hulls of the vessels now invisible as
-though they had been dissolved in the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>The anchor lights alone marked their places.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re all right now,” said Satan; “but I’ll give them
-another five minutes. Got the matches for the binnacle
-light?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes passed, then they got the canvas on her,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242">242</a></span>
-and Satan, at the wheel, taking his bearings from the
-far-off lights of the betrayed ones, turned the spokes.</p>
-
-<p>“Where are you going to sail for?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Cormorant Cay,” said Satan. “I’ve a fancy to look
-at that place.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243">243</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></a>CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SATAN IN PARADISE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> had divided Ratcliffe and Jude into watches, port
-and starboard.</p>
-
-<p>Jude turned in first, relieving him somewhere about two
-in the morning. At six, when Ratcliffe turned out and
-came on deck, he found Satan at the wheel, relinquished
-by Jude, and day pursuing the Sarah across a wrinkled
-sea of tourmaline and hinted blue. Away ahead somewhere
-to the south lay Cormorant Cay, the true tomb, if
-the chart indications were correct, of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A strong sailing wind was blowing, and Satan gave
-their speed at seven knots. He refused to hand over the
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve had a snooze on deck,” said he, “while the kid
-took charge. We’re nearly sixty miles south of Lone,
-and if this wind holds will be on to Cormorant somewhere
-about eight bells.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a sign of those chaps,” said Ratcliffe, looking
-back over the sea, clear of Cleary and Sellers and their
-dirty crowd.</p>
-
-<p>“Naw; they’ll be just about rousin’ up now and rubbin’
-their eyes.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244">244</a></span>
-“You don’t think they’ll try to follow us?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not likely, I don’t think. They’re wastin’ time and
-money if they cruise after us. Cark’s got his business
-in Havana to attend to, and Cleary’s the same. What’s
-gettin’ me is the fac’ that Sellers has spotted the kid for
-what she is. It’ll be all over Havana, and she knows it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, it had to come out some time.”</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here, Satan!” said Ratcliffe. “I’ve been thinking
-a lot about the girl and what’s to become of her. She
-can’t go on as she is. We must fix up something.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s easy said.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’ve grown fonder of her than any person I’ve
-ever met, that’s the truth. There’s no one like her; she’s
-gold right through.”</p>
-
-<p>“She ain’t bad.”</p>
-
-<p>“This sort of thing was all right when she was a
-child,” went on Ratcliffe; “but she’s growing out of that.
-Why, even in the little time since I’ve come aboard, she
-seems different, somehow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, if you ask me,” said Satan, “you seem to have
-made a change in her. She’s brightened up, somehow,
-has more sass in her. Y’see, when we were cruisin’
-round since Pap died, me, she, and the nigger, there
-wasn’t much company, and she was gettin’ a bit down-hearted.
-Then, when you came aboard, she picked up.
-She hadn’t laughed for weeks till she saw you in that
-pajama rig; then she chummed onto you.”</p>
-
-<p>“She did.”</p>
-
-<p>“Liked you from the first minute she saw you. There’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245">245</a></span>
-no two ways about Jude,—it’s either like or the other
-thing, right off.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I’m pretty much the same—and I don’t want
-to lose sight of her—or you.”</p>
-
-<p>“How’d you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, just that. I’m bothering about when this cruise
-is over. That’s bothering me a lot. Well, we’ll leave
-it at that for the present.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan turned his lantern face to starboard for half a
-moment to expectorate right over the starboard rail—maybe
-also to hide a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it’ll come all right somehow,” said he. “We
-ain’t much in the world, but we’re straight. Reckon
-you’re straight too. That’s all I want. That feller
-Thelusson, y’remember I told you he wanted to come
-for a cruise with us. Well, he was straight enough s’far
-as dollars went, but I wouldn’t have had him on this
-ship, not if he’d paid me a dollar a minute and a bonus
-for every knot we made—not with Jude aboard—Here’s
-the wheel for a sec’, if you’ll take it whiles I get some
-coffee ready.”</p>
-
-<p>Toward noon a wreath of gulls in the sky showed
-Cormorant.</p>
-
-<p>Jude was at the wheel, Satan forward on the lookout.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty minutes later Satan came running aft, fetched
-the old glass out of its sling, and went forward with
-it.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s a hooker on the sands!” cried he. “Looks
-like a small fruiter or suthin’ hove up.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, standing beside him, could see nothing,—the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246">246</a></span>
-sand, owing to their low level, was invisible from the
-deck of the <i>Sarah</i>,—then, straining his eyes, he made
-out a speck on the sea-line.</p>
-
-<p>“Mast’s gone,” said Satan, “white painted, not more’n
-fifty ton, and she’s layin’ in the lagoon. She must have
-come in over the sand where it narrows to the westward.
-There’s a pinch of sand there that’s near under water
-at flood, and the seas come right over it in an east’ard
-gale.”</p>
-
-<p>He handed the glass to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Funny,” said Ratcliffe, “if you were right about the
-<i>Nombre de Dios</i> being sunk here and we come to have a
-look for her and find another wreck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t take no shares in the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>,”
-said Satan. “I ran here more for somewhere to run to
-than with any thought of the <i>Nombre</i>. She’s a hundred
-foot under the sand if she’s here at all; but it’s luck all
-the same. There’ll be pickin’s. There was a big blow
-two weeks ago from the east,—that’s what’s done her,—and
-the salvage men won’t be here yet, if they ever come.”</p>
-
-<p>He stuck the glass to his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s a yacht, that’s what she is, one of them small
-cruisers, not more’n fifty or sixty, and her fittin’s will
-just do for us, if she’s not been stripped. There’s all
-sorts of folks come from New York and Philadelphia
-and N’ y’Orleans, cruisin’ about these seas in tubs like
-that,—fishin’ mostly.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i> held on, almost due south, with the daring
-of a sea-bird, Satan giving directions to the steersman
-and seeming absolutely regardless of the death and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247">247</a></span>
-dangers around them,—reefs that they shaved, rocks that
-waved fathom-long ribbons of fuci a few feet under
-water,—he avoided them all.</p>
-
-<p>South, east, and west Cormorant Cay is devoid of
-danger. Only here to the north do the reefs and rocks
-show, and it is just here that the only entrance to the
-lagoon lies.</p>
-
-<p>The place consists really of two sandspits widely
-separated to the north so as to form a pondlike harbor
-running from five to ten fathoms deep. Farther south
-the sandspits join so as to form a wide street, like the
-spit to eastward of Lone Reef.</p>
-
-<p>They held on. The sound of the gentle surf on the
-sands came now, and a full view of the lagoon water
-reflecting the sun blaze like a mirror.</p>
-
-<p>On the still lagoon, with strange stereoscopic effect
-seen between the two sand-arms holding off the wrinkled
-sea, lay the craft, floating on an even keel, and showing
-a stump of mainmast against the skyline. From her
-lines she had been a yacht.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, Go’ bless my soul, she’s anchored!” cried
-Satan. “Derelic’ and anchored. The people must have
-got away in a boat or suthin’. There’s not a sign of
-them. Port—hard—port—as you were—steady—so!”</p>
-
-<p>He ran to let go the halyards.</p>
-
-<p>Another anchor had been bent on to some spare
-chain. It was heaved over, and the <i>Sarah</i> came up to it,
-swinging less than fifty yards from the stranger. She
-was a picture, a forty-ton fishing yawl, white painted,
-gracile as a fish, dismasted, abandoned, and swinging to a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248">248</a></span>
-taut anchor chain; beyond her and the emerald of the
-lagoon lay the great stretch of sands, running due south,
-blanketing to the heat and showing ponds of aquamarine
-and storms of gulls.</p>
-
-<p>The anchor down, Satan stood with his eyes fixed on
-his prey; Jude too. They seemed considering her as a
-butcher might consider a carcass before he cut it up.</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you going to board her?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you ever seen a dead b’ar?” asked Satan.
-“Sometimes a b’ar isn’t as dead as he looks, and sometimes
-a derelic’ isn’t as empty as it looks. It’s a common thing
-for men on the Florida coast to hide in a driftin’ canoe
-and rise up and laugh at them that come out to collect it.
-I can’t make out that anchor chain bein’ down, and I’ll
-just give them one hour whiles we have dinner.”</p>
-
-<p>When they came on deck again after the meal, they
-dropped the dinghy, and the three of them put off for
-the derelict.</p>
-
-<p>She must have been dismasted outside the sands, for
-not a spar lay in the water alongside,—dismasted and
-driven over by a big wave, her crew clinging to her.
-On the bow was her name, <i>Haliotis</i>. They tied up
-and scrambled on board. The deck ran flush fore and
-aft. The wheel looked all right, but was jammed and
-immovable; the binnacle glass was smashed.</p>
-
-<p>Satan stood, whistling and looking about him. Then
-he dived below, followed by the others. The cabin had
-been left in good order. It was a bit over-gilded and
-decorated for a plain man’s taste, but everything was of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249">249</a></span>
-the best, and a hanging lamp of solid brass still swung
-over the center-table. The walls were of bird’s-eye maple,
-the cushions of the best blue cloth, and the fittings of
-the tiny sleeping cabins to match.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of stuff lying about,—books, clothes,
-boots. The people had evidently put off in a hurry, not
-caring much what they took as long as they got away.
-Perhaps they had taken advantage of a passing steamer.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe picked up a book, a volume of O. Henry.
-There was a name in it,—J. Seligmann.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, delving in the starboard after-cabin, came out
-holding up something. It was a pair of boots, women’s,
-patent leather with white suede tops and heels three inches
-high.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at them things!” said Jude with a burst of suppressed
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“A girl’s boots,” said Ratcliffe. “Try them on, Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“If I wore them things,” said Jude, “I’d have to walk
-on my hands. There’s dead loads more of stuff, and the
-place smells as if a polecat had been living there.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe stuck his head into the little cabin. It
-reeked of California poppy as though a bottle of it
-had been upset, California poppy and cosmetic scents.
-Clothes were lying about in disorder; a woman’s white
-yachting cap, deck shoes, lingerie, bursting like froth out
-of a cabin trunk, gave added touch to the hysterical distraction
-of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>One could see her, the woman, rushing about saving
-or collecting her valuables, leaving everything else, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250">250</a></span>
-calling on the gods to witness that she would never set
-foot again on another small yacht for a pleasure cruise
-among the islands.</p>
-
-<p>Jude picked out a frilled garment from the lingerie
-box, looked at it, rolled it up, and cast it with a chuckle
-into the bunk, then she reached up and opened the little
-port.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe left her pursuing her investigations, attracted
-by the whoops of Satan, who seemed pursuing things
-about the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, with his hair wild and his eyes ablaze, had
-rapidly sampled his treasure. Everything he wanted had
-been left. Had he found the <i>Nombre de Dios</i> with gold
-to her hatches, it is doubtful if his excitement would have
-been so intense.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at that!” cried he, pointing to the mast winch.
-“Wantin’ it—should think I had been! Come along and
-see!” He led the way to a heap of raffle and broken
-spars forward. “Look at them gaff jaws, galvanized an’
-covered with hide, and me with old wooden ones
-creakin’ like an old shoe! There’s a mainsheet buffer too!
-Camper Nicholson’s—rubber—cringles—come along to
-the sail room!”</p>
-
-<p>They went to the sail room, then to the galley,—everywhere
-finds, glorious finds, with this rough sum total:</p>
-
-<p>In the sail room, sixty fathoms of new manila rope,
-an eighty-foot otter trawl, harpoons and grains and a
-seine net, a trysail, square sails, two jibs; in the galley,
-cooking gear, an Atkey cooking stove to burn coal or
-coke; in addition to all this some splendid blocks with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251">251</a></span>
-patent sheaves with ball bearings which run so much
-better than dummies, a lower mainsheet block and two
-quarter-blocks, fathoms of galvanized chain, and two
-Nicholson’s patent anchors. Other things included
-lamps, a pair of binoculars, a sextant and a chronometer,
-charts, and lastly, glorious but useless, in a little engine
-room the auxiliary, a 13–15 horse-power petrol-paraffin
-Kelvin engine, two-cylinder, with the shaft running out
-through the quarter, and a spare Bergius propeller,
-which shuts up and opens out automatically when in
-motion.</p>
-
-<p>When they came on deck again after a rapid glance
-at these things a brain-wave came to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” said he. “Why not tow her back to
-Havana and claim salvage? She’s worth a lot and she’s
-derelict.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not me,” said Satan. “Have you ever claimed salvage?
-First there’s the tow, and we’re underhanded.
-Then there’s the lawyers. What’s to stop this Seligmann
-whoever he is poppin’ up an’ swearin’ against me.
-He’d say he left her with the anchor down in harbor;
-it amounts to that, though she’s derelic’ right enough.
-Not me! I’ll take what I want without no lawyers to
-help me. She’s my meat, by all the laws of the sea, and
-that’s the end of it.”</p>
-
-<p>Appeared Jude from the cabin hatch, carrying as a
-trophy a go-ashore hat she had unearthed from somewhere,
-a crushed-strawberry-colored straw hat—or was
-it a bonnet? It had long strings and a rose stuck on one
-side of it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252">252</a></span>
-“Look what that catawampus has left behind her!”
-cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“Quit your foolin’,” cried Satan, “and come along and
-lend a hand. Here, h’ist these things into the dinghy!”</p>
-
-<p>Jude flung the hat down the open skylight, and the
-rank burglary of the <i>Haliotis</i> began.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253">253</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXX"></a>CHAPTER XXX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">A SECRET OF THE SAND</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">It</span> seemed to Ratcliffe in the days that followed that
-he had never known what work meant before. That
-he, a wealthy and respected member of the British upper,
-upper-middle classes, an ex-Christ Churchman, and a
-member of Boodles, was assisting Satan Tyler in “tearing
-the tripes” out of another man’s yacht, also occurred to
-him sometimes as a fact, a distorted sort of fact, blurred
-and dimmed by the blazing and brilliant atmosphere in
-which they were working, the absolute and shocking
-loneliness that hemmed them in, Satan’s personality, and
-Jude’s companionship.</p>
-
-<p>By all the laws of the sea, according to Satan, these
-things were the property of the first finder. That was
-all very well according to Satan, and indeed according to
-what seemed common-sense; still, sea law was for all he
-could tell not quite the same thing as the laws of the
-sea, according to Satan. Though belonging to a great
-ship-owning family, he knew nothing of the rights of the
-matter; but the business they were engaged on seemed to
-him sometimes, when he cared to think, most tremendously
-like larceny,—larceny excused by a lot of considerations
-and made picturesque by environment; still, a business<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254">254</a></span>
-that in the unpicturesque surroundings of the London
-Sessions would undoubtedly have appealed to a judge
-in the voice of Larceny.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he imagined a warship, one of those prying,
-officious little cruisers that do police work, closing up
-with the cay and sending a boat into the lagoon.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he fell to wondering what Seligmann was
-like,—an American surely, one of the Gulf haunters, belonging,
-most probably, to one of the numerous clubs on
-the Florida coast, and Mrs. Seligmann—or was it Miss—or
-not even that?</p>
-
-<p>One thing was certain, Seligmann was rich. They
-were not robbing a poor man.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the third day Jude gave out, not from
-weariness, but from distaste.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! haven’t you had enough of this old truck?”
-said Jude. “I don’t feel’s if I ever wanted to see a
-len’th of rope nor a cringle again.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt pretty much the same.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll finish the business myself,” said Satan. “You
-can knock off if you like. Go’n hunt for turkles’ eggs.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come along, too,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Satan ferried them over to the sands. It was about
-two hours before sundown, and an easterly breeze was
-blowing fresh and cool, shivering up the lagoon water
-and whispering among the sand-grains.</p>
-
-<p>Jude walked despondently as they trudged along close
-to the sea edge and discovering nothing.</p>
-
-<p>“D’you know,” said Ratcliffe, “we’ve never even started<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255">255</a></span>
-to hunt for a sign of the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>? I wonder if
-she’s sunk, really, anywhere near here?”</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Jude; “don’t care, nuther. Satan’s
-so full of his pesky old fittings he’s no time to think of
-anything else.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cheer up, Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m all right.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, you’re not. What’s wrong?”</p>
-
-<p>“Lots of things.”</p>
-
-<p>“When we get back to Havana—” began Ratcliffe.
-She cut him short.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t want to go back to Havana,” said she. “Ain’t
-going.”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on the sands plump, nursed her knees,
-and stared over the sea, casting her hat beside her. He
-stood for a moment, then he sat down. He knew at once,
-knew what had been working in her mind for days.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re bothering about what Sellers said, dirty
-scoundrel! I’d have punched his head, only the whole
-thing happened so quick and you landed him with that
-mop—don’t worry.”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good?” went on Ratcliffe; then cautiously
-and feeling that he was treading on dangerous ground,
-“See here, there’s no harm in being a girl, no more than
-there is in being a man.”</p>
-
-<p>No reply.</p>
-
-<p>A laughing gull passed and jeered at them. Jude followed
-it with her eyes. She seemed almost unconscious
-of his presence and not to have heard his words. He<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256">256</a></span>
-watched her profile against the sky, noticed the eyelashes
-which seemed longer and more carved up than ever, the
-nice shape of the head, free of the old panama.</p>
-
-<p>Then she turned, leaned on her elbow, and looked up
-at him—then she looked down.</p>
-
-<p>“What made you think I was botherin’ about Sellers?”
-asked Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” said Ratcliffe, “I just thought it. I’ve
-been thinking a lot about you—I care for you a lot, that’s
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p>She looked up at him again, full in the eyes, and with
-a new expression he had never seen before, a puzzled,
-half-startled look, like that of a person suddenly
-awakened in strange surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>Then her eyes fell away from him.</p>
-
-<p>She took a handful of sand and let the grains fall between
-her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>“Just that,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>She was still playing with the sand, letting it fall between
-her fingers carefully as though trying to count
-the grains. Then she threw the stuff away, brushed the
-palm of her hand clean, and sat up. Drawing a little
-closer to her, he put his hand round her waist, just as
-he had done when they were on the sandspit, and just as
-on the sandspit, she let it rest there—for a moment.
-Then, with a queer little laugh, she removed the hand and
-struggled to her feet.</p>
-
-<p>He rose up and they went on, without a word. Then
-presently they began to talk about indifferent matters almost
-as though nothing had occurred.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257">257</a></span>
-They found a nest of turtles’ eggs, and Jude marked
-it; farther along they came upon something strange, a
-sort of platform half-covered with sand. Jude said it
-was the foretop of a ship sunk and sanded over.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s the <i>Nombre de Dios</i>, maybe,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe,” said Jude. “It’s the foretop of an old ship,
-anyhow. See, where the mast’s broke off—she’s thirty
-or forty foot under that.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much good to us, even if she is the <i>Nombre de
-Dios</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not much.”</p>
-
-<p>The gulls seemed to agree, and the little waves, falling
-crystal clear on the beach.</p>
-
-<p>It was near the end of the spit just here, and the
-sands shelved out, losing themselves in the immeasurable
-loneliness of the sea stretching to Mariguana and the
-Caicos and the northern shoulder of South America.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, on her knees with a bit of driftwood, was scraping
-away the sand from the edge of the sunk foretop,
-when something caught her eye.</p>
-
-<p>A turtle had landed where they had marked the eggs.
-It was so far away that it did not look bigger than a
-threepenny bit.</p>
-
-<p>She flung the bit of driftwood away, rose to her feet,
-and started running, taking the extreme sea-edge where
-the sand was hard. Ratcliffe followed. They were half
-a minute too late, the turtle turning back to the sea and
-leaving them spent and laughing. She got down on her
-knees and hived the eggs in her hat still laughing. He
-helped, filling his hat and his pockets, and then they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258">258</a></span>
-started for the lagoon edge, Jude suddenly in the wildest
-spirits. He had never seen her in such high, good
-spirits. When they got aboard it was just the same.
-Even Satan’s maniacal passion for old junk, expressed at
-supper in the determination to spend two more days
-picking and scraping at the <i>Haliotis</i>, did not depress her,
-it only made her laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ll be cryin’ before you’ve done if you go on
-laughin’ like that,” said Satan. “What’s possessed you
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough she was. The words acted like a pin on
-a bubble.</p>
-
-<p>She flushed, pushed her plate away, half rose, and then
-sat down again.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re always going on at me! Whatch’a want me
-to do? If I’m crying, I ought to be laughin’, an’ if I’m
-laughin’ I ought to be crying! I’ll laugh as much as I
-want—”</p>
-
-<p>Then, logically, she broke into violent tears, rose, and
-ran on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“What the hell-nation’s the matter with her?” asked
-Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know,” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259">259</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXI"></a>CHAPTER XXXI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE GO-ASHORE HAT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> had time to think over the matter as he lay in
-his bunk that night.</p>
-
-<p>He fell to wondering, among other things, what the
-spell was that drew him toward Jude and held him.</p>
-
-<p>Was it the indefinable attractive quality that had made
-her mother a “nacheral calamity” where men were concerned,
-or just the power of youth? Scarcely the latter.
-He had met lots of youth in his time, and it had not
-attracted him much; besides, when you have only to look
-into the looking-glass to see youth, it is at a discount.</p>
-
-<p>Puzzling over the matter, he came to the bedrock fact
-that Jude, in some extraordinary way, had the power to
-make him feel more alive than he had ever felt before.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving other things aside, there were an honesty,
-faithfulness, and simplicity about Jude that removed her
-from the category of bifurcated beings and raised her to
-the level of a dog.</p>
-
-<p>Instinct told him that this compound quality was worth
-more than all the gold lying under the hatches of the
-<i>Nombre de Dios</i>, more than all the diamonds in the
-Rand, when combined with that other quality speaking in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260">260</a></span>
-her level gaze,—steadfastness, the something that would
-make her keep the wheel in all weathers.</p>
-
-<p>But these excellencies would have been nothing without
-the impossibilities with which they were allied,—social
-and conventual impossibilities. The one reacted on
-the other, making an irresistible whole combined with
-the something else that was Jude.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered the queer little laugh with which she
-had freed herself from his hand round her waist—then
-he fell asleep and dreamt that he and Jude and a lot of
-larrikins were lying in wait by a harbor blue as the sea
-off Jamaica, to clod bathing nigger girls; then he was
-chasing Jude round and round a tree, only to catch her
-and find that she was Carquinez.</p>
-
-<p>When he got on deck next morning he found the ship
-deserted. The others were away on the sandbank, and
-he amused himself by fishing till they returned.</p>
-
-<p>Jude showed no traces of the tears of the last night,
-and Satan was elated. He had been examining the
-wreck-wood, and his experienced eye backed the declaration
-of Jude. It was the foretop of a ship, right enough,
-and, a hundred to one, so he declared, the foretop of the
-<i>Nombre</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, wondering vaguely why he seemed so pleased
-over the find, considering the sand conditions, asked him
-the chances of raising her. Then said Satan, seeming
-to turn his gaze inward upon his awful and profound
-knowledge of the sea and its ways:</p>
-
-<p>“If you was to get all the dridgers from H’vana to
-Pensacola and dridged till your eyes bugged out o’ your<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261">261</a></span>
-head an’ your tongue hanged down to your heels, you
-wouldn’t clear her—siltin’—but she’s a sure enough mug
-trap.”</p>
-
-<p>“How do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, with that story and that chart an’ that old
-foretop, I could set half Havana diggin’ like dogs for a
-bone, to say nothin’ of private parties an’ syndikits an’
-such things—maybe I will, too, some day.”</p>
-
-<p>They put out after breakfast for the <i>Haliotis</i> and another
-load of “old junk.” Satan rowed back with it,
-leaving Jude and Ratcliffe on board,—Ratcliffe collecting
-things forward, and Jude grubbing about in the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p>Having collected the odds and ends in a heap, he
-turned his eyes to the <i>Sarah</i>. Satan, having tied up the
-dinghy, was busy transhipping his plunder. Then the
-beauty of the morning sea flooding into the lagoon, held
-him for a moment. He followed the gulls in their flight,
-noted the sudden break from emerald to ultramarine
-deepening to purple, and beyond the reefs the sudden
-glitter of a leaping fish. Then he remembered Jude down
-below.</p>
-
-<p>He came to the companionway and down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin was brilliant with sunlight, with water reflections
-through the open portholes playing on the ceiling
-and polished maple and venesta of the walls. Across
-a pile of truck and bunk bedding heaped on the table he
-caught a glimpse of the upper part of Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Jude, fancying herself entirely alone, and yielding to
-some prompting or other, had picked up the despised<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262">262</a></span>
-go-ashore hat and put it on; she was looking at herself
-in the mirror fixed to the after bulkhead. She was looking
-at herself with her head now straight and now tilted
-slightly to one side; then the head turned, but she did
-not see Ratcliffe: her eyes were still fixed on the hat,
-she was looking at it sidewise.</p>
-
-<p>All her unconscious movements might have been those
-of a lady in a milliner’s shop trying on a hat in a critical
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>She had not heard him coming down the companionway,
-owing to the fact that he was in his bare feet, and
-she did not hear him go up again.</p>
-
-<p>On deck he took his seat on an old box upended close
-to the mainmast stump, and considered the thing he had
-just witnessed in a philosophical spirit.</p>
-
-<p>It was like seeing a chrysalis crack and a butterfly’s
-wing protruding.</p>
-
-<p>If Jude had not been admiring herself in that hat, then
-sight was a liar and its evidence worthless. But Jude
-was as honest as the day. She had greeted the thing
-with derision, brought it on deck to show as an object
-of mirth, and flung it down the skylight opening with contempt—yesterday
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>What had happened since then to make her consider
-the thing at all, let alone wear it before a looking-glass?</p>
-
-<p>Had she put it on in derision and to see what a guy
-she looked? Not a bit! She had made friends with
-that hat! Those few movements of the head spoke of
-consideration not derision, in a language old as the earliest
-feather headdress and more universal than Esperanto.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263">263</a></span>
-Then he remembered last evening on the sandspit and
-her sudden passage from despondency to high spirits; he
-remembered her queer little laugh as she removed his
-hand from round her waist,—had that been the sound of
-the rift coming in the chrysalis casing?</p>
-
-<p>For a moment he almost yielded to the desire to go
-below and see if the butterfly had really arrived. Then
-he checked himself. There was time, plenty of time; besides,
-Satan was putting off again in the dinghy for another
-load.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, over this business, like a man in drink or a
-lunatic, had his hot fits and cold fits. A hot fit had suddenly
-come on him.</p>
-
-<p>The petrol-paraffin engine had begun suddenly to shout
-to him that it must be taken. A glorious idea, too, had
-evolved itself in his brain,—why not fit it to the <i>Sarah</i>;
-not there in the lagoon, of course, but in some port?
-All that was required would be some structural alterations
-and a shaft-hole in the quarter; he reckoned the
-fitting would cost under three hundred dollars.</p>
-
-<p>He didn’t want the thing, really,—masts and sails were
-good enough for his pottering-about work,—it was the
-passion of a woman for jewelry. The <i>Sarah</i> would be
-a nobbier boat with an auxiliary,—sea swank, purely, exhibiting
-the only apparent weak spot in his character.</p>
-
-<p>That spare Bergius propeller had begun revolving in
-his mind days ago,—“thrud—thrud—thrud! See me
-drive the <i>Sarah</i>, see me drive the <i>Sarah</i>!” He had examined
-the propeller already attached and found the
-blades all broken. The shaft was intact, and, beaching<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264">264</a></span>
-the <i>Haliotis</i> stern on in that quiet lagoon, it would have
-been possible to fit on the spare one and take her off
-unmasted, as she was under her own motive power.</p>
-
-<p>He had a vague notion of the structure of engines and
-Yankee ingenuity enough to have driven her, but the
-fact of her anchor being down, as before stated, and the
-fact that he had already “torn the tripes” out of her
-plundered the sail room and the store room, removed
-brasswork that would have taken weeks to replace, and
-generally left her like a scooped cheese, prevented an
-idea of salvage.</p>
-
-<p>Taking the <i>Haliotis</i> into port he would have to declare
-her like a box of cigars,—a box of cigars belonging to
-another man and half the cigars gone.</p>
-
-<p>Coming over the rail, Ratcliffe saw the new light in
-his eye and wondered what it portended.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve been thinkin’,” said Satan, taking his stand by the
-mast stump and surveying the heap of stuff collected by
-the other, “I’ve been thinkin’ it’s tomfoolery to leave that
-engine.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, brought up by the sound of the dinghy coming
-alongside, appeared at the saloon companionway. She
-wore no hat.</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord!” said Ratcliffe, aghast. “You don’t
-mean to say—but it’s impossible. We haven’t the means
-to take it.”</p>
-
-<p>“There’s enough of the mast left to rig a tackle to,”
-said Satan, “and that hatch leads right down to the
-engine place. The heavy fittin’s are easy raised from the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265">265</a></span>
-bed-plates, and they’re not too heavy to go in the dinghy.
-We can tow her with the c’lapsible.”</p>
-
-<p>“But what can you do with the thing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Fit her to the <i>Sarah</i>, of course.”</p>
-
-<p>“Here, in the lagoon?” asked the horrified Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I wouldn’t mind if I had the hands and the
-tools for the job,” replied Satan. “Naw, it’s beyont me.
-I’ll have to take her to a port to have it done,—not
-Havana, neither: there’s too many eyes in Havana and
-people that know my business. Vera Cruz is the place.
-I know a Spanish yard there’ll do the job.”</p>
-
-<p>“The year after next,” put in Jude, “supposing you do
-manage to get it aboard, you know what the dagoes are,
-and you’ll knock the inside of the <i>Sarah</i> to flinders. She
-won’t be the same boat with that old traction injin in
-her—I wish we’d never struck this cay!”</p>
-
-<p>She sat down on the combing of the skylight and
-folded her hands. Ratcliffe had never seen her do that
-before. He stood torn between two things,—the desire
-to please Satan and the desire to please Jude. Pulling
-on the side of Jude there was also the sure foreknowledge
-of the heavy work that would be required. That did not
-frighten him; but it did seem to him that they had done
-enough and ought to be satisfied. It was like burglars
-going for the kitchen boiler after having removed the
-plate, furniture, and very bed-linen of a house.</p>
-
-<p>All the same he could not but admire Satan. Time
-was pressing, it was quite possible that a salvage boat
-might poke her nose into the lagoon at any moment.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266">266</a></span>
-Satan knew this as well as he, yet it did not move him.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s not a dago yard,” said Satan, evading the traction
-engine dig, “it’s French, and I’ve been wanting an
-auxiliary for years. Pap was with me, only he was
-awful slow over business, and here’s one for nix. I’m
-goin’ down to have a look at her.”</p>
-
-<p>He dived below.</p>
-
-<p>Jude sat brooding.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind,” said Ratcliffe. “It’s not a big engine,
-and he and I will be able to do it with a tackle. I’m not
-going to let him put you to work on it.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m not bothering about that,” said Jude fatefully.
-“It’s when it’s fixed up I’m thinking of.”</p>
-
-<p>“How?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll make me drive the durned thing.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he won’t.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s to stop him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lots of things—leave it to me.”</p>
-
-<p>He was cut short by Satan’s voice calling him to come
-below. Down below he had to follow all sorts of details
-pointed out, details proving the desirability of the prize
-and the miraculous ease of its removal.</p>
-
-<p>Then they came on deck and put off for dinner. But
-Satan was never destined to lift that engine. Fate had
-fixed it to its bed-plates more securely than screws and
-nuts could hold it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267">267</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXII"></a>CHAPTER XXXII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">CLEARY!</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Dinner</span> was over and Jude had run up on deck.
-Suddenly her voice came down through the open
-skylight.</p>
-
-<p>“Below there! Cleary’s coming!”</p>
-
-<p>Satan jumped from his place like a man shot. Next
-moment he was on deck. Jude pointed and handed him
-the binoculars she had been using.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s them!” said Satan, after a long look. “Cuss
-the swabs!”</p>
-
-<p>He handed the glasses to Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>Away to the north two sails cut the sea-line. With
-the aid of the glasses two vessels leaped into view,—a
-topsail schooner and a smaller vessel of fore-and-aft
-rig. Even with the glasses he could not have been sure
-that these were the <i>Natchez</i> and the <i>Juan</i> like a pair
-of evil dogs hunting in company; but Satan was sure,
-so was Jude.</p>
-
-<p>“They’re coming dead for the cay,” said Jude. Satan
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>He had been filling his pipe when the hail came, he
-lit it now, walked to the starboard rail to be alone, and
-stood with his eyes fixed on the <i>Haliotis</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268">268</a></span>
-The position was as bad as could be. First of all,
-these ruffians would be sure to make him bail up even
-more than he had had out of them; secondly, they would
-have the laugh at him and post him as a mug all over
-Havana; thirdly, they would give him away about the
-<i>Haliotis</i>, if they discovered how he had plundered her.</p>
-
-<p>Having smoked for a moment in silence, he turned
-to his companions.</p>
-
-<p>It was a boast of Satan’s that he had never lost a
-spar, a fact partly due to luck, partly to his foreseeing
-eye; like a good general, he had plans for all eventualities.</p>
-
-<p>“They won’t be in the lagoon for a couple of hours,”
-said he, “with this wind and all. Come on aboard the
-old tub.”</p>
-
-<p>“What are you going to do?” asked Jude. “Sink her
-at her moorings?”</p>
-
-<p>“No time; besides, they’d see her on the lagoon floor.
-It’s up anchor and let her drift on the sands.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the good of that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord! Don’t stand jibberin’! I’ve got my plan.
-Into the dinghy with you!”</p>
-
-<p>They rowed over to the <i>Haliotis</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The one thing that Satan had not coveted was, mercifully,
-the winch; it was of the type of the West Country
-winch, and not a spot on Pap’s patent, at least in
-Satan’s eyes.</p>
-
-<p>They set to, got the anchor in, secured it, and rowed
-back to the <i>Sarah</i>. Then they watched the <i>Haliotis</i> drift.
-The tide was going out. She was close to the eastern<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269">269</a></span>
-arm of the spit, and that arm had a bead in it toward
-the narrowing entry.</p>
-
-<p>Satan reckoned she would take the sand a hundred
-yards or so from the entry, and he reckoned right.</p>
-
-<p>But they had no time to watch her. The deck of the
-<i>Sarah</i> was lumbered with stuff that bad to be stowed out
-of sight. It took an hour before everything was shipshape
-and snug, and by that time the oncomers were
-close in, their sails big bellied with the wind, beating
-up for the entrance.</p>
-
-<p>They came through, the <i>Juan</i> leading, the <i>Natchez</i>
-some two cable lengths behind; then, with canvas threshing
-and the gulls yelling round them, they dropped their
-anchors, the <i>Juan</i> to starboard of the <i>Sarah</i> and the
-<i>Natchez</i> farther up the lagoon. Ratcliffe had expected
-demonstrations of hostility: there were none.</p>
-
-<p>They could see Sellers directing the fellows forward,
-and they could make out Cleary on the deck of the
-<i>Natchez</i>. Then they saw Sellers drop below, and
-through the binoculars they could see Cleary as though
-he were only a few yards off,—he was smoking and
-giving orders to the hands. Then he came and spat over
-the rail and stood looking toward the <i>Sarah</i> with his eyes
-shaded; having finished this inspection, he too dropped
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d a sight sooner they’d shook their fists at us,” said
-Satan. “They know they’ve got us, sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Sellers reappeared on the deck, and the <i>Juan</i>
-dropped a boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Here he is,” said Jude, “and whether he’s got us or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270">270</a></span>
-whether he hasn’t, he ain’t coming aboard this ship!”</p>
-
-<p>She ran forward and fetched the mop from the hole
-where it was stowed.</p>
-
-<p>“Let up!” said Satan. “I don’t want no fightin’: I
-tell you, I’ve got a plan; I don’t want no mops in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“He ain’t coming aboard,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<p>As the boat of the <i>Juan</i> came alongside, Sellers, in
-the sternsheets, raised his hand in a lordly fashion and
-slightly, as befitted a superior taking notice of an inferior.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, Satan!” cried Sellers as the bow oar hooked
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo, yourself!” replied Satan. “What you doin’
-down here away?”</p>
-
-<p>“Tell you when I get aboard,” said Sellers. “Why,
-there’s the kid! Hullo, Kid!”</p>
-
-<p>“Claws off!” cried Jude. “You try to come aboard
-and I’ll land you with this mop! You can talk from
-the boat.”</p>
-
-<p>Sellers sat down again in the sternsheets.</p>
-
-<p>“She won’t let you aboard,” said Satan, speaking as
-though Jude were not present. “You shouldn’t have
-sassed her the way you did over there at Lone.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m sure I beg your pardon,” said Sellers. “I’m
-trooly sorry to have trod on a female’s sussuptibilities;
-but what I’m wishin’ to say is this, and it’s as easy said
-from here as on deck: You’ve got to come aboard the
-<i>Juan</i>, you and that thousand dollars you’ve had from
-Cark, to say nothin’ of the coin you’ve had from Cleary,
-an’ be tried by C’t Martial, an’ take your sentence. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271">271</a></span>
-you don’t, I’ll board you, me and Cleary, an’ go through
-your ship, an’ fling the lot of you in the lagoon—d’you
-take me? I’m not funnin’.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll come,” said Satan. “I want to have a talk with
-Cark anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“And he wants to have a talk with you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right. Off you go, and I’ll follow.”</p>
-
-<p>“Swab!” said Jude, “are you going to pay them that
-thousand dollars back? I’d sooner chuck it in the lagoon!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d pay a thousand dollars to see Cark done in the
-eye,” replied Satan. “Where’s the damage? I’ve hived
-more than two thousand dollars’ worth of stuff off that
-blistered derelic’. You leave them cusses to me.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272">272</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE FIGHT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap al"><span class="smcap1">As</span> they watched Sellers pulling back they saw the
-<i>Juan</i> drop a boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Hullo!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>He put the glass to his eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark’s coming off. He’s in the sternsheets, him and
-his patch—what’s up now?”</p>
-
-<p>The two boats approached one another, and then hung
-together, evidently in consultation. Then the oars took
-the water and they approached the <i>Sarah</i>, Sellers leading.
-Satan, who had found a piece of chewing-gum in
-his pocket, put it into his mouth and began to chew,
-leisurely, like a cow on her cud, while he watched the
-approaching boats.</p>
-
-<p>“What you want?” shouted Satan when they were in
-speaking distance.</p>
-
-<p>“Cark says you’re to come aboard right now,” replied
-Sellers. “You’ve played him one trick, and he don’t
-want you to play him another.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, don’t he?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, he don’t.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan spat into the water alongside and leaned comfortably
-on the rail. Carquinez was as close to the <i>Sarah</i><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273">273</a></span>
-as Sellers, yet he spoke no word, leaving his deputy to
-do the talking, and contenting himself with making occasional
-birdlike noises.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, ruffled, for all his appearances of
-calm, “you can tell him I’ll come when I want to, and
-that won’t be before tomorrow morning, for his damn
-cheek! Ahoy there, Cark! Ain’t you got a tongue in
-your head?”</p>
-
-<p>“He’s like a blessed canary bird,” cut in Jude. “Hi,
-there, Sellers! what you done with the cage?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that your ultermatum?” demanded Sellers, ignoring
-Jude and addressing Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“My which matum?”</p>
-
-<p>“Is that all you gotta say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, out with it!”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe had never seen Satan “het up” till now, as,
-straightening himself and gripping the rail, he let out:</p>
-
-<p>“Gotta say? Why, if I’m sayin’ from now to the
-end o’ next week, I couldn’t say the beginnin’ of my
-opinion of you, right from the truck of Cleary’s old cod
-boat to the keel o’ that old disgrace you ripped of her
-guts when she was a yacht—you an’ your crew of cockroaches
-an’ dagoes—right from the soles of Cleary’s flat
-feet to the end of your bottle nose—you and your ultermatum!</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all. I haven’t time to be wastin’ on you.
-I’ll come if I have a mind to and when I want, without
-waitin’ for your orders—now scatter yourselves!”</p>
-
-<p>“Right,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274">274</a></span>
-He gave an order to the boat’s crew, and the boat
-turned, and, followed by Carquinez, made back to the
-<i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, his hand on the rail, watched them, still
-chewing.</p>
-
-<p>Not a word spoke he, the bulge in his cheek steadfast
-against the skyline and his eyes fixed on the boats.</p>
-
-<p>Then he suddenly turned.</p>
-
-<p>“Them thugs will try to board us now,” said Satan.
-“We’ve gotta fight. There’s Cleary puttin’ off, and we’ll
-have the whole Noah’s ark on us in two ticks. We’ve
-gotta get the ammunition ready.”</p>
-
-<p>“There are guns down below,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Guns!” said Satan. “God bless you, we don’t want
-no guns! Cark’s too frightened of the law to let any
-of his men use knives or pistols. Jude, where’s that
-tub of stinkin’ bait—you haven’t hove it over, have you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nope.”</p>
-
-<p>“Cart it along. Rat; fetch up them five bottles of
-whisky,—they’re better’n bumshells,—and there’s an old
-fryin’ pan in the galley with a hole in it. Fetch it with
-the rest. There’s nothin’ like a fryin’ pan for beltin’
-people—you can’t miss. What you gettin’ at Jude?”</p>
-
-<p>“The mop,” said Jude. “I don’t want nothing better
-for sweepin’ up rubbish!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, maybe; but they’ll fight better’n you think.
-Lord! if I only had a roll of barb wire! Here they
-come! Hurry up, Rat!”</p>
-
-<p>The three boats, Sellers and Cleary leading, were in
-motion and making for the <i>Juan</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275">275</a></span>
-“We’ve only two to reckon with,” said Satan, as Ratcliffe
-arrived, Jude helping him up with the ammunition.
-“Cark won’t join in: he’s too frightened of his
-skin. Now then, ready with your weapons!”</p>
-
-<p>He was right. Cark’s boat, half a cable-length away,
-backed water while the redoubtable Cleary and Sellers
-rushed like hawks on the prey, aiming to board the
-<i>Sarah</i> to starboard, Cleary forward, Sellers aft.</p>
-
-<p>But the men at the oars were not used to this sort
-of work. In their enthusiasm and despite the curses of
-their captains, they held on too long, nearly smashed
-the boat’s bows against the side of the <i>Sarah</i>, and fell
-into wild confusion trying to get their oars in under
-the bombardment from the deck. Over the clamor of
-the gulls rose the shrill curses and shouts of the dagoes,
-the whooping of Satan, the smashing of bottles, while
-over all the perfume of bad fish and poisonous whisky
-rose like the fume of the fight; but the attackers held,
-held by teeth and claws and boathooks, while the wily
-Carquinez, on the fringe of the fight, voiceful for once,
-standing up and clutching his coat together, shouted directions—unheeded
-as unheard.</p>
-
-<p>Twice Sellers was almost on board, and twice Jude’s
-mop sent him head over heels back; but now Cleary had
-made good forward, backed by two of his crew, and
-while Jude, rushing to Ratcliffe’s aid, drove him back
-with the mop in the pit of his stomach, Sellers, eyes
-shut, head down, and fighting Satan like a mad bull,
-gained the deck, gripped Satan, slipped, fell, and rolled
-with him in the scuppers. Three dagoes had followed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_276">276</a></span>
-Sellers and flung themselves like dogs on the stragglers;
-but now Jude and Ratcliffe, free for a moment, flung
-themselves on the dagoes, broke the fight, freed Satan,
-and sent the whole lot bundling over, Sellers and all—only
-to find that Cleary had made good again, and after
-Cleary half his boat’s crew.</p>
-
-<p>Led by Satan, who had seized the frying pan, the defenders
-hurled themselves on Cleary.</p>
-
-<p>Satan was right, you can’t miss with a frying pan.
-Cleary went down before it. Ratcliffe, using only his
-fists, had floored the biggest of the dagoes, and the rest
-were crowding back helter skelter, when a shout from
-Sellers, who had regained the deck, brought the battle
-to a pause.</p>
-
-<p>“Stop fightin’, you damn fools!” cried Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Lord! Look!” cried Jude.</p>
-
-<p>The port side of the <i>Sarah</i> was turned to the entrance
-of the lagoon, and into the lagoon was gliding a long,
-lean destroyer, shearing the blue-green water from her
-fore foot.</p>
-
-<p>Being to starboard, the attackers had not seen her,
-and the men on deck had been too busy.</p>
-
-<p>Carquinez alone had sighted her. The effect was
-magical. Peace fell like a suddenly dropped dish-cover,
-and over the rail came Carquinez and half a dozen more
-Spaniards from the boats.</p>
-
-<p>“Now we’re done!” said Sellers. “She’s a Britisher,
-and this damn sandbank’s British and we’ll be had to
-the Bahamas Courts o’ Inquiry and Lord knows what
-all. Referred to Havana for inquiries. They’ve seen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_277">277</a></span>
-us at it, no use in denyin’ it. Look at them cusses’ bloody
-noses and Cleary flattened out. Kick him alive, some
-of you fools! Here they come!”</p>
-
-<p>The destroyer had cast anchor and dropped a boat.
-With the terrible precision of a hawk or a warship
-closing on its prey, she was on to the <i>Sarah</i>. A blue
-and gold man held the yoke lines, and the oars of the
-rowers rowed like one.</p>
-
-<p>“Look at that image on the sternsheets,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave him to me,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s your game?”</p>
-
-<p>“Shut your head! Here he is!”</p>
-
-<p>The boat came alongside. The oars rising like one,
-fell with a crash, the bow oar hooked on, and over the
-rail came a sublieutenant of the British Navy, smooth
-of face and neat as though just taken from a bandbox.</p>
-
-<p>“What the devil are you fellows up to, fighting here?”
-asked the sublieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Satan broke into a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>“We’re movie men,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re what?”</p>
-
-<p>“Movin’ pictures.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh—cinematograph?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s it.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, fired with admiration for this Satanic move,
-joined in laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you think we were fighting, really? Well, that’s
-funny. What’s the name of your ship?”</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Albatross</i>,” replied the sublieutenant, completely
-and roundly taken in. “You’re English, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_278">278</a></span>
-“Yes, I’m English. Joined the show some time ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s that hooker on the sand over there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that’s part of our show. Boat supposed to have
-been wrecked—these chaps are pirates.”</p>
-
-<p>“Jolly good make-up!” said the other, surveying the
-pirates and taking in Cark, also Cleary, who, resuscitated
-in time, was leaning over the rail chewing and
-spitting into the water.</p>
-
-<p>The awful question, “Where’s your camera?” never
-came. If it had, Satan would no doubt have met it;
-but the sublieutenant was new to this sort of business
-and not on the hunt for evidence. The thing was palpable
-and plain. No complaint came from the attacked,
-and attacked and attackers were all seemingly friends.
-The words “cinematograph company” covered the situation
-completely.</p>
-
-<p>He gave a few words of information about the
-<i>Albatross</i>. She had put in for a small repair and would
-be off again tomorrow morning. Then he dropped into
-his boat and the incident was closed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, you cusses,” said Satan, “see where you have
-landed yourselves! Where’d you have been only for
-me?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I don’t deny you slipped the hood over that
-Britisher pretty smart,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>Cleary turned his head and looked at Sellers. “<em>You</em>
-don’t deny! Why, you bloody barnacle scraper, I told
-you to hold off from the business! Satan, I forgive
-you that clap on the head. Lord love me! I’ll never
-carry a derringer again. Give me a fryin’ pan, that’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_279">279</a></span>
-the weppin; you can’t dodge it no more than you can
-dodge a thunderstorm.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Satan, “fryin’ pan back the lot of you,
-and I’ll be on board the <i>Juan</i> inside half an hour and
-settle my business with you. If Cark had kept his mouth
-shut instead of givin’ me orders, we’d have finished it
-by now and no heads broke.”</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll be waiting for you,” said Sellers.</p>
-
-<p>They tumbled into the boats and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“They never drew a knife,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Cark took their knives from them,” said Satan.
-“He didn’t want no blood spillin’ and trouble,—too much
-afraid of the law.”</p>
-
-<p>Jude, who had collapsed sitting-wise on the deck, began
-to laugh hysterically.</p>
-
-<p>“What are you laughin’ at?” demanded Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“I dunno,” said Jude.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_280">280</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXIV"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“I’LL TAK!”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Ten</span> minutes later Satan and Ratcliffe boarded the
-<i>Juan</i>. Cleary was already on board, down in the
-cabin with the others; Cark and a bottle of gin were
-presiding at one end of the table. Satan, with a nod
-to the company, came to the table and took his seat;
-motioning Ratcliffe to take the seat opposite to him.</p>
-
-<p>It was like a meeting of a board of directors, and
-the table just held the six comfortably.</p>
-
-<p>What followed struck the unaccustomed Ratcliffe with
-astonishment,—the amiability of it,—it might have been
-a card party, with Satan the loser—momentarily.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, gentlemen,” said Satan, “what’s to pay?”</p>
-
-<p>There were extra glasses on the table and a box of
-cigars. The cigars were pushed along by Sellers as he
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s Cark’s loss of time,” said Sellers, “not to
-say mine and Cleary’s. We tried for you round Rum
-Cay when you gave us the slip, and then there was the
-run down here. A thousand dollars to us that means,
-and five hundred to Cleary.”</p>
-
-<p>“Makin’ it two thousand five hundred and forty,” said
-Satan. “I’m agreeable—and the derelic’ is mine.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_281">281</a></span>
-“Which derelic’?” asked Sellers innocently.</p>
-
-<p>Satan, absolutely disdaining to reply, lit a cigar.</p>
-
-<p>“She’s worth all ten thousand dollars,” said he, “and
-what’s the salvage on that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Y’mean that old dismasted catboat stuck on the sand
-there?” said Cleary. “Not worth five—b’sides she’s our
-meat.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan dropped Sellers and turned to Carquinez.
-“You’ll maybe explain,” said he. “You know the rights
-of the law. If you try to collar that hooker, I’ll come
-in with first claim, and here’s a gentleman will back me
-in law expenses. You know him,—Mr. Ratcliffe, Holt
-&amp; Ratcliffe.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll back you,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“And it seems to me law is not your lay, Cark,” went
-on Satan. “We came in here yesterday and boarded
-and claimed that hooker, and I was fixing the tackle
-for towing when you blew along. The thing’s as
-clear as paint. She’s ours for salvage, and you’re not
-in it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Look here!” began Sellers violently—then he closed
-up: Cark had given him a kick under the table. Then
-there was silence for a moment, during which these two
-scoundrels seemed to brood together telepathically.</p>
-
-<p>Then Cark spoke, addressing Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you take the air on deck for wan moment with
-your friend?” said Cark.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>A few minutes later they were called down again.</p>
-
-<p>“See here,” said Sellers, acting as spokesman for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_282">282</a></span>
-others, “we don’t want to bear hard on you, but we’ve
-been at a big loss over this business.”</p>
-
-<p>“And who let you in for it?” asked Satan. “Haven’t
-you been chasin’ me since last fall over the <i>Nombre</i>?
-Was it my fault she weren’t there?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, anyhow we’re losers. But I’m coming to the
-derelic’. You’ll never be able to do the tow with the
-<i>Sarah</i>—why, the <i>Sarah</i> ain’t bigger than her, and you’re
-underhanded anyhow.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s so,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what I propose is this,” said Sellers. “We’ll
-drop claims for the run down here and only ask a thousand
-and forty of you, and you drop claims on the
-derelic’.”</p>
-
-<p>Satan laughed.</p>
-
-<p>“Maybe you don’t know she’s got an auxiliary in her
-worth four thousand dollars if it’s worth a cent. She’s
-broke her propeller, but she’s got a spare one on board,
-and if I knew anythin’ of injins I’d drive her back on
-her own power. No, I sticks to the derelic’ if that’s
-the best you can offer and here’s your dollars—though
-I’ll have to give you my check for the extra money.”</p>
-
-<p>He produced a bundle; then, with his hand on it:</p>
-
-<p>“If you choose to take the derelic’ for what she’s worth
-and call it quits. I’ll trade, one or the other. I’m not
-set on that tow. But there you are; you know the
-chances.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tak!” suddenly broke in Carquinez, and the business
-was ended.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_283">283</a></span>
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_285">285</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2><a id="PART_III"></a><span class="larger">PART III</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></a>CHAPTER XXXV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE VANISHED LIGHT</span></h2>
-
-<p class="drop-cap a"><span class="smcap1">A week</span> later, toward sundown, the <i>Sarah</i> came up
-the half-mile channel and dropped her hook in
-Havana Harbor close to the old anchorage of the <i>Maine</i>.
-A Royal Mail boat passing out gave her the kick of its
-wash as she settled down to her moorings, a customs
-boat dropped alongside, and the customs men, hailing
-Satan as a friend and brother, came aboard and transacted
-business with him in the cabin. The wind blew
-warm, bringing scents and sounds across the vast harbor,
-fluttering the flags of the shipping, and Ratcliffe,
-standing at the rail, dazzled by the brilliance of the
-scene before him, knew that his cruise was over.</p>
-
-<p>It was like coming to the end of a book,—a volume
-suddenly handed to him by Fate to read, and of which
-he was condemned to write the sequel.</p>
-
-<p>He remembered the morning at Palm Island when
-he boarded the <i>Sarah</i> first, and the picture was still fresh
-in his mind of the <i>Haliotis</i> as they had left her in the
-lagoon at Cormorant, Sellers and Cleary and their men
-swarming about her and tinkering her up. They intended
-to ship the spare propeller and bring her along<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_286">286</a></span>
-under her own motive power to the nearest port, Nassau
-in the Bahamas.</p>
-
-<p>They had been so busy with the engines and the hull
-that they had never noticed how completely she had
-been stripped. They were unconscious of the fact that
-she had been left with her anchor down—unfortunates!
-He could still see them like ants laboring in the sun, at
-the task set to them by the grimly humorous Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Satan had won the game they had forced on him,
-holding, as he did, a thousand and forty dollars, the
-“tripes” of the <i>Haliotis</i>, and the secret of the mug trap,
-to be disposed of, perhaps, later on for a consideration.
-Satan would, no doubt, set other unfortunates digging
-for the <i>Nombre</i> just as he had set Cleary and Sellers
-tinkering and towing at the <i>Haliotis</i>, just as he had held
-up freighters for a bunch of bananas, just as he had
-made Thelusson and his crew careen and scrape the
-<i>Sarah</i>, just as he had made Ratcliffe an accomplice in
-his plans and a handy man to help him in his works;
-yet the funny thing about the scamp was the fact that
-he was absolutely dependable, when not dealing with
-companies or governments or derelicts. Ratcliffe would
-have trusted him with his last penny.</p>
-
-<p>Dependable if you took hold of him by his handle and
-not by his cutting edge! Trustable if you trusted him!</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude came up in her harbor rig; that is to say,
-boots and a coat.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan’s clacking away with the customs an’ the port
-doctor man,” said Jude. “You can’t see across the cabin<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_287">287</a></span>
-with the smoke, and I had to change my rig in the
-galley.”</p>
-
-<p>“You going ashore?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Jude, “Satan’s going. I’ve got to keep
-ship. You going with him?”</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p>Appeared Satan, followed by the port men, who tumbled
-into the boat and rowed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Goin’ ashore?” asked Satan. “Well, I’ll row you to
-the wharf after I’ve had a bite of supper. Jude’ll bring
-the boat back, and we can get a shore boat off for half
-a dollar.”</p>
-
-<p>Half an hour later, just as the electrics were springing
-alive and the anchor lights of the shipping marking the
-dusk blue sky, they started. They stood on the wharf
-steps for a moment watching Jude row off, then they
-turned to the town.</p>
-
-<p>Havana smells different from any other seaport. She
-smells of rum and garlic and dirt and cigars and the
-earth of Cuba, which is different from the earth anywhere
-else. The harbor and the town exchange bouquets;
-the negroes help; Spanish cigarettes, Florida water
-and decaying vegetables lend a hand. Satan led the
-way. He knew the place as well as the inside of his
-pocket, and as he trudged along beside Ratcliffe under
-the electrics across plazas, or through short-cut cut-throat-looking
-byways, he pointed out the notable features
-of the place,—Dutch Pete’s, the Alvarez factory,
-the great opera house, the Calle Commacio, the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_288">288</a></span>
-They passed Florion’s with its marble tables, drinkers,
-and domino players, and Satan suddenly hove to.</p>
-
-<p>“Where d’you want to go now?” said Satan. “D’you
-want drinks?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, I don’t want drinks,” said Ratcliffe. “Come over
-here.”</p>
-
-<p>A blazing cinema palace shone across the way, and
-they entered, Ratcliffe paying.</p>
-
-<p>The place was in black darkness. A cowboy shooting
-up a bar was on the screen, and a man with an electric
-torch led them to their seats.</p>
-
-<p>Then they sat watching the pictures, Satan criticizing
-the actors sometimes, and in a loud voice and not always
-favorably. The cowboy shot himself off the screen, the
-lights flared up for half a minute, went out, and the
-pictures resumed.</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe felt a nudge, and in the darkness Satan’s
-voice, muted now, came in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Say,” whispered Satan, “did you see him?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who?”</p>
-
-<p>“The man that dropped you at Pa’m Island.”</p>
-
-<p>“Skelton!”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s him. He’s sittin’ right a front of you.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure as sure.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton here! But where, then, was the <i>Dryad</i>? Had
-he wrecked her, or what?</p>
-
-<p>The words of Satan seemed to alter everything, from
-the music to the picture of John Bunny on the screen.</p>
-
-<p>The darkness, filled with native Havana scents, became<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_289">289</a></span>
-tinged with the atmosphere of British Respectability.
-Skelton at the pictures! Why, he ought to have been
-at the opera or one of the theaters or walking on the
-<i>alameda</i> digesting his dinner and thinking of Tariff
-Reform or Anglicanism. It seemed impossible; yet
-when the light flared up again there was Skelton, sure
-enough, sitting with another man, and now he was rising,
-evidently tired of the show, and passing out, followed
-by his friend, grave as though he had been attending
-his mother’s funeral instead of the marriage of John
-Bunny to Flora Finch in a Pullman car with negro accompaniments.</p>
-
-<p>He wore evening clothes, covered by a light overcoat.
-Ratcliffe rose and, followed by Satan, pursued him,
-touching him on the shoulder outside and in the full
-blaze of the lamps.</p>
-
-<p>“Good God!” said Skelton. “Ratcliffe!”</p>
-
-<p>“Just got in,” said Ratcliffe. “Had a ripping time.
-Where’s the <i>Dryad</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Up at the wharf, coaling,” replied Skelton, absorbing
-Ratcliffe’s rough and ready garb, the cloth cap he was
-wearing, and Satan. “I’m staying at the Matanzas; but
-I go aboard tomorrow morning, and we’re off in the
-evening. What have you been doing with yourself?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, having no end of fun. We found an old treasure
-ship and blew her up and found she was full of
-skulls and bones. You know Satan?”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, who had ignored Satan, acknowledged his existence
-by a little nod.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’s your friend?” asked Ratcliffe, glancing at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_290">290</a></span>
-Skelton’s companion, who had removed himself a few
-paces.</p>
-
-<p>“Ponsonby—diplomatic service. See here, come on
-board to lunch tomorrow—one-fifteen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right.”</p>
-
-<p>“I have some gear of yours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right. I’ll see about it.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Night.”</p>
-
-<p>“’Night.”</p>
-
-<p>Off he went.</p>
-
-<p>They had seen enough of the pictures, and having no
-inclination for cafés or taverns or gambling shops they
-made back toward the wharves, Satan walking in profound
-silence, Ratcliffe thinking.</p>
-
-<p>The whole evening he had been followed by a miserable
-sort of half-depression. It had attached itself
-to him first on the deck of the <i>Sarah</i>, born of his return
-to civilization; it had managed to decolorize the past
-few weeks and demagnetize Jude.</p>
-
-<p>His conscious mind had never quite gauged the hold
-that Jude had managed to get upon him, and this subconscious
-devil, rising at the touch of civilization, like
-a gas bubble from his conventional past, had burst, with
-spoiling effect, robbing the <i>Sarah</i> of her romance and
-sea-charm and the past few weeks of their brightness.
-Jude had dimmed with everything else, become part and
-parcel of what seemed an illusion.</p>
-
-<p>It was while sitting at the pictures, in black darkness,
-with knowledge of Skelton’s presence, that the atmosphere
-began to clear, the waves to beat again on Cormorant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_291">291</a></span>
-Cay, the gulls to fly and call—and Jude come
-back to life.</p>
-
-<p>He heard again that queer little laugh of hers as she
-removed his hand. He felt again the warm body that
-had rested confidingly against him away there on the
-sandspit.</p>
-
-<p>And then she was out on the black harbor alone in
-the <i>Sarah</i>, while he and Satan were watching the pictures!
-Suppose some lumbering sailing craft being
-towed to her moorings or some incoming mailboat were
-to smash into the <i>Sarah</i>—and they were to row off and
-find nothing—no Jude?</p>
-
-<p>The thought almost made him rise from his seat to
-leave the place. But he could not explain to Satan;
-so he sat on till the lights flared out. And all the time,
-mocking the pictures on the screen, came pictures of
-Jude, all sunlit, real, fresh as herself!</p>
-
-<p>Then, as they pursued their way to the wharf after
-leaving Skelton, the impatience increased; the darkness
-of the night, the blaze of the town, the gay life of the
-streets, and the revelry of the cafés seemed sinister and
-banded in a conspiracy against him and the lonely little
-figure of Jude. The indifference of Skelton, the way
-he had gone hurriedly off, the way he had ignored
-Satan, were part of the business, blended with the blazing
-cafés, the moving crowd of Chinks, colored men, Spaniards,
-and Americans, the brilliance and gaiety without
-heart, that seemed like a barrier between him and the
-humble little <i>Sarah</i> and Jude away out there in the darkness
-alone—waiting for him! It came to him that Jude<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_292">292</a></span>
-was the one sole thing he wanted in the cruel, odd,
-electric-lit world—and he had left her!</p>
-
-<p>They passed through narrow streets like the streets in
-an evil dream and blazing streets hideous with noise.
-Then at last they reached the wharf with its amber
-lights spilling on the black waving water. Satan hired
-a boat, and they put off, two dagoes rowing and Satan
-at the yoke-lines.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sarah</i> was anchored a mile out, and the vast
-three-mile harbor, vague in the starlight and circled by
-the hills, seemed to Ratcliffe more immense than when
-seen by daylight.</p>
-
-<p>Lights, lights everywhere,—scattered lights of shipping,
-some near, some far away, gem-crusted bulks that
-were great liners at anchor, songs and voices, and the
-creak of the oars in the rowlocks! Then a sudden green,
-red, and white light ahead and a fussy and furious little
-tug that nearly ran them down and left them rocking
-in her wash.</p>
-
-<p>“Scowbankers!” said Satan. Then: “I can’t make
-out the light of the <i>Sarah</i>, nohow.”</p>
-
-<p>A clutch came to Ratcliffe’s heart, the clutch of something
-cold and malign which had seemed following him
-ever since Skelton’s presence had made itself felt like
-an evil omen.</p>
-
-<p>They were so far out now that the sounds of the
-town and wharves had died to nothing; but still the
-creak of the oars in the rowlocks kept on. Then came
-Satan’s voice:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_293">293</a></span>
-“That’s her, over beyond them three lights on the
-starboard bow.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe breathed again, and his heart leaped in him
-as he picked out the light.</p>
-
-<p>Satan altered their course.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you sure?” asked Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“You gave me the devil of a fright.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which way?”</p>
-
-<p>“I thought she might have been run down by some
-ship coming in—or something.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, she’s well out of the track,” said Satan.</p>
-
-<p>“All the same, I didn’t feel easy.”</p>
-
-<p>Then they hung silent, Ratcliffe’s eyes on the light and
-his hand in his pocket feeling for dollars to pay the
-boatmen.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s there to pay?” asked he.</p>
-
-<p>“A dollar, seeing there’s two of them,” replied Satan.
-“<i>Sarah</i> ahoy!”</p>
-
-<p>“Ahoy!” came Jude’s voice, and a lantern swung over
-the side.</p>
-
-<p>Satan bundled on board, and Ratcliffe crammed five
-dollars into the hand of the stern oar; then he followed,
-and the fellows pushed off.</p>
-
-<p>“Took it without fightin’!” said Satan. “Lord’s sake,
-what’s come to them?” Then he bundled below to make
-some coffee.</p>
-
-<p>Jude snuffed the lantern out.</p>
-
-<p>She was moving away from the side and away from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_294">294</a></span>
-Ratcliffe, when he caught hold of her round the body.
-She did not resist him. He held her close to his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“What is it?” asked Jude, with a sudden catch in her
-breath and speaking in a whisper. “Whacha want?”</p>
-
-<p>Then his lips met hers, full.</p>
-
-<p>Five minutes later Satan, making his coffee over the
-Primus stove of the <i>Haliotis</i>, heard a struggling sound,
-mixed with stifled laughter, and Ratcliffe appeared at
-the cabin door. He was dragging Jude in; she was half-resisting,
-and her face was hid in the crook of her arm.</p>
-
-<p>“Satan,” said Ratcliffe, “I’m going to marry Jude.”</p>
-
-<p>“God help you!” said Satan.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_295">295</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="vspace"><a id="CHAPTER_XXXVI"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE WEDDING PRESENT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">“I’m</span> going to marry Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>The fantastic fact embodied in those words appeared
-to him folly only next day at one o’clock, with
-the sky to northward breathing hot on Havana Harbor
-like the mouth of a blue oven, flags fluttering to the
-wind, the drum and fife band of an American training
-ship coming over the water, and the <i>Dryad</i> being towed
-to her moorings half a mile shoreward.</p>
-
-<p>The blushing bride-to-be of last night, hiding her nose
-on Ratcliffe’s shoulder, as they sat together on the couch
-before Satan, while he taunted her with the fact that
-now she’d have to get into skirts, had turned back into
-Jude.</p>
-
-<p>She was busy getting the dinghy ready to row her
-fiancé off to the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She was over the side in her, busy and humming a
-tune as she worked, baling out water, fixing the cushions,
-and so on, while Satan watched her in a brooding manner
-over the rail.</p>
-
-<p>A ghastly fear was working in the heart of Satan,
-the fear that Skelton might want the dinghy returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, mind you,” said Satan, “and bring the boat<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_296">296</a></span>
-back. I’d sooner lose me head than that boat. If you
-come back without her, I’ll chuck you in the harbor!
-I’m talking straight.”</p>
-
-<p>Ratcliffe, who had just come on deck dressed for the
-occasion, came to the rail. Jude looked up at him and
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p>He had seen her laughing before, he had seen her
-surly, meditative, brooding, weeping, flushed with anger,
-grumbling; but he had never seen her with a look like
-this,—happy.</p>
-
-<p>Since last night something had come into her eyes that
-made her, when her eyes met his, beautiful. It was as
-though a lamp had been suddenly lit inside her, and
-the magical thing was the knowledge that he himself was
-the lamplighter.</p>
-
-<p>He had created this new something that spoke to him
-right out, right to his heart, right to his soul!</p>
-
-<p>He got into the dinghy, nodded to Satan, and they
-started, Jude at the sculls, her trousers rolled half-way
-up to the knees and her old panama on the back of her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>“Go slow,” said he, “there’s lots of time.” Then,
-when they were out of hearing and he was alone with
-her at last:</p>
-
-<p>“Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“What?”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember yesterday you asked me if I was
-going away, now the anchor was down?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“What would you have done if I had?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_297">297</a></span>
-“I’d a drowned myself in the harbor,” said Jude without
-a moment’s hesitation. “What’s the good of asking?”</p>
-
-<p>“When did you begin to care for me a bit?”</p>
-
-<p>“D’you remember the sandspit?” asked Jude. “I dunno—maybe
-it was beyond then—remember the cache?”</p>
-
-<p>“When I chased you round the tree and—”</p>
-
-<p>Jude screwed up her lips.</p>
-
-<p>“You gave me an awful bang on the head.”</p>
-
-<p>“You frightened the gizzard out of me,” said Jude,
-“and I wasn’t the same after—that night.”</p>
-
-<p>“I remember, I heard you telling Satan that hants
-were chasing you.”</p>
-
-<p>“You were the hants.”</p>
-
-<p>“But you didn’t care for me then. Remember you
-said derricks were only good for hoisting fools off ships
-with.”</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it was a sort of caring turned inside out,”
-said Jude. She turned her head to see if they were making
-for the <i>Dryad</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“You’re letting her off her course,” said she, “unless
-you’re making for that brig.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d just as soon make for her as anywhere else,”
-said he, altering the course, “unless it was the sandspit—Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>“Yep.”</p>
-
-<p>“Imagine if we were alone on the sandspit, you and I,
-just as we were that day, instead of in this rotten old
-harbor—let’s go there!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’m willing.”</p>
-
-<p>“When?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_298">298</a></span>
-“Soon’s you like.”</p>
-
-<p>“We can get a tent and grub, and Satan can take us
-there and come back for us. Damn! here’s the <i>Dryad</i>!”</p>
-
-<p>The first officer of the <i>Dryad</i> was leaning over the rail
-watching them. The stage was down, and Jude brought
-the dinghy alongside.</p>
-
-<p>Then on the stage he watched her rowing off. He
-waved his hand to her, and she replied.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when he reached the deck, he found Skelton
-also at the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“’Morning,” said Ratcliffe. “That’s Satan’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>“Which?” asked Skelton. “That—er—person in the
-boat?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes. But you saw her on deck down at Palm Island,
-didn’t you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I had forgotten,” said Skelton, dismissing the subject.</p>
-
-<p>There were no guests. Ponsonby was to have come,
-but he was indisposed; yet the luncheon was just as
-formal an affair as though a dozen had been present
-instead of two.</p>
-
-<p>Half-way through the meal, however, Ratcliffe’s spirits
-began to brighten under the influence of Perrier Jouet
-and the harlequin thought that began to dance in his
-head, “I am going for a honeymoon to the sandspit
-with Jude!”</p>
-
-<p>He laughed occasionally at nothing in particular, and
-Skelton thought his manner strange, heady, queer, and
-began to thank his stars that Ponsonby was indisposed.
-He noticed also that Ratcliffe’s hands, despite scrubbing,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_299">299</a></span>
-bore the evidence of hard work not dissociated with tar.
-There was also something queer about his hair.</p>
-
-<p>There was! Satan had barbarized it down at Cormorant
-with the pair of scissors he used on Jude.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, in asking Ratcliffe on board to luncheon, had
-considered himself a most forgiving individual. Leaving
-aside their little quarrel at Palm Island, remained
-the fact that Ratcliffe had left his ship, deserted him for
-the company of those Yankee “scowbankers,” and, to
-make matters worse, Ratcliffe seemed to have enjoyed
-the exchange.</p>
-
-<p>Now, in closer company with the delinquent, he was
-beginning to regret his forgiveness. “The man had deteriorated!”</p>
-
-<p>As a result of this impression his manner had stiffened;
-he felt irritated and bored.</p>
-
-<p>The steward had withdrawn, having placed the dessert
-on the table, and Skelton was in the act of carving a
-pineapple in the only way a pineapple ought to be carved,—that
-is to say by tearing it into pieces with two forks,—when
-Ratcliffe, who had been staring at the fruit as
-though hypnotized, suddenly broke into a chuckle of
-laughter.</p>
-
-<p>The pineapple, connecting itself, maybe, with canned
-pineapples robbed from the store room of the <i>Haliotis</i>,
-had suddenly brought up the vision of Satan.</p>
-
-<p>Satan in a new guise—Satan as a matchmaker!</p>
-
-<p>All sorts of things, some almost half-forgotten, rushed
-together to clothe Satan in this new garment. He remembered<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_300">300</a></span>
-Satan’s solicitude for Jude’s future, Satan’s
-complacency when he and Jude had gone off to the sandspit
-together, his conversations about Jude, the complete
-absence of surprise with which he had taken the business
-of last night,—a hundred things, and all pointing
-in the same direction and to the fact that Satan had
-wished the business, just as he had wished the dinghy
-away from Skelton, just as he had wished Ratcliffe on
-board of the <i>Sarah Tyler</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He, Ratcliffe, was part of the sea-pickings of this
-gipsy, part and parcel with bunches of bananas, pots
-of paint, sailcloth, mainsheet buffers, cringles, and so
-on! He was annexed to fit Jude just as the mast-winch
-of the <i>Haliotis</i> was annexed to fit the <i>Sarah</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Jude herself had declared that Satan had brought him
-on board because he “wanted him.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton paused in his operation on the pineapple and
-stared at the other.</p>
-
-<p>“I beg your pardon,” said Ratcliffe, “but something
-has just struck me so horribly funny I couldn’t help
-laughing—anyhow, the joke is against myself. Look
-here, Skelton, I want to tell you something—I’m—m—going
-to marry a girl.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed—but what is there horribly funny about that?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing—it’s not that, it’s something else; but let’s
-start with that. I’m going to marry that girl who rowed
-me over here today, Satan’s sister.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton laid down his fork. All his starch had vanished.
-Surprised out of his life, he seemed suddenly to
-grow younger and more natural looking.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_301">301</a></span>
-“Good God!” said Skelton, staring at the other. “You
-don’t mean—”</p>
-
-<p>“I do. I don’t know why I am telling you, but there
-it is. You can’t understand in the least—couldn’t hope
-to make you.”</p>
-
-<p>Now Skelton with his starch off and in an emergency
-was a sound man, with a heart as good as any ordinary
-mortal’s.</p>
-
-<p>He had an eye that no little detail ever escaped. He
-had seen Jude at Palm Island, he had heard her speak,
-he had seen her half an hour ago, and Ratcliffe’s manner
-left him in no doubt as to his absolute earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>The man was about to commit suicide, social suicide.
-He had seen men do the same thing often in different
-ways.</p>
-
-<p>He pushed the pineapple away and rose from the
-table.</p>
-
-<p>“Come into the smoke room,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>In the smoke room he rang for coffee. Not a word
-about Jude. Dead silence.</p>
-
-<p>Then, when the coffee was brought and the door closed,
-he turned to the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Ratcliffe, you can’t do this thing. I know. Let me
-speak for a moment. You are your own master, free
-to do as you choose; but I must speak. I like you.
-Our temperaments are dead different, and we don’t make
-good companions; but you have many sterling qualities,
-and I don’t want to see you come a mucker. You can
-do a thing like this in two minutes; but two hundred
-years won’t get you out of it, once it’s done. (Take<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_302">302</a></span>
-sugar in your coffee? Yes, I remember.) See here!
-I had a young brother once who was going to do just
-the same,—absolutely ruin himself. I managed to stop
-it, saved his future and his name.”</p>
-
-<p>He picked a cigar out of a box and, coming to a dead
-stop in his remarks, cut the end off.</p>
-
-<p>“My dear fellow,” said Ratcliffe, before he could continue,
-“I know absolutely and exactly how you feel on
-the subject and what you would say. I’ve felt it myself
-and said it to myself.</p>
-
-<p>“I began to get fond of her almost from the first.
-If you’d been in my shoes, you would have been just
-the same. No one could help getting fond of her. Then
-after awhile I found how I was drifting, and I said to
-myself, ‘It’s absurd!’ I pictured all my female relations
-and so forth and my position in the wonderful thing
-you call Society.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t sneer at Society,” said Skelton gravely. “That’s
-the easiest sort of cant that ever folly put into a man’s
-mouth. Go on.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re right,” said Ratcliffe. “All the same Society
-galls one at times when the thought of it comes up
-against something alive and fresh and free from snobbery
-like Jude. Well, things went on and on. I hadn’t
-much time for thinking, underhanded as we were; and
-that was the fatal thing, for I absorbed her without
-thinking,—not her face or body, but her character. You
-know that, underhanded and close together on a tub like
-the <i>Sarah</i>, character is the thing that shows and counts,
-and at every hand’s turn hers showed up and got a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_303">303</a></span>
-tighter grip on me. It wasn’t a character all jam, either,
-but it was a thing to count on and real as the sea—you
-can’t understand.”</p>
-
-<p>“I can,” said Skelton, humoring the other, “a fine
-character.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord, no!” said Ratcliffe. “Don’t get away with
-things. <em>Real</em>, that’s the word!”</p>
-
-<p>“But, my dear man—”</p>
-
-<p>“I know what you are going to say. She can’t speak
-King’s English—well, I’m going to teach her. She’s
-dressed like that—well, I’m going to dress her properly
-after awhile.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton suddenly showed a flash of irritation.</p>
-
-<p>“Come up to the point,” said he. “Are you, after
-what I’ve said, still fixed in your purpose? Are you
-going to marry her?”</p>
-
-<p>“As soon as ever I can get a priest off to the old
-<i>Sarah</i>,” replied Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“That is your last word?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said Skelton. His manner changed. He
-had done what he could: it was useless. Ratcliffe was
-no relation of his, and now, contemplating the thing
-with as much detachment as though it were a losing
-horse race or boxing encounter on which he had no bet,
-he lit the cigar, which he had been holding unlighted
-in his fingers, and became almost amiable.</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” said he, “go ahead. After all, it’s not
-my affair; but I’ll be interested to know how you get
-on. By the way, I have some gear of yours on board.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_304">304</a></span>
-“Take it back, will you, like a good chap,” said the
-other, “and leave it with the yacht people at Southampton?
-I’ll pick it up there when I return.”</p>
-
-<p>“You are coming back?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, rather; but not for a year or so, maybe. I’ve
-a lot to do, and when you see us next maybe you’ll
-agree—” He stopped short and relit his cigar, and they
-hung silent, each engaged in his own thoughts.</p>
-
-<p>Now; on the warm sea-scented air entering through
-the open ports, came a voice.</p>
-
-<p>It was the voice of the second officer, addressing someone
-over-side.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there! Bring her round to the quarter-boat
-davits; she’s to come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the dinghy,” said Skelton. “I told them to
-bring her aboard. I’ll send you back in the pinnace.”</p>
-
-<p>Again came the voice.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, there! Are you deaf? Bring her round to the
-quarter-boat davits; she’s to come aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Jude’s fresh young voice:</p>
-
-<p>“Gar’n! She’s ours; old Popplecock gave her to
-Satan. Whacha talking about?”</p>
-
-<p>“Very well,” came the other’s. “You wait till Sir
-William comes on deck.”</p>
-
-<p>Skelton with a grim smile turned to the door. He
-pointed to the clock on the bulkhead.</p>
-
-<p>“I’m going on deck,” said he. “See that clock—promise
-me to stick here for two minutes by it and
-think right over the matter for the last time. Don’t let
-anything I have said weigh with you.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_305">305</a></span>
-He went on deck and, keeping clear of the rail, entered
-into conversation with the first officer.</p>
-
-<p>Three minutes passed, and Ratcliffe’s head appeared at
-the saloon hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“Going?” said Skelton.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>“Right! You can keep the dinghy—it’s a wedding
-present. Luck!”</p>
-
-<p>“Same to you!” said Ratcliffe.</p>
-
-<p>He gripped the other’s hand, and the grip was returned.
-The two men had never been so close to each
-other before, never would be again.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* <span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">* </span><span class="in2">*</span></div>
-
-<p>Two hours later the <i>Dryad</i>, queening it over the satin-smooth
-harbor, dipped her flag to the humble little
-<i>Sarah</i>, and the <i>Sarah</i> dipped her flag to the <i>Dryad</i>, and
-someone in the Wedding Present lying alongside the
-<i>Sarah</i> waved a hat.</p>
-
-<p>Skelton, at the after rail, fixed his binoculars on the
-hat-waver. It was Satan.</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center smaller">THE END</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2><a id="Transcribers_Notes"></a>Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences
-of inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Satan, by Henry De Vere Stacpoole
-
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