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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second Mate, by Henry Bedford-Jones
-
-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: The Second Mate
-
-Author: Henry Bedford-Jones
-
-Release Date: November 26, 2019 [EBook #60796]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND MATE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-cover"></a>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-cover.jpg" alt="Cover art" />
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br /><br />
- THE<br />
- SECOND MATE<br />
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t2">
- BY<br />
- H. BEDFORD-JONES<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- GARDEN CITY NEW YORK<br />
- GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.<br />
- 1923<br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY<br />
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE &amp; COMPANY<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION<br />
- INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES<br />
- AT<br />
- THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- <i>First Edition</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<p class="t2">
-THE SECOND MATE
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<h3>
-I
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Sulu Queen</i> was steaming south at an
-eight-knot clip, which for her was
-exceedingly good, bound for Macassar, Singapore
-and way ports, according to the dispensation
-of Providence. Her tail shaft was likely to
-go at any minute; she had an erratic list to
-starboard; her pumps could barely keep down
-the water that seeped through her loose plates;
-but she was going. Just to be going was an
-achievement for the <i>Sulu Queen</i>. She was
-certain not to be going for very long.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Her Macaense&mdash;or Portuguese Eurasian&mdash;skipper
-was enjoying an opium dream in his
-cabin. Her chief engineer, a one-eyed
-Cyclops who had long since buried his Glasgow
-accent under a maze of tropic profanity, was
-dead drunk. Her black gang was composed
-of Macao coolies. Her men forward were
-lascars, under a mild-eyed Malay serang who
-was an escaped murderer from Bilibid Prison.
-Her two quartermasters were Chinese, and
-efficient. Her supercargo was a Straits
-Chinese comprador, a Singapore man. Her mate
-was a hulking Dutchman, rotten with gin
-alow and aloft. Her second mate was Jim
-Barnes, for whose labor all these others drew
-pay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She carried nine passengers. Abdullah, an
-Arab merchant, was going home to Macassar,
-taking with him his first wife and five
-offspring. How the Slave of God, as his name
-bore witness, ever got to Canton with so many,
-was a mystery; what had become of the other
-three lawful wives, not to mention the unlawful
-ones, was a greater mystery. The other
-two passengers were Nora Sayers and Ellen
-Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They were missionaries of some kind in
-China, had been ordered to voyage for their
-health, and as their funds were low, had taken
-the <i>Sulu Queen</i>. Jim Barnes had been too
-busy to ask questions. He would have
-welcomed them on the bridge, except that the
-Dutchman and the chief were both up there,
-nearly naked and rather soused. They had
-been there in that condition since leaving
-Cantop. When he explained the matter to them,
-Ellen Maggs blushed faintly, and Nora Sayers
-was quite willing to come along anyhow;
-but Ellen prevailed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At two bells in the morning watch, Jim
-Barnes heaved a huge sigh of relief and left
-the bridge, which he had perforce held since
-before midnight. The islands were past;
-Simonor was dropping astern into the
-horizon and ahead was the open Celebes Sea and a
-clear course for Macassar. By some miracle
-the coral reefs had been evaded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes sought the galley and obtained
-some tea from the yellow cook. He gulped
-it down and then started for his own cabin,
-meaning to get some sleep. The quartermaster
-of his watch had the bridge and a fair
-course.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, at the door af his stateroom, he
-paused with a sudden oath. The course was
-south by a quarter east; to his amazement,
-Barnes discovered that the ship was swinging
-around until the sun was almost astern.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With another oath of weary, wondering disgust,
-he started for the ladder. As he touched
-it, he heard his name spoken, and glanced
-around. The other quartermaster, Li Fu by
-name, was gliding toward him, and the yellow
-face was gleaming with inward excitement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What is it?" demanded Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Maste', you watch out velly sha'p!"
-exclaimed Li Fu, low-voiced, tense. "Bad
-piecee bobbery kick up, mebbeso two bells
-this afte'noon! I think mebbeso all hands
-talkee-talkee make fo' mutiny. Cap'n he say
-fo' tell you come see him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You tell the skipper to go to hell," said
-Barnes. "Opium crazy, that's what he is.
-Mutiny. Good gosh, we've nothing to mutiny for!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cap'n he say head in fo' Sesajap,"
-persisted the Chinaman.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes groaned. "Head in for Sesajap,
-eh? Heading in for Borneo&mdash;the skipper
-changed the course, did he? That why
-we're turning?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu nodded, beady eyes alert.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, I've no time now to palaver with
-that cursed Eurasian topside," said Barnes
-bluntly. "You tell him to take the bridge
-or chase Vanderhoof up there&mdash;I'm done.
-Savvy? I'm going to sleep. Let everybody
-mutiny and be damned. I'm the only seaman
-aboard this cursed packet anyhow. I'm tired
-o' doing ten men's work. Trouble coming this
-afternoon, is it? Then let afternoon take care
-of itself. I'll be ready to take the deck after
-this watch is over&mdash;noon. And, listen! Tell
-the cap'n that if he don't shoot the sun and
-verify his position after this running around,
-he'll land us all in hell. You savvy that?
-Then tell him from me. And if he wants to
-run us into Borneo, let him do it!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu grinned delightedly and stated that
-he savvied plenty. He, like any efficient
-seaman, had no use for the other officers and
-regarded Jim Barnes as a little tin god. Jim
-Barnes went into his cabin, locked the door,
-stuck a chair under the knob, and then
-dropped on his bunk, dead to the world.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Down in the engine-room, where the heat
-had sent the chief into a drunken stupor, the
-Malay serang conferred with the two assistant
-engineers. They were both men of color,
-being Macaense like the skipper, but not, like
-him, owning a large share in the <i>Sulu Queen</i>.
-Filling his mouth with betel paste, expectorating
-a scarlet stream across the floor under the
-ladder, the serang spoke as he squatted there
-with the two engineers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The supercargo, Lim Tock, is a very clever
-man. He has arranged everything into shares;
-there will be one hundred shares made of
-everything. Fifty of these will be divided
-among the men, the other fifty among us, the
-officers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good," assented the second engineer.
-"How many are in it, Gajah?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Gajah, the serang, spat again, and his soft
-eyes glowed luminously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All the men, here and above. The
-wireless man, the two quartermasters, <i>Tuan</i>
-Barnes, and the cap'n must be killed. <i>Tuan</i>
-Vanderhoof will navigate the ship. He is a
-great coward, and after his feet are burned he
-will be glad to serve us. This chief engineer
-must be killed, too. Six altogether. You will
-attend to this chief."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two Eurasians looked at each other,
-then at the supinely snoring figure of the chief.
-They grinned and nodded. The chief would
-be drunk again after tiffin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You are sure of the men?" asked the third.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course," said Gajah. "Lim Tock
-shipped them carefully at Canton, and my
-own men are picked for the purpose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why has the course been changed?"
-demanded the second engineer.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Because I whispered into the ear of the
-cap'n," said Gajah, with a meditative smile.
-"I told him that I knew a chief at one of the
-islands in the mouth of the Sesajap River,
-who had a great deal of gold dust, many birds'
-nests, and some fine pearls and shell. The
-<i>tuan</i> cap'n is very greedy. He changed the
-course immediately."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is there such a man?" asked the third.
-Gajah grinned in derision.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why not? Once I knew such a man at
-Sibuko, which is not far away. He was the
-second cousin of my elder brother's third wife,
-and he was very rich. I went to visit him,
-and induced his youngest wife to run away
-with me. But she forgot to bring the pearls
-with her, being in love with me, and so I slew
-her. That happened in Manila, and they put
-me into prison because of it. The white <i>tuans</i>
-did not understand."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, when is this to take place?" asked
-the second engineer nervously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"At the striking of two bells in the next
-watch."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It shall be done. Who is to command,
-after that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The supercargo, Lim Tock," answered the
-serang. "He is very clever. A friend of his,
-also a member of the Lim family, is to meet us
-near Bunju Island with a junk of which he is
-cap'n. Since the arrangement is all Lim
-Tock's, he deserves to command. It was he
-who got the opium put aboard at Macao."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One thing," put in the third, his dark and
-muddy eyes gleaming. "The two white women!
-Surely they are not to be killed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One does not waste the gifts of Allah,"
-said Gajah sententiously. "The one with
-yellow hair goes to me; the other, who blushes
-often and whose figure is that of the willow,
-will comfort Lim Tock for the loss of his
-eldest son, who was hanged by the English last
-month for killing a white <i>tuan</i>. After a little
-while we shall sell them to chiefs along the
-coast, and so be rid of them. <i>Wallah</i>! It is
-hot down here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He arose, knotted his fine silk <i>sarong</i> more
-closely about his waist, loosened his shagreen-hilted
-kris in its sheath, and departed. They
-two engineers looked at each other, and a slow
-smile passed between them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She of the yellow hair," said the third
-reflectively, "is tall and strong, of high spirit,
-and a fitting mate for me, whose veins run
-with the proud blood of the da Soussas!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And she of the lissome body," said the
-second engineer, rubbing his bristly chin, "has
-ere now smiled very sweetly upon me. It is
-not proper that yellow and brown island scum
-should have precedence before us, men
-descended from the conquistadors!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I agree with you," responded the other.
-"But what are we to do?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"First secure the ship," said the second
-promptly. "Then secure&mdash;what we want."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good!" agreed the third engineer with
-emphasis. "Let us consider the matter."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Meantime, in the chart-house Li Fu had
-delivered the second mate's message to the
-befuddled skipper, who sat dreamily over his
-charts. The message was literally delivered,
-but it could not stir the captain into action.
-He was lost in the reverie of contemplation
-that comes of good opium; not actual dreams,
-as some think, but a complacent sweetishness
-in the mind that shoves aside all immediate
-problems and refuses to take a crisis seriously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The captain, indeed, was a lost soul.
-Usually your opium-eater cannot smoke the drug
-at all, and the smoker cannot attain Nirvana
-by eating it. This Macaense, however, both
-ate and smoked, thereby letting damnation
-into himself by two channels. He was a thin,
-pasty man, once of powerful physique, but
-now rather rickety on his pins.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"One hundred and seventy miles to the
-mouth of the Sesajap," he murmured. "We
-shall reach it at five o'clock tomorrow morning."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He gave over thinking and plucked
-vacuously at his thin mustaches.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Providing the engines hold," added Li Fu,
-who spoke better Portuguese than English.
-"If the night is clear, there will be a new
-moon. We should sight the coast by midnight."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The engines!" repeated the skipper.
-"Where is the chief? He was here an hour
-ago."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He went below, sir. The mate woke up
-and went into the wheel-house."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Bring him here, Li Fu."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster went out of the
-chart-house, presently to return alone.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He is asleep, sir. We cannot wake him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Drunk, eh? Never mind, never mind. I
-will take the observation myself at noon&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And at two bells, sir," reminded Li Fu
-cautiously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, you are a fool, Quartermaster! These
-men will not mutiny. There is no reason for
-it. You are not used to Lascars and must not
-be a fool. I shall go to rest and make ready
-my instruments. The course is to be held as
-it is."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The captain rose and, with a sigh of relief
-that no more duty presented itself, made his
-way back to his cabin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu studied the outspread chart and
-lighted a cigarette. After a while, the other
-quartermaster left the wheel lashed and came
-into the chart-house, also lighting a cigarette.
-The two men greeted each other quietly.
-Like Li Fu, Quartermaster Hi John was a
-stalwart, efficient seaman, calm and well
-poised. He addressed Li Fu in the Cantonese
-dialect.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You told him, Li?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I told him," said Li Fu. "He went to
-sleep. He was very weary."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Did you find out why the captain changed
-the course?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. He thinks more about his <i>hap toi</i>
-than about what I ask him. I woke up the
-chief and told him, but he was too drunk to
-understand. He asked if there was no help
-for the widow's son, and went to sleep again.
-His mind is gone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The second mate will fight," said Hi John
-thoughtfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If he is not slain before he gets a chance."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There remains the wireless officer."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"True. He remains."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two men looked at each other and
-smiled mirthlessly. The wireless man was
-the privileged son of a Macaense, chief owner
-of the <i>Sulu Queen</i>. Cumshaw had obtained
-his berth; he did not know one end of the
-wireless from another, as the quartermasters had
-learned when Jim Barnes cursed him for an
-idiotic fool. He was no better than an idiot;
-he was, indeed, some degrees worse, since the
-diseased degeneracy of Asia was his heritage.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then you and I are alone," said Hi John.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We are alone. What answer shall we
-make to Lim Tock when the time comes?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John extinguished his cigarette.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Duty is a shining star, Li Fu. I have a
-revolver in my bag."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have one also," said Li Fu. "Yet I do
-not want to swallow gold."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nor I; this life is good." Hi John lighted
-another cigarette. "Still, consider duty! Lim
-Tock is a terrible man. It was he who sank
-the Dutch steamer last year, before his son
-was hung. His son helped him. They each
-got two Dutch women and much money. If
-we do not join him, Li, I think that we shall
-both swallow gold."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes. Then you join him."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, no." Hi John's singsong tones were
-soft. "Oh, no! I did not mean that."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu looked slightly ironic. "You think
-this ship worth dying for? Or those white
-women beautiful enough to die for?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not at all," said Hi John. "The ship is
-a rotten hulk. The women are ugly and pale
-as ghosts. I care nothing what becomes of
-either. At the same time, I revere the
-wisdom of my paternal parent, who was also an
-officer in a ship. Before he swallowed gold,
-he asked me to take an oath, that I would
-never swerve from my duty. Therefore I
-cannot well join Lim Tock, since I undertook
-a certain duty aboard this ship."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That is true," said Li Fu. "I have no
-oath to restrain me, but my duty needs no
-oath. Therefore I agree with you fully. I
-shall get my revolver, and also yours, while
-you are on the bridge; I have had it two
-rice-years, but it is a good one."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very well," said Hi John. "Give me
-mine when you have the opportunity."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-While these two men talked on the bridge-deck,
-Lim Tock, the super-cargo, walked aft
-on the main-deck, past the dingy passenger-cabins
-where the brood of Abdullah swarmed
-about the two "missionary ladies." Lim Tock
-was an elderly Straits Chinaman, with a short,
-gray mustache, a drawn, parchment face, and
-two bright and glittering gray eyes&mdash;a most
-amazing pair of eyes to be staring from a
-saffron face! Yet some Chinese are gray-eyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the stern, he came upon Abdullah, the
-Arab merchant, who was reading a Koran.
-The Arab looked up, smiled slightly, and
-spoke in the Low Malay which most men use
-in the island seas. This Slave of God was a
-thin and deadly looking person, fierce with his
-hook nose and jutting shreds of beard and
-jetty eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All is arranged?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It is arranged," said Lim Tock. "You
-agree to take the white women off our hands?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes; and to ask no other share of the rewards."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lim Tock inclined his head and passed on
-around to the starboard passage. There he
-came upon Gajah, the serang, busy doing
-nothing. To him Lim Tock spoke in High
-Malay, a tongue which very few men know or
-understand, even in the island seas.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Abdullah suspects nothing. His boxes
-will be rich plunder. Let him be the first to
-fall, and his children after him&mdash;a clean
-sweep."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the woman, his wife?" asked the
-Lascar serang.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She has borne many and is past pleasing.
-Let her accompany Abdullah."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The serang nodded indifferently and Lim
-Tock went his way.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-While men thus talked and schemed and
-counseled together alow and aloft, Jim Barnes
-slept.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-II
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Nora Sayers was tall and active, with
-brilliant yellow hair and very deep
-violet eyes; a young woman of great energy, who
-had seen too much bloodshed in the revolutionary
-fighting around Pekin, and who had
-turned her mission station into a hospital of
-tortured men. Ellen Maggs, smaller, very
-slender and frail in looks, was newer to China,
-but she, too, had seen so many horrors that the
-powers above had thought best to send both
-women away on a sea voyage in company.
-Ellen Maggs, however, had more steel
-beneath her quiet and old-fashioned exterior
-than men imagined possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When they entered the mess saloon at eight
-bells, noon, they were not surprised to find
-themselves alone. They had by this time
-grown used to the peculiar conditions
-prevailing aboard the <i>Sulu Queen</i>. The chief had a
-lurking sense of shame that kept him from
-their presence. The captain had the bridge.
-The wireless officer came in, bowed very
-effusively, and seated himself. He could speak
-no English, and listened staringly to the
-laughter and light chatter of the two women.
-Abdullah and his family ate by themselves.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Presently Jim Barnes entered, bathed and
-shaven and with his usual air of radiating
-high good-humor. Almost at the same
-moment came Vanderhoof, eyes bloodshot, walk
-unsteady, to seat himself with a grunt and
-absorb quantities of coffee and rice-curry. He
-gave Barnes a scowling regard across the table.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Der cap'n say for you to take der pridge,"
-he growled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not me," said Barnes pleasantly. "Now
-that we've open sea ahead, you and he can do
-a little work, Van. Everything's galley-west
-aboard this hooker, and the watches might as
-well go with the rest."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The yellow steward set an open gin-bottle
-beside the mate, who poured a tumbler full,
-then glared at Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"By chiminy," he said, "d'you refuse to
-opey orders, huh?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You bet I do," said Jim Barnes, his eyes
-twinkling. "And if you know what's good
-for your health, Van, you'll sober up before
-you try to give me any. Savvy that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Despite the cheerful accent, something in
-the steady and level regard of the second mate
-caused Vanderhoof to drink down his gin
-without making any response. When he had
-emptied the bottle, he shoved back his chair
-and left the cabin.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, ladies," said Barnes, "how do you
-find yourselves this morning? Rather warm
-last night. Did your fan work all right?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite, thanks," and Nora Sayers smiled.
-"Aren't you just a trifle independent with
-your superior officers, Mr. Barnes? I thought
-all sailors were very polite&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes grinned. "Oh, me and Van? Don't
-pay any attention to that, Miss Sayers. He
-was just trying to show his authority in front
-of you and Miss Maggs."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh!" Nora Sayers laughed. "Isn't it
-mutiny to refuse to obey orders?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not aboard this packet. The skipper has
-been hitting the pipe all morning and now
-he's got us headed slap for Borneo. Lord
-knows why; I don't."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen Maggs smiled shyly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You're the most happily irresponsible
-person I ever met, Mr. Barnes," she said. "And
-so is this ship. Every voyage in her must be
-a delightful adventure, if it's like this one!
-Have you been with her long?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"This is my first and last," said Barnes
-drily. "You can't say that you've enjoyed
-yourselves so far, can you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I have, every minute of it!" exclaimed
-Ellen Maggs, an unwonted sparkle in her
-eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And so have I," asserted Nora Sayers with
-energy. "Look at the queer people we've
-met! This funny little man down the table,
-who stares and giggles&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He's part idiot," interjected Jim Barnes.
-"But who else?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All of them! The poor old captain, with
-his politeness and queer abstractions and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The old man's only forty," and Barnes
-chuckled. "But the hops gets 'em early. So
-you like the Eurasians, do you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't like them, no, but they're interesting,"
-stated Miss Sayers. "And the chief engineer
-is queer, too, only he won't talk&mdash;=="
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was talking with him early this morning,"
-put in Ellen Maggs. "He's a dear old
-man, Nora. He was telling me all about his
-early life in Scotland."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He always does," put in Jim Barnes,
-"when he's in the middle of a big spree. Oh,
-don't look shocked! Won't do any good. I
-guess you ladies are disappointed that you
-didn't find another queer duck in the second
-officer's shoes, eh? Or am I queer, too?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You're just human," declared Miss
-Sayers promptly. "Only you're too busy to be
-very polite."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'm going to be busier yet, right after
-lunch," said Jim Barnes. "Oh, Steward!
-Get me some more of that curry."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why, what have you found now to keep
-you occupied?" asked Ellen Maggs, interested.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes did not respond until the steward
-had left the cabin. Then he spoke cheerfully,
-as he sugared his coffee with some care.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Me? I've got to set the ship afire. As
-soon as they give the alarm, I want you two
-ladies to come up to the upper bridge-deck,
-and come quick! I'll be in the chart-house&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You mean that little coop up above the
-bridge, with the awning?" asked Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Just that. I'll get there before they
-discover the blaze."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two women stared at him, then glanced
-at each other in perplexed wonder.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What do you mean, Mr. Barnes?" demanded
-Ellen Maggs, a faint touch of color
-in her cheeks. "Are you joking about getting
-the ship afire?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," said Jim Barnes. His tone was
-unusually crisp, and the look that he gave them
-was keen and incisive. "No. Don't let out
-a peep before the steward, now! A mutiny is
-due to start at one o'clock, and, so far as I can
-see, most of the officers will get wiped out at
-the first crack. Mutiny or piracy, I'm not
-sure which. I've got to set the hooker afire
-and keep the men so blamed busy they'll have
-no time for murder. Please pass the butter,
-Miss Maggs."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His matter-of-fact manner made the two
-women at first doubt his words, then believe
-them with a frightful sense of conviction;
-Ellen Maggs stared at him from eyes that
-slowly widened. Glancing up and meeting
-her gaze, Jim Barnes was suddenly startled by
-the intensity of her look, by the revealed
-womanhood he saw in her face; he had not
-dreamed that she could look so beautiful.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'm sorry I scared you," he said, smilingly.
-There was an infectious quality to his smile;
-perhaps because of his direct blue eyes,
-wrinkled at the corners; perhaps because of his
-wide and humorous mouth and strong chin.
-"But the steward's coming now&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You're in earnest?" demanded Nora Sayers,
-who had gone a little white.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Quite. Nobody aboard can use the wireless,
-unless you ladies can. Any chance?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen Maggs shook her head.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No chance," she said, and astonished Jim
-Barnes by smiling. "But I have a pistol in
-my suitcase&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fine!" exclaimed Barnes heartily. The
-steward entered with his plate of curry. "You
-get it. And you girls might as well buckle
-down to the fact that before we get through
-there's going to be a large slice of the lower
-regions laid bare aboard this hooker. Is that
-an engagement ring you're wearing, Miss Sayers?
-Pardon personalities; I'm asking for a
-reason."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes." Nora Sayers twisted the ring on
-her finger. "It's&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right. If you ever want to add a plain
-gold hoop to it, you remember that there's just
-one man aboard who can pull you out o' this,
-and that's me. I don't want any interference,
-and I do want help. Get me?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes!" exclaimed Ellen Maggs, and her
-eyes were shining. "Just where do you want
-us to come, please? You spoke about the
-chart-house&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Come there, and I'll see you up safe to the
-awning deck above. A little before two bells.
-Bring with you anything that you value very
-highly. We may stave off this fuss until
-night, in which case we'll be all right. Well,
-cheer up and don't worry! See you later."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes pushed back his chair, produced
-his pipe, and began to fill it as he left
-the mess saloon. He stood by the rail a
-moment, until his pipe was lighted.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I guess that was laying bare the situation
-with a rough and brutal hand," he said, and
-chuckled softly. "Had to be done, though.
-And now I've got to step mighty carefully.
-Most likely those assistant engineers are in on
-the game; they're Eurasians, too, so I can't
-take chances. If anyone suspects that I know
-about things, the blow-off will come before
-two bells&mdash;which would spoil everything for
-me. But lordy! What a pippin that little
-Maggs girl is! She's a regular guy."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From his language, it might be inferred
-that Jim Barnes was an American.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Puffing at his pipe, he sought the engine-room.
-The chief blinked up at him from a
-huge plate of curry. A glance showed Barnes
-that neither of the assistants were about, and
-he ventured an open word.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Chief, wake up! Mutiny is scheduled for
-two bells, and if you don't want your throat
-cut you'd better be advised&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Get oot o' ma engine-room!" ordered the
-chief with dignity. "Ye drunken scut, can
-ye not bear your liquor like a man? I'll hae
-no drunken officers cooming doon here to be
-bawlin' o' mutinies in ma ear! Tak' shame
-to yoursel', sir!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes compressed his lips and turned
-away. It was useless.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Sulu Queen</i>, originally a well-decked
-tramp, had been fitted up rather shabbily to
-carry passengers in the island trade, the after
-portion of the deck-house having been added
-to for this purpose. Carrying all the oily
-waste he could conceal about his person, Jim
-Barnes made his way aft to one of the
-unoccupied cabins. The two white passengers were
-not in sight. In the stern, beneath a tattered
-awning, Abdullah sat smoking a water-pipe,
-his wife and family around him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They're safe enough," observed Barnes, as
-he ducked into the cabin he sought. "Even if
-the old packet can't get up enough steam to
-check the flames, and goes down, they'll be
-taken care of. So, on with the dance!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The fact that he was committing various
-sorts of barratry and felony, did not worry
-Jim Barnes in the least.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The storm season being past, the lookout or
-awning-deck above the pilot-house was fitted
-up with awning and canvas aprons and some
-chairs, but remained almost unused. The
-additional climb of a dozen feet from the
-chart-and pilot-house was far too much trouble for
-the captain and others; besides which, the
-place was no more than a box a dozen feet
-square, and was hot. A single ladder
-ascended to it from the bridge deck, which it
-overlooked completely.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Shortly before two bells, Jim Barnes
-welcomed Ellen Maggs and Nora Sayers, as they
-came up to the bridge. He was alone there,
-with Li Fu and two of the lascars in the
-chart-house. Down in the bows, Lim Tock,
-the supercargo, was standing in talk with the
-steward, and both watches were idling about
-the deck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How do we get upstairs?" asked Ellen Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right this way, ladies!" answered Barnes
-cheerfully. "Chairs up there and a couple of
-old magazines, as well as a breaker of water
-and some other things. Whatever happens,
-don't worry&mdash;and wait for me. Here you are!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As they vanished up the ladder, he re-entered
-the chart-house and addressed the two
-lascar seamen.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Run, quick! One of you to the serang,
-the other to Lim Tock. Say that I smell
-smoke, and have search made for fire. Look
-at the bunkers, but don't take off the hatches
-until the last thing. If there's a fire in the
-forward hold, call me."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A startled glance passed between the two
-men, and they jumped for the ladder. Jim
-Barnes turned to the quartermaster, smiling
-slightly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where is Hi John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Him look velly sharp, I think."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We can depend on him?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu nodded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right, then," said Barnes. "You go
-tell him to come up here. Then take charge
-of those lascars and keep 'em out of the after
-cabins for a while, until the fire shows itself.
-You savvy? Don't be in any hurry to put it
-out, either. We'll hold this thing off until
-night if we can."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Across the saffron features flitted a look of
-admiration, for Li Fu comprehended the plan
-instantly. Then the quartermaster was gone.
-Barnes looked at the chronometer. It lacked
-five minutes of one.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two bells won't be struck," he thought,
-as he swung the wheel.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He grinned at sight of the commotion
-below. Lim Tock was yelling orders at those
-of the black gang whom he could see. Gajah,
-the serang, was whistling at his lascars shrilly.
-Then he remembered the chief engineer, and
-rang the bell. One of the assistants answered
-in the tube.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ship's on fire," said Jim Barnes, chuckling
-to himself. "Stop your engines and keep
-up a full head o' steam for the hose."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John appeared, gave Barnes a brief nod
-and a grin, and took the wheel. There had
-never been any fire drill aboard the <i>Sulu
-Queen</i> in the memory of man, but Barnes
-blew the whistle nevertheless and added to
-the confusion. Vanderhoof's bellow arose
-from below, followed by an outburst of yells
-and shouts from aft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They've found it," said Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He went to the bridge rail and glanced aft.
-A trail of smoke and steam was veering out
-in the wake of the steamer. Barnes listened
-for a little to the sounds of tumultuous
-confusion, then rejoined the quartermaster.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How did you and Li Fu know so much
-about this mutiny?" he demanded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Talkee-talkee," rejoined Hi John curtly.
-"My savvy lascar talk plenty."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh! Understand Malay, do you? Good
-work. What reason have they to mutiny?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John had picked up a good deal of
-information. He knew that the rich boxes of
-the merchant Abdullah were to be looted, and
-that there was a large amount of opium down
-below, to be transferred to a Chinese junk and
-landed somewhere along the Bornean coast.
-Undoubtedly, the <i>Sulu Queen</i> was to be
-stripped of everything valuable, then quietly
-sunk in deep water. Lim Tock was in it, the
-serang Gajah was in it, and the Chinese junk
-was in it; so were some of the officers and all
-the men aboard.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Reluctantly Jim Barnes became convinced
-that to strive against the inevitable would be
-useless. Except for these two Chinese, he
-could depend upon no one. Had he been
-alone on the ship, his actions would have been
-simple and perhaps effectual.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'd like to go down there and shoot the
-supercargo, the serang, and a few of the men,
-and get the old hooker into port," he said to
-Hi John. "But the safety of those two white
-women is worth more than this damned old
-carcass of a boat. I can't risk it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John looked bewildered at this reasoning,
-which he could not understand. At this
-instant Li Fu came up the port ladder,
-panting, and grinned as he saluted Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Mutiny makee, no matter! I think they
-wait, same time tonight, mebbeso."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two bells evening watch?" demanded
-Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, sir. Cap'n say go ahead on course,
-he makee fire go out."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes rang for full speed ahead, then
-questioned Li Fu. Both the skipper and
-Vanderhoof were in charge, it seemed, and were
-fighting the fire. Vanderhoof was somewhat
-sobered by the danger; the captain was almost
-incapacitated and was acting like an old
-woman, according to Li. The quartermaster
-was highly disgusted. It was the effort of the
-serang, whose lascars were working hard, that
-was putting the fire under control.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Presently the skipper himself appeared,
-He was breathing hard and was all in a
-tremble. He wiped his pallid brow and cursed
-heartily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fire under?" asked Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, yes, or soon will be. No matter at
-all. Very disturbing," panted the captain.
-"I must obtain some rest, must verify our
-position. Keep her as she is, sir."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He looked around, nervously fingered the
-chart, then departed. Barnes looked after
-him in contempt, then went to the ladder
-leading above.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gone for a few pipes, the swine!" he
-muttered, then looked up and raised his voice.
-"Come on down, girls. Mutiny's postponed
-until tonight. False alarm and nobody killed
-yet."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-III
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"What part are you from?" asked Jim
-Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Illinois," said Ellen Maggs. "From
-Elgin, where they make watches. Were you
-ever there?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No closer than the outside of a watch,"
-responded Barnes. "But now I'm going there
-some day."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Why?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To see where you came from."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen Maggs laughed a little and actually
-forgot to blush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do it again," said Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Do what?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Laugh that way. It's the prettiest thing
-I ever saw."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen blushed at that, then turned as Nora
-Sayers joined them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nora! Mr. Barnes comes from Baltimore,
-too! He was born there!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good for him!" Nora Sayers laughed in
-her hearty, energetic fashion. "Perhaps you
-know my father there, Mr. Barnes&mdash;the
-physician, Doctor Sayers?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't know anybody there," admitted Jim
-Barnes. "I've been at sea ever since the war
-finished up, and before. But I'm going to
-settle down some day, across the bay from San
-Francisco. Ever been there, Miss Maggs?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Only when I came out to China."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well," said Jim Barnes, in his whimsical
-[Transcriber's note: line of text missing from source book]
-all picked out! A fine little bungalow on one
-of the hills at Sausalito, where you can see the
-ships all up and down the bay, and the
-campanile at Berkeley clear across&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Have you got the girl picked out, too?"
-asked Nora Sayers amusedly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well," said Jim Barnes, in his whimsical
-way, "I didn't have up to a couple of weeks
-ago, but lately I've sort of got my mind made
-up. By the way, girls, you'd better get all
-ready. We're going to leave the ship in an
-hour or two."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leave her?" they repeated as one, in
-dismayed accents. "How?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You'll see. I'll take the bridge when
-watches are changed at eight bells&mdash;eight
-o'clock. You come up to the bridge a little
-before then, and stick around. Excuse me,
-now; I'll have to pack a few things myself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes hurried away, leaving the two
-women at the rail.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Dinner was over, a meal from which all
-three were glad to escape, coming out on deck
-to find the sun gone and the afterglow staining
-the horizon like old church windows. A
-tragic affair, that dinner! The captain was
-ill and did not appear; Vanderhoof was on
-deck, more drunk than usual; the second
-engineer quarreled with the wireless cub, who
-lost his head in a fit of idiotic rage and had to
-be taken away and locked up, screaming
-curses. The chief engineer was also locked in
-his own cabin, enjoying a spell of "the horrors."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Wishing vainly that he understood something
-about the wireless outfit, Barnes sought
-his cabin and packed up the few belongings
-that he wished to take from the ship. While
-he was at this task, Li Fu knocked at the door
-and entered hurriedly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hello! What news? Is it set for two
-bells?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu assented. He was bursting with
-laughter over some joke of the cruel Chinese
-variety, and Barnes presently learned what it
-was. He was ordering Li to warn Abdullah
-of what was intended, with the intent to get
-the Arab's family away safely, when the
-quartermaster exploded in a laugh and reported a
-conversation that he had overheard among
-some of the lascars.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It appeared that Abdullah was as much in
-the plot as anyone, and was to receive as his
-booty the two white women. The assistant
-engineers had an eye on the same prey; while
-Lim Tock and Gajah, the serang, were
-equally concerned. To the Chinese, this was
-a huge jest all around, for it meant that the
-wolves would turn and rend each other.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Hell!" said Jim Barnes. "I hate to leave
-the kids here. But go ahead, now; and tell
-Hi John to attend to the engines as soon as he
-goes off watch, then to get up to the bridge
-and stand by. Have you got the boat ready?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, sir," assented Li Fu. "Plenty wate';
-eve'ything leady."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"On your way, then!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes made his way to the bridge, where
-Hi John and two lascars were in charge, and
-passed behind the chart-house unremarked.
-Vanderhoof was not in evidence. Aboard the
-<i>Sulu Queen</i> the clear night was already
-insufferably warm, for she was steaming with the
-wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Passing to the centre starboard boat, Barnes
-found the cover loosely in place. He put in
-his few effects, then gave his attention to the
-lines. Like most old ships of a past
-generation, the steamer was equipped with Clifford's
-lowering gear, the most beautiful boat-gear
-ever devised, in theory, permitting a boat to
-be lowered by slacking a single line. This
-was the boat carried for use in emergencies.
-It was not stowed in chocks but was swung out
-and left clear, secured by gripes to a toggle
-which could be slipped in ah instant.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If we have luck she'll do," thought Barnes,
-examining the lowering line. "The pendants
-are new line and not swelled; we ought to get
-down without spilling. Hm! If anybody'd
-ever told me that I'd owe life, liberty and the
-pursuit of happiness to this cursed ancient
-Clifford gear, I'd have called him a liar! But
-wait. We're not off yet by a long shot."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-True enough.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-An automatic in either side pocket of his
-jacket, Jim Barnes took over the bridge from
-Hi John as eight bells struck. Then, dismay
-seized upon him. His own lack of foresight
-had brought on the crisis before he wanted or
-expected it! Ellen Maggs and Nora Sayers
-were on the bridge. They had brought some
-personal effects, each in a small grip; and
-from the look cast at them by the departing
-lascar wheelmen, Barnes knew that suspicion
-was up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two fresh lascars came to the wheel, with
-Li Fu. Disregarding these, Barnes made a
-slight gesture to Hi John, who slipped out of
-sight instantly on his errand below. Unless
-the engines were disabled, Barnes knew that
-his preparations were of no avail. He greeted
-the two women with his usual air of cheerful
-assurance, however.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All ready? Fine! The two quartermasters
-are with us. Come along, now, and climb
-into the boat&mdash;no time to lose, I assure you!
-In ten minutes this ship is going to be
-about the unhealthiest spot you ever heard
-of."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He led them around the chart-house toward
-the boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But the captain!" protested Nora Sayers.
-"Surely, if you know there will be some
-trouble, the other officers&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nix," said Barnes. "Good Lord, girl!
-Haven't you seen already what sort o' swine
-the others are? Hear that so-called wireless
-officer scream? He's still off his head&mdash;and
-couldn't send a message if he were sane. And
-the old man's soggy with opium. Here you
-are! Step on this water breaker, and over
-into her; she's solid."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, his words were given emphasis by
-the screaming of the wireless man, which had
-broken out anew down below. Miss Sayers
-stepped to the breaker, and Barnes helped her
-up into the boat. Then he turned, picked up
-Ellen Maggs bodily and lifted her over the
-edge, laughing as he did so.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Got your pistol? Good. Sit tight, and
-don't scream when things bust loose. See you
-later."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He left them hurriedly and returned to the
-wheel, fighting down his appalling helplessness
-to prevent what was going to happen.
-About the ship's officers he cared less than
-nothing; he was thinking now of the Arab
-woman and her brown children below. Abdullah
-might or might not protect them from
-the yellow fiends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The tall figure of the serang rose at the
-starboard ladder. One glance from Li Fu told
-Barnes that this was the end. The two
-lascars were here to finish the quartermaster, and
-Gajah had come to attend to the second mate.
-The time was at hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes went to the door of the chart-house.
-A shot would do the business, but he wanted
-no shooting up here if possible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Serang!" he exclaimed crisply. "Step
-aft. Something I want to show you."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That suited the Malay, who loosened his
-kris in its sheath and followed. At the
-corner of the chart-house, Barnes pointed across
-the deck, obscure in the starlight, to the boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's that?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sincerely astonished, Gajah peered at the
-boat, with the two women sitting in her. And
-as he stared, Barnes let drive with the heavy
-barrel of his automatic, a full, fair blow across
-the skull. A grunt broke from the serang,
-who pitched sideways and flung out his arms.
-Barnes caught him and lowered the bleeding
-form to the deck, then darted back to the
-chart-house.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just in time, too! For all his watchful
-care, Li Fu had been taken unawares, one of
-the lascars gripping him in both arms, the
-other with kris upraised for the blow. Barnes
-was in upon them unseen, and struck down the
-man with the kris. The other lascar leaped
-away, gained the far door of the chart-house&mdash;and
-ran into the arms of Hi John. Something
-happened there. Steel flashed and a
-man gasped; the lascar slipped to the deck
-quietly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You two men watch the ladders!" snapped
-Barnes. "When you hear me call, come
-to the boat."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Revolvers out, each quartermaster took one
-of the ladders. Barnes turned and ran aft
-along the deck at top speed, disregarding the
-low call that the two women sent after him as
-he passed the boat. He was listening
-desperately for sounds from below. They came
-to him, came all in a jumble that his brain
-sorted out mechanically. First came a
-jarring wrench that shook the whole ship. Then
-the engines stopped. Whatever Hi John had
-done, the work was effective. And at the
-same instant the night was split by a sudden
-cry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Allah! Allah&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the screaming of the wireless man
-was cut very short. An oath of desperation on
-his lips, Jim Barnes gained the small after
-ladder that led to the stern of the main deck.
-From below him burst a storm of cries; the
-shriek of a woman, the staccato yells of men,
-and a thin, shrill wail that maddened him.
-He dropped to the deck below, and found
-himself in the midst of an inferno, clearly
-illumined by the deck-lights.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Abdullah lay across his water-pipe,
-stabbed in the back. Nearby was his eldest child,
-also stabbed, and two lascars were fighting to
-take another child from the arms of its dying
-mother. Barnes saw only this much, and then
-began to fire. He forgot everything but the
-horror in front of him, and only laughed
-when several of the lascars began to converge
-on him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A shot rang out from one of the forward
-cabins. Barnes, seizing the child, thrust him
-up the ladder and then swung about to meet
-three lascars plunging at him. He shot the
-first and second, ducked the kris-swing of the
-third, then tripped the man and shot him as
-he fell. Then he plunged for the nearest
-cabin, whence came screams.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Just what happened next is something of
-which Jim Barnes never speaks. The orders
-of Lim Tock, to make a clean sweep of
-Abdullah's family, were being followed to the
-letter. Barnes was in the cabin for fully a
-minute&mdash;which, just then, was a very long
-space of time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By the time he emerged, much had happened.
-There was a crashing and smashing
-from the length of the cabins as the doors
-were battered in. From the bridge, a spatter
-of revolver shots; and, from below, more shots
-followed by the wild scream of the old chief
-as he reached the deck&mdash;a scream of half rage,
-half agony. He died at the rail, trailing blood
-across the deck, in his fist a blood-spattered
-spanner. After him, the Chinese stokers
-poured up to the deck and scattered for loot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes came out of the cabin, thrusting
-a dead lascar ahead of him. About his
-neck clung one of Abdullah's daughters, and
-under his left arm was another. From the
-passage leaped a stoker, whom Barnes shot.
-Then, at the ladder, he urged the two little
-girls upward to join their brother above.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A shot rang out at him, and the bullet
-slithered on the steel beside him. Barnes paused
-to empty his automatics, then went up the
-ladder on the jump. At the top, he caught hold
-of the frightened children and rushed them
-along, shouting as he did so to the two
-quartermasters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They, after shooting at the forms down
-below on the foredeck and in the well, joined
-him at the boat. Barnes chucked in the three
-children and cast off the toggle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"In with you, men, and lower away! I'll
-slide down the pendant. Where's your pistol,
-Ellen? Hand it over&mdash;thanks. Sit still,
-all of you! Lower, Li, lower! That's it&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu slacked the lowering line about the
-cleat, and the boat fell away rapidly. Barely
-in time, too; Barnes perceived a rush of
-figures coming from the after ladder, and opened
-fire. They scattered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-There was a moment's breathing spell,
-while from fore and aft, alow and aloft, rose
-sing-song calls in Cantonese and the harsher
-gutturals of the lascars. A rush was being
-planned from both sides.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes caught a soft call from below, and
-breathed a prayer of thanks. A number of
-figures showed at the corner of the
-chart-house. He emptied his pistol at these, then
-turned, caught one of the pendants hitched to
-the davit-head, and let himself go sliding
-down.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A burst of yells rang out from the bridge
-deck, but he was in the boat below ere any
-could reach the rail. The two quartermasters
-had already put out the oars, and Barnes
-cast off the line and let the pendants unreeve
-as the roller whirled. The boat started away
-from the ship's side.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here," came a voice, and Barnes felt one
-of his own pistols shoved into his hand. "My
-clip fitted your automatic and&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good girl, Ellen!" he cried out, and
-laughed as he fired at the rail above. A shot
-made answer, and a kris sang through the air
-to splash alongside&mdash;but the boat was clear.
-She drew away from the ship before the
-mutineers were sure just what had happened.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-IV
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"There's one good thing we can say for
-the <i>Sulu Queen</i>," observed Jim Barnes.
-"That is, she sailed under English board
-rules."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What has that to do with our present
-situation?" demanded Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It means that we've got a sprit rig stowed
-aboard. In oars, men! Hi John, we'll be
-sailing before the wind, so lash your oar to
-the for'ard thwart to make a boom for the
-fores'l. Li Fu, break out the canvas. Get
-the mast stepped, then trim ship."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Over the waves behind, the tumult had died,
-and the distant lights of the <i>Sulu Queen</i>
-showed only when the boat lifted on a crest.
-No pursuit had been made, nor had the
-searchlight been put into effect. Seemingly,
-Lim Tock was making no effort to find the
-boat. Probably the supercargo was for the
-present unable to get his men in hand and was
-also very likely to be busy getting the engines
-into working order.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When the centreboard was let down and the
-boat was being trimmed, Jim Barnes surveyed
-her with acute satisfaction. She was a nearly
-new whaleboat, fitted with a rudder in navy
-style, and well found in all respects. With a
-grunt of delight, Barnes opened the oiled silk
-wrapping of the matches, found the compass
-to be a good one, and set it by his side in the
-stern. In another ten minutes the sprit was
-up, the foresail rigged to the makeshift boom,
-and the whaleboat was running before the
-wind toward Borneo.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The eldest of the three children was barely
-six; none of them were cognizant of what had
-happened. After whimpering a little, they
-were soon asleep amidships, wrapped in the
-spare sail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If you girls will come aft, you can curl
-up in the bottom of the boat at my feet," said
-Barnes. "You'll be out of the wind and she'll
-be better trimmed. I've kept the boat well
-wet down since we sailed, and she's dry as a
-bone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two women obeyed. Nora Sayers
-looked up at Barnes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The other children? And their mother?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes tried to speak, but his throat was
-suddenly dry.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I&mdash;damn it, girl, don't make me think of
-it! I did what I could. Go to sleep."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen Maggs caught her breath sharply.
-Then, after a moment, Barnes felt her hand
-touch his, and he gripped her fingers. Both
-women were crying, he thought; but after a
-little they fell quiet, lulled by the regular rise
-and fall of the boat, by the long forward
-sweep, the rush and hiss of water as she drove
-along on a crest, and the tilted drop into the
-trough only to gather impetus anew and hurl
-forward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The curling sweep of wind and sea, like a
-cleansing breath, wiped out all that was
-behind them and lessened the sharp memory.
-Once Barnes, looking back, saw a searchlight
-fingering the water; that was all. The stars
-blazed cold and brilliant, and the thin
-crescent of the new moon hung like green silver
-against the depths above. So passed the hours,
-and the boat rushed ever onward and onward
-under the steady sweep of wind. Barnes held
-her on the same course the <i>Sulu Queen</i> had
-been following, to make the Bornean coast.
-They were far out of any steamer track, and
-there was no hope of being picked up unless
-by some chance trading schooner.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Dawn found them steadily bowling along.
-Li Fu had crept aft and relieved Barnes of
-the tiller; and Barnes, resting against the
-stern-thwart, opened his eyes to find the head
-of Ellen Maggs pillowed upon his shirt, and
-his arms about her shoulders. How this had
-come about, he had not the least idea, but
-made no objection to the arrangement.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Perhaps aroused by his awakening stir, the
-girl opened her eyes a moment later. Nora
-Sayers was sleeping peacefully. Barnes felt
-Ellen Maggs catch her breath at sight of the
-ocean and sky that closed them in, then saw
-the color come into her cheeks. Before she
-turned to glance at him, he closed his eyes
-again. She did not move, but, after realizing
-the situation, accepted it. Above them the
-lean form of Li Fu crouched at the tiller,
-dark eyes sweeping the water ahead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Awake?" asked Barnes after a moment.
-"Don't move. Sailing a whaleboat before
-the wind, even with a centreboard, is about as
-ticklish as canoeing. Comfortable?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very, thank you," she responded, although
-he could see that the color lingered in her cheeks.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"When the kids wake up, we'll stretch our
-legs a bit and break out some grub," said
-Barnes. She was silent for a space, then spoke
-quietly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are we going anywhere? Have you seen
-any ship, or will any see us?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Going to Borneo. We'll raise the coast
-as soon as the sun's up. We won't see any
-ship unless she sees us first, however."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But I thought we might see one, and catch
-her attention&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes chuckled at this.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No chance! Novels to the contrary, it
-just ain't done. A small boat has a horizon
-of two and a half miles. We could see
-another boat a mile farther. The bridge of a
-ship can see us fifteen miles away, and would
-be sure not to miss our sails. So by the time
-we saw a ship, she'd be bearing down to take
-us on board. But we'll not see any; we're
-way out of the steamer lane."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Behind the boat, all the eastern sky
-reddened and streamed with the dawn-shafts, and
-the sun sprang suddenly from the sea-rim,
-piercing the haze and mist of dawn with his
-level rays of gold. Li Fu bent down and
-touched the shoulder of Barnes. The latter
-looked. Out ahead of them a purple mass
-was upheaved above the horizon, running
-north and south.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Look!" Barnes pointed it out to the girl.
-"There's Borneo. If the wind holds, we'll
-make the coast in a couple of hours. The
-wind's shifting around to the north, too.
-Wake up, Hi John! Take in your boom,
-bring the sheet aft, and let the foresail gybe.
-Mind your helm, Li Fu, as she wears&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whaleboat came over nicely, but as
-she heeled the three children wakened and
-began to cry out. Nora Sayers sat up, bewildered,
-then quickly began to mother the little
-ones. Hi John came aft and relieved Li Fu,
-who, with Barnes, set to work breaking out
-the cabin stores put aboard the boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When breakfast was somewhat precariously
-made an end of, Barnes turned over the
-forward portion of the boat to the two women
-and their charges, bringing the quartermasters
-back in the stern with him. With the
-spare sail he contrived a low screen which
-afforded the women some privacy without
-lessening the windage of the sails.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu curled up to sleep, but Hi John, with
-a serious effort to improve his English,
-questioned Barnes about their course and then
-delivered himself of a matter which drew
-Barnes' immediate and earnest attention.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermaster had discovered that the
-captain had changed the course of the <i>Sulu
-Queen</i> toward Borneo by reason of something
-the serang Gajah had said to him. Further,
-he knew that there was much opium on the
-steamer, which Lim Tock meant to transfer to
-a junk which was to meet her somewhere.
-Putting these facts together, the inference
-was that the <i>Sulu Queen</i> was to meet the
-junk somewhere near the mouth of the
-Sesajap, for which the skipper had headed
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I don't know but what you're right, John,"
-said Barnes thoughtfully. "We might run
-into that junk, eh? But no great matter if we
-did. They'd be Chinese and would leave us
-alone."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John shook his head at this. The boat
-was stenciled with the name of the <i>Sulu
-Queen</i>, and the men aboard the junk would
-not be exactly fools. Barnes nodded assent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You're right. Still, the chances are ten to
-one that we'll not see her. How badly did
-you smash those engines? What did you do
-to them?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Me no savvy," said the quartermaster with
-a shrug. He had smashed them, and that was
-all he knew, except that he had done it in a
-hurry and at considerable risk.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes had fetched along no charts,
-but needed none for this coast. To the north
-was Point Elphinstone and British territory,
-and no settlements along the coast. To the
-south were several Dutch stations within a
-hundred miles or so. As Hi John claimed to
-know the coast fairly well, Barnes decided to
-run straight in for the land, if possible
-identify their position, and then strike south for
-the nearest Dutch settlement. The boat was
-staunch; the storm season was gone, and there
-was nothing to fear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And the quicker I can get a gunboat after
-that devil, Lim Tock, the better!" reflected
-Barnes. He still saw red at thought of what
-he had witnessed the previous night.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-An hour passed, and another, and the coast
-opened up before them as the breeze held.
-The mountains of the interior rose in a dull
-purple mass, against which stood the brighter
-green of the low shores. An island presently
-detached itself to the north, and after studying
-the coast-line carefully, Hi John declared
-this to be Bunju, with the island of Tarakan
-a little off the port bow. South of Tarakan
-were Dutch posts on the Bulangan River
-mouths, so Barnes let her fill off a little,
-heading southeast by east.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The children, meantime, had begun to explore,
-and two of them appeared aft, staring
-at the three men with wondering brown eyes,
-but too shy to talk. Barnes was paying little
-heed to them; both he and Hi John were
-examining the coast ahead. Then, suddenly, Li
-Fu uncurled, and came out of his sleep with a
-blood-curdling yell.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For an instant Barnes thought the
-quartermaster had gone mad, until he saw the man
-staring at the wet leg of his dungaree
-trousers. Wet! A chattering cry from Li Fu
-drove the warning home. He plunged forward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Drop it, you little rascal! Drop it!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was one of those slight accidents upon
-which destiny hangs and veers. The Arab
-boy had found the lanyard of the plug in the
-boat's bottom, and now stood holding up the
-plug curiously while the water spouted into
-her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At the cry and plunge of Barnes, the boy
-scrambled away forward. Nora Sayers came
-aft, and ran into him. They fell together,
-just as Barnes flung himself on the plug and
-attempted to replace it. Hi John, too startled
-to mind his helm properly, let her yaw on
-the crest of a wave&mdash;and the big mainsail
-gybed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes, who had jammed the plug back
-into place, thought she was gone; but the
-water that she had shipped saved her in that
-instant. The mast, bone-dry and rotten,
-went with a rending crash, smashing the sprit
-with it. She swept up on the next sea with a
-pile of canvas dragging over her bow and the
-frightened children screaming.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Seizing Li Fu's knife, Barnes went into the
-tangle furiously, for somewhere beneath it
-was Ellen Maggs. He found her unhurt,
-however, her arms about the youngest child.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lord, girl! I thought the mast had hit
-you. Get aft, now. Both of you girls take
-pannikins and bail. Li, put out an oar and
-keep her from broaching. John, come along
-and help clear away. Move sharp, everybody!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In five minutes the dripping canvas was
-hauled in amidships and the damage
-ascertained. The sprit was gone beyond repair,
-and the upper half of the mast. Against the
-stump, Barnes held an oar while Hi John
-deftly lashed it in place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What happened?" demanded Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We all picked the lee side to fall on," and
-Barnes laughed as he spoke. "Cheer up!
-No harm done! We'll run into shore and
-replace the spars, then be on our way. Eh,
-John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can do," grunted Hi John, examining the
-coast line. "Plenty bamboo. Hey! Catchum
-sail off sta'board counter!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes leaped to a thwart and took one look
-to the north. A brown, square sail was in
-sight, creeping from behind one of the islands.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He turned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, John, move! Get that canvas up,
-anyway at all so it'll draw&mdash;come on! Use
-that long piece of the sprit for a gaff; lash the
-canvas to it and then lash it as high on the
-oar as you can. Look alive! That's your
-junk, yonder."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two men fell furiously to work, while
-the women bailed and Li Fu tugged at the
-long oar to keep the whaleboat from broaching.
-And the brownish yellow matting sail
-crept down on them like an ungainly water-spider.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-V
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Under the rapid directions of Barnes,
-the whaleboat was presently surging
-through the water again, while he took the
-tiller and the quartermasters finished the
-bailing. Both women sat a bit aft to trim the
-boat anew; and, as they had worked diligently
-at Cantonese while fitting themselves for
-mission duties, they understood the tongue more
-or less. Neither of the quartermasters was
-aware of the fact. Barnes spoke it not at all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our master is in love with this drooping
-girl," said Li Fu chantingly, as he bailed.
-"Lim Tock desired her also. She must have
-a devil that charms some men, for she is of no
-beauty in my eyes."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John laughed harshly. "If those aboard
-the junk see the women, they will try hard for
-us! Lim Tock was a Straits man; to him
-white women are beautiful. These others are
-Straits men, too, I think. Women are more
-desirable than gold, and white women than
-pearls; for white women are hard to come by
-in Singapore, unless one&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He went on to speak learnedly of matters
-which, by good fortune, came in words that
-the two women had not learned. As it was,
-they gave each other a startled glance. Then
-Ellen Maggs motioned to the spare sail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Get it, Nora. Lie down and pull it over us."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes saw the action, and his eyes
-narrowed perplexedly. Then he understood,
-and a smile touched his lips.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good work, girls! Get the kids with you.
-Li and John, lie down here by the after
-thwart, in the trough of the next wave.
-Chances are they won't have very good
-glasses aboard the junk. We'll puzzle 'em a
-bit and make 'em suspicious."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once again the slender accident upon
-which hangs fortune! Although the junk
-was at least three miles from them, Barnes
-had swiftly estimated her course and sailing
-power, and had come to the desperate
-conclusion that she meant to intercept them and
-would do so before they could make the shore.
-Her large forward and smaller after sail were
-putting her through the water almost dead
-before the wind at a fast clip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now, when the whaleboat rose to the following
-seas, she presented the spectacle of a
-boat under jury rig manned by a single figure
-in the stern. Other figures had been aboard
-her; now they were gone. To those on the
-junk, familiar with the artifices of Malay and
-Dyak, familiar with theft and murder and
-piracy by quiet lagoon and hidden river-mouth,
-it was obvious that the thirty-foot
-whaleboat wished them to think only one
-person was aboard. The others might be lying
-hidden with weapons ready under mats and
-sails&mdash;as they were.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes hauled in his sheets until the
-whaleboat began to heel, and headed up more
-directly For the shore, sailing by the wind and
-getting every possible fraction of speed out of
-her. Watching narrowly, he saw the brown
-matting sail braced around. The junk altered
-her course slightly, to run past the stern
-of the whaleboat and reconnoitre.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good!" he exclaimed, with a breath of
-relief. "We've won&mdash;he's frightened!
-Everybody stay close, now. We don't want her
-to learn too much. Li Fu, feel around there
-and pass me up the crutch for the steering oar,
-and you, John, have one of the oars ready.
-I'll ship the crutch and get out the oar.
-That'll give us better steering power and add
-a bit to our speed. We'll need the oar in the
-surf, if there is any."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Five minutes later the change was made
-and Barnes stood up to the long oar, which
-kept the boat from yawing and thus aided her
-progress. Her makeshift rig was holding
-and promised to effect its purpose.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-So it did, indeed. Another twenty minutes
-made so plain to the junk that the whaleboat
-could not be intercepted, that she hauled
-about and stood off-shore, giving up the chase
-entirely. Barnes jubilantly conveyed the
-news to all hands, but added a warning
-word.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stay where you are! We don't want her
-coming in later to investigate us. John, stand
-by the centreboard and haul up when I give
-the word. There's a lagoon ahead, and we
-may find a bar at the entrance. No sign of
-any, but that don't always signify&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He craned anxiously forward as he stood,
-examining the shores upon which they were
-sweeping. They were low and unhealthy.
-From the water ascended a line, a tangled
-cluster of mangrove roots twisted like frozen
-snakes, with the green wall above. Here and
-there, however, openings showed that behind
-these islets lay long lagoons. For one of these
-openings Barnes steered, forced to take
-chances on striking a sandbar. He looked back
-from a crest and found the brown sail dipping
-under the horizon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All clear! Come alive! Ready for a
-shock if she strikes, girls. Haul in, John!
-That's the ticket!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In between the trees, they rushed on a white
-foam-crest, swept past, and went darting
-across the quiet surface of a lagoon, the sails
-flapping. A hundred yards in width it was,
-the mangrove wall on one side, and on the
-other a strip of white sand with jungle
-greenery making another wall to shut off the sky.
-The boat glided gently across and drifted
-until her nose touched the sand. With a breath
-of relief, Barnes dropped his oar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then the heat smote them, blazing, torrential,
-insufferable. There in the quiet lagoon,
-cut off from wind and sea, the sun beat down
-unchecked. Nora Sayers, coming to her feet,
-glanced at the watch on her wrist and uttered
-a cry of surprise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good gracious! Do you know that it's
-nearly noon? No wonder it's hot&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sit down!" ordered Barnes. "Pull her
-up, lads."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Leaping into the water, the quartermasters
-pulled the nose of the whaleboat to the sand
-and helped the two women and the children
-out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All ashore!" sang out Barnes. "Li Fu,
-you and John cut a new mast and sprit.
-Bamboo, if you can find it; if not, whatever you
-can get. Miss Sayers, keep your eye on the
-kids, will you? Miss&mdash;er&mdash;Ellen, will you
-take this stuff as I hand it out? We'll use the
-spare canvas for table-cloth, and have a
-bang-up feed to celebrate. You girls are getting
-your money's worth this cruise! How do
-you like Borneo?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nora Sayers had no time to answer, for
-the three brown children had promptly
-stripped and were plunging through the
-water or catching sand-fleas, and she was
-in laughing pursuit. Ellen Maggs smiled as
-she took the provisions that Barnes handed
-out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I&mdash;why, I like it!" she said, her eyes big
-with wonder at the things around, and
-sparkling with eagerness. "I'm frightened, and
-happy, and&mdash;don't want to go back! Are
-there any savages around?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Probably a few head-hunters, but they
-won't worry us. Here's a tin of sardines."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-With her next load the girl was laughing
-at sight of Nora Sayers rounding up her
-charges.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I wish we could do that, too! The water
-looks so clean, and the sand so white."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Nothing to prevent," said Barnes, chuckling.
-"After lunch we'll get the boat rigged.
-You and Nora can slip up around that point,
-take the kids along and enjoy life. No sharks
-of any size in here, and no crocodiles in salt
-water, I guess. You might catch a stingaree,
-but not much chance. While you're gone,
-I'll have a dip myself."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nora Sayers and the excited, chattering
-brown children rejoined them, and presently
-their noon meal was ready. Barnes sent up a
-call, which was answered from the depths of
-the green jungle, but the meal was half over
-when Li Fu and Hi John appeared. They
-were hot and bedraggled, but exultantly
-produced two admirable spars of bamboo, each
-of the right size, for mast and sprit.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Nora Sayers, energetic and vigorous despite
-the heat, went exploring and announced the
-discovery of a little cove, just around a sandy
-point. So, taking the children, she and Ellen
-Maggs presently departed thither, and the
-joyful shrieks of splashing youngsters soon
-echoed through the lagoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes lighted his pipe and fell to
-work on the spars, at which the quartermasters
-joined him after their meal. It was no
-light job, since he was determined to have
-everything shipshape for the proper handling
-of the boat, and the sheath-knives made slow
-work of the fibrous bamboo. It was an hour
-before the mast was stepped and rigged to his
-satisfaction. Then he enjoyed a quick dip,
-and was dressed again when the others
-returned. The Chinese went in search of crabs,
-to vary their diet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The two women found Barnes sitting on the
-sand, his pipe alight and a frown on his face,
-as he studied the opposite shore of the lagoon.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are you all ready to get off?" asked Nora.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ready and waiting." Barnes grinned
-cheerfully. "Look at the channel over there,
-by which we came in. Notice anything funny
-about it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both women looked, perplexed, but could
-find no explanation of his words. Barnes
-pointed to the sand about the bow of the boat.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"There's the answer, girls. Tide! It must
-have been on the ebb when we got here. Now
-she's gone down, and there isn't three inches
-of water over the bar. We're stuck until
-about five o'clock, that's all! I'm taking no
-chances with a thin-skinned whaleboat."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We can't get out, then?" queried Ellen
-Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right. We can fish and sew and smoke
-and talk, and hunt crabs, but we can't leave.
-By four or five o'clock we may scrape over.
-Why worry? We're a lot better off than we
-might have been. Not often you strike a
-sand beach along these mangrove swamps, I
-can tell you! We'll stretch the spare sail as
-an awning for the kids and let 'em sleep."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Using the broken spars, and Nora Sayers
-aiding him, he stretched the canvas from the
-side of the boat and the three children were
-soon asleep in the shade. Retiring to the edge
-of the trees, the three awaited the return of
-the quartermasters. Barnes sighed luxuriously.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Golly! This is the first vacation I've had
-in a long while. Hope you girls won't lose
-your jobs if you don't get back to China on
-schedule?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I guess not," said Ellen Maggs. "What
-brought you on that awful ship, Mr. Barnes?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes gave her a look of whimsical reproach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now, now, I'm surprised at you! My
-name isn't Mister&mdash;it's Jim! Make believe
-we're on a desert isle, can't you?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Ellen Maggs blushed faintly, but her eyes
-were sparkling when she responded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right&mdash;Jim! Now what brought you
-on that ship?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fate," said Jim Barnes, grinning. "Do
-you girls remember that morning you came
-into the consul's office in Hong Kong?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Both women glanced at him, surprised.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Were you there?" demanded Nora Sayers.
-"We didn't see you?".
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I was there when you left, after talking
-with the consul about the <i>Sulu Queen</i>" he
-responded. "You were too excited to notice
-me, though. The consul's a good sport. He
-knew the old hooker was no ship for me, but
-he said you girls were stubborn and were
-going to take the trip aboard her&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"The rates," put in Ellen Maggs meekly,
-"were half what the other steamers wanted."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Sure. So's the pay they offered me. 'You
-go along on that houseboat of corruption,
-Barnes,' the consul said. 'She needs a second,
-and there ought to be one white man aboard
-her if those fool girls are determined to sail.' So,
-having seen you girls, I agreed with him&mdash;and
-here we are! And believe me, I'm tickled
-to death that I shipped aboard her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So am I," said Nora Sayers laughing
-frankly. Ellen Maggs said nothing at all,
-but Barnes caught a look from her eyes that
-set his pulses leaping.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu and Hi John returned with a mighty
-loot of crabs and sea-slugs garnered from the
-outer reef, and reported that no sail was in
-sight, nor was any trail of smoke along the
-horizon. While the women shudderingly
-eyed the hideous slugs and the children poked
-at them with sticks, Barnes got a fire going
-from dry driftwood and the crab-meat was
-cooked. The two Chinese squatted over
-another fire and prepared the slugs after their
-own fashion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The repast was flavored with curiosity
-rather than hunger. By the time it was done,
-Nora Sayers announced the hour as nearly
-four. Jim Barnes glanced out at the bar, and
-nodded. The tide was creeping in.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All aboard! We'll try it, anyhow. Unship
-the tiller, Li! She steers and handles
-much better with the oar."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thankful to escape from the unstirred,
-stagnant heat of the lagoon, the women and
-children were aided into the boat after it had
-been shoved clear. Barnes took the stern; the
-quartermasters ran her out and leaped aboard,
-getting out oars.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Wind's going down outside," announced
-Barnes, as they neared the opening. "We'll
-keep along the coast during the night,
-however, and with morning ought to run into some
-native fishing boats. We can soon find where
-the nearest Dutch post is located. Here we
-are, now! In oars, men! Stand by the
-centreboard, John. Li Fu, take care of the
-sheets!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boat's keel touched the mud of the bar
-lightly, very lightly, and then was over.
-There had been surf in the morning, but now
-it was gone, except for a line of breakers fifty
-feet away. The sails caught the breeze, the
-boat heeled over, and a moment later Barnes
-luffed and drove her through the surf, to fall
-away on the other tack and head out to the
-southward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then, as he stood watching the sails, his
-eyes widened. Before him, seemingly without
-cause, had appeared a little round hole in
-the mainsail. An instant later the crack of a
-rifle came on the wind. He turned, as a shout
-broke from Li Fu, and perceived what none
-of them had observed in the moment of
-getting through the surf.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Half a mile to the north along the
-mangrove reef was the same junk they had
-encountered earlier in the day; and, between her
-and them, bearing down upon them and booming
-along with the breeze, were three ship's
-boats with canvas set.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Our boats!" cried Jim Barnes. "They
-sank the ship and came along in the boats.
-Down, everybody! John, get those water
-breakers aft to trim ship. Down!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Another rifle-crack emphasized his words,
-and then the sharp song of the bullet whining
-overhead, followed by a chorus of yells from
-the three boats.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-VI
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Barnes stood at the steering oar, holding
-the long ash deep and giving the whaleboat
-every ounce of windage that would drive
-her forward. Shot after shot rang out from
-the pursuing boats, which were filled with
-men.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He could picture well enough what had
-happened. Lim Tock, unable to repair the
-smashed engines of the <i>Sulu Queen</i>, had sunk
-her. Into the boats had piled the lascars and
-the yellow men, with their loot and opium,
-and started for the coast. They must have
-met the junk during the day, put the loot
-aboard her, heard of the whaleboat, and had
-come to seek her. Lim Tock would not dare
-to let her escape to carry tales.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"And now they've found us right enough!"
-he thought. "Caught us, confound it! If
-they didn't have rifles, I'd run out to sea and
-fight 'em with seamanship. Those lascars
-can't begin to handle whaleboats. If we only
-had a good mile between us! But the wind's
-falling. It'll die out, and won't come up
-again until after sunset. And by that time
-they'll crawl up on us with the oars. Damn it!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The bullets droned overhead. One man at
-a time seemed to be firing until his magazine
-emptied. There were good shots among the
-pursuers, too; several holes were visible in the
-mainsail, and twice Barnes had felt hot lead
-come close. It dawned upon him that they
-were firing at his figure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Are we beating them?" called Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," said Barnes grimly. In his appraisal
-he found the case hopeless, desperate;
-and he put it bluntly enough, explaining that
-the oarsmen aboard the pursuing boats, and
-the calm that was certain to fall, insured
-their being overtaken. The Chinese listened
-calmly, with clear understanding; the two
-women comprehending well enough, but
-urging him desperately with their eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The whaleboat was reaching out on the
-starboard tack, as she had left the lagoon
-opening. The land fell away to the southwest,
-so that she was standing practically out
-to sea while running almost before the wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We'll have to run for the land, and do it
-quick," said Barnes. "We don't dare to tack;
-we'll have to wear. The breeze is still pretty
-fresh, and they're apparently badly out of
-trim; good! Now you'll see some fun, girls.
-I'll bet a trade dollar that one of 'em gets
-spilled. Nora, come a bit aft and sit on the
-lee thwart&mdash;that's right. Revolvers loaded, men?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The quartermasters answered with a nod.
-Barnes commanded Li Fu to stand by the fore
-sheet and, when the helm was put up, to empty
-his weapon at the nearest of the three boats.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You take charge of the main sheet, John.
-Those lascars will imitate us, and we'll give
-'em something to imitate, or I'm a Dutchman!
-All right, John&mdash;slack away, roundly! Haul
-in&mdash;haul in! Let her gybe, now&mdash;smart does
-it! Ease away, now&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The staccato reports of Li Fu's revolver
-cracked emptily down the wind. The boat
-went off before the wind, and the mainsail was
-hauled in and gybed dangerously, then was
-eased away as she paid off on the new tack.
-Li Fu, dropping his weapon, handled the fore
-sheet smartly to meet her by the wind.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A jubilant yell broke from Barnes as he
-glanced backward. The foremost pursuer,
-confused by Li Fu's bullets, tried to wear
-hastily and suddenly. Her mainsail hauled
-around in a terrific jibe that sent her flat over.
-Heads dotted the water about the craft, but
-the other two boats managed the trick safely
-and stood away without halting to pick
-up their companions. A renewed rifle-fire
-opened from them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fire and be damned to you!" shouted
-Barnes in delight. "If I had you out at sea
-and the wind steady, I'd show you tricks, you
-dogs! That's one of you gone, and the junk
-will be delayed picking up&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The words seemed suddenly checked on his
-lips; a grunt broke from him, an abrupt
-ejaculation of surprise and almost alarm. The
-occasion of it did not appear.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can either of you men steer with the oar?"
-he demanded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu shook his head. Hi John assented
-with a nod, and Barnes beckoned him.
-Picking his way aft, Hi John took over the oar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You see that point dead ahead, with what
-seems to be a river-mouth on the other side?
-Head for it, or a couple of points to starboard
-of it to allow for leeway. And make the
-river, John&mdash;good man&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes spoke jerkily. For an instant he
-changed countenance; an expression of agony
-leaped across his face. He started forward.
-A cry broke from Ellen Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Catch him, Li Fu!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But Jim Barnes sank down on the thwart
-beside Nora Sayers, and, smiling a little,
-reached up one of his automatics to Li Fu.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Here, Li! Go aft to keep her trimmed,
-and let 'em have it. Fire low; those bullets
-will smash through the boat."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu stepped past him. Barnes, disregarding
-the hand of Nora Sayers, lifted himself
-forward a little and dropped near the bow
-thwart, beside Ellen Maggs. The three
-children were up in the bow, chattering away and
-delighted with the chase.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You're hurt?" cried Ellen Maggs, leaning
-toward Barnes. He laughed lightly, though
-his lips were graying, as he looked into her
-eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye. Nora, pass up that little black medicine
-chest, will you? It's stowed under your
-thwart, I think, with the lantern and other
-stuff that was in the boat. Does either of you
-girls know anything about surgery?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I do," said Ellen Maggs. Her cheeks
-were very white, her eyes large. "Only a
-little&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes put his hand under his shirt and
-examined his side gingerly. Then, with a
-grimace, he wriggled out of his jacket. He took
-the sheath-knife which Li Fu tossed forward
-on demand, and cut at the right side of his
-shirt. Nora Sayers, her face drawn and
-anxious, would have come with the medicine case,
-but Barnes checked her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stay where you are, Nora. We're fighting
-to reach land ahead of those devils, and
-every bit of trim to the boat counts a lot.
-Throw it; that's right. Now Ellen, the
-bullet went in under the right arm and is
-bulging out the skin here on my right side. Cut
-the skin and it'll pop out. I'm not left-handed
-or I could do it. Then douse on
-plenty of iodine fore and aft, and clap on some
-kind of a bandage."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He lay back and threw up his arms, gripping
-the corks outside the gunwale, and so lay
-motionless, waiting. The girl leaned forward,
-her lips clenched.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Don't worry; it won't hurt," he said easily.
-"You, Li Fu! Open up. Are they gaining
-on us, or holding steady?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Plenty steady," responded the quartermaster.
-At the next wave-crest he fired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-His feet braced, Barnes lay motionless, and
-a smile crept to his pallid lips as he noted the
-deft certainty with which the girl attacked
-her task. Twice she started to cut, and
-flinched; then, desperately, she set the keen
-steel to the white skin. In five seconds it was
-done. The bullet fell from her reddened
-fingers and bounced on the thin sheathing.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Steady, steady!" said Barnes quietly,
-seeing her lips quiver. "Now the smelly stuff
-and the bandages, girl." A sudden exclamation
-from the Chinese made him glance up.
-"What is it, men? What is it?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"That last shot plenty damn good; first-chop!"
-responded Li Fu, staring out. "Hai!
-Catchum bottomside one time!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Fine work!" cried Barnes. "That's two
-out of the race. Ripped through her
-sheathing, eh? Anybody hurt?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My no can see&mdash;catchum one damn coolie,
-mebbeso. Bail like hellee!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good! Do the same to the other boat if
-you can."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Can do," asserted Li Fu confidently, but
-he failed to make good his promise. The one
-shot that caused one of the two pursuers to
-limp behind was doubtless sheer luck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Turn over, please," came the voice of
-Ellen Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes obeyed. The girl caught her breath
-as his blood-soaked back was revealed, while
-Nora Sayers leaned forward and directed her,
-aiding as best she could.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"How's the wind?" demanded Barnes,
-while the bandage was being wrapped in
-place.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Go down plenty quick," responded Li Fu,
-examining the empty weapon. "No can do.
-I think Lim Tock in this boat. Plenty joss."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Huh! Joss won't save him if I get a good
-crack at the devil," commented Barnes, as he
-lay face-down. "Going to make the river,
-John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye. Can do."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It's done," said Ellen Maggs, her voice
-very faint.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes lifted himself stiffly and sat up. He
-saw the girl smile tremulously. Then her
-face went ashen and she dropped back against
-the lee gunwale and lay quiet. Barnes looked
-up at Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Leave her be," he said quietly. "Poor
-girl! Must have been hell for her."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It was," agreed Nora Sayers, regarding
-him almost savagely. "Why didn't you let
-me do it? She wasn't made for that sort of
-thing, although she's a wonderful surgical
-assistant. I saw her faint twice, one morning
-at Tientsin, when they were working on the
-wounded men. She ought to be cooking and
-tending babies, instead of messing around
-blood and wounds!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good lord, don't take it out on me!" said
-Barnes, and smiled a little. "I didn't send
-her out to China, did I? But it won't be my
-fault if she ever goes back, I can tell you that!
-Come on, swap places with me and mother
-her a bit. I've got to see what's doing. We've
-got a darned slim chance even if we do get
-ashore, and we can't overlook any bets."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He dragged himself painfully to the thwart,
-Nora Sayers aiding him. Then, as he sat up,
-she took the head of Ellen Maggs in her lap.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To his infinite relief, Barnes perceived that
-they were more than holding their own in the
-chase, and, if the wind had held, might have
-run for it successfully. But the wind would
-not hold. Already it was dying out. Looking
-back, he could see the brown matting sails
-of the junk flapping idly as she lay to,
-picking up the men from the capsized boat. The
-second boat, half submerged, was heading
-back for her.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only the third boat held on its course. As
-nearly as Barnes could tell, there were a dozen
-men aboard her, but without glasses he could
-not distinguish figures to the extent of
-identifying them. He took the empty weapon from
-Li Fu and began to reload.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"None too many cartridges left; we didn't
-figure on a little war," he commented, and
-turned his attention to the shore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A breath of relief escaped him. The shore
-was a scant quarter-mile away, and the wind
-would get them to it. Hi John had made the
-promontory, a low, mangrove-rimmed tongue
-of land, and was heading toward the
-river-mouth which had disclosed itself beyond.
-The stream was one of some size, thickly girt
-by trees and jungle.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A single line of surf, breaking across the
-bar, was divided by a small, narrow island of
-white sand, where a few trees struggled. With
-extra high tides the island would be covered,
-Barnes decided, but not at present.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Right-hand channel, John," he directed.
-"Then beach her on that island. If we don't
-get that boat stopped, she'll do for us; but we
-can stop her. Ellen waked up yet?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not yet," said Nora Sayers.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then leave her alone. The next ten minutes
-tells the tale. Give me that gun of hers."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The girl obeyed. A shrill cry from Hi
-John heralded the surf-line, and as the boat
-rose to it, the sail began to flap. The wind
-was down.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-VII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Sunset was at hand. The red ball of the
-sun, blurred out of rotundity by the haze,
-hovered at the purple rim of the western
-mountains as though hesitating to depart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boat was through the surf, carried forward
-by the white crest in a surging rush. A
-last puff of wind filled her sails and gave her
-way enough to get over the bar and go in upon
-the sandy shore of the islet. Here the trees
-and brush, while nothing like the tangled
-mass of jungle ashore, were thick enough to
-afford concealment. This was not the aim of
-Barnes, however.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Haul her up, lads!" To his order the
-quartermasters leaped out. "You girls stay
-here and keep the kids quiet. If they have
-the nerve to rush, we're gone; but they won't.
-Here, John, give me a hand! Quick!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He was helped ashore, finding himself very
-weak but clear-headed. Each of the Chinese
-had a revolver. Barnes had two automatics
-and the one belonging to Ellen. He gave his
-directions swiftly, and the two men darted
-into the brush. Barnes leaned against the
-nearest tree and waited, watching the canvas
-of the pursuing boat come flying in with the
-last dregs of the breeze.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At last she came, rising on the gathering
-surge of the breaking surf, bow flinging high,
-steersman standing at the straining, oar in the
-stern. As she lifted against the flaming sky,
-Barnes threw up his automatic and fired. The
-oarsman crumpled up. From three points
-the islet spat bullets at the nearing boat,
-sweeping her with the hot lead.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-By some miracle, the expected did not
-happen. Instead of capsizing, the boat swept in
-on the surf, and paused. A rifle spat
-response vainly. Men were tumbling, falling
-over the thwarts, shrieking and yelling oaths.
-The figure of Lim Tock, in the bow,
-staggered and went down, but his voice pierced
-through the din continually.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An oar was put out, and another. Of the
-dozen men aboard her, not half survived that
-blasting welcome. Revolvers and pistols had
-been emptied. Frantically the gasping men
-got the boat headed around to meet the surf.
-Two more oars jabbed out. Barnes lifted
-Ellen Maggs' pistol and shot with deliberate
-aim. Two of the oarsmen sprawled down.
-Somehow the boat crawled out again, in an
-interval of the surf, and began to draw away.
-Barnes, disappointed and raging, emptied his
-last bullets at her. For a while she floated
-there, until the oars bit at the water and
-pulled her slowly away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Damn it!" said Barnes bitterly, as the
-quartermasters came back, reloading. "Came
-within an ace of capsizing him; came within
-an ace of getting him and bagging his rifles!
-And missed. Now we've lost the whole trick
-after all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Plenty joss along Lim Tock," commented Hi John.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes wearily turned to the boat and
-seated himself on the gunwale, while at his
-order the two men unshipped the spars and
-canvas. Ellen Maggs still lay unconscious,
-her head in the lap of Nora Sayers, who, was
-looking up at Barnes with glad eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"We've won? You beat them off?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes mechanically felt for his pipe, filled
-it, and held a match to it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No," he said, his voice bitter. "We'd
-have won if we'd got their rifles and killed
-that devil, Lim Tock. We only drove him
-off&mdash;and we've lost, absolutely. Leave the
-spars here ashore, John; put the canvas
-aboard&mdash;that's right. Lay her on the
-canvas, Nora, and take it easy. You'll need the
-sails for a covering against the night-mist."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-When she had made the unconscious girl
-comfortable with the canvas, Nora Sayers
-rose and stepped ashore, where the three
-children were already ranging happily.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What do you mean?" she demanded.
-"How have we lost?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes jerked his pipe to seaward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They're bound to silence us at all costs,
-aren't they? Sure. They've plenty of men
-aboard the junk and those other boats. It'll
-probably remain calm until sunrise, now, and
-we can't possibly get to sea. We can use only
-two oars. The inference is obvious."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She could not mistake it, and nodded slowly.
-Barnes turned to the two Chinese.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Any idea where we are, John?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John nodded, and squatted in the sand
-with a stick. In the sand he drew several
-converging lines, designed to represent the
-delta and mouths of a large river. He pointed
-to one, then indicated the river beside them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I think Bulungan River," he said. "We
-go up, bimeby we come topside. Big river."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You may be right, John&mdash;and look here!
-There's a Dutch post somewhere up the
-Bulungan&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Two," said the quartermaster. "Plenty
-big river, topside."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes looked at the recumbent figure of
-Ellen Maggs in the boat, looked at the three
-children playing in the sand. In the warm,
-clear light of the sunset, the perplexed frown
-of his face was plain to be seen. He looked
-anxious, yet his blue eyes were stormy and
-filled with a passionate anger as though he
-were rebelling against something that he saw
-was unavoidable. He came to his feet and
-paused.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Dutch posts?" cried Nora Sayers eagerly.
-"Then we can row up the river!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes looked at her, and under the regard
-of his eyes she fell silent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, you can," he said. "Sure. And so
-can those devils, unless there's something right
-here to stop 'em! Besides, it's a long chance.
-We don't know for sure that it's the Bulungan
-River, or one of the mouths. That's the devil
-of destiny; it never gives a man a fair show
-for his white alley! The cards are stacked
-every time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He glanced at the sky. There was yet half
-an hour of daylight, for the sun was down
-behind the western mountains of Borneo, and
-the afterglow would linger for a while.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You mean," questioned the girl, "that they
-can row so much faster than we can?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Exactly. A dozen oars to our two. The
-Dutch posts, if they're here, are probably
-miles up-river. They are trading posts, you
-know, in touch with the natives. We might
-hide somewhere along the river, only to die
-slowly. Lim Tock will search every inch of
-the stream, you may be sure. His own life
-depends on it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"If we could get a messenger up the river&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes," said Barnes, and laughed. Nora
-Sayers bit her lip.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For a moment he puffed at his pipe, then
-drew a deep breath and beckoned the two
-quartermasters. They came, watching his
-face calmly, without emotion.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You men will take this boat and row up
-the stream," he said quietly. "I confide to
-your care these two women, and these
-children. You are to protect them at all costs.
-This is&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"But&mdash;wait!" exclaimed Nora Sayers in dismay.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shut up!" snapped Barnes. "Now, men,
-this is your duty. They must be taken up to
-the Dutch post, wherever it is. It means you
-must row most of the night, understand? I
-shall remain here and stop Lim Tock's men.
-I'm no good for rowing&mdash;and I can do that.
-Now, do you understand?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"My savvy. Aye," they responded together.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good. Get to work and lighten the boat,
-then."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes put his pipe between his teeth and
-stepped toward the trees. He found himself
-halted, the girl's hand on his arm. He
-turned, and was astonished by the emotion
-that was in her face and eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Please!" she said brokenly. "You must
-not do this. You must not deliberately
-sacrifice yourself&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Cut it out, will you?" he roughly
-intervened. "I know what must be done here,
-Nora. I'm not making any grandstand play,
-either. I can hold 'em up, and you can send
-down a Dutch launch with a gun in her.
-They have 'em with machine-guns and pom-poms.
-One o' their launches could sink that
-blamed junk in a jiffy! They'll come quick
-enough, too! Believe me, those Dutchmen
-like nothing better than wiping out pirates,
-unless it's wiping out plague-ships. They do
-both jobs up brown."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Stop evading, please," she broke in.
-"Why are you doing this? Why don't you
-leave one of those Chinese here, and go with
-us?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The face of Barnes twisted wryly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Gosh, I wish that I could!" he said almost
-wistfully. "Nope. Whoever stays here will
-have a sweet time of it. Besides, I'm good
-for nothing else. Those quartermasters are
-darned fine men, Nora; they'll see you
-through safe. You've got to realize that
-we're up against a desperate affair, and no
-half-way measures will serve!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She stared into his eyes for a moment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is it for the children that you're doing
-it?" she asked. "They aren't worth it, I tell
-you! Three Arab children&mdash;they aren't
-worth the loss of a man like you!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You know better, girl," he said quietly,
-and she shivered.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Is it&mdash;us? Is it for her? Then, do you
-think she'd want to leave you? Do you think
-she'd want to live and know that you had died
-here&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Shut up; you'll be hysterical if you keep
-up this gait," interrupted Barnes. "Now,
-young lady, you can gamble good and hard
-that I don't want to stay here! Not much.
-If there was any way out of it, I wouldn't.
-I'm not hankering for a martyr's crown or
-any of that hero stuff, not for a minute! I'm
-for keeping Jim Barnes topside every time.
-It hurts like hell to realize that there's no
-other way out. But here are you girls, and
-the kids, and somebody has to wait here. See?
-It just has to be done, that's all."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then&mdash;then you don't believe that&mdash;we
-can reach the post in time?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Well, anything's possible," said Barnes
-dryly. "Sure, there's a chance! Now, I
-want you to get off before Ellen wakes up,
-see? Let her sleep as long as she will; this
-faint of hers is liable to go into sleep."
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-Meantime, the two quartermasters, while
-lightening the boat of everything except food
-and a breaker of water, had been drinking in
-what they could understand of this conversation.
-Their work finished, they stood by the
-bow of the boat and looked at each other for
-a moment, silent. At length Li Fu spoke,
-impassively, unconcerned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"To the superior man, duty is as a clear star
-shining in the night."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"So it is written," agreed Hi John. "Give
-me your revolver and cartridges."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Haste treads upon the tail of a tiger,"
-dissented Li Fu reflectively. "Here is the
-revolver. Let us see to whom the gods assign it.
-Shall a white man be braver than we?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Very well."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu tossed his revolver in the air. It
-spun, end over end, and spinning, fell down
-into the sand. The butt fell toward Li Fu,
-who stooped and picked it up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Now give me yours," he said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Hi John obeyed without protest, passing
-over his revolver and what spare cartridges
-he had in his pockets. Then he turned and
-walked to Barnes and Nora Sayers, who had
-watched this scene curiously. He addressed
-the girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Missee, I think mebbeso you can row
-plenty good?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Of course!" she exclaimed. "Of course I
-can!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Then you row along me," said Hi John.
-"Li Fu, he stop here."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes growled something under his
-breath, and walked over to Li Fu.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What's this mean?" he demanded. "You
-get in that boat and row, d'you understand?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu regarded him placidly, without
-emotion, his yellow features very composed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"You go hellee," he said, and then grinned.
-"My stop along you. Savvy? Missee plenty
-stlong, use oar plenty good! You go hellee."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-What he saw in those calm eyes checked
-the words on the lips of Barnes. He turned
-and went to the boat, and waded out along the
-gunwale until he was beside the figure of
-Ellen Maggs. With an effort, he stooped and
-touched his lips to her still cheek.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good-by, girl!" he whispered, and then
-straightened. "Get the kids, Nora! Come
-on, pile in; time to get off! Get as far as you
-can before it gets dark. Wrap a cloth about
-your hands, too; they'll be blistered quick
-enough."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Collecting the children, Nora Sayers got
-into the boat. She held out her hand to
-Barnes, who gripped it and smiled cheerfully.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Good-by," she said, her voice breaking.
-"I wish you'd let me wake her up! She'd
-want to say&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"She'd say I needed a shave damn bad," and
-Barnes chuckled as he made reply. "You
-settle down on this thwart. All ready, men?
-Shove off. Good luck to you, Nora! Wrap
-your hands, now, before you get started. See
-you later!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boat glided out, Hi John scrambling
-aboard as she cleared the sand. Nora Sayers
-tried to answer, but could not. Barnes stood
-beside Li Fu and waved his hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The boat slowly drew up-river under the
-pull of the two oars and vanished around the
-head of the islet.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-VIII
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-"Watch and watch, Li Fu," said Barnes,
-when night settled down on the islet, the
-river-mouth and the booming surf. "I'm
-done in. Wake me at midnight; they'll not
-come until then."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Not then, I think," said Li Fu. "China
-boys not like night devils. Plenty devils in
-liver."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"All right," Barnes laughed as he
-stretched out in the warm sand. "Let the
-river-devils fight for us, then!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-About midnight the quartermaster wakened
-him. There had been no alarm, no
-sound or sight of the enemy. Only the
-continuous rolling crash of the surf, regular and
-unceasing, conflicted with the noises of nightbirds
-from the jungle. The starlight and thin
-glow of the sickle moon faintly illumined the
-white sands and the glittering waters, where
-the waves curled and broke in running lines
-of phosphorescent radiance.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-At first Barnes found Li Fu's conviction
-incredible. It was hard to believe that Lim
-Tock's lascars and Chinese, the latter
-probably predominating, would relinquish the
-opportunity to sweep in upon the islet with their
-boats and finish everything with one determined
-rush. The Chinese firmly credited the
-existence of water-devils, however, and
-river-devils in particular, whose power at night was
-invincible.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes sat through his lonely watch, stiff
-and aching from his wound, and found no
-indication of alarm out on the surging waters,
-where a heavy ground-swell kept the rollers
-tumbling in along the shoreline. He began
-to think that he had wasted himself, despite
-all. Had he stayed in the boat, it by this time
-would be far up the river.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He laughed and shook off the thought.
-After all, he had no assurance of that! The
-boat, with only two oars, might be a day or
-two in reaching the main river above the
-delta, where the Dutch post would be placed.
-With dawn, the pirates would sweep down on
-the island. If they found it deserted, they
-would go up the river with a rush. No, the
-effort was not wasted; was far from wasted!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Toward dawn he roused Li Fu, and lay
-down once more to get all the rest possible.
-When the quartermaster again wakened him,
-it was to point out dark dots on the waters,
-now overcast with the graying dawn. The
-boats, four of them, were scattered a quarter-mile
-from the river mouth, up and down from
-the bar. Jim Barnes laughed softly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They think we'll come out with the first
-breath o' wind; that we've been waiting here
-for the breeze! And they're waiting to
-riddle us with their rifles, then close in. Good!
-Let 'em wait. Every minute gained puts the
-whaleboats farther up the river. Suppose we
-make some tea, Li Fu. The fire will show
-that we're here and encourage 'em to wait."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Chuckling at all this, Li Fu gathered wood
-and soon had a fire going. Hot tea and
-biscuit invigorated Barnes hugely, and he was
-much himself again by the time the reddening
-dawn and freshening daylight betrayed to the
-waiting boats that the fugitives were not
-setting forth from shore. No doubt they
-considered that Barnes had laid up the whaleboat
-and was prepared to fight it out.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They're closing in," said Barnes suddenly.
-"Oars are out. The junk is coming down the
-coast, too. She'll probably anchor off the
-river, and they'll pour in a hot rifle-fire before
-making a rush. Dig for cover, Li!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Grasping the idea, Li Fu took his knife to
-the sand and prepared two long, deep depressions
-at the edge of the brush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meantime, one of the boats drew in closer
-than the others as though to test the presence
-of those on the islet. Barnes sighed unavailingly
-for a rifle, as his pistols were of small
-value at such distance. He tried two shots,
-however, and by sheer luck dropped the boat's
-helmsman, so that she sheered off promptly.
-The boats opened a dropping rifle-fire, and
-Barnes retired to the position prepared.
-Lying beside Li Fu, he waited. He had three
-automatics and several spare clips. The
-quartermaster had two revolvers and a
-handful of loose cartridges.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Under the urge of the ground-swell, surf
-was now breaking in a heavy line at the bar,
-an outer line of breakers stretching twenty
-yards farther seaward. While the boats kept
-up their intermittent fire, bullets crashing
-across the island, the junk came slowly along
-with the morning breeze. Outside the first
-line of surf she dropped anchor and hauled
-down the brown matting sails, and the boats
-converged upon her. Streamers and fingers
-of flame were reaching across the whole
-eastern sky.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Plenty of men aboard her," said Barnes.
-"They'll crowd into the boats and pull for us.
-Catch the first boat as she rises, Li, like we did
-last night. If one of them goes over in that
-surf, not a man will reach shore. Good gosh,
-look at her rise up! They're fools if they try
-it."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-To the two men lying on the sandy islet,
-the surf promised indeed to be an excellent
-protection. The roaring breakers swept on
-and hurled up into a great wall of white and
-crimson spray, against the sunrise, a ten-foot
-wall of curling, foaming water whose impact
-as it came down made the islet shake and sent
-a booming roar echoing along the coast. The
-tide was coming in, and there was a strong rip
-along the bar.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Now the sun was up, in a gleaming splendor
-of golden glory.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As each glittering line of surf swept up and
-curled, it hid from sight the boats and all save
-the upper masts of the junk herself. Between
-the surges, the rifle-fire was maintained steadily,
-but Li Fu and Barnes were well protected
-against the ripping storm of lead that devastated
-the foliage above and ploughed the sand
-into ripples of dancing grains.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"They come," said Li Fu suddenly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The next surf-interval showed a crowded
-boat leaving the junk. The craft damaged
-on the preceding evening by Hi John's bullet
-must have sunk, for it appeared that now
-there were but two whaleboats among the
-four approaching craft. One of those,
-however, would do the business, thought Jim
-Barnes grimly.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Covered by a hot fire from the rifles, the
-first boat reached in for the surf, her oars
-dipping strongly, the other boats following her.
-She was a bluff-jawed longboat belonging to
-the junk, dangerously crowded with men, and
-Barnes caught the flame of naked steel as she
-lifted on a crest. He thrilled to the
-possibility of sending her over as she struck the
-white wall to cleave a way through. Not a
-man would reach shore through the pounding
-maelstrom of those waters.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Thundering and shuddering, a long breaker
-smashed and swirled across the bar, and now
-the longboat dipped oars and gathered way to
-rise on the next crest and come over. A whirl
-of bullets heralded her coming. Then, as the
-riotous crest closed in and lifted her and the
-shots ceased, Barnes came to one knee. He
-had her position absolutely fixed, and aimed
-carefully, firing even before she came into
-sight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She heaved and lifted, cleaving the water.
-Barnes fired again and again, hearing the
-bark of Li Fu's revolver at his side. A mad
-yell broke from the Chinese. Barnes lowered
-his arm and stared, wide-eyed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-That first shot of his, perhaps, had done the
-work; had sent a rower headlong at the
-crucial instant. At the very crest of the giant
-wave, the boat broached, was sent stern-first.
-A shriek burst from the score of men crowded
-into her, a fearful, splitting shriek that
-wrenched through the roar of the surf. Then
-she was picked up, hurled end over end from
-the crest of the wave, flung sideways, and went
-upside down beneath the terrific smash of
-that falling pinnacle of water.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A lather of foam spread out from the sweeping
-rush of the breaker, but not a man showed
-in it. They were held down, dragged out
-with the backlash, gripped and flung about
-with the mad swirl under the surface. The
-boat itself, a crushed and broken thing, came
-into sight, was tugged out and into the next
-surf-crest, to be whirled horribly aloft and
-buried again; but no man of all her crew appeared.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /></p>
-
-<p>
-The whiff of a bullet made Barnes wake
-up, and he flung himself into the sand. Li
-Fu was yelling in an ecstasy of delight. Then,
-at the next interval, Barnes realized that the
-other boats were coming forward&mdash;two whale-boats,
-and a smaller craft.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Lascars!" yelled Li Fu. "Plenty joss
-along Lim Tock!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The Malays were rowing these boats; seamen
-unsurpassed. Well, this was the end of
-it; useless everything that had been done, once
-these boats came through. Barnes caught the
-arm of the yellow man.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Empty one gun&mdash;then reload and wait. Savvy?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Li Fu nodded hastily. The two whale-boats
-came on abreast, rowed with precision,
-a brown Malay at each steering crutch, the
-long oars rising and dipping and hurling her
-forward with absolute surety. Up they rose
-and up, then forward and down, as though
-leaping from that high curling wall into the
-water beyond!
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes found himself firing mechanically,
-firing until the hammer clicked on nothing
-and he slipped one of his extra clips into the
-weapon. Useless! A sudden inarticulate
-cry escaped his lips. The last bullet had
-brought down the steersman of the boat to the
-left. Almost through, she broached and
-swerved. The water swung her about, caught
-up her keel and spilled her men into the
-smother. She was sent rolling along, crushing
-the men beneath her, pounding on the sand
-until the undertow dragged her out and away.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the other boat was through. It drove
-forward toward the islet with a wild yell lifting
-from the men aboard, and rifles spattering
-lead. And now the smaller boat was in the
-surf, and riding it.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Back!" shouted Barnes. "Back to cover,
-Li! Fire and reload while I fire."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the shelter of the brush, Li Fu
-emptied his two revolvers into the boat. He
-could hardly miss at this distance, as she came
-foaming to the shore. Barnes could see the
-figure of Lim Tock crouching amidships, a
-bandage about his head. Men went down,
-brown and yellow men crowded between her
-thwarts. Rifles and revolvers sent bullets
-hailing at the trees, and with the impetus that
-was upon her, she came in and her nose
-touched the beach.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Barnes was ready, cool, imperturbable. The
-first man that leaped from her, he dropped;
-and the second, and the third. Then the boat
-tipped, and brown and yellow came ashore in
-a mass, Lim Tock heading them. Krisses
-and knives flamed in the sunlight. The
-smaller boat was reaching into the shore now.
-The end was at hand.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Into the mass Barnes planted his bullets
-steadily. One gun was empty, now the other.
-No time to reload&mdash;he dropped them and
-seized that of Ellen Maggs. Only three or
-four men left, Lim Tock heading them! Then
-a new burst of yells, and from the last boat
-poured a dozen fresh assailants, with the
-serang Gajah at their head, his unhealed scalp
-wound red and ominous in the sunlight.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A scream of battle-madness burst from Li
-Fu. He leaped forward, out into the open,
-and ran at the newcomers. Pistols barked;
-krisses glittered. Barnes saw the quartermaster
-come to grips with Gajah, and the two
-men went rolling in the sand. Then, smiling,
-he lifted his weapon and shot.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Lim Tock took the bullet between the eyes,
-and sprawled forward. Barnes laughed, and
-shot again. Then he ducked back into the
-brush. An instant later, the brown and
-yellow men came on in a wave, mad with the
-battle fury, blind and deaf to everything
-around them, intent only upon the white man
-who had eluded them.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From among the trees the weapon of
-Barnes barked out its last shots.
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-IX
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The patrol launch belonging to the
-Bulungan River post, commanded by.
-Controleur Opdyke and manned by stalwart
-Achinese sepoys, sped swiftly down the
-northern branch of the mighty river. The
-controleur was highly nervous, for this
-navigation in the early dawn was an unaccustomed
-and perilous thing; further, the girl who
-stood beside him, and the tall Chinese at her
-elbow, were continually urging him to greater
-speed.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then came the first gleams of sunrise, and
-the spattering of shots from below&mdash;and the
-prim, alert controleur needed no further
-urging. At his swift command the speed was
-increased, and the brown sepoys stripped the
-cover from the one-pounder up forward.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Rifles were brought up and loaded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-They burst into full view of the river-mouth
-just as the smaller boat came to the
-islet and poured forth her men and the wild
-charge forward was begun. Controleur Opdyke
-perceived instantly that he could not get
-through the surf to the junk. Being a man
-of distinct character, he did not hesitate. Two
-orders passed his lips. At the first, the gun
-crew threw in a shell and sighted; at the
-second, the rifles began to speak along the
-forward deck.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The little pom-pom barked, and the shell
-exploded above the junk. It barked again,
-and scored a hit. Again, and the junk reeled
-and staggered. Then the Achinese were leaping
-overboard and pouring ashore, and among
-them Hi John.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And after them, despite the imploring
-commands of the officer, Ellen Maggs.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Jim Barnes came face to face with her as
-he squirmed out of the brush and brushed the
-blood from his eyes. A kris had slithered
-athwart his scalp; for a moment he thought
-she was a vision, standing there in the fresh
-sunlight, her eyes fastened upon him, her
-hands outreaching. Then he heard her voice.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Jim, Jim! If you had only known&mdash;it
-was barely five miles up to the post! And
-we were hours getting there. Thank God,
-you're alive!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was quite as a matter of course that Jim
-Barnes took her in his arms and held her close
-to him for a long moment. Speech came hard.
-There was everything to say, and nothing.
-Suddenly he realized that she was trembling.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, Jim! You'll have to help me. I&mdash;I
-told an awful lie&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-She was frightened, nervous, tearful, and
-yet a smile crept into her-blushing cheeks as
-she looked up into his eyes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Who to, me?" he asked, returning the smile.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"No. To&mdash;to the controleur. Controleur
-Updyke. He was terribly severe about it all.
-He wouldn't bring Nora, and he wasn't going
-to bring me&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"What was the lie?" asked Barnes, puzzled.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Then he looked up to see the officer striding
-toward them. He realized abruptly that the
-little brown soldiers had been very busy all
-over the islet.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Der junk hass sunk," said the controleur,
-taking off his helmet. "Diss iss Mynheer
-Parnes? I am pleassed to meet you, sir."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Same to you," and Barnes grinned as he
-put out his hand. Even the primness of
-Opdyke could not meet that grin without an
-answering smile. "Controleur Opdyke?
-I'm sure much obliged to you. Just came
-along in time."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ja. I am glad. Your vrouw, Madame
-Parnes, she hurried us. Dat wass goot,
-too."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Oh, so that's it!" Barnes laughed out
-suddenly, and caught Ellen Maggs to him. "You
-little rascal, you! Told him you were my
-wife, eh? Well, you will be as quick as it
-can be managed&mdash;won't you? Say yes!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Yes, Jim,"-she murmured.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Suddenly Barnes turned.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Where's Li Fu?" he demanded. "That
-Chinese chap who stayed with me&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"He iss badly hurt, but all right," said
-Opdyke, beginning to understand things a little.
-"Sir, dere must be reports made, und prisoners
-must be&mdash;&mdash;"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Forget it, forget it!" said Barnes, and
-laughed happily. "This is Miss Maggs,
-Controleur. She told you a lie. She's not
-my wife, but is going to be. Will you forgive
-her?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Controleur Opdyke met the eyes of Ellen
-Maggs. Suddenly he smiled, and tendered
-her a very deep bow.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Diss young man, he iss very lucky," he
-said. "<i>Mejuffvrouw</i>, shall I make you
-happy, yes? Den, dere iss a missionary at de
-post. Now, if you eggscuse me, I must look
-after dese t'ings."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He turned and walked stiffly away toward
-his men, who were rounding up sullen
-captives. But Jim Barnes looked-down into the
-shining eyes of the girl.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Ellen! Remember that bungalow on the
-hill above Sausalito that I told you about?
-Do you really want it&mdash;and a husband who's
-a sailor and hasn't a lot o' money? Or would
-you sooner go back to China?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A smile lightened in her face.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I'm tired of China, Jim," she said.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Delightedly, Barnes caught her to him
-again and stooped to her lips. Then, with a
-happy laugh, he straightened up.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Missionary at the post, eh? Hurray!
-Let's go!"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"Aye, aye, sir," she said obediently. "Go
-it is, sir&mdash;steady as she is!"
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
-THE END
-</p>
-
-<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Second Mate, by Henry Bedford-Jones
-
-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: The Second Mate
-
-Author: Henry Bedford-Jones
-
-Release Date: November 26, 2019 [EBook #60796]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SECOND MATE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Al Haines
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: Cover art]
-
-
-
-
- THE
- SECOND MATE
-
- BY
- H. BEDFORD-JONES
-
-
- GARDEN CITY NEW YORK
- GARDEN CITY PUBLISHING CO., INC.
- 1923
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY
- DOUBLEDAY, PAGE & COMPANY
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, INCLUDING THAT OF TRANSLATION
- INTO FOREIGN LANGUAGES, INCLUDING THE SCANDINAVIAN
-
- PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES
- AT
- THE COUNTRY LIFE PRESS, GARDEN CITY, N. Y.
-
- _First Edition_
-
-
-
-
-THE SECOND MATE
-
-
-
-I
-
-The _Sulu Queen_ was steaming south at an eight-knot clip, which for
-her was exceedingly good, bound for Macassar, Singapore and way
-ports, according to the dispensation of Providence. Her tail shaft
-was likely to go at any minute; she had an erratic list to starboard;
-her pumps could barely keep down the water that seeped through her
-loose plates; but she was going. Just to be going was an achievement
-for the _Sulu Queen_. She was certain not to be going for very long.
-
-Her Macaense--or Portuguese Eurasian--skipper was enjoying an opium
-dream in his cabin. Her chief engineer, a one-eyed Cyclops who had
-long since buried his Glasgow accent under a maze of tropic
-profanity, was dead drunk. Her black gang was composed of Macao
-coolies. Her men forward were lascars, under a mild-eyed Malay
-serang who was an escaped murderer from Bilibid Prison. Her two
-quartermasters were Chinese, and efficient. Her supercargo was a
-Straits Chinese comprador, a Singapore man. Her mate was a hulking
-Dutchman, rotten with gin alow and aloft. Her second mate was Jim
-Barnes, for whose labor all these others drew pay.
-
-She carried nine passengers. Abdullah, an Arab merchant, was going
-home to Macassar, taking with him his first wife and five offspring.
-How the Slave of God, as his name bore witness, ever got to Canton
-with so many, was a mystery; what had become of the other three
-lawful wives, not to mention the unlawful ones, was a greater
-mystery. The other two passengers were Nora Sayers and Ellen Maggs.
-
-They were missionaries of some kind in China, had been ordered to
-voyage for their health, and as their funds were low, had taken the
-_Sulu Queen_. Jim Barnes had been too busy to ask questions. He
-would have welcomed them on the bridge, except that the Dutchman and
-the chief were both up there, nearly naked and rather soused. They
-had been there in that condition since leaving Cantop. When he
-explained the matter to them, Ellen Maggs blushed faintly, and Nora
-Sayers was quite willing to come along anyhow; but Ellen prevailed.
-
-At two bells in the morning watch, Jim Barnes heaved a huge sigh of
-relief and left the bridge, which he had perforce held since before
-midnight. The islands were past; Simonor was dropping astern into
-the horizon and ahead was the open Celebes Sea and a clear course for
-Macassar. By some miracle the coral reefs had been evaded.
-
-Jim Barnes sought the galley and obtained some tea from the yellow
-cook. He gulped it down and then started for his own cabin, meaning
-to get some sleep. The quartermaster of his watch had the bridge and
-a fair course.
-
-Then, at the door af his stateroom, he paused with a sudden oath.
-The course was south by a quarter east; to his amazement, Barnes
-discovered that the ship was swinging around until the sun was almost
-astern.
-
-With another oath of weary, wondering disgust, he started for the
-ladder. As he touched it, he heard his name spoken, and glanced
-around. The other quartermaster, Li Fu by name, was gliding toward
-him, and the yellow face was gleaming with inward excitement.
-
-"What is it?" demanded Barnes.
-
-"Maste', you watch out velly sha'p!" exclaimed Li Fu, low-voiced,
-tense. "Bad piecee bobbery kick up, mebbeso two bells this
-afte'noon! I think mebbeso all hands talkee-talkee make fo' mutiny.
-Cap'n he say fo' tell you come see him."
-
-"You tell the skipper to go to hell," said Barnes. "Opium crazy,
-that's what he is. Mutiny. Good gosh, we've nothing to mutiny for!"
-
-"Cap'n he say head in fo' Sesajap," persisted the Chinaman.
-
-Jim Barnes groaned. "Head in for Sesajap, eh? Heading in for
-Borneo--the skipper changed the course, did he? That why we're
-turning?"
-
-Li Fu nodded, beady eyes alert.
-
-"Well, I've no time now to palaver with that cursed Eurasian
-topside," said Barnes bluntly. "You tell him to take the bridge or
-chase Vanderhoof up there--I'm done. Savvy? I'm going to sleep.
-Let everybody mutiny and be damned. I'm the only seaman aboard this
-cursed packet anyhow. I'm tired o' doing ten men's work. Trouble
-coming this afternoon, is it? Then let afternoon take care of
-itself. I'll be ready to take the deck after this watch is
-over--noon. And, listen! Tell the cap'n that if he don't shoot the
-sun and verify his position after this running around, he'll land us
-all in hell. You savvy that? Then tell him from me. And if he
-wants to run us into Borneo, let him do it!"
-
-Li Fu grinned delightedly and stated that he savvied plenty. He,
-like any efficient seaman, had no use for the other officers and
-regarded Jim Barnes as a little tin god. Jim Barnes went into his
-cabin, locked the door, stuck a chair under the knob, and then
-dropped on his bunk, dead to the world.
-
-
-Down in the engine-room, where the heat had sent the chief into a
-drunken stupor, the Malay serang conferred with the two assistant
-engineers. They were both men of color, being Macaense like the
-skipper, but not, like him, owning a large share in the _Sulu Queen_.
-Filling his mouth with betel paste, expectorating a scarlet stream
-across the floor under the ladder, the serang spoke as he squatted
-there with the two engineers.
-
-"The supercargo, Lim Tock, is a very clever man. He has arranged
-everything into shares; there will be one hundred shares made of
-everything. Fifty of these will be divided among the men, the other
-fifty among us, the officers."
-
-"Good," assented the second engineer. "How many are in it, Gajah?"
-
-Gajah, the serang, spat again, and his soft eyes glowed luminously.
-
-"All the men, here and above. The wireless man, the two
-quartermasters, _Tuan_ Barnes, and the cap'n must be killed. _Tuan_
-Vanderhoof will navigate the ship. He is a great coward, and after
-his feet are burned he will be glad to serve us. This chief engineer
-must be killed, too. Six altogether. You will attend to this chief."
-
-The two Eurasians looked at each other, then at the supinely snoring
-figure of the chief. They grinned and nodded. The chief would be
-drunk again after tiffin.
-
-"You are sure of the men?" asked the third.
-
-"Of course," said Gajah. "Lim Tock shipped them carefully at Canton,
-and my own men are picked for the purpose."
-
-"Why has the course been changed?" demanded the second engineer.
-
-"Because I whispered into the ear of the cap'n," said Gajah, with a
-meditative smile. "I told him that I knew a chief at one of the
-islands in the mouth of the Sesajap River, who had a great deal of
-gold dust, many birds' nests, and some fine pearls and shell. The
-_tuan_ cap'n is very greedy. He changed the course immediately."
-
-"Is there such a man?" asked the third. Gajah grinned in derision.
-
-"Why not? Once I knew such a man at Sibuko, which is not far away.
-He was the second cousin of my elder brother's third wife, and he was
-very rich. I went to visit him, and induced his youngest wife to run
-away with me. But she forgot to bring the pearls with her, being in
-love with me, and so I slew her. That happened in Manila, and they
-put me into prison because of it. The white _tuans_ did not
-understand."
-
-"Well, when is this to take place?" asked the second engineer
-nervously.
-
-"At the striking of two bells in the next watch."
-
-"It shall be done. Who is to command, after that?"
-
-"The supercargo, Lim Tock," answered the serang. "He is very clever.
-A friend of his, also a member of the Lim family, is to meet us near
-Bunju Island with a junk of which he is cap'n. Since the arrangement
-is all Lim Tock's, he deserves to command. It was he who got the
-opium put aboard at Macao."
-
-"One thing," put in the third, his dark and muddy eyes gleaming.
-"The two white women! Surely they are not to be killed?"
-
-"One does not waste the gifts of Allah," said Gajah sententiously.
-"The one with yellow hair goes to me; the other, who blushes often
-and whose figure is that of the willow, will comfort Lim Tock for the
-loss of his eldest son, who was hanged by the English last month for
-killing a white _tuan_. After a little while we shall sell them to
-chiefs along the coast, and so be rid of them. _Wallah_! It is hot
-down here."
-
-He arose, knotted his fine silk _sarong_ more closely about his
-waist, loosened his shagreen-hilted kris in its sheath, and departed.
-They two engineers looked at each other, and a slow smile passed
-between them.
-
-"She of the yellow hair," said the third reflectively, "is tall and
-strong, of high spirit, and a fitting mate for me, whose veins run
-with the proud blood of the da Soussas!"
-
-"And she of the lissome body," said the second engineer, rubbing his
-bristly chin, "has ere now smiled very sweetly upon me. It is not
-proper that yellow and brown island scum should have precedence
-before us, men descended from the conquistadors!"
-
-"I agree with you," responded the other. "But what are we to do?"
-
-"First secure the ship," said the second promptly. "Then
-secure--what we want."
-
-"Good!" agreed the third engineer with emphasis. "Let us consider
-the matter."
-
-
-Meantime, in the chart-house Li Fu had delivered the second mate's
-message to the befuddled skipper, who sat dreamily over his charts.
-The message was literally delivered, but it could not stir the
-captain into action. He was lost in the reverie of contemplation
-that comes of good opium; not actual dreams, as some think, but a
-complacent sweetishness in the mind that shoves aside all immediate
-problems and refuses to take a crisis seriously.
-
-The captain, indeed, was a lost soul. Usually your opium-eater
-cannot smoke the drug at all, and the smoker cannot attain Nirvana by
-eating it. This Macaense, however, both ate and smoked, thereby
-letting damnation into himself by two channels. He was a thin, pasty
-man, once of powerful physique, but now rather rickety on his pins.
-
-"One hundred and seventy miles to the mouth of the Sesajap," he
-murmured. "We shall reach it at five o'clock tomorrow morning."
-
-He gave over thinking and plucked vacuously at his thin mustaches.
-
-"Providing the engines hold," added Li Fu, who spoke better
-Portuguese than English. "If the night is clear, there will be a new
-moon. We should sight the coast by midnight."
-
-"The engines!" repeated the skipper. "Where is the chief? He was
-here an hour ago."
-
-"He went below, sir. The mate woke up and went into the wheel-house."
-
-"Bring him here, Li Fu."
-
-The quartermaster went out of the chart-house, presently to return
-alone.
-
-"He is asleep, sir. We cannot wake him."
-
-"Drunk, eh? Never mind, never mind. I will take the observation
-myself at noon--
-
-"And at two bells, sir," reminded Li Fu cautiously.
-
-"Oh, you are a fool, Quartermaster! These men will not mutiny.
-There is no reason for it. You are not used to Lascars and must not
-be a fool. I shall go to rest and make ready my instruments. The
-course is to be held as it is."
-
-The captain rose and, with a sigh of relief that no more duty
-presented itself, made his way back to his cabin.
-
-Li Fu studied the outspread chart and lighted a cigarette. After a
-while, the other quartermaster left the wheel lashed and came into
-the chart-house, also lighting a cigarette. The two men greeted each
-other quietly. Like Li Fu, Quartermaster Hi John was a stalwart,
-efficient seaman, calm and well poised. He addressed Li Fu in the
-Cantonese dialect.
-
-"You told him, Li?"
-
-"I told him," said Li Fu. "He went to sleep. He was very weary."
-
-"Did you find out why the captain changed the course?"
-
-"No. He thinks more about his _hap toi_ than about what I ask him.
-I woke up the chief and told him, but he was too drunk to understand.
-He asked if there was no help for the widow's son, and went to sleep
-again. His mind is gone."
-
-"The second mate will fight," said Hi John thoughtfully.
-
-"If he is not slain before he gets a chance."
-
-"There remains the wireless officer."
-
-"True. He remains."
-
-The two men looked at each other and smiled mirthlessly. The
-wireless man was the privileged son of a Macaense, chief owner of the
-_Sulu Queen_. Cumshaw had obtained his berth; he did not know one
-end of the wireless from another, as the quartermasters had learned
-when Jim Barnes cursed him for an idiotic fool. He was no better
-than an idiot; he was, indeed, some degrees worse, since the diseased
-degeneracy of Asia was his heritage.
-
-"Then you and I are alone," said Hi John.
-
-"We are alone. What answer shall we make to Lim Tock when the time
-comes?"
-
-Hi John extinguished his cigarette.
-
-"Duty is a shining star, Li Fu. I have a revolver in my bag."
-
-"I have one also," said Li Fu. "Yet I do not want to swallow gold."
-
-"Nor I; this life is good." Hi John lighted another cigarette.
-"Still, consider duty! Lim Tock is a terrible man. It was he who
-sank the Dutch steamer last year, before his son was hung. His son
-helped him. They each got two Dutch women and much money. If we do
-not join him, Li, I think that we shall both swallow gold."
-
-"Yes. Then you join him."
-
-"Oh, no." Hi John's singsong tones were soft. "Oh, no! I did not
-mean that."
-
-Li Fu looked slightly ironic. "You think this ship worth dying for?
-Or those white women beautiful enough to die for?"
-
-"Not at all," said Hi John. "The ship is a rotten hulk. The women
-are ugly and pale as ghosts. I care nothing what becomes of either.
-At the same time, I revere the wisdom of my paternal parent, who was
-also an officer in a ship. Before he swallowed gold, he asked me to
-take an oath, that I would never swerve from my duty. Therefore I
-cannot well join Lim Tock, since I undertook a certain duty aboard
-this ship."
-
-"That is true," said Li Fu. "I have no oath to restrain me, but my
-duty needs no oath. Therefore I agree with you fully. I shall get
-my revolver, and also yours, while you are on the bridge; I have had
-it two rice-years, but it is a good one."
-
-"Very well," said Hi John. "Give me mine when you have the
-opportunity."
-
-
-While these two men talked on the bridge-deck, Lim Tock, the
-super-cargo, walked aft on the main-deck, past the dingy
-passenger-cabins where the brood of Abdullah swarmed about the two
-"missionary ladies." Lim Tock was an elderly Straits Chinaman, with
-a short, gray mustache, a drawn, parchment face, and two bright and
-glittering gray eyes--a most amazing pair of eyes to be staring from
-a saffron face! Yet some Chinese are gray-eyed.
-
-In the stern, he came upon Abdullah, the Arab merchant, who was
-reading a Koran. The Arab looked up, smiled slightly, and spoke in
-the Low Malay which most men use in the island seas. This Slave of
-God was a thin and deadly looking person, fierce with his hook nose
-and jutting shreds of beard and jetty eyes.
-
-"All is arranged?"
-
-"It is arranged," said Lim Tock. "You agree to take the white women
-off our hands?"
-
-"Yes; and to ask no other share of the rewards."
-
-Lim Tock inclined his head and passed on around to the starboard
-passage. There he came upon Gajah, the serang, busy doing nothing.
-To him Lim Tock spoke in High Malay, a tongue which very few men know
-or understand, even in the island seas.
-
-"Abdullah suspects nothing. His boxes will be rich plunder. Let him
-be the first to fall, and his children after him--a clean sweep."
-
-"And the woman, his wife?" asked the Lascar serang.
-
-"She has borne many and is past pleasing. Let her accompany
-Abdullah."
-
-The serang nodded indifferently and Lim Tock went his way.
-
-While men thus talked and schemed and counseled together alow and
-aloft, Jim Barnes slept.
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-Nora Sayers was tall and active, with brilliant yellow hair and very
-deep violet eyes; a young woman of great energy, who had seen too
-much bloodshed in the revolutionary fighting around Pekin, and who
-had turned her mission station into a hospital of tortured men.
-Ellen Maggs, smaller, very slender and frail in looks, was newer to
-China, but she, too, had seen so many horrors that the powers above
-had thought best to send both women away on a sea voyage in company.
-Ellen Maggs, however, had more steel beneath her quiet and
-old-fashioned exterior than men imagined possible.
-
-When they entered the mess saloon at eight bells, noon, they were not
-surprised to find themselves alone. They had by this time grown used
-to the peculiar conditions prevailing aboard the _Sulu Queen_. The
-chief had a lurking sense of shame that kept him from their presence.
-The captain had the bridge. The wireless officer came in, bowed very
-effusively, and seated himself. He could speak no English, and
-listened staringly to the laughter and light chatter of the two
-women. Abdullah and his family ate by themselves.
-
-Presently Jim Barnes entered, bathed and shaven and with his usual
-air of radiating high good-humor. Almost at the same moment came
-Vanderhoof, eyes bloodshot, walk unsteady, to seat himself with a
-grunt and absorb quantities of coffee and rice-curry. He gave Barnes
-a scowling regard across the table.
-
-"Der cap'n say for you to take der pridge," he growled.
-
-"Not me," said Barnes pleasantly. "Now that we've open sea ahead,
-you and he can do a little work, Van. Everything's galley-west
-aboard this hooker, and the watches might as well go with the rest."
-
-The yellow steward set an open gin-bottle beside the mate, who poured
-a tumbler full, then glared at Barnes.
-
-"By chiminy," he said, "d'you refuse to opey orders, huh?"
-
-"You bet I do," said Jim Barnes, his eyes twinkling. "And if you
-know what's good for your health, Van, you'll sober up before you try
-to give me any. Savvy that?"
-
-Despite the cheerful accent, something in the steady and level regard
-of the second mate caused Vanderhoof to drink down his gin without
-making any response. When he had emptied the bottle, he shoved back
-his chair and left the cabin.
-
-"Well, ladies," said Barnes, "how do you find yourselves this
-morning? Rather warm last night. Did your fan work all right?"
-
-"Quite, thanks," and Nora Sayers smiled. "Aren't you just a trifle
-independent with your superior officers, Mr. Barnes? I thought all
-sailors were very polite----"
-
-Barnes grinned. "Oh, me and Van? Don't pay any attention to that,
-Miss Sayers. He was just trying to show his authority in front of
-you and Miss Maggs."
-
-"Oh!" Nora Sayers laughed. "Isn't it mutiny to refuse to obey
-orders?"
-
-"Not aboard this packet. The skipper has been hitting the pipe all
-morning and now he's got us headed slap for Borneo. Lord knows why;
-I don't."
-
-Ellen Maggs smiled shyly.
-
-"You're the most happily irresponsible person I ever met, Mr.
-Barnes," she said. "And so is this ship. Every voyage in her must
-be a delightful adventure, if it's like this one! Have you been with
-her long?"
-
-"This is my first and last," said Barnes drily. "You can't say that
-you've enjoyed yourselves so far, can you?"
-
-"I have, every minute of it!" exclaimed Ellen Maggs, an unwonted
-sparkle in her eyes.
-
-"And so have I," asserted Nora Sayers with energy. "Look at the
-queer people we've met! This funny little man down the table, who
-stares and giggles----"
-
-"He's part idiot," interjected Jim Barnes. "But who else?"
-
-"All of them! The poor old captain, with his politeness and queer
-abstractions and----"
-
-"The old man's only forty," and Barnes chuckled. "But the hops gets
-'em early. So you like the Eurasians, do you?"
-
-"I don't like them, no, but they're interesting," stated Miss Sayers.
-"And the chief engineer is queer, too, only he won't talk--=="
-
-"I was talking with him early this morning," put in Ellen Maggs.
-"He's a dear old man, Nora. He was telling me all about his early
-life in Scotland."
-
-"He always does," put in Jim Barnes, "when he's in the middle of a
-big spree. Oh, don't look shocked! Won't do any good. I guess you
-ladies are disappointed that you didn't find another queer duck in
-the second officer's shoes, eh? Or am I queer, too?"
-
-"You're just human," declared Miss Sayers promptly. "Only you're too
-busy to be very polite."
-
-"I'm going to be busier yet, right after lunch," said Jim Barnes.
-"Oh, Steward! Get me some more of that curry."
-
-"Why, what have you found now to keep you occupied?" asked Ellen
-Maggs, interested.
-
-Jim Barnes did not respond until the steward had left the cabin.
-Then he spoke cheerfully, as he sugared his coffee with some care.
-
-"Me? I've got to set the ship afire. As soon as they give the
-alarm, I want you two ladies to come up to the upper bridge-deck, and
-come quick! I'll be in the chart-house----"
-
-"You mean that little coop up above the bridge, with the awning?"
-asked Nora Sayers.
-
-"Just that. I'll get there before they discover the blaze."
-
-The two women stared at him, then glanced at each other in perplexed
-wonder.
-
-"What do you mean, Mr. Barnes?" demanded Ellen Maggs, a faint touch
-of color in her cheeks. "Are you joking about getting the ship
-afire?"
-
-"No," said Jim Barnes. His tone was unusually crisp, and the look
-that he gave them was keen and incisive. "No. Don't let out a peep
-before the steward, now! A mutiny is due to start at one o'clock,
-and, so far as I can see, most of the officers will get wiped out at
-the first crack. Mutiny or piracy, I'm not sure which. I've got to
-set the hooker afire and keep the men so blamed busy they'll have no
-time for murder. Please pass the butter, Miss Maggs."
-
-His matter-of-fact manner made the two women at first doubt his
-words, then believe them with a frightful sense of conviction; Ellen
-Maggs stared at him from eyes that slowly widened. Glancing up and
-meeting her gaze, Jim Barnes was suddenly startled by the intensity
-of her look, by the revealed womanhood he saw in her face; he had not
-dreamed that she could look so beautiful.
-
-"I'm sorry I scared you," he said, smilingly. There was an
-infectious quality to his smile; perhaps because of his direct blue
-eyes, wrinkled at the corners; perhaps because of his wide and
-humorous mouth and strong chin. "But the steward's coming now----"
-
-"You're in earnest?" demanded Nora Sayers, who had gone a little
-white.
-
-"Quite. Nobody aboard can use the wireless, unless you ladies can.
-Any chance?"
-
-Ellen Maggs shook her head.
-
-"No chance," she said, and astonished Jim Barnes by smiling. "But I
-have a pistol in my suitcase----"
-
-"Fine!" exclaimed Barnes heartily. The steward entered with his
-plate of curry. "You get it. And you girls might as well buckle
-down to the fact that before we get through there's going to be a
-large slice of the lower regions laid bare aboard this hooker. Is
-that an engagement ring you're wearing, Miss Sayers? Pardon
-personalities; I'm asking for a reason."
-
-"Yes." Nora Sayers twisted the ring on her finger. "It's----"
-
-"All right. If you ever want to add a plain gold hoop to it, you
-remember that there's just one man aboard who can pull you out o'
-this, and that's me. I don't want any interference, and I do want
-help. Get me?"
-
-"Yes!" exclaimed Ellen Maggs, and her eyes were shining. "Just where
-do you want us to come, please? You spoke about the chart-house----"
-
-"Come there, and I'll see you up safe to the awning deck above. A
-little before two bells. Bring with you anything that you value very
-highly. We may stave off this fuss until night, in which case we'll
-be all right. Well, cheer up and don't worry! See you later."
-
-Jim Barnes pushed back his chair, produced his pipe, and began to
-fill it as he left the mess saloon. He stood by the rail a moment,
-until his pipe was lighted.
-
-"I guess that was laying bare the situation with a rough and brutal
-hand," he said, and chuckled softly. "Had to be done, though. And
-now I've got to step mighty carefully. Most likely those assistant
-engineers are in on the game; they're Eurasians, too, so I can't take
-chances. If anyone suspects that I know about things, the blow-off
-will come before two bells--which would spoil everything for me. But
-lordy! What a pippin that little Maggs girl is! She's a regular
-guy."
-
-From his language, it might be inferred that Jim Barnes was an
-American.
-
-Puffing at his pipe, he sought the engine-room. The chief blinked up
-at him from a huge plate of curry. A glance showed Barnes that
-neither of the assistants were about, and he ventured an open word.
-
-"Chief, wake up! Mutiny is scheduled for two bells, and if you don't
-want your throat cut you'd better be advised----"
-
-"Get oot o' ma engine-room!" ordered the chief with dignity. "Ye
-drunken scut, can ye not bear your liquor like a man? I'll hae no
-drunken officers cooming doon here to be bawlin' o' mutinies in ma
-ear! Tak' shame to yoursel', sir!"
-
-Barnes compressed his lips and turned away. It was useless.
-
-The _Sulu Queen_, originally a well-decked tramp, had been fitted up
-rather shabbily to carry passengers in the island trade, the after
-portion of the deck-house having been added to for this purpose.
-Carrying all the oily waste he could conceal about his person, Jim
-Barnes made his way aft to one of the unoccupied cabins. The two
-white passengers were not in sight. In the stern, beneath a tattered
-awning, Abdullah sat smoking a water-pipe, his wife and family around
-him.
-
-"They're safe enough," observed Barnes, as he ducked into the cabin
-he sought. "Even if the old packet can't get up enough steam to
-check the flames, and goes down, they'll be taken care of. So, on
-with the dance!"
-
-The fact that he was committing various sorts of barratry and felony,
-did not worry Jim Barnes in the least.
-
-The storm season being past, the lookout or awning-deck above the
-pilot-house was fitted up with awning and canvas aprons and some
-chairs, but remained almost unused. The additional climb of a dozen
-feet from the chart-and pilot-house was far too much trouble for the
-captain and others; besides which, the place was no more than a box a
-dozen feet square, and was hot. A single ladder ascended to it from
-the bridge deck, which it overlooked completely.
-
-
-Shortly before two bells, Jim Barnes welcomed Ellen Maggs and Nora
-Sayers, as they came up to the bridge. He was alone there, with Li
-Fu and two of the lascars in the chart-house. Down in the bows, Lim
-Tock, the supercargo, was standing in talk with the steward, and both
-watches were idling about the deck.
-
-"How do we get upstairs?" asked Ellen Maggs.
-
-"Right this way, ladies!" answered Barnes cheerfully. "Chairs up
-there and a couple of old magazines, as well as a breaker of water
-and some other things. Whatever happens, don't worry--and wait for
-me. Here you are!"
-
-As they vanished up the ladder, he re-entered the chart-house and
-addressed the two lascar seamen.
-
-"Run, quick! One of you to the serang, the other to Lim Tock. Say
-that I smell smoke, and have search made for fire. Look at the
-bunkers, but don't take off the hatches until the last thing. If
-there's a fire in the forward hold, call me."
-
-A startled glance passed between the two men, and they jumped for the
-ladder. Jim Barnes turned to the quartermaster, smiling slightly.
-
-"Where is Hi John?"
-
-"Him look velly sharp, I think."
-
-"We can depend on him?"
-
-Li Fu nodded.
-
-"All right, then," said Barnes. "You go tell him to come up here.
-Then take charge of those lascars and keep 'em out of the after
-cabins for a while, until the fire shows itself. You savvy? Don't
-be in any hurry to put it out, either. We'll hold this thing off
-until night if we can."
-
-Across the saffron features flitted a look of admiration, for Li Fu
-comprehended the plan instantly. Then the quartermaster was gone.
-Barnes looked at the chronometer. It lacked five minutes of one.
-
-"Two bells won't be struck," he thought, as he swung the wheel.
-
-He grinned at sight of the commotion below. Lim Tock was yelling
-orders at those of the black gang whom he could see. Gajah, the
-serang, was whistling at his lascars shrilly. Then he remembered the
-chief engineer, and rang the bell. One of the assistants answered in
-the tube.
-
-"Ship's on fire," said Jim Barnes, chuckling to himself. "Stop your
-engines and keep up a full head o' steam for the hose."
-
-Hi John appeared, gave Barnes a brief nod and a grin, and took the
-wheel. There had never been any fire drill aboard the _Sulu Queen_
-in the memory of man, but Barnes blew the whistle nevertheless and
-added to the confusion. Vanderhoof's bellow arose from below,
-followed by an outburst of yells and shouts from aft.
-
-"They've found it," said Barnes.
-
-He went to the bridge rail and glanced aft. A trail of smoke and
-steam was veering out in the wake of the steamer. Barnes listened
-for a little to the sounds of tumultuous confusion, then rejoined the
-quartermaster.
-
-"How did you and Li Fu know so much about this mutiny?" he demanded.
-
-"Talkee-talkee," rejoined Hi John curtly. "My savvy lascar talk
-plenty."
-
-"Oh! Understand Malay, do you? Good work. What reason have they to
-mutiny?"
-
-Hi John had picked up a good deal of information. He knew that the
-rich boxes of the merchant Abdullah were to be looted, and that there
-was a large amount of opium down below, to be transferred to a
-Chinese junk and landed somewhere along the Bornean coast.
-Undoubtedly, the _Sulu Queen_ was to be stripped of everything
-valuable, then quietly sunk in deep water. Lim Tock was in it, the
-serang Gajah was in it, and the Chinese junk was in it; so were some
-of the officers and all the men aboard.
-
-Reluctantly Jim Barnes became convinced that to strive against the
-inevitable would be useless. Except for these two Chinese, he could
-depend upon no one. Had he been alone on the ship, his actions would
-have been simple and perhaps effectual.
-
-"I'd like to go down there and shoot the supercargo, the serang, and
-a few of the men, and get the old hooker into port," he said to Hi
-John. "But the safety of those two white women is worth more than
-this damned old carcass of a boat. I can't risk it."
-
-Hi John looked bewildered at this reasoning, which he could not
-understand. At this instant Li Fu came up the port ladder, panting,
-and grinned as he saluted Barnes.
-
-"Mutiny makee, no matter! I think they wait, same time tonight,
-mebbeso."
-
-"Two bells evening watch?" demanded Barnes.
-
-"Aye, sir. Cap'n say go ahead on course, he makee fire go out."
-
-Barnes rang for full speed ahead, then questioned Li Fu. Both the
-skipper and Vanderhoof were in charge, it seemed, and were fighting
-the fire. Vanderhoof was somewhat sobered by the danger; the captain
-was almost incapacitated and was acting like an old woman, according
-to Li. The quartermaster was highly disgusted. It was the effort of
-the serang, whose lascars were working hard, that was putting the
-fire under control.
-
-Presently the skipper himself appeared, He was breathing hard and was
-all in a tremble. He wiped his pallid brow and cursed heartily.
-
-"Fire under?" asked Barnes.
-
-"Yes, yes, or soon will be. No matter at all. Very disturbing,"
-panted the captain. "I must obtain some rest, must verify our
-position. Keep her as she is, sir."
-
-He looked around, nervously fingered the chart, then departed.
-Barnes looked after him in contempt, then went to the ladder leading
-above.
-
-"Gone for a few pipes, the swine!" he muttered, then looked up and
-raised his voice. "Come on down, girls. Mutiny's postponed until
-tonight. False alarm and nobody killed yet."
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-"What part are you from?" asked Jim Barnes.
-
-"Illinois," said Ellen Maggs. "From Elgin, where they make watches.
-Were you ever there?"
-
-"No closer than the outside of a watch," responded Barnes. "But now
-I'm going there some day."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"To see where you came from."
-
-Ellen Maggs laughed a little and actually forgot to blush.
-
-"Do it again," said Barnes.
-
-"Do what?"
-
-"Laugh that way. It's the prettiest thing I ever saw."
-
-Ellen blushed at that, then turned as Nora Sayers joined them.
-
-"Nora! Mr. Barnes comes from Baltimore, too! He was born there!"
-
-"Good for him!" Nora Sayers laughed in her hearty, energetic
-fashion. "Perhaps you know my father there, Mr. Barnes--the
-physician, Doctor Sayers?"
-
-"Don't know anybody there," admitted Jim Barnes. "I've been at sea
-ever since the war finished up, and before. But I'm going to settle
-down some day, across the bay from San Francisco. Ever been there,
-Miss Maggs?"
-
-"Only when I came out to China."
-
-"Well," said Jim Barnes, in his whimsical [Transcriber's note: line
-of text missing from source book] all picked out! A fine little
-bungalow on one of the hills at Sausalito, where you can see the
-ships all up and down the bay, and the campanile at Berkeley clear
-across--
-
-"Have you got the girl picked out, too?" asked Nora Sayers amusedly.
-
-"Well," said Jim Barnes, in his whimsical way, "I didn't have up to a
-couple of weeks ago, but lately I've sort of got my mind made up. By
-the way, girls, you'd better get all ready. We're going to leave the
-ship in an hour or two."
-
-"Leave her?" they repeated as one, in dismayed accents. "How?"
-
-"You'll see. I'll take the bridge when watches are changed at eight
-bells--eight o'clock. You come up to the bridge a little before
-then, and stick around. Excuse me, now; I'll have to pack a few
-things myself."
-
-Barnes hurried away, leaving the two women at the rail.
-
-
-Dinner was over, a meal from which all three were glad to escape,
-coming out on deck to find the sun gone and the afterglow staining
-the horizon like old church windows. A tragic affair, that dinner!
-The captain was ill and did not appear; Vanderhoof was on deck, more
-drunk than usual; the second engineer quarreled with the wireless
-cub, who lost his head in a fit of idiotic rage and had to be taken
-away and locked up, screaming curses. The chief engineer was also
-locked in his own cabin, enjoying a spell of "the horrors."
-
-Wishing vainly that he understood something about the wireless
-outfit, Barnes sought his cabin and packed up the few belongings that
-he wished to take from the ship. While he was at this task, Li Fu
-knocked at the door and entered hurriedly.
-
-"Hello! What news? Is it set for two bells?"
-
-Li Fu assented. He was bursting with laughter over some joke of the
-cruel Chinese variety, and Barnes presently learned what it was. He
-was ordering Li to warn Abdullah of what was intended, with the
-intent to get the Arab's family away safely, when the quartermaster
-exploded in a laugh and reported a conversation that he had overheard
-among some of the lascars.
-
-It appeared that Abdullah was as much in the plot as anyone, and was
-to receive as his booty the two white women. The assistant engineers
-had an eye on the same prey; while Lim Tock and Gajah, the serang,
-were equally concerned. To the Chinese, this was a huge jest all
-around, for it meant that the wolves would turn and rend each other.
-
-"Hell!" said Jim Barnes. "I hate to leave the kids here. But go
-ahead, now; and tell Hi John to attend to the engines as soon as he
-goes off watch, then to get up to the bridge and stand by. Have you
-got the boat ready?"
-
-"Aye, sir," assented Li Fu. "Plenty wate'; eve'ything leady."
-
-"On your way, then!"
-
-Barnes made his way to the bridge, where Hi John and two lascars were
-in charge, and passed behind the chart-house unremarked. Vanderhoof
-was not in evidence. Aboard the _Sulu Queen_ the clear night was
-already insufferably warm, for she was steaming with the wind.
-
-Passing to the centre starboard boat, Barnes found the cover loosely
-in place. He put in his few effects, then gave his attention to the
-lines. Like most old ships of a past generation, the steamer was
-equipped with Clifford's lowering gear, the most beautiful boat-gear
-ever devised, in theory, permitting a boat to be lowered by slacking
-a single line. This was the boat carried for use in emergencies. It
-was not stowed in chocks but was swung out and left clear, secured by
-gripes to a toggle which could be slipped in ah instant.
-
-"If we have luck she'll do," thought Barnes, examining the lowering
-line. "The pendants are new line and not swelled; we ought to get
-down without spilling. Hm! If anybody'd ever told me that I'd owe
-life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to this cursed ancient
-Clifford gear, I'd have called him a liar! But wait. We're not off
-yet by a long shot."
-
-True enough.
-
-
-An automatic in either side pocket of his jacket, Jim Barnes took
-over the bridge from Hi John as eight bells struck. Then, dismay
-seized upon him. His own lack of foresight had brought on the crisis
-before he wanted or expected it! Ellen Maggs and Nora Sayers were on
-the bridge. They had brought some personal effects, each in a small
-grip; and from the look cast at them by the departing lascar
-wheelmen, Barnes knew that suspicion was up.
-
-Two fresh lascars came to the wheel, with Li Fu. Disregarding these,
-Barnes made a slight gesture to Hi John, who slipped out of sight
-instantly on his errand below. Unless the engines were disabled,
-Barnes knew that his preparations were of no avail. He greeted the
-two women with his usual air of cheerful assurance, however.
-
-"All ready? Fine! The two quartermasters are with us. Come along,
-now, and climb into the boat--no time to lose, I assure you! In ten
-minutes this ship is going to be about the unhealthiest spot you ever
-heard of."
-
-He led them around the chart-house toward the boat.
-
-"But the captain!" protested Nora Sayers. "Surely, if you know there
-will be some trouble, the other officers----"
-
-"Nix," said Barnes. "Good Lord, girl! Haven't you seen already what
-sort o' swine the others are? Hear that so-called wireless officer
-scream? He's still off his head--and couldn't send a message if he
-were sane. And the old man's soggy with opium. Here you are! Step
-on this water breaker, and over into her; she's solid."
-
-Indeed, his words were given emphasis by the screaming of the
-wireless man, which had broken out anew down below. Miss Sayers
-stepped to the breaker, and Barnes helped her up into the boat. Then
-he turned, picked up Ellen Maggs bodily and lifted her over the edge,
-laughing as he did so.
-
-"Got your pistol? Good. Sit tight, and don't scream when things
-bust loose. See you later."
-
-He left them hurriedly and returned to the wheel, fighting down his
-appalling helplessness to prevent what was going to happen. About
-the ship's officers he cared less than nothing; he was thinking now
-of the Arab woman and her brown children below. Abdullah might or
-might not protect them from the yellow fiends.
-
-The tall figure of the serang rose at the starboard ladder. One
-glance from Li Fu told Barnes that this was the end. The two lascars
-were here to finish the quartermaster, and Gajah had come to attend
-to the second mate. The time was at hand.
-
-Barnes went to the door of the chart-house. A shot would do the
-business, but he wanted no shooting up here if possible.
-
-"Serang!" he exclaimed crisply. "Step aft. Something I want to show
-you."
-
-That suited the Malay, who loosened his kris in its sheath and
-followed. At the corner of the chart-house, Barnes pointed across
-the deck, obscure in the starlight, to the boat.
-
-"What's that?"
-
-Sincerely astonished, Gajah peered at the boat, with the two women
-sitting in her. And as he stared, Barnes let drive with the heavy
-barrel of his automatic, a full, fair blow across the skull. A grunt
-broke from the serang, who pitched sideways and flung out his arms.
-Barnes caught him and lowered the bleeding form to the deck, then
-darted back to the chart-house.
-
-Just in time, too! For all his watchful care, Li Fu had been taken
-unawares, one of the lascars gripping him in both arms, the other
-with kris upraised for the blow. Barnes was in upon them unseen, and
-struck down the man with the kris. The other lascar leaped away,
-gained the far door of the chart-house--and ran into the arms of Hi
-John. Something happened there. Steel flashed and a man gasped; the
-lascar slipped to the deck quietly.
-
-"You two men watch the ladders!" snapped Barnes. "When you hear me
-call, come to the boat."
-
-Revolvers out, each quartermaster took one of the ladders. Barnes
-turned and ran aft along the deck at top speed, disregarding the low
-call that the two women sent after him as he passed the boat. He was
-listening desperately for sounds from below. They came to him, came
-all in a jumble that his brain sorted out mechanically. First came a
-jarring wrench that shook the whole ship. Then the engines stopped.
-Whatever Hi John had done, the work was effective. And at the same
-instant the night was split by a sudden cry.
-
-"Allah! Allah----"
-
-Then the screaming of the wireless man was cut very short. An oath
-of desperation on his lips, Jim Barnes gained the small after ladder
-that led to the stern of the main deck. From below him burst a storm
-of cries; the shriek of a woman, the staccato yells of men, and a
-thin, shrill wail that maddened him. He dropped to the deck below,
-and found himself in the midst of an inferno, clearly illumined by
-the deck-lights.
-
-Abdullah lay across his water-pipe, stabbed in the back. Nearby was
-his eldest child, also stabbed, and two lascars were fighting to take
-another child from the arms of its dying mother. Barnes saw only
-this much, and then began to fire. He forgot everything but the
-horror in front of him, and only laughed when several of the lascars
-began to converge on him.
-
-A shot rang out from one of the forward cabins. Barnes, seizing the
-child, thrust him up the ladder and then swung about to meet three
-lascars plunging at him. He shot the first and second, ducked the
-kris-swing of the third, then tripped the man and shot him as he
-fell. Then he plunged for the nearest cabin, whence came screams.
-
-Just what happened next is something of which Jim Barnes never
-speaks. The orders of Lim Tock, to make a clean sweep of Abdullah's
-family, were being followed to the letter. Barnes was in the cabin
-for fully a minute--which, just then, was a very long space of time.
-
-By the time he emerged, much had happened. There was a crashing and
-smashing from the length of the cabins as the doors were battered in.
-From the bridge, a spatter of revolver shots; and, from below, more
-shots followed by the wild scream of the old chief as he reached the
-deck--a scream of half rage, half agony. He died at the rail,
-trailing blood across the deck, in his fist a blood-spattered
-spanner. After him, the Chinese stokers poured up to the deck and
-scattered for loot.
-
-Jim Barnes came out of the cabin, thrusting a dead lascar ahead of
-him. About his neck clung one of Abdullah's daughters, and under his
-left arm was another. From the passage leaped a stoker, whom Barnes
-shot. Then, at the ladder, he urged the two little girls upward to
-join their brother above.
-
-A shot rang out at him, and the bullet slithered on the steel beside
-him. Barnes paused to empty his automatics, then went up the ladder
-on the jump. At the top, he caught hold of the frightened children
-and rushed them along, shouting as he did so to the two
-quartermasters.
-
-They, after shooting at the forms down below on the foredeck and in
-the well, joined him at the boat. Barnes chucked in the three
-children and cast off the toggle.
-
-"In with you, men, and lower away! I'll slide down the pendant.
-Where's your pistol, Ellen? Hand it over--thanks. Sit still, all of
-you! Lower, Li, lower! That's it----"
-
-Li Fu slacked the lowering line about the cleat, and the boat fell
-away rapidly. Barely in time, too; Barnes perceived a rush of
-figures coming from the after ladder, and opened fire. They
-scattered.
-
-There was a moment's breathing spell, while from fore and aft, alow
-and aloft, rose sing-song calls in Cantonese and the harsher
-gutturals of the lascars. A rush was being planned from both sides.
-
-Barnes caught a soft call from below, and breathed a prayer of
-thanks. A number of figures showed at the corner of the chart-house.
-He emptied his pistol at these, then turned, caught one of the
-pendants hitched to the davit-head, and let himself go sliding down.
-
-A burst of yells rang out from the bridge deck, but he was in the
-boat below ere any could reach the rail. The two quartermasters had
-already put out the oars, and Barnes cast off the line and let the
-pendants unreeve as the roller whirled. The boat started away from
-the ship's side.
-
-"Here," came a voice, and Barnes felt one of his own pistols shoved
-into his hand. "My clip fitted your automatic and----"
-
-"Good girl, Ellen!" he cried out, and laughed as he fired at the rail
-above. A shot made answer, and a kris sang through the air to splash
-alongside--but the boat was clear. She drew away from the ship
-before the mutineers were sure just what had happened.
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-"There's one good thing we can say for the _Sulu Queen_," observed
-Jim Barnes. "That is, she sailed under English board rules."
-
-"What has that to do with our present situation?" demanded Nora
-Sayers.
-
-"It means that we've got a sprit rig stowed aboard. In oars, men!
-Hi John, we'll be sailing before the wind, so lash your oar to the
-for'ard thwart to make a boom for the fores'l. Li Fu, break out the
-canvas. Get the mast stepped, then trim ship."
-
-Over the waves behind, the tumult had died, and the distant lights of
-the _Sulu Queen_ showed only when the boat lifted on a crest. No
-pursuit had been made, nor had the searchlight been put into effect.
-Seemingly, Lim Tock was making no effort to find the boat. Probably
-the supercargo was for the present unable to get his men in hand and
-was also very likely to be busy getting the engines into working
-order.
-
-When the centreboard was let down and the boat was being trimmed, Jim
-Barnes surveyed her with acute satisfaction. She was a nearly new
-whaleboat, fitted with a rudder in navy style, and well found in all
-respects. With a grunt of delight, Barnes opened the oiled silk
-wrapping of the matches, found the compass to be a good one, and set
-it by his side in the stern. In another ten minutes the sprit was
-up, the foresail rigged to the makeshift boom, and the whaleboat was
-running before the wind toward Borneo.
-
-The eldest of the three children was barely six; none of them were
-cognizant of what had happened. After whimpering a little, they were
-soon asleep amidships, wrapped in the spare sail.
-
-"If you girls will come aft, you can curl up in the bottom of the
-boat at my feet," said Barnes. "You'll be out of the wind and she'll
-be better trimmed. I've kept the boat well wet down since we sailed,
-and she's dry as a bone."
-
-The two women obeyed. Nora Sayers looked up at Barnes.
-
-"The other children? And their mother?"
-
-Barnes tried to speak, but his throat was suddenly dry.
-
-"I--damn it, girl, don't make me think of it! I did what I could.
-Go to sleep."
-
-Ellen Maggs caught her breath sharply. Then, after a moment, Barnes
-felt her hand touch his, and he gripped her fingers. Both women were
-crying, he thought; but after a little they fell quiet, lulled by the
-regular rise and fall of the boat, by the long forward sweep, the
-rush and hiss of water as she drove along on a crest, and the tilted
-drop into the trough only to gather impetus anew and hurl forward.
-
-The curling sweep of wind and sea, like a cleansing breath, wiped out
-all that was behind them and lessened the sharp memory. Once Barnes,
-looking back, saw a searchlight fingering the water; that was all.
-The stars blazed cold and brilliant, and the thin crescent of the new
-moon hung like green silver against the depths above. So passed the
-hours, and the boat rushed ever onward and onward under the steady
-sweep of wind. Barnes held her on the same course the _Sulu Queen_
-had been following, to make the Bornean coast. They were far out of
-any steamer track, and there was no hope of being picked up unless by
-some chance trading schooner.
-
-Dawn found them steadily bowling along. Li Fu had crept aft and
-relieved Barnes of the tiller; and Barnes, resting against the
-stern-thwart, opened his eyes to find the head of Ellen Maggs
-pillowed upon his shirt, and his arms about her shoulders. How this
-had come about, he had not the least idea, but made no objection to
-the arrangement.
-
-Perhaps aroused by his awakening stir, the girl opened her eyes a
-moment later. Nora Sayers was sleeping peacefully. Barnes felt
-Ellen Maggs catch her breath at sight of the ocean and sky that
-closed them in, then saw the color come into her cheeks. Before she
-turned to glance at him, he closed his eyes again. She did not move,
-but, after realizing the situation, accepted it. Above them the lean
-form of Li Fu crouched at the tiller, dark eyes sweeping the water
-ahead.
-
-"Awake?" asked Barnes after a moment. "Don't move. Sailing a
-whaleboat before the wind, even with a centreboard, is about as
-ticklish as canoeing. Comfortable?"
-
-"Very, thank you," she responded, although he could see that the
-color lingered in her cheeks.
-
-"When the kids wake up, we'll stretch our legs a bit and break out
-some grub," said Barnes. She was silent for a space, then spoke
-quietly.
-
-"Are we going anywhere? Have you seen any ship, or will any see us?"
-
-"Going to Borneo. We'll raise the coast as soon as the sun's up. We
-won't see any ship unless she sees us first, however."
-
-"But I thought we might see one, and catch her attention----"
-
-Jim Barnes chuckled at this.
-
-"No chance! Novels to the contrary, it just ain't done. A small
-boat has a horizon of two and a half miles. We could see another
-boat a mile farther. The bridge of a ship can see us fifteen miles
-away, and would be sure not to miss our sails. So by the time we saw
-a ship, she'd be bearing down to take us on board. But we'll not see
-any; we're way out of the steamer lane."
-
-Behind the boat, all the eastern sky reddened and streamed with the
-dawn-shafts, and the sun sprang suddenly from the sea-rim, piercing
-the haze and mist of dawn with his level rays of gold. Li Fu bent
-down and touched the shoulder of Barnes. The latter looked. Out
-ahead of them a purple mass was upheaved above the horizon, running
-north and south.
-
-"Look!" Barnes pointed it out to the girl. "There's Borneo. If the
-wind holds, we'll make the coast in a couple of hours. The wind's
-shifting around to the north, too. Wake up, Hi John! Take in your
-boom, bring the sheet aft, and let the foresail gybe. Mind your
-helm, Li Fu, as she wears----"
-
-The whaleboat came over nicely, but as she heeled the three children
-wakened and began to cry out. Nora Sayers sat up, bewildered, then
-quickly began to mother the little ones. Hi John came aft and
-relieved Li Fu, who, with Barnes, set to work breaking out the cabin
-stores put aboard the boat.
-
-When breakfast was somewhat precariously made an end of, Barnes
-turned over the forward portion of the boat to the two women and
-their charges, bringing the quartermasters back in the stern with
-him. With the spare sail he contrived a low screen which afforded
-the women some privacy without lessening the windage of the sails.
-
-Li Fu curled up to sleep, but Hi John, with a serious effort to
-improve his English, questioned Barnes about their course and then
-delivered himself of a matter which drew Barnes' immediate and
-earnest attention.
-
-The quartermaster had discovered that the captain had changed the
-course of the _Sulu Queen_ toward Borneo by reason of something the
-serang Gajah had said to him. Further, he knew that there was much
-opium on the steamer, which Lim Tock meant to transfer to a junk
-which was to meet her somewhere. Putting these facts together, the
-inference was that the _Sulu Queen_ was to meet the junk somewhere
-near the mouth of the Sesajap, for which the skipper had headed her.
-
-"I don't know but what you're right, John," said Barnes thoughtfully.
-"We might run into that junk, eh? But no great matter if we did.
-They'd be Chinese and would leave us alone."
-
-Hi John shook his head at this. The boat was stenciled with the name
-of the _Sulu Queen_, and the men aboard the junk would not be exactly
-fools. Barnes nodded assent.
-
-"You're right. Still, the chances are ten to one that we'll not see
-her. How badly did you smash those engines? What did you do to
-them?"
-
-"Me no savvy," said the quartermaster with a shrug. He had smashed
-them, and that was all he knew, except that he had done it in a hurry
-and at considerable risk.
-
-Jim Barnes had fetched along no charts, but needed none for this
-coast. To the north was Point Elphinstone and British territory, and
-no settlements along the coast. To the south were several Dutch
-stations within a hundred miles or so. As Hi John claimed to know
-the coast fairly well, Barnes decided to run straight in for the
-land, if possible identify their position, and then strike south for
-the nearest Dutch settlement. The boat was staunch; the storm season
-was gone, and there was nothing to fear.
-
-"And the quicker I can get a gunboat after that devil, Lim Tock, the
-better!" reflected Barnes. He still saw red at thought of what he
-had witnessed the previous night.
-
-
-An hour passed, and another, and the coast opened up before them as
-the breeze held. The mountains of the interior rose in a dull purple
-mass, against which stood the brighter green of the low shores. An
-island presently detached itself to the north, and after studying the
-coast-line carefully, Hi John declared this to be Bunju, with the
-island of Tarakan a little off the port bow. South of Tarakan were
-Dutch posts on the Bulangan River mouths, so Barnes let her fill off
-a little, heading southeast by east.
-
-The children, meantime, had begun to explore, and two of them
-appeared aft, staring at the three men with wondering brown eyes, but
-too shy to talk. Barnes was paying little heed to them; both he and
-Hi John were examining the coast ahead. Then, suddenly, Li Fu
-uncurled, and came out of his sleep with a blood-curdling yell.
-
-For an instant Barnes thought the quartermaster had gone mad, until
-he saw the man staring at the wet leg of his dungaree trousers. Wet!
-A chattering cry from Li Fu drove the warning home. He plunged
-forward.
-
-"Drop it, you little rascal! Drop it!"
-
-It was one of those slight accidents upon which destiny hangs and
-veers. The Arab boy had found the lanyard of the plug in the boat's
-bottom, and now stood holding up the plug curiously while the water
-spouted into her.
-
-At the cry and plunge of Barnes, the boy scrambled away forward.
-Nora Sayers came aft, and ran into him. They fell together, just as
-Barnes flung himself on the plug and attempted to replace it. Hi
-John, too startled to mind his helm properly, let her yaw on the
-crest of a wave--and the big mainsail gybed.
-
-Barnes, who had jammed the plug back into place, thought she was
-gone; but the water that she had shipped saved her in that instant.
-The mast, bone-dry and rotten, went with a rending crash, smashing
-the sprit with it. She swept up on the next sea with a pile of
-canvas dragging over her bow and the frightened children screaming.
-
-Seizing Li Fu's knife, Barnes went into the tangle furiously, for
-somewhere beneath it was Ellen Maggs. He found her unhurt, however,
-her arms about the youngest child.
-
-"Lord, girl! I thought the mast had hit you. Get aft, now. Both of
-you girls take pannikins and bail. Li, put out an oar and keep her
-from broaching. John, come along and help clear away. Move sharp,
-everybody!"
-
-In five minutes the dripping canvas was hauled in amidships and the
-damage ascertained. The sprit was gone beyond repair, and the upper
-half of the mast. Against the stump, Barnes held an oar while Hi
-John deftly lashed it in place.
-
-"What happened?" demanded Nora Sayers.
-
-"We all picked the lee side to fall on," and Barnes laughed as he
-spoke. "Cheer up! No harm done! We'll run into shore and replace
-the spars, then be on our way. Eh, John?"
-
-"Can do," grunted Hi John, examining the coast line. "Plenty bamboo.
-Hey! Catchum sail off sta'board counter!"
-
-Barnes leaped to a thwart and took one look to the north. A brown,
-square sail was in sight, creeping from behind one of the islands.
-
-He turned.
-
-"Now, John, move! Get that canvas up, anyway at all so it'll
-draw--come on! Use that long piece of the sprit for a gaff; lash the
-canvas to it and then lash it as high on the oar as you can. Look
-alive! That's your junk, yonder."
-
-The two men fell furiously to work, while the women bailed and Li Fu
-tugged at the long oar to keep the whaleboat from broaching. And the
-brownish yellow matting sail crept down on them like an ungainly
-water-spider.
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-Under the rapid directions of Barnes, the whaleboat was presently
-surging through the water again, while he took the tiller and the
-quartermasters finished the bailing. Both women sat a bit aft to
-trim the boat anew; and, as they had worked diligently at Cantonese
-while fitting themselves for mission duties, they understood the
-tongue more or less. Neither of the quartermasters was aware of the
-fact. Barnes spoke it not at all.
-
-"Our master is in love with this drooping girl," said Li Fu
-chantingly, as he bailed. "Lim Tock desired her also. She must have
-a devil that charms some men, for she is of no beauty in my eyes."
-
-Hi John laughed harshly. "If those aboard the junk see the women,
-they will try hard for us! Lim Tock was a Straits man; to him white
-women are beautiful. These others are Straits men, too, I think.
-Women are more desirable than gold, and white women than pearls; for
-white women are hard to come by in Singapore, unless one----"
-
-He went on to speak learnedly of matters which, by good fortune, came
-in words that the two women had not learned. As it was, they gave
-each other a startled glance. Then Ellen Maggs motioned to the spare
-sail.
-
-"Get it, Nora. Lie down and pull it over us."
-
-Barnes saw the action, and his eyes narrowed perplexedly. Then he
-understood, and a smile touched his lips.
-
-"Good work, girls! Get the kids with you. Li and John, lie down
-here by the after thwart, in the trough of the next wave. Chances
-are they won't have very good glasses aboard the junk. We'll puzzle
-'em a bit and make 'em suspicious."
-
-Once again the slender accident upon which hangs fortune! Although
-the junk was at least three miles from them, Barnes had swiftly
-estimated her course and sailing power, and had come to the desperate
-conclusion that she meant to intercept them and would do so before
-they could make the shore. Her large forward and smaller after sail
-were putting her through the water almost dead before the wind at a
-fast clip.
-
-Now, when the whaleboat rose to the following seas, she presented the
-spectacle of a boat under jury rig manned by a single figure in the
-stern. Other figures had been aboard her; now they were gone. To
-those on the junk, familiar with the artifices of Malay and Dyak,
-familiar with theft and murder and piracy by quiet lagoon and hidden
-river-mouth, it was obvious that the thirty-foot whaleboat wished
-them to think only one person was aboard. The others might be lying
-hidden with weapons ready under mats and sails--as they were.
-
-Jim Barnes hauled in his sheets until the whaleboat began to heel,
-and headed up more directly For the shore, sailing by the wind and
-getting every possible fraction of speed out of her. Watching
-narrowly, he saw the brown matting sail braced around. The junk
-altered her course slightly, to run past the stern of the whaleboat
-and reconnoitre.
-
-"Good!" he exclaimed, with a breath of relief. "We've won--he's
-frightened! Everybody stay close, now. We don't want her to learn
-too much. Li Fu, feel around there and pass me up the crutch for the
-steering oar, and you, John, have one of the oars ready. I'll ship
-the crutch and get out the oar. That'll give us better steering
-power and add a bit to our speed. We'll need the oar in the surf, if
-there is any."
-
-Five minutes later the change was made and Barnes stood up to the
-long oar, which kept the boat from yawing and thus aided her
-progress. Her makeshift rig was holding and promised to effect its
-purpose.
-
-So it did, indeed. Another twenty minutes made so plain to the junk
-that the whaleboat could not be intercepted, that she hauled about
-and stood off-shore, giving up the chase entirely. Barnes jubilantly
-conveyed the news to all hands, but added a warning word.
-
-"Stay where you are! We don't want her coming in later to
-investigate us. John, stand by the centreboard and haul up when I
-give the word. There's a lagoon ahead, and we may find a bar at the
-entrance. No sign of any, but that don't always signify----"
-
-He craned anxiously forward as he stood, examining the shores upon
-which they were sweeping. They were low and unhealthy. From the
-water ascended a line, a tangled cluster of mangrove roots twisted
-like frozen snakes, with the green wall above. Here and there,
-however, openings showed that behind these islets lay long lagoons.
-For one of these openings Barnes steered, forced to take chances on
-striking a sandbar. He looked back from a crest and found the brown
-sail dipping under the horizon.
-
-"All clear! Come alive! Ready for a shock if she strikes, girls.
-Haul in, John! That's the ticket!"
-
-In between the trees, they rushed on a white foam-crest, swept past,
-and went darting across the quiet surface of a lagoon, the sails
-flapping. A hundred yards in width it was, the mangrove wall on one
-side, and on the other a strip of white sand with jungle greenery
-making another wall to shut off the sky. The boat glided gently
-across and drifted until her nose touched the sand. With a breath of
-relief, Barnes dropped his oar.
-
-Then the heat smote them, blazing, torrential, insufferable. There
-in the quiet lagoon, cut off from wind and sea, the sun beat down
-unchecked. Nora Sayers, coming to her feet, glanced at the watch on
-her wrist and uttered a cry of surprise.
-
-"Good gracious! Do you know that it's nearly noon? No wonder it's
-hot----"
-
-"Sit down!" ordered Barnes. "Pull her up, lads."
-
-Leaping into the water, the quartermasters pulled the nose of the
-whaleboat to the sand and helped the two women and the children out.
-
-"All ashore!" sang out Barnes. "Li Fu, you and John cut a new mast
-and sprit. Bamboo, if you can find it; if not, whatever you can get.
-Miss Sayers, keep your eye on the kids, will you? Miss--er--Ellen,
-will you take this stuff as I hand it out? We'll use the spare
-canvas for table-cloth, and have a bang-up feed to celebrate. You
-girls are getting your money's worth this cruise! How do you like
-Borneo?"
-
-Nora Sayers had no time to answer, for the three brown children had
-promptly stripped and were plunging through the water or catching
-sand-fleas, and she was in laughing pursuit. Ellen Maggs smiled as
-she took the provisions that Barnes handed out.
-
-"I--why, I like it!" she said, her eyes big with wonder at the things
-around, and sparkling with eagerness. "I'm frightened, and happy,
-and--don't want to go back! Are there any savages around?"
-
-"Probably a few head-hunters, but they won't worry us. Here's a tin
-of sardines."
-
-With her next load the girl was laughing at sight of Nora Sayers
-rounding up her charges.
-
-"I wish we could do that, too! The water looks so clean, and the
-sand so white."
-
-"Nothing to prevent," said Barnes, chuckling. "After lunch we'll get
-the boat rigged. You and Nora can slip up around that point, take
-the kids along and enjoy life. No sharks of any size in here, and no
-crocodiles in salt water, I guess. You might catch a stingaree, but
-not much chance. While you're gone, I'll have a dip myself."
-
-Nora Sayers and the excited, chattering brown children rejoined them,
-and presently their noon meal was ready. Barnes sent up a call,
-which was answered from the depths of the green jungle, but the meal
-was half over when Li Fu and Hi John appeared. They were hot and
-bedraggled, but exultantly produced two admirable spars of bamboo,
-each of the right size, for mast and sprit.
-
-Nora Sayers, energetic and vigorous despite the heat, went exploring
-and announced the discovery of a little cove, just around a sandy
-point. So, taking the children, she and Ellen Maggs presently
-departed thither, and the joyful shrieks of splashing youngsters soon
-echoed through the lagoon.
-
-Jim Barnes lighted his pipe and fell to work on the spars, at which
-the quartermasters joined him after their meal. It was no light job,
-since he was determined to have everything shipshape for the proper
-handling of the boat, and the sheath-knives made slow work of the
-fibrous bamboo. It was an hour before the mast was stepped and
-rigged to his satisfaction. Then he enjoyed a quick dip, and was
-dressed again when the others returned. The Chinese went in search
-of crabs, to vary their diet.
-
-The two women found Barnes sitting on the sand, his pipe alight and a
-frown on his face, as he studied the opposite shore of the lagoon.
-
-"Are you all ready to get off?" asked Nora.
-
-"Ready and waiting." Barnes grinned cheerfully. "Look at the
-channel over there, by which we came in. Notice anything funny about
-it?"
-
-Both women looked, perplexed, but could find no explanation of his
-words. Barnes pointed to the sand about the bow of the boat.
-
-"There's the answer, girls. Tide! It must have been on the ebb when
-we got here. Now she's gone down, and there isn't three inches of
-water over the bar. We're stuck until about five o'clock, that's
-all! I'm taking no chances with a thin-skinned whaleboat."
-
-"We can't get out, then?" queried Ellen Maggs.
-
-"Right. We can fish and sew and smoke and talk, and hunt crabs, but
-we can't leave. By four or five o'clock we may scrape over. Why
-worry? We're a lot better off than we might have been. Not often
-you strike a sand beach along these mangrove swamps, I can tell you!
-We'll stretch the spare sail as an awning for the kids and let 'em
-sleep."
-
-Using the broken spars, and Nora Sayers aiding him, he stretched the
-canvas from the side of the boat and the three children were soon
-asleep in the shade. Retiring to the edge of the trees, the three
-awaited the return of the quartermasters. Barnes sighed luxuriously.
-
-"Golly! This is the first vacation I've had in a long while. Hope
-you girls won't lose your jobs if you don't get back to China on
-schedule?"
-
-"I guess not," said Ellen Maggs. "What brought you on that awful
-ship, Mr. Barnes?"
-
-Barnes gave her a look of whimsical reproach.
-
-"Now, now, I'm surprised at you! My name isn't Mister--it's Jim!
-Make believe we're on a desert isle, can't you?"
-
-Ellen Maggs blushed faintly, but her eyes were sparkling when she
-responded.
-
-"All right--Jim! Now what brought you on that ship?"
-
-"Fate," said Jim Barnes, grinning. "Do you girls remember that
-morning you came into the consul's office in Hong Kong?"
-
-Both women glanced at him, surprised.
-
-"Were you there?" demanded Nora Sayers. "We didn't see you?".
-
-"I was there when you left, after talking with the consul about the
-_Sulu Queen_" he responded. "You were too excited to notice me,
-though. The consul's a good sport. He knew the old hooker was no
-ship for me, but he said you girls were stubborn and were going to
-take the trip aboard her----"
-
-"The rates," put in Ellen Maggs meekly, "were half what the other
-steamers wanted."
-
-"Sure. So's the pay they offered me. 'You go along on that
-houseboat of corruption, Barnes,' the consul said. 'She needs a
-second, and there ought to be one white man aboard her if those fool
-girls are determined to sail.' So, having seen you girls, I agreed
-with him--and here we are! And believe me, I'm tickled to death that
-I shipped aboard her."
-
-"So am I," said Nora Sayers laughing frankly. Ellen Maggs said
-nothing at all, but Barnes caught a look from her eyes that set his
-pulses leaping.
-
-Li Fu and Hi John returned with a mighty loot of crabs and sea-slugs
-garnered from the outer reef, and reported that no sail was in sight,
-nor was any trail of smoke along the horizon. While the women
-shudderingly eyed the hideous slugs and the children poked at them
-with sticks, Barnes got a fire going from dry driftwood and the
-crab-meat was cooked. The two Chinese squatted over another fire and
-prepared the slugs after their own fashion.
-
-The repast was flavored with curiosity rather than hunger. By the
-time it was done, Nora Sayers announced the hour as nearly four. Jim
-Barnes glanced out at the bar, and nodded. The tide was creeping in.
-
-"All aboard! We'll try it, anyhow. Unship the tiller, Li! She
-steers and handles much better with the oar."
-
-Thankful to escape from the unstirred, stagnant heat of the lagoon,
-the women and children were aided into the boat after it had been
-shoved clear. Barnes took the stern; the quartermasters ran her out
-and leaped aboard, getting out oars.
-
-"Wind's going down outside," announced Barnes, as they neared the
-opening. "We'll keep along the coast during the night, however, and
-with morning ought to run into some native fishing boats. We can
-soon find where the nearest Dutch post is located. Here we are, now!
-In oars, men! Stand by the centreboard, John. Li Fu, take care of
-the sheets!"
-
-The boat's keel touched the mud of the bar lightly, very lightly, and
-then was over. There had been surf in the morning, but now it was
-gone, except for a line of breakers fifty feet away. The sails
-caught the breeze, the boat heeled over, and a moment later Barnes
-luffed and drove her through the surf, to fall away on the other tack
-and head out to the southward.
-
-Then, as he stood watching the sails, his eyes widened. Before him,
-seemingly without cause, had appeared a little round hole in the
-mainsail. An instant later the crack of a rifle came on the wind.
-He turned, as a shout broke from Li Fu, and perceived what none of
-them had observed in the moment of getting through the surf.
-
-Half a mile to the north along the mangrove reef was the same junk
-they had encountered earlier in the day; and, between her and them,
-bearing down upon them and booming along with the breeze, were three
-ship's boats with canvas set.
-
-"Our boats!" cried Jim Barnes. "They sank the ship and came along in
-the boats. Down, everybody! John, get those water breakers aft to
-trim ship. Down!"
-
-Another rifle-crack emphasized his words, and then the sharp song of
-the bullet whining overhead, followed by a chorus of yells from the
-three boats.
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-Barnes stood at the steering oar, holding the long ash deep and
-giving the whaleboat every ounce of windage that would drive her
-forward. Shot after shot rang out from the pursuing boats, which
-were filled with men.
-
-He could picture well enough what had happened. Lim Tock, unable to
-repair the smashed engines of the _Sulu Queen_, had sunk her. Into
-the boats had piled the lascars and the yellow men, with their loot
-and opium, and started for the coast. They must have met the junk
-during the day, put the loot aboard her, heard of the whaleboat, and
-had come to seek her. Lim Tock would not dare to let her escape to
-carry tales.
-
-"And now they've found us right enough!" he thought. "Caught us,
-confound it! If they didn't have rifles, I'd run out to sea and
-fight 'em with seamanship. Those lascars can't begin to handle
-whaleboats. If we only had a good mile between us! But the wind's
-falling. It'll die out, and won't come up again until after sunset.
-And by that time they'll crawl up on us with the oars. Damn it!"
-
-The bullets droned overhead. One man at a time seemed to be firing
-until his magazine emptied. There were good shots among the
-pursuers, too; several holes were visible in the mainsail, and twice
-Barnes had felt hot lead come close. It dawned upon him that they
-were firing at his figure.
-
-"Are we beating them?" called Nora Sayers.
-
-"No," said Barnes grimly. In his appraisal he found the case
-hopeless, desperate; and he put it bluntly enough, explaining that
-the oarsmen aboard the pursuing boats, and the calm that was certain
-to fall, insured their being overtaken. The Chinese listened calmly,
-with clear understanding; the two women comprehending well enough,
-but urging him desperately with their eyes.
-
-The whaleboat was reaching out on the starboard tack, as she had left
-the lagoon opening. The land fell away to the southwest, so that she
-was standing practically out to sea while running almost before the
-wind.
-
-"We'll have to run for the land, and do it quick," said Barnes. "We
-don't dare to tack; we'll have to wear. The breeze is still pretty
-fresh, and they're apparently badly out of trim; good! Now you'll
-see some fun, girls. I'll bet a trade dollar that one of 'em gets
-spilled. Nora, come a bit aft and sit on the lee thwart--that's
-right. Revolvers loaded, men?"
-
-The quartermasters answered with a nod. Barnes commanded Li Fu to
-stand by the fore sheet and, when the helm was put up, to empty his
-weapon at the nearest of the three boats.
-
-"You take charge of the main sheet, John. Those lascars will imitate
-us, and we'll give 'em something to imitate, or I'm a Dutchman! All
-right, John--slack away, roundly! Haul in--haul in! Let her gybe,
-now--smart does it! Ease away, now----"
-
-The staccato reports of Li Fu's revolver cracked emptily down the
-wind. The boat went off before the wind, and the mainsail was hauled
-in and gybed dangerously, then was eased away as she paid off on the
-new tack. Li Fu, dropping his weapon, handled the fore sheet smartly
-to meet her by the wind.
-
-A jubilant yell broke from Barnes as he glanced backward. The
-foremost pursuer, confused by Li Fu's bullets, tried to wear hastily
-and suddenly. Her mainsail hauled around in a terrific jibe that
-sent her flat over. Heads dotted the water about the craft, but the
-other two boats managed the trick safely and stood away without
-halting to pick up their companions. A renewed rifle-fire opened
-from them.
-
-"Fire and be damned to you!" shouted Barnes in delight. "If I had
-you out at sea and the wind steady, I'd show you tricks, you dogs!
-That's one of you gone, and the junk will be delayed picking up----"
-
-The words seemed suddenly checked on his lips; a grunt broke from
-him, an abrupt ejaculation of surprise and almost alarm. The
-occasion of it did not appear.
-
-"Can either of you men steer with the oar?" he demanded.
-
-Li Fu shook his head. Hi John assented with a nod, and Barnes
-beckoned him. Picking his way aft, Hi John took over the oar.
-
-"You see that point dead ahead, with what seems to be a river-mouth
-on the other side? Head for it, or a couple of points to starboard
-of it to allow for leeway. And make the river, John--good man----"
-
-Barnes spoke jerkily. For an instant he changed countenance; an
-expression of agony leaped across his face. He started forward. A
-cry broke from Ellen Maggs.
-
-"Catch him, Li Fu!"
-
-But Jim Barnes sank down on the thwart beside Nora Sayers, and,
-smiling a little, reached up one of his automatics to Li Fu.
-
-"Here, Li! Go aft to keep her trimmed, and let 'em have it. Fire
-low; those bullets will smash through the boat."
-
-Li Fu stepped past him. Barnes, disregarding the hand of Nora
-Sayers, lifted himself forward a little and dropped near the bow
-thwart, beside Ellen Maggs. The three children were up in the bow,
-chattering away and delighted with the chase.
-
-"You're hurt?" cried Ellen Maggs, leaning toward Barnes. He laughed
-lightly, though his lips were graying, as he looked into her eyes.
-
-"Aye. Nora, pass up that little black medicine chest, will you?
-It's stowed under your thwart, I think, with the lantern and other
-stuff that was in the boat. Does either of you girls know anything
-about surgery?"
-
-"I do," said Ellen Maggs. Her cheeks were very white, her eyes
-large. "Only a little----"
-
-Barnes put his hand under his shirt and examined his side gingerly.
-Then, with a grimace, he wriggled out of his jacket. He took the
-sheath-knife which Li Fu tossed forward on demand, and cut at the
-right side of his shirt. Nora Sayers, her face drawn and anxious,
-would have come with the medicine case, but Barnes checked her.
-
-"Stay where you are, Nora. We're fighting to reach land ahead of
-those devils, and every bit of trim to the boat counts a lot. Throw
-it; that's right. Now Ellen, the bullet went in under the right arm
-and is bulging out the skin here on my right side. Cut the skin and
-it'll pop out. I'm not left-handed or I could do it. Then douse on
-plenty of iodine fore and aft, and clap on some kind of a bandage."
-
-He lay back and threw up his arms, gripping the corks outside the
-gunwale, and so lay motionless, waiting. The girl leaned forward,
-her lips clenched.
-
-"Don't worry; it won't hurt," he said easily. "You, Li Fu! Open up.
-Are they gaining on us, or holding steady?"
-
-"Plenty steady," responded the quartermaster. At the next wave-crest
-he fired.
-
-His feet braced, Barnes lay motionless, and a smile crept to his
-pallid lips as he noted the deft certainty with which the girl
-attacked her task. Twice she started to cut, and flinched; then,
-desperately, she set the keen steel to the white skin. In five
-seconds it was done. The bullet fell from her reddened fingers and
-bounced on the thin sheathing.
-
-"Steady, steady!" said Barnes quietly, seeing her lips quiver. "Now
-the smelly stuff and the bandages, girl." A sudden exclamation from
-the Chinese made him glance up. "What is it, men? What is it?"
-
-"That last shot plenty damn good; first-chop!" responded Li Fu,
-staring out. "Hai! Catchum bottomside one time!"
-
-"Fine work!" cried Barnes. "That's two out of the race. Ripped
-through her sheathing, eh? Anybody hurt?"
-
-"My no can see--catchum one damn coolie, mebbeso. Bail like hellee!"
-
-"Good! Do the same to the other boat if you can."
-
-"Can do," asserted Li Fu confidently, but he failed to make good his
-promise. The one shot that caused one of the two pursuers to limp
-behind was doubtless sheer luck.
-
-"Turn over, please," came the voice of Ellen Maggs.
-
-Barnes obeyed. The girl caught her breath as his blood-soaked back
-was revealed, while Nora Sayers leaned forward and directed her,
-aiding as best she could.
-
-"How's the wind?" demanded Barnes, while the bandage was being
-wrapped in place.
-
-"Go down plenty quick," responded Li Fu, examining the empty weapon.
-"No can do. I think Lim Tock in this boat. Plenty joss."
-
-"Huh! Joss won't save him if I get a good crack at the devil,"
-commented Barnes, as he lay face-down. "Going to make the river,
-John?"
-
-"Aye. Can do."
-
-"It's done," said Ellen Maggs, her voice very faint.
-
-Barnes lifted himself stiffly and sat up. He saw the girl smile
-tremulously. Then her face went ashen and she dropped back against
-the lee gunwale and lay quiet. Barnes looked up at Nora Sayers.
-
-"Leave her be," he said quietly. "Poor girl! Must have been hell
-for her."
-
-"It was," agreed Nora Sayers, regarding him almost savagely. "Why
-didn't you let me do it? She wasn't made for that sort of thing,
-although she's a wonderful surgical assistant. I saw her faint
-twice, one morning at Tientsin, when they were working on the wounded
-men. She ought to be cooking and tending babies, instead of messing
-around blood and wounds!"
-
-"Good lord, don't take it out on me!" said Barnes, and smiled a
-little. "I didn't send her out to China, did I? But it won't be my
-fault if she ever goes back, I can tell you that! Come on, swap
-places with me and mother her a bit. I've got to see what's doing.
-We've got a darned slim chance even if we do get ashore, and we can't
-overlook any bets."
-
-He dragged himself painfully to the thwart, Nora Sayers aiding him.
-Then, as he sat up, she took the head of Ellen Maggs in her lap.
-
-To his infinite relief, Barnes perceived that they were more than
-holding their own in the chase, and, if the wind had held, might have
-run for it successfully. But the wind would not hold. Already it
-was dying out. Looking back, he could see the brown matting sails of
-the junk flapping idly as she lay to, picking up the men from the
-capsized boat. The second boat, half submerged, was heading back for
-her.
-
-Only the third boat held on its course. As nearly as Barnes could
-tell, there were a dozen men aboard her, but without glasses he could
-not distinguish figures to the extent of identifying them. He took
-the empty weapon from Li Fu and began to reload.
-
-"None too many cartridges left; we didn't figure on a little war," he
-commented, and turned his attention to the shore.
-
-A breath of relief escaped him. The shore was a scant quarter-mile
-away, and the wind would get them to it. Hi John had made the
-promontory, a low, mangrove-rimmed tongue of land, and was heading
-toward the river-mouth which had disclosed itself beyond. The stream
-was one of some size, thickly girt by trees and jungle.
-
-A single line of surf, breaking across the bar, was divided by a
-small, narrow island of white sand, where a few trees struggled.
-With extra high tides the island would be covered, Barnes decided,
-but not at present.
-
-"Right-hand channel, John," he directed. "Then beach her on that
-island. If we don't get that boat stopped, she'll do for us; but we
-can stop her. Ellen waked up yet?"
-
-"Not yet," said Nora Sayers.
-
-"Then leave her alone. The next ten minutes tells the tale. Give me
-that gun of hers."
-
-The girl obeyed. A shrill cry from Hi John heralded the surf-line,
-and as the boat rose to it, the sail began to flap. The wind was
-down.
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-Sunset was at hand. The red ball of the sun, blurred out of
-rotundity by the haze, hovered at the purple rim of the western
-mountains as though hesitating to depart.
-
-The boat was through the surf, carried forward by the white crest in
-a surging rush. A last puff of wind filled her sails and gave her
-way enough to get over the bar and go in upon the sandy shore of the
-islet. Here the trees and brush, while nothing like the tangled mass
-of jungle ashore, were thick enough to afford concealment. This was
-not the aim of Barnes, however.
-
-"Haul her up, lads!" To his order the quartermasters leaped out.
-"You girls stay here and keep the kids quiet. If they have the nerve
-to rush, we're gone; but they won't. Here, John, give me a hand!
-Quick!"
-
-He was helped ashore, finding himself very weak but clear-headed.
-Each of the Chinese had a revolver. Barnes had two automatics and
-the one belonging to Ellen. He gave his directions swiftly, and the
-two men darted into the brush. Barnes leaned against the nearest
-tree and waited, watching the canvas of the pursuing boat come flying
-in with the last dregs of the breeze.
-
-At last she came, rising on the gathering surge of the breaking surf,
-bow flinging high, steersman standing at the straining, oar in the
-stern. As she lifted against the flaming sky, Barnes threw up his
-automatic and fired. The oarsman crumpled up. From three points the
-islet spat bullets at the nearing boat, sweeping her with the hot
-lead.
-
-By some miracle, the expected did not happen. Instead of capsizing,
-the boat swept in on the surf, and paused. A rifle spat response
-vainly. Men were tumbling, falling over the thwarts, shrieking and
-yelling oaths. The figure of Lim Tock, in the bow, staggered and
-went down, but his voice pierced through the din continually.
-
-An oar was put out, and another. Of the dozen men aboard her, not
-half survived that blasting welcome. Revolvers and pistols had been
-emptied. Frantically the gasping men got the boat headed around to
-meet the surf. Two more oars jabbed out. Barnes lifted Ellen Maggs'
-pistol and shot with deliberate aim. Two of the oarsmen sprawled
-down. Somehow the boat crawled out again, in an interval of the
-surf, and began to draw away. Barnes, disappointed and raging,
-emptied his last bullets at her. For a while she floated there,
-until the oars bit at the water and pulled her slowly away.
-
-"Damn it!" said Barnes bitterly, as the quartermasters came back,
-reloading. "Came within an ace of capsizing him; came within an ace
-of getting him and bagging his rifles! And missed. Now we've lost
-the whole trick after all."
-
-"Plenty joss along Lim Tock," commented Hi John.
-
-Barnes wearily turned to the boat and seated himself on the gunwale,
-while at his order the two men unshipped the spars and canvas. Ellen
-Maggs still lay unconscious, her head in the lap of Nora Sayers, who,
-was looking up at Barnes with glad eyes.
-
-"We've won? You beat them off?"
-
-Barnes mechanically felt for his pipe, filled it, and held a match to
-it.
-
-"No," he said, his voice bitter. "We'd have won if we'd got their
-rifles and killed that devil, Lim Tock. We only drove him off--and
-we've lost, absolutely. Leave the spars here ashore, John; put the
-canvas aboard--that's right. Lay her on the canvas, Nora, and take
-it easy. You'll need the sails for a covering against the
-night-mist."
-
-When she had made the unconscious girl comfortable with the canvas,
-Nora Sayers rose and stepped ashore, where the three children were
-already ranging happily.
-
-"What do you mean?" she demanded. "How have we lost?"
-
-Barnes jerked his pipe to seaward.
-
-"They're bound to silence us at all costs, aren't they? Sure.
-They've plenty of men aboard the junk and those other boats. It'll
-probably remain calm until sunrise, now, and we can't possibly get to
-sea. We can use only two oars. The inference is obvious."
-
-She could not mistake it, and nodded slowly. Barnes turned to the
-two Chinese.
-
-"Any idea where we are, John?"
-
-Hi John nodded, and squatted in the sand with a stick. In the sand
-he drew several converging lines, designed to represent the delta and
-mouths of a large river. He pointed to one, then indicated the river
-beside them.
-
-"I think Bulungan River," he said. "We go up, bimeby we come
-topside. Big river."
-
-"You may be right, John--and look here! There's a Dutch post
-somewhere up the Bulungan----"
-
-"Two," said the quartermaster. "Plenty big river, topside."
-
-Barnes looked at the recumbent figure of Ellen Maggs in the boat,
-looked at the three children playing in the sand. In the warm, clear
-light of the sunset, the perplexed frown of his face was plain to be
-seen. He looked anxious, yet his blue eyes were stormy and filled
-with a passionate anger as though he were rebelling against something
-that he saw was unavoidable. He came to his feet and paused.
-
-"Dutch posts?" cried Nora Sayers eagerly. "Then we can row up the
-river!"
-
-Barnes looked at her, and under the regard of his eyes she fell
-silent.
-
-"Yes, you can," he said. "Sure. And so can those devils, unless
-there's something right here to stop 'em! Besides, it's a long
-chance. We don't know for sure that it's the Bulungan River, or one
-of the mouths. That's the devil of destiny; it never gives a man a
-fair show for his white alley! The cards are stacked every time."
-
-He glanced at the sky. There was yet half an hour of daylight, for
-the sun was down behind the western mountains of Borneo, and the
-afterglow would linger for a while.
-
-"You mean," questioned the girl, "that they can row so much faster
-than we can?"
-
-"Exactly. A dozen oars to our two. The Dutch posts, if they're
-here, are probably miles up-river. They are trading posts, you know,
-in touch with the natives. We might hide somewhere along the river,
-only to die slowly. Lim Tock will search every inch of the stream,
-you may be sure. His own life depends on it."
-
-"If we could get a messenger up the river----"
-
-"Yes," said Barnes, and laughed. Nora Sayers bit her lip.
-
-For a moment he puffed at his pipe, then drew a deep breath and
-beckoned the two quartermasters. They came, watching his face
-calmly, without emotion.
-
-"You men will take this boat and row up the stream," he said quietly.
-"I confide to your care these two women, and these children. You are
-to protect them at all costs. This is----"
-
-"But--wait!" exclaimed Nora Sayers in dismay.
-
-"Shut up!" snapped Barnes. "Now, men, this is your duty. They must
-be taken up to the Dutch post, wherever it is. It means you must row
-most of the night, understand? I shall remain here and stop Lim
-Tock's men. I'm no good for rowing--and I can do that. Now, do you
-understand?"
-
-"My savvy. Aye," they responded together.
-
-"Good. Get to work and lighten the boat, then."
-
-Barnes put his pipe between his teeth and stepped toward the trees.
-He found himself halted, the girl's hand on his arm. He turned, and
-was astonished by the emotion that was in her face and eyes.
-
-"Please!" she said brokenly. "You must not do this. You must not
-deliberately sacrifice yourself----"
-
-"Cut it out, will you?" he roughly intervened. "I know what must be
-done here, Nora. I'm not making any grandstand play, either. I can
-hold 'em up, and you can send down a Dutch launch with a gun in her.
-They have 'em with machine-guns and pom-poms. One o' their launches
-could sink that blamed junk in a jiffy! They'll come quick enough,
-too! Believe me, those Dutchmen like nothing better than wiping out
-pirates, unless it's wiping out plague-ships. They do both jobs up
-brown."
-
-"Stop evading, please," she broke in. "Why are you doing this? Why
-don't you leave one of those Chinese here, and go with us?"
-
-The face of Barnes twisted wryly.
-
-"Gosh, I wish that I could!" he said almost wistfully. "Nope.
-Whoever stays here will have a sweet time of it. Besides, I'm good
-for nothing else. Those quartermasters are darned fine men, Nora;
-they'll see you through safe. You've got to realize that we're up
-against a desperate affair, and no half-way measures will serve!"
-
-She stared into his eyes for a moment.
-
-"Is it for the children that you're doing it?" she asked. "They
-aren't worth it, I tell you! Three Arab children--they aren't worth
-the loss of a man like you!"
-
-"You know better, girl," he said quietly, and she shivered.
-
-"Is it--us? Is it for her? Then, do you think she'd want to leave
-you? Do you think she'd want to live and know that you had died
-here----"
-
-"Shut up; you'll be hysterical if you keep up this gait," interrupted
-Barnes. "Now, young lady, you can gamble good and hard that I don't
-want to stay here! Not much. If there was any way out of it, I
-wouldn't. I'm not hankering for a martyr's crown or any of that hero
-stuff, not for a minute! I'm for keeping Jim Barnes topside every
-time. It hurts like hell to realize that there's no other way out.
-But here are you girls, and the kids, and somebody has to wait here.
-See? It just has to be done, that's all."
-
-"Then--then you don't believe that--we can reach the post in time?"
-
-"Well, anything's possible," said Barnes dryly. "Sure, there's a
-chance! Now, I want you to get off before Ellen wakes up, see? Let
-her sleep as long as she will; this faint of hers is liable to go
-into sleep."
-
-
-Meantime, the two quartermasters, while lightening the boat of
-everything except food and a breaker of water, had been drinking in
-what they could understand of this conversation. Their work
-finished, they stood by the bow of the boat and looked at each other
-for a moment, silent. At length Li Fu spoke, impassively,
-unconcerned.
-
-"To the superior man, duty is as a clear star shining in the night."
-
-"So it is written," agreed Hi John. "Give me your revolver and
-cartridges."
-
-"Haste treads upon the tail of a tiger," dissented Li Fu
-reflectively. "Here is the revolver. Let us see to whom the gods
-assign it. Shall a white man be braver than we?"
-
-"Very well."
-
-Li Fu tossed his revolver in the air. It spun, end over end, and
-spinning, fell down into the sand. The butt fell toward Li Fu, who
-stooped and picked it up.
-
-"Now give me yours," he said.
-
-Hi John obeyed without protest, passing over his revolver and what
-spare cartridges he had in his pockets. Then he turned and walked to
-Barnes and Nora Sayers, who had watched this scene curiously. He
-addressed the girl.
-
-"Missee, I think mebbeso you can row plenty good?"
-
-"Of course!" she exclaimed. "Of course I can!"
-
-"Then you row along me," said Hi John. "Li Fu, he stop here."
-
-Barnes growled something under his breath, and walked over to Li Fu.
-
-"What's this mean?" he demanded. "You get in that boat and row,
-d'you understand?"
-
-Li Fu regarded him placidly, without emotion, his yellow features
-very composed.
-
-"You go hellee," he said, and then grinned. "My stop along you.
-Savvy? Missee plenty stlong, use oar plenty good! You go hellee."
-
-What he saw in those calm eyes checked the words on the lips of
-Barnes. He turned and went to the boat, and waded out along the
-gunwale until he was beside the figure of Ellen Maggs. With an
-effort, he stooped and touched his lips to her still cheek.
-
-"Good-by, girl!" he whispered, and then straightened. "Get the kids,
-Nora! Come on, pile in; time to get off! Get as far as you can
-before it gets dark. Wrap a cloth about your hands, too; they'll be
-blistered quick enough."
-
-Collecting the children, Nora Sayers got into the boat. She held out
-her hand to Barnes, who gripped it and smiled cheerfully.
-
-"Good-by," she said, her voice breaking. "I wish you'd let me wake
-her up! She'd want to say--
-
-"She'd say I needed a shave damn bad," and Barnes chuckled as he made
-reply. "You settle down on this thwart. All ready, men? Shove off.
-Good luck to you, Nora! Wrap your hands, now, before you get
-started. See you later!"
-
-The boat glided out, Hi John scrambling aboard as she cleared the
-sand. Nora Sayers tried to answer, but could not. Barnes stood
-beside Li Fu and waved his hand.
-
-The boat slowly drew up-river under the pull of the two oars and
-vanished around the head of the islet.
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-"Watch and watch, Li Fu," said Barnes, when night settled down on the
-islet, the river-mouth and the booming surf. "I'm done in. Wake me
-at midnight; they'll not come until then."
-
-"Not then, I think," said Li Fu. "China boys not like night devils.
-Plenty devils in liver."
-
-"All right," Barnes laughed as he stretched out in the warm sand.
-"Let the river-devils fight for us, then!"
-
-About midnight the quartermaster wakened him. There had been no
-alarm, no sound or sight of the enemy. Only the continuous rolling
-crash of the surf, regular and unceasing, conflicted with the noises
-of nightbirds from the jungle. The starlight and thin glow of the
-sickle moon faintly illumined the white sands and the glittering
-waters, where the waves curled and broke in running lines of
-phosphorescent radiance.
-
-At first Barnes found Li Fu's conviction incredible. It was hard to
-believe that Lim Tock's lascars and Chinese, the latter probably
-predominating, would relinquish the opportunity to sweep in upon the
-islet with their boats and finish everything with one determined
-rush. The Chinese firmly credited the existence of water-devils,
-however, and river-devils in particular, whose power at night was
-invincible.
-
-Barnes sat through his lonely watch, stiff and aching from his wound,
-and found no indication of alarm out on the surging waters, where a
-heavy ground-swell kept the rollers tumbling in along the shoreline.
-He began to think that he had wasted himself, despite all. Had he
-stayed in the boat, it by this time would be far up the river.
-
-He laughed and shook off the thought. After all, he had no assurance
-of that! The boat, with only two oars, might be a day or two in
-reaching the main river above the delta, where the Dutch post would
-be placed. With dawn, the pirates would sweep down on the island.
-If they found it deserted, they would go up the river with a rush.
-No, the effort was not wasted; was far from wasted!
-
-Toward dawn he roused Li Fu, and lay down once more to get all the
-rest possible. When the quartermaster again wakened him, it was to
-point out dark dots on the waters, now overcast with the graying
-dawn. The boats, four of them, were scattered a quarter-mile from
-the river mouth, up and down from the bar. Jim Barnes laughed softly.
-
-"They think we'll come out with the first breath o' wind; that we've
-been waiting here for the breeze! And they're waiting to riddle us
-with their rifles, then close in. Good! Let 'em wait. Every minute
-gained puts the whaleboats farther up the river. Suppose we make
-some tea, Li Fu. The fire will show that we're here and encourage
-'em to wait."
-
-Chuckling at all this, Li Fu gathered wood and soon had a fire going.
-Hot tea and biscuit invigorated Barnes hugely, and he was much
-himself again by the time the reddening dawn and freshening daylight
-betrayed to the waiting boats that the fugitives were not setting
-forth from shore. No doubt they considered that Barnes had laid up
-the whaleboat and was prepared to fight it out.
-
-"They're closing in," said Barnes suddenly. "Oars are out. The junk
-is coming down the coast, too. She'll probably anchor off the river,
-and they'll pour in a hot rifle-fire before making a rush. Dig for
-cover, Li!"
-
-Grasping the idea, Li Fu took his knife to the sand and prepared two
-long, deep depressions at the edge of the brush.
-
-Meantime, one of the boats drew in closer than the others as though
-to test the presence of those on the islet. Barnes sighed
-unavailingly for a rifle, as his pistols were of small value at such
-distance. He tried two shots, however, and by sheer luck dropped the
-boat's helmsman, so that she sheered off promptly. The boats opened
-a dropping rifle-fire, and Barnes retired to the position prepared.
-Lying beside Li Fu, he waited. He had three automatics and several
-spare clips. The quartermaster had two revolvers and a handful of
-loose cartridges.
-
-Under the urge of the ground-swell, surf was now breaking in a heavy
-line at the bar, an outer line of breakers stretching twenty yards
-farther seaward. While the boats kept up their intermittent fire,
-bullets crashing across the island, the junk came slowly along with
-the morning breeze. Outside the first line of surf she dropped
-anchor and hauled down the brown matting sails, and the boats
-converged upon her. Streamers and fingers of flame were reaching
-across the whole eastern sky.
-
-"Plenty of men aboard her," said Barnes. "They'll crowd into the
-boats and pull for us. Catch the first boat as she rises, Li, like
-we did last night. If one of them goes over in that surf, not a man
-will reach shore. Good gosh, look at her rise up! They're fools if
-they try it."
-
-To the two men lying on the sandy islet, the surf promised indeed to
-be an excellent protection. The roaring breakers swept on and hurled
-up into a great wall of white and crimson spray, against the sunrise,
-a ten-foot wall of curling, foaming water whose impact as it came
-down made the islet shake and sent a booming roar echoing along the
-coast. The tide was coming in, and there was a strong rip along the
-bar.
-
-Now the sun was up, in a gleaming splendor of golden glory.
-
-As each glittering line of surf swept up and curled, it hid from
-sight the boats and all save the upper masts of the junk herself.
-Between the surges, the rifle-fire was maintained steadily, but Li Fu
-and Barnes were well protected against the ripping storm of lead that
-devastated the foliage above and ploughed the sand into ripples of
-dancing grains.
-
-"They come," said Li Fu suddenly.
-
-The next surf-interval showed a crowded boat leaving the junk. The
-craft damaged on the preceding evening by Hi John's bullet must have
-sunk, for it appeared that now there were but two whaleboats among
-the four approaching craft. One of those, however, would do the
-business, thought Jim Barnes grimly.
-
-Covered by a hot fire from the rifles, the first boat reached in for
-the surf, her oars dipping strongly, the other boats following her.
-She was a bluff-jawed longboat belonging to the junk, dangerously
-crowded with men, and Barnes caught the flame of naked steel as she
-lifted on a crest. He thrilled to the possibility of sending her
-over as she struck the white wall to cleave a way through. Not a man
-would reach shore through the pounding maelstrom of those waters.
-
-Thundering and shuddering, a long breaker smashed and swirled across
-the bar, and now the longboat dipped oars and gathered way to rise on
-the next crest and come over. A whirl of bullets heralded her
-coming. Then, as the riotous crest closed in and lifted her and the
-shots ceased, Barnes came to one knee. He had her position
-absolutely fixed, and aimed carefully, firing even before she came
-into sight.
-
-She heaved and lifted, cleaving the water. Barnes fired again and
-again, hearing the bark of Li Fu's revolver at his side. A mad yell
-broke from the Chinese. Barnes lowered his arm and stared, wide-eyed.
-
-That first shot of his, perhaps, had done the work; had sent a rower
-headlong at the crucial instant. At the very crest of the giant
-wave, the boat broached, was sent stern-first. A shriek burst from
-the score of men crowded into her, a fearful, splitting shriek that
-wrenched through the roar of the surf. Then she was picked up,
-hurled end over end from the crest of the wave, flung sideways, and
-went upside down beneath the terrific smash of that falling pinnacle
-of water.
-
-A lather of foam spread out from the sweeping rush of the breaker,
-but not a man showed in it. They were held down, dragged out with
-the backlash, gripped and flung about with the mad swirl under the
-surface. The boat itself, a crushed and broken thing, came into
-sight, was tugged out and into the next surf-crest, to be whirled
-horribly aloft and buried again; but no man of all her crew appeared.
-
-
-The whiff of a bullet made Barnes wake up, and he flung himself into
-the sand. Li Fu was yelling in an ecstasy of delight. Then, at the
-next interval, Barnes realized that the other boats were coming
-forward--two whale-boats, and a smaller craft.
-
-"Lascars!" yelled Li Fu. "Plenty joss along Lim Tock!"
-
-The Malays were rowing these boats; seamen unsurpassed. Well, this
-was the end of it; useless everything that had been done, once these
-boats came through. Barnes caught the arm of the yellow man.
-
-"Empty one gun--then reload and wait. Savvy?"
-
-Li Fu nodded hastily. The two whale-boats came on abreast, rowed
-with precision, a brown Malay at each steering crutch, the long oars
-rising and dipping and hurling her forward with absolute surety. Up
-they rose and up, then forward and down, as though leaping from that
-high curling wall into the water beyond!
-
-Barnes found himself firing mechanically, firing until the hammer
-clicked on nothing and he slipped one of his extra clips into the
-weapon. Useless! A sudden inarticulate cry escaped his lips. The
-last bullet had brought down the steersman of the boat to the left.
-Almost through, she broached and swerved. The water swung her about,
-caught up her keel and spilled her men into the smother. She was
-sent rolling along, crushing the men beneath her, pounding on the
-sand until the undertow dragged her out and away.
-
-But the other boat was through. It drove forward toward the islet
-with a wild yell lifting from the men aboard, and rifles spattering
-lead. And now the smaller boat was in the surf, and riding it.
-
-"Back!" shouted Barnes. "Back to cover, Li! Fire and reload while I
-fire."
-
-From the shelter of the brush, Li Fu emptied his two revolvers into
-the boat. He could hardly miss at this distance, as she came foaming
-to the shore. Barnes could see the figure of Lim Tock crouching
-amidships, a bandage about his head. Men went down, brown and yellow
-men crowded between her thwarts. Rifles and revolvers sent bullets
-hailing at the trees, and with the impetus that was upon her, she
-came in and her nose touched the beach.
-
-Barnes was ready, cool, imperturbable. The first man that leaped
-from her, he dropped; and the second, and the third. Then the boat
-tipped, and brown and yellow came ashore in a mass, Lim Tock heading
-them. Krisses and knives flamed in the sunlight. The smaller boat
-was reaching into the shore now. The end was at hand.
-
-Into the mass Barnes planted his bullets steadily. One gun was
-empty, now the other. No time to reload--he dropped them and seized
-that of Ellen Maggs. Only three or four men left, Lim Tock heading
-them! Then a new burst of yells, and from the last boat poured a
-dozen fresh assailants, with the serang Gajah at their head, his
-unhealed scalp wound red and ominous in the sunlight.
-
-A scream of battle-madness burst from Li Fu. He leaped forward, out
-into the open, and ran at the newcomers. Pistols barked; krisses
-glittered. Barnes saw the quartermaster come to grips with Gajah,
-and the two men went rolling in the sand. Then, smiling, he lifted
-his weapon and shot.
-
-Lim Tock took the bullet between the eyes, and sprawled forward.
-Barnes laughed, and shot again. Then he ducked back into the brush.
-An instant later, the brown and yellow men came on in a wave, mad
-with the battle fury, blind and deaf to everything around them,
-intent only upon the white man who had eluded them.
-
-From among the trees the weapon of Barnes barked out its last shots.
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-The patrol launch belonging to the Bulungan River post, commanded by.
-Controleur Opdyke and manned by stalwart Achinese sepoys, sped
-swiftly down the northern branch of the mighty river. The controleur
-was highly nervous, for this navigation in the early dawn was an
-unaccustomed and perilous thing; further, the girl who stood beside
-him, and the tall Chinese at her elbow, were continually urging him
-to greater speed.
-
-Then came the first gleams of sunrise, and the spattering of shots
-from below--and the prim, alert controleur needed no further urging.
-At his swift command the speed was increased, and the brown sepoys
-stripped the cover from the one-pounder up forward.
-
-Rifles were brought up and loaded.
-
-They burst into full view of the river-mouth just as the smaller boat
-came to the islet and poured forth her men and the wild charge
-forward was begun. Controleur Opdyke perceived instantly that he
-could not get through the surf to the junk. Being a man of distinct
-character, he did not hesitate. Two orders passed his lips. At the
-first, the gun crew threw in a shell and sighted; at the second, the
-rifles began to speak along the forward deck.
-
-The little pom-pom barked, and the shell exploded above the junk. It
-barked again, and scored a hit. Again, and the junk reeled and
-staggered. Then the Achinese were leaping overboard and pouring
-ashore, and among them Hi John.
-
-And after them, despite the imploring commands of the officer, Ellen
-Maggs.
-
-Jim Barnes came face to face with her as he squirmed out of the brush
-and brushed the blood from his eyes. A kris had slithered athwart
-his scalp; for a moment he thought she was a vision, standing there
-in the fresh sunlight, her eyes fastened upon him, her hands
-outreaching. Then he heard her voice.
-
-"Oh, Jim, Jim! If you had only known--it was barely five miles up to
-the post! And we were hours getting there. Thank God, you're alive!"
-
-It was quite as a matter of course that Jim Barnes took her in his
-arms and held her close to him for a long moment. Speech came hard.
-There was everything to say, and nothing. Suddenly he realized that
-she was trembling.
-
-"Oh, Jim! You'll have to help me. I--I told an awful lie----"
-
-She was frightened, nervous, tearful, and yet a smile crept into
-her-blushing cheeks as she looked up into his eyes.
-
-"Who to, me?" he asked, returning the smile.
-
-"No. To--to the controleur. Controleur Updyke. He was terribly
-severe about it all. He wouldn't bring Nora, and he wasn't going to
-bring me----"
-
-"What was the lie?" asked Barnes, puzzled.
-
-Then he looked up to see the officer striding toward them. He
-realized abruptly that the little brown soldiers had been very busy
-all over the islet.
-
-"Der junk hass sunk," said the controleur, taking off his helmet.
-"Diss iss Mynheer Parnes? I am pleassed to meet you, sir."
-
-"Same to you," and Barnes grinned as he put out his hand. Even the
-primness of Opdyke could not meet that grin without an answering
-smile. "Controleur Opdyke? I'm sure much obliged to you. Just came
-along in time."
-
-"Ja. I am glad. Your vrouw, Madame Parnes, she hurried us. Dat
-wass goot, too."
-
-"Oh, so that's it!" Barnes laughed out suddenly, and caught Ellen
-Maggs to him. "You little rascal, you! Told him you were my wife,
-eh? Well, you will be as quick as it can be managed--won't you? Say
-yes!"
-
-"Yes, Jim,"-she murmured.
-
-Suddenly Barnes turned.
-
-"Where's Li Fu?" he demanded. "That Chinese chap who stayed with
-me----"
-
-"He iss badly hurt, but all right," said Opdyke, beginning to
-understand things a little. "Sir, dere must be reports made, und
-prisoners must be----"
-
-"Forget it, forget it!" said Barnes, and laughed happily. "This is
-Miss Maggs, Controleur. She told you a lie. She's not my wife, but
-is going to be. Will you forgive her?"
-
-Controleur Opdyke met the eyes of Ellen Maggs. Suddenly he smiled,
-and tendered her a very deep bow.
-
-"Diss young man, he iss very lucky," he said. "_Mejuffvrouw_, shall
-I make you happy, yes? Den, dere iss a missionary at de post. Now,
-if you eggscuse me, I must look after dese t'ings."
-
-He turned and walked stiffly away toward his men, who were rounding
-up sullen captives. But Jim Barnes looked-down into the shining eyes
-of the girl.
-
-"Ellen! Remember that bungalow on the hill above Sausalito that I
-told you about? Do you really want it--and a husband who's a sailor
-and hasn't a lot o' money? Or would you sooner go back to China?"
-
-A smile lightened in her face.
-
-"I'm tired of China, Jim," she said.
-
-Delightedly, Barnes caught her to him again and stooped to her lips.
-Then, with a happy laugh, he straightened up.
-
-"Missionary at the post, eh? Hurray! Let's go!"
-
-"Aye, aye, sir," she said obediently. "Go it is, sir--steady as she
-is!"
-
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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