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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Four Bells, by Ralph D. Paine
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Four Bells
- A Tale of the Caribbean
-
-Author: Ralph D. Paine
-
-Illustrator: Frank E. Schoonover
-
-Release Date: May 19, 2021 [eBook #65385]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Al Haines, John Routh & the online Distributed Proofreaders
- Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FOUR BELLS ***
-
-
-
-
- FOUR BELLS
-
- _A Tale of the Caribbean_
-
- BY
-
- RALPH D. PAINE
-
- _Author of “The Call of the Offshore Wind”_
- _“First Down, Kentucky!” “Roads of Adventure,” etc._
-
- WITH A FRONTISPIECE BY
- FRANK E. SCHOONOVER
-
-
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
- The Riverside Press Cambridge
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1923, BY STREET & SMITH CORPORATION
- COPYRIGHT, 1924, BY RALPH D. PAINE
-
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
- The Riverside Press
- CAMBRIDGE • MASSACHUSETTS
- PRINTED IN THE U.S.A.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- I. THE VOICE OF THE SPANISH MAIN
- II. THE SEA DOGS OF DEVON
- III. A GREAT GALLEON
- IV. THE ANGER OF COLONEL FAJARDO
- V. RICHARD CARY STROLLS ALONE
- VI. THE TROUBLED HEART OF TERESA
- VII. THE MAN WHO LIED
- VIII. UPON THE CITY WALL
- IX. THE GOOD HERMIT OF LA POPA
- X. THE GREAT YELLOW TIGER
- XI. SPANISH TREASURE!
- XII. RICARDO WRITES A LETTER
- XIII. THE MASTER TAKES COMMAND
- XIV. SHAKING A CREW TOGETHER
- XV. IN THE HOUSE OF MYSTERY
- XVI. BLIND ROADS OF DESTINY
- XVII. TERESA, HER PILGRIMAGE
- XVIII. RUBIO SANCHEZ FINDS FRIENDS
- XIX. THE INTRUDER FROM ECUADOR
- XX. RICARDO PLAYS IT ALONE
- XXI. THE HAPPINESS OF PAPA BAZÁN
- XXII. THE FACE OF THE WATERS
- XXIII. THE CASTAWAY
- XXIV. A TRANQUIL HAVEN
-
- Four Bells: A Tale of the Caribbean
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
- THE VOICE OF THE SPANISH MAIN
-
-The romance of the sea! Damned rubbish, he called it. The trade of
-seafaring was one way to earn a living. This was about all you could say
-for it. He had been lured into the merchant service as the aftermath of
-an enlistment in the Naval Reserve for the duration of the war. There
-was a great hurrah, as you will recall, over the mighty fleet of new
-cargo ships which were to restore the Stars and Stripes to blue
-water—Columbia’s return to the ocean, and all that—a splendid revival
-of the days of Yankee ships and sailors of long ago—a career for
-ambitious, adventurous American youth.
-
-This was true enough until the bubble broke. The painful malady of
-deflation suddenly afflicted the world’s commerce. Much of Columbia’s
-mighty fleet rusted at its moorings. Ambitious American youth walked the
-streets in quest of jobs afloat or relinquished the sea to the Briton
-and the Scandinavian. It could not be said that the nation was deeply
-stirred by this calamity. In a manner of speaking, it had long since
-turned its back to the coast and could not be persuaded to face about.
-
-This Richard Cary was one of the young men who had not been cast high
-and dry by the ebb tide of maritime affairs. No auspicious slant of
-fortune favored him. He earned what came to him in the way of employment
-and promotion. All he knew was the hard schooling of North Atlantic
-voyages in bull-nosed brutes of war-built freighters that would neither
-steam nor steer.
-
-During the period of booming prosperity, the supply of competent
-officers fell far short of the demand. Any ancient mariner with a
-master’s license and fairly sound legs could get a ship. Foreign
-skippers were given “red ink tickets” and shoved aboard big American
-steamers.
-
-The iron discipline and austere traditions of the sea were jeered at by
-motley crews, alien and native-born, who had easier work and better
-treatment than sailormen had ever known. Mutiny ceased to be
-sensational. Noisy Slavs preached Bolshevism in the forecastle. Every
-dirty loafer had a grievance. Ships limped into port with drunken
-stokers who refused to ply shovel and slice-bar unless they happened to
-feel like it. Wise gentlemen ashore diagnosed it as the poison of social
-unrest.
-
-Amid these turbulent conditions, such an officer as Richard Cary was
-worth his weight in gold. For one thing, the Navy had hammered into his
-soul certain ideas which he declined to regard as obsolete. These
-pertained to order, fidelity, and obedience as essential to the conduct
-of a ship. He was a young man unvexed by complex emotions. Life
-consisted in doing the day’s work well, and the Lord help the
-subordinate who held opinions to the contrary.
-
-It was a doctrine which had vouchsafed its own rewards. At twenty-five
-years of age he was chief officer of a ten-thousand-ton steamer of the
-Shipping Board fleet. There was something more to this rapid advancement
-than the old-fashioned virtues referred to. A natural aptitude for the
-sea was a large factor. Linked with this was a strong serenity of temper
-that few besetments could ruffle. Chief Officer Richard Cary moved on
-his appointed way with a certain ponderous momentum of mind and body.
-
-He was sprung from that undiluted pioneer stock which is still to be
-found in the rural New England that is remote from the wash of later
-immigration. It was the English strain, fair-haired and blue of eye,
-that throws back to the Saxon blood. There had been men of rare height
-and bulk among his ancestors. This was his goodly inheritance, that his
-head should brush the ceiling beams of his cabin on shipboard and his
-shoulders fill the width of the doorway. Mutinous or sulky sailors
-ceased to bluster about their rights when this imperturbable young man
-laid hands on them. This was not often necessary. What he called moral
-suasion was enough to quell a very pretty riot. He had this uncommon
-gift of leadership, of mastering men and circumstances, when he was
-compelled to display it.
-
-There was lacking, however, the driving power of ambition, the
-keen-edged ardor that cuts its way through obstacles to reach a destined
-goal. This large placidity of outlook betokened a dormant imagination, a
-sort of spiritual inertia. There was no riddle of existence, so far as
-he was concerned. The romance and mystery of the sea? Silly yarns
-written by lubbers for landsmen to read! They ought to jam across the
-Western Ocean in the dead of winter with a doddering old fool of a
-skipper on the bridge and a crew of rotten scoundrels who deserved to be
-hung.
-
-While enthusiastic crusaders were proclaiming the glorious resurgence of
-the American merchant marine, surplus tonnage began to pile up in every
-port. Richard Cary’s huge scow of a freighter could find no cargo and
-was condemned to idleness with a melancholy squadron of her sister
-craft. The chief officer decided to look around a bit before seeking
-another berth. One or two offers came from shipping men who knew him by
-reputation. Already he stood out from the crowd. Waterfront gossip had
-passed along various tales of the reign of law and order upon the decks
-which big Dick Cary trod. He was no cursing, bullying bucko mate, mind
-you. Six and a half feet of soothing influence is a fairer phrase.
-
-Home he went to the New Hampshire farm for a respite from the hard toil
-of the sea. In February it was, and the bleak hills wore their deep
-blankets of snow. His younger brother drove him in a pung to the white
-house snuggled close to the ground which had sheltered six generations
-of Carys. It made his back ache merely to look at the miles of stone
-wall which, as a clumsy young giant, he had helped to keep in repair.
-
-“I guess going to sea is easier than this,” said brother Bill. “You seem
-to have done mighty well for yourself, I’ll tell the world. Any chance
-for me?”
-
-“Not a chance,” replied the deep, leisurely accents of brother Dick.
-“Seafaring is all shot to pieces. You stand by your mother and look
-after the farm till you are ready to go to the agricultural college.
-I’ll pay for it.”
-
-“Plenty of excitin’ stories to tell us, I s’pose. Your picture was in
-the papers, Dick, after your ship came into New York with four men in
-irons. It said you subdued ’em. What with, I want to know.”
-
-“I read poetry to ’em, Bill, and distributed bouquets of cut flowers.
-They seemed grateful. So mother is as spry as ever and working her head
-off because she likes it.”
-
-“Yep, she sure does make me snap out, Dick. And I bet she takes no back
-talk from you.”
-
-“I’m scared already,” grinned the herculean mariner. “Watch her start a
-rough house if I track in any snow.”
-
-He strode up the path to the granite doorstep and whisked up the wiry
-little woman who wore a best black gown and a white apron. Into the
-house he carried this trifling burden and set her down in a
-rush-bottomed chair by the fireplace.
-
-“Bless me, Richard,” she cried, “that’s a trick you learned from your
-father that’s dead and gone! I used to tell him it was dreadful
-undignified. Of course he didn’t have your heft, but there was no
-ruggeder man in the village. Do you realize it’s been a whole year since
-you came home last?”
-
-“Couldn’t break away, mother. A mate has to drive like a nigger when a
-ship is in port. Has Bill been taking good care of you? Any complaints
-and I’ll wallop the kid.”
-
-“William is a quick and willing boy,” was the maternal verdict—“not so
-easy and good-natured as you—more inclined to be fretty when things go
-wrong.”
-
-“You always called me lazy,” laughed the elder son, “and a nuisance
-under foot.”
-
-“I dunno as I was far wrong, Richard,” was the severe rejoinder, “but we
-all have our failings. You have been a generous boy to your widowed
-mother. My land, you must have sent me ’most all your pay. I’ve been as
-careful as I could with it, and the account in the savings bank makes me
-feel real rich. Of course it belongs to you.”
-
-“Forget it,” Richard growled amiably, waving a careless hand of imposing
-dimensions. “I’ll eat you out of house and home in the next fortnight.
-What about a whole pie right now?”
-
-“Too much pie is bad for you between meals,” she firmly announced. “I’ll
-go cut you a reasonable piece. And don’t you let me hear you make a fuss
-about it.”
-
-“Not me,” he sighed. “I know better.”
-
-Contentedly he submitted to this fond tyranny. After all, home was the
-only place where folks cared whether a man lived or died. He was in
-every respect so unlike this high-strung, unflagging wisp of a mother of
-his that the contrast amused him. She was a Chichester and ran true to
-type. Most of the women wore themselves out in middle age. Her energy
-burned like a flame. Idleness was a sin.
-
-In her turn she was perplexed by this strapping son of hers. He was
-rated as a highly successful young man, and yet, in her opinion, he
-lacked both zeal and industry—cardinal tenets of her New England creed.
-Sprawled upon the cushioned settle, he would drowsily stare at the fire
-for hours on end. He read very little and was not a loquacious person.
-An excellent listener, however, his mother’s eager chatter about little
-things broke against his massive composure like ripples upon a rock.
-
-Now and then, in oddly silent moments, she studied him intently. Rugged,
-like his father, but there resemblance strangely halted. Matthew Cary’s
-frame had been gaunt, his features harsh and shrewd with the enduring
-imprint of the Puritan tradition. Richard, the son, might have belonged
-to another race of men. The fair skin, the ruddy cheek roughened by
-strong winds and salt spray, the hair like minted gold, were unfamiliar
-among the recent generations of Carys and Chichesters.
-
-Handsome as a picture and as big as all outdoors, reflected the canny
-mother with a thrill of pride, but she actually felt like boxing his
-ears to wake him up. There was no soft streak in him, no weak fiber.
-This much she knew. His record at sea confirmed it. To call him hulking
-was absurd. There was courage in the level, tranquil gaze, and
-resolution was conveyed by the firm lips that smiled so readily.
-
-“What in the world do you think about when you sit there like a bump on
-a log?” impatiently exclaimed the mother. “Is it a girl? William has
-suffered from those moon-struck spells now and then, but at his age it’s
-no more serious than chicken-pox.”
-
-“There’s never been a girl that I thought of very long,” dutifully
-answered Richard, his pipe between his teeth. “I’m not so anxious to
-meet the right one. Going to sea is poor stuff for a married man. They
-mean well enough, but I have seen too many lonely skippers and mates
-raising hell ashore.”
-
-“Don’t you swear in this house, Richard. And I advise you to beware of
-low company. Sailors who have been properly brought up are true to their
-sweethearts and wives, like all decent folks.”
-
-“Yes’m,” murmured her worldly young giant. “If Bill ground the axe, as I
-told him to, I guess I’ll go and cut two or three cords of that pine
-growth. I need to limber up.”
-
-“Then please stop at the gate and get the mail, Richard. It must be in
-the box by this time. And don’t you let that axe slip and cut your foot.
-I know you’re a wonderful chopper, just like your father, but I always
-fret—”
-
-“Aye, mother. You never saw a man so careful of his own skin. At sea,
-now, I run no risks at all.”
-
-“Richard, you are joking. Please don’t cross the pond. The ice is melted
-thin and rotten with this February thaw. You might fall in and catch
-your death o’ cold.”
-
-Chief Officer Cary, veteran of the North Atlantic trade, promised to
-avoid getting wet in the pond. Axe on his shoulder, he passed through
-the lane to the highway. In the box nailed to a gatepost he found a
-letter from a seafaring friend in New York. It appeared to interest him.
-After a hasty glance, he read it with more care. What it said was this:
-
- MY DEAR DICK:
-
- I don’t know what your plans are. If you have a job already
- cinched you are a lucky stiff. You can’t throw a brick in this
- port without hitting an idle shipmaster. So far I haven’t been
- chucked on the beach. The port captain of the Union Fruit
- Company is an old friend of mine. I told him about you
- yesterday. He needs a second officer in a passenger boat, the
- _Tarragona_, on the run to Kingston, Cartagena, and so on. Fine
- people to work for. None better. You may turn up your nose at
- the notion of going second mate, but they can’t keep a good man
- down. The _Tarragona_ sails next Wednesday. Wire me if you care
- to run down and size it up. Better come early and avoid the
- rush. The Spanish Main ahoy!
-
- Faithfully yours
- L. J. P.
-
-Richard Cary let the axe rest against the gate while he pondered in his
-deliberate fashion. At first it had annoyed him to think of stepping
-down a peg. He had been looking forward to command in two or three years
-more. But times were hard and the tenure of employment in cargo steamers
-uncertain. He might be shifting about, from one company to another, and
-if freight rates dropped much lower he would be likely to join the
-luckless mob of stranded officers.
-
-There was a prospect of advancement in the Union Fruit Company’s
-service. A second mate’s pay would meet his modest needs, with a surplus
-to send home. An easier life, decent men to handle, a smart, efficient
-ship—these were arguments not to be tossed aside. So much for the
-practical aspect of it. This was overshadowed, however, by the desire to
-make the southern run. It was more like an urgent impulse. Until now,
-voyaging in the tropic zones had never appealed to him. He had a Western
-Ocean sailor’s pride in fighting bitter gales and pounding seas.
-
-Rather puzzled by his quick surrender to this summons, he turned back to
-the house and forgot to pick up the axe. He walked briskly, chin up, a
-man astir and efficient. Queer how a few lines of that letter had
-thrilled his matter-of-fact mind! He liked the sound of Cartagena and
-the Spanish Main. Where the devil was Cartagena? He knew there was a
-port of that name on the coast of Spain. This other one was somewhere in
-the Caribbean, down Colombia way, as he vaguely recalled.
-
-Into the kitchen swung Richard Cary and demanded to know where the atlas
-was kept. His mother wiped the flour from her hands and exclaimed:
-
-“First time I ever saw you in a hurry about anything except your meals.
-What under the sun ails you?”
-
-“Outward bound—the night train for New York. I want to find out where I
-go from there.” His mellow voice rang through the low-studded rooms. His
-mother was dismayed. The sea had called her towering son and he was a
-different being. Almost timidly she said:
-
-“But you expected to make a longer visit, Richard. Why, you aren’t
-really rested up. You sat around here—”
-
-“And enjoyed every minute of it,” he broke in, with a boyish laugh. “Now
-I’m going south in a banana boat, where the flying fishes play. Do I
-have to pull this house down to break out the atlas?”
-
-“Mercy sakes, no! It’s under the Bible on the parlor table where it has
-set for years. There’s yellow fever and snakes down there, and how are
-you off for summer underwear?”
-
-With his chin in his hand he pored over the map of the Caribbean and the
-sailing tracks across that storied sea. Jamaica and the Isthmus of
-Panama! Thence his finger moved along the coast to Cartagena and Santa
-Marta and La Guayra. His kindled fancy played around the words. They
-were like haunting melody. It was an emotion curiously novel. To find
-anything like it, he had to hark back to the fairy tales of childhood.
-
-The feeling passed. His mother’s anxious accents recalled him to
-himself.
-
-“But is it necessary, Richard, for you to rush off and take a second
-officer’s position? Why don’t you wait for something better? It’s not a
-mite like you to fly off at a tangent like this. Common sense was always
-your strongest point.”
-
-“This is just the berth I want, I tell you,” said he. “It sounds new and
-interesting. Now if you will help me get my dunnage together—clean
-clothes and so on—where’s Bill?”
-
-“Gone to the village on an errand, Richard,” was the meek answer. “He
-will be back in plenty of time to drive you to the train. Well, I’ve
-seen you wake up for once. Is this the way you boss men around on a
-ship?”
-
-“For Heaven’s sake, I didn’t mean to sound rough, mother dear. I can
-move lively when something has to be done. And I don’t want to lose the
-chance of sailing in this _Tarragona_.”
-
-The details of departure arranged, he resumed his wonted humor,
-care-free and easy. His mother wept a little when the sound of
-sleigh-bells heralded the approach of William in the pung. There had
-been other partings like this, however, and she briskly waved a
-handkerchief from a window as he rode away. She still had her qualms
-about those outlandish ports, but he had solemnly sworn to shake the
-scorpions out of his shoes before putting them on, and this gave her
-some small comfort.
-
-Young William fired a volley of questions on the road to the station,
-but his big brother had little to say. The spell of the Caribbean had
-faded. It was merely another job in a different ship. This lazy
-reticence irritated William who burst out:
-
-“Sometimes you act as if you were dead from the neck up, Dick. You go to
-sleep in your tracks like a regular dumb-bell. Where’s your pep and
-punch if you’re such a blamed good officer? I’m entitled to talk plain,
-seeing as it’s all in the family. Don’t you ever get mad?”
-
-“Quite peevish at times, Bill. There was a cabin steward last voyage who
-brought me cold water to shave with, two days running. I hated to do it,
-but I had to beat him to death with a hairbrush and throw his body
-overboard. He left a wife and seven children in Sweden and begged
-piteously for his life. Discipline, Bill! You have simply got to enforce
-it.”
-
-William snorted with disgust. He was off this big lump of a brother, he
-said to himself, who treated him like a silly kid. The train was late,
-and while they waited at the station a stray dog wandered along the
-platform. It was no vagrant cur, but a handsome collie which had somehow
-lost its master and was earnestly trying to find him. The plight was
-enough to inspire sympathy in the heart of any man that loved a good
-dog.
-
-“Take him home and keep him until you can ’phone around and stick up a
-notice in the post-office, Bill,” said Richard Cary.
-
-Before William could catch the collie, the express train came thundering
-down. One of the loungers on the platform emitted a loud guffaw and
-tossed a bit of stick between the rails of the track. The collie rushed
-to retrieve it. Richard Cary cursed the man and yelled at the dog which
-bravely snatched the stick and fled to safety, escaping destruction by
-no more than the length of its plumed tail. It stood quivering in every
-nerve, nuzzling Richard’s hand.
-
-“Put my bags aboard, Bill,” said the mariner. “I have a little business
-to attend to. It will take only a minute.”
-
-William concluded to hover within sight and sound. His brother’s face
-was white as he moved closer to the man who had attempted to slay a dog
-in wanton sport. The offender was heavily built, with a truculent air, a
-stranger to the village. His coarse visage reflected alarm, but before
-he could fight or retreat his right arm was caught and twisted back in a
-grip that made him scream with pain.
-
-A bone snapped. It would be some time before he could throw sticks with
-that right arm. Beside himself with rage and anguish, he bellowed foul
-abuse.
-
-“Shut your dirty mouth,” commanded Richard Cary. “You are getting off
-easy.”
-
-The tortured blackguard was given time to utter one more obscene insult.
-An open palm smote his face. It was a buffet so tremendous that the
-victim was fairly lifted from his feet. He pitched into the snow at the
-edge of the platform and lay huddled without motion.
-
-“Good God-amighty, Dick, you busted that guy’s neck,” gasped William as
-he tugged at his brother’s sleeve. “And all you did was slap him. If you
-want to hop this train, you’d better hustle.”
-
-“Broke his neck? No such luck,” growled Richard. “If he wants to see me
-again, tell him to wait till I come back. All right, Bill. Let’s go.”
-
-He stooped to pat the head of the affectionate collie and ran to swing
-on board of the moving train. William had a farewell glimpse of his face
-at the window. Again it was ruddy and good-humored. The smile was a
-little wistful, almost like that of a boy leaving home for the first
-time. The younger brother stood staring after the train. His thoughts
-were confused. Presently he said to himself:
-
-“Looks to me like there is a good deal for us to learn about Dick. You
-don’t catch _me_ sassin’ him again. I certainly did run an awful risk
-when I called him a dumb-bell. Come on, pup. He told me to lug you home
-and I feel darn particular about obeyin’ orders.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
- THE SEA DOGS OF DEVON
-
-The _Tarragona_, of the Union Fruit Company’s fleet, was steaming to the
-southward, away from harsh winds and ice-fettered harbors. It was sheer
-magic, this sea change that brought the sweet airs of the tropics to
-caress the white ship when she was no more than three days out from
-Sandy Hook. Passengers whose only business was to seek amusement loafed
-on the immaculate decks or besought the nimble bartender to mix one more
-round of planter’s punches. The three-mile limit was another discomfort
-which had been left far astern.
-
-To the second officer, Richard Cary, it was like a yachting cruise. He
-was adjusting himself to this unfamiliar kind of sailoring. In a uniform
-of snowy duck he stood his watches on the bridge or occupied himself
-with the tasks of keeping the ship as smart and clean as eternal
-vigilance could make her. It resembled dining in a gayly crowded hotel
-to take his seat at one of the small tables in the saloon and listen,
-with an ingenuous interest, to the chatter of these voyagers who had
-embarked for an idle holiday on the blue Caribbean. Among them were
-girls, adept at flirtation and not at all coy, who regarded this big,
-fair-haired second officer with glances frankly admiring. He was by all
-odds the most intriguing young man aboard the _Tarragona_.
-
-His lazy indifference was provoking. When asked a question on deck he
-replied with a boyish smile and a courteous word or two, but could not
-be persuaded to linger. In his own opinion he was not hired to entertain
-the passengers. Leave that nonsense to the skipper. He had all the time
-in the world and seemed to enjoy making a favorite of himself.
-
-Captain Jordan Sterry was a man past fifty years old, but reluctant to
-admit it. A competent seaman of long service in the company’s employ, he
-had a sociable disposition and could tell a good story. Sturdy and
-erect, his grayish hair and mustache close-cropped, he looked the part
-of the veteran shipmaster. He had one weakness, not unknown among men of
-his years. He preferred the society of women very much younger than
-himself. This expressed itself in a manner gallantly attentive to the
-bored young person who could find nobody else on board to play with, or
-to the audacious flapper who liked them well seasoned by experience and
-felt immensely flattered at attracting the notice of the spruce master
-of the _Tarragona_.
-
-His attitude was nicely paternal. He deluded himself into believing that
-onlookers accepted it as such. In this respect Captain Jordan Sterry was
-not unique.
-
-Richard Cary had an observant eye and a sense of humor. When he appeared
-sluggish, it was merely the sensible avoidance of waste motion of mind
-and body. He read the philandering skipper through and through and felt
-a healthy contempt for the soft streak in him, harmless enough, perhaps,
-but proof that there is no fool like an old fool. The man had been young
-once. Presumably he had had his fling. Why try to clutch at something
-that was gone, that had vanished as utterly as the froth of a wave? It
-was more than absurd. To Richard Cary, secure in the splendid twenties,
-unable to imagine himself as ever growing old, the skipper’s rebellion
-against the inevitable was almost grotesque.
-
-Professionally no flaws could be found in Captain Sterry’s conduct. He
-ruled his ship with a firm hand, dealt justly with his officers, and was
-quick to note inefficiency. In all ways the _Tarragona_ was a crack
-ship. It was to Richard Cary’s credit that the captain already approved
-of him. In fact, he was as cordial as the difference in rank permitted.
-
-The chief officer was a sun-dried, silent down-easter who had found it
-slow climbing the ladder of promotion. He was always hoping for a
-command, yet somehow missing it. Dependable, incredibly industrious, he
-lacked the spark of initiative, the essential quality of leadership.
-Disappointment had soured him. He nursed his grievances and wished he
-were fitted for a decent job ashore.
-
-After trying in vain to break through his crust, Richard Cary sought
-companionship elsewhere. He found it in the chief engineer, an
-extraordinary Englishman named McClement whose cabin was filled with
-books: history, philosophy, poetry; fiction translated from the French
-and Russian. There he sat and read by the hour, shirt stripped off,
-electric fan purring, a cold bottle of beer at his elbow. Half a dozen
-assistant engineers stood their watches down where the oil burners
-roared in the furnaces and the huge piston rods whirled the gleaming
-crank shafts. If anything went wrong, the chief engineer appeared
-swiftly, clad in disreputable overalls, and his speech was rugged
-Anglo-Saxon, of a quality requiring expurgation.
-
-Now and then he strolled on deck of an evening, a lean, abstracted
-figure in spotless white clothes, hands clasped behind him, eyeing the
-capers of frivolous humankind with a certain cynical tolerance. They
-were as God had made them, but it was a bungled job. He ate most of his
-meals in his room, a book propped behind the tray. In this manner he
-evaded the affliction of mingling with tired business men and vivacious
-ladies eager to visit the engine room.
-
-Richard Cary drifted into this McClement’s quarters by invitation, found
-a chair strong enough to hold him, and filled a blackened pipe from a
-jar on the desk. As usual he had not a great deal to say, but was
-amiability itself. He was content to sit and smoke and speak when spoken
-to. This pleased his host who read aloud choice bits of things and made
-pungent comments. The visitor borrowed a book and came again. They got
-on famously together because in temperament they were so curiously
-unlike.
-
-On a clear day the ship sighted the lofty mountain range of Jamaica and
-steered to make her landfall for the harbor of Kingston. She drew near
-to the coast in the late afternoon. The breeze brought the heavy scents
-of the tropical verdure, of lush mountain vales, and the wet jungle.
-Richard Cary was on watch. Instead of standing at the bridge railing,
-with his calm and solid composure, he walked to and fro in a mood oddly
-restless. Intently he stared at the lofty slopes all clothed in living
-green, the tiny waterfalls bedecking them like flashes of silver lace.
-
-He snuffed the air, so very different from the sea winds. The tropic
-island of Jamaica was strange to him, and yet it seemed vaguely,
-elusively familiar, as though he had beheld it while asleep and
-dreaming. The chief officer relieved him, but he lingered on the boat
-deck to see the black pilot come aboard from a dugout canoe. The steamer
-forged ahead again and passed into the harbor. The mountains loomed
-beyond the huddled roofs of Kingston. On the starboard side was a low,
-sandy point upon which were the trim, red-tiled bungalows of the
-quarantine station. The _Tarragona_ paused again, to wait for the
-British health officer.
-
-McClement, the chief engineer, climbed to the boat deck and said, as he
-joined Richard Cary:
-
-“Port Royal yonder! No more than a sandbank now. The old town was sunk
-by an earthquake long ago. If you poke about in a small boat, they say
-you can see the stone walls of the houses down under the clear water. It
-was a famous resort of pirates and such gentry in the roaring days of
-the Spanish Main. Rum and loot, women and sin! All that made life worth
-living.”
-
-“Port Royal?” exclaimed Cary. “I’m sure I have heard something about
-Port Royal. All gone, eh, Mac? Scuppered for their crimes. Served ’em
-right. A bad lot.”
-
-“Very rotten, Dick, but they had certain virtues which the modern
-buccaneers of industry lack. We have two or three of these aboard. They
-never risked their skins to bag _their_ plunder.”
-
-Second Officer Cary muttered something and walked to the edge of the
-deck to peer down into the bright green water as if expecting to see the
-flickering phantoms of the wild sea rovers of the lost Port Royal. His
-blue eyes were bright with an ardent interest. McClement remarked, with
-a quizzical grin:
-
-“I haven’t seen you really awake before now. What touched you off?
-Pirate yarns you read when you were a kid?”
-
-“Perhaps so, Mac. I had this feeling once before. It was when I got word
-from a pal in New York, telling me about this job, that it was on the
-run to Cartagena. What is Cartagena like?”
-
-“Wait and see it, my boy. Cartagena is a vision of vanished adventures,
-a gorgeous old Spanish treasure town preserved, by a sort of miracle,
-through three hundred years. Romance, color, tradition? It makes the
-days of the tall galleons and the bold sea dogs live again.”
-
-“Tell me more about it,” demanded Richard Cary. His voice rolled out in
-a deep and masterful note.
-
-“Come down to my room after the ship docks and I’ll give you some books
-to read, Kingsley’s ‘Westward Ho,’ Hakluyt’s ‘Voyages,’ and Captain
-Burney’s ‘History of the Buccaneers of America.’”
-
-Some small sound in the engine-room far below them diverted McClement’s
-attention. His perception of such things was uncannily acute. He
-vanished instantly down the nearest stairway. Richard Cary also found
-work to do. This broke the spell of his day-dreaming. It did not recur
-to him during the _Tarragona_’s brief stay at Kingston. In the evening
-he was on duty at the cargo hatches while the passengers swarmed ashore
-to find entertainment at the excessively modern and luxurious hotel.
-
-He had leisure to saunter a little way from the wharf, but felt no
-desire to explore Kingston. It was quite common-place, the streets noisy
-with electric cars and automobiles, the brick and wooden buildings as
-cheap and unlovely as those of any American town. Several charming young
-passengers failed to persuade him to join a party at the hotel where an
-orchestra was jazzing it, and he also declined, with due caution, the
-hospitality of thirsty voyagers who were making a night of it.
-
-Returning to the ship, he went to his room at midnight and picked up the
-chief engineer’s books instead of turning in. Presently he found himself
-fascinated. For the sake of comfort he shifted into pajamas and lay
-stretched in the bunk. The ship’s bell tolled one half-hour after
-another and he was still reading. These printed pages were a key that
-unlocked the gates of enchantment. Now and then he lost himself in
-absorbed reverie.
-
-These chronicles of hazards and escapes and hard fighting in the waters
-that washed the Spanish Main had been derived from documents, from the
-robust memoirs of men whose bones had crumbled in a century now dim and
-dead. The rich ports whose walls they had stormed with a bravado that
-defied all odds were no more than fragments of ruined masonry submerged
-in the jungle growth, Nombre de Dios, Porto Bello, and old Panama, names
-that still reëcho like the brazen blare of trumpets.
-
-All gone save Cartagena, reflected Richard Cary. Cartagena still basking
-by the sea to recall that day when Francis Drake and his Devon lads had
-stormed it with the naked sword.
-
-At length this brawny second mate of the _Tarragona_ laid the books
-aside. Dawn was brightening the windows of his room. He thrust his bare
-feet into straw slippers and went on deck to loaf in the fresh morning
-air. His head was buzzing. He felt fatigued, although as a mariner he
-was hardened to wakeful nights.
-
-In fancy he had been sailing, fighting, and carousing with those
-ferocious freebooters of the Caribbean. They seemed as real to him as
-the plodding, slow-spoken farmers of the New Hampshire soil on which he
-had been raised. Those clumsy, high-pooped ships with the bellying sails
-and gaudy pennants were as clearly etched in his mind as the stone
-walls, the square white houses, and the dark woodlands of his native
-countryside.
-
-Confound the chief engineer’s books, he said to himself. They had turned
-his brain all topsy-turvy.
-
-These impressions slowly faded until the _Tarragona_ had sailed from
-Kingston and was steaming across that wide waste of sea that rolls
-between Jamaica and the Spanish Main. Strong winds were almost always
-blowing there, whistling through a ship’s stays, whipping the blue
-surface into foaming surges, with clear skies and hot sunshine. The
-_Tarragona_ reeled to the swing of these restless seas, and the spray
-pelted her decks in sparkling showers. The passengers disliked it. Some
-of them uttered low moans and retired to their rooms. There were vacant
-chairs in the dining-saloon, regrets at having left the dry land of
-home, no matter how dry it was.
-
-Richard Cary enjoyed it. He was amazed that he had ever regarded going
-to sea as drudgery. This part of the voyage appealed to him with a
-peculiar zest. For the first time he loved the ocean. This boisterous
-wind that blew beneath a hard bright sky, a cool tang to it that
-tempered the tropic heat—he drew it deep into his lungs, standing with
-arms folded across his mighty chest.
-
-The astute chief engineer found something to interest him in the
-behavior of his herculean young shipmate. They were walking the deck
-together when McClement said, with his dry chuckle:
-
-“Until we sighted Jamaica, Dick, you were majestic and quiet, like the
-everlasting hills. I welcomed you as a benign influence in a world of
-guff and jazz and nervous twitters. Now you fairly talk my head off. It
-doesn’t bore me, mind you, but I find myself perplexed to account for
-this flow of language. Were you bottled up all those years, and has the
-cork just blown out?”
-
-“Something like that, Mac,” rather sheepishly admitted Richard Cary. “I
-can’t seem to help talking to you about the Spanish Main and the
-hard-boiled lads that put it on the map. You know all that stuff by
-heart, and I fairly eat it up.”
-
-“Aye, Dick, you lick your chops over it. You have read every bally book
-I could dig up. It is like a craving for strong drink.”
-
-Cary did not appear to be listening. The wind was blowing against his
-cheek. The deck was unsteady beneath his feet. Against the ship’s side
-the crested waves crashed and broke.
-
-“Can’t you see them, Mac?” was his resonant exclamation. “Lubberly
-little vessels, as round as an apple, leaking like baskets, rotten with
-fever—wallowing off to leeward when the wind drew ahead? It was this
-same wind that blew them across this stretch of sea to the Isthmus of
-Darien and Cartagena, that made it possible for them to fetch the
-mainland. They had it on the beam, there and back. It served the Spanish
-galleons as well as the Englishmen that hunted them. Why, Mac, old man,
-the _feel_ of this wind, now don’t laugh at me, is enough to tell me
-more stories than I found in all your musty old books.”
-
-The chief engineer halted in his tracks. With a keener scrutiny than
-usual he studied the candid, engaging features of Richard Cary, the
-fearless vision, the resolute chin, the ruddy color, and the thatch of
-yellow hair. Cary was conscious of this deliberate appraisal. He flushed
-under it. McClement took another turn along the deck before halting to
-ask a question:
-
-“Do you resemble the rest of the family, Dick?”
-
-“Absolutely not. My dad used to say I was a throwback, and a long throw
-at that.”
-
-“Precisely. That is what I am driving at. New England rural stock, you
-told me. English on both sides, I presume. Where did your forbears come
-from?”
-
-“Devonshire, all of them,” answered Cary. “My mother’s folks came over
-from Plymouth a couple of hundred years ago and settled near where they
-live now. My father’s ancestors came later, just before the Revolution.
-They hailed from a little village near Bideford, so I used to hear him
-say.”
-
-“From Devon?” exclaimed McClement, who did not appear greatly surprised.
-“The Carys of Devon! And your mother was—”
-
-“A Chichester,” said Richard.
-
-“Carys and Chichesters, of course, Dick. And you are the living image of
-Amyas Leigh in ‘Westward Ho’! He must have been about your build and
-bulk. The kind of lad they bred in Devon when the world was young!”
-
-“Carys and Chichesters sailed with Drake and Hawkins,” broke in Richard,
-“in these same seas, and they fought the Spanish Armada along with
-Walter Raleigh and Martin Frobisher. I found the names in one of your
-books.”
-
-“Aye, they did all of that and more too,” agreed the chief engineer. “I
-am too hard-headed to take stock in any fantastic theory of buried
-memories and such tosh as that. I’ll have to admit, though, that you are
-a bit startling, Dick. It’s out of the question, of course, that certain
-impressions and associations could have been handed down through your
-race, to come to life in you.”
-
-Inherited memories of the Spanish Main? Such a notion had not occurred
-to Richard Cary. Fantastic enough, but his quickened imagination laid
-hold of it.
-
-“There must have been a Cary in one of the expeditions against
-Cartagena, don’t you think, Mac?”
-
-“My word, yes. You can bet your last dollar on that. Those stout Devon
-lads were all over the shop, wherever there was a chance to singe the
-beard of the king of Spain.”
-
-“Then wouldn’t that account for the queer feeling that I have been in
-these waters before? Why, the idea of sailing for Cartagena made me
-tingle right down to my heels when I first heard of it.”
-
-“Here, you can’t coax me into discussing anything like that, you fine
-big brute,” protested McClement. “It won’t do at all. Do you think you
-are a blooming reincarnation? Better come to my room and have a drink
-and forget it.”
-
-“Then how do you explain it?” was the stubborn question. “On the level,
-I am getting worried about myself.”
-
-“No occasion for it, Dick. You are a coincidence, in a way, and a vastly
-interesting one. What ails you, however, is the spirit of romance and
-adventure. You didn’t know you had it in you. Youth often finds it in a
-first voyage to the tropics. I was that way myself. And the Spanish Main
-has a beguiling magic of its own. Most of these wild tales were fresh to
-you. Unconsciously you identified yourself with them because you knew
-you were bred from that same strain of Elizabethan seamen.”
-
-“Have it your own way,” rather sulkily agreed Richard Cary, “but there
-is more to this than you can figure out, as wise as you are.”
-
-McClement had implanted a suggestion which oddly lingered in Cary’s
-thoughts and colored them with strange conjectures. Who or what was the
-real Richard Cary? The brawny rover of Devon who had diced with the
-devil and the deep sea, or the prosaic son of New Hampshire farming folk
-who had viewed seafaring as a means of earning his bread?
-
-“Two Richard Carys,” reflected this second officer of the _Tarragona_.
-“All my life I may have been a mixture of both and didn’t know it. When
-I got sore at something and cleared for action, like wading into that
-bunch of fo’castle outlaws on the last Western Ocean voyage, I must have
-been the big Dick Cary of Devon that found his fun in walloping the
-Spaniards.”
-
-His meditations trailed off into nebulous realms, into a haze of
-conjectures and dreams and anticipations. Instead of taking each day as
-it came, he found himself looking forward to something. It seemed to be
-beckoning him. Somewhere in these romantic seas, adventure awaited him.
-The chief engineer read aloud a poem that matched this new mood. Richard
-Cary listened with a smile on his face.
-
- “Could man be drunk forever
- With liquor, love or fights,
- Lief should I rouse at morning
- And lief lie down of nights.
-
- “But men at whiles are sober
- And think by fits and starts,
- And if they think, they fasten
- Their hands upon their hearts.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
- A GREAT GALLEON
-
-Señorita Teresa Fernandez was the stewardess of the _Tarragona_. A dark,
-handsome young woman, she wore a cap and uniform of white, severely
-plain, that were singularly becoming. They also conveyed the impression
-that she had no time for sentiment or frivolity. She talked easily, with
-a flash of white teeth, a sparkling eye, and graceful gestures. The
-ladies were apt to confide their affairs to her when she carried the
-breakfast trays to their rooms.
-
-In return she told them various things about herself. She had been left
-motherless when a child. Her father, a South American merchant who had
-traveled much and visited many countries of Europe, had taken her with
-him and she had learned to know the sea and to speak French and Italian
-and English. He had died after very sad business troubles and there had
-been no relatives to look after her except an uncle, a very eccentric
-and disagreeable old gentleman to get along with.
-
-She had preferred making her own way in the world to seeking shelter
-under her uncle’s roof. She was very young for a stewardess? Yes, but
-her father had been a friend of certain officials of the Fruit Company,
-and she had been given a trial. It was enough for her to say that she
-had been kept in the service. For one whose family was very old and
-dignified, with an honored name, it was unusual, in a way; but what
-would you? If Teresa Fernandez was not ashamed to be earning an honest
-living, why pay attention to what others might say?
-
-When off duty she liked to sit in a wicker chair near the saloon
-staircase of the _Tarragona_. It was a cool, breezy place. She was close
-enough to the electric bells to respond to any summons. It was
-convenient for chatting with her friends as they passed, the second
-steward, the wireless operators, the purser, or the doctor. They agreed
-that Señorita Fernandez was a good scout.
-
-Now and then Richard Cary had stopped for a bit of gossip. He liked this
-cheerful, good-looking young stewardess who always had a smile for him
-and a gay word of greeting. She offered to darn his socks and overhaul
-his shirts for missing buttons, and refused payment for it. This was out
-of the ordinary. She was a thrifty soul who overlooked no opportunities
-to add to her income.
-
-From his seat in the dining-saloon, Cary often caught her looking at him
-when she was resting in the wicker chair near the landing. And when
-their eyes met, the tint in the olive cheek of Teresa Fernandez was
-likely to deepen. It was to be surmised that she was a woman of feelings
-as well as a very competent stewardess.
-
-During the run from Jamaica to the Spanish Main, Dick Cary paused
-oftener and stayed longer beside the wicker chair. He had lost that air
-of serene indifference to the feminine equation. This Teresa Fernandez
-strongly attracted him. She knew ships and the sea and the ports of many
-climes. She made conversation delightfully easy.
-
-One evening he found her standing on the lower deck, in a corner
-sheltered from the wind. A scarf of Spanish lace was thrown over her
-ebon, lustrous hair. She was alluring, exotic, a woman in another role
-than that of the efficient, industrious stewardess of the _Tarragona_.
-
-“What are you, Spanish or Portuguese?” asked Richard Cary, gazing down
-at her from his commanding height.
-
-“Oh, Spanish, ’most all of it,” laughed Teresa Fernandez, with a tilt of
-her shapely head. “Where do you think I come from, Don Ricardo Cary?”
-
-“From Spain? Vigo? Santander? Bilbao? I know that coast. Fine women in
-those ports. They were easy to look at.”
-
-“_Gracias, señor._ Is it a compliment?” she archly replied. “But I am
-not a fine woman—just a stewardess in funny clothes like a nurse or
-something. Ah, yes, I know Spain. I have been there in ships, but my
-home is not there. I am a Colombian, from Cartagena. Yes, my dear mother
-and father they died in Cartagena, and my uncle he lives there now.”
-
-“Cartagena?” echoed Richard Cary, his pulse beating faster. “Did you
-really come from that old town? And you know it well?”
-
-“Better than any other place, you bet,” cried Teresa Fernandez, her
-rounded shoulder touching Cary’s arm. “This Cartagena—poof! she is too
-old and dead, you understand. Plenty of big walls and forts and plazas
-for the tourists to see, but it is not up-to-date, not one little bit.
-Hot and stupid! Lots of people there, but they are too slow. Nothing
-doing, thank you.”
-
-“I could tell you some things about Cartagena,” said Richard Cary, “but
-they might not interest you. I have been reading and dreaming about it
-until I know the whole story by heart.”
-
-“The history, you mean, Don Ricardo?” she exclaimed, with a disdainful
-shrug. “The books you have been reading so hard? My gracious, I can tell
-you better stories than that. Look at me! I am what you call a chapter
-of the old history of Cartagena. Is it not much nicer to study me?”
-
-“Very much nicer,” warmly agreed the yellow-haired giant of a sailor. He
-dared to let his arm steal around her trim waist and to press her close.
-
-Teresa Fernandez laughed softly nor drew herself away. It was necessary,
-however, for her to explain:
-
-“You must not think I am this way with the other boys in the ship. No, I
-am never this way at all. You ask them if you want to. They will say
-Señorita Fernandez is very proper—she minds her own business all the
-time. My goodness, Don Ricardo, what can I do with you? You are so
-strong, so terrible. I never saw such a man in my life. Will you not
-have some mercy on poor Teresa?”
-
-True it was that she had never met such a man as this. Her heart might
-flutter, however, but it was not so easy to turn her head. An episode,
-this? Perhaps, but it was not to be resisted.
-
-“A chapter of history, are you, Teresa?” smiled he. “Then you are all I
-want to read from now on. I was surely wasting my good time on books.”
-
-“You were pretty thick, it seemed so,” said she. “Always talk, talk with
-that chief engineer. Listen! Now let me tell you something. My
-great-great—I don’t know how many times—grandfather was the _capitan_
-of the great galleon _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_. His name it was Don
-Juan Diego Fernandez, a man very proud—what you call noble blood. There
-was his galleon, four hundred sailors and soldiers and maybe a hundred
-cannon, in Cartagena harbor. When we go into port, you will see just
-where she was anchored that time. My brave ancestor, this Don Juan Diego
-Fernandez, he was all ready to make the voyage to Spain with his galleon
-full of gold and silver bars from the mines of Peru, eh? The treasure it
-was brought across the Isthmus of Panama on the backs of mules. You
-know. It was the plate fleet that sailed once a year for Cadiz. This my
-old Don Juan Diego Fernandez he waited for the other galleons.
-
-“_Valgame Dios!_ Right into the harbor of Cartagena sailed the
-Englishmen, the _piraticos_. The forts bang at them plenty. They give
-those forts the merry laugh. Two little ships! My old grandfather, so
-proud in his gold armor, he was not scared at all. He would sink these
-crazy little ships and send the English heretics to the Holy Inquisition
-in Cartagena. Now listen to this! What _do_ you suppose? Mother of God,
-they gave Don Juan Diego Fernandez no show at all to fire his hundred
-cannon and shoot the muskets of his four hundred sailors and soldiers.
-Did he get a run for his money? I guess not! First thing you know, one
-little English ship is tied fast on the starboard side of the tremendous
-big galleon _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_, and the other little ship on
-the port side.
-
-“_Carramba!_ These crazy Englishmen they climb to the decks of that
-galleon just like monkeys. These four hundred Spanish sailors and
-soldiers are all chopped to pieces. The tall galleon she is on fire and
-blazes all up. And these English _piraticos_ dump the gold and silver
-bars through the ports, into their two little ships, just like you
-shovel coal.
-
-“Whew! My old grandfather in his shiny armor, all so grand and brave,
-has to give up his sword to the English _capitan_. He is treated very
-nice as a prisoner, but he has to get ransom for himself in Cartagena,
-four thousand pieces of eight. Some money, to buy old Don Juan Diego
-Fernandez with! Maybe if those wicked Englishmen had not captured the
-_Nuestra Señora del Rosario_, I will be a rich woman now and not have to
-go to sea.”
-
-“Yes, the old boy was out of luck,” heartily agreed Richard Cary. “Of
-course I feel more like cheering the Englishmen. Do you happen to know
-the names of their ships?”
-
-“Yes. It is written down in Spanish, in the library of the Bishop of
-Cartagena. My father made a copy one time. The ships were named the
-_Bonaventure_ and the _Rose of Plymouth_.”
-
-Richard Cary seemed to forget the allurement of Teresa Fernandez. He
-folded his arms and stood detached and erect, staring out at the
-darkened sea. It was thus he stood whenever these misty, fleeting
-emotions came to disquiet him. McClement was right, no doubt. It was
-nothing more than the voice of romance to which hitherto he had been
-deaf. He brushed a hand across his eyes. His massive body relaxed. He
-laughed awkwardly, patted Teresa’s soft cheek, and muttered:
-
-“You described it so well that I seemed to see the thing just as it
-happened.”
-
-“Please do not look like that again,” said Teresa, her accents slightly
-tremulous. “You scare me. It was just like the ghost of one of those mad
-Englishmen in the little ships. I was going to tell you some more, but
-you must be nice and gentle. The ship’s bell from the galleon _Nuestra
-Señora del Rosario_ was saved by a Spanish officer from a fort when the
-hulk drifted ashore. This one he gave the bell to my old ancestor, Don
-Juan Diego Fernandez, and it stayed always in Cartagena. I give you my
-word, Ricardo, it is hanging right now in the _patio_ of my uncle’s
-house, close to the Plaza de la Independencia. There is the bronze bell,
-very beautiful, and it hangs from an oak timber that was in the galleon.
-If you go ashore with me, I will show you the bell in my uncle’s
-_patio_. We can sit there, and my uncle he will amuse you. He is a very
-funny old guy.”
-
-“The bell of the _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_,” Richard Cary mused
-aloud. “Yes, I shall want to see it, Teresa.”
-
-“Hum-m, in Cartagena you will be admired, let me tell you that,
-Ricardo,” said she, with a flash of asperity. “A girl in every port? And
-you have made a fool of Teresa Fernandez. It does not happen every day.
-I swear by the blessed Santa Marta.”
-
-“I’ll swear it never happened to me before—to find a girl like you and
-fall in love with her,” was his ardent declaration.
-
-“Do you truly love me, Ricardo? Such a man as you?” Her sigh was both
-wistful and happy. “I was hoping—I thought I saw it in your eyes, in
-your smile, but—”
-
-For answer he kissed her on the lips, clinging lips that returned the
-caress. Responsively she surrendered to his masterful sway. In her heart
-was the faith to believe that he could never be fickle or inconstant,
-once his love was pledged. A girl in every port? She had spoken in jest.
-
-It was time for them to part. On watch, later in the night, he found
-himself repeating:
-
- “Could man be drunk forever
- With liquor, love or fights,
- Lief should I rouse at morning
- And lief lie down of nights.”
-
-He stood alone with the wind and the clamorous sea and the stars in the
-velvet sky. Gazing forward from the bridge, the ship’s derrick booms and
-cargo winches were obscurely shadowed. The forecastle deck and lofty
-prow lifted against the curtain of night. The spray broke over them and
-beat like gusts of rain. It was possible to forget that this was a
-modern steamer, infinitely complex and cunningly contrived, a steel
-trough driven by tireless engines. To Richard Cary she was a ship
-steering across the Caribbean as ships had steered in bygone centuries.
-Never had his heart beat so high nor had he been conscious of such a
-keen-edged joy in living.
-
-Teresa Fernandez, the blood in whose veins ran back to Don Juan Diego
-Fernandez, commander of the shattered treasure galleon! It pleased
-Richard Cary’s awakened fancy to picture such a girl as this in the
-Cartagena of long ago, a scarf of Spanish lace thrown over her lustrous
-hair, and a tall, fair Devon lad to woo her when the seamen of the
-_Bonaventure_ had landed on the beach to parley for ransom.
-
-At breakfast next morning, Cary could see the competent stewardess,
-graceful, light of foot, flitting to and fro on this errand or that,
-with a shrewd eye to the main chance. No nonsense, her aspect seemed to
-say. She was the “good scout,” the unsentimental friend of the second
-steward, the wireless operators, the purser, and the doctor. She colored
-divinely, however, when her sailor lover smiled a greeting from his
-table. A little later, when he passed her on the staircase, and they
-were unobserved, her fingers lightly brushed the sleeve of his coat.
-
-The _Tarragona_ was approaching the Colombian coast. In the afternoon a
-trifling incident occurred. It was destined, however, to affect the
-fortunes of Richard Cary in a manner unforeseen. Captain Jordan Sterry,
-that vigorous figure of a middle-aged shipmaster, had displayed a
-fatherly interest in a pert young creature with bobbed hair who seemed
-to enjoy it, for lack of a better game to play. He had invited her to
-visit the bridge. It was a courtesy often shown favored passengers.
-
-The second officer was on duty. He happened to overhear some chance
-remark of the skipper, a rather silly thing to say, fatuous in a man old
-enough to be the bobbed one’s father. Most unluckily Richard Cary
-chuckled aloud. A lively sense of the ridiculous was too much for him.
-The infatuated Captain Sterry turned and glared. Cary was fairly caught.
-His face betrayed him. It mirrored the merciless verdict of youth. Words
-could have put it no more bitingly.
-
-Captain Sterry turned red. He bit his lip. His second mate thought him
-absurd. To be laughed at was degrading, intolerable. It penetrated his
-vanity and seared his soul like acid.
-
-A fleeting tableau, but Cary had made an enemy who both hated and feared
-him. His offense was beyond all forgiveness. He stepped to a wheel-house
-window and took the binocular from the rack. It occupied him to watch a
-distant steamer almost hull down. He felt rather sorry for what he had
-done. It was uncomfortable to think of the look in the skipper’s eyes,
-not so much anger as profound humiliation. Never again would these twain
-be happy in the same ship together.
-
-It meant that Richard Cary might have to leave the _Tarragona_ and find
-another berth. This was his regretful conclusion. He liked the ship nor
-could he imagine himself as forsaking the Caribbean Sea to return to the
-Western Ocean trade.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
- THE ANGER OF COLONEL FAJARDO
-
-The steamer sighted Cartagena in the rosy mists of dawn. It seemed to
-rise from the sea and float like a mirage. It was a mass of towers,
-domes, and battlements, of stone houses tinted pink and yellow with
-tiled roofs that gleamed and wavered. The surf broke against the wall of
-enduring masonry which marched around this ancient city of the
-_conquistadores_, a mighty wall broken here and there by massive
-gateways and bastions.
-
-Defiantly facing the sea, secure of itself, this proud stronghold of
-Cartagena de Indias had been increasingly fortified until it had become
-impregnable to the foes who, in the very early days, had harried and
-plundered it. These walls and escarpments, the flanking towers and the
-guardian forts looming from the nearby hills and forelands, had cost the
-kings of Spain untold millions drained from the fabulous mines of
-Potosi. They had been determined to make this Caribbean seaport the
-Gibraltar of the New World.
-
-The _Tarragona_ changed her course and moved to the southward of the
-city, past the tall palms clustered on the hot, white beaches. What
-appeared to be a wide entrance to the harbor was soon revealed, but the
-breakers frothed against a barrier that ran athwart it like a reef. On
-the chart this reef was a curiously straight line, as if laid down with
-a ruler. Richard Cary was shading his eyes with his hand when the chief
-officer remarked:
-
-“If the Colombians had any get-up and gumption they would blow a hole in
-that submerged wall and open the old ship channel. It was built across
-there, God knows how long ago, to keep the buccaneers out. Some building
-job, that! There must be almost a mile of it.”
-
-“Yes, it was put there after the Englishmen sailed in past the forts and
-sacked the town,” quickly exclaimed Cary. “It wasn’t there when Drake
-took Cartagena. He used this Boca Grande.”
-
-It was necessary for the _Tarragona_ to proceed seven miles to the
-southward and enter the narrow passage of the Boca Chica, tortuous and
-difficult, and then to make her way through the reaches of a blue
-lagoon. She passed between the outermost forts, gray and grass-grown,
-but still resisting the slow processes of decay. On the port side was
-the Castillo de San Fernando with its crenelated walls and deep
-embrasures in which rested dismounted brass carronades. In the lee of
-the lofty water-gate rode a Colombian trading schooner. A few Indian
-canoes were drawn up on the beach.
-
-On the starboard side, the Castillo de San Juan jutted from the sea like
-a huge rock. Patches of verdure had found root in the crumbling
-counterscarps. Flowering vines wreathed the round sentry boxes.
-
-Steaming slowly through the placid lagoon, the _Tarragona_ found a
-circuitous path to Cartagena. The wharf, the corrugated iron cargo
-sheds, the railway tracks, were ugly and modern. Looking away from them,
-however, one saw only the stately seaport of the vanished centuries.
-Behind its ramparts the galleried streets and shaded plazas drowsed
-through the heat of the day until the breeze came sweeping from the sea
-with the setting sun.
-
-The _Tarragona_ had much freight to discharge before resuming the voyage
-to Santa Marta and filling her holds with bananas. Richard Cary had to
-be an efficient second mate with his mind on the job while the
-clattering winches plucked the rope slings filled with cases, bales, and
-casks from the open hatches. At the noon hour he found leisure to loaf
-under an awning.
-
-Teresa Fernandez found him there. She had something to say. One of her
-swift and supple gestures indicated a swarthy Colombian in a handsome
-military uniform who reclined in a steamer chair on the promenade deck.
-He was gaunt, grizzled, and harsh-featured. Just now his eyes were
-closed. His hands were comfortably clasped across his belt. He was
-enjoying a brief siesta after a bountiful luncheon in the saloon as the
-guest of the ship.
-
-“You see that fellow?” exclaimed Teresa, with a shrug that betokened
-disfavor. “All his brass buttons and medals? He is the _Comandante_ of
-the Port, Colonel Fajardo. The boss of the custom-house police and
-things like that. What do you think of him?”
-
-“Is he a friend of yours?” Dick Cary cautiously parried.
-
-“Last voyage that Colonel Fajardo asked me to marry him,” candidly
-answered Teresa. “Yes, that fellow told me he was in love with me. He is
-not as old as he looks, unless he is a big liar. Forty-two years old he
-says.”
-
-Cary glowered at the somnolent _Comandante_ of the Port. In a way, this
-was startling news. Next he fixed a questioning eye on the charming
-Teresa whose demeanor hinted that, as a suitor, the colonel had not been
-finally disposed of on that last voyage. She flashed a brilliant smile,
-furtively caressed Cary’s hand, and deigned to explain:
-
-“It was just like this, Ricardo. This Colonel Fajardo is a very
-important man in Cartagena. The Fruit Company must treat him nice and
-pat him on the back or he will make trouble for the ships. He can find
-something wrong with the papers and delay the sailings or maybe a poor
-sailor is caught smuggling some cigarettes ashore. You see, I am in the
-Company’s employ and I must not make this Colonel Fajardo mad with me.
-It is best to be _diplomatique_, to jolly him along, you understand?”
-
-“It sounds well enough,” growled Richard Cary, by no means appeased,
-“but what about _this_ voyage? Has that buzzard proposed to you again?”
-
-“Oh, yes, as soon as he came aboard this morning. He was waiting, very
-impatient. He had told me he had plenty of money and a very good house.
-His pay is not much, you know, except what he can steal. I asked my
-uncle in Cartagena to find out about this Colonel Fajardo. My uncle he
-cannot come down to the ship to-day, but he sends me a letter. This fine
-_Comandante_ is a false alarm, Ricardo. He has spent all his money on
-women and his house is mortgaged up to the neck. He is no good at all.
-Bah! Why should I marry that fellow, even if I am a poor girl that has
-to go to sea and work very hard?”
-
-“Have you told him so?” sternly demanded Dick Cary. Her nonchalance
-rather staggered him.
-
-“Yea, I could not string him along any more,” serenely confessed Teresa
-Fernandez.
-
-“But if he had all kinds of money, what then?”
-
-“Never, Ricardo. He disgusts me. That last voyage, when I told him to
-wait, you had not kissed me then.”
-
-“You are _my_ sweetheart,” he passionately exclaimed. “And I’ll take
-care of that Colombian blackguard if he pesters you again.”
-
-“You would kill him, Ricardo, because you love me?” happily sighed
-Teresa Fernandez. “But, listen, don’t you go making trouble with that
-man if he acts jealous. I will be glad when the ship sails for Santa
-Marta to-morrow.”
-
-Richard Cary’s laugh was lightly scornful. He held the amorous Colonel
-Fajardo in very small esteem. By this time the latter gentleman had
-awakened from his siesta. He yawned and blinked at the harbor upon whose
-oily surface a small sailing vessel drifted becalmed in the blistering
-heat. Then his gaunt frame uprose from the steamer chair and he stiffly
-straightened himself in the frogged white uniform with the ornate gold
-shoulder-straps.
-
-He was not a man to be dismissed with a careless laugh. A visage tanned
-to the hue of brown leather was bitten deep with the lines of a hard and
-cruel temper. The thin lips and jutting nose were predatory. One thought
-of him as perhaps a soldier who had seen more arduous service than this
-lazy billet of _Comandante_ of the Port. He had the air of command, but
-sloth and dissipation were corroding him as rust destroys a good weapon.
-
-Yawning, Colonel Fajardo lighted a cigarette and smoothed the wrinkles
-from his tunic. Then he twisted the ends of a mustache that was
-prematurely flecked with gray. He sauntered forward, to the gangway, and
-swore viciously at two of his custom-house guards who had retreated to
-the shade of a deck-house. One of them he kicked by way of emphasis.
-From this part of the ship he caught sight of Teresa Fernandez under the
-awning with the huge, yellow-haired young second mate of the
-_Tarragona_.
-
-At a glance it was easy to perceive that they found this dalliance
-agreeable. Excessively and infernally agreeable, in the opinion of this
-interested Colonel Fajardo. It was a mordant sight for him to behold. He
-felt suddenly feverish. It was, indeed, like a touch of _calentura_.
-
-A certain thing was revealed to him. It displayed itself beyond a shadow
-of doubt. Teresa Fernandez had considered his offer of marriage. Yes,
-she had been favorable, his vanity led him to believe, delaying the
-answer until the ship had returned to Cartagena.
-
-Now she had rejected him; the humble stewardess of the _Tarragona_
-rejecting the renowned Colonel Fajardo, _Comandante_ of the Port, who
-might have had so many other young and beautiful women. It was because
-she had found a Yankee lover. Little devil, would she so wantonly flaunt
-this great, stupid beast of a sailor before the eyes of Colonel Fajardo?
-It was amusement for those two.
-
-The Colonel’s lean fingers quivered as he lighted a fresh cigarette. The
-thin lips twitched beneath the martial mustache. He turned on his heel
-and strolled aft to the smoking-room. There he slumped upon a cushioned
-settle and rested his elbows upon the table. He ordered a whiskey and
-soda and drank it very slowly. Another Colombian official joined him, a
-loquacious person who babbled about various matters and was indifferent
-to the brooding, ungracious demeanor of Colonel Fajardo. After a while
-this acquaintance departed.
-
-The colonel continued to drink, steadily and alone, until the chief
-engineer drifted in for a cold bottle of beer. He was sweaty and dirty
-and his legs ached. For sociability’s sake he sat down at the table with
-the _Comandante_ of the Port. It was an error, as he presently
-discovered. The morose gentleman of the gold shoulder-straps contributed
-no more than an occasional grunt or a bored, “_Si, señor_.”
-
-His eyes were slightly bloodshot and failed to focus. Otherwise his
-sobriety could not be challenged. He brightened only when about to
-plunge his predatory beak into another whiskey and soda. Having
-prudently slaked his own thirst, the chief engineer betook himself back
-to the task of tinkering with a balky condenser in a temperature that
-would have made Hades seem frigid. Later in the afternoon, when he
-emerged on deck for air, he accosted Richard Cary.
-
-“Hearken to me, shipmate. If you insist on sparking the beautiful
-stewardess, I suggest that you suspend operations until Cartagena is in
-the offing. What I mean to say is, a little discretion wouldn’t be half
-bad.”
-
-“Thanks, Mac, but if you had just as soon mind your own damn business,”
-was the discourteous retort, “I can hearken a lot easier. How did you
-get this way?”
-
-“By using a normal intelligence and powers of observation in which you
-are so colossally lacking,” was the unruffled reply. “You have already
-driven Colonel Fajardo to drink. He has been at it ever since luncheon,
-according to Jimmy, the barkeep. No, he isn’t drunk, but, my word, his
-disposition is ruined. He may be chewing glass by this time.”
-
-“Humph! You read too many novels, Mac. Trying to stage a melodrama?”
-
-“This from you, Dick Cary? You wild ass! After boring me with your
-fantastic nonsense about buried memories of the Spanish Main? Accuse me
-of being stagey when I offer a friendly bit of common sense? Oh, very
-well, if you get a knife in your ribs or a bullet in your back, you
-needn’t expect me to hold your hand and listen to your last words. I
-have heard gossip in Cartagena, that this Colonel Fajardo has bumped off
-one or two sprightly young _caballeros_ who got in his way.”
-
-“And you listen to such rot?” scoffed Dick Cary. “The drunken
-counterfeit! Somebody ought to call his bluff. I wish he would give me a
-chance.”
-
-“The Devon lad? Spaniards are good hunting,” quizzed McClement. “Up, my
-hearties, and at ’em.”
-
-Instead of dining at his favorite café in Cartagena, Colonel Fajardo
-remained on board the _Tarragona_. He swayed just a trifle as he walked
-into the saloon, but his bearing was haughty and sedate. He held his
-liquor well, did this seasoned soldier of the tropics. A man of blood
-and iron! More accurate, perhaps, to say that he had a copper lining.
-Whatever emotions may have tormented him, his appetite for food was not
-blighted. He ate enormously and gulped down cup after cup of black
-coffee.
-
-This treatment was sobering. The colonel’s eyes were again in focus.
-They expressed an intelligence alert and sinister. His gait was normal
-when he returned to the promenade deck. He posted himself where he could
-observe the gangway steps that led down to the wharf. It was not long
-before Teresa Fernandez appeared. As he suspected, she had been warily
-avoiding him. Just now she failed to see him because she was looking
-elsewhere, forward, where the stairs led down from the officers’
-quarters on the boat deck.
-
-This was a woman of a very different aspect from the industrious
-stewardess of the _Tarragona_ in her white garb so severely trim and
-plain. The wide black hat framed a face girlish and piquant. The gown
-was of some gray stuff, thin and shimmering. It revealed the soft
-contours of her shoulders, of her slenderly modeled arms. The ancestry
-which could boast of a Don Juan de Fernandez, captain of the great
-galleon of the plate fleet, had survived in Teresa’s small-boned wrists,
-in the curves of her slim silken-clad ankles. Greedily did the lustful
-Colonel Fajardo gaze at her. Damnation! Never had he so greatly desired
-to possess a woman. In proof of this he had been even willing to marry
-her.
-
-She gayly waved a hand, but not at him. The second officer of the ship
-was hastening to join her, the great, insolent ox of a Yankee sailor.
-He, too, was in shore-going clothes, a jaunty Panama with a crimson
-band, cream-colored suit of pongee, a bamboo stick crooked on his arm.
-He was so flagrantly the happy lover off for a holiday hour ashore that
-Colonel Fajardo muttered blasphemies the most picturesque. The intention
-was to annoy him, to make him beside himself. It was odious.
-
-The perfidious Teresa Fernandez hung on the arm of Richard Cary as they
-descended to the wharf and walked to the custom-house gate beyond which
-waited a group of little open carriages, plying for hire. The drivers
-raised their voices in clamorous persuasion, naming extortionate prices.
-Teresa scolded them in voluble Spanish as _piraticos_ and children of
-the Evil One. They meekly subsided. The carriage with the least bony and
-languorous nag rattled over the cobblestones in the direction of the
-nearest gateway through the city wall.
-
-Colonel Fajardo moved to the gangway. He halted to think. His hard, worn
-face was not so angry as perplexed. It was to be surmised that things
-had taken a disappointing turn. Possibly it would have pleased him more
-had the second officer gone ashore alone. The fact that Teresa Fernandez
-had accompanied him intruded a certain awkwardness. In a way, it was
-unforeseen. In previous voyages she had declined to leave the ship after
-dark.
-
-Colonel Fajardo absently fingered a scar on his chin. The circumstances
-were regrettable, but he was not one to neglect a matter of importance
-so long as there was the remotest chance of success. Immediately he made
-his way down to the wharf and strode as far as the office of the
-customs. He entered this small building, locked the door, and talked
-softly into the telephone. The conference was brief. His language was so
-guarded that it could mean nothing at all if overheard. The message was
-a masterpiece of circumlocution. It was understood, however, by a
-certain sallow young man who had been playing a guitar in a café of
-shady repute in a dingy street of Cartagena.
-
-He had been waiting for a message. In the afternoon a dusty urchin had
-come from the wharf with a few unsigned words scrawled on a bit of paper
-advising him to hold himself in readiness for orders.
-
-In employing the telephone, Colonel Fajardo displayed the modern spirit.
-In certain aspects of his private affairs he harked back to earlier
-centuries. From the wharf he returned to the ship and sought the
-smoking-room. With a mien of somber abstraction he applied himself to a
-whiskey and soda.
-
-Meanwhile the shabby open carriage had rattled through a cavern of a
-gateway in the wall. Cartagena by moonlight! Richard Cary was glad he
-had waited until night. All traces of garish modernity were banished by
-the sorcery of the silver moon. In the shadows of the winding streets,
-gallants whispered at grated windows. The tall houses with overhanging
-balconies that almost met across these narrow streets were gravely
-beautiful. In the stones above their doors were chiseled the crests of
-conquering _hidalgos_ whose bones had been dust these hundreds of years.
-
-There was almost no traffic. Strollers loitered in the grateful breeze,
-a group was singing as it passed. There was the hum of voices from the
-balconies, the distant music of a band in a plaza. To Richard Cary it
-was like the ghost of a city, untouched by change or dissolution, which
-dwelt with memories great and tumultuous. He gave himself over to its
-spell.
-
-Teresa Fernandez also was silent. When she spoke, it was to say, with
-deep emotion:
-
-“It is so wonderful to be with you, Ricardo, away from the ship and all
-those noisy people. To-night we seem to belong right here in my old
-Cartagena, you and I. This is like a beautiful dream, but, ah, dreams
-never last very long. Will you love me for more than a little while?”
-
-“Aye, Teresa mine; forever and ever. McClement calls me crazy, but I
-feel as though I had loved you in Cartagena long ago.”
-
-“Santa Maria, do I look as old as that?” she rippled. “And I thought I
-had made myself _muy dulce_ for you. If you will stay crazy about me, I
-don’t care how crazy that old chief engineer thinks you are.”
-
-When deeply stirred, Ricardo was not one to turn a ready compliment. She
-was satisfied, however, with his smile of fond approval, with his
-manifest pride in her slender and elegant beauty. One thought made them
-wistful. To forsake the open carriage and wander at their will, to a
-stone bench in the shadows of the Plaza Fernandez de Madrid, or to the
-murmuring beach, this was their desire. But they could not remain long
-away from the ship.
-
-Teresa had petulantly explained that there was no evading a call at the
-house of her uncle, Señor Ramon Bazán. It was a promise, made last
-voyage, and she was a woman of her word. Besides, this funny old guy of
-an uncle, said she, had vowed to leave her all his money when he was
-dead. It was necessary to be nice to him while he was alive. Ha, not one
-dollar would he give her until he was dead, not if she begged him on her
-knees. A terrible tightwad was the Señor Ramon Bazán.
-
-Richard Cary made no comment. He felt sorry for the girl who had been
-compelled to travel rough roads of life, courageously battling for
-survival. She was not sordid, but anxious. Money was a weapon of
-self-defense. She had been compelled to think too much of it.
-
-The carriage halted in front of the frowning residence of Uncle Ramon
-Bazán. The iron-studded door was stout enough to have stopped a volley
-of musket balls. It was swung open by a barefooted Indian lad in ragged
-shirt and trousers. Teresa brushed him aside and led the way into the
-_patio_, open to the sky, where a fountain tinkled and flamboyant
-flowers bloomed. A little brown monkey scampered up a trellis and swung
-by its tail. A green parrot screeched impolite Spanish epithets from a
-cage on the wall.
-
-The Indian youth shuffled into the _patio_ and timidly informed the
-señorita that her uncle had gone out on an errand and would soon return.
-
-“I hope he forgets to come back, Ricardo,” said Teresa. “Now we can sit
-down by the oleander tree and I will show you the bell of the old
-galleon _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_.”
-
-They crossed the moonlit square of the patio. Cary saw a heavy framework
-of Spanish oak timbers, more durable than iron. From the cross-piece was
-suspended the massy bell whose elaborately chased surface was green with
-time and weather. By the flare of a match, Cary discovered a royal coat
-of arms in high relief and the blurred letters of an inscription,
-presumably the name of the galleon and of the port whence she had
-hailed.
-
-Teresa Fernandez groped for the clapper and let it swing against the
-flaring rim. The bell responded with a note sonorous and musical.
-Lingeringly vibrant, the sound filled the _patio_. With more vigor
-Richard Cary swung the clapper. The voice of the galleon’s bell swelled
-in volume. The air fairly quivered and hummed. It was unlike any ship’s
-bell that Richard Cary had ever heard at sea or in port. And yet its
-timbre thrilled some responsive chord in the dim recesses of his soul.
-It was such a bell as had flung its mellow echoes against the walls of
-Cartagena, of Porto Bello, of Nombre de Dios when the tall galleons of
-the plate fleet had ridden to their hempen cables.
-
-The sound of the bell had died to a murmur when Teresa spoke. The
-quality of her voice was attuned in harmony with it, or so it seemed to
-the listening Richard Cary.
-
-“When I was a little girl,” said she, “I liked to come and play with the
-old bell. I had to stand up on my toes and push the clapper with my two
-hands. Dong! Dong! It sang songs to me. They made me feel like you say
-you do when you hear the wind in the palm trees, Ricardo. There is
-something about this bell—very queer, but just as true as true can be.
-You will not laugh, like the other _Americanos_. If anything very bad is
-going to happen to the one it belongs to, this bell of the _Nuestra
-Señora del Rosario_ it strikes four times. _Dong! dong!—Dong! dong!_
-Four bells, like on board a ship. When there is going to be death or
-some terrible bad luck! It has always been like that, ’way, ’way back to
-my ancestor Don Juan Diego Fernandez.”
-
-Richard Cary nodded assent. It was not for him to find fault with a
-legend such as this. Teresa, encouraged by his sympathy, went on to say:
-
-“Yes, it was heard the night before the two little English ships, the
-_Bonaventure_ and the _Rose of Plymouth_, came sailing into Cartagena
-harbor. _Dong! dong!—Dong! dong!_ There was no Spanish sailor near at
-all on deck when it struck four bells. A hundred years ago there was a
-General Fernandez who fought with Bolivar in the revolution against
-Spain. His wife she sits right here in this _patio_ and waits for news
-from her brave husband. One night it is very quiet and everybody is
-asleep. She is waked up. What does she hear? Not so loud, but very sad
-and clear. _Dong! dong!—Dong! dong!_ Four bells!
-
-“This poor woman knows her husband must be dead in some battle for the
-flag of Bolivar. Pretty soon a soldier comes from the Magdalena with a
-message, but she has had her message already. Another time, my Ricardo,
-it was a Fernandez that got drowned in a ship. It went down in a
-hurricane off Martinique. The bell told his mother. Now I have told you
-enough gloomy stuff, Ricardo. Maybe that old bell will belong to me some
-day. I think I will throw it in the harbor. It is a Jonah.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
- RICHARD CARY STROLLS ALONE
-
-A wisp of an elderly man appeared in the moonlit _patio_, with no more
-sound than the rustle of a dry leaf. He seemed to move with an habitual
-air of stealth. Bent and meager, his linen clothes flapped on him. He
-peered this way and that. The little brown monkey came dancing down from
-the trellis and perched, chattering, upon his shoulder. He stood fanning
-himself with a dingy straw hat. He was short of breath, wheezing
-audibly. No matter how trifling his errands, it was to be conjectured
-that he always flitted to and fro in a hurried, secretive manner.
-
-Teresa moved out of the shadows. He jumped back, easily startled. His
-niece called out some affectionate Spanish phrase and dutifully advanced
-to embrace him. Señor Ramon Bazán pecked at her cheek, cackled a
-welcome, and wriggled clear. He was fascinated by the formidable size of
-the stranger who hovered between the galleon bell and the oleander tree.
-It was a phenomenon that provoked excited curiosity.
-
-Uncle Ramon Bazán sputtered questions. Teresa proudly presented the
-second officer of the _Tarragona_ who felt baffled because he could talk
-no Spanish. This failed to check the wordy welcome of the uncle of
-Teresa. He was impressed and amused. On tiptoe he patted Cary’s mighty
-shoulder and measured his height. It was like a terrier making friends
-with a Saint Bernard.
-
-“He says you are as big as the hill of La Popa,” swiftly interpreted
-Teresa. “You do his poor house an honor. Everything in it is yours. You
-have made a delicious hit with him, Ricardo. He does not like many
-people.”
-
-Cary bowed and conveyed his thanks. Uncle Ramon chuckled like the squeak
-of a rusty hinge. He had made a joke, explained Teresa. Why offer the
-house to this Señor Cary when he could easily carry it off on his back
-if he felt so disposed? They found chairs near the fountain. The Indian
-_muchacho_ brought glasses of iced lemonade. Cary smoked his pipe and
-idly listened. To hear Teresa’s voice, flowing, musical, talking in the
-language of her native Cartagena, was a new delight.
-
-Presently the wee brown monkey clambered to his knee and sat there. The
-wrinkled visage bore an odd resemblance to that of Señor Ramon Bazán.
-Richard Cary knocked the ashes from his briar pipe and laid it on the
-bench beside him. The monkey noted the procedure, with a grave scrutiny.
-Then it picked up the pipe, carefully rapped the bowl against Cary’s
-knee, and inserted the stem between its teeth. Cary courteously offered
-his match-box and tobacco-pouch. Uncle Ramon’s shrill mirth was so
-violent that a coughing fit was nearly the death of him. Teresa was
-gleeful because to win the monkey’s favor was a signal distinction. In
-her uncle’s sight, it was the final seal of approval.
-
-Soon it was time to go back to the ship. The host escorted them to the
-street and sent the Indian lad in quest of a carriage. He warmly urged
-Richard Cary to make the house his home whenever he was in port. It was
-expressed with gusto. They left him in the doorway, a bizarre figure,
-the monkey tucked under one arm.
-
-“Never have I seen my uncle like this,” said Teresa as they drove away.
-“He hates ’most everybody. You are his big pet, Ricardo. Any favor you
-ask, he will tumble over himself to do it.”
-
-“I was sorry I couldn’t have a chat with him, he seemed so cordial. A
-comical old chap.”
-
-“Pooh, he can talk English when he wants to. He lived in Washington one
-time, for the government at Bogotá. He is funny. To-night it was a
-trick, his talking only Spanish. Maybe you would say something about him
-to me, eh? He was sizing you up. He is just as sly as that little
-monkey. But I must not speak so horrid of my uncle. He is a very old
-man—cracked—some bats in the _cabeza_. How old do you think he is?”
-
-“I couldn’t get a slant on him in the moonlight,” answered Cary. “He is
-pretty well warped and dried up, but he seems to have a kick in him.”
-
-“Nobody knows how old that Ramon Bazán is, Ricardo. He looked just like
-this when I was a little, little girl.”
-
-Cary absently filled his briar pipe. Teresa snatched it from him and
-objected:
-
-“That monkey was trying to smoke it just like a man. Dirty beast! Here,
-you take a cigarette from me and I will scrub that pipe with boiling
-water.”
-
-One other thing troubled her. That story of the galleon bell. Did
-Ricardo think she was stupid to believe all that stuff? It sounded true
-in the _patio_, in the moonlight of Cartagena, but would he laugh at her
-when he was at sea again in the _Tarragona_ with that wise _amigo_ of
-his, the chief engineer? Listen! It was no more wonderful than the
-marble pulpit in the cathedral, all carved with the images of the
-saints. It was well known to everybody that the Pope had commanded the
-best artists of Spain to carve that pulpit for a gift to the faithful
-people of Cartagena. The Pope had blessed it before the ship sailed from
-Cadiz. Oh, very long ago!
-
-The ship was close to the Spanish Main when the English buccaneers had
-captured her. They were very angry to find the cases of marble that were
-all carved with the blessed images of the Catholic saints. So they threw
-the cases overboard when they plundered the ship. All this heavy marble!
-It did not sink at all, but floated on the waves. A long time these
-cases of marble floated until, one day, they washed right up on the
-beach of Cartagena.
-
-The bishop called all the people to see the holy miracle and there was a
-procession to the cathedral with incense and banners and hymns. And
-there is the marble pulpit to-day, and the priests saying Mass under the
-canopy.
-
-Richard Cary gravely agreed that such a miracle could not be doubted,
-even by a heretic. And he did not have to be persuaded to believe in the
-marvelous powers of the galleon’s bell to toll a warning of disaster.
-This comforted the heart of Teresa Fernandez, so shrewd and yet so
-credulous. She was radiantly happy in these golden moments with the man
-she loved.
-
-He left her at the ship’s gangway. The chief officer was on watch. Dour
-and taciturn, he was human enough to say:
-
-“You didn’t have to hurry back, Mr. Cary. A pity to cut it short on a
-night like this. The old man is ashore.”
-
-“That is very thoughtful of you, but the stewardess had to come back and
-report for duty.”
-
-“An uncommonly pretty young woman,” was the gruff comment, “and as good
-as she looks, from all accounts. I can’t blame you for taking notice.
-Don’t lose your head, though. Going to sea is a dog’s life for a man
-that’s fool enough to get married.”
-
-“Exactly what I used to say,” replied Cary, “but a man has been known to
-change his mind.”
-
-He drifted along the promenade deck and chatted with a passenger or two.
-This failed to interest him. In the lee of the cargo sheds, where the
-ship was moored, the air was hot and heavy. He went to his room and
-tried to read. A cabin steward came in with the briar pipe, sent by
-Teresa who had thoroughly cleaned and boiled it. He lighted the pipe and
-went on deck again, roaming to and fro alone.
-
-It occurred to him to walk into Cartagena, as far as the nearest shops,
-and buy some picture postcards to send to his mother in New Hampshire.
-He had noticed them in the windows, attractively colored, giving
-impressions really vivid of the charm and antiquity of the place. They
-would be treasured at home, probably passed around at a meeting of the
-missionary society or the Ladies’ Aid.
-
-It was an excuse to work off his restless humor. An absurd anticlimax,
-in a way, to be tied to the routine of a fruit steamer, to be separated
-from one’s sweetheart because, in the role of a stewardess, she had to
-wait upon a lot of fussy, pampered women. Richard Cary swore under his
-breath. Dreams of adventure? The sense of tingling expectancy? Bonds not
-easy to break constrained him, habits of discipline and environment. He
-was torn two ways. It was a conflict between the two Richard Carys.
-
-After finding the postal cards and mailing them, he walked through one
-quaint, shadowed street after another. Certain buildings he felt drawn
-to find, the House of the Holy Inquisition, the towered cathedral, which
-was so bold a landmark from seaward, the cloistered convents whose nuns
-had fled inland whenever the topsails of the buccaneers had gleamed off
-the Boca Grande or the Boca Chica.
-
-He was passing a café when he noticed, with a casual glance, a military
-officer seated just inside the iron grillwork of a long window. The
-officer waved a hand and called out a courteous invitation. Cary
-recognized him as Colonel Fajardo, the _Comandante_ of the Port. This
-was rather surprising. Affability was unexpected. Richard Cary was
-intrigued. The chief engineer had taken pains to warn him against this
-gentleman as both truculent and dangerous where a woman was involved.
-Apparently Colonel Fajardo wished to dispel such an impression. He
-pointed at the tiny cognac glass in front of him and suavely suggested:
-
-“Will you give me the pleasure? You are enjoying the lovely night, and
-alone? How unfortunate!”
-
-“Thank you. I can tarry a few minutes,” replied Cary. He entered the
-door and took a chair facing the Colombian colonel. The café was more
-than respectable. It was what one might have called a resort of fashion.
-A perfectly safe place in which to sit with Colonel Fajardo and sip a
-tiny glass of cognac. He was sober enough, reflected Cary. Haggard and a
-little the worse for wear, but not in the least quarrelsome. Jimmy, the
-bartender of the _Tarragona_, must have been unduly excited. No prospect
-of melodrama in such a situation as this.
-
-Nonsense, to imagine plots of revenge and murder just because a man was
-a South American and had a few drinks in him! It was true enough that
-Colonel Fajardo looked the part. To incur his dislike and then encounter
-him in a dark street might possibly be unhealthy. Apparently, however,
-he had thought discretion the better part of valor. It was off with the
-old love and on with the new.
-
-“You will stay in the _Tarragona_?” inquired the colonel, with an air of
-friendly solicitude. “You are fond of the ship and the trip to Colombian
-ports?”
-
-“Yes, thank you. It is a pleasant change after the North Atlantic. I
-hope to stay in the ship, if only to see Cartagena again.”
-
-“Ah, ha, there is no other reason, Mr. Cary? Pardon me, I do not intend
-to be personal,” murmured Colonel Fajardo. He laughed, without mirth.
-The leathery cheek was flushed. Richard Cary ignored the implication. He
-was not one to invite trouble. Let the other man show his hand.
-
-Colonel Fajardo smothered a yawn. It had been a fatiguing day. Cary
-found little to say. At his leisure he finished the glass of cognac.
-Colonel Fajardo declined another. He had an engagement to wait for a
-friend. Cary therefore bade him good-night. A courtly bow from the
-waist, a graceful phrase, and the colonel sat himself down again.
-
-Rather fortunate, reflected Richard Cary as he resumed his promenade
-through the streets of Cartagena. He would have to meet this man on
-shipboard every voyage. It might have been disagreeable, also awkward, a
-personal row with the _Comandante_ of the Port.
-
-Into a sleeping square hemmed in by houses rambled Richard Cary and came
-to the massive church of San Pedro Clavér whose bells had jangled in the
-squat tower through long centuries. At its altar the Spanish conquerors
-had knelt in ornate armor before invading the fetid jungles and daring
-the unknown mountains to seek the fabled El Dorado.
-
-Crossing the square and halting to gaze at the church, Cary happened to
-notice, from the tail of his eye, several men loitering on a corner
-underneath a balcony. The shadows somewhat obscured them. He thought
-nothing of it. One thrummed a guitar. They were singing some plaintive,
-long-drawn love song with many minor chords.
-
-The second mate of the _Tarragona_ glanced at his watch. He ought to be
-retracing his course, in the direction of the waterfront. He walked
-along one side of the square. The group of serenaders beneath the
-balcony strolled in the same direction. They were still singing. It was
-agreeable to listen to them.
-
-Richard Cary turned into a street which was no more than a gash between
-shuttered walls of stone. No lights were visible. The musicians,
-care-free and idle, drifted into the same street and followed along
-behind him. They were in no haste. The night was still young. Cary felt
-like loitering until they finished a song whose refrain carried a
-cadence sweet and wistful.
-
-They walked a little faster. The guitar and the harmonious voices were
-silenced. Richard Cary quickened his own gait and swung into a long,
-easy stride. Presently it caught his attention that the musicians had
-also increased their pace. He was not drawing away from them. This was a
-trifle odd. The Colombians of Cartagena were not apt to walk as fast as
-this. They seldom exerted themselves.
-
-As a rule, this stalwart American mariner was contemptuously careless of
-danger nor borrowed trouble of any sort. He was likely to be
-unsuspicious. Now, however, he turned to glance over his shoulder at
-these unusually energetic Colombians. His ear noted that they were not
-shod with leather. Their footfalls made a quick, soft pit-pat on the
-stone pavement. It was like the tread of furtive animals.
-
-They crossed a thin, white shaft of moonlight where a house had crumbled
-and fallen. It was discernible that they were young men, quick and
-slender, wearing white shirts, but no coats. A moment later Cary saw
-them divide, two flitting across the street.
-
-He looked ahead of him. The street was like a dark ravine. It had taken
-a slight bend. He could see one lighted window, perhaps a hundred feet
-distant, a long, yellow rectangle laced with iron bars.
-
-He was unarmed. The bamboo cane was merely ornamental. Instinct told him
-that he stood in peril of his life. These bravos of Cartagena were not
-intent on robbery. They were of the breed of the mediæval night-hawks of
-the cloak and sword, the _gente de capa y espada_, the rufflers who did
-murder for hire.
-
-Long of limb and deep-lunged, Richard Cary might have run away from them
-and saved his skin. There was no pith in these thugs of the Cartagena
-slums to overtake him in a stern chase. He flung the thought aside. By
-God, no Devon man had ever turned his back when outnumbered in these
-same narrow, frowning streets. Five to one? They paid him a handsome
-compliment.
-
-He suddenly whirled about to face the pursuers. He stood massive and
-alert, head thrust forward, like a bull about to charge. The two bravos
-who had crossed the street came gliding back to take him in the rear.
-The three whom he faced deployed to encircle him. They moved rapidly, in
-silence.
-
-He dreaded to hear a pistol shot. They were not as clumsy as that, to
-make a noise and alarm the street unless it had to be done that way.
-Richard Cary was ashamed to cry out for help. It was like striking his
-flag. He drew in his breath. His strong teeth were set tight together.
-His fists were clenched. They swung at his sides. They were like
-terrible mallets.
-
-He moved, slowly, until his back touched the wall of the overhanging
-house. He was at bay. The bravos approached him like cats. They
-entertained a profound respect for him. The most reckless one of them
-plucked a knife from his shirt. He led the attack. A quick thrust or two
-and the thing would be done. It would be like sticking a steer for beef.
-
-Colonel Fajardo was waiting at the Café Dos Hermanos for the word that
-the business had been dispatched. He had the money ready in his pocket.
-It would not do to fail. _Madre de Dios_, no! Not when a man like that
-one gave the order. He knew too much about these five bad young men of
-Cartagena. He had them by the scruff of their necks, as you might say.
-
-In spite of this, there was a reluctance to close in with the huge
-figure of the yellow-haired _Americano_ who stood so silent, so
-unafraid, with his back against the wall. He was mysterious, terrifying.
-However, there could be no delay. It was a ticklish undertaking at best,
-to kill him in an open street, in the middle of the evening. Earlier
-they had trailed the open carriage in which he rode with the woman from
-the ship, but it had been impossible to arrange anything.
-
-The leader of the bravos lunged forward, one arm upraised. He stooped
-low, to thrust up. The _Americano_ had no pistol. He would have fired it
-by now. Before that upraised arm could drive home the knife, it was
-gripped between the elbow and shoulder. Richard Cary’s hand had been as
-swift as the dart of a snake. Here was better luck than he had dared
-expect. His other hand clamped itself on the bravo’s forearm.
-
-Before the rest of them could rush in to cut him down, he leaped away
-from the wall, dragging his struggling captive by the arm. The fellow
-was scrawny, no great weight for Richard Cary to do with as he pleased.
-He planted his legs apart, tightened the grip of his two hands and swung
-the body of the helpless bravo by the arm as a handle. Sheer over his
-head he swung him, in a circle as he might have whirled a bludgeon.
-
-As he swung this extraordinary weapon he ran forward, with an agility
-amazing, dumbfounding. It cleared the path. The four ruffians scattered.
-They were crying out to each other. One dropped upon his knees. Another
-flung himself flat. A third was not quick enough. The revolving body of
-the bravo, extended straight, seemingly rigid, struck him with a
-peculiar thud. He reeled and limped into the shadows.
-
-With a laugh, Richard Cary released his grip. The bravo, converted into
-a missile, went hurtling into the middle of the street with a dreadful
-momentum. He flew as if propelled from a catapult. His body smote the
-cobblestones. It sprawled without motion.
-
-Snatching at this brief respite, Richard Cary turned and ran. It was not
-a retreat. He was running for that lighted window with the rusty iron
-bars set in the ancient mortar. The four bravos rallied. They were
-mindful of the menace of Colonel Fajardo’s wrath, as well as of the fat
-price he had promised them. They sprinted to overtake the fleeing
-_Americano_, wary to avoid such a blunder as had cracked the skull of
-their leader.
-
-Richard Cary was too quick for them. He plunged against the iron bars of
-the window. A glance showed him an empty room. There was no help there.
-He had not hoped to find it. This was his own joyous battle, to be waged
-alone. At random he laid hold of an iron bar of the grating. Both ends
-of it were embedded in mortar which had become cracked and rotten. He
-braced a knee against the stone window ledge. His broad back heaved. The
-great shoulders strained. The veins purpled his temples. Suddenly his
-back straightened. The bar came away in his hands, bending, ripping out
-of the sockets in the mortar. It had been the work of a moment.
-
-Now he had a weapon to his liking. Again he laughed. The bravos disliked
-the sound of that laugh. It made them tremble. By the light from the
-window they could see the iron bar in the hands of the colossal
-_Americano_. One of them jerked out a pistol and fired. The bullet
-clipped a lock of Cary’s yellow hair.
-
-Before the rascal could pull trigger again, the iron bar smote him a
-slanting blow on the neck. He crumpled upon the cobblestones. His neck
-was beyond mending. There were three of them left. Two took to their
-heels. Behind them the iron bar beat the air like a flail. They moaned
-prayers to San Pedro Clavér, to the Blessed Virgin herself. They were
-murderers grown suddenly religious.
-
-One of them stumbled. Death fanned him with its breath. He tried to
-wheel, knife in hand. Over him loomed the dread figure of the giant with
-the charmed life. The bravo was of a mind to clasp his hands and wail
-for mercy. The iron bar fell. It crashed against his shoulder and
-crushed it like putty. He rolled over, kicking and making queer noises
-in his throat.
-
-Richard Cary halted in his tracks. One lone bravo was in sight, fleeing
-for the slums which had spewed him forth. He ran with the staccato
-pit-pat-pat of feet that spurned the cobblestones. Never in his life had
-he run with such speed. A bullet could not have overtaken him.
-
-Four of the gang had been disposed of. Where was the fifth? Richard Cary
-was puzzled. He turned to search the street behind him. As he moved, a
-shadow moved with him. It was the shadow of the fifth bravo. He had
-recovered his wits, this cool and vigilant one who had a flair for
-dexterous assassination. Instead of exposing himself to a blow from that
-bone-crushing iron bar, he had hugged the nearest wall, awaiting an
-opportunity, keeping himself at Richard Cary’s back, shifting whenever
-he did. He hunted like a ferret.
-
-From a trousers pocket he withdrew a bit of rubber hose filled with bird
-shot, flexible and heavy. He slipped his hand through a loop of cord.
-The weapon hung from his wrist. In the other hand was a knife with a
-thin blade.
-
-Unable to fathom the disappearance of the fifth bravo, Cary delayed an
-instant longer. The iron bar was poised in his two hands. Just behind
-him moved a shadow. Suddenly he seemed to sense its presence. He
-stiffened and turned his head. It was a fraction of a second too late. A
-blow on the head stunned him. His eyes were filled with fire. His
-strength left him. He toppled forward with a groan. The iron bar clanged
-on the pavement.
-
-As he fell, a knife was driven between his shoulder blades. He felt it
-sear like a red coal. A tremor passed through his mighty frame. Then he
-stretched prone and inanimate, an arm twisted under his head.
-
-The only sound in the dark, narrow street was the pit-pat-pat of a man
-running away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
- THE TROUBLED HEART OF TERESA
-
-Teresa Fernandez, the trim, immaculate stewardess, on her way to a
-passenger’s room with a breakfast tray glanced into the dining-saloon.
-Richard Cary’s chair was vacant. He had not yet come down. Usually he
-was punctual. It had been a pleasure to see him sitting there, so big
-and clean and wholesome, always good-humored, with a smile for every
-one. Teresa was disappointed at missing this first morning glimpse of
-him. It had not happened before.
-
-She visited several staterooms and was blithe to the ladies who were too
-indolent to bestir themselves. Then the chief steward detained her with
-a list of the ship’s laundry which required checking up. This meant an
-inspection of the shelves in the linen room. As soon as she was free,
-the stewardess hastened to the nook beside the stairway and the wicker
-chair, on the chance of intercepting Richard Cary.
-
-Bad luck this time! He must have come and gone. His chair was empty. She
-went to the foot of the stairs and beckoned her friend, the second
-steward. Mr. Cary had not been down, he told her, nor had he ordered
-breakfast sent to his room. A hearty man who had never missed a meal
-before! Perhaps he felt under the weather. The climate of Cartagena was
-trying for a stranger, and Mr. Cary had worked all day in the sun. The
-amiable young second steward decided to find out for himself.
-
-Teresa hovered near a doorway of the promenade deck. She was anxious for
-Richard Cary’s health, but it would not do to show it. She had been
-careless already, perhaps, in inviting gossip. It was unwise for a woman
-compelled to live in a ship. Busy-bodies were eager to carry tales to
-the captain’s ears. The code of behavior was rigid and she had always
-avoided any appearance of fondness for a shipmate. She had treated them
-all alike and her record was clear of the breath of scandal.
-
-When the second steward returned from his errand to the officers’
-quarters, his face told her that something was wrong. She was afraid to
-hear news of an illness. Her heart pounded. The words flew to her lips:
-
-“Is it the fever? Has the doctor been up to see him?”
-
-The second steward shook his head mysteriously. He motioned Teresa into
-the library where they could be alone. With an effort she masked her
-agitation. She could be a clever actress. Richard Cary was merely
-another friend of hers.
-
-“Vamoosed! Flown away!” exclaimed the second steward. “Mr. Cary is not
-in the ship. His bed wasn’t slept in last night, Miss Fernandez. He was
-supposed to go on watch at midnight. Now what do you think of that?”
-
-“He is not in the ship?” she echoed, trying to keep her voice hushed.
-“Who told you so?”
-
-“The third officer. A nice kid. He’s all fussed up about it. Mr. Cary is
-a regular tin god to him. You know what the rest of ’em are saying. Mr.
-Cary hit the beach last night and got soused. His first trip down this
-way, and the Cartagena rum slipped one over on him. He’ll turn up with a
-head on him before the ship sails. It will sure put him in wrong with
-the old man.”
-
-“Who dares say these wicked things?” blazed Teresa. “Mr. Cary is not a
-common sailor bum. Thank you very much, Frank. If you find out any more,
-please come and tell me. It is very strange.”
-
-The second steward was inclined to linger and discuss it, but Teresa’s
-manner dismissed him. She had no intention of betraying her emotions.
-This made it difficult to press her inquiries, to attempt to discover
-the facts in the case. Her head was throbbing. She felt tired. In order
-to be alone a few minutes she went to her room and bolted the door.
-
-She had returned to the ship with Richard Cary before ten o’clock. He
-had said good-night at the gangway. A little later she had sent the deck
-steward to his room with the briar pipe. He had returned his thanks.
-
-With a gesture of disgust she flung aside the theory that he might have
-sneaked ashore later for a quiet spree in Cartagena, wine and women,
-like so many of the men she had sailed with. Concerning the masculine
-sex she had few illusions left. Respectable shipmasters, passengers of
-pious repute at home, sporting young officers whose blood was hot, she
-had seen them yield to the lures of foreign ports.
-
-Ah, thank God, Richard Cary was not that kind. In her eyes he was the
-perfect knight without fear and without reproach. It was now she
-realized how much she loved him, a love untarnished by the jealousies
-and suspicions that were native to her. Mere passion would have made her
-tremble with dreadful doubts that Don Ricardo had amused himself with
-her as a pastime and then had roved ashore to slake his desires with
-wanton girls.
-
-Teresa wept a little, oppressed by the mystery of it, consumed by an
-anxiety that scorched her. Superstitious, she wished she had not let him
-touch the galleon’s bell in the _patio_ of Señor Ramon Bazán. Perhaps
-the bell was accursed, bringing misfortune as well as foretelling it.
-Then she courageously fought down her quaking trepidation and wild
-fancies. Richard Cary was strong and unconquerable, a man to defy evil
-or disaster.
-
-He was not in the ship. He had been absent most of the night. He had not
-slept in his room. Either he had gone ashore on some lawful business of
-his own, as an afterthought, or he had fallen overboard. Ridiculous,
-this! Teresa permitted herself a whimsical smile. It dimpled the corners
-of her mouth. _Valgame Dios_, he would have made a splash to awaken the
-whole harbor and make the ship rock at her moorings. Ha, ha, it would
-have made a tidal wave on the beach and floated the fishing boats into
-the streets.
-
-Teresa Fernandez bathed her eyes, powdered her nose, smoothed her hair,
-and then emerged from her room. The ship was to sail at noon. Passengers
-from Cartagena were beginning to come on board—a rich Colombian family
-for the A suite, the mother very stout and overdressed, dapper father of
-a dusky complexion, a wailing baby, children of various sizes, a
-frightened nurse, innumerable parcels and bags. The stewardess was
-demanded to talk Spanish to them and bring order out of this domestic
-chaos.
-
-As soon as possible, she ran on deck. Her eager vision searched the
-bridge, the cargo hatches, the wharf. The boyish third officer was at
-the gangway. She tried to speak casually.
-
-“I heard Mr. Cary was missing. Has he come back yet?”
-
-“Not a sign of him, Miss Fernandez. Darned if I know what to make of it.
-He was as steady as a clock. Reliable was his middle name. A
-quartermaster saw him leave the ship last night, about ten o’clock. The
-last he saw of Mr. Cary in the moonlight, he was walking into town. He
-didn’t feel sleepy, I guess, and went out for a stroll. And then he fell
-off the earth.”
-
-“It is very, very queer, is it not?” sighed Teresa. “’Most twelve hours
-away from the ship! Has the captain tried to find him? Has he sent
-anybody into Cartagena? Has he ’phoned to the police?”
-
-“Not that I know of,” answered the third officer. He hesitated and
-looked to right and left before going on to say: “It’s my notion that
-Captain Sterry won’t look for him, from something I heard him spill to
-the first mate. There is some hard feeling between them, Miss Fernandez.
-I can’t give you the dope on it, but the skipper doesn’t seem a mite
-broken-hearted over leaving Mr. Cary behind. He hasn’t lifted a finger
-to find him, as far as I can make out. It’s a rotten situation, believe
-me.”
-
-“And you tell me the captain don’t care what has happened to Mr. Cary?”
-breathed Teresa, aghast at this disclosure. “He will stand the second
-mate’s watch on the run back to New York? I have been at sea as much as
-you, young man, and I give you my word this is too queer for me.”
-
-To desert the ship herself, to use her own intelligent energy in the
-quest of the missing man, this was Teresa’s natural impulse. She knew
-Cartagena, on the surface intimately, beneath the surface by hearsay. It
-would be foolish, perhaps, to do such a thing until the very last
-moment. She would wait before making up her mind, wait until the whistle
-blew to cast off from the wharf.
-
-Her superior officer, the chief steward, had seldom found fault with
-Miss Fernandez, but now he noticed her frequent tours on deck and the
-interruptions in her routine of duty. He was a fat Swiss who perspired
-copiously and eternally prowled through the kitchens, the pantries, the
-corridors in search of delinquencies. A pudgy finger beckoned the
-stewardess, and a hoarse voice barked:
-
-“Miss Fernandez, I haf got to call you down. You vill lose your job mit
-me if you don’t mind it better. Vat is all dis rubberin’ and beatin’ it
-upstairs and down again? Here is dot woman in number seventeen ringin’
-like hell and tellin’ her cabin steward she can’t get you.”
-
-“That woman in seventeen ought to be poisoned, Mr. Schwartz,” sniffed
-Teresa. “All she does is eat, eat. I know what she wants now, orange
-juice and biscuit and a little fruit. My gracious, for breakfast I took
-that woman a cereal, a melon, bacon and eggs, fish, fried potatoes, and
-a stack of toast. She is suffering with a nervous breakdown and must be
-careful of herself, she tells me. You let her ring is my advice, Mr.
-Schwartz.”
-
-The chief steward mopped his dripping jowls and sulkily retorted: “Dot
-woman pays big money for the cruise, a room mit bath, Miss Fernandez. Go
-chase yourself on the job, and no more runnin’ all over the ship like a
-crazy girl. Vas you smugglin’ or somethings? You mind your step. I can
-get plenty of goot stewardesses in New York for the _Tarragona_.”
-
-Teresa’s white teeth closed over her lower lip. She detested this puffy
-swine who was in a position to bully her. He saw the temper flare in her
-black eyes and awaited the explosion. To his surprise she held herself
-in check. Her voice was almost indifferent as she replied:
-
-“Yes, Mr. Schwartz. I will do as you say. I am feeling nervous this
-morning, not very well. I need to go on deck to get the air. But you
-will not have to scold me again.”
-
-The stewardess hurried away. Mr. Schwartz gazed after her and sopped his
-bulging neck. The moods of Miss Fernandez were beyond him. Competent as
-she was, he would have preferred a Swiss or German woman. These Spanish
-girls were flighty. You couldn’t keep up mit ’em.
-
-A few minutes later Teresa whisked into the passage leading to the room
-of Mr. McClement, the sagacious chief engineer. Here was a world
-secluded from the passenger quarters, a grimy, hard-working world in
-which moved scantily clad men with towels thrown over their shoulders.
-Teresa was safe from the espionage of the apoplectic chief steward. She
-rapped on a door which was opened by Mr. McClement, whose lean, freckled
-countenance was white with lather. He waved a razor in a gesture of
-cordial invitation.
-
-Teresa entered. He removed a disorderly heap of books and clothing from
-a chair and offered no apologies.
-
-“Just came out of the shower and was shifting into fresh duds,” he
-explained. “Been taking one of those condemned winches to pieces. The
-misbegotten machines go wrong every voyage. What can you expect, though,
-with these nigger donkeymen we pick up from port to port? I wanted to
-take a turn ashore, but couldn’t get off sooner. It is Dick Cary, of
-course. Where the deuce is he? Any theories to offer, Miss Fernandez?”
-
-“Nothing at all, Mr. McClement. Not one thing at all,” she said, no
-longer trying to hide what she felt. “You are his best friend in the
-ship and—and he is a friend of mine, too. You know. You are so wise
-that it is no use fooling you.”
-
-“I shouldn’t say that the large and ingenuous Cary had baffled my
-perceptions,” was the dry comment. “When I last saw him he was wearing
-his heart on his sleeve. God made him that way. The bigger they are the
-harder they fall.”
-
-“And you honestly think he fell for me?” cried Teresa, with her most
-enchanting smile. It was like a flash of sunshine in a rifted cloud.
-
-“His symptoms convinced me, Miss Fernandez. Humph! This pleases you, I
-see, but it gets us nowhere. Well, he didn’t go ashore to pull the town
-to pieces. I know him better than that. The captain makes that excuse
-for leaving him adrift.”
-
-“You believe in Mr. Cary, just as I do? Ah, I could kiss you for that. I
-have heard those horrid lies on deck—”
-
-“Pardon me, while I remove this lather, and perhaps you can find a dry
-spot,” he interrupted. “A kiss from you would be a noteworthy event in
-the somber chronicle of existence.”
-
-“For shame, Mr. McClement. How can you joke with me?”
-
-“Very well, then. In all seriousness, I am as uneasy about Cary as you
-are. I still take it for granted that he will turn up with some
-perfectly good alibi. This feeling is, I presume, because he is such a
-husky, two-fisted beggar with a level head on his shoulders. No
-greenhorn, either—accustomed to knocking about strange ports at all
-hours. But, confound him, he hasn’t turned up. You can’t get away from
-that, can you? And I don’t know where to look if I go buzzing around
-Cartagena for the hour or two before the ship sails. I did call up the
-central police office soon after breakfast. My Spanish is bad and a
-congenital idiot was on the other end of the line. I got nothing at
-all.”
-
-“These police of Cartagena,” sighed Teresa. “They are a bunch of nuts.”
-
-“Rather well put,” agreed McClement, who was no stranger to the Spanish
-Main.
-
-“Is there anybody that hates Mr. Cary?” she asked, expressing the fear
-that had been lurking in her troubled soul. “I am foolish, maybe, but I
-cannot make myself forget that Colonel Fajardo. I dreamed about him last
-night, a terrible dream. I woke up crying. Do you believe in dreams, Mr.
-McClement?”
-
-“In this instance I don’t really have to,” said he, rather glad to have
-her broach this sinister topic. He had been reluctant to alarm her.
-
-“Then you know something about this Colonel Fajardo that is not a
-dream?” exclaimed Teresa. “It has to do with Mr. Cary?”
-
-“Possibly. You are a sensible young woman, in spots, Miss Fernandez. And
-I can’t imagine your kicking your heels in hysterics. Besides, my room
-is too cluttered up for that sort of thing. I warned Cary yesterday
-afternoon to keep a weather eye lifted for this saturnine _Comandante_
-of the Port. He was drinking hard and the liquor seemed to make him
-wicked instead of drunk. You know what I mean? I got the impression that
-he had a provocation. You threw him over, I believe. I was looking on,
-last voyage and this. The emotions of Colonel Fajardo were quite
-obvious.”
-
-“I should say so,” exclaimed Teresa. “The whole ship knew he was daffy
-about me. And he is now jealous of Mr. Cary? He has plenty of reason to
-be so. I am proud to say it to _you_, Mr. McClement, that Richard Cary
-is much more to me than my life. You are his friend and I can tell you.”
-
-“Mutual, I should say,” was the comment. “You bowled him clean off his
-pins. The splendor of youth and romance! I am envious. It seems a
-frightful pity to upset you, my dear girl, but I do suspect this Fajardo
-blackguard. Cary laughed at me. Piffle, melodrama, and all that.”
-
-“Yes, Mr. McClement, he would laugh. But I saw how that Colonel Fajardo
-looked at me when I told him I would not marry him. I swear to you, I
-crossed myself and said my prayers. And I saw him looking at Mr. Cary.
-Ah, now you understand why I had awful dreams last night.”
-
-“Hum-m, and he saw you go ashore with Cary in the evening, Miss
-Fernandez. I noticed him stalking about and muttering to himself. He
-left the ship soon after that.”
-
-“Ah, I believe it was a dream to warn me,” murmured Teresa, “but it was
-too late to save Mr. Cary.”
-
-“Oh, I won’t say it is as bad as all that. I’ll toddle ashore right away
-and have a look around. Ten to one Dick Cary will come galloping aboard
-just before the whistle blows, as fresh as paint and with some
-extraordinary yarn or other.”
-
-“You wish to jolly poor Teresa Fernandez,” said she. “Are you sure the
-captain will not help to find him?”
-
-“Rather! Cary was unlucky enough to puncture his self-esteem, a most
-painful wound. It was the plump flapper with the bobbed hair—Captain
-Sterry was on the bridge with her—Cary snickered. And there you are.
-One of those momentous trifles. Life is like that.”
-
-“I know,” said Teresa. “Captain Sterry is mushy sometimes. I have seen
-it with some other young girls. I know men pretty well. That was enough
-to queer Mr. Cary, all right. Well, Mr. McClement, I must go back to my
-job. You will tell me, if you find out anything?”
-
-“Like a shot. Cary is not going to lose _you_ if he can help it.
-Remember that. You can gamble on him to break out of almost any kind of
-a jam he gets into. I hope to God you and I are a pair of false alarms.”
-
-Teresa had no more to say. The chief engineer was inserting the buttons
-in the cuffs of a fresh shirt. She walked slowly along the passage,
-scarcely seeing where she went. Richard Cary was dead. She said the
-words to herself. They hammered in her brain, over and over again, like
-the strokes of the galleon’s bell. No other reason accounted for his
-disappearance.
-
-The air in the passage reeked with steam and oil. It was also intensely
-hot. She felt faint. Steadying herself, she opened a door to the lower
-deck. She leaned on the railing and stared at the blue harbor and the
-dazzling sea beyond. A slight breeze fanned her cheek. The vitality
-returned to her lithe and slender body. This was no time to be weak, to
-play the coward. She had never flinched from life. It was something to
-be a Fernandez of Cartagena. They had never whimpered when they held the
-losing cards.
-
-Mr. Schwartz, the corpulent chief steward, prowling in search of whom he
-might annoy, discovered her at the railing. He began to growl, noticed
-her pallor, and changed his tune to say:
-
-“You haf a sick feeling, Miss Fernandez? You look like you vas all in.
-Why didn’t you told me so? You go lay down. Let ’em holler. I vill be
-the sweet leetle stewardess for an hour or so.”
-
-“I am not sick, Mr. Schwartz,” she gratefully assured him. “Dizzy, a
-little bit. I will go sit in my wicker chair till somebody rings.”
-
-He grunted, slapped her on the shoulder with a sticky paw, and lumbered
-off to find victims more deserving of his wrath. Before sitting down to
-rest, Teresa wearily climbed to the promenade deck.
-
-She was in time to see Colonel Fajardo ascend the gangway steps. His
-demeanor was haughty and dignified. The lines in his harsh face seemed
-to be graven a little deeper, its expression more predatory than usual.
-He was puffy under the eyes. A nervous twitching affected his upper lip.
-It was the morning after. Whiskey and cognac had not been good even for
-a man of blood and iron, a man with a copper lining.
-
-It was unusual for him to come to the wharf so late on sailing day. He
-made some suave explanation to Captain Sterry who happened to meet him
-on deck. Teresa Fernandez stood watching them. She was tensely
-observant. Would she be able to read the soul of Colonel Fajardo? She
-must try. It was a throw of the dice. He was striding toward the
-smoking-room when she accosted him in Spanish:
-
-“Pardon, Colonel Fajardo. You omit to say good-morning to me. Am I no
-longer the lovely flower of Cartagena?”
-
-“_Car-r-amba!_ I am as blind as an owl, not to see the adorable Teresa,”
-he jauntily responded. “You were shy, my little one. Not so much like
-the rose to-day. White like the lily, but no less beautiful.”
-
-“A tongue as ready as his sword,” smiled Teresa. “What a devil with the
-women! Have you heard? The second officer of the ship cannot be found.
-It is sensational. In our peaceful, sleepy Cartagena of all places,
-where there are no wicked people to molest a sailor ashore!”
-
-“Very true, señorita,” he gravely returned. “I am amazed. Captain Sterry
-mentioned the matter just now—the big second mate with the yellow hair.
-Not so easy to mislay him, by the Apostles. A dear friend of yours, too!
-It is distressing, and I sympathize with all my soul. Alas, I am in
-darkness, with no information for you. And the ship sails in two hours.
-It will be an unhappy voyage—for the friends of the deserter, Second
-Officer Cary.”
-
-“Not a deserter, Colonel Fajardo,” she protested, very careful of her
-words and icily restrained. “You are, of course, acquainted with the
-chief of the municipal police. He is your brother-in-law? If a ship’s
-officer was in trouble, it would be reported to you as _Comandante_ of
-the Port?”
-
-“Doubtless I should hear of it, my lovely one,” he gravely assured her.
-“This man you speak of may have fled from Cartagena by night. Possibly
-he had planned to escape into hiding in order to avoid the consequences
-of some crime committed elsewhere. Has this occurred to you?”
-
-“No, I am a stupid woman,” said Teresa. “A thousand thanks, Colonel
-Fajardo.”
-
-“Permit me to kiss your hand, Señorita Fernandez. It is my condolence,
-my feeling of pity for you, to lose such a friend as the valiant, the
-enormous, the sentimental Señor Cary. Would that I might lighten your
-sorrow.”
-
-She snatched her hand away and regarded him with a steadfast and
-penetrating scrutiny. His voice had held a note of flagrant mockery. Her
-ear was quick to detect it. His gloating smile also betrayed him. Yes,
-she was looking into his soul. It was like the gift of second sight.
-What she saw there made her shiver. Unwittingly he had made confession.
-Teresa Fernandez knew. His guilt had ceased to be a torturing surmise.
-
-She let him pass into the smoking-room. Then she went down to her own
-stateroom. As she entered it, the faint sound of the ship’s bell on the
-bridge came thin and metallic. _Ting, ting—ting, ting!_ Four bells! Ten
-o’clock! Two hours until sailing time. It was useless to wait and hope
-for Richard Cary to return at the last moment. Teresa was now convinced
-of this.
-
-For some time she sat lost in thought. To a knock on the door she paid
-no heed. She was quite calm. The only sign of nervousness was the
-pit-pat-pat of one little white shoe on the rug. She rose and looked in
-the mirror. What she saw was unlike the bonny Teresa Fernandez with the
-red lips, the warm tint in the olive cheek, the eyes that had shone with
-the joy of living only yesterday. All expression seemed to have been
-ironed from her face. It was blank and very solemn.
-
-She lifted a rosary from the nail where it hung at the head of her bed.
-She fingered the beads. Her lips moved. Then she placed the rosary
-around her neck, underneath the plain white shirt-waist of her
-stewardess’s garb. There was no indecision, no struggle.
-
-Presently she opened a drawer at the bottom of the closet and held up a
-wooden box. In it was an automatic pistol, so small that she could
-almost hide it in her hand. It had been advisable to have the little
-pistol with her when ashore at night in seaports where the streets led
-through the haunts of rough men.
-
-She slipped it into the pocket of the white apron. She would deal out
-justice, if needs be, and willingly pay the price as became a woman who
-had loved and lost, who was a Fernandez of Cartagena.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
- THE MAN WHO LIED
-
-These last hours before the sailing of the _Tarragona_ made the indolent
-wharf bestir itself against its inclination. It was a pity to disturb
-the tranquil noontide when all Cartagena closed the shutters and went to
-sleep. In its baking, quivering streets the proverbial pin would have
-dropped with a loud report. However, for every departing passenger many
-friends exerted themselves to go down to the steamer, even though the
-voyage might be no farther away than Santa Marta or Porto Colombia. The
-promenade deck was like the stage of an opera, tears, embraces,
-perfervid dialogue, animated choruses surrounding the actors.
-
-The railroad whose tracks ran out upon the wharf shared this intense
-excitement. Belated freight cars filled with hides and sacks of coffee
-came rolling down in frantic haste. It was always that way, a general
-air of surprise, almost of consternation, that the steamer actually
-proposed to sail on time instead of _mañana_. Why, she was mad enough to
-leave passengers, influential people of Colombia, and heaps of coffee
-and hides, even if they were only a few hours late. It was discourteous,
-to say the least.
-
-Amid this confusion and noise, Colonel Fajardo moved like an imperious
-dictator. He was unmistakably the _Comandante_ of the Port. Thievish
-idlers fled from the gaunt figure in the uniform of white with the
-medals and gold stripes. A scowl and a curse, and the traffic untangled
-itself to let a porter pass with a trunk on his back or an American
-tourist buying a green parakeet and the beaded bags woven by the Indian
-women.
-
-Teresa Fernandez desired another interview with Colonel Fajardo. It was
-imperative. To make a scene on board the ship, however, was repugnant to
-her sense of decorum, of her fidelity to the Company’s service. This
-difficulty perplexed her. She was jealous of the ship’s good name. She
-was a deep-water sailor with a sailor’s loyalties and affections for the
-ships she served in.
-
-Her eyes followed the movements of Colonel Fajardo who found much to do
-on the wharf. She had certain questions to ask him. Liar that he was,
-the odds were all against his answering anything truly, but the chance
-would be offered him. Justice demanded it. Intently she watched him as
-he stalked to and fro. She was singularly unmoved by impatience. What
-was destined to happen would happen.
-
-No longer did her gaze, questing and wistful, turn landward in the hope
-of seeing Richard Cary come back to the _Tarragona_. There was no such
-thing as hope.
-
-The cargo sheds extended almost the length of the wharf. Between them
-and the ship were the railroad tracks and the entrance from the
-custom-house gate. On the farther side of the cargo sheds was a narrow
-strip of wharf where smaller vessels could tie up, mostly Colombian
-sailing craft that traded with the villages on the lagoon or made short
-trips coastwise. Just now the graceful masts of one schooner lifted
-above the roofs of the sheds.
-
-It did not escape Teresa’s notice when Colonel Fajardo passed around the
-outer end of the cargo sheds to the narrow strip of wharf behind them.
-He was screened from the sight of the ship; also from the laborers at
-the freight cars and the hoisting tackle. He had betaken himself into a
-certain seclusion which offered Teresa the opportunity she craved.
-
-Unheeded she tripped down to the wharf. It was usual for her to pass to
-and fro on farewell errands, perhaps to purchase curios for the ladies
-who were unable to bargain in Spanish. And there were always friends,
-residents of Cartagena, with whom she enjoyed exchanging greetings. The
-sailing hour was likely to be a gala time for Señorita Teresa Fernandez.
-She was the most popular stewardess of the steamers in this service.
-
-Slipping aside, she followed Colonel Fajardo around the outer end of the
-long cargo shed. He had been on the deck of the Colombian schooner
-alongside and was just stepping back to the string-piece of the wharf.
-Evidently he had found no one in the schooner. Whatever the purpose of
-his visit may have been, it was banished from his mind by the sight of
-Teresa Fernandez. He appeared startled.
-
-Walking a little way along the edge of the wharf, he was abreast of the
-schooner’s stern when Teresa confronted him. He halted there, lifted his
-cap with an elaborate flourish, and signified that he could not be
-detained. Teresa put a hand in the pocket of her apron. She kept it
-there while she said:
-
-“Please do not move, Colonel Fajardo. It will be unfortunate for your
-health. I am so glad that you came to this quiet spot where we are not
-interrupted. I could not sail without giving myself the pleasure of
-saying adieu. The other side of the wharf is so crowded, so
-conspicuous.”
-
-He was not deceived into surmising that this desirable woman had
-repented of her coldness. It was no coquetry. Her voice had a biting
-edge. Her face was even whiter than when he had met her on deck.
-Uneasily he glanced behind him and then over her shoulder. They were
-alone and unobserved. The Colombian schooner, her crew ashore, rocked
-gently at its mooring lines. Beyond it was a wide stretch of azure
-harbor upon which nothing moved except a far distant canoe as tiny as a
-water bug. Between this strip of wharf and the shore was a high wooden
-barrier with a closed gate. It was a curious isolation, with so much
-life and motion on the other side of the cargo sheds, only a few yards
-away.
-
-Colonel Fajardo bared his teeth in a forced smile as he said:
-
-“As I remember, señorita, you were not so anxious for the pleasure of my
-company yesterday. I am, indeed, flattered to have you seek me out for
-an adieu, but I must return to my duties. The _Tarragona_ will soon blow
-her whistle. Have you anything of importance to say before you sail?”
-
-Teresa removed her hand from the pocket of the white apron. Her hand
-almost covered the little automatic pistol. The colonel caught a glimpse
-of it, this object of blued steel with a round orifice no bigger than a
-pill. He was still standing close to the edge of the wharf. Astonished,
-he almost lost his balance. Recovering himself, he snatched at Teresa’s
-hand. She eluded him with a quick backward step.
-
-The pistol was aimed straight at the belt of Colonel Fajardo. He stood
-rigid, his posture that of a man mysteriously bereft of volition.
-Carefully Teresa lowered her hand until the pistol nestled in the pocket
-of her apron, concealed from view, but the short barrel bulged the white
-fabric. It was still pointed at the middle of Colonel Fajardo.
-Instinctively he flattened his stomach until it was like a board. He had
-a shrinking feeling in that region, like that of a man who has fasted
-many days.
-
-Thus they stood facing each other in a tableau as still as a picture.
-When Teresa Fernandez, spoke, it was not loudly, but her voice vibrated
-like a bell.
-
-“Place your hands on your hips, outside your coat, Colonel Fajardo. And
-be careful to keep them so. Your own pistol is in a holster inside your
-coat. I have noticed it there. It will be unwise for you to try to get
-it.”
-
-Her captive’s gaze was wild and roving. He dared not cry out. This
-hell-begotten woman carried death in a touch of her finger. Lunacy
-afflicted her. It was a predicament for such a man as himself, a
-situation incredibly fantastic. His gaze returned to her face, and also
-to that little bulge in the pocket of her apron. It gave him the effect
-of being cross-eyed. The nervous twitching of his upper lip was like a
-grimace. He was grotesque.
-
-Teresa Fernandez had no time to waste. She asked, peremptorily: “Where
-is the second officer of the _Tarragona_? What misfortune occurred to
-Señor Cary in Cartagena last night? The truth, Colonel Fajardo, or, as
-God beholds me, I shall have to kill you.”
-
-He could not make himself believe that the game was up. He had twisted
-out of many a tight corner. It was impossible for him to conceive of
-being beaten by a woman. He would endeavor to cajole this one, to play
-for time. Her nerves would presently break under the strain. He was
-watching her like a cat. Let her waver for an instant and he would
-pounce. He answered her questions in the earnest tones of a man who
-lived on intimate terms with truth.
-
-“By the holy spirit of my dead mother, señorita, your words are like the
-blank wall of the shed yonder. They mean nothing. You have deluded
-yourself. Some malicious person in the ship must have led your mind
-astray. I have made enemies. Why not? It is evidence of my integrity and
-courage. What is this big second officer of the _Tarragona_ to me? I
-have not even spoken to the man. He is a stranger.”
-
-Teresa’s hand moved slightly in the pocket of her apron. The little
-bulge indicated that the orifice of the pistol was pointed somewhat
-higher than the colonel’s belt. He perceived this. His two hands rested
-upon his hips, outside the coat. They seemed to have been glued there.
-His leathery cheek blanched to a dirty hue. He swallowed with an effort.
-The cords stood out on his neck.
-
-Solemnly Teresa Fernandez framed her accusation in words: “You have
-killed Señor Ricardo Cary. You yourself, Colonel Fajardo, or more likely
-by the hands of others. If you are ready to confess it, I will permit
-the Government of Cartagena to decree the punishment. It will be left to
-the law and the courts. Do you confess?”
-
-“Confess to what, my little one?” he blurted, with a touch of the old
-bravado. “Careful! You are in a strange frenzy, and that pistol may
-explode before you know it.”
-
-“I will know it,” said Teresa, “and you will know it, Colonel Fajardo. I
-am familiar with the little pistol. For the last time, are you a guilty
-or an innocent man?”
-
-“As innocent as the Holy Ghost—” he protested, but his voice stuck in
-his throat, for he read death in the girl’s unflinching glance.
-Desperately he attempted to snatch at the holster on his hip, with one
-swift motion to take her by surprise and slay her where she stood. It
-was instinctive, like the leap of a trapped wolf.
-
-Teresa read his sinister purpose. If he was swift, she was the swifter.
-She raised her hand from the pocket of her apron. It paused for a small
-fraction of a second and almost touched a bit of red ribbon attached to
-a medal on the left breast of Colonel Fajardo’s handsome white coat. He
-stammered thickly:
-
-“Ah, wait—wretched slut of a woman—Jesus, have mercy—oh, oh, my
-heart—may you roast in hell—”
-
-The report of Teresa’s pistol had been no louder than the crack of a
-whip. One report, no more. When a bullet had drilled clean through a
-man’s heart, it was unnecessary to fire again.
-
-Colonel Fajardo’s hands flew from his hips. They were beating the air.
-His mouth was slack, like that of an idiot. He blinked as if immensely
-bewildered. His chin fell forward. His body swayed tipsily. Teresa stood
-waiting, her left hand clasped to her bosom. It was the end. She had
-seen death come by violence to men on shipboard.
-
-The unforeseen occurred when Colonel Fajardo, swaying and sagging,
-tottered backward and disappeared. He had been standing close to the
-edge of the wharf. His fingers clawed the empty air as he plunged
-downward, barely clearing the overhanging stern of the Colombian
-schooner.
-
-Teresa laid hold of a piling and stared down at a patch of frothy water.
-Small waves ran away from it in widening circles. They lapped against
-the schooner’s rudder. Nothing else was visible. Presently, however, a
-huge black fin, triangular, sheared the surface like a blade. Another
-like it glistened and vanished. There was the sheen of white bellies as
-the greedy sharks of Cartagena harbor swirled downward into the green
-water.
-
-Teresa Fernandez averted her eyes. The body of Colonel Fajardo would
-never be seen again. He was obliterated. She let the pistol fall through
-a crack between the planks of the wharf. Then she walked to the side of
-the cargo shed and leaned against a timber. She had pictured herself as
-almost instantly discovered and seized, the body of Colonel Fajardo
-lying upon the wharf. For this she had prepared herself. She had been
-willing to pay the price.
-
-Now she realized that her deed was undiscovered. The isolation was
-unbroken. The harsh commotion of the ship’s winches, the rattle of the
-freight cars as the switching engine bumped them about, the yells of the
-Colombian stevedores, had made the whip-like report of the pistol
-inaudible. And the whole thing had been so quickly done. Perhaps two or
-three minutes she had stood there and talked with Colonel Fajardo.
-
-A revulsion of feeling shook the soul of Teresa Fernandez. Why should
-she suffer bitter shame and die in expiation of a righteous act? It was
-no crime in her sight. She had administered justice because otherwise it
-would have been forever thwarted. And, in the last resort, had she not
-fired the little pistol in self-defense? These thoughts raced through
-her brain during the moments while she leaned against the timber of the
-cargo shed.
-
-She mustered strength. Her knees ceased trembling. A hint of color
-returned to her olive cheek. Her lips were not so bloodless. Head erect,
-she walked along the narrow strip of wharf, but not to pass around the
-outer end of the shed. Instead of this, she sought the shoreward exit
-through the high wooden barrier. The gate was fastened, she found, but
-another way of escape led through an empty room in which baggage was
-sometimes stored for examination. She passed through this room and
-emerged on the railroad tracks.
-
-Between two freight cars she made her way and so to the custom-house
-gate and the main entrance from the open square beyond. In a shady spot
-squatted an Indian woman with beaded bags displayed on her lap. Another
-drowsed beside a pile of grass baskets. Teresa paused to buy two beaded
-bags and a basket.
-
-Just then a carriage dashed into the open square. A portly Colombian
-gentleman and his wife called out cordial salutations to Señorita
-Fernandez. A small boy fairly wriggled with joy as he flew out of the
-carriage to fling both arms around the waist of the stewardess of the
-_Tarragona_.
-
-She welcomed them gayly. They had made the southward voyage with her
-several months earlier, _en route_ to their home in Bogotá. Teresa
-walked back to the ship with them, the small boy clinging to her hand
-and piping excitedly in Spanish. Would she show him again how to play
-those wonderful games of cards? He had forgotten some of them. And the
-story of the jaguar that sat on the roof of the peon’s hut and clawed a
-hole through the thatch and tumbled right in?
-
-Yes, Teresa would tell him all the tales she could remember. There would
-be plenty of time during the voyage to New York. In this manner the
-stewardess returned to the ship, beaded bags and grass basket on one
-arm, the happy urchin from Bogotá clinging to the other. The youthful
-third officer was at the gangway. He halted her to say:
-
-“Nothing doing. Not a sign of Mr. Cary. The chief engineer drove into
-town. He may dig up a clue, but I doubt it.”
-
-“Mr. McClement is a sharp one,” said she, “but the time is too short.”
-
-“Sure! It seems as if that chesty gink, Colonel Fajardo, might have
-helped. He ought to be wise to what goes on in Cartagena.”
-
-“Ah, yes, it would seem so,” said Teresa as she stepped on board the
-ship. She found the staterooms of the family from Bogotá and saw that
-nothing was lacking for their comfort. Then she proceeded to her own
-room, but not for long. She washed her hands, scrubbing them with
-particular care. In a way, it was a symbol. Then she put on a fresh
-apron. The one she had worn on the wharf was wrinkled. The pocket showed
-a small stain of oil where the little pistol had nestled.
-
-A few minutes later she met the chief steward in the corridor. He
-detained her to rumble:
-
-“You haf tooken my advice, Miss Fernandez, and laid off a leetle while?
-Now go chase yourself on the job.”
-
-“All right, Mr. Schwartz. I will make myself pleasant to that cranky
-woman in seventeen.”
-
-Teresa went and knocked at the stateroom door. A querulous voice said,
-“Come in.” The woman curled up on the divan, under the electric fan, was
-not much older than Teresa, but she looked faded and unlovely. Rouge and
-lip-stick simulated a vanished bloom. An empty cocktail glass was at her
-elbow. An ash tray reeked with dead cigarettes.
-
-“For God’s sake, Miss Fernandez, is the ship ever going to leave this
-beastly hole?” she complained. “I’m dying with the heat and bored sick.
-Rub some of that bay rum on my head. It feels as if the top would fly
-off.”
-
-“Yes, madam. It will be cooler soon, when we get out of the harbor.
-Cartagena is always hot in the middle of the day.”
-
-“Hot? You said something. And stupid! I didn’t mind the cruise until we
-tied up to this dump. A fool doctor shoved me off on a sea voyage, and
-my husband couldn’t leave his business. It was wished on me, all right.”
-
-“Cartagena is very beautiful, so many people think,” ventured Teresa.
-
-“Huh, they must be dead ones. Nothing has happened here in three hundred
-years. I’ll bet you couldn’t wake it up with a ton of dynamite. How did
-you ever stand living here? You seem to have some pep. Got it in little
-old New York, I’ll bet.”
-
-“Perhaps, madam. New York is a live one.”
-
-“Right-o. That’s where you get action. No Rip Van Winkle stuff. You can
-always start something. These Colombians? Dead on their feet—asleep at
-the switch.”
-
-“I am a Colombian, madam,” smiled Teresa, an absent look in her eyes.
-“Yes, nothing ever happens in Cartagena. It is stupid and asleep. Nobody
-could start anything at all.”
-
-Deftly the stewardess ministered to the aching head of the woman in
-seventeen, soothing her with a murmurous, agreeable flow of talk. The
-steamer blew three long, strident blasts. Teresa excused herself and
-hastened on deck. The _Tarragona_ was moving slowly away from the wharf.
-Presently she swung to traverse the wide lagoon and so reach the open
-sea through the narrow fairway of the Boca Chica.
-
-The swell of the Caribbean was cradling the steamer when Teresa
-Fernandez found time to rest in the wicker chair beside the staircase.
-She gazed into the dining-saloon. At a small table in a corner sat a
-wireless operator and the assistant purser. Between them was an empty
-chair. Teresa sighed and closed her eyes. She would move her wicker
-chair to another place. She did not wish to see the second officer’s
-empty chair.
-
-Late in the afternoon she met the chief engineer on deck. In spotless
-white clothes he strolled with hands clasped behind him, alone as usual,
-a lean, abstracted figure. He paused to stand at the rail beside the
-stewardess.
-
-At first they found nothing to say. They were staring at the roseate,
-misty city of Cartagena. It seemed to rise from the sea and float like a
-mirage. The surf flashed white against the wall of enduring masonry that
-marched around this ancient stronghold of the _conquistadores_. Teresa
-Fernandez said in a low voice:
-
-“Do you understand what Mr. Cary meant when he talked about the
-Cartagena of ages and ages ago, as if he had really been there? He is
-dead, I know, but it seems to me that he must be alive, that he will
-always be alive in Cartagena.”
-
-“It was a romantic obsession of his, Miss Fernandez. By the way, did you
-say anything to Colonel Fajardo? I fancied you might have given him the
-third degree, after the session in my room. I found out nothing when I
-drove into town. It was a gesture, as you might say. I had to be doing
-something.”
-
-“I asked him very straight, Mr. McClement,” replied Teresa, her eyes
-meeting his. “He swore he had nothing to tell me.”
-
-“Humph! Then I’m afraid we can never find out.”
-
-McClement resumed his stroll. More than once he glanced at Teresa still
-lingering at the rail and looking at distant Cartagena, now a vanishing
-vision. The chief engineer shook his head. The expression of his
-intelligent and reflective face was inscrutable. To himself he muttered:
-
- “But men at whiles are sober
- And think by fits and starts,
- And if they think, they fasten
- Their hands upon their hearts.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
- UPON THE CITY WALL
-
-The prison of Cartagena consisted of a long row of arched, tomb-like
-apartments built against the inside of the city wall. Two centuries
-earlier, this series of stone caverns had been the barracks of the
-Spanish troops who had defended this treasure port against one furious
-assault after another. Here was a prison likely to hold the most
-desperate malefactor. Only an earthquake could have weakened such
-masonry as this.
-
-Upon a cot in one of these gloomy rooms lay stretched the body of a
-young man of heroic proportions. He was not a native. The fair skin and
-yellow hair were alien to the coasts of the Caribbean. His hairy chest
-was bare. Around it was bound a strip of cloth as a hasty bandage. His
-head was half-swathed in other folds of cloth. It was perplexing to know
-whether he was alive or dead.
-
-The door faced a small open yard in which was a rude shelter from the
-sun, a shack knocked together of poles and boards. It had a covered
-porch in which hammocks were slung. A Colombian soldier lolled in one of
-them. Two others squatted on the floor and languidly shook a leather
-dice-box. They were small, coffee-colored men wearing coarse straw hats
-and uniforms of blue cotton drilling much faded. Their rifles leaned
-against a plank table littered with dirty dishes and black with flies.
-
-The soldier in the hammock was a corporal. He aroused himself to scuffle
-to an iron door and peer in at the silent figure upon the cot. It had
-not moved. A waste of time to have washed and bandaged this murderous
-prisoner. Now these poor soldiers would be put to the trouble of digging
-a grave, and such a devil of a big grave! The two privates, Francisco
-and Manuel, were shaking the dice to see who should wield the accursed
-shovel.
-
-The corporal yawned and loafed back to the hammock to rest. The journey
-of a few yards to the iron door had fatigued him. The trio chewed
-sugar-cane and lazily discussed the huge _Americano_, a most uncommon
-fish to be landed in their net. Alive and vigorous, he would be most
-dangerous. It would be as much as a man’s life was worth to enter his
-cell. Fortunately he had been hit on the head and stabbed in the back
-when discovered in a street not far from the little plaza of the Church
-of San Pedro Clavér.
-
-He had run amuck, _loco_ with rum, not much doubt of that. He had
-attacked as many as five young men of Cartagena, a serenading party
-innocently singing and playing the guitar. He had broken the necks of
-two and smashed the shoulder of another. Like a flail he had swung an
-iron bar actually plucked from a window with the strength of a giant and
-the fury of a madman.
-
-By chance, the _Comandante_ of the Port, the famous Colonel Fajardo,
-walking home from the Café Dos Hermanos, had discovered the body of the
-_Americano_ and his victims, a sight to wonder at in that respectable
-street of peaceful Cartagena. Colonel Fajardo had summoned the police.
-They had decided to keep the matter hushed until they could investigate.
-They had been annoyed to find a little life in him. Such a man was
-better dead. He was unknown to the police. Perhaps a sailor from a ship
-or one of those red-faced, hard-fisted Yankee foremen from the gold
-mines of the Magdalena.
-
-It had been advisable to put him in the prison instead of the hospital.
-Think what he had done! Tried to kill five young men because he disliked
-the way they sang and played the guitar!
-
-Richard Cary was not quite so near burial as they took for granted. His
-breath so faint that it would scarcely have fogged a mirror, he had
-remained in the black realm of unconsciousness until now. The return to
-life was blurred and glimmering, like a feeble light in this profound
-darkness. It refused to be snuffed out. At first like a mere spark, to
-his stupefied senses it seemed to become hotter and hotter until it
-glowed like a coal, burning inside his head and torturing him.
-
-He did not try to move, but lay wondering why these fiery pains should
-dart and flicker through his brain. He raised his leaden eyelids and
-dimly, waveringly perceived the arched stone ceiling blotched with
-dampness. It was like a dungeon. Were these merely things he had read of
-in books that shocked and quickened the mysterious process of his
-awakening? His groping mind was ablaze with illusions which seemed
-intensely actual. Tenaciously he endeavored to banish them, but they
-poignantly persisted. The sweat ran down his face. He groaned aloud.
-Spasms of alarm shook him.
-
-Was this a dungeon of the Holy Office of the Inquisition? The cord was
-already twisted around his temples. His head was almost bursting. The
-stake and the fagot were waiting for him in the courtyard. Such had been
-the cruel fate of many a stout seaman of Devon—burly James Bitfield
-twice racked and enduring the water torment until death eased him—young
-Bailey Vaughan slashed with two hundred stripes in the market-place and
-enslaved in the galleys for seven years—gray-haired John Carelesse
-dying of the _strappado_, the pulley that wrenched joint and sinew
-asunder.
-
-The pains in his head were intolerable. The yellow-robed agents of the
-Holy Office were twisting the cord tighter, to bite into his skull. By
-God, they could never make him recant like a whining cur and a traitor
-to his faith. The torture of the cord wasn’t enough for them. The fiends
-were pressing the red-hot iron to his back, between the shoulder blades.
-
-It was the agony of these hallucinations that roused him out of his
-coma, that held him from slipping back into the dark gulf. One hand
-moved and clenched the frame of the cot. His eyes remained open and
-wandered from the gray stone arch above his head. His chest rose and
-fell in normal suspiration. Mistily he recognized himself as the Richard
-Cary who was the second officer of the _Tarragona_. Cartagena in the
-moonlight and Teresa Fernandez—a galleon’s bell that foretold disaster,
-_dong, dong—dong, dong_—the twang and tinkle of a guitar, of an
-ominous guitar.
-
-He had been knocked out? Well, it was a mighty hard head to break. Solid
-above the ears, his young brother Bill had delicately hinted. The pain
-was terrific, but this didn’t necessarily mean a crack in it. That head
-had been banged before now.
-
-Stabbed in the back, besides! That was more serious. It ought to have
-finished him. Such had been the bravo’s intention. But he had never
-thrust a knife into a back as broad and deep as this, with such thick
-ridges of muscles that overlaid it like armor. Also, in the flurry of
-haste, he may have driven the blade aslant.
-
-Anxiously Richard Cary drew in his breath and expelled it. He concluded
-that his lungs were undamaged. That his heart was still beating proved
-that the knife had missed a vital part. A deep flesh wound and muscles
-that throbbed and burned! So much for that.
-
-He was alive and not mortally hurt. He felt hazily thankful. This stone
-kennel was too much like a prison cell to be anything else. A rotten
-deal, to throw a man in jail after failing to kill him. This seemed like
-the fine hand of Colonel Fajardo. It was one way to finish the job. His
-five bravos had made a mess of it.
-
-His disordered mind fitfully clearing, Richard Cary became aware of the
-one thing of supreme importance. His ship was to sail at noon. He
-fumbled in the pockets of his torn trousers. His watch and money were
-gone. What hour of the day was it now? He rolled his head and blinked at
-the little window set in the iron door. The sunlight blazed like a
-furnace in the yard outside. It was the breathless heat and brightness
-that smote the city near the middle of the day. Perhaps it was not yet
-noon.
-
-His first voyage in the _Tarragona_ and logged as a deserter? An officer
-who had earned promotion on his merits in the hard schooling of the
-North Atlantic trade? It was an imperative obligation to return to the
-ship. Had Captain Sterry made an effort to find him? Perhaps not. Good
-riddance might be his feeling in the matter. An official word from the
-Union Fruit Company would have set powerful influences at work in
-Cartagena. Political connections safeguarded its vast commercial
-interests on the Colombian coast. The inference was that Captain Sterry
-had been willing to let his too candid second mate go adrift.
-
-The hope of getting back to the ship was another delusion. This the
-battered man on the cot presently realized. He was buried alive in this
-stone vault of a prison and lacked strength even to lift his head. Tears
-of weakness filled his eyes. He felt profound pity for himself. He was a
-forlorn derelict on a lee shore.
-
-Soon, however, the sweat dried on his face. His skin grew dry and hot.
-His heart was beating faster. The burning sensation in his head was
-diffusing itself through his body. The air of the room was more stifling
-than ever. It was like a furnace. Strange, but he felt less inert, not
-so helpless to move. He was dizzy, light-headed, but this was preferable
-to the incessant waves of pain. He did not know that fever was taking
-hold of him. He mistook it for a resurgence of his tremendous vitality,
-evidence that he could pull himself together and break the bonds of his
-weakness.
-
-He lay motionless, waiting, trying to think coherently, while the fever
-raced through his veins. He seemed to be floating off into space. The
-sensations were agreeable. No longer sorry for himself, he was unafraid
-of any odds. Keep him in a Cartagena jail? Nonsense. All he had to do
-was to use his wits. He laughed to himself, but he was careful to lock
-his lips. Not a sound escaped him. He was wary and cunning.
-
-The Colombian corporal of the guard decided to pry himself from the
-hammock and ascertain whether the big _Americano_ was dead by this time.
-Instead of peering through the window, the corporal thought best to make
-a closer investigation. He was impatient with this prisoner who had
-stubbornly refused to become a corpse. A clumsy iron key squeaked in the
-rusty lock of the door. The corporal walked in and stooped over the cot.
-
-Yes, the _Americano_ had about finished with the business of living. A
-hand held over his mouth detected no breath at all. The corporal was
-about to shift his hand to the naked chest to discover if the heart had
-ceased to beat.
-
-Two mighty arms flew up. One of them wrapped itself around the
-corporal’s neck and pulled him down. Fingers like steel hooks squeezed
-his throat. He gurgled. He was pop-eyed. His grass sandals were kicking
-the stone floor. It was a small, scratching noise unheard on the porch
-of the shack where the two privates drowsed and rolled cigarettes.
-
-The corporal’s toes ceased their rustling agitation. His lank body was
-as limp as an empty sack. It slid gently from the side of the cot. It
-sprawled so still that a green lizard ran over one twisted leg and
-paused close by to swell its ruby throat. The hour of the siesta
-appeared to have overtaken this luckless corporal somewhat earlier than
-usual.
-
-His absence would cause comment. Richard Cary upheaved himself from the
-cot and almost toppled over. He struggled to keep his feet. Drunk with
-fever, he began to walk with a giddy, erratic motion in the direction of
-the door. He succeeded in reaching it. Grasping the timbered framework,
-he stood there half-blinded by the dazzle of the sun. The two Colombian
-soldiers looked up and saw him.
-
-Body and blood of San Felipe! What an apparition! A man raised from the
-dead and such a man! What had befallen the corporal? It was easy to
-guess that. For the moment these two affrighted soldiers were incapable
-of motion. The love of life, however, pricked them to scramble for their
-rifles. Already the fearful specter of the _Americano_ was lurching from
-the doorway, across the yard, straight at them.
-
-With chattering teeth, Private Francisco dived to clutch a rifle.
-Private Manuel tripped and rammed into him. They clawed each other, with
-bitter words. The sturdier Francisco was first to lay hands on a rifle.
-He pulled trigger. Nothing but a foolish click. It was the corporal’s
-rifle, unloaded because he had intended cleaning it _mañana_. Francisco
-flung the useless thing aside. He could run faster without it.
-
-The _Americano_ picked up the discarded rifle and wheeled in pursuit of
-him. For a dead man, this yellow-haired ogre could be as quick as a
-tiger. As if the rifle were no heavier than a pebble, he hurled it, butt
-foremost, at the fleeing Francisco. It struck him on the hip. He turned
-a somersault. So fast was he running that his heels flipped over his
-head. When he fell, the dust whirled like brown smoke. He tried to crawl
-away on hands and knees.
-
-The _Americano_ turned to find the other soldier. He was on the porch,
-about to fire his rifle. The barrel waved like a leaf in a gale. Here
-was enough to disturb the bravest soldier. The first bullet went singing
-off into the blue sky. Before Manuel could shoot again, something like a
-house fell upon him and flattened him out. His head whacked a plank. A
-fist drove his jaw askew. He was instantly as peaceful as the corporal
-who slumbered with a green lizard for a comrade.
-
-The disabled Francisco had not crawled far on hands and knees. Richard
-Cary tottered after him and dragged him to the timbered doorway of the
-vaulted cell. A thrust of the foot and Francisco rolled inside like a
-bale. It was better to stay there, he thought, than to try to run away
-again. And now Manuel was dumped in on top of him. The iron door closed
-and the key squeaked in the rusty lock. Richard Cary tossed the key over
-the roof of the shack.
-
-Thus far he had behaved with normal promptitude and efficiency. Now he
-reeled to the bench on the porch and fought against utter collapse. His
-head spun like a top as he groped for a coffee pot on the table and
-drained the black brew to the dregs. It seemed to steady his quivering
-nerves, to clear the mists of fever from his brain. He would go and
-search for his ship until he dropped in his tracks.
-
-One of the discarded rifles caught his eye, but he found it too heavy to
-carry. A machete hung from a peg in the wall. It was a handy weapon,
-with a straight blade. With it he slashed strips from the hammock and
-tied them around his bare feet. There was a grain of method in his
-madness.
-
-The machete in his hand, he moved out into the yard and gazed up at the
-city wall. Here and there were easy ascents, he knew, built for the
-passage of troops and vehicles. One of these sloping roadways ought to
-be somewhere near the prison which had once been the barracks of the
-Spanish garrison. From the lofty parapets he should be able to see the
-harbor and the wharf where the _Tarragona_ berthed. Then he could
-perhaps make his way thither before an alarm was raised. If they tried
-to stop him, he would hack a path with the machete.
-
-Rocking on his feet and muttering aloud, he walked out of the yard and
-turned at random. Unseen, he passed into a paved alley and saw in front
-of him a wide ramp leading to the top of the wall. Fortune had not
-deserted him. Very slowly he climbed the rutted, crumbling slope,
-panting for breath, his face a bright crimson, his knees crippling under
-him. He could not finish the ascent, and yet he did. He was broken in
-body, but his will urged him on.
-
-Gaining the broad esplanade he made for the nearest parapet. It was at
-the corner of a bastion where stood a small, round sentry tower. With
-arms outspread he clung to this support while his swimming gaze raked
-the harbor. It was not yet noon, for the white hull and the yellow
-funnel of the _Tarragona_ glistened alongside the cargo sheds. The
-distance was not far. Through a gateway in the wall he might reach the
-beach and so leave the city behind him. Unless his strength should
-utterly forsake him, a merciful deliverance was beckoning.
-
-He found it much easier, however, to cling to the small round sentry
-tower than to resume his pitiable pilgrimage. He tried it once, twice,
-and stumbled drunkenly. But he was not beaten—he could not be—while
-the blessed sight of the _Tarragona_ compelled him. He tried again and
-advanced toward a square, grim mass of stone that marked the nearest
-gateway.
-
-Then he heard three blasts blown on a steamer’s whistle, deep-throated
-and prolonged. He knew the _Tarragona’s_ voice and what this signal
-meant. It was her courteous adieu to Cartagena. She was outward bound,
-through the Boca Chica and to the rolling spaces of the Caribbean.
-Richard Cary dragged himself to the parapet and stood looking at his
-ship, but only for a moment. Then he buried his face in his arms. Sobs
-shook him. It was the cruelest joke that ever a man had played on him.
-He damned Captain Sterry for a dirty hound that would leave his second
-mate in a fix like this.
-
-Ashamed of crying like a silly woman, he retraced his steps to the
-sentry tower. It was shady inside, with deep slits of windows. He did
-not wish to see the _Tarragona_ move away from the wharf. He slid to the
-floor and sat propped against the wall, his chin against his breast. His
-ruling impulse had kept delirium under for a little while. Now he became
-a prey to all manner of curious thoughts. Dominant was the resolve that
-they should not take him alive. He whetted the edge of the machete on a
-rough stone, and tested the balance of it and the grip of the hilt. He
-would give a good account of himself on the wall of Cartagena.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
- THE GOOD HERMIT OF LA POPA
-
-The cloth bound round his tousled head, the torn shirt that bared his
-chest, the pongee trousers soiled with sweat and dust, the strips of
-canvas wrapped about his feet, made this wounded fugitive the image of a
-buccaneer as he sat waiting in the round watch-tower with the machete
-across his knees. It was not long before the temper of savage defiance
-yielded to exhaustion. Oblivion enfolded his senses and he relaxed in a
-stupor that was a counterfeit of sleep. The scowling visage took on the
-gentler aspect, boyish and engaging, that was familiar to his shipmates.
-It was an interlude.
-
-He did not stir when the stone barracks inside the city wall were
-agitated by some loud excitement. There was confused shouting, orders
-bandied to and fro, the shrill _alerte_ of a bugle, squads of soldiers
-pattering at the double-quick. All this indicated that the hapless
-privates, Francisco and Manuel, had found an audience.
-
-The hue-and-cry passed by the broad ramp that led to the top of the
-wall. It was perhaps assumed that the mad _Americano_ would spread havoc
-in the city streets or break for the harbor to hide in some boat and
-escape by sea. It was the first duty of the soldiers to protect the
-people of Cartagena. Therefore they scattered to warn and search, ready
-to shoot on sight.
-
-Meanwhile the hunted man’s respite was unbroken. When, at length, he
-lifted his head and hastily caught up the machete to resume his sullen
-vigil, the prison area had resumed its wonted quietude. There were no
-sounds to suggest an alarm. The sun had passed the meridian by an hour
-or so, as Richard Cary discovered through a slitted window. He was
-surprised that his hiding-place had not been discovered. He could hope
-for no such good fortune as concealing himself in the watch-tower until
-nightfall. And how would that aid him? He was trapped. Death clamored
-for him in the city. It was certain to overtake him in the swamps and
-jungle if he should succeed in stealing away. The sea was also
-impossible. He could never reach it.
-
-The effort of rising to his feet left him all spent and trembling. He
-could not have walked a score of yards in the deadly heat of the sun.
-The muscles of his back were so stiffened and inflamed that he was bent
-like an old man knotted with rheumatism. His head was even more
-troublesome. After the lull, it was aflame again. One moment he was able
-to think, the next he was lost in a welter of phantasms. He closed his
-eyes because the light hurt them. He would hear the Colombian soldiers
-when they came near the watch-tower.
-
-A little while, however, and the aching brightness of the sky was
-tempered by clouds that gathered swiftly. They grew black as they rolled
-toward the zenith, with a flickering play of lightning. The distant
-mutter of thunder swelled in rolling detonations. At first the rain came
-in a flurry of drops. Richard Cary mistook the sound for the pit-pat-pat
-of the hurrying feet of Colombian soldiers. With a groan he lurched out
-of the watch-tower to finish the thing in the open.
-
-The tropical rain came down like a flood, as though the clouds spilled a
-solid deluge of water. A whistling squall swept it in sheets. Between
-the parapets was a gushing river which spouted through the embrasures
-and rushed down the ramp. It was a torrential downpour unknown to
-northern climes.
-
-To Richard Cary it was the saving grace of heaven. It beat against him,
-cooling his parched skin, refreshing him like an elixir. It quenched the
-fires that had so grievously tormented him. He felt the strength revive
-in his weary body. He forgot the stiffness, the hurts, the hopelessness
-of a man in the last ditch. He scooped up the rain in his cupped hand
-and lapped it like a dog.
-
-The blessed rain did more than this. It offered a chance of extricating
-himself from the immediate perils besetting him. The squall drove the
-rain in sheets, obscuring the buildings of the city, veiling the harbor.
-He gripped the machete blade between his teeth and threw a leg over the
-outer parapet. It was a thirty-foot drop to the bottom, which was a
-shallow depression where the moat had been. The stones had been
-cunningly cut and fitted to build a wall with a smooth facing, but the
-tooth of time had gnawed deep crevices in which grass had taken root.
-
-Richard Cary’s fingers found rough corners to cling to, and lodgment for
-his toes. Cautiously groping, he let himself down from one stone to
-another. It was not a vastly difficult feat, easier than those other
-Devon seamen of long ago had found it to scale these same walls with
-ladders. When giddiness halted him, he fastened himself to the stones
-like a great bat and waited for the spell to pass.
-
-Finally he let go and dropped to the ground. It had been a wrenching
-ordeal, but when the pain was unendurable he had the machete to bite on.
-The space outside the wall, which was a populous open-air market and
-resort for idlers, had been suddenly deserted. The terrific rain had
-driven every last soul to shelter. The fugitive made a limping détour to
-reach a strip of beach beyond the quay. Fishermen with their baskets,
-the vendors of green stuffs, the carts and the burros, had scampered to
-find dry places.
-
-It was a homing instinct, this endeavor to escape to salt water. There
-was no plan. In fact there was no clear expectation of getting anywhere.
-It was enough, for the moment, to be outside the walls of Cartagena. Far
-better risk drowning than be riddled with bullets by the comrades of
-Francisco and Manuel.
-
-Between the driving sheets of rain he caught glimpses of the yellow
-beach. Two or three dugout canoes were drawn up. One of them had a
-lading of green bananas. The fugitive plodded toward them and no man
-came to hinder him. The rain was all about him like a misty curtain. He
-stumbled in the soft sand above high-water mark and fell against the
-gunwale of an empty canoe. It was a small craft, but heavy. To push it
-into the water seemed a task altogether beyond him. However, he set his
-shoulder against the blunt bow and dug his feet into the sand.
-
-Gashed and harried and fevered, it was the inherited bulldog strain in
-“Big Dick” Cary that sufficed for this final struggle on the sands of
-Cartagena. The canoe moved, an inch at a time, to the harder surface of
-the tide-washed beach. Then it slid faster until the surf kicked up by
-the squall was splashing against it. The stern floated.
-
-Cary stood up and looked out at the foaming, rain-swept lagoon. He could
-not drive the canoe ahead against the wind, but he remembered a wooded
-point not far away and a lee beyond it. This he might fetch on a
-slanting course with the ebbing tide to help.
-
-A last dogged thrust and the canoe floated in the surf. He tumbled over
-the side and fell face downward in the tepid rainwater that washed over
-the bottom boards. Righting himself, he caught up a short paddle and
-swung the bow away from the beach. He crouched amidships and did little
-more than steer, with a few strokes now and then to hold the course and
-avoid drifting broadside on. These motions were done mechanically, like
-an automaton. The canoe safely skirted the shore where it curved an arm
-out into the lagoon. Behind it was calmer water, a rippling surface on
-which the canoe floated lazily.
-
-The paddle was idle. The fugitive sat with folded arms, indifferent to
-the whims of destiny. The tide pulled at the sluggish canoe and it
-slowly moved abreast of the shore. The rain ceased as suddenly as it had
-flooded down. The clouds broke and dissolved in ragged fragments until
-the sky was an inverted bowl of flawless blue. The sun poured its
-breathless radiance upon a lush landscape that steamed as it dried.
-
-To Richard Cary this was an affliction. An hour of sun would be the
-finishing stroke. He had not even a straw hat to shield his head. It
-didn’t very much matter what happened to him. He was beyond caring, but
-it was peculiarly unpleasant to be grilled alive. He made shift to steer
-the canoe inshore until it grounded. Just beyond the belt of marsh he
-saw a densely verdured knoll marked by one tall palm. He filled the
-baling can with the rainwater in the canoe and carried it with him. The
-machete served to chop a few bushes and so make room for him to crawl
-into the thicket and lie down.
-
-In spite of the heat a fit of shivering seized him, the chill that
-presaged a recurrence of fever. Mosquitoes swarmed to plague him. The
-afternoon waned and he had not moved from this lair in the thicket. Not
-until sunset did he go crashing through the brushwood and hold fast to
-the palm tree while he stupidly glared this way and that, imagining
-ambushed foes.
-
-Behind this bit of low land was a hill that soared abruptly to a height
-of several hundred feet. Its crest was stark and rugged, with a sheer
-cliff that dropped toward the sea. It stood alone, this bold and
-frowning hill, and was a famous landmark from many miles offshore. La
-Popa, mariners had always called it because of the resemblance to the
-castellated poop of a galleon. What made it even more prominent was the
-massive convent whose walls were like a fortress, a structure which, at
-a distance, looked as if it had never been despoiled and forsaken. Both
-Drake and De Pontis the Frenchman had held it for ransom.
-
-It had become a mere shell, a noble relic of the religious zeal of
-another age. At one end nestled the chapel and this had been preserved,
-still used for the infrequent advocation to Our Lady of La Popa by
-priests and pious pilgrims of Cartagena. From the city a rough path led
-up the sloping ridge of the hill, a path trodden by many generations of
-nuns and worshipers.
-
-La Popa! The huge white convent looming on the summit of the cliff! A
-place for a man to hide and scan the Caribbean for sight of a ship.
-There Drake had posted his sentries to guard against surprise by
-galleons coming from the north or south. A long, hard climb up the hill,
-through the jungle at the base, and then a circuit to get clear of the
-cliff where the defenders had rolled rocks down upon the heads of
-certain English seamen. It might be done, however, if a man could find
-the path. A full moon rising early and the convent gleaming above to set
-his bearings by!
-
-Soon after dawn of the following morning, the caretaker of the Chapel of
-Our Lady of La Popa came pottering out of a hut built in a corner of the
-roofless convent. His errand was to tether his two goats on the herbage
-of the slope. He was a spare man, lame in one leg and feeling the burden
-of years. Having lived much by himself in this lonely retreat, he had
-formed the habit of talking to himself in the unkempt gray beard. By way
-of variety he often talked to the goats whom he fondly addressed by
-name.
-
-Having tethered them while the air was still cool, this kindly Palacio
-untied a rusty tin cup from his belt and milked Mercedes who was a
-docile animal. The cup of warm milk and a _tortilla_ of coarse meal was
-a breakfast that sufficed him. While munching the sooty _tortilla_ he
-gazed about him from under shaggy brows and, as always at this time of
-day, admired the roseate splendor of Cartagena and its everlasting
-walls. There was nothing in all the world to compare with it, reflected
-this elderly recluse. The browsing Mercedes waggled her tufted chin in
-agreement.
-
-Presently Palacio picked up his cane and wandered along the slope to
-inspect his garden patch of beans and peppers. It was a continual
-skirmish to save the beans from the forays of the other goat, Lolita,
-who was a young creature of feminine caprices and often possessed of a
-devil. Palacio’s rebukes, even the threat of making goat’s-meat of her,
-left Lolita’s heart untouched.
-
-In the grass beside the garden patch, Palacio was startled to perceive a
-large object which had not been there before. Cautiously he backed away
-and leaned on his stick while he scrutinized the phenomenon. It was a
-man asleep or dead, a man of prodigious bulk and brawn whose clothing
-was no more than dirty tatters. His skin was criss-crossed with
-scratches and smeared with dried blood. A stranger to Palacio, and a man
-so strange to this part of the world that he might have dropped from the
-skies!
-
-Timidly the caretaker approached the body in the grass and knelt to
-touch its cheek. The flesh was warm, even hot and angry. Gaining
-courage, he tugged at the man and rolled him over to discover any
-serious injuries. He found a knife wound in the back and a lump on the
-head as big as a tangerine. If the man had climbed the hill of La Popa,
-it was a miracle. Where had he come from? It was the divine influence of
-Our Lady, whose shrine was in the chapel, that he should be found alive
-in this place.
-
-“What a thing to stumble on when I lead my goats out in the morning!”
-said Palacio, both hands in his beard. “Never has a wonder like this
-happened to me. I am at the end of my poor wits. If I go down to
-Cartagena to find a doctor, it is slow walking for me with my lame leg
-on the rough path—and this enormous man may die in the grass. Soon the
-sun will be too hot to leave him without a roof over his head.”
-
-In his agitation Palacio limped to and fro. Could he roll this man over
-and over like a sack of coffee, as far as the threshold of the convent?
-Then perhaps he might drag him into the hut. It could do him no more
-damage. As it was, he looked as if he had fallen off the cliff. In spite
-of his lameness, Palacio was tough and sinewy. When in his prime he had
-been a laborer on the quay, carrying heavy freight on his back.
-
-The goats had cropped the grass until it was a green sward. Palacio
-grunted and began to roll the man like a cask. A groan dismayed him.
-This would not do. It was more merciful to try to drag the body a little
-way at a time, like a burro hitched to an ox-cart. Nobly Palacio hauled
-and panted until he had progressed as far as the stake that tethered
-Mercedes. She trotted over to nuzzle him. It was an expression of
-sympathy. He felt much encouraged. Lolita, the jade, was waiting to rear
-on her hind legs and butt her master behind the knees.
-
-“Horned offspring of perdition,” he told her, “do not add to my
-troubles. Poor Palacio is almost breaking himself in two for the sake of
-love and charity. Butt me again and the dust shall fly from your
-speckled hide.”
-
-A back-breaking task it was, but Palacio managed to drag his burden to
-the hole in the convent wall where a door had been. A bed of straw and a
-blanket on the floor of his hut was all the comfort he could contrive
-for the unbidden guest. So fatigued that his legs were like two sticks,
-the anxious Palacio mixed a little warm goat’s-milk and rum in the tin
-cup and forced it between the man’s lips. It seemed to trickle down his
-throat. Then he dosed him with a bitter draught from a bottle, a
-tincture of quinine and herbs which had assuaged his own spells of
-fever.
-
-With a singular deftness, Palacio washed the patient and tore up a clean
-shirt to bandage him. That wound in the back was alarming, so livid and
-inflamed, but it might heal if kept cleansed and dressed.
-
-“A man like this is very hard to kill,” he said aloud. “To look at him
-you would say he had already suffered several deaths. The air is cool
-and healthy up here on La Popa, and there is the sweet presence of Our
-Lady. I will light a candle at her shrine and a fresh one as soon as
-that is burned down, poor man though I am. The life of this enormous
-stranger with the hair like gold belongs to me. It is a gift of God.”
-
-It was a battered, useless gift, the wreckage of Richard Cary. Hard to
-kill, though, as Palacio had concluded. In his favor were youth,
-extraordinary vitality, and clean blood untainted by dissipation.
-Illness was unknown to him. Through two long days and nights the devoted
-Palacio watched and nursed him, nodding off at intervals. That bitter
-brew in the bottle was holding the fever in check, and the diet of
-goat’s-milk and onion broth was efficacious.
-
-The patient babbled while delirious. Palacio understood almost nothing
-of what he said, but one inference was beyond doubt. The sick man’s
-voice, the message of his eyes, the restless movements of his hands were
-easily interpreted. He was afraid of discovery. Enemies were in pursuit
-of him. It was an issue of life and death. Palacio referred the problem
-to the responsive Mercedes while milking her.
-
-“What is to be done, little comfort of mine? This man is innocent of
-crime. You have seen him for yourself. He has won my trust and
-affection, and he is my guest. Not many visitors come to La Popa from
-the city. It is an old story to them. But the American tourists from the
-fruit boats will come early some morning to see the convent. The men
-will sit on the rocks and say, ‘_Zowie! damn-fine-view_,’ and the women
-will poke their noses everywhere. Our guest will make curiosity and be
-chattered about in Cartagena and down at the ships. He wishes to be
-hidden away until his health is restored. What do you advise, most
-intelligent of little goats?”
-
-The most intelligent Mercedes tossed her head and ambled in the
-direction of the convent wall, as far as her tether permitted. Then she
-pawed the grass with a sharp hoof. Palacio eyed her gravely. She was
-trying to assist him. He pondered the matter, twisting his beard tight.
-Blockhead that he was! To have to be instructed by a goat! She was
-showing him what to do. He hurried into the hut for a lantern. Into the
-convent cellar he clambered and then crept into an opening where the
-stones had been dislodged.
-
-It was the entrance of the ancient tunnel which was said to have led to
-the foot of the hill and so beneath the walls of Cartagena as a secret
-passage to be used in time of siege. Such was the tradition. It was
-possible, however, to explore only a short distance from La Popa because
-rocks and dirt had filled the tunnel.
-
-“Two or three days more,” said Palacio, “and I can move my guest into
-this chamber where only God himself will find him. Visitors can be told
-that the tunnel has caved in since the last heavy rain.”
-
-This was partly the truth. A hole had appeared in the gullied surface of
-the hill, but it was a dozen yards away from the convent wall and hidden
-by a clump of small trees. It let the light into the tunnel, and the air
-drew through it by day and night. Palacio courteously thanked Mercedes
-for stamping her hoof directly over the underground passage. She had
-handsomely solved the problem.
-
-He spared no pains to make the secret chamber habitable for his guest.
-In the chapel was found a disused table and a carved oak chair big
-enough to hold an archbishop. There was also a strip of carpet and two
-brass candlesticks. Palacio fashioned a bed of limber poles bound with
-rawhide thongs, and stretched a piece of old canvas across the frame.
-
-During the labor of love, what of Richard Cary? The stormy stress of
-mind and body was past. The whirling tumult of emotions, the repeated
-shocks of perils and escapes, were no more tangible than dreams. Indeed,
-they seemed to belong with his dreams of the Cartagena of the galleons
-and the _conquistadores_. He was in a haven of lucid tranquillity,
-unvexed by the past, with no thought of the future. Physical weakness
-constrained him, but Nature was eager to heal and restore, and he felt
-no great discomfort. It was a state of apathy that brought the anodyne
-of contentment.
-
-It amused him to listen to the droning monologues of Palacio as he
-pottered about the hut. They exchanged a few phrases in English and
-Spanish and became amazingly well acquainted thereby. Between them was
-the fondness of a father and son. The goats walked in to pay their
-respects, Mercedes the well-mannered lady at a bedside, Lolita rudely
-foraging for provender and chewing stray garments until Palacio thumped
-her with a broken stool.
-
-It was a memorable moment when the guest was helped to lift himself from
-the pallet of straw. He swayed against the straining Palacio, their arms
-across each other’s shoulders. In this manner they staggered into the
-cellar by arduous stages and thence to the chamber inside the tunnel
-entrance. The guest expected his weight to crush the spare Palacio, but
-it was do or die. The achievement made them hilarious. Palacio uncorked
-a treasured bottle of red wine. Later he knelt at the shrine of Nuestra
-Señora de La Popa and humbly offered thanks for the recovery of his dear
-friend and guest.
-
-In the underground room the hours passed without impatience. Light
-filtered through the gullied opening in the roof. The air was never
-sultry. A roving armadillo tumbled through the hole and consented to
-stay a while, lured by bits of food. It curled up in its scaly armor and
-slept under a bench. Its serene attitude toward life was worthy of
-imitation.
-
-“But I can’t stay here curled up in _my_ shell,” said Señor Cary to the
-placid armadillo. “For one thing, I am imposing on Palacio’s good nature
-with no way of repaying him. And the old codger is pretty well worn out.
-As soon as my legs will hold me up, I must work out some plan of
-campaign or other. But why fret about it now? _Mañana!_”
-
-With a steady mind he returned to the situation day after day. To try to
-smuggle himself aboard a Fruit Company’s steamer was one possibility. It
-was thrashed out and dismissed. Ignorant that Colonel Fajardo had ceased
-to be the _Comandante_ of the Port or anything else, he pictured him as
-venomously vigilant to watch and search every vessel leaving Cartagena.
-Without friends or money it was out of the question to try to reach some
-other port by land. The delta of the Magdalena was one vast wilderness
-of swamp and water-courses.
-
-He was still ensnared, but no longer a frenzied fugitive without a
-refuge, and he possessed the unquenchable optimism of a strong and
-competent young man.
-
-Very often his thoughts dwelt with Teresa Fernandez. Her kisses were
-dearly remembered, her voice echoed in his heart, and the gay fortitude
-with which she met the buffets of life appealed to his chivalry. She was
-a woman worth loving forever and a day.
-
-A fortnight more, and the _Tarragona_ would be steaming across the
-Caribbean, on another southern voyage, to pick up her landfall for
-Cartagena, sighting the abrupt and lofty hill of La Popa from many miles
-at sea. Now that his strength was flowing back, Richard Cary could not
-remain buried like a mole. Inaction would soon become both irksome and
-cowardly. One thing was certain. He swore to find Teresa Fernandez,
-returning in the _Tarragona_, and to hold her in his arms.
-
-There was only one hope of attaining this desire, of making the resolve
-more than an empty boast. Teresa’s uncle, that “funny old guy” Señor
-Ramon Bazán, had shown a liking for him during that brief visit in the
-moonlit _patio_. “A delicious hit,” Teresa had called it. This might
-mean nothing at all. A man in his dotage, tricky and whimsical, had been
-the impression left by the shriveled uncle with the little brown monkey
-perched upon his shoulder.
-
-What his relations might be with the officials of Cartagena was
-impossible to surmise. He had been a person of consequence in earlier
-years, a figure in the political affairs of Colombia. This much Teresa
-had conveyed in the remark that he had once been sent to Washington by
-the Government at Bogotá. Would he feel inclined to protect an American
-refugee whom the authorities were hunting like a dangerous animal? What
-of the obligations of the hospitality which he had so warmly proffered?
-A rope of sand, as likely as not. Spanish courtesy in its finest flower
-had been displayed by the lowly Palacio, but with Señor Ramon Bazán it
-was a very different situation. Doubtless he knew what Richard Cary had
-done and why he was branded as a criminal condemned to execution.
-
-Ah, well, what else was life than a gamble on the turn of a card? A
-proper man ought not to hesitate whenever the stake was worth the
-hazard. Teresa Fernandez would risk as much for him, of this Richard
-Cary felt convinced. She was that kind of a woman. Win or lose, he would
-try to meet her in the house of Uncle Ramon Bazán while the _Tarragona_
-was in port.
-
-There was only one way to put the hazard to the touch. This was to send
-Palacio into Cartagena with a note to the bizarre old gentleman. It
-meant revealing the hiding-place on the hill of La Popa and inviting
-capture. The message would have to be an appeal to find some ingenious
-plan of smuggling the fugitive through the city streets. He was not yet
-strong enough even to walk down the rocky path to the foot of the hill.
-
-“A rotten poor bet,” said the guest of the good Palacio, “but show me
-another one. And if I can get into Cartagena, I can get out again. By
-God, I’m going to kiss my girl.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
- THE GREAT YELLOW TIGER
-
-Sending a message to Señor Bazán was easier said than done. Pen and
-paper were not essential to the simple life of Palacio for the excellent
-reason that he had never learned to read or write. The hut was rummaged
-in vain. Much perturbed, Palacio limped into the chapel and returned
-with a tattered missal. Heaven knows how long this illuminated
-black-letter volume had reposed in a dusty niche of the pulpit.
-Sacrilege it might be to tear out a broad-margined leaf, but Palacio
-promised himself to do penance. With a sharp bit of charcoal the
-derelict mariner wrote on the margin:
-
- MY DEAR SEÑOR BAZÁN:
-
- I am disabled and in serious trouble. If you feel like lending a
- hand, you will have to send somebody to get me down the hill of
- La Popa, and safely to your house. The Señorita Teresa Fernandez
- told me how to say _ver las orejas del lobo_. “To see the ears
- of the wolf” means to be in great danger, I take it. This seems
- to fit the case of
-
- Yours sincerely
- RICHARD CARY
-
-Anxiously Palacio looked on and furiously rumpled his gray beard. He did
-not approve. To hear the name of old Ramon Bazán was enough. Some
-unpleasant gossip or other had lingered in his simple mind. He had not
-always been the hermit of La Popa. Timidly at first and then in a
-scolding humor he objected to the procedure. The beloved guest was safe,
-as things were, and rapidly regaining health and vigor. Leave it to
-Palacio to safeguard him against his enemies and, in due time, to devise
-some means of flight. It might be up the great river and across the
-mountains to the other ocean, such a journey as Palacio had made in his
-own youth.
-
-Gently but stubbornly the guest persuaded his benefactor to undertake
-the mission. Consent was hard wrung, but in the last resort Palacio
-could not deny any wish of the mighty, fair-haired Ricardo, the apple of
-his eye. It was toward the middle of the afternoon when the reluctant
-messenger took his staff and said farewell.
-
-“God willing,” he called back. “God willing,” he was repeating to
-himself as he trudged past the garden patch, “_Como Dios es servido, ó
-si Dios es servido—ó siendo Dios servido._”
-
-Shortly after the departure, Richard Cary concluded to essay walking out
-of his tunneled chamber, as far as a gap in the convent wall. It was
-necessary to know whether he was capable of this much effort. Very
-carefully he guided his uncertain steps across the cellar, like a child
-learning to walk. It seemed ridiculous. A touch would have pushed him
-over. His brawn had been so much fuel for the fever to feed upon.
-
-Elated by the venture he sat down to rest on a broad stone slab from
-which he could see the slope of the hill toward Cartagena, and the sea
-flashing beyond the barrier of the Boca Grande. It filled him with a
-sense of buoyancy and freedom, with emotions too deep for words.
-Circumstances still shackled him, but once more he beheld wide horizons
-and felt the freshening trade wind brush his cheek, the wind that had
-blown so many stout ships across the Caribbean.
-
-He was alive again, eager to follow wherever fickle fortune might
-beckon. If the odds should veer in his favor, would he want to go back
-to the monotonous trade of seafaring in a merchant steamer out of New
-York? It seemed incongruous, a world away. The Spanish Main had been
-cruel to him, but he had ceased to feel resentment. It had been a game
-of give-and-take. His was the winning score. The next turn of events was
-worth waiting for. Heads or tails?
-
-The peaked straw hat of Palacio had long since bobbed down the hill and
-across the causeway to a gateway of the city wall. Gradually the violet
-shadows crept over the sward beside the melancholy pile of the convent.
-The goats raised their voices to notify the lonely watcher that
-something was wrong. It was time for them to trot in to shelter.
-
-It was time also for Richard Cary to seek his own retreat before the
-dusk should make him stumble in the débris of the cellar. He was most
-loath to leave the open sky and the westering glow and the communion of
-the salt breeze. Laboriously he made his way to the darkened refuge in
-the earth and lighted a candle. The complaisant armadillo had sauntered
-off on some twilight errand of its own. Silly, but the solitary man
-wished he had the armadillo to talk to. Again immured, his spirits were
-overcast.
-
-Out of doors, he had regained his large and placid indifference to
-whatever might impend. Now his nerves were tautening. The answer of
-Señor Ramon Bazán might be a file of Colombian soldiers hurrying up the
-hill. With a shrug, he thrust such fears aside. Win or lose, he must
-play his hand out. No more of that crazed torment which had bitten into
-his brain while he had crouched in the round watch-tower, whetting the
-machete on a rough stone.
-
-Once while he had stood with Teresa Fernandez at the rail of the
-_Tarragona_, she had hummed a verse or two of a song called the Breton
-Sailor’s Litany, remembered from a voyage to Brest in her girlhood. He
-had learned it as well as he could, for the pleasure of hearing her
-murmur the words over and over again.
-
- “Dieu puissant, notre père,
- Qui commandez aux flots,
- Écoutez la prière
- Des pauvres matelots.”
-
-It came back to him now, with the translation she had also taught him to
-say. He found peace and comfort in it, as if Teresa herself were bidding
-him to hold fast to his courage:
-
- “God all powerful, our Father,
- Thou Who commandest the sea,
- Listen to the prayer
- Of the poor mariners.”
-
-The first significant sound to catch his listening ear was the excited
-bleating of the goats tethered almost over his head. Nothing else than
-the return of Palacio could make them so suddenly vocal. A delay while
-he found his lantern, and the weary messenger came stumbling through the
-cellar, shouting to ask if Ricardo was alive and well. It was hard to
-find out what news he brought. There was no word in writing from Señor
-Ramon Bazán, and Palacio’s long narrative was poured out in Spanish so
-tumultuous that it meant very little to his guest.
-
-It had something to do with a pile of wood and a mule and a _muchacho_.
-This much was picked out of the jumble. In Palacio’s croaking accents
-was also a violent distrust of the manners, morals, and motives of the
-aged Señor Bazán. Having simmered down, he made it comprehensible that
-Ricardo was to make ready to go at once, _pronto_, into Cartagena by
-night. Means had been provided. Much distraught, Palacio toddled to his
-hut to find and offer a patched tarpaulin cape and a new peaked straw
-hat woven by himself. He had already washed and mended Cary’s tattered
-shirt and trousers.
-
-Lack of a razor contributed to the general effect of a Robinson Crusoe
-as the fugitive emerged from his earthy abode. It was, indeed, a venture
-in the darkness. _Quien sabe?_ The riddle of Señor Bazán’s intentions
-was still unsolved.
-
-“Here goes,” said Richard Cary, looking about him in the starlight.
-“I’ll soon find out whether I am putting my head in a trap or not. Where
-do we go from here? _Donde?_”
-
-Palacio whistled. A gray mule came sidling into the lantern’s glow.
-Leading it by the bridle was the Indian lad whom Cary recalled seeing in
-the _patio_ of Uncle Ramon. There was no saddle. A sack was tied across
-the mule’s back.
-
-“What kind of foolishness is this?” objected the passenger. “I see
-myself parading through Cartagena on the quarterdeck of a flop-eared
-mule. _Oiga!_ The Colombian infantry could never miss a target like
-that.”
-
-The Indian lad caught the drift of this tirade and grinned a
-reassurance. Palacio volubly insisted that it was _muy bueno_, so far as
-the mule was concerned. Again he chattered about the mysterious pile of
-wood. He had labored with it himself. He lifted imaginary sticks and
-groaned with both hands clapped to his back. Richard Cary subsided. He
-was in no position to quibble over details.
-
-His companions hoisted him astride the mule. It was a very strong mule
-or its legs would have bent. Palacio limped as far as the garden patch.
-Another journey down the hill and back again was too much for him. He
-embraced his guest, his splendid son, and fervently commended him to God
-and Nuestra Señora de La Popa. If he weathered the stormy gale of
-circumstances, Richard Cary pledged himself somehow to repay this humble
-recluse with the heart of gold.
-
-The sure-footed mule picked its way down the broken path, the lithe
-Indian lad chirruping in its ear. Beyond the foot of the hill, where a
-road swung inland from the harbor, the lad turned aside. At the edge of
-the jungle was hidden a ponderous, two-wheeled cart. It was heaped high
-with cordwood. Stakes at the sides prevented it from spilling. The
-_muchacho_ nudged Cary to dismount. The mule was backed into the shafts
-and a brass-bound harness slung on its back.
-
-“I suspected a nigger in the woodpile,” reflected the dubious Cary, “and
-now I know it. Just where do I fit into this load of wood? Hi, boy! What
-about it? _Qué es esto?_”
-
-The lad motioned him to examine for himself. A false bottom had been
-laid in the body of the cart. Between the floor that rested upon the
-axle and the upper platform of boards was a space perhaps a foot and a
-half deep. Into this the bulk of Richard Cary was expected to insert
-itself. He thanked his stars that illness had reduced his flesh. It was
-the utter helplessness of being flattened in there, underneath the pile
-of wood, that made him flinch. It was too much like being nailed in a
-coffin. To be discovered and hauled out by the heels would be a fate too
-absurd to contemplate.
-
-However, if there was a beggar alive who could not be a chooser, it was
-this same Richard Cary. He had to admire the ingenuity of the
-contrivance. A belated countryman hauling a load of firewood to the city
-in the cool of the night would pass unnoticed, whereas a curtained
-carriage might invite scrutiny. The stratagem was worthy of the wizened
-little man of the _patio_, with the grimace of a clown and the eye of an
-inquisitor.
-
-Very unhappy, Richard Cary inched himself in beneath the load of wood,
-flat on his back. The Indian lad, who had a wit of his own, hung over
-the rear of the cart two bags stuffed with fodder for the mule. These
-concealed the protruding feet of the melancholy stowaway. It was one way
-to enter Cartagena, but hurtful to the pride of an adventurer who had
-waged one hand-to-hand conflict after another in escaping from these
-same walls. There were precedents among other bold men, however, as far
-back in history as the wooden horse of Troy.
-
-The springless cart bumped and shook him infernally. He swore at the
-mule, in muffled accents, and even more earnestly at the crafty Señor
-Bazán. He could not be blamed for a petulant humor. After an hour or a
-week or a year, over streets that seemed to be paved with boulders, the
-load of wood turned into an alley and halted. The _muchacho_ was in no
-haste to extricate his passenger. First the wood had to be thrown off
-and the false bottom knocked apart. The lad was unequal to the task of
-hauling his human cargo out by the legs.
-
-Released, at length, from the ignominious cart, Richard Cary was a prey
-to renewed qualms. The rear wall of Señor Bazán’s house was darkly
-uncommunicative. It told nothing whatever. Presently, however, a door
-opened on a crack. The Indian lad hissed, “_Rapido_.” The _Americano_
-was to remove himself from the alley. He obeyed as _rapido_ as the
-cramps in his legs permitted. His senses were set on a hair-trigger for
-whatever emergency might leap at him.
-
-The door opened far enough to admit him. He brushed through, into a
-shadowy hall, and collided with the shrunken figure of Señor Bazán who
-yelped dismay and retreated as if afraid of being trodden upon like a
-bug. The uneasy visitor tottered after him, having a fancy for quarters
-more spacious than this dim, confined hall. It was like a pursuit during
-which Señor Bazán scurried into a large room which to Richard Cary’s
-unaccustomed vision seemed ablaze with lights. He stood and goggled like
-an owl.
-
-Many shelves of books, a desk littered with papers and more books, heavy
-furniture of mahogany and stamped leather—this was evidently a library
-in which the aged uncle of Teresa spent much of his time.
-
-He, too, blinked bewilderment. The ragged scarecrow of a Cary, with the
-stubbled beard, the blanched color, and the drawn features, was
-tragically unlike the ruddy young giant in the crisp white uniform with
-the gold shoulder bars who had towered beside the galleon bell in the
-moonlit _patio_. The contrast was deeper than this. Then he had been
-easy and smiling, the massive embodiment of good-nature. Now his jaw was
-set, the haggard eyes somberly alert, and his whole demeanor that of a
-man on guard against an ambuscade. Still absorbed in studying him, Señor
-Bazán said not a word, but dragged a chair forward and thrust it behind
-the visitor.
-
-Cary could not have stood on his feet much longer. He dropped into the
-chair. As a gesture of good-will the old gentleman patted his shoulder
-and silently vanished to reappear with a tray of cold chicken, salad,
-bread and cheese, and a bottle of port. Then he cocked his head like a
-bird and said in English:
-
-“Make yourself easy, my dear young friend. It has been the devil to pay
-for you since I had the pleasure of meeting you in my house. I have no
-soldiers hiding behind the curtains, and I have not informed the
-department of police. There is a hot bath and a soft bed for you, and my
-poor company to-morrow.”
-
-“I’ll have to take your word for it that I am in safe water,” sighed
-Richard Cary, his scowl fading. “Comfort like this is worth any trouble
-that may break later. There was no reason why I should feel sure of a
-friendly welcome, sir. I am an outlaw, as you know. It was taking a
-blind chance.”
-
-“‘_Ver las orejas del lobo!_’ ‘To see the ears of the wolf,’” gleefully
-quoted the old gentleman. “So this is the wolf’s den? First I must ask
-pardon for talking only Spanish when you called with Teresa. It was
-rude, a shabby trick. There is no better English scholar in Colombia
-than Ramon Bazán. That girl is so full of mischief that I thought she
-might lead you on to make fun of her venerable uncle. It would have
-amused me to listen. Where did I learn my English so well? It means
-nothing to Teresa—these things happened before she was born; but for
-several years I was the minister for my country in Washington and later
-in London. A withered old back-number now, with one foot in the grave,
-but Ramon Bazán was almost the president of Colombia. A revolution
-exploded under him. That was many years ago.”
-
-A breast of chicken and a glass of port were not too diverting to
-prevent Richard Cary from paying keen attention. He surmised that Señor
-Bazán was eager to make a favorable impression, exerting himself to
-dispel the idea that he was a senile object of curiosity. He desired to
-awaken respect as well as gratitude. This might be laid to an old man’s
-childish vanity. At any rate, he had ceased to be merely grotesque.
-
-There was no malice on the wrinkled, mobile features of the little old
-man in the flapping linen clothes. Furtive he was by nature, the beady
-black eyes glancing this way and that, the bald scalp twitching, but,
-for the present, at least, there was no harm in him. This was Richard
-Cary’s intuition. He also guessed that Señor Bazán was anxious to
-ingratiate himself. If there was a motive behind it, this could be left
-to divulge itself. The situation hinted of aspects unforeseen.
-
-“You can sleep calmly to-night, Señor Cary,” said the host, with his
-twisted grin, “but many people in Cartagena would stay wide awake if
-they knew you were so near.”
-
-“Am I as notorious as all that, sir? Of course I want to hear the
-news—”
-
-“As they say, you stood this city on its head,” shrilly chuckled Ramon
-Bazán. “Revolutions have begun with less disturbance in some of our hot
-little republics of the Caribbean. Rumors flew about until your exploits
-were frightful. The children of Cartagena have never been so obedient to
-their parents. All they have to be told is that _El Tigre Amarillo
-Grande_, the Great Yellow Tiger, will catch them if they are naughty. It
-was this way—your dead body was not found, although you were on the
-edge of death when you escaped from the prison. You could not have fled
-far. This was why you were not looked for at La Popa. Therefore you were
-no man, but a wicked spirit from hell. The common people are very
-foolish and ignorant.”
-
-“I never meant to upset the town when I came ashore that night,” said
-Cary, smiling in his turn. “You are good enough to shelter me and you
-ought to know the facts. It was just one thing after another. A gang of
-roughs tried to wipe me out. In self-defense I stretched two or three of
-them. My hunch was that Colonel Fajardo had put up the job. If I stayed
-in jail, he was bound to get me. And my ship was ready to sail. My duty
-was to join her. So I walked out of the prison, but was too late to get
-aboard the _Tarragona_. My head went wrong with fever. I don’t know how
-I climbed La Popa. Well, that’s the nubbin of the story.”
-
-“Five of the _bravoné_ and three soldiers of the prison,” grinned Señor
-Bazán, ticking them off on his fingers. “Am I not a valiant old man to
-sit alone in the same house with _El Tigre Amarillo Grande_?”
-
-“Not while a word in the telephone yonder would cook my goose,” grimly
-answered the prisoner of fortune. “Please tell me one thing. Did I kill
-any of those poor devils at the prison? I didn’t want to. They got in my
-way and I had to treat ’em rough.”
-
-“By the mercy of God, the corporal whose neck you wrung had a little
-breath left in him. The two other soldiers are also alive. The five
-_bravoné_ who were serenading the ladies that night? Two were found very
-dead. Another whose shoulder felt the iron bar died after four days, I
-am happy to say. That iron bar? My dear young man, crowds of people
-still gather to look at the window from which _El Tigre_ pulled the iron
-bar like a straw in his hands.”
-
-Richard Cary blushed. He was never a braggart nor had he aspired to a
-reputation like this. “Then I am a bigger fool than I thought I was, to
-come into Cartagena,” said he.
-
-“An amusing fool,” replied Señor Bazán, with a whimsical twinkle. “How
-you expect to get out again is too much for my feeble old wits. Not in a
-Colombian sailing boat of any kind. Every sailor of Cartagena crosses
-himself when he hears the name of _El Tigre Amarillo Grande_. The
-muleteers and men of the river are carrying it back into the mountains.
-It will soon spread as far away as Bogotá.”
-
-“Then why in the name of common sense did you fetch me in from La Popa?”
-was the blunt question.
-
-“How could I refuse, Señor Cary, when you appealed to my hospitality,
-you a friend of my niece, the Señorita Fernandez?”
-
-This answer was palpably evasive. Here was a riddle which only time and
-the crotchety impulses of Ramon Bazán could disclose. The puzzled young
-man was in no mind to confide that his love for Teresa had urged him to
-this blind adventure. Cross-currents were already visible. The uncle of
-Teresa had some design of his own in harboring the sailor refugee. The
-situation was cleared of immediate peril, however, and Richard Cary
-concluded that he was not to be betrayed. The rasping voice of Ramon
-Bazán awoke him from a reverie.
-
-“You suspected Colonel Fajardo of plotting to kill you? Why?”
-
-“Jealousy,” was the admission. “And I was warned that he had a bad
-record.”
-
-“Jealousy, Señor Cary?” twittered the old gentleman, highly diverted.
-“And the woman was that spitfire of a Teresa! I had my suspicions, but
-it is not politic to wag the tongue too much in Cartagena. As it turned
-out, this Colonel Fajardo convicted himself.”
-
-“The deuce he did,” cried Richard Cary. “Then my conscience is clear
-from start to finish. What do you mean? How did he convict himself?”
-
-“He fled next day—disappeared like smoke. Afraid because you were not
-dead? Perhaps. Afraid of a plot he had hatched while half-drunk? The
-fact is that he was seen for the last time on the wharf before the
-_Tarragona_ sailed. Yes, he ran away somewhere, and so confessed himself
-a guilty man.”
-
-“He was that kind,” said Cary. “The blackguard invited me to sit and
-drink with him in a café a little while before his gunmen attacked me.
-So he lost his nerve and decided to make himself scarce. How did he get
-away?”
-
-“Possibly in the _Tarragona_. There was some talk that he might have
-bribed one of the crew to hide him for the short trip to Porto Colombia
-or Santa Marta. But he has not been seen in those ports. I have inquired
-of friends. He is very well known on this coast as a colonel of the army
-before he was appointed _Comandante_ of the Port. There it is! Colonel
-Fajardo has most thoroughly disappeared. I regret you did not hit him
-with the terrible iron bar.”
-
-“I shall always regret it,” said Richard Cary. “Doesn’t that make it
-more hopeful for me to climb out of this infernal scrape, Señor Bazán?”
-
-“Not very much. You are charged with murder, assault, breaking prison,
-and the good God knows what else! And you are _El Tigre Amarillo
-Grande_! The Fruit Company’s agent has shown no interest in your behalf.
-That would be most useful.”
-
-“Captain Sterry may have turned in a bad report in New York, sir. He was
-biased—there was a personal difference—a grudge of his. He signed on
-another second mate, I presume, and I was thrown in the discard.”
-
-“Then you will have no employment as an officer, even if you are lucky
-enough to get away from Cartagena, Señor Cary?”
-
-“It sounds ridiculous to look that far ahead,” lazily answered the
-prisoner who found it hard to stay awake. “At present I seem to be cast
-for the part of _El Tigre_, and it doesn’t appeal to me at all.”
-
-Señor Bazán scolded himself for exhausting a guest already weak and in
-distress of mind. He took the young man by the arm and tried to steady
-him as they crossed the _patio_ and entered a bedroom. The bath was near
-at hand.
-
-“Pajamas to-morrow, Ricardo,” said the host. “The woman in my kitchen is
-sewing them together. She will also make some white clothes. There are
-none big enough in the shops. If I visit a tailor he will pass it around
-as a joke that Ramon Bazán must have _El Tigre Amarillo_ in his house.
-Bolt your door, if it pleases you. The window has strong iron bars and
-nobody in Cartagena can pull them out to molest you. There are worse
-friends to have than old Ramon Bazán. That Teresa has called me a funny
-old guy to my face. You mustn’t believe all she tells you.”
-
-The old gentleman went fluttering off in his hurried fashion as if
-shadows were forever chasing him. Richard Cary was awake for a long
-time. Sounds in the street disturbed him. Once he fancied he heard the
-distant voices of men singing and the melodious tinkle of a guitar.
-Again it was the pit-pat-pat of feet on the pavement outside the window.
-When sleep came to him, his dreams were unhappy.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
- SPANISH TREASURE!
-
-A different man in fresh white pajamas and straw slippers, Richard Cary
-idled in a shady corner of the _patio_. A razor had reaped the heavy
-stubble clean. Not in the least resembling the Yellow Tiger that gobbled
-naughty children, he looked amiable enough to purr. His status in this
-household was even more perplexing than at his arrival. Señor Bazán
-seemed to be afraid of his disfavor. Afraid? It should have been the
-other way about. It was for the helpless fugitive to exert himself, by
-every means in his power, to win and hold the regard of the eccentric
-old gentleman who held his life in the hollow of his hand.
-
-Every precaution was taken to guard the secret of his presence in this
-house. The outer doors were kept locked. The only servants were the
-Indian lad and a fat black woman in the kitchen. These two mortally
-feared the wrath of Señor Bazán, and were close-mouthed by habit. He had
-taught them the doctrine of assiduously minding their own business.
-Moreover, it was a thing far more perilous to risk the vengeance of _El
-Tigre Amarillo_ should they drop even a whisper outside the house. How
-calm and harmless he seemed, but imagine him in one of those rages! It
-was common report that no bullet could slay him.
-
-Señor Bazán endeavored to display his very best behavior. The flighty
-fits of temper were restrained and he was thoughtful of the small
-courtesies. As Teresa had said, he was a very old man, brittle and
-easily tired. At times the wheezing spells almost choked him. Quite
-often he dozed off with a book in his lap. Otherwise he was diabolically
-wide awake.
-
-More like himself every day, Richard Cary knew that inaction would soon
-fret him beyond endurance. In the New Hampshire farmhouse at home he
-could sit and look at the fire through long lazy spells, but this
-senseless confinement was very different. He was living and waiting for
-the arrival of the _Tarragona_. After that? Ramon Bazán insisted that it
-was impossible to flee this hostile coast, nor did he offer the smallest
-hint of willingness to coöperate in any attempt. Why, then, had Richard
-Cary been fetched into Cartagena? It was a question that pursued itself
-in a tedious circle.
-
-With all the leisure in the world to mull it over, Cary found solace in
-the briar pipe with the amber bit which was the sole possession left
-him. Through his tempestuous escapades it had stayed in a trousers
-pocket. A pipe with a charmed life, he thought, and a precious reminder
-of Teresa Fernandez and their last glimpse of each other.
-
-Now he laid it on the stone flagging beside his canvas chair, and the
-little brown monkey came frisking over from the trellis. It snatched the
-pipe in a tiny black paw and was about to stick it in his mouth when
-Cary interfered. He laughed at the indignant little beast which squeaked
-profane opinions of a man who would deny a petted monkey a morning pipe.
-The puckered countenance, the spiteful grimace, the gusty temper, were
-absurdly like Señor Bazán when things displeased him. At one moment the
-Spanish gentleman of culture and manners, in the next he might be a
-chattering, scolding tyrant with no manners whatever.
-
-Crack-brained? So Teresa had expressed herself, but her relations with
-her uncle appeared to be uncertain, an intermittent feud, and she was
-not apt to give the devil his due. As a rule, Richard Cary’s verdicts
-were slowly formulated and uncolored by prejudice. In this instance he
-felt more and more convinced that there was some unseen method in the
-madness of Señor Ramon Bazán. He had enticed _El Tigre Amarillo Grande_
-into a comfortable cage and proposed to keep him there.
-
-Meanwhile the wizened keeper of the tiger was frequently leaving the
-house on some affairs of his own. He went jogging off in a hired
-carriage and was not seen again for hours. He brought back American
-magazines and tobacco, phonograph records, delicacies from the market,
-anything to amuse the restless Ricardo, who chafed under the increasing
-burden of obligation. Nothing was said to explain why Señor Bazán should
-spend so much time away from his house. Secretiveness enwrapped him. He
-moved like an industrious conspirator.
-
-On the day before the _Tarragona_ was due in port, Richard Cary took
-occasion to say:
-
-“You have been a wonderfully kind friend to me, Señor Bazán, and I don’t
-deserve it. Now that I am getting fit to take care of myself, I must
-plan to get away somehow. I have been waiting for the arrival of the
-ship, to see the Señorita Fernandez again—”
-
-Uncle Ramon bounced from his chair and wildly waved his hands as he
-cried:
-
-“It was that girl all the time! The devil fly away with her! But I must
-let you see her or there will be another commotion with an iron bar. All
-right, Ricardo. Teresa is sure to come to my house to ask if anything
-was heard about you after the steamer sailed away with her. How can I
-keep you from seeing that girl? You have an infatuation.”
-
-“I shall take no chances,” was the dogged reply. “She might be kept on
-board. I’ll write her a letter and you will send it down to the ship or
-carry it yourself.”
-
-This ripped the temper of Señor Bazán to shreds. He slapped his bald
-pate and his false teeth clicked as he vociferated:
-
-“Writing letters is a trick of———— idiots. It would make me as big a
-fool as you are to let a letter go out of my house, a letter you had
-written to a sweetheart. What happens to me if Cartagena finds out I am
-hiding you here? Bah! That girl has turned your brain into a rotten
-egg.”
-
-Taken aback by this tantrum, Cary was strongly inclined to twist the old
-gentleman’s neck. It was not really essential, however, to write a
-letter. Soothingly he suggested:
-
-“Then you will promise to let her know that she must come to the house
-while she is in port. Without fail? She will guess that something is in
-the wind.”
-
-“Yes, I will do that much,” grumbled Uncle Ramon. “I have to keep you
-quiet. I will drive down to the ship and bring Teresa back with me. What
-if the chief steward or somebody forbids her to go ashore?”
-
-“She will come anyhow, unless I am all wrong about her,” said Cary.
-
-“God knows what is in the heart of a girl like that,” spitefully
-retorted her uncle.
-
-“One thing more, Señor Bazán. The chief engineer of the ship, Mr.
-McClement, is a friend of mine. I wish to get word to him, too. He can
-be trusted absolutely. If you will slip a word to Teresa, she will
-arrange it so that he can drop in for a chat after dark. McClement is a
-man who will help you find some way to get me off your hands. And I am
-anxious to let him know that I am alive and didn’t desert the ship.”
-
-“Why not invite the whole damned crew of the _Tarragona_ to parade to my
-house with a band of music?” shouted the disgusted uncle. “Forget this
-pest of a chief engineer. It is enough to let that girl into the house.
-How do I know what mischief it will make? She is the kind that talks in
-her sleep.”
-
-Richard Cary felt wretchedly ashamed of his own futility. Sulkily he
-surrendered. Teresa could later confide in the chief engineer, but it
-was a sore blow to be deprived of his canny wisdom and aid in this
-extremity. The Yellow Tiger had ceased to purr. He had not been rescued,
-but kidnaped. He did not propose to spend much more of his life shut up
-in this madhouse.
-
-He was pacing up and down next day, counting the hours. The clothes made
-by the handy black woman in the kitchen, white shirt and trousers, were
-by no means an atrocious fit. He was quite spick-and-span, a young man
-waiting for his sweetheart. It was late in the afternoon when the wind
-brought to the open courtyard the distant, vibrant blasts of a steamer’s
-whistle. It was the _Tarragona_ blowing for the wharf. He could have
-told that whistle from a hundred other ships. Never would he forget it,
-not after hearing her blow the three long blasts of departure when he
-had tottered up the ramp to the round watch-tower on the city wall.
-
-Earlier in the day, Ramon Bazán had vanished on one of his shrouded
-errands, promising to go to the wharf as soon as the steamer should be
-reported. Cary grew more and more impatient. Soon he looked to see
-Teresa come flying in, slender, graceful, ardent to respond to his fond
-greeting. Then she would turn her attention to the wicked old uncle who
-was making a jail of his house and holding her Ricardo against his will.
-It would be a lively scene.
-
-A carriage was heard to stop in front of the house. The young man dared
-not show himself, but retreated to his room, as caution had taught him
-to do. He was chagrined at being found in such a plight. He was like a
-stranded hulk. But if Teresa still loved him, nothing was impossible to
-attempt and to achieve.
-
-Uncle Ramon Bazán came teetering in alone, very much put out and
-wheezing maledictions. Richard Cary advanced from the threshold of his
-room, grievously disappointed, but expecting to hear that Teresa had
-been delayed until evening. Her uncle made no effort to break the news
-gently.
-
-“My trip to the _Tarragona_ was for nothing. I lost my breath climbing
-on board that ship and there was no Teresa at all.”
-
-“She was not in the ship?” blurted Cary. “What’s the answer to that?
-What did the chief steward say?”
-
-“That pig of a Swiss said she had left the ship in New York. He didn’t
-know why. A good stewardess, he called her, when she was not chasing
-herself about something else.”
-
-“And no word to explain why she wanted to quit or where she went?”
-implored the lover.
-
-“Not one word, Ricardo,” said Ramon, his bald head cocked sagaciously.
-“These infernal girls! They can make a Yellow Tiger look like a sick
-house-cat. But why should I laugh? There were such girls when Ramon
-Bazán was a gay _caballero_—Good God, how long ago it was—and he was
-never afraid to see the ears of the wolf if the prize was an embrace and
-a kiss. Teresa, though, she was never a girl to be a fool with the men.
-Not a coquette, I will say that much for the jade. She was fond of you,
-Ricardo. My old eyes told me that.”
-
-Richard Cary stood massive and composed. The uncle’s tirade was the
-sound of empty words. They buzzed without biting. He could not believe
-that Teresa was faithless or forgetful, fleeting though the romance had
-been. Sadly mystified, he was not one to be dragged adrift by an ill
-wind. His convictions were stanch. Such was his native temperament.
-Because Teresa had found some reason for leaving the ship in New York,
-it did not mean that she had forsaken him. He would find her some day
-and then it could be explained.
-
-“I am badly disappointed, sir,” he said to her uncle. The boyish smile
-was wistful as he added: “I couldn’t see beyond to-day. Never mind.
-Teresa Fernandez is wise enough to steer her own course. Now, my dear
-Señor Bazán, I am finished with Cartagena. I’m head over heels in debt
-to you for all your kindness, but I must be on my way. I never fell in a
-hole that I couldn’t pull myself out of somehow. If you will help me, I
-shall be more grateful than ever.”
-
-It was not mere bravado. The time had come to force the hand of the
-benevolent old despot. The reply to this ultimatum was a sardonic
-chuckle. The mirth increased until it ended in spasms of coughing. Cary
-pounded the brittle Uncle Ramon on the back and almost broke him in two.
-It was exasperating to listen to him. He wiped his eyes, adjusted his
-teeth, and motioned the young man into the library. There the exhausted
-Señor Bazán curled up in a chair like a goblin and began to elucidate
-himself as follows:
-
-“To laugh at a broken-hearted lover is abominable, Ricardo. I reproach
-myself and implore you to forgive a funny old guy. It is selfish of me
-to feel so pleased, but I hope to make you understand. That girl was in
-the way. To me she was an obstacle. I could do nothing with you until
-her ship came in. And then I was afraid of her entangling you against
-me. With a man and girl, everything must be talked over together. ‘Will
-I do this?’ ‘Should I do that?’ ‘What does she say?’ I tell you, dear
-Ricardo, the women spoil more bold men than they ever make heroes of.
-For the present we are happily rid of Teresa. You will be fool enough to
-follow her later, but that is none of the funeral of Ramon Bazán.”
-
-Richard Cary thrust his grieved disappointment into the background. Here
-was promise of reading the riddle of his detention. The old man had
-never been so ablaze with excitement as now. He caught his breath and
-volubly continued:
-
-“It filled my mind when I first saw you, Ricardo—you were the man I had
-been looking for—the man I had to have. And then I lost you, the worst
-luck that ever was. When that lame fellow, Palacio, came down from La
-Popa with your letter, I tell you I rejoiced myself. You were crazy to
-find that Teresa, I could see it between the words, but it was the best
-of fortune for Ramon Bazán. Since you have been in my house, Ricardo, I
-have watched you, to measure you up, and I was right as could be, on
-that very first night. You are the man I want. Not so many bats in my
-_cabeza_ as the saucy Teresa has told me to my face! When you know what
-I want you for, you will not sigh and look sad and talk about bursting
-out of Cartagena. You will be glad of the day when you came to live with
-Ramon Bazán.”
-
-“Show me any road out and I will swamp you with my blessings,” exclaimed
-Cary, immensely diverted. “I knew you had something up your sleeve, but
-there I stuck. Now, for the Lord’s sake, please get down to brass tacks.
-Then I can tell you whether I’ll take it or leave it.”
-
-“Come over to my desk,” cried Señor Bazán, as agile as the little brown
-monkey. “Now sit down and listen. You do that very well. It is a virtue
-worth its weight in pure gold. I have observed it in you. Have you read
-much about Spanish treasure? Have the legends fascinated you?”
-
-Richard Cary jumped from his chair. The words had wrenched him out of
-his solid composure. All he could say was, like a deep-voiced echo:
-“Spanish treasure? Has it fascinated me? How did you happen to hit the
-mark like that?”
-
-This quick vehemence startled Señor Bazán. It was unexpected. This new
-Richard Cary, aroused and masterful, was, indeed, like having a great
-yellow tiger in the house.
-
-“Ah, ha, Ricardo, you smell the trail? You have dreamed of finding
-Spanish treasure? This is better than I hoped for. It might be a captain
-that sailed with El Draque as you stand there with eyes on fire.”
-
-“With Drake?” exclaimed Richard Cary, his arms folded across his mighty
-chest. “Aye, Señor Bazán, there was treasure for the men that sailed
-these seas with Frankie Drake. Here at Cartagena, though it was like
-pulling teeth to make the fat Spanish merchants give up their gold.”
-
-Señor Bazán was a trifle dazed. This amazing young man whom he had
-handled so carefully, with such solicitude to gain his good-will and
-gratitude, was fairly running away with him. He did not have to be
-coaxed or persuaded. This was already obvious.
-
-“Dead stuff?” laughed Cary. “You have it in the books on your shelves.
-But I enjoy talking about it—how Drake and his seamen used their long
-pikes in carrying the _barricadas_ in the streets after they made a
-breach in the wall. It was merry work while it lasted. Six hundred
-Englishmen to take the strongest town in the West Indies! There was a
-swarm of Indian bowmen with poisoned arrows that played the mischief
-with them. The town had to yield after Master Carlisle, the
-lieutenant-general, slew the chief ensign-bearer of the Spaniards with
-his own hand. They fought as pretty a duel with swords as ever a man
-saw. And all for what? After Drake and his men took their pleasure in
-sacking and spoiling the town and setting fire to a great part of it,
-the ransom they obtained was no more than a hundred and ten thousand
-ducats. A beggarly adventure that laid a hundred and fifty lads on their
-backs with wounds and fever.”
-
-Señor Bazán sucked in his breath with a greedy sound. He was squirming
-in his chair. Here was a topic he could never tire of. His heart’s
-desire was revealed.
-
-Richard Cary pleasantly rambled on, yarning of Spanish treasure like a
-sociable Elizabethan mariner in a waterside taproom. He was carried away
-by his own enthusiasm. The way was cleared for the cherished secret of
-Ramon Bazán. Ricardo was in a mood to respond and sympathize. He would
-not scoff at an old man’s dearest ambition that had long possessed him,
-body and soul, that had vivified old age and decrepitude with the magic
-of youth’s illusions.
-
-Señor Bazán was careful to lock the library door before seating himself
-at the desk. From a drawer he withdrew a folded document much crumpled
-and soiled. His fingers fumbled with it. He was pitifully agitated. Cary
-stood leaning over the desk. He foresaw the nature of the document.
-Ramon Bazán delayed unfolding it. The habit of secrecy was not easily
-broken. He preferred first to explain what was more or less known to the
-picaresque race of modern treasure-seekers. It happened to be new to
-Richard Cary’s ears. He drank it in with gusto, while humming in his
-brain was an old sea chantey:
-
- “Why, I’ve seen less lucky fellows pay for liquor with doubloons,
- And for ’baccy with ozellas, gold mohurs, and ducatoons!
- _Bring home! Heave and rally, my very famous men!_”
-
-Still clutching his precious document, old Ramon Bazán chose Lima for
-the beginning of his long-winded narrative. During the last days of
-Spanish rule on the west coast, this capital of Peru had been the
-lordliest city of the vast domains won by the _conquistadores_ and ruled
-by the Viceroys. Founded by Francisco Pizarro, it was for centuries the
-seat of government in South America. The Viceregal court was maintained
-in magnificent state, and the Archbishop of Lima was the most powerful
-prelate of the continent.
-
-Here the religious orders were centered and to Lima the Inquisition was
-removed from Cartagena. Of the incredible amount of gold and silver
-taken from the mines of the Incas, much remained in Lima to pile up
-fortunes for the grandees and officials, or to be fashioned into massive
-adornments for the palaces, residences, churches, and for the great
-cathedral which stands to-day to proclaim the grandeur that was Spain’s.
-To Cartagena its walls, to Lima its cathedral, runs the saying.
-
-When Bolivar the Liberator had succeeded in driving the Spanish out of
-Venezuela and had also set up the free republic of Colombia, the ruling
-classes of Peru took alarm, which increased to panic as soon as it was
-known that the revolutionary forces were organizing to march south and
-assault Lima itself. There was great running to and fro among the
-wealthy Spanish merchants, the holders of political offices under the
-Viceroy, and the gilded aristocracy which had ruffled it with riches won
-by the swords of their two-fisted ancestors. It was feared that the
-rebels of Bolivar and San Martin would loot the city and confiscate the
-treasure, both public and private, which consisted of bullion, plate,
-jewels, and coined gold.
-
-The people of Lima, hoping to send their private fortunes safe home to
-Spain before the plundering invaders should make a clean sweep, put
-their valuables on board all manner of sailing vessels which chanced to
-be in harbor. A fugitive fleet of merchantmen steered away from the
-coast of Peru, the holds filled with gold and silver, the cabins crammed
-with officials of the Church and State and other residents of rank and
-station. In the same manner was sent to sea the treasure of the great
-cathedral of Lima, all its jeweled chalices, monstrances, and vestments,
-the weighty gold candlesticks and shrines, the vast store of precious
-furniture and ornaments which had made this one of the richest religious
-edifices in the world.
-
-There had not been so much dazzling booty afloat since the galleon
-fleets were in their heydey. Gone, however, were the dauntless
-buccaneers and gentlemen adventurers who had singed the beard of the
-King of Spain in the wake of Francis Drake. The best of them had sailed
-and fought and plundered for glory as well as gain, for revenge as much
-as for doubloons. Their successors as sea rovers were pirates of low
-degree, wretches of a sordid commercialism who preyed on honest merchant
-skippers of all flags and had little taste for fighting at close
-quarters. The older race of sea rogues had been wolves; these later
-pirates were jackals.
-
-Many a one of these gentry got wind of the fabulous treasure which had
-been sent afloat from Lima and there is no doubt that much of it failed
-to reach Spain. While in some instances these fleeing merchantmen were
-boarded and scuttled by pirate craft, in others the lust of gold was too
-strong for the seamen to whom the rare cargoes had been entrusted. They
-rose and took the treasure away from their hapless passengers whose
-bodies fed the fishes.
-
-Among these treacherous mariners, and the most conspicuous of them, was
-one Captain Thompson, of the British trading brig _Mary Dear_. He
-received on board in the harbor of Lima as much as six million dollars’
-worth of gold and silver. The black-hearted Captain Thompson led his
-crew in killing the Spanish owners once the brig was out at sea. Instead
-of sailing south around Cape Horn, they steered northward in the Pacific
-and made a landing on lonely Cocos Island.
-
-There the booty was carried ashore and buried until such time as these
-villains could safely plan distribution and escape. Wisely preferring to
-stay at sea, Captain Thompson joined the crew of a well-known pirate,
-Benito Bonito, who also had bloodied his hands with this Spanish
-treasure. He had captured a rich galleon off the coast of Peru and two
-other vessels bearing riches sent from Lima. On Cocos Island, at the
-advice of Captain Thompson, he buried some of his treasure, in a
-sandstone cave in the face of a cliff. Then he laid kegs of powder upon
-a ledge close by and blew great fragments of the cliff to cover the
-cave. In another excavation he placed gold ingots, seven hundred and
-thirty-three of them. They were ten inches long and four inches wide and
-three inches thick. With them were twoscore gold-hilted swords inlaid
-with jewels.
-
-The records of the British Admiralty show that Benito Bonito’s ship was
-captured by _H.M.S. Espiègle_ which was cruising in the Pacific. Rather
-than be hanged in chains, this affluent pirate gallantly blew out his
-brains. At this time Captain Thompson was no longer sailing in company
-with him and so saved his own wicked skin. One rumor had it that he was
-garroted in Havana, under another name, with eleven of his old crew of
-the brig _Mary Dear_. Other curious stories indicated that he flitted in
-obscurity from port to port, in mortal terror of Spanish vengeance and
-never daring to disclose the secret of Cocos Island. . .
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
- RICARDO WRITES A LETTER
-
-Such was the narrative as old Ramon Bazán poured it forth with various
-impassioned digressions which included cursing the souls of Captain
-Thompson and Benito Bonito. Excitement made him pepper it with Spanish
-phrases that had to be translated. The effort sorely taxed his vitality.
-As Richard Cary said to himself, it was like a boiling kettle. The lid
-had blown off.
-
-Artfully the climax had been withheld. With the gloating affection of a
-miser in a melodrama, Señor Bazán spread his creased, soiled document
-upon the desk. He guarded it with both hands as if Cary might snatch it
-and bolt for the street. A chart, as the young man had anticipated—a
-ragged island roughly sketched—the depths of water marked in
-fathoms—shore elevations shown by fuzzy scratches like
-caterpillars—sundry crosses and arrows and notations in figures. Here
-and there the penmanship was almost illegible. Time had faded the ink.
-Dirt had smudged the sheet of yellowed paper ripped out of some old
-canvas-backed log-book which might have belonged in the doomed _Mary
-Dear_. Ramon Bazán poised a skinny finger over a symbol inked between
-two hills and piped exultantly:
-
-“Six million dollars in gold and silver and jewels, Ricardo. And here is
-the cave where Benito Bonito hid the ingots.”
-
-Cary picked up a reading-glass and studied the sheet of paper with the
-eye of a professional navigator. The chart was the handiwork of a
-seaman, this he speedily concluded. The compass bearings were properly
-marked, the anchorage for a vessel noted with particular care, and a
-channel between the reefs indicated by heavier lines of a pen. The rest
-of the chart was cryptic, impossible to make head or tail of without
-prolonged examination. It was interesting but not convincing to Richard
-Cary who had heard of similar treasure charts. Seafaring men gossiped
-about them. They turned up every now and again, in the possession of
-credulous dreamers who swore them to be authentic.
-
-There were excellent reasons, however, for avoiding skepticism in
-discussing this prodigious marvel with Señor Bazán. Here was Richard
-Cary’s chance to put the walls of Cartagena behind him, his one tangible
-hope of salvation. And he was not a man to hang back from seeking
-Spanish treasure as his next gamble with destiny.
-
-[Illustration: “WHERE IS THIS COCOS ISLAND?”]
-
-“Where is this Cocos Island?” he asked.
-
-“Only two hundred miles from the coast of Costa Rica,” instantly
-answered Ramon. “You see, it is a short voyage through the Canal and
-into the Pacific. You will not have to climb a tree, like El Draque, to
-look at the great South Sea. You are wondering why I should have so much
-faith in this chart? I am easily fooled? Well, then, it will cost a
-great deal of money to pay for a ship and a crew to go to Cocos Island
-and dig up the treasure. Nobody ever saw Ramon Bazán spend a dollar
-unless he knew what he was doing. They call him the stingiest old
-tight-fist in Cartagena. To get ahead of him you must rise before the
-cock crows.”
-
-“Yes, it will cost you a good many thousands,” agreed Cary. “Do you mind
-telling me why you feel you have a sure thing in this treasure chart?”
-
-“It is fair to ask me that question, Ricardo. When did the _Mary Dear_
-sail away from Lima? One hundred years ago, and a little bit more. One
-hundred and three years ago. This chart was given to me by my father. He
-lived and died in Cartagena, and he was eighty-six years old when he
-died in this house. It was always _mañana_ with him, and he had business
-that tied him to the grindstone. He had dreams of going to Cocos Island.
-Figure it for yourself, Ricardo. This chart came to him just one hundred
-years ago. Will you laugh at me if I say this chart was given to him by
-Captain Thompson himself?”
-
-“In Cartagena I believe anything and everything,” gravely acquiesced
-Richard Cary. “You couldn’t make me bat an eye to save you. The fever
-downed this Captain Thompson, I presume, while he was dodging under
-cover, and your father befriended him. That is how it should work out.”
-
-“Exactly that! Truth is funnier than fiction,” cried Ramon Bazán,
-bobbing up from the desk. “My father had the kindest heart in the world.
-This stranger was dumped on the beach from a Mexican privateer which
-came in for fresh water. The man was ill and almost dead. My father took
-him into this house. He died in the room where you now sleep, Ricardo. A
-merchant captain, he said, whose ship had been wrecked off the Isle of
-Pines. Just before he died he told the truth, which is a proper thing to
-do, Ricardo. One should always make his peace with God. Then it was that
-my father received the chart and learned the whole story of Captain
-Thompson and the _Mary Dear_ and the partnership with the pirate Benito
-Bonito.”
-
-“I’m in no position to pick flaws in it,” said Cary. “I could tell you
-wilder ones than that. And you actually have a ship in mind to sail for
-Cocos Island and you want me to take her there?”
-
-Ramon Bazán seemed to have some sudden difficulty with his articulation.
-He opened his mouth. His eyes bulged. His gestures were aimless as he
-faltered in a high key:
-
-“The ship will be ready—the ship will be—will be—will be—”
-
-His voice died in his throat. His face was contorted in a spasm of
-agony. He toppled across the desk, his hands drumming against it.
-
-Richard Cary stood dumbfounded. This was the devil of a new
-complication! The possible consequences raced through his mind. Ramon
-Bazán dead in his library—_El Tigre Amarillo Grande_ hiding in the
-house—a fatal snarl of circumstances from which there could be no
-possible release! Fantastically it occurred to him that the old man
-could not die in this tragic manner because the galleon bell had not
-intoned its ghostly forewarning.
-
-Delaying only an instant, Cary ran to the kitchen shouting for the black
-woman who might know what should be done. She took it calmly, waddling
-into the library, making the terrified young man understand that Papa
-Ramon was subject to such seizures. In a small cabinet she found a vial
-and shook out two capsules. These she rammed between the suffering man’s
-lips and crushed them against his teeth. Like a miracle, the acute
-anguish subsided. It was his heart, _mucho malo_.
-
-The corpulent negress picked him up in her arms like a baby and laid him
-upon the bed in his room. With a menacing finger under Cary’s nose, she
-dared to berate him. Topics of conversation more soothing were necessary
-to the welfare of the fragile old Papa Bazán.
-
-Shunted aside, Richard Cary retired to a wicker divan in a cool corner
-and smoked his pipe while he took account of stock. He was nervous. Said
-he to himself:
-
-“Big as I am and hard to jolt, I can stand just about so much. Here is
-one bet that I did overlook. Why didn’t the old boy tell me he had a
-balky heart? Supposing his clock stops before he gets me out of this
-jam? Whew!”
-
-After some time, he tiptoed into the stricken man’s room. It was
-delightful beyond words to find him propped up with pillows and sipping
-a stiff glass of rum and lime-juice. He was a forlorn little object,
-more shriveled and brittle than ever, but his eye was brightening again
-and he mustered a shadowy grin. Soothingly Cary suggested:
-
-“Thinking it over, sir, you ought to turn this business of the voyage
-over to me as soon as you can. You don’t want to pop off before we even
-sight Cocos Island. I agree to go, of course. Now where is your ship and
-what is she like? I am competent to take hold.”
-
-“Thank you, Ricardo,” murmured Papa Bazán, with a long pull at the rum.
-“It was too much excitement. Sit down, if you please. We can talk
-quietly, like two pigeons. I knew you would agree to go with me, whether
-you wanted to or not. I had you by the hair of the head. But unless I
-have won your confidence, unless you go willingly, you can desert the
-ship at Colon and then where am I? I am bright enough to see that far.”
-
-“I promise to stand by,” said Cary. “In the first place, it is a matter
-of honor. Perhaps you did kidnap me to serve your own ends, but that
-doesn’t lighten my obligation. I have no intention of getting out from
-under it. You have made a pampered guest of me, and now you offer me the
-one chance of oozing out of Cartagena with a whole skin. In the next
-place, I’m eager to go to Cocos Island with you. We’ll see the thing
-through. And there’s that.”
-
-“Then I am a well man, as spry as a tarantula,” sputtered Ramon Bazán.
-“Have you a master’s license, Ricardo? It will concern the insurance on
-my steamer. I can’t afford to risk heavy loss. All the money I can
-scrape together will be in this voyage.”
-
-“Yes, I hold a master’s ticket. And I’m fed up with twiddling my thumbs,
-so let’s go to it. What do you say?”
-
-“But I can’t turn the ship over to you until she is ready to go to sea,
-at the very last minute,” lamented the owner. “You will have to be
-sneaked on board at night and hidden until the steamer is ready to sail,
-or the Colombians in the crew will jump over the side. One look at _El
-Tigre Grande_ and—_adios_! Ten hundred things have I had on my hands to
-arrange, and do you wonder at my bad heart kicking a flip-flop?”
-
-“I shall pray for your health, believe me,” devoutly returned the
-nervous young mariner. “Now about this steamer—”
-
-“She is very awful to look at,” was the frank admission. “A German tramp
-that was interned four years at Cartagena! I bought her cheap, Ricardo.
-Rusty and afflicted with heart disease and other things, she will not
-sink if the weather is kind. But you yourself could never make the
-mistake of thinking she was the _Tarragona_. I have found a crew for my
-shabby harlot of a _Valkyrie_. Not such men as you will love, Ricardo,
-for I must take what I find. They must hear not a whisper of Cocos
-Island. It is a trading voyage to the west coast. The ship will clear
-for Buenaventura, a Pacific port of Colombia.”
-
-“We’ll drive that condemned old crock along somehow,” cheerfully
-responded Richard Cary. “When do we sail?”
-
-“A few days more, my captain. A little coal to put in and boiler tubes
-to be plugged. Coal is cheaper at Balboa. We can fill the bunkers there.
-As Heaven hears my voice, Ricardo, unless we find the treasure this
-voyage will ruin poor old Ramon Bazán.”
-
-The interview had taken a turn that was not good for a damaged heart.
-The owner of the _Valkyrie_ was growing excited. Cary thought it best to
-let the details rest. The old gentleman’s health interested him
-enormously. It was like carrying a basket of eggs along a very rough
-road.
-
-The breakable Papa Bazán insisted on getting into his clothes next
-morning and seemed little the worse for wear. It was quite apparent that
-he had not been running around in aimless circles while preparing for
-his romantic voyage. He was amazingly capable of getting what he wanted,
-and without the eternal delays of his native clime. Those who now did
-business with him found his pertinacity as vexing as the itch.
-
-The _Valkyrie_ was a small vessel, of nine hundred tons, which had flown
-the German flag in the coasting trade of Colombia and Venezuela until
-gripped by the greedy hand of war. Corroded and blistering, a sad orphan
-of the sea, she had slumbered at an anchor chain in the lagoon of
-Cartagena until rashly purchased by Ramon Bazán after a season of
-dickering and bickering to make a New England horse-trader jealous. When
-he found how much repair work was unavoidable, his heart almost stopped
-forever. What made it beat again was the stimulus, more potent than
-capsules, of the six millions of treasure of the brig _Mary Dear_,
-besides those seven hundred and thirty-three gold ingots piled in the
-cave by the arithmetical Benito Bonito.
-
-A west coast trading venture to make his old age something more than dry
-rot and stagnation, publicly explained Ramon Bazán. A whim of this
-erratic old codger, the Cartagena merchants found it mirthful. A
-guardian should interpose before he squandered all his money. A few
-critics argued to the contrary. In his prime Ramon Bazán had been famous
-for shrewdness. Who could tell? He might have something up his sleeve.
-The problem of raking a crew together caused more speculation. Cartagena
-was a languid seaport. Most of the commerce had been diverted to Porto
-Colombia. The American beach-combers who drifted in from the Canal Zone
-were more or less of a nuisance. It was one of these that Ramon Bazán
-had put in charge of his ship as chief officer while fitting for sea. A
-captain would join the _Valkyrie_ later, he vouchsafed.
-
-“What do you know about this chief officer, Señor Bazán?” asked Richard
-Cary.
-
-“If I knew more I should like him less,” was the peevish reply. “He
-calls himself Captain Bradley Duff. Rough and tough, eh? He commanded
-ships, to hear him say so, but I think he lost his ticket somewhere. He
-had a job with the North American Mining Company at Calamar for a little
-while. A large, important man, Ricardo, with blossoms on his nose, and a
-very red face—his belly is round and his feet are flat. He has a big
-voice and a whiskey breath. But he knows a ship, and he can’t graft very
-much because I pay all the bills. He asks why he is not made captain of
-the _Valkyrie_? You will understand why when you know him, Ricardo.”
-
-“I don’t have to know him, thank you. You can find a frowsy Captain
-Bradley Duff in almost any port. They make a loud noise and throw a
-chesty front. Is your chief engineer the same kind?”
-
-“No. I was lucky to find him. A long, thin boy, younger than you,
-Ricardo, and with manners courteous to an old man. He wandered to
-Colombia from Boston because he had the loose foot. You know. To take a
-look at the tropics. Nothing wrong with him. He was an assistant
-engineer in steamers between Boston and Norfolk. Down this way he was in
-charge of the ice plant at Barranquilla until his foot felt loose again.
-For two weeks he has been sweating with the engines of the _Valkyrie_,
-always cheerful, and he says he will hammer seven knots out of the old
-contraption or blow her to the middle of next week. Contraption? He made
-me laugh. The _Valkyrie_ is just that.”
-
-For Richard Cary it was a game of blind-man’s buff, with such random
-echoes as these to make him call it a choice between being shot in
-Cartagena or drowned in a coffin of a ship. It was a mad world and daily
-growing madder. However, he liked it, and would not have exchanged lots
-with the spruce Captain Jordan Sterry and the immaculate _Tarragona_
-punctually running her lawful schedule.
-
-One thing troubled him, and one thing only. He could not bear to go
-surging off into this uncertain escapade without sending some word to
-Teresa Fernandez. Wherever she might be, a letter would probably be
-forwarded if addressed in care of the Union Fruit Company’s offices in
-New York. He could not disclose his plans, but he could ask her to wait
-for him. So straitly was he fettered by circumstances that he felt bound
-to say to Señor Bazán:
-
-“It is your secret, this voyage to Cocos Island. I have no idea of
-giving it away, but I must write Teresa before we sail. There is no harm
-in telling her that I have found a good berth in a ship in the west
-coast trade for two or three months. She knows how dull shipping is at
-home. I disappeared from the _Tarragona_, you remember, and I want her
-to understand that it wasn’t my fault.”
-
-“Write her that much, then,” cried her waspish uncle, “but no more, on
-your honor, Ricardo. Fill that girl with all the beautiful lies you like
-about love and separations, but not one word about the _Valkyrie_ and
-Ramon Bazán. By my soul and breeches, we must keep Teresa quiet. Nobody
-knows what she will do next. Put your letter on the desk with my
-letters. I will take them to the post-office when I go out to-morrow.”
-
-For a young man naturally candid and unversed in evasions, it was a
-mortally difficult letter to write. He hated the web of secrecy which
-had inexorably enmeshed him. Besides this, he was writing his first love
-letter, and to a girl who had vanished from his ken, beyond horizons of
-her own. The situation was intricate, wretchedly confused. For the time
-he had given hostages to fortune and was not his own free man. To tell
-the whole truth, to explain to Teresa that, for love of her, he had
-sought a hiding-place in Cartagena with a price on his head and was now
-off for a fling at pirate’s gold to pour into her lap, this would have
-satisfied the normal impulses of a young man who desired to stand well
-in the eyes of his sweetheart.
-
-With a sigh and a frown, and a smile now and then, he finished the task.
-The letter he laid on the desk of Uncle Ramon Bazán, as instructed. It
-was gone next morning, he was particular to notice, when the owner of
-the _Valkyrie_ hastily departed in a carriage to pursue his harassing
-affairs.
-
-What Richard Cary did not know was that his letter was not among those
-which Señor Bazán had casually tucked in a pocket after observing that
-all of them bore stamps. He may have inferred that the young man had
-changed his mind. At any rate, it was a detail which soon slipped from
-an aged and heavily laden mind. All the letters found on the desk were
-deposited at the post-office and this was the end of the transaction for
-Ramon Bazán.
-
-The perversity of fate had assumed the guise of a little brown monkey of
-morbidly inquisitive habits. Early in the morning he had strayed in from
-the _patio_. The library was forbidden hunting-ground and therefore
-alluring. No doubt he was searching for Cary’s briar pipe as the
-especial quest. From a chair he had easily hopped to the top of the flat
-desk. The pile of letters ready for mailing arrested his errant fancy.
-First he shuffled them as though playing solitaire. Then he selected an
-envelope at random. It crackled as he squeezed it.
-
-The stamp in the corner caught his eye. A paw with sharp nails peeled
-off a corner of the stamp. He tasted it. The flavor was agreeable. Some
-sound in the hall just then disturbed his pastime. He tucked the one
-letter under his arm and took it along for leisurely investigation. It
-might be worth chewing for more of that pleasant flavor.
-
-Lightly the little brown monkey frisked from the library and galloped
-across the _patio_. In a far corner were two large tubs, painted green,
-which held young date palms. Behind them was a secluded nook where the
-astute monkey had often hidden such objects as appealed to his fickle
-fancy.
-
-Into this snug retreat he retired with the crackling envelope. Gravely
-intent, he tore the envelope open. He crammed a piece of it into his
-cheek. The taste was disappointing. He was angry. He had been hoaxed. He
-chattered profanely. With a grimace he tore the sheets of paper into
-strips. Then he tore the strips into very little bits of paper. They
-fluttered down behind the green tubs.
-
-The brown monkey looked pleased. He raked the bits of paper together and
-tossed them in air. They floated down like petals of the white flowers
-when he shook a bush in the _patio_. Some of them stuck to his hairy
-hide. Very carefully he picked them off. He scooped another handful of
-these bits of paper and flung them up.
-
-Soon tiring of this frolic, he swept all the bits of paper into a wide
-crack of the masonry wall behind the tubs. He had learned to be
-discreet. It was unwise to leave any traces of a foray into that
-forbidden library. Once it had resulted in a little brown monkey with a
-very sore head. Papa Bazán had used the flat of a brass paper-cutter.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
- THE MASTER TAKES COMMAND
-
-It was the opinion of Señor Bazán that the bell of the galleon _Nuestra
-Señora del Rosario_ should be mounted on the deck of his own vessel. The
-ancient bell had once sounded the watches from the forecastle-head of
-another treasure ship in these same seas. Also, it possessed a legendary
-virtue which was not to be overlooked, that of ringing its ghostly
-warning when fatal disaster impended. From what he could learn of the
-rusty relic of a tramp steamer, Richard Cary felt inclined to endorse
-the old man’s whimsy. It would be handy to know in advance when the
-_Valkyrie_ intended plunging to the bottom of the Caribbean or the
-Pacific.
-
-“I am too wise to believe all kinds of nonsense, Ricardo, like the
-ignorant people of Cartagena,” said Papa Ramon, “but this bell of the
-galleon—how can I doubt it? And there is no bell on the _Valkyrie_, so
-I save some good dollars. These Colombian thieves stole the brass
-fittings while my steamer was empty and anchored during the war. And the
-galleon bell had the blessing of the Holy Church and the favor of Our
-Lady of Rosario so we make no mistake in carrying it on our voyage.”
-
-Richard Cary reflected, quite logically, that it was no more fantastical
-than pinning one’s faith and fortune to a pirate’s chart of Cocos
-Island. The whole thing might be unreal, but it had the texture of
-consistency. Like a satisfactory fairy tale, the improbable and the
-absurd were made entirely plausible. The twentieth century had very
-little to do with it.
-
-And so the chief engineer of the _Valkyrie_ sent two of his native
-helpers with a mule-cart. They unbolted the heavy bronze bell from the
-weather-darkened frame of Spanish oak. It clanged as they bore it out of
-the _patio_, a mellow note that throbbed and lingered like a phantom
-voice. A carpenter was instructed to set up another frame, on the roof
-of the forward deck-house.
-
-The residence of Señor Bazán was to remain closed during his absence.
-This he had announced to the black woman in the kitchen and the faithful
-Indian lad. It was uncertain when their master would return. Two months’
-wages in advance he was generous enough to pay them, although it made
-him wince, and they could enjoy a vacation among their own people. They
-would be notified when to reopen the house. The señor who lived next
-door had consented to receive the green parrot and the little brown
-monkey. The key also would be left with him.
-
-His energy phenomenally sufficient for his needs, Ramon Bazán made the
-final arrangements for departure. Richard Cary admired the tenacious
-sagacity with which one obstacle after another was ridden over. He
-himself felt more and more like a big, useless lump of a man, to have to
-sit and look on. Give him a ship under his feet and he would be quit of
-this foolish trance.
-
-He wondered how the old man proposed to set him aboard the _Valkyrie_
-and hide him there until the harbor was astern. It was a nut to crack.
-He forbore to ask too many questions. They annoyed Papa Ramon. He was
-his own strategist. An uncannily strong finish he was making of it. The
-adventure was like a magic draught of the elixir of youth. It enabled
-him to hold decrepitude at arm’s length, for a little while to grin in
-the face of the old devil of death that had so often jumped out at him
-from the dark.
-
-The journey from the house to the quay was boldly and simply contrived.
-At eleven o’clock at night, the _muchacho_ waited in the alley with a
-one-horse carriage. The top had been raised. Richard Cary was directed
-to double himself on the rear seat. He slid down as far as possible with
-his knees almost up to his chin. Around and over him were piled the
-personal luggage, rolls of blankets, canvas bags filled with clothing,
-folded hammocks, two or three valises, until they filled the back of the
-carriage to the roof.
-
-Señor Bazán conspicuously hunched himself in front with the driver. This
-was the factor of safety. The old man was the passport through the
-streets of Cartagena where he was as well known as the Church of San
-Pedro Clavér and almost as much of an antiquity. Cary perceived this.
-Alone he had been hemmed in and helpless. Before the carriage rolled out
-of the alley, Ramon Bazán turned to say very softly:
-
-“Hold out your hand, Ricardo. Here is a pistol I forgot to give you. If
-anything trips our plans, I don’t want you to be caught like a rat.
-Never mind me. You just shoot your way out if you can. Run for La Popa.
-The lame Palacio may help you to flee to the coast or the mountains. I
-sent him money yesterday as a gift from you. It was your wish.”
-
-“Bless your heart, that would leave you a fine chance to square yourself
-with the police,” gratefully replied Cary. “If I have to leg it I’ll put
-you in my pocket. We have to see this thing through together. Cast off,
-_muchacho_, and full speed ahead.”
-
-The carriage rattled through the silent, galleried streets and provoked
-no curiosity until it approached a gateway in the city wall. A police
-officer in a white uniform was strolling out of a wine-shop. In the
-light from the windows the carriage attracted his attention. It was
-moving too rapidly, the horse at a gallop. Even a young Indian driver
-had nerves. They were feeling the strain. He was anxious to get through
-that gateway. It had been much less trying to haul _El Tigre Amarillo
-Grande_ into Cartagena under a load of wood than to haul him out again
-in a hired carriage.
-
-The lieutenant of police jumped from the curb and raised his sword as a
-peremptory signal to halt. The despairing _muchacho_, a slave to a
-military uniform, laid back on the reins and jerked the horse to its
-haunches. The carriage stopped so abruptly that Richard Cary bounced
-beneath his mountain of luggage. He knew that something had gone askew.
-He made elbow room to free the heavy pistol. Then he heard the petulant
-voice of Ramon Bazán upbraiding the officer. It was asinine to meddle
-with the owner of a ship in haste to go aboard and enjoy a few hours of
-sleep, a ship which was to sail at dawn.
-
-The lieutenant was a young man of polished manners who now recognized
-this abusive old gentleman. He was about to offer a laughing apology,
-with a caution to drive with more care, when Ramon Bazán swayed forward,
-a hand plucking at his breast. He stuttered something in a queer,
-frightened little voice.
-
-Richard Cary heard and comprehended. In a flash he saw the library and a
-frail figure toppled across the desk, face contorted, eyes bulging.
-Before he could toss the luggage aside, oblivious of his own
-predicament, the quick-witted _muchacho_ had thrown an arm around the
-drooping old man to hold him in the carriage. A twitch of the reins, a
-chirrup, and the horse was in motion. It broke into a quick trot.
-
-The lieutenant of police stared for a moment and strolled homeward from
-the wine-shop. Señor Bazán was getting quite feeble, he said to himself.
-Silly of him to be bothering with a ship. Greedy to make more money even
-if it killed him!
-
-The frightened driver steered the horse through the gateway in the wall,
-one arm still supporting the flaccid, silent shape of his master. In the
-wide, open space between the wall and the quay, the lad halted the
-carriage and wailed a “_mucho malo_.” Richard Cary instantly crawled out
-and lifted poor Ramon from the front seat. The _muchacho_ threw a roll
-of blankets and a canvas sack on the ground. They laid the stricken man
-down very gently.
-
-Cary put a finger on his pulse. It was not stilled, but the beat was
-faint and slow. The one hope was to search his pockets for the precious
-vial. Thank God, it had not been forgotten! The lad held a small
-flash-lamp while Cary pried open Ramon’s jaw and crushed two capsules in
-his mouth.
-
-They waited a few minutes. The excruciating pain was eased. The sufferer
-was able to whisper a few words. Ricardo was to carry him to the beach
-near the quay where a boat would be found. There was to be no turning
-back. It was a command.
-
-Some of the luggage was shifted to the front of the carriage. This made
-room in the rear so that Cary could sit and hold the old gentleman in
-his arms. Thus they came to the deep sand at the edge of the deserted
-beach. The Indian lad indicated the skiff which, earlier in the night,
-he had placed in readiness for the stealthy embarkation. Then he stood
-waiting for orders. First they made a bed on the sand for Ramon Bazán.
-He was too weak to lift his head. Cary mercifully refrained from
-questions concerning the plan of action. It had been withheld from him.
-Childish vanity and secretiveness had made it enjoyable to lead the big
-Ricardo by the nose.
-
-It was not in the mind of Ricardo, however, to let the voyage be delayed
-or thwarted. He would use his own wits. He tried to conjecture just how
-the crafty Papa Bazán had expected to turn the trick of smuggling _El
-Tigre Amarillo Grande_ on board. It was something very deceptive and
-complicated, no doubt.
-
-“I am not in his class when it comes to hocus-pocus,” said the
-dubitating young man. “He was going off to the ship first, I imagine,
-leaving me on the beach until he could signal with a flash-light. Most
-of the crew must be ashore, for a last night in port. Well, it’s up to
-me to play it alone. And I did hope to get clear of Cartagena without
-any more rough stuff. My reputation can’t stand it.”
-
-Having finished this brief debate with himself, the brawny seafarer
-moved with an alert and easy confidence. He helped the _muchacho_ stow
-the luggage in the skiff. Then they made a comfortable nest for Señor
-Bazán who manifested no more than a glimmering interest in this, the
-supreme exploit of his life. Richard Cary was made to feel forgetful of
-himself. Once at sea, Papa Ramon might rally and live to enchant himself
-with the pirate’s chart amid the volcanic cliffs of Cocos Island. He
-deserved to win.
-
-With the Indian lad in the stern of the skiff, Cary picked up the oars
-and drove ahead. A few hundred yards out in the dusky harbor floated the
-_Valkyrie_, an uncouth blotch against the stars. Here and there a light
-gleamed from a round port or a deck-house window. Cary aimed the skiff
-to come up under the steamer’s stern, as the course least likely to be
-detected. As soon as he was close aboard he used an oar as a paddle. The
-skiff stole under the overhang and then slid along the vessel’s side
-until it nudged the steeply slanting gangway steps.
-
-Cary made fast with a turn of line and motioned the lad to stay where he
-was. Then he gathered Ramon Bazán from the blankets and deftly doubled
-him over his shoulder. It was like carrying a helpless infant. With one
-hand free, Cary awkwardly footed it up the steps, steadied by a shifting
-grip of the side-rope. It made him puff, but the fatigue amounted to
-nothing.
-
-Quietly he stepped on the deck, which was unlighted. No one hailed him.
-It was wisdom to look about and find his bearings. The impromptu capture
-of a seagoing steamer had not been contemplated in his darkest hours as
-a fugitive. It required some care.
-
-The first thought was to deposit Ramon Bazán in a place where he might
-rest undisturbed. The living quarters would be forward of the saloon.
-Presumably they included a vacant room for the owner and another for the
-captain. On tiptoe Cary bore his burden along the deck. He found a
-darkened passage and entered it. The pocket flash-lamp showed him his
-own room, identified by a desk and the rolls of charts in the racks
-overhead.
-
-This was good enough. He rolled Ramon Bazán into the bunk, after
-removing his coat and shoes. The old man mustered breath to thank him
-and then fell asleep. At a guess, he was no worse off than when he had
-been bowled over in his library.
-
-Closing the door, Captain Richard Cary returned to the deck. For so
-heavy a man his tread was light and quick. He ran down the gangway steps
-and bade the _muchacho_ fetch up the luggage and leave it on deck. Then
-he was to shove off in the skiff and go back to his horse and carriage
-on the beach.
-
-Captain Cary climbed on board again and stood listening. He heard, down
-below, the clatter of a shovel, the pulsations of a pump, and the hiss
-of a leaky steam-pipe. This was heartening. He would take the vessel to
-sea with daylight enough to find the channel. Pilot be hanged! There
-were marks and buoys enough.
-
-In the crew’s quarters, up in the bows, two or three men were quarreling
-over a game of cards, or it sounded like that. They could be left to
-their own devices. The saloon was lighted, the door open. A husky voice
-was bawling to the steward.
-
-Richard Cary had to stoop to enter the small saloon. At the table sat
-his chief officer, Bradley Duff, and a plump, flashy young man with
-kinky hair and a flattened nose. An elderly mulatto in a dirty apron
-just then emerged from the pantry with a tray.
-
-The late supper was interrupted, but not rudely. “Big Dick” Cary
-intruded his soothing presence with the air of a man who disliked
-violence. He received no greetings, for the reason that the three men in
-the saloon had suddenly forgotten what speech was for. They were as dumb
-as three oysters.
-
-The blustering Bradley Duff blew a long breath through his ragged
-mustache. The kinky-haired young man in the pink silk shirt showed the
-whites of his eyes and slid lower in his chair. He seemed to be ebbing
-under the table. The glasses on the steward’s tray jingled together. His
-feet were riveted to the floor.
-
-The large, pleasant-featured visitor could not help smiling as he said:
-
-“Good-evening, _Mister_ Duff. I am Captain Cary, master of this ship.”
-
-The spell was broken. The plump young man slid lower as he murmured,
-“_Madre de Dios! Está El Tigre Amarillo!_” The steward wrenched his feet
-from the floor. They would have retreated swiftly to the pantry, but
-Captain Cary crooked a finger at him. He obeyed and joined the others at
-the table.
-
-Mr. Bradley Duff had not slid down in _his_ chair. His mottled cheeks
-were puffed out. His pimpled nose was redder, if that were possible. He
-was a beefy, truculent figure, a man who had been valorous in his prime,
-before some hidden flaw had broken him. Wiping his mouth with the back
-of his hand, he hoarsely burst out:
-
-“Like hell you are the master of this ship, you big buckaroo! I know who
-_you_ are—the guy that busted loose and fooled the town into thinking
-he was a bad _hombre_. I’m no kid to be scared by a bogeyman. You make
-me laugh. Master, my eye! You’ve gone clean bughouse. Wait till the
-owner comes off to-night. He’ll throw a fit. I am waiting for his pet
-skipper.”
-
-“The owner is on board,” said Cary, “but he is to be left alone until I
-say so. He is a sick man. We shall get under way at four-thirty, Mr.
-Duff. What’s the word from the chief engineer?”
-
-“You bumped into old Ramon Bazán on the beach and knocked him on the
-head, that’s what you did,” retorted the inflamed Mr. Duff. “You _are_
-addled if you figure on putting this stuff over on me. If you don’t want
-to be thrown overboard, beat it. What I ought to do is put you in irons
-and turn you over to the police. I’ll go see if Ramon Bazán is really
-aboard and what you did to him. If you turn out to be just a harmless
-boob of a lunatic, I don’t want to be too rough with you.”
-
-“Stay right here in the saloon, Mr. Duff, and please keep your hands on
-the table. If you swell up any more, you’ll break a blood vessel and
-then I am shy a chief officer. You will have to brace up to-morrow. You
-keep a rotten lookout and the ship is slack and filthy. How many men are
-ashore?”
-
-“None of your bloody business,” was the savage reply. “Here, I’ve stood
-enough silly play-acting from you.”
-
-Pot-bellied beach-comber though he was, Bradley Duff refused to strike
-his colors. He was honest in his belief that this was an unlawful
-invasion. There were men enough on board if he could get word to them.
-And at any minute a boat-load was due to arrive from the wharf. He
-kicked his plump companion as a signal for action. One of them might
-succeed in breaking for the deck to summon help.
-
-Snatching a bottle from the tray, Mr. Duff hurled it with a mighty swing
-of his thick arm. Cary ducked his head. A miss was as good as a mile. To
-his sincere regret, he was in for a disturbance.
-
-Before the enraged Mr. Duff could fling another bottle, Cary jumped
-forward and tapped him over the head with the butt of the heavy pistol.
-Too bad, but it had to be done! The blow was not meant to be deadly. It
-was enough to put the unlucky chief officer to sleep.
-
-A pink silk shirt was streaking it for the saloon door. Captain Cary
-thrust out a foot and the plump young man fell. He rebounded like a
-ball. Catching him on the rebound, Cary called to the elderly steward:
-
-“Do you talk English? What’s your name?”
-
-“Rufus Pilley, sah. I’se a British subjec’ f’um Jamaica, if you please,
-Cap’n, an’ I stands on mah rights to be treated right. You don’t have to
-blam me with no pistol. At yo’ service, sah.”
-
-“Bully for you, Rufus. Your views are sound. Who is this hot sport that
-I hold in my hands? Does he belong on board?”
-
-“Th’ secon’ mate, Mr. Panchito, Cap’n, sah. You done scared him till
-he’s green as a lizard.”
-
-“Lock him up, Rufus. The pantry will do. Step lively.”
-
-Mr. Panchito offered no resistance. It was a thing to be thankful for
-that the Yellow Tiger had spared his life. Having tucked him away,
-Captain Cary exclaimed:
-
-“Now, Rufus Pilley, help me lug Mr. Duff to his room. He will wake up
-with a headache. Sorry, but it couldn’t be helped.”
-
-“Thank you, sah. When you gits done an’ finished with disciplinin’ the
-crew, kin I serve you a tasty suppah, Cap’n? It looks like it’s hungry
-wuk a-conquerin’ all hands like th’ way you started off.”
-
-“You are a sensible man,” grinned Cary. “We’ll get on well.”
-
-They left Mr. Duff in his room. He displayed no interest. Cary looked in
-at Señor Ramon Bazán. It was like being in charge of an infirmary. The
-aged treasure-seeker was awake. He demanded a nip of rum and lime-juice.
-It was an auspicious symptom. Rufus Pilley, very sympathetic,
-volunteered as a nurse for the night. He trotted off to mix the drink.
-
-“I was afraid you were fighting, Ricardo,” said Papa Ramon. “If you will
-bring the chief officer here, I can explain it so he will understand you
-are the captain.”
-
-“Oh, Mr. Duff is quiet enough,” was the careless reply. “He has just
-turned in. You heard something smash? Mr. Duff dropped a bottle. You
-turn over and go to sleep again as soon as the steward brings the toddy.
-We are off for Cocos Island in the morning, with a westward ho and a
-rumbelow!”
-
-“I am a very happy old man, Ricardo. Yes, I will sleep like a child. The
-ship is safe with you.”
-
-With two officers mutinous and the crew yet to deal with, Captain Cary
-was not as happy as Señor Bazán. He went into the wheel-house and found
-the voice tube to the engine-room.
-
-“Is this the chief?” he asked.
-
-“Yes. Who the dickens are you?”
-
-“The master, Captain Cary. Come to the saloon right away, if you
-please.”
-
-“Right away, sir.”
-
-“Can you kick her out of harbor at daybreak?”
-
-“She can do that much, Captain Cary. Come down here later and I’ll make
-you weep.”
-
-It was the tired voice of a Yankee from down east, rare music to Richard
-Cary’s ears. Presently the youthful chief engineer came dragging his
-lank frame into the saloon. A greasy cap was pulled over a shock of
-brown hair. The boiler suit was black with oil and coal dust. His face
-was besmirched like a burnt-cork minstrel. The white teeth gleamed in
-the smile of a rover who could not be daunted by life’s rough roads. He
-was a tropical tramp because he liked it.
-
-“You look to me as if old Daddy Bazán knew where to find the right
-skipper,” said he, reaching for the water pitcher. “This is one pie-eyed
-voyage to the west coast, believe me. My name is Charlie Burnham, sir,
-and it takes a good deal to give me the yips or I’d be raving right
-now.”
-
-“Burnham?” said Cary. “You sound like a letter from home. There are lots
-of Burnhams in my New Hampshire village of Fairfield.”
-
-“Cousins of mine, I guess. Shucks, I was raised in Tobey Center, only
-thirty miles from Fairfield. I’m a hick from a rock-ribbed farm. It was
-the darned chores that made me run away, cows to milk and wood to chop
-and snow to shovel, and stone walls to break your back.”
-
-“Shake hands on that,” grinned Captain Cary. “Is there such a place as
-New Hampshire on the map?”
-
-“Gosh, you wouldn’t think so. It was never like this. Say, there can’t
-be two men like you on this coast. You must be the bird who got mad and
-cleaned up Cartagena a while ago. You sure did make yourself hard to
-find. This looks like a nice get-away for you. I’m not butting in on
-your affairs, am I?”
-
-“Not a bit, Charlie Burnham. I’m the bird. Now tell me about this unholy
-old hooker. What have you got for a black gang?”
-
-“Two assistants. That’s what they signed on as. Colombians. Eight nigger
-firemen and a couple of oilers. I can cuss in Spanish so we’re doing
-pretty well. Short-handed, but I couldn’t scrape up another damn man.”
-
-“What about the deck force? Did Mr. Duff have any better luck?”
-
-“Half a dozen black-and-tans, Indians and such. I guess I can steal one
-or two of ’em at a pinch.”
-
-Charlie Burnham gulped another glass of water and fished a cigarette
-from a damp packet. He was eyeing the tall, fair-haired skipper with a
-certain grave concern. Cary noticed the change of manner and missed the
-brave twinkle. Something worried his valiant Yankee engineer.
-
-“What’s on your mind, Charlie?” he asked. “You can’t be getting cold
-feet. It’s a great life if you keep calm. I’ll be glad to help you
-handle your crowd.”
-
-“Oh, I can ride those ginks, Captain Cary. I got wise to their curves
-when I was running the ice plant at Barranquilla. But look here, I don’t
-want to be a false alarm, so don’t kid me. You may have a lively time
-getting this ship away. For one thing, this rummy of a chief officer has
-made no hit with me.”
-
-“I made a hit with him,” gravely replied Cary, “but it may not last
-long. What else is in your noddle?”
-
-“A dozen of these men are ashore, Captain Cary, and most of ’em will be
-pickled when they come off to-night. They were having a pow-wow on deck
-yesterday. It meant nothing in my young life, but it popped into my mind
-just now. It was this crazy dope about _El Tigre Amarillo_—they swore
-he was still hiding in Cartagena—and the main gazabo of the police had
-offered a thousand dollars reward for the outlaw, dead or alive. One of
-the firemen had a poster and was reading it to the bunch. They got all
-jazzed up over it. You know how they go up in the air. Every mother’s
-son of ’em was all set to grab _El Tigre_ with his bare hands and get
-the thousand dollars.”
-
-“Flattering, I call it,” said Cary. “I hadn’t heard about the reward.
-They will try to cash in before we sail, Charlie?”
-
-“It may be a flivver, sir, but I thought I ought to tip you off. They
-won’t have the nerve unless they see a chance to rush you in a mob.”
-
-“Then I must keep them from getting their heads together,” said Cary.
-“And my two deck officers are of no use to me. That is unfortunate.”
-
-“I’ll say so,” replied the chief engineer, “but I’ll do my best to make
-that thousand dollars hard to collect. Sorry I must go below, sir. Be
-sure to give me a call when the party begins.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
- SHAKING A CREW TOGETHER
-
-The master of the _Valkyrie_ prowled on deck for some time. The two or
-three men in the forecastle had ceased their noise and were presumably
-in their bunks. The steamer was quiet. Cary regretted that he had been
-compelled to tap Mr. Duff on the head, but there had been no other way
-out of it. Quick action had been demanded or the dandyish second mate,
-Mr. Panchito, might have escaped from the saloon to raise an alarm.
-
-First impressions of Mr. Bradley Duff had been more favorable than
-expected. He amounted to more than a rum-eaten shell of a man. There had
-been no cowardice in his violent rebellion. His sense of the fitness of
-things had been outraged, that a chief officer left in charge of a ship
-should be challenged by a crazy vagabond with no credentials.
-
-On shore Mr. Duff might be a blatant ruin. To such men, however, the sea
-is often the breath of salvation, and its austere traditions have power
-to restore, for the time, the habits of courage and fidelity.
-
-To Richard Cary the whole adventure had taken a disagreeable slant. The
-flavor was spoiled. He was out of the frying-pan into the fire. The
-tidings of that thousand-dollar reward stuck in his throat. It hadn’t
-occurred to him that this Colombian crew might regard him as a treasure
-to be hunted with murderous enthusiasm. The shoe was very much on the
-wrong foot. If Señor Bazán was aware of this excessively awkward aspect,
-he was not letting it fret him. His confidence in the colossal Ricardo
-who plucked iron bars from windows and walked out of prisons was either
-sublime or senile.
-
-Could anything be attempted during the night? It would be easy enough to
-stay under cover until after the boat-load of firemen and sailors had
-returned from the town. But this would not get the steamer to sea
-unless—unless—yes, there was a fighting chance.
-
-Richard Cary walked the deck, trying to fit together this detail and
-that. He had no fatuous intentions of storming through the ship and
-crushing mutiny single-handed. The chief engineer, willing as he was,
-ought to be left below with his invalid machinery. And any disturbance
-on board would be certain to attract attention on shore.
-
-While Captain Cary, with deliberate scrutiny, was weighing and testing
-his plans, he heard the splash of oars and the cadenced thump of
-thole-pins. The ship’s boat presently bumped alongside with much loud
-mirth and gusty argument. Cary withdrew to the wheel-house where he
-could watch them go forward to their quarters. They lingered in a noisy
-group, evidently surprised at finding no officer on watch. What was to
-be done with the boat? Should they hoist it to the davits or leave it in
-the water? One of the mates ought to be somewhere about to give orders.
-However, these returning mariners were weary after much liquor and
-dancing with the girls. They forgot the boat and stumbled forward,
-weaving this way and that, arms around one another, singing
-sentimentally.
-
-Richard Cary counted them as well as he could. A dozen or so! Charlie
-Burnham must have kept a couple more on watch in the fire-room. The two
-or three already in the forecastle accounted for the lot. There was this
-to be said for this scratch crew of Colombians. They had not run wild
-ashore. It had been a harmless spree.
-
-Cary went to the gangway and turned the boat adrift. It was a needless
-hazard to leave it tied alongside. There should be no scrambling out of
-the ship in the morning to arouse the police of Cartagena. One hornet’s
-nest was enough. Next he stole into the chief officer’s room and flashed
-the light on him. Alas, Mr. Duff was indisposed to be an active partner.
-He slumbered heavily, his crimsoned nose trumpeting like a bugle. His
-gray hair was slightly clotted, but the pistol butt had no more than
-scratched it. The effect had been more soporific than serious.
-
-Shaking his shoulder failed to stir him, although he grunted and
-muttered a very profane desire to be let alone. This was disappointing.
-Captain Cary turned his steps to the room which harbored Señor Ramon
-Bazán. The steward nodded in a chair. He put a finger to his lips and
-whispered:
-
-“Sleepin’ like he was rocked in a cradle, Cap’n. What kin I do foh you,
-sah?”
-
-“Produce that supper you promised me, Rufus. I shall be kept up all
-night.”
-
-“Right away, sah. I didn’t hear you blam no more people,” hopefully
-observed the steward as he ambled aft. “Th’ reason I has lived a long
-while an’ kep’ mah health is, ’cause I abstained mahself from fool
-questions. But what does you aim to do wid th’ second mate, Mr.
-Panchito? You done lock him in mah pantry. How kin I find suppah foh
-you, Cap’n?”
-
-“Sure enough, Rufus. How careless of me! What is your opinion of Mr.
-Panchito?”
-
-“He ain’t so worse, sah, tho’ dese Colombia yaller men don’t class with
-us Jamaica folks, in mah jedgment. Mr. Panchito was in th’ Colombia navy
-till th’ navy filled up an’ sunk one night, right smack in dis yere
-harbor, Cap’n. It got tired of stayin’ afloat. Th’ one gunboat was all
-the Colombia navy done was, so Mr. Panchito had to go git him another
-job. Um-m-m, when you come bulgin’ in to-night he was so skeered his
-hair mighty near unkinked. It was jes’ like a nightmare bustin’ in on
-him—wid all dis say-so ’bout _El Diablo_ prancin’ an’ ravin’ through
-Cartagena.”
-
-“That sounds better,” heartily exclaimed the skipper. “You have seen the
-owner of the vessel, Señor Bazán, and you know I am the lawful master.
-Can you talk to Mr. Panchito in his own lingo?”
-
-“Yes, Cap’n. I was two years in a gen’leman’s house in Cartagena, an’
-then he ups an’ dies on me.”
-
-“Then make Mr. Panchito savvey that I am easy to get along with if he
-jumps lively.”
-
-Mr. Panchito was released from the pantry, anticipating sudden death.
-Nothing like this had ever happened in the navy of Colombia. When
-invited to sit at table with a good-humored _El Diablo_ who smiled
-often, he plucked up spirit and found his own voice. In his heart was
-dismay at the thought of losing this position as second mate, with its
-excellent wages, and he was anxious to do anything in his power to hold
-it. To annoy this giant of a captain was to be rapped on the _cabeza_
-with a pistol butt. Mr. Panchito had not the remotest idea of collecting
-any thousand-dollar reward.
-
-After a refreshing supper, Captain Cary and Mr. Panchito went arm-in-arm
-to the wheel-house. The chief engineer sent up the information that the
-first assistant, two firemen, and an oiler were on watch, to keep steam
-in readiness for morning.
-
-“Hold them down there, Charlie,” was the order. “Have you got a gun?”
-
-“A sort of a one. All right, sir, I’ll hold ’em here. What’s the big
-idea?”
-
-“Fetch me a hammer and spikes and some short pieces of scantling. I
-won’t need the rest of the crew in the morning. Can you manage to shove
-her as far as the Boca Chica?”
-
-“Sure! I sling a mean shovel myself. Nail ’em up? That’s a corker.”
-
-Soon Captain Cary went forward, with Mr. Panchito, to reconnoiter. A
-wooden house with large windows had been built, at Mr. Duff’s
-suggestion, to give the crew lodgings more livable in the tropics than
-the noisome kennels under the deck of the vessel’s bow. These were so
-leaky that rough weather would flood them, and they were foully dark. It
-had been cheaper to build a shelter than to make the necessary repairs.
-
-Mr. Panchito was eager to assist the captain’s hasty carpentry by
-discouraging with a pistol any attempts to break out. The doors had
-hasps and padlocks, but these could not withstand much battering from
-within. Richard Cary spiked them fast with swift, powerful blows of a
-machinist’s hammer. The noise awoke the dozen sailors and firemen. For
-the moment they imagined the mate was pounding to call all hands on
-deck. They tumbled from the bunks, crowded to the doors, and couldn’t
-push them open.
-
-_Caramba!_ There was a commotion in this stout wooden coop. Bare toes
-could not kick through obstinate doors. The terrific hammering dinned at
-them. It was like being inside a bass drum. Fearfully they flew for the
-windows.
-
-And now the rotund Mr. Panchito exhibited a frenzied agility. He bounded
-from one window to another, flourishing the pistol, pushing a head back,
-belaboring a wriggling pair of shoulders. It was like a multiplied
-jack-in-the-box. He caught one limber fellow by the leg as he dived for
-the deck. Into the window he stuffed him by main strength. Mr. Panchito
-was magnificent. As a second mate he was already deserving encomiums.
-
-Laughter made Richard Cary miss a spike as often as he hit it. He too
-had to gallop round and round the wooden structure which seemed to have
-a hundred windows and as many frantic men trying to spill out of them.
-Never had he heard the Spanish language so molten that it actually
-threatened to set a building on fire. As fast as he rammed a man inside,
-he slapped a piece of board across a window and whacked the spikes into
-it.
-
-Mr. Panchito was running himself to death. He sounded like a whistling
-buoy. There was no leisure for him while those infernal heads were
-popping out, and _El Diablo_ was at his heels. One by one the windows
-were made secure enough to check the eruption. Then Captain Cary had
-time to spike more boards across the windows. Even if the captives
-should pull the bunks to pieces for battering-rams, they were safely
-caged for the present. In their own tongue Mr. Panchito informed them
-through the cracks that if they cared to live longer it was essential to
-be as still as mice and to beseech the goodness of God on their sinful
-knees.
-
-“_Mucho bueno, Capitan Cary_,” exclaimed this excellent second mate
-whose pink shirt stuck wetly to his skin.
-
-“One hundred per cent _bueno_,” was the hearty verdict. “If the
-Colombian navy hadn’t dropped out from under you, it would have been
-Admiral Panchito some day.”
-
-“_Si, señor._ Now ees what?”
-
-“Now is what? That is as bright a remark as I ever had put up to me, Mr.
-Panchito.” (Cary held up two fingers.) “_Dos hombres!_ Just the two of
-us. We must make the old steamboat, _el vapor_, vamoose from Cartagena.”
-
-“_Dos hombres? Si, señor_,” instantly agreed the second mate to whom
-nothing was now incredible.
-
-They adjourned to the saloon where the steward was waiting with food and
-drink.
-
-“Seems like I heard yo’ conquerin’ somebody else, Cap’n Cary.”
-
-“You did, Rufus. Now I’ve knocked off. I forgot to ask you—is there a
-cook to be accounted for?”
-
-“Yes, sah. He come aboard with th’ men an’ is sleepin’ it off.”
-
-“Please turn him out for an early breakfast. Does he have to be
-conquered?”
-
-“Not him. I showed one nigger who was boss yestiddy. Um-m-m, I’se his
-speshul brand of Yellow Tiger.”
-
-“Then we are all checked up,” said Cary. “Now, Mr. Panchito, you can
-siesta yourself on those cushions for an hour or two. I’ll be on deck.”
-
-Dawn had no more than touched Cartagena with rosy fingers when Mr.
-Panchito was lifted from the cushions and stood upon his feet. Captain
-Cary was holding a steaming cup of coffee under his nose. The second
-mate rubbed his kinky head with both hands, yawned, and sighed a long
-“_Si, señor._” Gently but firmly he was led forward and escorted into
-the wheel-house. Did he know the channel out through the lagoon? To
-Cary’s gestures he nodded confident assent. Through the voice tube the
-chief engineer assured them that she could flop her propeller over if
-nobody spoke harshly to her. Leaving Mr. Panchito propped against the
-steering-wheel, Cary ran to the bow to handle the anchor winch himself.
-
-He opened the valves and grasped the lever. Steam hissed from rusty
-connections, but the piston began to chug back and forth. Anxiously he
-threw the winch into gear. With a frightful clamor the drum very slowly
-revolved, dragging in the links of the cable. If the winch didn’t fly
-into fragments or pull itself out of the deck, the anchor would have to
-break out of the mud.
-
-A series of protesting shrieks from the laboring winch, a dead stop,
-another effort, and it was taking hold in grim earnest. The cable was
-coming home link by link. Cary jumped to look overside. The huge ring of
-the anchor came surging out of the water. The _Valkyrie_ was free. Her
-master let the winch revolve until the anchor hung flat against the bow.
-This was good enough. It could be stowed later.
-
-He waved his hand to Mr. Panchito who had drooped himself over a window
-ledge of the wheel-house. The pink shirt moved over to the
-steering-wheel. The whistle of the _Valkyrie_ blew no farewell to the
-port of Cartagena. It would have been a foolish waste of steam.
-
-The steamer sluggishly gathered headway, riding light in ballast. It was
-odd to see her heading for sea without any visible crew. Two _hombres_
-were in the wheel-house. Not a soul moved on deck.
-
-Safely she avoided the shoals and made the wide circuit to swing into
-the narrow fairway of the Boca Chica between the mouldering, grass-grown
-forts. By now Captain Richard Cary was pacing the bridge in solitary
-grandeur. His brow was serene with contentment. The ship was heaving
-under his feet as she felt the swell of the wide Caribbean. He was
-gazing ahead.
-
-“‘Now ees what?’” he said to himself. A rumbling cough made him whirl
-about. Mr. Bradley Duff was clinging to a stanchion with one hand. The
-other tenderly caressed his scalp. On his puffy features was written a
-bitter resentment. The night’s rest had not sweetened his temper. Cary
-was quick to offer amends.
-
-“I hated to have to do it, Mr. Duff. Señor Bazán was near dying in my
-room, and I didn’t dare jolt him with any more excitement. You refused
-to listen to me—”
-
-“I went in and saw the old gentleman just now,” grumpily replied the
-chief officer. “He set me straight about you. I didn’t air my troubles.
-He has chirked up quite a bit. But what was the sense in all the hush
-stuff? Why didn’t the old coot tell me you were coming aboard to take
-command? Do you think I’d ’a’ blabbed it ashore? It was nothing to me if
-a big Yankee sailorman had enjoyed beating up the town.”
-
-“You wouldn’t have blabbed when you were sober,” said Cary. “It was the
-Colombian crew that made Señor Bazán nervous. They had some foolish
-notions about me.”
-
-“And so you boxed up the crew, Captain Cary? That is a new one on me.
-And now you will have to turn ’em loose. How about that?”
-
-“Not a thing to worry about, if you feel like turning to, Mr. Duff,” was
-the cheery assurance.
-
-This compliment so astonished Mr. Duff that he blew his mustache like a
-walrus. He tried, with no great success, to push his chest out and pull
-his stomach in. His bleary eye brightened as he ripped out:
-
-“Hell’s bells, young man, we’ll show ’em who runs this ship. Of course
-they may refuse duty and try to make you put back. Seems to me I heard
-some mention of a thousand dollars reward for you. It went in one ear
-and out the other. I never needed money bad enough to dirty my hands by
-crimping a fellow Yank in a foreign port. You’ll take my word for that.”
-
-“I believe you, Mr. Duff. Then I will release the men and set the
-watches, if they behave themselves.”
-
-“One moment, Captain Cary,” growled the beach-comber. “You bent a gun
-over my crust last night, and I’m willing to forget that, which is very
-handsome of me. But you insulted me professionally and I feel hurt. You
-called it a filthy ship. Let me tell you, I was commanding smart vessels
-when you were a clumsy pup. You don’t know what I have had to contend
-with in this blistered old scow that ought to be scrapped. The owner
-hollers murder when you ask him for paint. Now you back me up and I’ll
-make this ship so clean you can eat off her decks. You can’t tell me one
-bloody word about a chief officer’s job.”
-
-“I apologize,” smiled Cary. “It was unfair of me. I snapped it out
-before I thought. Go to it. Between us we’ll shake the crew down.”
-
-The swag-bellied Mr. Duff was pacified. He looked almost pleasant. His
-professional instincts had been not dead but dormant. Presently he
-trudged forward to pull the spikes from the doors of the forecastle
-house. The men came piling out, hungry and hostile. Mr. Duff’s fist
-smote the first one under the chin. The others took the hint. They were
-not so rampant.
-
-On the bridge they happened to descry the figure of a very tall and
-broad young man with a thatch of yellow hair that shone in the sun like
-spun gold. In every way he was a most unusual young man. He was looking
-at them with steady, untroubled eyes, as if they were no more than so
-many noisy insects.
-
-This was a great surprise. The young man could be none other than the
-dreaded _Tigre Amarillo_ whose capture they had so gayly discussed for
-the fun of spending an imaginary fortune. Last night, when the boards
-had been mysteriously nailed on the windows, there had been frightened
-surmises—the man with the hammer had been ever so much bigger and more
-powerful than Mr. Duff—but they had later agreed that they were drunk
-and their vision was untrustworthy.
-
-Swiftly now their startled minds were adjusting themselves. Their
-emotions were easy to read. Sixteen men in all, if they could unite—the
-ship was still within sight of the Boca Chica—if they couldn’t manage
-to take her all the way back to Cartagena they could anchor inside and
-send a boat once they had gotten the upper hand of the three
-_Americanos_. The second mate and the assistant engineers were
-Colombians. They would be glad to aid the cause of justice. This
-yellow-haired monster of a man had been guilty of crimes to make one
-shudder.
-
-Captain Richard Cary saw them hesitate and crowd together. He jumped
-down the iron ladder and shoved into the group. A knife flashed. He
-slapped the hand that held it. The sailor clasped a benumbed wrist. The
-chief officer was bravely collaring them. It was no more than a flurry.
-They were given no time to organize and act cohesively.
-
-“Hustle ’em along, Mr. Duff,” said Cary. “Breakfast be hanged! Send the
-firemen below. Put your sailors at work. Keep all hands moving. Give me
-a good man to relieve the second mate at the wheel. We are too
-short-handed to stave any of them up. So be as easy as you can.”
-
-“Here is a quartermaster, sir,” panted Mr. Duff, jerking his thumb at a
-chunky fellow with a boil on his neck.
-
-“Aye, I’ll just take him along,” said the skipper.
-
-With this he grasped the quartermaster around the waist, deftly flipped
-him head down and heels up and, thus reversed, tucked him under one arm.
-Encumbered in this manner, Captain Cary strode for the wheel-house where
-he stood his spluttering quartermaster right end up and cuffed him
-erect. He was shown the course on the compass card in the binnacle. He
-gripped the spokes with the most zealous sincerity. He had no other
-thought in the world than to steer an absolutely correct course. Neither
-to the right nor left did he glance.
-
-The steamer’s speed increased to five knots. The chief engineer, still
-at his post, called through the tube:
-
-“All the firemen came tumbling down at once, Captain Cary. They are
-awful sore about no breakfast. This bunch of mine would sooner eat than
-fight.”
-
-“I’ll send grub and coffee down, Charlie. Can you stand by two or three
-hours longer? Things are smoothing out.”
-
-“Sure I can. These engines interest me. I just sit and wonder what makes
-’em go. Come down when you get a minute.”
-
-“Right-o, Charlie boy. It looks like a happy voyage, even if we did get
-off to a bum start.”
-
-Soon Mr. Duff lumbered to the bridge to report:
-
-“I am going to feed my animals directly, sir. They are washing down with
-the hose and scrubbing for their lives. A smart ship, by the time we
-slide into the Pacific! The second mate refused to go off watch. He
-bounces after the men and damns their eyes if they turn their heads to
-spit. The only moment Mr. Panchito took off was to shift into a purple
-silk shirt and a necktie with yellow spots.”
-
-The routine set in motion, Richard Cary went in to visit the invalid
-Señor Ramon Bazán. He was sitting up in bed. Joyously he piped:
-
-“A life on the ocean wave, Ricardo! I am a man ten years younger. And
-the ship has sailed with no trouble at all. How is my fine ship and my
-great captain?”
-
-“Not a care in the world,” was the genial reply. “Everybody earning his
-wages and the course set for the Isthmus.”
-
-“Bend your ear down, Ricardo mine. Softly now. There is no whisper of
-our secret plans? They know nothing about the treasure chart and Cocos
-Island?”
-
-“Not a suspicion, Papa Ramon. To Buenaventura for orders and thence with
-cargo.”
-
-“What kind of a crew is it to trust when we find the six million dollars
-and the gold ingots? This is the only thing that has worried me,
-Ricardo. I could do no better for a crew in Cartagena. This chief
-officer, Bradley Duff. Will he be a bad egg?”
-
-“Right as can be. You can’t always judge a man by his looks and manners.
-As for the crew, there will be no trouble with them.”
-
-“El Draque has come again to the Spanish Main,” said Ramon Bazán, fondly
-regarding his commander. “Remember now! The treasure chart is wrapped in
-the rubber cloth, under my shirt, Ricardo. Now take me into my own room
-and you get yourself all settled comfortably in here where you belong.”
-
-To the _Valkyrie_ came a breathing spell. Outwardly she was an unlovely
-little ocean tramp which had seen much better days, plodding along the
-Colombian coast on some humdrum errand to earn a pittance by begging
-cargoes from port to port. Her discolored sides rolled to the regular
-impulses of the sea and the propeller blades flailed the water into
-foam. A banner of black smoke trailed from the shabby funnel and spread
-behind her in a dirty smudge.
-
-The early morning weather had been kind to these argonauts. During the
-forenoon, however, Mr. Duff cocked a knowing eye at the barometer and
-sniffed the warm breeze. It was damper than he liked. His feet pained
-him more than usual. His broken arches had warned him of more than one
-sudden gale of wind and rain. He mentioned his misgivings to Captain
-Cary who received them with respect. They set about doing what they
-could to make things secure, swinging the boats inboard and lashing
-them, covering hatches, attending to odds and ends neglected in the
-haste of departure.
-
-Even while they toiled, the sky grew overcast and the sea lost its
-sparkle. The wind veered this way and that before it began to blow
-strongly out of the east. It threatened to blow much harder. The crew
-realized that the _Valkyrie_ was ill-prepared to endure furious weather.
-They laid aside all ideas of plotting mutiny. It was more essential to
-save themselves from drowning.
-
-By noon the steamer was wallowing in a gray waste of raging water. She
-rolled with a sickening motion as if about to turn bottom up. The seas
-broke solid on her decks and poured through smashed skylights, through
-the leaky joints of deadlights, through weather-cracked doors. When
-pounded and submerged like this, the ship was not much tighter than a
-basket.
-
-Leaving Mr. Duff on the bridge, Richard Cary went down to the
-engine-room. He found a red-eyed, haggard Charlie Burnham hanging to the
-throttle valve with both hands to ease her or to jam ahead when the
-indicator bell whirred like an alarm clock. Water was slashing over the
-greasy floor plates. The first assistant was up to his waist in the
-filth of the bilge, trying to clear the pumps of the loose coal which
-had choked the suction pipe. He was a small man limp with seasickness
-and bruises. When he stooped over to try to claw the coal away and free
-the suction strainer, the water boiled over his head as the ship rolled
-far down.
-
-Cary crawled over and pulled him out of the bilge. Here was a job for a
-man of more height and strength. He plunged in himself and was working
-with the energy of a dredge when Charlie Burnham slid across the floor
-to yell in his ear:
-
-“The pumps are drawing a little, sir. You can clear it if anybody can.
-If you don’t, it’s good-night. We’ve got to keep the water down or it
-will put out the fires.”
-
-Cary wiped the floating grease from his eyes and grunted:
-
-“I’ll do my best to clear it, Charlie, if I have to stand on my head.
-How is she steaming?”
-
-“Like a dizzy old miracle. Better than she knows how. It’s lucky I held
-all the firemen below. They are working short shifts, but it’s banging
-’em around something awful.”
-
-Twenty minutes later, Captain Cary hauled himself out of the bilge. The
-pumps were sturdily pulling water, and the flood in the engine-room had
-been checked. He went into the stokehold. Half-naked men were staggering
-and tumbling to and fro in a fog of steam from the hot ashes and salt
-water. Red coals spilled out when a furnace door was opened. Frequently
-the wretched toilers lost their footing and were flung headlong. Arms
-were seared with burns, bodies contused.
-
-When the captain of the ship suddenly loomed among them, they cowered
-from him, dropping slice-bars, letting coal fall from their shovels.
-Their nerves were already rasped to breaking. They were disheartened men
-dumbly struggling for survival against the obliterating ocean. Instead
-of striking and cursing them, this mighty captain was smiling like a
-friend. He snatched a shovel from a half-dead fireman with a bleeding
-shoulder and pushed him out of the way. The shovel ate into a pile of
-coal on the floor and swiftly fed it into a furnace door.
-
-The captain poised himself against the wild rolling of the ship and shot
-the coal into that furnace like three or four men. He was all grease and
-grime like themselves. He was _El Diablo_ of a stoker, setting them an
-example to wonder at. The word passed that he had been in the bilges,
-making the pumps suck to save the fires. This was a new kind of captain.
-It restored their hope and made them oblivious of hurts and fatigue.
-
-For some time the captain plied the shovel or raked the fires with a
-long slice-bar. They had heard of his prowess with an iron bar. It was
-the truth. He handled this heavy bar like a straw. They watched him with
-the eager excitement of children. The ship was safe with such a captain.
-He could do anything. It was certain that he would preserve their lives.
-
-When, at length, the captain desisted from stoking like a giant, he
-shouted a few words of Spanish at them. They were all _muchos buenos
-hombres_, and _viva el vapor_! It was a little storm, nothing to worry
-brave sailors of Colombia. They grinned and clapped their hands
-together. He was not a yellow tiger, but _El Capitan Grande_.
-
-When, at length, he climbed to the bridge, the sea seemed less violent
-and the sky not so somber. Mr. Duff was planted beside the engine-room
-indicator, jockeying the ship as best he could to ward off the blows of
-the toppling combers. His red face was streaked with salt. A sou’wester
-was jammed on his gray pow. The wind whipped his oilskin coat out behind
-him. At a glance he was competent, a man restored to his element.
-
-“All right, Mr. Duff,” said Cary. “We have seen the worst of it. Go
-below and ease your feet. You may as well snooze till I call you. There
-was nothing I could do up here. I left the ship in good hands.”
-
-“Thank you for that,” beamed the chief officer. “It shook the ship up
-some, but, by Judas, it’s worth the damage. It shook this flighty crew
-together. I don’t anticipate much more trouble with them.”
-
-“Neither do I, Mr. Duff. This gale has blown some of the nonsense out of
-their heads. I think we can make it a contented ship.”
-
-Sunset found a quieting sea and a dying wind. The _Valkyrie_ was on her
-course for Colon. After a while the second mate came up to relieve the
-captain and let him snatch a few hours of sleep. Richard Cary waited a
-moment. A sailor paused beside the wooden house in the bows. Upon the
-roof was mounted the bronze bell of the galleon _Nuestra Señora del
-Rosario_. The sailor pulled a cord and the ancient bell rang out the
-hour, _dong-dong—dong-dong—dong-dong—dong-dong_! Eight bells!
-
-“All’s well and westward ho!” said Richard Cary, the sense of illusion
-stealing over him. “It’s still the same. Ships have changed, but men are
-the same. And the game is still worth playing.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
- IN THE HOUSE OF MYSTERY
-
-Only to Mr. McClement, chief engineer of the _Tarragona_, had Teresa
-Fernandez made known her intention of leaving the ship at the end of the
-voyage. Never again did she wish to see the walls of Cartagena and the
-white moonlight in the plazas, or to hear the wind in the cocoanut palms
-and the bells in the church towers. The thoughtful McClement did not try
-to dissuade her. Convinced as she was that Richard Cary had been
-wickedly done to death, it was not a decision to be argued. Her plans
-were uncertain, she said. If she were fitted to earn a living ashore,
-she would not go to sea again. The sea made her sad.
-
-She had a last talk with McClement the night before the ship was due at
-New York. It was a farewell, he suspected. Teresa had resolved to break
-all ties with the _Tarragona_ and her shipmates.
-
-“Will you let me look you up in New York?” he asked. “We might have
-dinner together, or something like that. If I can cheer you up a bit—”
-
-“Thank you very much, Mr. McClement. I will let you know where to find
-me if I need you. On your next trip to Cartagena you may hear
-something—of how—of how it happened, but you will never find Mr.
-Cary.”
-
-“I can’t be so cock-sure of that, Miss Fernandez. As I have insisted
-right along, a man like Dick Cary doesn’t vanish without a trace.
-Colonel Fajardo is the blighter for me to keep an eye on. He will be
-looking for you on the ship, won’t he? Hot after you again, I fancy. He
-may give himself away. He will be badly upset when he finds you have
-stayed in New York.”
-
-“Do you truly expect to see Colonel Fajardo waiting on the wharf in
-Cartagena, Mr. McClement?” demanded Teresa. Her face was solemn, her
-dark eyes very large, her hands clasped. She was urged against her will
-to discover what this loyal friend might hold secluded in the secret
-places of his understanding. Sometimes he frightened her, he seemed so
-wise and penetrating and yet vouchsafed so little. To her tense question
-he replied, laying a hand on hers:
-
-“No more of that, my dear girl. You must be up early when the ship docks
-to-morrow morning, so it’s time for you to say your prayers and go to
-bed.”
-
-“Ah, yes, I always say my prayers,” she breathed in low tones. “And will
-you remember to say a prayer for the soul of poor Teresa who found her
-lover and lost him so soon?”
-
-“God may be a trifle surprised at hearing from a perfect stranger,” he
-answered, with his cynical twinkle, “but I am always at your service,
-Miss Fernandez.”
-
-“It will comfort me,” said she, “to know you believe I am still good—in
-spite of—no matter what—no matter what—oh, Mr. McClement, I am such a
-very, very unhappy woman.”
-
-She sobbed the words. For the first time her proud and righteous
-composure had broken. It was the realization that in all the world there
-was no one else than this man who could comprehend her, in whom, if
-needs be, she could unreservedly confide. He was a link, as faithful as
-forged iron, between the brief joy of which she had been bereft and the
-dark perspective of the future.
-
-McClement made no comment. He knew when silence was golden. Teresa
-quickly regained her poise. The display of emotion had been like the
-swirl of an eddy on the surface of a deep, swift stream.
-
-“To have a second mate left on the beach means so little in a great
-fleet of ships like the Fruit Company’s,” said she. “The captain will
-report him absent from duty, and it is soon forgotten. Mr. Cary was a
-new man in the service—a stranger—they scratch him off the list. And
-you have packed his clothes in the two bags, Mr. McClement? And all the
-little things that belonged to him?”
-
-“Yes. I found his home address—a letter from his mother. I kept it for
-you. Shall I send the stuff to her, or what? How about waiting another
-trip?”
-
-“Wait for what?” Teresa exclaimed. “Mr. Cary is dead, I tell you.
-Colonel Fajardo killed him. How else can it be—think, Mr. McClement,
-two days the _Tarragona_ was at Porto Colombia, and two days at Santa
-Marta loading bananas—a whole week on the coast before we sailed for
-Kingston. And the Company’s radio stations at those ports! I have told
-you this over and over again. Can you imagine Mr. Cary alive and not
-sending a radio to me—to the captain—to explain why he was missing? It
-is impossible. A whole week on the coast and then to Kingston.”
-
-“I grant you all that,” replied McClement. “It has knocked the props
-pretty well from under me. What about Dick Cary’s mother? There’s the
-rub.”
-
-“His things ought to be sent to her, I suppose,” said Teresa. “What else
-can we do? And who will write to her? You or I? Maybe the port captain
-who hired him will send her a letter. I don’t know about that. But Mr.
-Cary is nothing but a second mate that jumped his ship.”
-
-“Writing his mother! Humph!” grunted McClement. “What the deuce is there
-to tell her but to sit tight and hope for news? My word, but it _is_ a
-rotten situation for her, isn’t it?”
-
-“I am the one to write a letter to her,” said Teresa. “And I will tell
-her why. It is because I loved him, and was ready to die for him.”
-
-Troubled sleep and wakeful hours were Teresa’s portion during this last
-night in the ship which had long been her home. The blind instinct of
-flight had driven her to break these familiar bonds. Abhorrent was the
-thought of returning to the long wharf at Cartagena with the ugly cargo
-sheds and the tapering masts of a Colombian schooner lifting beyond
-them. There was the fear that somehow she might betray herself, that out
-of the very air accusation might be directed against her.
-
-She felt neither guilt nor remorse, but she was too young to die. And it
-would be hideously unjust if she should be taken and put to death for
-what she had done. Not by chance had she been delivered from punishment.
-The miraculous decree of fate had sheltered and absolved her.
-
-She wondered if the evil spirit of Colonel Fajardo haunted the narrow
-strip of wharf beyond the cargo shed, waiting, waiting for the ship to
-bring Teresa Fernandez back to Cartagena. The unholy vision could not be
-thrust aside—the gaunt figure and the harsh, cruel face bleached with
-sudden terror—the whip-like crack of the little pistol—the strangled
-scream of “Jesus, have mercy”—the splash just astern of the schooner
-and the patch of frothy water with the widening circles. . .
-
-Unpleasant and distressing, such a crimson page of remembrance as this,
-but not to be regretted or moaned over. Such was Teresa’s inflexible
-verdict. Raging more than once, grinding her small white teeth, she had
-been sorry that Colonel Fajardo had only one death to die. The Holy
-Office of the Inquisition would have known how to make it more
-lingering.
-
-These thoughts would leave her alone, she hoped, as soon as she should
-have seen the last of the ship which had been so intimately associated
-with him.
-
-There was something more troublesome, and she could see no way to meet
-it. Write a letter to the mother of Richard Cary? What in the name of
-God could she, Teresa, say to his mother by way of explanation? What
-could she tell the mother of a noble son? That he was dead? How? Where?
-Why? Where was the proof? Who had buried him and where was his grave? He
-was dead. This was all Teresa knew as she had read it in the hard eyes
-of Colonel Fajardo, in his twitching smile, gloating, gratified, unable
-to dissemble his own secret. But a mother of a son—and such a son—here
-was a wall of difficulty that loomed to the sky!
-
-While the passengers were landing next morning, very impatient to run
-the gantlet of the customs inspectors and hurl themselves into taxicabs,
-Miss Fernandez was the efficient, light-footed stewardess with a blithe
-word and a quick readiness to aid the ladies and amuse the children. She
-turned aside from her duty only to accost Mr. McClement and say:
-
-“Leave Mr. Cary’s things with the baggage-master of the wharf, to be
-sent for. This is my advice. They must not go to his home in New
-Hampshire till I write the letter. It is going to be a very hard letter
-to write. Good-bye, dear friend, good-bye.”
-
-At her leisure she packed her trunk and shook hands with her good
-comrades, the purser, the doctor, the second steward, and the wireless
-operators, who expressed themselves as broken-hearted to a man. She was
-saucy to Mr. Schwartz, the bullying chief steward, and boxed his ears
-when he would have chucked her under the chin in token of an amicable
-parting.
-
-From the ship she went to the office of the port steward and demanded
-her wages, also a first-class recommendation. These were promptly handed
-over. No longer a stewardess in trim uniform, with white cap and apron,
-Miss Fernandez reappeared in a small hotel below Madison Square where
-she would be unlikely to encounter passengers and officers with whom she
-had sailed.
-
-Her savings banks books were a substantial anchor to windward. She had
-done well for herself at sea. There was little faith in Uncle Ramon
-Bazán’s promises of leaving her his property. He had too many bats in
-his aged _cabeza_. Meanwhile she had dreaded being cast on a lee shore
-of adversity and having to ask his help. There would be a string to it,
-as she said, that she would have to go and live in his Cartagena house,
-with the detestable brown monkey and the squawking green parrot and an
-uncle who had a worse temper than either.
-
-There were friends in New York, but she did not care to see them. They
-were mostly South Americans or seafaring people. Her intention was to
-rest a while and then to look for another position as stewardess on some
-route removed from the Caribbean, perhaps the Spanish line to Cadiz or a
-Lamport & Holt boat to Buenos Aires.
-
-Prudent with her money as she was, she permitted herself the pleasure of
-buying some new clothes, preferring to dress in black. The results were
-admirable. She had excellent taste. A simple elegance distinguished her.
-It was partly an inheritance. There was a certain exotic charm about
-her, the eyes, the hair, the coloring of her race.
-
-She was not so vivacious, alas, as when Richard Cary had wooed her in
-the tropics. At times she was like a nun, in moods pensive and wistful.
-
-Day after day she postponed writing the letter to the widowed mother of
-the tall, ruddy son who had been so carelessly confident that nothing
-could harm him. The longer the delay the more impossible it became to
-put pen to paper. At last she ceased to deceive herself in the matter.
-That letter would never be written by Teresa Fernandez.
-
-The dilemma held her like a vise. Every passing day was a merciless turn
-of the screw. Inevitably she was compelled to try to put herself in the
-mother’s place. Therefore she came to perceive, more and more clearly,
-that her flight from Cartagena had been futile. She had fled from the
-deed she had done, but there were consequences which she could neither
-flee nor evade.
-
-In putting herself in the mother’s place, Teresa had to deny that
-Richard Cary was dead. What mother would accept such a message as
-anything more than flimsy conjecture, as meaning anything at all? A
-mother’s impulse would be to fly to Cartagena herself or to send some
-one. She would have to _know_ before the tenacious illusions of hope
-could finally be extinguished.
-
-For Teresa Fernandez to allow herself to hope was to destroy the whole
-fabric of her justification. Even the faintest whisper of hope and she
-was no longer absolved. She had killed Colonel Fajardo because he had
-deserved to die, because otherwise he would have gone unpunished. He was
-guilty. Of this she had been as certain as that the tides flowed and the
-sun set.
-
-But this certainty could never convince Richard Cary’s mother. And in
-her heart of hearts did it entirely convince Teresa Fernandez? During
-the voyage northward to New York she had been visited by visions of
-hope. They had come not in her waking hours, however, but when she was
-asleep and dreaming. Then had Richard Cary appeared to her, masterful
-and tender, his deep voice vowing that he loved her, aye, for much
-longer than a little while. She had felt his kisses warm on her lips and
-his arms holding her close.
-
-Cruel, empty dreams she had called them, but now they took substance and
-seemed to be calling her. For Richard Cary’s mother and for her own
-sake, she discerned that she must go back to Cartagena. It had been
-necessary for her to leave the ship and seclude herself amid different
-scenes where she might be solitary and detached. Now she was thinking
-clearly, recovered from that impulse of flight and concealment that had
-driven her away. It was ordained that she should go back to Cartagena in
-order to try to bring to light the hidden circumstances. She could do
-nothing else than attempt it. By sea or land she could find no peace or
-sanctuary.
-
-A fortnight in New York sufficed to rid this conclusion of its fears and
-hesitations. It was the sequel, logical and unescapable, of the verdict
-which she had privately inflicted upon the wicked Colonel Fajardo.
-
-Winter had gone. It was in the month of April when Teresa made this
-voyage to the southward. The tourist travel had slackened. There were
-few tired business men and restless wives and daughters. Teresa was
-fortunate enough to be given a stateroom to herself. She was also alone
-at a small table in the dining-saloon. It would have made her happier to
-have been helping the stewardess, who was a heavy, middle-aged woman
-with twinges of rheumatism.
-
-There were novels to read, long hours in a deck-chair, and the chat of
-casual acquaintances. The men tried to flirt with her and found it
-wasted time. The voyage was something to be endured in quietude, with
-all the patience she could summon. Her courage was equal to the
-undertaking.
-
-Apart and silent she stood, with an air of grave serenity, when the ship
-passed in through the Boca Chica and slowly followed the channel of the
-broad lagoon. The Colombian customs officials would come aboard and
-summon the passengers for Cartagena into the saloon to check them on the
-list and examine their passports. This was what Teresa was inwardly
-dreading. If suspicion had followed her departure, she would learn it
-now.
-
-A new _Comandante_ of the Port entered the saloon. He was a
-white-haired, kindly man wearing spectacles. Importantly he scrutinized
-the purser’s papers and ticked off the names with a pencil. Teresa sat
-watching him. He had not come to her name. One little white shoe tapped
-the floor with a quick pit-pat. Otherwise she appeared calm. He held the
-pencil in air and exclaimed: “Señorita Teresa Fernandez.”
-
-Glancing over his spectacles, he perceived her sitting there. In tones
-of surprise he repeated the name. She flinched and held her breath.
-Rising from his chair, the _Comandante_ crossed over to her and put out
-his hand. It was a friendly gesture. With a sigh she took the hand he
-offered. Her fingers were as cold as ice.
-
-“It is an agreeable surprise, my dear young lady,” said he, “to find you
-among the passengers, bound homeward to Cartagena. I welcome the lovely
-niece of my friend Señor Ramon Bazán.”
-
-Teresa murmured words vaguely polite. The _Comandante_ returned to his
-papers. He was fussily preoccupied. Presently Teresa slipped away to her
-room, there to remain until the other passengers had disembarked. She
-wished to have no reunions on the wharf with friends who had come to see
-the steamer arrive.
-
-The barrier had been safely passed. She was free to enter the city as a
-woman innocent of suspicion so far as the officials were concerned. No
-information had been lodged against her, or the _Comandante_ and his
-harbor police would have summarily detained her.
-
-In the heat of the day she hired one of the carriages at the gate and
-was driven to the residence of her uncle. She would tell him what her
-errand was, to search for tidings of Richard Cary’s fate. With a will to
-help her, Uncle Ramon might be able to burrow beneath the surface of
-things. In years gone by he had pulled strings in the complex politics
-of the city, and was still respected in certain quarters for the things
-he knew and didn’t tell. Crochety as he was, she thought he was really
-fond of her when she refrained from teasing. And he had expressed an
-unusual liking for the big second mate of the _Tarragona_.
-
-Teresa rang the bell of the ancient house with the rose-tinted walls and
-the jutting gallery. Expectantly she waited for the Indian lad to come
-pattering through the hall, or the shuffling slippers of Uncle Ramon
-himself. Again she pulled the brass knob. She could hear the echoing
-jingle of the bell. It awakened no response in the silent house.
-Possibly they were asleep, her uncle, the _muchacho_, the fat black
-woman in the kitchen. It was early, however, for the siesta. Uncle Ramon
-should now be eating the midday breakfast in a shady corner of the
-_patio_.
-
-This was a situation awkward and unforeseen. She had taken it implicitly
-for granted that her funny old uncle would be found in his house because
-he had always been there. To her he was a lifelong habit and fixture,
-growing no older or more infirm.
-
-While Teresa stood on the pavement, the carriage waiting with her trunk,
-the neighbor who lived next door came strolling home under an enormous
-green umbrella. He was a courtly, bland gentleman with grayish side
-whiskers who was manager of a bank and had large commercial interests in
-the interior of the country. Teresa had known this affluent Alonzo de
-Mello ever since he had been wont to carry her across the plaza upon his
-shoulder and toss her squealing into a clump of plumed pampas grass. He
-was her uncle’s financial adviser and loyal friend, ignoring his twists
-of temper.
-
-Teresa walked along the pavement to meet him. His green umbrella was a
-familiar sight. Now it was like a beacon in troubled waters. At sight of
-her, Alonzo de Mello swept off his hat with the graceful homage of an
-_hidalgo_. He was a gentleman of the old school. Very much surprised he
-was to see Teresa. Kissing her on the cheek, as was his privilege, he
-sonorously exclaimed:
-
-“Old Ramon told me you had failed to come south in the _Tarragona_ last
-voyage, my child! Come into my house and have breakfast. The family will
-thank me a thousand times for bringing you.”
-
-“And as many thanks to you, dear Señor de Mello,” replied Teresa,
-grasping his arm as they walked with the umbrella over them, “but I must
-find out how to get into my uncle’s house. I came to make him a visit
-and the house is locked as tight as a jail. Where is he? What do you
-know? Is anything wrong?”
-
-“The house is closed. He has gone away,” answered the banker, with an
-oddly perplexed manner. “Ah, you have your trunk in the carriage,
-Teresa? Then stay with us. I beseech it of you as a favor.”
-
-“I knew you would say just that, Señor de Mello, but if you don’t mind I
-shall stay in my uncle’s house if there is any way to get into it. He
-must be coming back soon. Where has he gone? What has become of his two
-servants?”
-
-“You are a girl not to be cajoled if her mind is made up,” smiled the
-affectionate neighbor. “Wait, if you please, while I get the key. Uncle
-Ramon left it with me. Let the driver carry in your trunk, if you
-insist. Then you can run in and out as you please and have your meals
-with us. Your uncle’s servants have been sent away, you ought to know,
-until he returns to the city.”
-
-Señor de Mello was obviously fencing with the story of Uncle Ramon’s
-curious departure, as if it might require considerable explanation.
-Teresa was mystified, but she asked no more questions until the banker
-came back with the heavy iron key. At his heels galloped a little brown
-monkey squeaking its annoyance at something or other. Teresa eyed it
-with dislike. She knew that monkey of old. It was not to be mistaken for
-any other wretched monkey in Colombia. It pulled at her skirt with tiny
-black paws and would have frisked to her shoulder, but she thrust it
-away with her foot.
-
-“Little imp of the pit! You are no friend of mine. It is beyond me how
-my uncle could bear to part with you.”
-
-The monkey grinned at her, showing every tooth in its head, and it was a
-most malevolent grin. Tail looped over its back, it scampered into the
-house ahead of them, casting back proud and hateful glances. This house
-belonged to it. These two persons were intruders. Into the silent
-_patio_ scampered the monkey and went hand over hand up the trellis from
-which it swayed in a contemptuous manner.
-
-Teresa was not interested in the antics of little brown monkeys. She
-went into the library. It was clean and orderly. The other rooms had
-been left in the same condition by the faithful servants.
-
-“Yes, I think I will stay here, Señor de Mello. It will amuse me to keep
-house, after living so much in ships. Just now I am tired. I have not
-been feeling as strong as usual. Will you excuse me from calling on your
-family till later in the afternoon? I had breakfast on the ship.”
-
-“As you say, Teresa. You have everything here for your comfort. You will
-dine with us to-night, of course. And now where has your uncle gone? Let
-us sit down? Your uncle is self-willed and like a mule to handle, as you
-know. And an old man must not be crossed too much. In the inscrutable
-wisdom of God, our Ramon Bazán took it into his head to become a
-shipowner and engage in the west coast trade. A bolt from a clear sky, I
-assure you, when he came to me to turn his securities into cash and
-finance the affair. He insisted on buying the old _Valkyrie_ some time
-ago, very secretly, before he announced what he proposed to do with her.
-
-“You remember the small German tramp steamer, Teresa, that was idle so
-long in the harbor. Then suddenly he told me he had decided to make
-repairs and go to Buenaventura for a cargo. It took much more money than
-he could afford to invest in such a scheme, but I could not refuse to
-get the funds together for him. My advice amounted to nothing.
-Objections drove him quite frantic. He had the bit between his teeth.
-Restless, craving change and excitement before death snatched him, he
-hit upon this foolish enterprise.”
-
-“He did not tell you everything,” wisely observed Teresa. “I have not
-the slightest idea of what was in his ridiculous mind, but he expected
-to bring back more dollars than he spent. Uncle Ramon was never an idiot
-when it came to his precious money.”
-
-“I called him an idiot,” said Señor Alonzo de Mello, “and he grinned
-precisely like that monkey on the trellis. So away he sailed and that
-was the last seen of him.”
-
-“What did he do for a crew?” asked Teresa, the deep-water mariner. “And
-where did he find a captain?”
-
-“He picked up a man called Captain Bradley Duff, and Cartagena was very
-well pleased to get rid of him. All the vices of the famous Anglo-Saxon
-race and none of its virtues were visible to the eye. An unsanctified
-swine of a wind-bag, down at the heel, who had been annoying this coast
-for some time.”
-
-“Captain Bradley Duff?” said the disgusted Teresa. “He was kicked off
-the wharf when I was in the _Tarragona_. He came on board and tried to
-borrow money from the officers and passengers. Then he got drunk in the
-smoking-room. And this is the man that my uncle took as captain in his
-old steamer? You were too soft with Uncle Ramon, my dear sir. He is in
-his second childhood. You should have locked him in a room and given him
-some toys to play with. Has anything been heard of this _Valkyrie_?”
-
-“Yes, she passed through the Canal. I interested myself to find that
-out, but she is not yet reported as arriving at Buenaventura. I feel
-some anxiety, for soon she will be overdue.”
-
-“There will be gray hairs in my head if I sit here in his house until he
-comes back,” cried Teresa, in a sudden gust of anger. “He has gone the
-good God knows where. May He protect the silliest voyage that a ship
-ever made! Yes, Señor de Mello, I think I had better stay alone for a
-while this afternoon and reflect on what I am to do.”
-
-As the good Señor de Mello bowed himself out, it escaped his notice that
-the little brown monkey was still roosting on the trellis. Teresa, also,
-was unobservant. She had discovered that the galleon bell had been
-removed from its framework of Spanish oak. This was more food for
-speculation. It was fairly easy to fathom, however, for one who knew
-Señor Ramon Bazán and the history of the sonorous bell of _Nuestra
-Señora del Rosario_. It had been his notion to take the bell along in
-his steamer by way of precaution. Quite sensible of him, thought Teresa,
-but to be regretted because with the bell still in the _patio_ she might
-have been told if any catastrophe was about to put an end to her erratic
-old kinsman.
-
-While Teresa was pondering this odd discovery, the monkey descended to
-the floor and bethought himself of some urgent business of his own. With
-a furtive glance at Teresa, who paid no attention, he scuttled into a
-corner where two green tubs had formerly stood. The cocoanut palms had
-been carried into the house of Señor de Mello that they might not perish
-of thirst. The monkey was exceedingly indignant, as his language
-conveyed, at finding his favorite depositary of loot disturbed.
-
-There was the wide crack in the masonry, however, where he had hidden
-the fragments into which he had torn the letter purloined from the
-library desk. Into this crevice he now inserted a paw and found what he
-so anxiously sought.
-
-It was a briar pipe with an amber bit, the choicest treasure acquired
-during a long career of zealous burglary. The huge guest of Papa Bazán
-had forgotten the pipe that night when he had gone away in the dark. A
-prize beyond compare for the covetous monkey who had found it in the
-library next morning and had fled to hide it in the safest, surest place
-he knew!
-
-Then he had been violently snatched away and kept as a captive in the
-house of Señor de Mello, and there had been no chance to retrieve the
-briar pipe. He had been sitting at the top of the trellis wondering what
-made him feel so sorrowful and uneasy. At last he had remembered. It was
-the pipe, tucked away in the crack of the wall behind the green tubs.
-
-In a happier frame of mind the monkey wandered across the _patio_, the
-pipe held firmly between his teeth, a finger in the bowl. He had the air
-of one for whom solace waited if only he could find a match and a pinch
-of tobacco.
-
-Teresa caught sight of this absurdly gratified monkey with the pipe in
-its mouth. She gasped and sprang to her feet. Like a flash she dived to
-catch the horrid beast, but he flew from under her hands and raced for
-the nearest room. Teresa was after him. She picked up an empty flower
-pot and hurled it. The aim was wild, but the crash was startling. The
-monkey’s nervous system was so shaken that he dropped the pipe and
-vanished beneath a bed.
-
-The panting Teresa swooped for the pipe. She was laughing hysterically.
-She could not believe her eyes. She fondled the pipe, turning it over
-and over in her hands. It was the pipe which once before she had rescued
-from the pest of a monkey, when she had brought Richard Cary from the
-ship for an evening call on her uncle.
-
-This briar pipe was unmistakable. There were the initials neatly carved
-on the side of the smoke-blackened bowl—_R. C._
-
-She put a hand to her head. Richard Cary had taken the pipe back to the
-ship that night. She was certain of this because she had insisted upon
-cleaning it before he smoked it again. She had forced a jet of steam
-through it in the pantry, and then had sent it to his room by a cabin
-steward. Ricardo had returned his thanks. This had been her last word
-from him.
-
-Later in the evening, about ten o’clock, he had gone ashore. A
-quartermaster had seen him walk off the wharf and through the
-custom-house gate. Betwixt that time and the present, then, he had been
-in the house of Uncle Ramon Bazán. The pipe was evidence unquestionable,
-or so it appeared to her confused sense. But if Richard Cary had been in
-her uncle’s house since leaving the ship that last time, why had he sent
-no word to explain his absence? Why had her uncle kept silent?
-
-Both joy and anguish overwhelmed her. The room went suddenly dark before
-her eyes. Never before had she fainted.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
- BLIND ROADS OF DESTINY
-
-Joy in the belief that Richard Cary had not died that night in
-Cartagena! Anguish that she, Teresa Fernandez, had stained her hands
-with blood for which there had been no justification! She felt herself
-falling, falling, falling into unfathomable depths while a fateful
-little monkey sat and grinned at her.
-
-She found herself lying on the stone floor which felt cool against her
-cheek. Lassitude overpowered her like a drug. A few feet away was a long
-wicker chair with chintz cushions, a chair to recline in if she could
-make the effort. She dared not try to stand. Like a child that had not
-learned to walk, she crept to the chair and, for lack of strength, knelt
-with her head on a cushion. A few minutes more and she was able to lift
-herself into the chair and lie relaxed, grateful that she was no longer
-falling, falling to dreadful darkness.
-
-The brown monkey had watched her from his hiding-place. He was as
-unpitying as destiny itself. All that interested him was the briar pipe
-which had slipped from Teresa’s fingers. There it was, on the stone
-floor, near where she had so suddenly and curiously concluded to lie
-down for a short time. Very cautiously he peered around the bamboo
-screen and scratched his hairy hide. The woman appeared to sleep in the
-long wicker chair. It was worth risking a bold sortie. Nothing venture,
-nothing have!
-
-The monkey advanced in a series of short dashes, ready to retreat on the
-instant. He was still nervous from the crash of that hurtling flower
-pot. A fragment had nicked his bald rump. A final leap, and he pounced
-on the pipe and silently fled out into the _patio_. Having fled to a
-safe distance he informed the woman what he thought of her.
-
-The woman was not as indifferent as the thievish little beast surmised.
-It was her intention to recover that blackened briar pipe with the
-initials, _R. C._, neatly cut on the side of the bowl. Her slender body
-was still a prisoner to weakness, however, and so she watched the
-monkey, through the doorway of the room, as it gamboled insolently with
-the pipe between its teeth.
-
-Ere long it sauntered over to the corner where the two green tubs had
-been, assuming a specious air of indifference. Apparently the woman had
-forgotten his existence and was enjoying her siesta in the long wicker
-chair. The monkey examined the wide crevice between the stones where his
-treasures had been habitually concealed. After an absence it was
-advisable to take account of stock.
-
-Some other recollection, also a pleasing one, haunted his simian
-intelligence. Into the crevice went an eager paw. It raked out one
-handful after another of tiny white bits of paper and let them flutter.
-He brushed them together as they fell and tossed them in air. They came
-drifting down like the petals of the small, white flowers when a certain
-monkey was scrambling up a favorite trellis.
-
-Amusing enough, but soon tiresome. This monkey was apt to suffer from
-ennui. Giving thought to the matter, he picked up the pipe, rapped it on
-a stone, and then stuffed the bits of paper into the bowl. It was
-expertly done, a few bits of paper, and a finger tamping them down. This
-had been the custom of the tall man with the yellow hair who had been
-kind enough to leave the pipe behind him.
-
-Solemnly the monkey waited for the fascinating smoke to curl from the
-bowl. He waited rather anxiously because he was very much afraid of
-fire. Teresa Fernandez thought it time to interfere. She could see that
-wide crack between the stones of the wall, and she did not know how deep
-it might be. If the malignant little devil of a monkey should thrust
-Richard Cary’s pipe in too far, for safe-keeping, it might drop between
-the stones and be lost to her forever.
-
-She cried out sharply, insulting the ancestors of all monkeys. This one
-jumped as if he had been shot and spun about, hiding the pipe behind its
-back. Teresa was rapidly regaining strength. Indignation goaded her to
-action. Reaching out an arm, she caught up a book from a small table and
-let it fly through the doorway. It fell short of the mark, but hit a
-galvanized watering-can. Bang!
-
-The monkey leaped into the air. He was sensitive to shocks. This woman
-was determined to seek his life. If it was the briar pipe that made her
-so ruthless, then he would let her have it. Better a live pauper than a
-dead monkey! Only the gods of the jungle knew what she would be throwing
-at him next. A bombardment of those explosive flower pots and books that
-went “bang” might put an end to his career. Old Papa Bazán had a temper,
-but he was never like this.
-
-Thereupon the mistreated monkey dropped the pipe and sped at top speed
-to a far part of the house, into the vegetable bin beyond the kitchen
-where there were burlap sacks to pull over one’s self. The atmosphere of
-home had been ruined by a hateful, alien presence in petticoats.
-
-Her mind slightly relieved, Teresa called herself a useless girl for
-yielding so weakly to a fainting spell. It was the breaking strain, but
-she was by no means ready to surrender to the impact of circumstances.
-She walked into the bathroom and let the water run cool in the basin.
-She splashed her face and temples and laved her wrists. This was no time
-to indulge in hysteria or to let her wits be tangled. It was a mercy
-that she could be alone in this empty house until the late hours of the
-afternoon.
-
-Soon she felt strong enough to cross the _patio_ and regain possession
-of Richard Cary’s pipe. It had intimately belonged to him, a companion
-of his night watches in all the ships he had known. He had told her
-this. Perhaps he had thought of Teresa when he had smoked his pipe on
-the rocking bridge of the _Tarragona_ under the star-spattered skies of
-the Caribbean.
-
-Now she caressed the pipe with the palm of her hand until the bowl shone
-like polished teak. With a hairpin she fished out the crumpled bits of
-paper which the monkey had so painstakingly rammed therein.
-
-Here was a queer thing. She was quick to notice it, and as quick to
-deduce its immense significance. When she had cleaned the pipe for
-Ricardo, that last night on shipboard, she had dug out the evil-smelling
-dottle in order to put steam through it and blow out the nicotine. It
-had been a labor of love.
-
-Teresa knew as much about pipes as a man. She had listened to many
-shipmates deliver orations or wrangle over the merits of their pet
-briars or meerschaums, their clays and corn-cobs. She had watched them
-carefully scrape the burnt cake when the bowl was almost filled.
-
-Ricardo’s pipe had been almost clear of this charred cake, as hard as
-coal. This she remembered because it had been easy to clean it. He must
-have been busy with his knife not long before that, as men were
-accustomed to do when there was almost no room for tobacco in the bowl.
-
-But this same briar pipe, as she now held it in her hand, was caked and
-foul. It had been smoked a good deal since she had last seen it on board
-the _Tarragona_. A pipe could not get in this condition unless it had
-been smoked longer than a day or a week. Why, it was time to dig out the
-bowl again and cut away the black, hard cake. Here was something very
-engrossing to study, enough to make a girl ever so much flightier than
-Uncle Ramon Bazán in his maddest moments.
-
-Merely the tobacco ash burned hard in a briar pipe, but in the random
-alleys of life, no incident is so small that it can be called
-negligible. The little brown monkeys of chance momentously meddle with
-the affairs of humankind and pass gayly on.
-
-Teresa Fernandez found a resting-place on the bench near the frame of
-the galleon bell. Her senses were awakened to their normal alertness.
-Who else than Richard Cary could have been smoking this pipe? Not her
-Uncle Ramon! He had forsaken his black, rank cigars after two or three
-heart seizures had almost popped him into his grave.
-
-“Ricardo has been here,” she said to herself, “and he must have stayed
-some time. I could be no more certain of it if he told me himself.”
-
-She tried to banish the specter of her own frightful situation with
-respect to the man she had slain on the wharf as an act of retribution.
-This must await its turn. Unless she could control her mind to this
-extent, she was hopelessly, helplessly befogged and adrift, without
-chart or compass. Why had Ricardo failed to return to the ship? Why and
-how and whither had he vanished again, from the house of Uncle Ramon
-Bazán? These were the questions she was first compelled to grope with.
-Her intuitions might be feminine, but life had taught her the logic of
-cause and effect. When the occasion required, she could be as practical
-as a navigator working out his sights.
-
-“They went away together, Ricardo and Uncle Ramon,” she thought aloud.
-“It has to be so. Uncle Ramon knew better than to hire that worthless
-Bradley Duff to command his steamer. When so much money is risked, you
-can’t fool him as easy as all that. It is hard to find officers in
-Cartagena. In a pinch, Bradley Duff may have been signed as a mate, but
-not as a captain. I know my old uncle very well. He would never trust
-himself, much less his ship, to a notorious beach-comber who has
-nobody’s respect.
-
-“It was Ricardo who went as captain. Señor de Mello is mistaken. How
-does it happen that he never mentioned Mr. Cary to me to-day? How could
-they be in the two houses side by side and Alonzo de Mello not know Mr.
-Cary was going to sail with my Uncle Ramon? The second officer of my old
-ship, the _Tarragona_? Why, it would have been at the end of Alonzo de
-Mello’s tongue to tell me how my uncle had such a fine officer with him.
-Nobody could forget Ricardo if they met him only once.”
-
-Teresa ceased to be logical for the moment and veered to sentiment by
-way of shadowy consolation. She went on to say to herself:
-
-“Buenaventura! A lucky omen, perhaps. It means good fortune. That is the
-west coast port they sailed for? One of the little English ships that
-captured the great galleon of my ancestor, Don Juan Diego Fernandez, in
-Cartagena harbor, was the _Bonaventure_. And how grand and fierce
-Ricardo looked when I was telling him how my brave ancestor fought in
-his golden armor. He frightened me. Bad luck for Don Juan Diego
-Fernandez, but good fortune for the Englishmen! And Ricardo is one of
-them. He is not like a Yankee at all.”
-
-Good fortune? Could there be such a thing in God’s world for Teresa
-Fernandez? The spirit of Colonel Fajardo had indeed risen from the muddy
-waters of the harbor to claim its vengeance and reprisal. Teresa’s will
-was still strong enough to hold this issue in the background. Let it
-fasten a grip on her and she was lost. Time enough for that struggle.
-
-Broodingly she considered another issue intimately more vital. Had
-Richard Cary truly loved her? Had she been more to him than a passing
-fancy, a pretty girl to kiss, another sweetheart in a new port?
-
-With never a word to explain his desertion from the ship, with never a
-message of any kind during these intervening weeks, it would seem that
-he had forgotten her. He had left her to wonder and to grieve. What a
-tragic fool she would have been to write a letter to his mother,
-breaking the news that her precious son was dead in Cartagena!
-
-Thus Teresa sadly argued with herself, but love and logic cannot be
-mated. She loved Richard Cary with an unwavering constancy. And her
-belief that he cared for her in the same way might be shaken, but could
-not be destroyed. He was the soul of candor. His simplicity was as
-massive as a mountain-side. Honesty was in him if ever it dwelt in any
-man.
-
-The fateful brown monkey, unhappily secluded beneath the burlap sacks in
-the vegetable bin, had reason for ironic mirth. Those crumpled scraps of
-paper in a corner of the _patio_—if the woman had been wise enough to
-smooth them and try to piece them together, a word or two here, a phrase
-there, she might have found the answer to her question.
-
-Absorbed in her study of the briar pipe, Teresa had paid no heed to the
-scattered bits of paper so minutely torn by a monkey’s busy fingers.
-They had failed to impress her as bearing any resemblance to the remains
-of a letter. She went from room to room, searching for sign or trace of
-the occupancy of Richard Cary. There might be something else besides his
-pipe. The search yielded nothing at all. The library desk was vainly
-ransacked. The waste-baskets had been emptied. There was absolutely
-nothing anywhere to indicate that Uncle Ramon Bazán had entertained a
-guest.
-
-Weary and bewildered, Teresa threw herself upon the bed in the coolest
-room. It would be an ordeal to have to meet Señor Alonzo de Mello’s
-family at dinner, but it could not be avoided. There were questions to
-ask him. She had to know more about the singular voyage of her Uncle
-Ramon. Where else could she try to find information? Uncle Ramon’s two
-servants, of course, the Indian _muchacho_ and the negress who had
-cooked and slaved for him. José and Rosa were all the names by which she
-knew them. She was in ignorance of where either lived. It might not be
-in Cartagena at all. Unless Señor de Mello could help her, it might be
-impossible to find the two servants. Then, again, if the furtive Uncle
-Ramon had been guarding some secret, as it seemed plausible to assume,
-it would have been like him to bind José and Rosa to silence after his
-departure.
-
-This house held a secret. It concerned Richard Cary. This was as far as
-Teresa could grope in her labyrinth, But it was not her habit to
-hesitate and grope for long. She would take a path and follow it to the
-bitter end, once the choice of direction had been made.
-
-It was a long, long afternoon to spend in this silent house that refused
-to whisper its secret. Teresa drowsed off more than once, dreadfully
-tired and feeling the heat after the passage across the Caribbean and
-the strong wind that was almost always blowing there, whistling through
-a ship’s stays, whipping the blue surface into foaming surges, blowing
-beneath a hard, bright sky: the wind with a tang to it, the wind that
-Richard Cary had so zestfully drawn deep into his lungs, standing with
-arms folded across his mighty chest.
-
-It was a breath of this same wind that came, at length, and drew through
-the long windows of Ramon Bazán’s house when the sun was going down. It
-stirred the sultry air. Teresa dropped her fan. She would take her bath
-and do her hair and put on the evening gown of black lace which had been
-her one extravagant purchase in New York. The household of Señor de
-Mello dined with a certain amount of formality.
-
-When she was dressed, Teresa remembered the odious monkey which had
-betaken itself into retirement. She could never coax it into following
-her next door. Señor de Mello would have to intervene. She refused to
-spend a night under the same roof with it. She went to close the door
-into the rear hall. This would keep her pet aversion penned in the
-kitchen quarters.
-
-The breeze had increased and was buoyantly sweeping through the _patio_.
-It caught up the bits of torn paper and whirled them like snowflakes.
-Teresa noticed them because she hated the slightest disorder. She had
-been disciplined in the immaculate routine of well-kept ships in the
-passenger trade. Flying bits of paper annoyed her. It was too late to
-sweep them up. They were drifting hither and yon.
-
-Now that they had attracted her attention, she called herself a stupid
-fool for neglecting to examine them in the first place. She had been
-thinking of something else. Was there writing on them? She stooped to
-catch a few bits as they eddied to the floor. One or two fluttered
-behind a bench. Others settled in the dusty basin of the fountain. In
-the open court the light of the sky was failing. She took the bits of
-paper to a lamp.
-
-So small and crumpled that it seemed a waste of time to pore over them,
-they bore the marks of a pen. This quickened her curiosity. She had
-never seen Richard Cary’s handwriting, and therefore this could not be
-called a definite clue. But this was not her Uncle Ramon’s crabbed fist.
-It was a vigorous hand that had driven the pen hard.
-
-Malign luck, perversity, the influence of a little brown monkey, call it
-what you will, so ordered it that the breeze failed to waft to Teresa
-even one fragment which might have brought her precious consolation. All
-it required was a bit of paper with her name or some remembered word of
-endearment, or a broken hint to be interpreted. What she found herself
-able to read were such meaningless words as these, “_and will_”—“_so
-he_”—“_wish I_”—“_you told me_.”
-
-“If Ricardo wrote this, as perhaps he did,” said Teresa, “why was it
-thrown away? Or was it a letter from somebody else to my uncle, and the
-monkey found it in the waste-basket? And I might have had all the pieces
-to puzzle over! Too late now. Some of the scraps have flown out of the
-windows. For such stupidity I deserve to have the devil fly away with
-me.”
-
-Before going out, she carefully closed the windows. Other scraps of
-paper might possibly reveal something in the morning.
-
-She carried herself bravely, did Teresa, when she entered the large
-living-room of Señor Alonzo de Mello’s hospitable home. It had been her
-fancy to arrange her hair not so much in the latest mode as in the
-Spanish fashion of other days, the glossy tresses piled high upon her
-head and thrust through with a comb of hammered silver. A scarf from
-Seville, shot with threads of gold and crimson, was across her bare
-shoulders. She looked the patrician, a girl of the blood of the ancient
-house of Fernandez.
-
-The welcome of Señora de Mello was affectionate. She was a plain,
-motherly woman with a double chin and no waist-line who found
-contentment within four walls, and had come to the opinion that the
-younger generation needed the intercession of all the saints in the
-calendar. Teresa she graciously excepted from this _index
-expurgatorius_.
-
-Just now her only son and his wife were making a brief visit _en route_
-to New York and Paris for the annual pleasure jaunt. Antonio de Mello
-had married a Colombian heiress owning vast banana and coffee
-plantations, cattle ranches, gold mines, and what not. Ostensibly he
-directed these interests, but his real vocation was that of a sportsman,
-a spender, a cosmopolitan figure in the world of folly and fashion.
-
-Teresa Fernandez stiffened when young de Mello and his wife came into
-the room. The daughter-in-law displayed all the latest improvements,
-from plucked eyebrows to no manners whatever. A thin, fretful person,
-beauty had passed her by. With a very bored air she said to Teresa:
-
-“We are sailing to-morrow. So sorry you are not to be the stewardess. We
-came south with you last year in the _Tarragona_. As I remember, you
-were quite capable and obliging. Most of them are like the other
-servants one hires nowadays, utterly impossible.”
-
-That kindly gentleman, Alonzo de Mello, was dismayed by this crass
-rudeness to a guest. By his old-fashioned code a Fernandez could not
-demean herself. She dignified the task. Before he could voice his
-reproof, Teresa was heard to reply, her demeanor serene, but her eye
-glittering:
-
-“Ah, yes, I remember the trip. Why not? You had the B suite, and rowdy
-parties in it every night. There were ladies on board. They requested
-the captain to stop the disturbance. It was most unusual. A ship’s good
-name is highly regarded.”
-
-Young Antonio de Mello perceived that his heiress had caught a Tartar.
-Also, he knew Teresa of old. He cleverly contrived to draw her aside,
-and said:
-
-“Pardon my wife’s lack of tact. Think how I adored you when we were
-young. And you are more beautiful than ever, La Bella Teresa. How many
-lovers at this moment? Be frank with an old friend.”
-
-“Only one, I swear it, thou scamp of an Antonio,” smiled Teresa, “and he
-has run away from me.”
-
-“He is an imbecile. Then I am just in time to apply for the vacancy.”
-
-“The vacancy is in your silly head, not in my poor heart,” she told him.
-
-Before the scamp could parry this insult, his small daughter, aged five,
-came running in to throw herself into the arms of Teresa Fernandez. It
-was a joyous reunion. They had been shipmates. This explained it. Teresa
-was a lawful capture who had to be led jealously by the hand, away from
-the grown-ups, and held in audience by this devoted admirer.
-Breathlessly the child rattled on:
-
-“And I can’t stay up for dinner, but Mamma said I could see you for five
-minutes, after I yelled and wouldn’t stay good. And if you don’t go in
-the ship with us to-morrow I’ll cry some more. Why aren’t you a
-stewardess, Teresa? You know the story you told me—’bout the jaguar
-that climbed right up on the roof of the peon’s hut and clawed and
-scratched and growled _awful_, till he made a hole and tumbled in?”
-
-“Yes, my sweet angel,” laughed Teresa. “I have told that story to lots
-of little boys and girls on the ship. The last trip I made as stewardess
-I told the story to a little boy from Bogotá. I had to tell it to him
-four times, and his eyes got bigger and bigger and he wiggled his feet
-and said, ‘_Oh my_,’ just like you.”
-
-“I wasn’t real scared, Teresa, but I bet I can scare _you_, awful. My
-story is _terrible_. You’ll just scream.”
-
-“Good Heavens, child, don’t tell it just before bedtime,” warned Teresa.
-“And have pity on me! Why, I shan’t sleep a wink myself.”
-
-“Well, I won’t make it so awful terrible then,” said the small girl as
-she cuddled in Teresa’s lap. “My nurse told it to me. It’s the story
-’bout _The Great Yellow Tiger_ that ran _right_ into Cartagena and—and
-what do you s’pose he did?”
-
-“Sant’ Iago preserve us! A great yellow tiger!” cried Teresa, imitating
-extreme terror. “Indeed, that does scare me more terribly than my
-spotted jaguar on the roof.”
-
-“He was looking for naughty little boys and girls,” solemnly affirmed
-the narrator. “That’s what my nurse says. And he bited iron bars off of
-windows to find ’em. Your old jaguar couldn’t do that. All _he_ could do
-was scratch through a straw roof with his claws. Want to hear some more
-’bout the Great Yellow Tiger?”
-
-“Not to-night, darling,” said Teresa. “He is much too terrible for me.
-Did he run back to the jungle?”
-
-“Yes, but maybe he’ll come out of the jungle again if the boys and girls
-aren’t as good as they can be. Glad I don’t live in Cartagena.”
-
-“You will be far away across the ocean and no yellow tiger can swim
-after you,” comforted Teresa. “Besides, you are never naughty. You tell
-your nurse that you don’t want to hear that story any more.”
-
-“It scared you, didn’t it? Oh, I have a little monkey to play with, but
-I couldn’t find him to-day. Señor Ramon Bazán left it when he went away.
-Will you play with me and the monkey to-morrow, Teresa?”
-
-“Perhaps, if you will promise not to tell me such awful stories. They
-make me squirm!”
-
-The small daughter was presently summoned by her nurse. It was a tearful
-departure. The Great Yellow Tiger! _El Tigre Amarillo Grande!_ A child’s
-fantasy that meant no more to Teresa Fernandez than the spotted jaguar
-tumbling through the thatched roof of the peon’s hut.
-
-She rejoined the de Mello family and was escorted into dinner by her
-host. The wife of young de Mello was in no mood to make herself
-agreeable. Her rake of a husband displeased her the more by paying court
-to Teresa. He was flagrant about it. And she appeared to find it
-diverting. The talk had no significance, however, until Antonio chanced
-to remark:
-
-“I went to the steamer this afternoon to look at our rooms. It was odd
-not to see Colonel Fajardo swaggering about, cursing everybody in sight.
-This new _Comandante_ of the Port reminds me of a retired schoolmaster,
-tiresomely virtuous and well-behaved. Fajardo, now, was a character,
-wicked enough to please my taste. I miss him. What’s this scandal about
-his disappearance? You hear the gossip of the wharf, Teresa.”
-
-“This is my first trip south since he disappeared, as you call it,
-Antonio. I heard nothing about him on the ship. What is the scandal?”
-
-“Merely that he had left his girls and his debts behind him, with no
-farewells. He had been going the pace for years—I used to hear some
-wild stories in the clubs and cafés.”
-
-The elder de Mello broke in to say: “More than one jealous husband
-threatened to shoot him. He was beginning to break—liquor had the upper
-hand of him—and he fled in some kind of sudden panic, I imagine. A
-threat, perhaps, and his courage went to pieces.”
-
-“Strange! A born fire-eater and a soldier with a record,” was Antonio’s
-comment. “The moral is, of course, that one must be virtuous. I shall
-take it to heart.”
-
-“I hope so,” said Teresa, “or some day you may fly away, pouf, like
-Colonel Fajardo, and people will say shocking things about you.”
-
-The wife of Antonio was not interested in the petty scandals of
-Cartagena and low people of whom she was in ignorance. She said
-something sharp to her husband and began to talk volubly herself, the
-plans for the summer in Paris, the new dances, the racy gossip
-concerning persons of importance. Teresa welcomed the respite. She found
-a glass of champagne very grateful. She had known dinner parties less
-fatiguing than this one. Antonio turned sulky and glowered at his wife.
-Teresa excused herself rather early. The elder de Mello escorted her
-into her own house that he might retrieve the monkey and take it back
-with him. This gave Teresa an opportunity to inquire, at a venture:
-
-“Did you happen to meet the very tall, fair-haired young man, a Mr.
-Cary, who was visiting my Uncle Ramon before he sailed?”
-
-“Pardon me, Teresa, but Ramon had no visitors at all. Is this Mr. Cary a
-friend of yours? Did he say he was expecting to visit Ramon Bazán?”
-
-“I inferred so. I am mistaken, then? You are quite sure?”
-
-“Positive of it,” exclaimed Alonzo de Mello. “I was in the house several
-times during the last fortnight before he went away, with his business
-affairs to look over and so on. He was alone, I am sure. He always had
-that air of hiding away by himself. He preferred it.”
-
-“Thank you,” said Teresa. “Mr. Cary must have changed his mind.”
-
-“Who is the young man, may I ask?”
-
-“He was an officer in the _Tarragona_ for a short time. Probably you
-have never heard his name. I thought Uncle Ramon might have taken him in
-his steamer for the west coast voyage.”
-
-“I should have known it,” replied the banker. “The last time I saw Ramon
-he told me that Captain Bradley Duff and the chief engineer were the
-only American officers on board.”
-
-“A pipe-dream of mine, as you might say!” exclaimed Teresa. The
-atrocious pun made her feel like giggling with a touch of hysteria. She
-controlled herself and harmlessly inquired: “Do you know where to find
-the two servants, if I decide to spend some time here?”
-
-“Then you refuse to stay with us? I am afraid you must let me look for
-new servants. These two reported that the house was in order and gave me
-the keys. Where they went is beyond me. Your uncle was to send them word
-of his return.”
-
-“Never mind, Señor de Mello. I have not yet made up my mind what to do.
-It is a thing to sleep over.”
-
-He was too courteous to press her with interrogations. She was an
-independent girl accustomed to her own gait. Something he mentioned
-quite casually came like a light in the dark.
-
-“I have instructed my agent in Panama to let me know when the _Valkyrie_
-reaches Buenaventura. Then you can cable your uncle, if you feel anxious
-for his safety or wish to adjust your own plans. I mentioned, I think,
-that the steamer had passed through the Canal. She was delayed a week at
-Balboa for repairs after some heavy weather on this coast.”
-
-“Delayed a week at Balboa?” cried Teresa, with sudden eagerness. “I am
-glad he stopped to have his old ship patched up.”
-
-After Alonzo de Mello had bade her good-night, she was able to discern
-quite clearly the path she was to follow. She would not try to find
-Richard Cary with cable messages and wait and wait for an answer which
-might never come. Her evidence that he still lived was so slight as to
-be grotesque. A briar pipe and an inquisitive monkey! Her faith was
-scarcely more than the substance of things hoped for. She was ready to
-swear on the cross that she had read his death in the gloating eyes of
-Colonel Fajardo.
-
-Even though he were alive and had been in this house of mystery, this
-house that whispered of a carefully shrouded secret, why could she
-expect to receive any answer to a message? Old Ramon Bazán had carried
-his secrecy with him.
-
-“His ship stayed a week at Balboa,” said Teresa. “Then her officers and
-crew must have been ashore in Panama. That is where I must go to find
-out anything. There is nothing for me in Cartagena.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
- TERESA, HER PILGRIMAGE
-
-Across the Isthmus to Panama! It had been a golden road for the
-ancestors of Teresa Fernandez to follow to the South Sea. It seemed a
-propitious road for her to follow in quest of Richard Cary. Early awake
-next morning, she felt less unhappy. It was not so much like groping in
-a blind alley. Those scraps of paper that had eddied in the breeze? She
-found a few more of them, but they told her nothing. She accepted it as
-a decree, perhaps of punishment. Not knowing whether Richard Cary loved
-her, in fear that he had died, she must set forth on her pilgrimage.
-
-The good Señor de Mello would think it strange of her to go as
-unceremoniously as she had come. Anxiety for her uncle’s safety, the
-desire to persuade him to quit his senseless wanderings, the fact that
-he was in the company of such an unsavory mariner as Captain Bradley
-Duff—this would have to serve as her pretext. What other people thought
-of her was, after all, of no consequence.
-
-In the harbor she had noticed an English steamer waiting for a berth at
-the wharf. It was the coastwise boat that picked up cargo and passengers
-here and there, and went on to Colon. Teresa was out of the house before
-the offices and shops were open. Over her rolls and coffee in an untidy
-little café, she scanned a newspaper for the shipping items. The English
-boat was expected to sail some time during the afternoon. It seemed best
-to go on board as soon as possible. After some delay she found the agent
-and secured a stateroom.
-
-Then she went to the bank. Señor de Mello was just arriving with his
-green umbrella. In his private office she explained her sudden decision
-as well as she could, and showed him a letter of credit. She wished to
-draw some money, a considerable amount for a woman to carry with her.
-Some emergency might arise before she could present herself at another
-bank.
-
-Alonzo de Mello stared at the letter of credit. It was for two thousand
-dollars, many times as much as the niece of Ramon Bazán had required
-when intending to visit him in Cartagena. It was, in fact, every dollar
-of Teresa’s savings, her precious anchor to windward. The banker looked
-up to say, in his bland, paternal manner:
-
-“I am not one to pry, Teresa, but there is something in this that I fail
-to understand. Why this large letter of credit? Did you expect to travel
-farther than Cartagena? For transferring your funds a draft would have
-been proper. Ramon’s wretched voyage frets you, but you anticipated
-nothing like this. We are very fond of you, as you know, and—”
-
-“Then you will have to trust in me, dear Señor de Mello,” pleaded
-Teresa. “You have known me all your life. I have tried to do what seemed
-right.”
-
-“No question of that,” he assured her. “You will write me from Panama?
-And permit me to give you a letter to my agent commending you as though
-you were my own daughter.”
-
-Teresa’s eyes filled with tears. She had little more to say. When she
-walked out of the bank she was still feeling the stress of emotion. A
-dapper young man in the uniform of a lieutenant of police stepped up to
-accost her. Apparently he had been waiting at the entrance. She
-trembled. Her lips parted. She was falling, falling into some black
-abyss. Her courage lifted her out of it. She did not faint. What was the
-lieutenant saying?
-
-“To meet the Señorita Fernandez makes the day radiant. May I have a few
-words with you? It is a matter that has been waiting some time.”
-
-“As you will,” she murmured, forcing a smile. “It tires me to stand.
-Shall we sit in the reception room of the bank? At this early hour it is
-seldom in use.”
-
-The lieutenant bowed. He was a gallant fellow with an eye for a pretty
-woman. He sympathized with the señorita. She was, indeed, feeling
-indisposed. A glance at the closed door behind which Señor de Mello sat
-at his desk, and Teresa inquired:
-
-“Your errand is what?”
-
-“It is that eccentric old uncle of yours,” answered the lieutenant of
-police.
-
-“_Ah_, and what of him?” said Teresa. The hand of fear released its
-strangling clutch.
-
-As through a mist she gazed at the lieutenant, who replied: “I take the
-liberty of informing you, as his niece, señorita. It may be of interest
-now that you have found him gone. I had the felicity of seeing you drive
-to his house yesterday.”
-
-“And you wish to tell me something about his voyage?”
-
-“Yes. On the night he embarked in that wretched steamer of his, I was
-leaving a party of friends. It was quite late. A carriage came tearing
-along like the devil. Too fast, I thought. So I stepped out and halted
-it. Your uncle sat beside that Indian boy of his who was driving. The
-carriage was filled to the top with bags and valises and blankets. A
-reproof was all I intended. And it seemed worth looking into, this
-driving so fast late at night. I recognized your uncle and was about to
-say something pleasant, but he seemed immensely startled. He nearly
-tumbled from the seat, like a man stricken with illness. The boy caught
-hold of him and they went on through the gate. His steamer sailed the
-next morning, so I suppose it was nothing serious. His health interests
-you, I have no doubt, Señorita Fernandez. I said to myself that old
-Ramon Bazán should have stayed in his comfortable house if he was as
-feeble as that. Have you heard from him?”
-
-“Not yet,” replied Teresa. “It is wonderfully kind of you. What else
-could be expected of an officer so polite and attractive? Yes, my uncle
-must have been ill. It was his heart. He is taken like that when excited
-or frightened.”
-
-“He has my prayers,” exclaimed the lieutenant. “It must be lonely for
-you. I am at your feet. Any service in the world—”
-
-He bowed himself out, having made an impression, so he flattered
-himself. It had been a clever excuse to win the favor of a girl who had
-inspired his passionate ardor. Teresa lingered in the reception room of
-the bank trying to read the riddle of a doddering uncle who had been
-driving at furious speed to board his ship late in the night. Why had he
-almost died with one of his heart attacks when an affable lieutenant of
-police had merely halted the carriage to question the driver? Uncle
-Ramon must have been mortally afraid of being detected in some secretive
-stratagem.
-
-“That lieutenant is a handsome doll with a wooden head!” mused Teresa.
-“Why didn’t he poke inside the carriage? He might have found something
-under all that baggage. My trip to Panama looks wiser than ever. I shall
-never rest until I find out why my uncle was almost scared to death.”
-
-Haste was not urgent, so Teresa walked several blocks at a leisurely
-gait in search of a carriage. She stopped to look into the dusty window
-of a pawnshop. It occurred to her that her pilgrimage might lead her
-into unpleasant places. In the sailors’ haunts of tropical ports a woman
-ran certain risks. She could not think of carrying another little
-automatic pistol in her pocket. The very sight of one in the pawnshop
-window made her shudder.
-
-Idly standing there, she caught sight of another weapon that strongly
-attracted her fancy. It was an antique dagger, resembling the
-_miséricorde_ of the age of chivalry, such as knights in armor had worn
-attached to the belt by a chain. On the tarnished handle of this relic a
-crest was still discernible. The blade had rusted thin, but the double
-edge could easily be ground sharp. It was a small weapon, only a few
-inches long, contrived for a thrust between the joints of a corselet or
-neck-piece at close quarters.
-
-In the rubbish of a pawnshop in a side street, this dagger had escaped
-the search of collectors. It had come from some ancient house of
-Cartagena, a weapon that might have clinked on the steel-clad thigh of a
-_conquistador_. Teresa bought it for a _peso_. The pawnbroker rummaged
-until he found a sheath of embossed leather into which the dagger could
-be slipped. A ribbon could be sewn to the sheath, a ribbon long enough
-to pass around the neck. Then the dagger could be worn inside a woman’s
-dress. _Miséricorde!_ The sad heart of Teresa and a dagger next it!
-
-Returning to the house, she decided to leave her new clothes there. This
-cost her a pang, but it might be a rough road and a long one. A battered
-little sole-leather trunk, unearthed in Uncle Ramon’s storeroom, would
-serve her needs. In her handbag was Richard Cary’s briar pipe.
-
-Two days after this, a trim young woman, very simply dressed in white,
-found shelter in an old stone hotel near the plaza of Panama. Her
-fastidious taste would have preferred the large American hotel on the
-Ancon hill in the Canal Zone, but this was too far removed from the
-crossroads of merchant mariners in drudging cargo boats. She was
-familiar with the noisy streets of Panama through which flowed a mixture
-of races from all the Seven Seas.
-
-The afternoon was growing late when Teresa began her quest. It led her
-first to the bank in which Señor de Mello’s agent had his office. He was
-a native of the city and in close touch with west coast shipping. To
-Teresa’s dismay he informed her that Ramon Bazán’s steamer _Valkyrie_
-had not been heard from since leaving the Balboa docks. It had not
-arrived at Buenaventura, only three hundred miles down the coast. The
-weather had been unusually fair, with no heavy winds. Already a week had
-elapsed.
-
-The steamer carried no wireless, but had she been disabled some other
-vessel would have reported her by this time. They were coming in every
-day. In such good weather and near the coast, the _Valkyrie_ could not
-have foundered without trace. Her boats would have taken care of the
-crew. Furthermore, cable messages of inquiry, sent at the request of
-Señor Alonzo de Mello, disclosed that no steamer by this name was
-expected at Buenaventura. The shipping firms and export agents in that
-port had made no charter arrangements nor had there been any
-correspondence about cargo. Steamers of the regular services were taking
-care of all the freight offered at this season of the year.
-
-“Then my old uncle never sailed for Buenaventura? And he had no
-intention of going there?” commented Teresa.
-
-“He must have changed his plans,” suavely observed the agent.
-
-“He is very capricious, señor. Did you happen to meet him while his ship
-was coaling at Balboa?”
-
-“Yes, Señorita Fernandez. He came into the office to draw funds to pay
-the Canal tolls, having arranged a credit for that purpose. He had
-little to say and seemed quite feeble.”
-
-“He would seem that way, at parting from so much money. Did he bring his
-captain with him?”
-
-“No. I don’t know who commanded the steamer. I am extremely sorry, but I
-have to take a train to Colon late this afternoon to be gone until
-to-morrow. After that, I shall be delighted to go with you to Balboa.
-The records will tell you who the captain was, and there may be other
-details. I am acquainted with the officials and it will expedite your
-affairs. A young lady may feel a certain awkwardness—”
-
-Teresa was cordially grateful. The situation had taken on aspects more
-complex and inexplicable than ever. As a seafarer herself, she accepted
-the theory that the _Valkyrie_ had met with no disaster while bound down
-the coast to Buenaventura. The vessel had steered some unknown course of
-her own to another destination. From the beginning her tortuous uncle
-had schemed and lied to mask his real purpose, whatever that might be.
-No mere hallucination could have lured him into the Pacific. It had not
-occurred to him that any one might try to follow him.
-
-At Balboa, Teresa might be able to discover whether Richard Cary had
-been in the ship. This was of transcendent moment to her. But even were
-it true, her penitential pilgrimage was no more than begun. It was
-necessary to meet him face to face. Her own soul was at stake. What had
-happened to Ricardo that night in Cartagena, when he had been missing
-from his ship? What of the guilt of the dead Colonel Fajardo?
-
-Teresa walked the floor of her room in the Panama hotel. What she said
-to herself was like this:
-
-“Supposing Ricardo is commanding this Flying Dutchman of a ship. Where
-has he gone? No records in the Canal office can tell me that. A
-wonderful comfort, if it is the will of God to let me know Ricardo is
-alive and strong. But what of me? Ah, what of poor me? There must be
-some way of finding out, here in Panama, but how can I go into the
-places where this Bradley Duff and the sailors may have babbled with the
-liquor in them? Do I look like one of the wretched girls in these dirty
-cabarets?
-
-“It is hard to keep a secret in a ship after she has left her own port.
-Something seems to whisper it—a look, a word, a feeling. Perhaps my
-Uncle Ramon muttered in his sleep, as he often does at home. He is too
-old to play such a hand as this for very long. Look what it did to him
-when he was frightened by that lieutenant of police! And if he loses his
-temper he may say too much. If those Colombian sailors got it into their
-heads that the voyage was to be longer than to Buenaventura, it would be
-like some of them to desert such an unseaworthy vessel in Panama. One
-thing I do know. I can never sit here and wait with folded hands for the
-_Valkyrie_ to come back to the Canal. It might be weeks and months or
-not at all.”
-
-To be a roving woman where sailors resorted in this and perhaps other
-ports of the Spanish Main was both hampering and repugnant. It made a
-difficult task unendurable. Unwelcome attentions, insults, nameless
-perils might be her lot. Not that Teresa flinched or hesitated, but it
-was possible to make the path easier. The most hopeful clue was Captain
-Bradley Duff. He was almost certain to have had disreputable friends in
-Panama. Birds of his feather flocked together, and they were always
-thirsty. Likely enough there had been money in his pocket to make him
-popular. He would be the boisterous good fellow, greedily sociable,
-anxious to parade the fact that he was no longer on the beach. And what
-he knew he would be apt to confide to this companion and that.
-
-Yes, it was a handicap to be a good woman, reflected Teresa, and she did
-not propose to be a bad one. There was another way. It appealed to her
-as feasible. Some daring would be required to carry it off, but she was
-not one to lack faith in herself. At the masquerade ball in Cartagena,
-two years ago, she had played the part of a _caballero_ so well that the
-girls had boldly flirted with her. Her hair had been hidden by a huge
-sombrero adorned with silver braid.
-
-Her hair was her crown and her glory. If she decided to play the part in
-Panama, it would have to be sacrificed. But what mattered a woman’s
-vanity now, or her desire to be thought beautiful, if she had lost her
-lover and knew not where to find him?
-
-Teresa went shopping in Panama. It was rather amusing. A boy trudged
-behind her with a large, shiny new suitcase in which the various
-purchases were stowed. He followed her to a side-entrance of the hotel
-and so to her room.
-
-Having dismissed him and locked the door, Teresa sat and looked at
-herself in the glass. _Adios_ to the girl who had been so proud of
-Ricardo’s admiration! She let down her black hair. It flowed over her
-lovely shoulders. Snip, snip, the wicked new shears severed the tresses.
-Her hand was unsteady. It was a dreadful thing to do. Even the sight of
-bobbed hair made her feel like swearing. This was much worse.
-
-A ragged job it was when she gloomily surveyed the result. Carefully,
-tenderly, she gathered up her tresses and wrapped them in a silk scarf.
-She could not bear to throw them away. Presently she was slipping a belt
-through the loops of linen trousers. She scowled at the canvas shoes.
-The clumsy pattern disguised a narrow foot and an arching instep. The
-soft white shirt with a rolling collar was open at the throat. A loose
-coat of gray Palm Beach cloth completed the costume. The brim of her own
-Panama hat was bent down in front with a touch of jauntiness.
-
-Teresa surveyed herself with a critical scrutiny. Her girlish bust and
-slender hips were unobtrusive. What she saw in the glass was a supple
-youth as straight as a lance, a youth with an oval face and dark eyes
-too somber for his years. At a glance he resembled a hundred others who
-strolled in the plazas or sat at the café tables of any Spanish-American
-city. His name was Rubio Sanchez, so he was informed, as the farewell
-message of Señorita Teresa Fernandez before she made her exit from the
-stage.
-
-The young Colombian, Rubio Sanchez, busied himself in the room a little
-while longer. Then he sauntered down to the lobby in which men loafed
-and smoked and talked of many things. It was near the dinner hour.
-Behind the desk the night clerk was on duty. He had been denied the
-pleasure of welcoming Señorita Fernandez in the afternoon. The slim,
-debonair youth from Cartagena sauntered over to say to him in a voice of
-a pleasant contralto quality:
-
-“The lady, my sister, wishes to leave her trunk in storage. I will pay
-her bill. Here is the key. Have your porter bring down the suitcase. I
-will look after it for her. She has been sent for in haste. An uncle old
-and sick needs her.”
-
-The clerk was an obliging person. He expressed his regrets and arranged
-matters promptly. Young Rubio Sanchez and his large, shiny suitcase
-presently departed in a one-horse hack which was instructed to proceed
-until told to stop. The passenger sat indolently, a cigarette between
-his lips.
-
-What made him alert was the blazing electric sign of “The Broadway
-Front” which seemed to be a pretentious lodging-house with a saloon,
-restaurant, and dance-hall on the ground front. It was the most
-flamboyant place of good-cheer along the street. It loomed like a beacon
-to draw the wandering footsteps of sailormen weary of the sea. Captain
-Bradley Duff and his shipmates of the _Valkyrie_ never could have passed
-it by.
-
-Rubio Sanchez, a blasé young man who knew his way about, halted the hack
-and swung his shiny suitcase to the pavement. Here were rooms to rent.
-The building was new. It looked neither dingy nor dirty. It would do for
-the night, or until fortune beckoned elsewhere.
-
-He spied a barber shop next door. It occurred to him as advisable to
-finish what the shears had so awkwardly begun. The barber eyed him
-critically, with a smirk of amusement. Never had he beheld such a ragged
-hair-cut. Rubio Sanchez curtly told him to make it smooth, leaving
-enough to part. The barber laughed and asked in Spanish:
-
-“Was it chewed by the mice, señor? You had been letting it grow very
-long.”
-
-“Not as long as your clacking tongue,” was the crisp retort. “Shall I
-cut it for you?”
-
-The barber goggled at the slender youth in the chair, but held his
-peace. It was not good to jest too far with one whose voice was so cool
-and hard.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
- RUBIO SANCHEZ FINDS FRIENDS
-
-In the American bar of The Broadway Front, the mahogany counter ran the
-length of the room. Mirrors glittered behind it. Here was a shrine of
-Bacchus, extinct in its native land, in which the rites of the ritual
-were faithfully observed. The presiding genius was a florid Irish
-bartender in a crisp white jacket with a flower in the lapel. Assisting
-him were three acolytes native to Panama. For them the lowly service of
-pulling the shining handles of the beer-pumps, cracking ice and washing
-glasses. With the skill of an artist and the speed of a prestidigitator,
-their master hurled cocktails, fizzes, and punches together and served
-them to the votaries who rested one foot upon the brass rail in the
-traditional posture of those about to offer libations.
-
-Women were excluded from this room. Across the hallway was the café, the
-dancing-floor, the stage where entertainment more frivolous was
-provided. The mahogany bar and the little tables were sacred to the wit
-and wisdom of the sterner sex, to the discussion of weighty matters to
-which Mike, the paragon of bartenders, would always lend a sympathetic
-ear. He was a friend and philosopher of a vintage much riper and rarer
-than the stuff he sold.
-
-Alone at one of the tables sat a pensive young man of delicate features
-whose black hair was smoothly parted. At this moment he was reminding
-himself that his name was Rubio Sanchez. He sipped a claret lemonade
-through a straw and eyed the passing show with a trepidation not easily
-dissembled.
-
-The bar was crowded—American soldiers from the Canal Zone garrisons
-hilariously rolling the dice for the drinks, tanned bluejackets from
-ships of the Pacific Fleet, dapper Panama merchants, brisk Yankee
-salesmen spreading the gospel of safety razors, sewing machines, and
-porous underwear from Mexico to Peru, solid master mariners and mates
-who held aloof from the rabble of landsmen.
-
-The solitary young man, Rubio Sanchez, was unmolested. No one even
-noticed him. The sense of panicky uneasiness diminished. He perceived
-that it was urgently advisable for him to make the acquaintance of Mike,
-the suave and genial divinity behind the bar. He was the very man to
-have stowed away the garrulous gossip and confidences that were forever
-dinned at him. The place was repellent to young Rubio Sanchez, but not
-as shocking as had been feared.
-
-Disorder was smothered before it started. A lifted hand, a word of
-reproof from Mike, or a threat to summon the boss, and quarrelsome
-topers subsided. This threat of summoning the boss seemed to be most
-effective. Unseen, he exercised a potent influence.
-
-There would be no opportunity to engage the attention of the persuasive
-bartender until the crowd had thinned. Rubio Sanchez lingered and looked
-on with the curious feeling that a kindly star had guided the pilgrimage
-to this Broadway Front. It was like a comforting intuition.
-
-In the company that swirled along the bar was a boyish bluejacket,
-clean-built, jolly, with the red bars of a petty officer on his sleeve.
-He looked winsome and unspoiled, but eager to see what life was like.
-His two companions were older and harder Navy men. It was his money that
-carelessly paid for the rounds of drinks. He displayed crumpled bills by
-the fistful. It was like so much trash that burned holes in his pockets.
-
-An argument arose. His companions had another engagement for the
-evening. They conferred with their heads together. The youngster laughed
-and refused to be dragged along. He was heard to call them a pair of
-boobs. The Navy patrol would be sure to pinch them if they rambled into
-the red-light district and, anyhow, they ought to know better. None of
-that for him. They borrowed money of him and rolled out to charter a
-seagoing hack.
-
-The youngster stood undecided what to do next. It was early for the
-music and dancing in the cabaret across the hall. He drifted over to a
-table, sprawled in a chair, and glanced around the room. Two or three
-penniless loafers would have joined him, but he curtly told them to beat
-it. The young South American sitting alone with a lemonade and a straw
-impressed him favorably. He sauntered over, the round Navy hat balanced
-on the back of his head, and affably remarked:
-
-“Hello, kid! How’s tricks? Don’t you go drowning yourself in too many
-buckets of that pink lemonade. What you need is one of Mike’s vermouth
-stingarees. I’ll buy.”
-
-“Too much sting in it for me,” said the black-haired Rubio Sanchez, with
-a shy smile. “A little claret and vichy this time, if you don’t mind.”
-
-“Suit yourself, buddy. I’m no souse myself. What’s your game? I don’t
-see anybody to play with but that bunch of doughboys with their bellies
-against the bar. God may love the Army, but I pass. What’s your home
-port? You were born under a cocoanut tree somewheres.”
-
-“Colombia, but you can’t lose me in New York,” replied Rubio. “I used to
-sail there.”
-
-“You don’t look husky enough. What’s your ship?”
-
-“A cargo boat in the Pacific trade, but she left me on the beach.”
-
-It went against the grain to deceive this warm-hearted, attractive Navy
-lad. In fact, there was no reason why he should be kept in the dark
-concerning the vanished _Valkyrie_. He had won the respect of Teresa
-Fernandez by his refusal to go roistering among the bad women of Panama.
-
-“Gee, you are out of luck,” impulsively exclaimed the boyish petty
-officer. “What’s your name? Rubio? Hey, Rube, if you need any coin, I’ve
-got a bundle. You’re a good kid. I can size ’em up. Steve Brackett,
-gunner’s mate, second class, is what they call me. I’m in the destroyer
-_Patterson_. We’ve been chasing a division of seaplanes that made a
-flight down from San Diego.”
-
-“You ought not to carry so much money,” seriously advised young Rubio.
-“Panama is just looking for fellows like you. I have money enough, thank
-you with all my heart.”
-
-“Let ’em try to ease me of my roll,” bragged the gunner’s mate. “I’m not
-such a soft mark for these spiggoty crooks. On the level, kid, I ought
-to convoy _you_. For a sailor you sure do look timid and tender.”
-
-“Is that so? Here, let me take your hand,” smiled the soft-spoken young
-Colombian.
-
-Steve Brackett extended a brown, calloused paw. Before he could close
-it, the fingers were squeezed in a quick, nervous grip that made him
-wince and cry out. He wrenched them free and exclaimed:
-
-“Easy, kid! Do you want to cripple one of the best gun-pointers in this
-man’s Navy? Huh, you _are_ the deceivin’ guy! How do you get that way,
-with a wrist as small as that, and a hand like a girl’s?”
-
-The training of a ship’s stewardess might have had something to do with
-it, but Rubio fancifully explained:
-
-“There were some great swordsmen in my family one time. Listen, Steve,
-do you know this nice, polite bartender? Tell me about him.”
-
-“Who, Mike? They don’t grow ’em any better. Sure I know him. I was here
-in a cruiser for the Fleet maneuvers last winter. The Navy swears by
-Mike. Stick around and you’ll hear him bawl me out if I’m liable to
-overstay my liberty to-night and get in trouble. He’s a regular daddy to
-us young gobs.”
-
-Just then the musicians in the café across the hall began to bang and
-blare and tootle in a barbaric frenzy of syncopated discords. The
-voluble patrons of the bar deserted it almost to a man. Mike was given a
-respite to put the shrine of Bacchus in order and to rest his weary
-frame. Having instructed his assistants, he donned a fresh jacket and
-apron, and found a chair and a newspaper at a little table near the bar.
-
-“Come on, Rube, if you want to chew the rag with him,” said the gunner’s
-mate. “Now’s the time. This cease-firing interval won’t last long. Some
-of those rum-hounds will be romping in as soon as they dance ’emselves
-dusty.”
-
-Rubio Sanchez complied with a fluttering timidity. This smooth,
-sophisticated bartender had an eye like a hawk. For him the proper study
-of mankind was man. He removed the glasses from his fleshy nose,
-puckered his brows, and heartily exclaimed:
-
-“Glad you shook them hard-boiled pals, Steve. They ain’t your class.
-An’, mind, you drink no more hard stuff to-night, understand?”
-
-“All done, Mike. Meet my friend Señor Rube Sanchez, a sailorman like
-myself.”
-
-“Howdy, señor. Set down, boys. What’s on your chests? I’m flattered to
-have you prefer me company to the wild women in the cabaret yonder.”
-
-Rubio’s clear voice trembled, but it held its contralto pitch as he
-said:
-
-“I have an errand of much importance to me, Mr. Mike. I want to find a
-steamer that belongs to my uncle, Señor Ramon Bazán of Cartagena. He is
-an old man as wrinkled as a monkey. He sailed in this vessel, which is a
-little tramp named the _Valkyrie_ and flies the flag of Colombia. She
-was at Balboa not long ago, bound to Buenaventura, but she didn’t go
-there at all.”
-
-The benevolent Mr. Mike was interested. He laid down the newspaper and
-assumed his habitual manner of patient and tactful deference.
-
-“Well, well,” said he, “’tis comical to have a steamer go playin’ hookey
-with itself, ain’t it, Señor Sanchez? And you’ve tried the other coast
-ports, north and south of here?”
-
-“Yes. The vessel is nowhere on the coast, Mr. Mike.”
-
-“So you’re adrift and forlorn without this uncle that looks like a
-monkey? The _Valkyrie_, hey? Who else was in her?”
-
-“Captain Bradley Duff, for one,” replied Rubio. “He is pretty well
-known.”
-
-“Bradley Duff? The lousy old skate!” said Mike, with an air of
-reflection. “He was in jail in Panama a year ago, an’ I paid his fine
-for him. The spiggoty cops run him in for disturbin’ the peace. A
-first-class skipper was Bradley Duff till he piled a fine steamer up
-when he was stewed, an’ that busted him.”
-
-“My uncle was crazy when he hired him,” said Rubio, “but in Cartagena he
-could find nobody else.”
-
-“I dunno about that,” observed Mike. “A man may be down, but he’s never
-out. But I’d never apply this motto to Bradley Duff if I hadn’t seen it
-with me own two eyes. Your old uncle made no mistake, surprising as it
-may sound. Not long ago, do you say? Right you are, Señor Sanchez. In
-walks this same Bradley Duff, an’ you could ha’ knocked me down with a
-lemonade straw. He was clean and smart as new paint. Blue serge coat
-buttoned over that fat stummick of his, a chief officer’s stripes on the
-sleeves, white duck pants, cap cocked over one eye an’ you be
-billy-be-damned! He slaps his money on the bar an’ drinks a bottle of
-beer.”
-
-“Was he alone?” asked Rubio, leaning forward.
-
-“In solitary grandeur he was, an’ minding his own business. Strong men
-used to flee when he came into a bar-room, for it was him that could
-talk your ear off, boomin’ an’ droolin’ along by the hour. Well, we
-passed the time of day, an’ I handed him a few compliments an’ another
-bottle of beer on the house. All he told me was that his ship was the
-_Valkyrie_ an’ he was chief officer. Never a word about where he was
-going nor what for. Something is in the wind, I says to meself, but I’m
-not slick enough to pry it out of this human clam of a Bradley Duff.
-
-“He sets down for a spell, very dignified, buyin’ no more drinks, as
-indifferent as if him an’ booze had never been introjuced. Then he looks
-at the clock, says he’s due back on board an’ pounds out. ’Twas like one
-of these juicy young gobs on liberty. The discipline of the ship was not
-to be trifled with. Something powerful had put the fear of God into
-Bradley Duff. As the Good Book says, whilst the light holds out to burn,
-the vilest sinner may come home to roost.”
-
-The young Colombian had hearkened to this harangue with strained
-attention. His slim fingers were playing a tattoo on the table. Forlorn
-and adrift he was, indeed. The cup of hope had been dashed from his
-lips. Again he was groping. He brushed a hand over his short, black hair
-so smoothly parted. The gesture was a tragic symbol. The sacrifice had
-been to no purpose.
-
-“Did you ask him who was captain, Mr. Mike?” faltered Rubio. “Did any
-other officers come in?”
-
-“Nary a one. And from what he said, the crew was held pretty close. I
-might have asked him more questions, but I was busy at the time.
-Somebody had shut him up tight. He heard his master’s voice, did Bradley
-Duff.”
-
-“And you—you didn’t see a very big, splendid young man with bright
-yellow hair—a man you could never forget, Mr. Mike? He may have been
-the captain of the _Valkyrie_. A wonderful-looking man—there is nobody
-like him on this coast.”
-
-“You lose, son,” said the sympathetic Mr. Mike. His expression betokened
-surprise. “To the best of me knowledge, there has been no young man like
-that hereabouts. It is him you’re after, an’ not the old monkey of an
-uncle?”
-
-“He was very kind to me in a ship, Mr. Mike, when he was the second
-mate. I—I wish I could see him again.”
-
-The profound wisdom of the veteran bartender prompted him to study the
-slender, drooping youth whose emotion was so unexpected. The boyish
-gunner’s mate had been keeping silent with the courtesy of a lad who had
-been taught to listen to his elders. Now, however, he eagerly exclaimed:
-
-“All right, kid. I didn’t want to butt in. Now you pipe down and give me
-the deck. It seems to mean a whole lot to you to find that ship and the
-big guy that makes you cry. I’ve got some dope for you. The _Valkyrie_!
-Is that the hooker? A bum little tramp with red sides and a rusty
-funnel, that somebody resurrected from the bone-yard? Moseyin’ along in
-ballast, is she? Listen! My destroyer was coming south a few days ago,
-see, and we fetched a course away from the coast of Costa Rica to search
-for a seaplane that had engine trouble and was reported as blown
-offshore. We sighted a steamer steering almost due west. Our skipper
-thought perhaps she might have sighted the seaplane, so we tried her
-with radio and got no answer. We ran down to speak her. It was unusual
-to see a vessel as small as this tramp heading so far to the west’ard
-instead of following the coast. The Pacific Ocean looked awful large and
-wet for her to cross.
-
-“The signal quartermaster tried her with a flag hoist in the
-international code. All he got back was a string of ragged bunting that
-looked as if the rats had chewed it. You couldn’t make out the code
-letters to save your soul. So we kept on to run close and hail her with
-a megaphone. Say, kid, the skipper of this _Valkyrie_ was one whale of a
-big guy! He waved his straw hat, and he sure was a natural blond. Lazy
-and good-natured, too, like he was enjoying a life on the ocean wave.
-That’s how he looked when he grinned at us. The world was his buddy.
-
-“He hollered over that he hadn’t seen any stray seaplanes, and would we
-please give him the correct Greenwich time because his owner had bought
-the chronometer in a junk-shop to save a dollar. We asked him where he
-thought he was going, but he laughed and said he was going to Davy
-Jones’s locker if the weather went back on him. It was nothing in our
-young lives, so we hauled on our course and wished him luck. Now, kid,
-I’ve found the big guy for you, but where he expects to head in is too
-much for me. What’s your guess?”
-
-The kid from Cartagena was guilty of the most unmanly behavior. He was
-biting his lip and dabbing his eyes with a handkerchief. He could not
-speak. Steve Brackett, the gunner’s mate with the heart of a gentleman
-and the manners of a prince, looked inquiringly at Mike, but said not
-another word. The bartender nodded in the direction of the door. Steve
-took the hint. A hand on Rubio’s soft shoulder, he said:
-
-“So-long, kid! I’ve got to shove off. Glad I could do you a good turn.
-Look me up if you get a chance, or drop a line care U.S.S. _Patterson_.
-Tell Mike your troubles and don’t hold out on him. That goes double for
-the boss of this dump. If the kid needs more than you can do for him,
-Mike, be sure to steer him against the boss, won’t you?”
-
-“Sure, Steve. The kid could ha’ done worse than camp in the bar-room of
-The Broadway Front.”
-
-The gunner’s mate hung his round white hat on three hairs and delayed to
-roll a cigarette. Meditatively he scratched a match. Rubio’s hand stole
-into his, in a clasp strong and grateful. Steve blushed a fiery red and
-jerked his hand away. Then he moved briskly to the door without glancing
-behind him.
-
-Mike sat with his elbows on the table and regarded young Rubio Sanchez,
-not with the eye of a hawk, but with a scrutiny both pitiful and
-protective. The lad might have got away with it, he said to himself, if
-it hadn’t been for the big guy with the yellow hair. Even now there was
-more suspicion than proof. Taking Rubio by the arm, he spoke in
-confidential tones.
-
-“Where are you staying at, son? The Tivoli? No? Right here? Don’t try to
-talk. You won’t be wanting to go through the crowded hall to get
-upstairs, till you sort of pull yourself together. I’ll have to be
-tending bar again. Here’s what you do. Go into the boss’s office an’
-wait for him. The door in the corner yonder. No one’ll bother you. He
-’phoned from his house that the wife had a headache an’ he would set
-with her an hour or so. This place may seem rough to you, but betwixt
-Mike an’ the boss you’re agoin’ to be looked after right.”
-
-Alone in the private office, Teresa Fernandez heard Mike turn the key in
-the lock. She was not so much frightened as chagrined that she had
-miserably failed to play the rôle. But how could she help breaking down
-for joy and thanksgiving that she had been granted a blessed vision of
-Ricardo, alive, untouched by fate, towering on the bridge of a ship? God
-had guarded him. She also would be guarded. Her faith glowed like an
-illumined altar, and she felt safe even in a situation like this.
-
-For a few minutes she stood looking out of a barred, open window into a
-dark rear yard enclosed by a high wall. The room was small and plainly
-furnished, a rolltop desk, two chairs, and a massive steel safe. One of
-the chairs was against the wall, at one side of the open window. She
-sank into it and was soothed by the hum of the electric fan. She
-wondered what the boss could be like, and why he commanded the implicit
-respect of Mike and the fine young gunner’s mate. How could he help her
-find a vanished ship? This was all that mattered.
-
-The doorknob turned. She jumped to her feet, again the young man Rubio
-Sanchez, alert and on the defensive. A burly man of middle age entered
-the office. First impressions were alarming. He looked brutal and
-overbearing, a man fitted to dominate this Broadway Front. He had a jaw
-like a rock and the neck of a bull. The deep-set eyes were as hard as
-agates. Teresa watched his mouth. It was human, with a whimsical twist
-as he spoke from a corner of it.
-
-“Sit down, Señor Sanchez, and make yourself at home. Have a cigar? No? I
-am Jerry Tobin and I won’t bite you. So let’s be sociable. Mike told me
-what he could, about your hunt for the _Valkyrie_ and so on. You banked
-on picking up some news in Panama, didn’t you? And that goose is
-cooked?”
-
-“I did find some wonderful news, but it wasn’t enough, Mr. Tobin,”
-replied Rubio, his voice steadied, his demeanor composed.
-
-“I’m here to do what I can for you,” was the gruff response, “but I
-don’t recommend your living in the Broadway Front. That’s too much to
-have on my mind.”
-
-“I was in a hotel, before the goose was cooked, Mr. Tobin. I—er—I
-don’t want to go back there, but I can go somewhere else.”
-
-“We can fix that up later,” said Jerry Tobin, peeling off his coat and
-shoving back the top of the desk. “I can think better with a pencil and
-paper. This destroyer kid met your ship off the coast of Costa Rica,
-Mike tells me. And the voyage was a secret? Going to Buenaventura was
-all a bluff?”
-
-“My old uncle bluffs in his sleep,” laughed Rubio. “He whispers to
-himself through a keyhole. But he was never so head over heels in a
-secret as this time.”
-
-“It makes ’em act that way,” barked Jerry Tobin, making marks with the
-pencil. “If you hadn’t sort of knocked Mike off his pins by blubbering
-in the bar-room, perhaps he would have put you wise. Wait a minute and
-I’ll draw you a rough map. Panama Bay to the coast of Costa Rica and
-then due west! I’ll put down a dot for an island that has made all kinds
-of people as dippy as your uncle. An old pirate’s chart and some shovels
-and dynamite—”
-
-Jerry Tobin broke off abruptly. A turbulent life he must have led, but
-now he was staring at the open window like a man whose wits were frozen.
-His seamed, forbidding visage reflected terror, hatred, helplessness.
-The hard eyes were unwinking.
-
-Teresa Fernandez gazed at him in fixed fascination. She moved not so
-much as a finger. She heard a voice at the open window, a wicked voice
-that cut the stillness like a knife.
-
-“Hands up, Jerry, you —— —— I’ve got you cold. Now back yourself
-over to the safe. Turn around and open her up. Come clean, or I’ll plug
-you in the back. The whole bankroll! Make it snappy!”
-
-Burly John Tobin may have had some reason to recall that sinister voice.
-Very cautiously he backed away from the desk with hands rigidly upraised
-until his heel struck the safe. Then he knelt to fumble with the
-combination knob. He was working as fast as he could. His face was gray.
-Sweat bedewed it.
-
-Almost without breathing, Teresa Fernandez watched him. She dared not
-turn her head toward the window. She was unseen by the man outside. He
-had spied only Jerry Tobin in the room. From where he stood in the yard,
-the girl in the chair against the wall was invisible. It was a blunder.
-
-From a corner of her eye, Teresa could perceive the window ledge. The
-criminal was careful to stand a little way back from it, where he could
-dodge for cover if the door should suddenly open. To steady himself, he
-rested a hand upon the window ledge. Teresa could see this hand from
-where she sat. She could have reached out and touched it. It was a hairy
-hand with thick fingers and broken nails, a detestable hand. Teresa
-looked at it, flattening herself in the chair. Then she looked at the
-kneeling figure of Jerry Tobin who was removing a small drawer from the
-open safe.
-
-This man who had befriended her was unable to defend himself. There had
-been a worse menace than robbery in that sinister voice from outside the
-window. It signified some old score to settle, a vengeance to be slaked.
-It was as wicked as a snake.
-
-Jerry Tobin straightened himself and stood with the drawer in his hand.
-His movements were as stiff and careful as those of a man with lumbago.
-The drawer was filled with packages of bank-notes. His eyes roved to the
-rolltop desk, but he could not reach the pistol in it. The voice outside
-the window spoke again.
-
-“Come through, Jerry, you dirty dog. No funny business. You ain’t got
-coin enough to square it this side of hell. I’m liable to blow your head
-off yet.”
-
-It was the voice of a man lustful to kill, but not quite ready to risk
-the consequences. Jerry Tobin’s life hung in the balance. The weight of
-a feather might swing it either way. Teresa Fernandez could read in his
-drawn, ashen face that he expected no mercy. It was the climax of a
-mortal feud.
-
-Teresa put her hand to her breast. Her fingers felt the handle of the
-antique dagger under the soft shirt, the two-edged weapon in the leather
-sheath hung by a ribbon around her neck. No matter what Jerry Tobin
-might have done to deserve a bullet, he was a friend, and she was loyal.
-She stole a glance at the hairy hand upon the window ledge.
-
-Her own hand flew inside her shirt and whipped out the dagger. A jaguar
-could have struck with no more speed and fury. The blade drove down
-through the detestable hand upon the window ledge and quivered in the
-soft wood. It was driven by a supple wrist and an explosion of energy.
-It transfixed the evil hand and spiked it there.
-
-Jerry Tobin leaped for the desk and snatched a pistol from a
-pigeon-hole. From a corner of his mouth he growled like a mastiff:
-
-“Guess again, you dumb-bell. Drop that gun.”
-
-The dumb-bell had forgotten that he possessed a gun. He was writhing and
-cursing, his one idea being to pull that dagger out of the window ledge.
-Jerry Tobin preferred to let it stay there for the moment. Mildly he
-said to the girl in the chair:
-
-“On your way, señorita. You mustn’t get mixed up in this. Go upstairs
-and wait there for me. Stay in your room. Tell Mike to come here. Excuse
-me, but you’d better pull your shirt together. Rubio Sanchez is a dead
-card.”
-
-Teresa clutched at the bosom of her shirt. A button had been ripped off.
-It revealed no more than did her evening gown of black lace, but it was
-enough to prove to Jerry Tobin that he had taken on the responsibilities
-of a chaperon. The color dyed her face from chin to brow as she buttoned
-the gray coat over the shirt.
-
-Looking neither at the window ledge nor at Jerry Tobin, she fled from
-the office, whispered a hurried word to Mr. Mike as she passed the bar,
-and stole into the hall and up the staircase. The straw hat was pulled
-low over her eyes. Safely in her room, she shot the bolt and fairly
-toppled over on the bed. To her ears came the thump, thump of the drums,
-the frenzied wail of the saxophones, loud laughter, snatches of song.
-
-An hour passed before she was aroused by a knock on the door. It was
-Jerry Tobin. He entered rather gingerly, as if to apologize for an
-intrusion. As a chaperon he was evidently a novice. His change of manner
-was amusing. He was like a man afraid. From a pocket he took the antique
-dagger. The blade had been cleaned of stains. Awkwardly he ventured to
-say:
-
-“Here’s something of yours. I didn’t want the police to find it. Sheeny
-George, the bird you—ahem—left it with, don’t know how it happened.”
-
-“What did you say to the police?” fearfully asked Teresa.
-
-“No more than I had to. I made ’em a present of an outlaw with a record
-as long as your arm, and they were tickled to death. He’ll get put away
-for pretty near the rest of his life. So there’s that. You don’t show in
-it at all.”
-
-“But I don’t want the dagger, Mr. Tobin. Throw it away.”
-
-“Not if you’ll let me keep it as a souvenir. You won’t have to pack any
-more weapons. Understand? So cheer up, young lady. You’ve got a friend
-to make the play for you. Do you mind telling me what name to call you
-by?”
-
-“Teresa Fernandez. As a young man I was—I was a failure, Mr. Tobin.”
-
-“Oh, not so worse, until you just naturally blew up,” was his verdict.
-“Now, Miss Fernandez, I can’t make your head of black hair grow again,
-but they’re wearing it short. Against that, you can credit yourself with
-a large, elegant’s night’s work. You saved my bankroll, twenty thousand
-dollars. I run a game on the third floor. And you just about saved my
-wife from being a widow. Sheeny George was working up steam to croak me.
-It was the yellow streak that held him back just long enough for you to
-get action.”
-
-“His voice told me so,” shakily replied Teresa. “Oh, Mr. Jerry Tobin, I
-am going all to pieces. What can I do? You don’t know—you don’t know—I
-did it to help you—I was so angry—but I never, never want to see a
-pistol or a knife again, not in all my life. I used to be a happy girl
-and I never harmed anybody—and I never dreamed of things like this—”
-
-This was too much for battling Jerry Tobin to handle. As he said to
-himself, it was time to pass the buck. Fingering that iron jaw of his,
-he issued his instructions.
-
-“Please scramble your stuff into that suitcase, Miss Fernandez, or let
-me do it for you, seeing as it’s the duds of the late Rubio Sanchez. You
-are going home with me. This is a job for Mrs. Jerry Tobin, a woman
-that’s too good for this world. The best bet for you is a mother. Savvey
-that? Have you got any other clothes?”
-
-“A trunk at the Hotel Las Palmas,” meekly answered Teresa. “What will
-Mrs. Tobin say? My goodness, I am scared again.”
-
-“You scare easy, don’t you?” he grunted. “I know different. I ’phoned
-the missus, but I didn’t tell her too much. I never do. You and she will
-cuddle up like two kittens in a basket. My car is outside. Now let’s
-make it _pronto_.”
-
-Teresa obeyed. Discussion seemed absurd. The boss had proclaimed an
-edict. She had one question to ask.
-
-“That island, Mr. Tobin, where you said my uncle’s ship had gone? You
-were going to show me with a pencil.”
-
-“Cocos Island? What’s the hurry? I’ll get you there. If I know anything
-about these treasure-hunting nuts, this locoed uncle of yours will be
-blasting rock and making the gravel fly from now till the Fourth of
-July.”
-
-“Cocos Island?” murmured Teresa. “I never heard of any treasure on Cocos
-Island. That was just my hard luck, Mr. Tobin, or maybe I am thick.”
-
-“Not thick, Miss Fernandez. For fast work you have me stopped. You
-wouldn’t be so apt to hear this treasure dope over on the Atlantic side.
-Leave the proposition to me. As a fixer, I’m good.”
-
-Jerry Tobin carried the shiny suitcase into the lower hall. Teresa had a
-farewell glimpse of the devoted Mr. Mike. He was manipulating a cocktail
-shaker and patiently listening to the sorrows of a stranger who clung to
-the bar like a limpet to a reef.
-
-While they drove through the city and into a suburb of trim lawns and
-bungalows, Jerry Tobin was taciturn. Teresa felt grateful for it. For
-the time she had ceased to fret and suffer. Quietude enfolded her.
-Through troubled waters and muddy, her pilgrimage had led her to a
-haven. She was tolerant of the faults and follies of mankind as she had
-known them on land and sea. God’s grace might visit the heart of a Mr.
-Mike or a Jerry Tobin as well as the heart of a priest. Saints or
-sinners, who was she to condemn, a woman who had yet to cleanse her own
-soul of stain?
-
-Jerry Tobin marched her into a wide-roofed bungalow on the side of a
-green hill. A woman came forward to meet them. She was slight and
-plain-featured, insignificant to the eye. To Jerry Tobin she was the
-Colleen Bawn. He kissed her like a knight paying homage to a lady love.
-The Jerry Tobin, boss of The Broadway Front, was unknown inside this
-threshold.
-
-His wife saw the slender girl who waited hesitant, uncertain of her
-welcome. Mary Tobin took her hands as she said:
-
-“Jerry ’phoned me you were a lady and a darling, Miss Fernandez, and I
-would love to have you in the house. Once in a while the lump of a man
-says something real sensible. Now run away, Jerry, and leave us two
-women alone. You have done your bit for to-night.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
- THE INTRUDER FROM ECUADOR
-
-The voice of Señor Ramon Bazán cracked with excitement as he cried out,
-from the bridge of the _Valkyrie_:
-
-“Behold our Cocos Island, my Ricardo! You have steered the ship as
-straight as an arrow.”
-
-They were gazing at a lofty, rounded hill that lifted from the sea like
-the cone of a dead volcano. For the most part its slopes were green,
-with bare cliffs here and there or yellow gullies washed by the rains.
-In the top of this hill was a bowl or crater which seemed to brim over
-with water like a tiny lake, spilling many streams that leaped and
-flowed to the strip of level land, close to the sea, which was luxuriant
-with cocoanut palms. A pleasant island to visit, as the buccaneers had
-found it when first their topsails had gleamed in the South Sea.
-
-It was no longer a secret to the _Valkyrie_’s crew that they were bound
-in search of pirates’ treasure. Captain Richard Cary had told them so,
-soon after the departure from Balboa. He had pledged them his word that
-if they played fair with him they should receive a share of the booty.
-They believed him. The Colombian sailors and firemen yelled with
-enthusiasm. They had completely forgotten the conspiracy to take the
-ship back to Cartagena and claim the reward offered for _El Tigre
-Amarillo Grande_, dead or alive. It had been a foolish dream of very
-stupid men, they admitted among themselves. Their huge captain had saved
-the wretched steamer from perishing in the storm on the Caribbean coast.
-After that, he had enforced such a discipline and mastery as they had
-never known in their lives, the rule of a sea-lord who was both stern
-and kind. He held them under his thumb. It was even a pleasure to obey
-him for the sake of the sunny smile and the word of praise that followed
-duty well done.
-
-With chart and sounding lead, the _Valkyrie_ slowly approached Cocos
-Island to find the small bay which was indicated as an anchorage. As the
-bay opened to view between its rock-bound headlands, the masts of a
-schooner became visible. Señor Ramon Bazán was greatly disturbed. He
-snatched up the binocular and squinted until the hull of the schooner
-was disclosed.
-
-“By my soul, it is another treasure party!” he wildly shouted. “They
-will find out my secret of the place where it is hidden.”
-
-“We can’t very well stick up no trespass signs on Cocos Island,” said
-Cary, in his easy fashion. “It doesn’t belong to us.”
-
-Chief Officer Bradley Duff broke in to say: “No sense in borrowing
-trouble, Señor Bazán. Of course you were all wrapped up in your own pet
-scheme, but it is no great surprise to me to find another party here.
-They have been at it on and off, all kinds of expeditions, as long as
-I’ve known this coast. If you have the real information, then the rest
-of ’em are out of luck. We won’t let this other outfit crowd us.”
-
-“We will make them mind their own business,” grumbled Señor Bazán, in a
-very fretful humor. “I bought those rifles in Panama, Ricardo, to guard
-the treasure after we find it, but nobody must interfere with us at all.
-Do you understand that?”
-
-“Wait and look it over,” placidly advised Ricardo. “There seems to be
-plenty of elbow room on the island. The schooner may have touched here
-out of curiosity.”
-
-The _Valkyrie_ nosed her way inside the bay and let an anchor splash a
-few hundred feet from the three-masted schooner which flew no colors.
-Several South Americans lounged beneath an awning. They looked like
-seamen left in charge while the rest of the company went ashore. One of
-them flourished his big straw hat in a friendly gesture.
-
-“Better send the second mate over with a couple of men, Mr. Duff,”
-suggested Captain Cary. “Mr. Panchito is a sociable cuss and perhaps he
-can find out something.”
-
-The rotund, vivacious Mr. Panchito was delighted to oblige. As a former
-officer of the Colombian navy, he flattered himself that he possessed
-the aplomb, the diplomatic approach. He assured Mr. Duff that he would
-turn those strangers inside out. They could conceal nothing from him.
-Into a skiff he bounded and was rowed over to the schooner which
-displayed no symptoms of excitement.
-
-Señor Ramon Bazán, on the contrary, was in a stew of impatience to be
-set ashore. It was the noon hour, and the sun was insufferably hot for a
-rickety old gentleman to explore the jungle and the rocky ravines.
-Richard Cary advised waiting, but was met with sputtering obstinacy.
-They were to take the precious chart drawn by the own hand of the
-infamous Captain Thompson of the brig _Mary Dear_, also a compass and a
-surveyor’s chain to measure the distances in rods and feet. After
-finding the lay of the land they could rest much easier. At their
-convenience they could unload the equipment and make a camp.
-
-Richard Cary kept his own misgivings to himself. It had strained his
-credulity to accept the secret chart as authentic. Granted this,
-however, the face of the island must have been considerably changed in a
-hundred years. Naked scars showed where the rock and gravel had slid
-from the steep hillsides. The water overflowing the crater-like bowl fed
-by living springs had been eating the soil away and depositing it
-elsewhere. The cliffs, however, might have resisted this erosion. If
-there were natural caves in them, and these had not been buried too deep
-in débris, possibly the treasure chart of Señor Bazán might be used as a
-guide.
-
-The blurred notations and rude symbols had been inscribed on the chart
-by the hand of a man familiar with Cocos Island. The safe channel for a
-vessel entering the bay was correctly indicated. And in these first
-glimpses of the rugged landscape, it was mightily persuasive to study
-such detailed directions as “_N.N.E. 5 rds. to water-course. . . thence
-9 rds. 7 ft. E. by W. ½ W. to face of cliff. . . thence follow ravine to
-big boulder bearing S.S.W. from hump of Hill & due South from Stone on
-beach which Stone is carved with letters H.M.S. Jason 1789_:. . .”
-
-There was some delay in getting the exploring party ashore. Señor Bazán
-had to be humored. A pitiable agitation muddled his wits. He had to pore
-over the chart again. Compass and surveyor’s chain were not enough, he
-suddenly decided. They ought to carry axes, picks, and shovels, on the
-chance of stumbling across the place where the treasure was unmistakably
-concealed. Some of the crew must go with them and carry rifles. There
-were strangers on the island. They might be lawless men. It was for
-Ricardo to be prepared to drive them away if they came near enough even
-to spy on the party from the _Valkyrie_.
-
-By this time Mr. Panchito was returning from his diplomatic mission to
-the schooner. He was all animation and importance. Yes, he had found out
-everything. It was a treasure expedition, from Guayaquil. They had been
-three months on the island, and the sailors were very tired of it. Now
-they felt in better spirits because their leader had been overheard to
-say that he had given up hopes of finding any gold and silver. He would
-soon be sailing back to Guayaquil. He was a most extraordinary man, this
-leader. He had attacked Cocos Island as if he intended to tear it to
-pieces, with powerful machinery that tossed the great rocks about like
-pebbles and moved thousands of tons of gravel. He was a mining engineer
-well known in Ecuador.
-
-“Did they tell you his name?” interrupted Chief Officer Bradley Duff.
-
-“Don Miguel O’Donnell, but he is not Irish,” replied Mr. Panchito.
-
-“Huh, I know that,” grunted Mr. Duff. “It’s like the O’Reilleys in Cuba
-and the O’Higgins in Chile. They were Irish some ways back. And it still
-crops out in their blood. And so we’ve run afoul of this O’Donnell
-highbinder from Ecuador! Now what do you think of that! He calls himself
-a mining engineer, does he? Maybe he is. All I know is that he has been
-mixed up in trouble enough to please any Mike O’Donnell. Concessions and
-politics and high-class devilment in Ecuador for years and years. I was
-captain of a dredge in Guayaquil harbor one time. From the stories I
-heard, it was Don Miguel O’Donnell that really backed General Eloy
-Alfara in the revolution of 1905 that bumped President Cordero off his
-perch. How about it, Señor Bazán? You may have the straight dope.”
-
-Ramon Bazán was more troubled than ever. He took hold of the ship’s rail
-for support. Wearing a great cork helmet and leather gaiters, a canteen
-slung over his shoulder, he looked like a queer little caricature of a
-tropical explorer.
-
-“Don Miguel O’Donnell on Cocos Island?” he wheezed, in a gusty flare of
-passion. “May he suffer ten million torments! Colombia knows him as well
-as Ecuador, Mr. Duff. He is very wise and very bold, a man of brains. I
-tell you, we must sleep with both eyes open. Bad luck has come to us. If
-Don Miguel O’Donnell suspects us of knowing where the treasure is, he
-will stop at nothing at all. A soldier of fortune, Ricardo? This one is
-a _piratico_ of the most up-to-date pattern.”
-
-“He sounds entertaining,” hopefully suggested Ricardo. “He does things
-in the grand manner. Just now he is tearing Cocos Island to pieces, or
-pulling it up by the roots, according to Mr. Panchito. I like his
-style.”
-
-“The grand manner is right,” grumbled Bradley Duff. “Somebody staked him
-on this proposition. A syndicate, perhaps. He always talks big and gets
-away with it.”
-
-It was apparent to Richard Cary that old Ramon Bazán had been shaken by
-enough excitement for one day. Don Miguel O’Donnell was the last straw.
-It was therefore sensible to suggest:
-
-“Why not sit tight aboard ship for a day or two and see if this other
-outfit really intends to weigh anchor? Mr. Panchito has a notion that
-they are about through. Unless we show our hand, this enterprising
-gentleman from Ecuador won’t think of interfering with us.”
-
-“Right you are, Captain Cary,” agreed Bradley Duff. “Let’s wait him out.
-It may avoid getting in a jam. Why not keep our business to ourselves?”
-
-This rational advice infuriated Señor Bazán. Wait in idleness on the
-deck of a ship and look at the cliffs of Cocos Island with its fabulous
-riches almost within his grasp? Why had he placed this giant of a
-Captain Ricardo in command of the expedition? To smash through all
-obstacles, to use his wonderful strength and courage. Was the Yellow
-Tiger of Cartagena afraid of matching himself against this Don Miguel
-O’Donnell? He, Ramon Bazán, was an aged man with one foot in the grave,
-but he was eager to go ashore and begin operations. There were men and
-rifles enough. . .
-
-The tirade was quelled by Ricardo, who thrust his employer into a
-deck-chair, fanned him with the cork helmet, and announced:
-
-“If you rave any more, Papa Bazán, your heart will go funny, and then
-where are you? Unless you take care of yourself, I can’t let you go
-ashore at all. You are not fit to leave the ship to-day. Now please stay
-in the shade and keep cool and collected.”
-
-This high-handed behavior dumbfounded poor Papa Bazán. He dashed the
-cork helmet to the deck and kicked it like a football. Ricardo
-pleasantly suggested tucking him in and locking the door. This ended the
-tantrum. The owner of the _Valkyrie_ curled up in the chair and
-disconsolately talked to himself.
-
-The boyish chief engineer, Charlie Burnham, came strolling along,
-bright-eyed and eager to insert himself into whatever ructions might
-show above the horizon.
-
-“Come along with me, Charlie,” said Captain Cary. “Let’s take a look at
-this Cocos Island. I may pay Don Miguel O’Donnell a social call. Keep a
-sharp watch, Mr. Duff, and let nobody aboard from the schooner.”
-
-“Atta boy!” blithely exclaimed Charlie Burnham. “Why not take the whole
-crew and run these Ecuador outlaws plumb off the island? They have had a
-fair crack at it, haven’t they? Three months is enough. Time’s up.”
-
-Woefully forlorn, Señor Bazán watched them set out for the beach in the
-skiff. Before striking inland they paused to examine the boulders strewn
-above high-water mark. On this one and that were roughly chiseled the
-names of ships which had visited Cocos Island at various times. It had
-become a custom singularly interesting. Richard Cary felt a thrill when
-he discovered a massive stone on which the weather had almost
-obliterated the lettering, but it was possible to decipher this much:
-
-“_H . . J . . . N-1-7-9_—”
-
-“Here we are, Charlie,” cried Richard Cary. “We couldn’t ask anything
-better than this. This must be ‘_H.M.S. Jason 1789_.’ Now we head due
-north to what the chart calls ‘the hump of the hill.’ We are going at
-the thing backward, but this is good enough for to-day. I want to work
-out a rough position and select a place for a camp. We may have to cut a
-trail and so on.”
-
-To their surprise and uneasiness, a trail already led due north from the
-stone on the beach. The trees and undergrowth had been chopped out,
-holes filled with broken stone, two or three small water-courses bridged
-with logs and plank. Wheeled vehicles had worn deep ruts in the soil.
-The crew of the schooner must have dragged heavy burdens over this
-pathway through the cocoanut groves and jungle. Observant Charlie
-Burnham picked up an iron bolt and a pipe coupling of large dimensions.
-He remarked that it knocked the romance out of treasure hunting when you
-made an engineering job of it.
-
-Curiosity urged them along at a breathless gait. They emerged into the
-wide bed of a dry ravine and followed the path until it climbed to a
-small plateau or level area barricaded on one side by crumbling cliffs.
-They could hear the noise of rushing water. It was as loud as a
-cataract. They halted to reconnoiter. Charlie Burnham craned his neck to
-stare up at the broken slope of the great hill that towered far above
-the cliffs, the hill that loomed so conspicuously from seaward like a
-dead crater.
-
-“Do you see that rusty streak that runs down the hill, Captain Cary?
-I’ve guessed it. This Don Miguel O’Donnell has tapped the little lake
-way up yonder. That streak is a line of pipe. He has a dandy head of
-pressure for hydraulic mining. Tearing the island to pieces? I’ll say he
-is. He’s trying to wash the treasure out. Some stunt!”
-
-They followed the noise of rushing water and came to chaotic banks of
-gravel and a wooden sluice-box that poured its muddy torrent into a
-brook. A little way beyond it was a tent, and several huts built of
-boards. What fascinated them was a heavy steel nozzle at the end of the
-iron pipe leading down the hillside. A solid stream of water leaped from
-the nozzle. One man easily guided and turned it as a gunner lays his
-piece on the mark.
-
-The water was like a projectile. It bored into the looser soil of the
-hill where it had slid down to pile up at the base of the cliff. Gravel
-and broken rock were swept down to the sluice or flung aside.
-
-“And to think we have got to break our backs with the old pick and
-shovel, or drilling holes for blasting charges,” lamented Charlie
-Burnham.
-
-“But this bright scheme hasn’t found any treasure for him,” replied
-Cary.
-
-They advanced toward the tent. A hammock was swung near it. In it
-reclined a man who smoked a cigar and read a book. He glanced up, was
-quickly on his feet, and walked to meet the visitors. Don Miguel
-O’Donnell was much nearer sixty than fifty years old, but physically he
-appeared to be in his prime. He was well-knit, vigorous, and taller than
-the average. His cheek was ruddy. At the corners of his eyes, however,
-the wrinkles spread in a network of fine lines. He looked more like an
-O’Donnell than a native of Ecuador.
-
-It seemed odd to hear his courteous greeting in Spanish. Richard Cary
-fumbled a few phrases in response. Don Miguel apologized and his smile
-was engaging as he said in fluent English:
-
-“I saw the Colombian flag on your steamer, my dear sir. But there is not
-a man in all Colombia like you. You are—”
-
-“I am Captain Cary of the _Valkyrie_, and this is the chief engineer,
-Mr. Burnham.”
-
-“An excursion for pleasure to Cocos Island?” observed Don Miguel,
-watching them closely. “You are interested in my mining operations?
-There is nothing to hide. I have been disappointed.”
-
-“And you are going home soon, sir?”
-
-“Perhaps. It may amuse me to stay and look at you. One of my men reports
-that you sent an officer to the schooner. The second mate? A fat young
-man with curly hair who chatters like a parrot.”
-
-“Quite correct. That was Mr. Panchito,” replied Cary. “I wanted to find
-out.”
-
-“And you found out? My men asked some questions of your Mr. Panchito. He
-was delighted to tell them. Señor Ramon Bazán has come to camp on Cocos
-Island for his health?”
-
-The manner was genial, but the voice conveyed a certain amusement,
-ironical and patronizing. Thus might the wandering Ulysses, crafty and
-vastly experienced, have addressed beguiling words to his own
-simple-minded sailormen on some other desert island of a blue sea.
-
-Young Charlie Burnham was nothing if not direct. He broke in to say:
-“Quit your kidding. You know exactly what we came for, and we expect to
-get it. Mr. Panchito is as leaky as a basket. I’ll bet he told your men
-all he knew and then some. But there’s no harm done.”
-
-“I will be frank with you, gentlemen,” cordially exclaimed Don Miguel
-O’Donnell, who showed no resentment. “My own chart of this pirates’
-treasure was made by the boatswain of Benito Bonito’s ship. The rascal
-died in prison in Guayaquil. The chart was found by accident, a few
-years ago, in a pile of old prison records and papers. As you say, Señor
-Burnham, I knew exactly what I came for and I expected to get it. May
-you have more success. My Cocos Island Exploration Company has wasted
-its money.”
-
-The visitors from the _Valkyrie_ eyed each other dubiously. If the chart
-of Benito Bonito’s boatswain had failed to locate the treasure, what
-about the chart of Captain Thompson of the brig _Mary Dear_? This was
-poor news for Señor Ramon Bazán. They would say nothing about it.
-
-“If you decide to stay longer, Don Miguel,” said Cary, “I see no reason
-why we should get in each other’s way. We shall be digging a good many
-rods from here.”
-
-The adventurer from Ecuador had been shrewdly appraising the massive
-candor of the Yankee shipmaster. Plausibly he suggested:
-
-“Why not a partnership, Captain Cary? You have your own secret
-information. I have the machinery, with more iron pipe in the hold of my
-schooner if we need a longer line.”
-
-“Señor Bazán will not agree to that,” said Cary, rather curtly. “He
-prefers to go it alone.”
-
-“Ah, old Ramon has a long memory and a short temper,” chuckled Don
-Miguel O’Donnell. “I was a young man then, when he had an ambition to be
-the president of Colombia. To some extent I helped his enemies. It hurt
-him to spend money. He might have had my support, but no matter—I know
-your Ramon Bazán, as it happens. If he comes to Cocos Island he bets on
-a sure thing. But you will find it enormous labor, so much rock and
-gravel have tumbled from the hill since the pirates buried the treasure
-of Lima. My bargain is a good one, Captain Cary. I beg you to consider
-it.”
-
-“Señor Bazán wouldn’t trust you, sir,” frankly declared Cary. “His
-dislikes are very violent.”
-
-“Is it necessary to obey his orders?” suavely returned Don Miguel
-O’Donnell. “Why not arrange this business without him? I include your
-chief engineer, Mr. Burnham. He will be most useful. To let a greedy old
-man expect most of this treasure for himself, to let him stand in the
-way of a partnership with me, is absurd, Captain Cary. Your Colombian
-sailors will soon be tired of digging in this gravel. Even a man like
-you will fail unless you let me help you. You see my equipment. Think of
-the money it has cost me.”
-
-“Do you intend to take it with you?” asked Charlie Burnham.
-
-“A bright young man,” smiled Don Miguel. “You can use it for yourself?
-Wait a minute. What do you say, Captain Cary?”
-
-“My owner will have no dealings with you, and that goes for his
-officers,” was the brusque response. “I should say that he has you sized
-up about right. You ask me to be disloyal to him, do you, to make a
-private dicker and throw him over? Then how do I know you would be on
-the level with me? Nothing doing. We play our own game and I warn you to
-keep clear of it.”
-
-“Most big, strong men are stupid,” amiably observed Don Miguel. “You
-have no objections if I stay and guard my property?”
-
-“Not as long as you leave ours alone,” declared Cary.
-
-His voice had a deeper note. The blue eye had a frosty glint. Charlie
-Burnham nudged him. It was time for them to put their heads together.
-They bade Don Miguel O’Donnell good-day. He was affable, polite, and
-apparently entertained by the crassness of youth. Until the arrival of
-these ingenuous Americans, one could see that he had been bored to
-extinction.
-
-As they scrambled down to the dry ravine, Charlie Burnham remarked, with
-some heat:
-
-“One smooth guy, Captain Cary. He would double-cross his own
-grandmother. What’s the answer? It don’t look much like waiting him out.
-Shall we go ahead?”
-
-“It looks that way, Charlie. I don’t know how many men he has. After we
-begin work, is he liable to jump us? I can’t put our whole crew in camp.
-It would be foolish to leave the steamer without protection.”
-
-“Sure it would. And I mustn’t let the fires go dead. If it came on to
-blow hard, we might have to steam out of the bay. And you’ll need an
-anchor watch, of course.”
-
-“Well, we can get organized by to-morrow. Now let’s see what we can do
-with this next bearing, from the hump of the hill and along the ravine.”
-
-They floundered through dense growth and over gullied ground until they
-had traversed the estimated distance in rods. No attempt was made to
-measure it accurately. This brought them to a lower rampart of cliff,
-crumbled and rotten, in which bushes and creepers had found root. There
-were wide fissures, as though an earthquake had shaken the limestone
-formation. Richard Cary made a hasty calculation. There was no other
-“face of cliff” nearby. They could not be very many rods from the spot.
-Here was an agreeable camp site in a grove of cocoanut palms, with a
-spring of clear water just beyond it.
-
-“We shall have to make our own trail to the bay,” said Cary, “but it’s
-not as rough as I expected. We don’t want to pack our stuff in over Don
-Miguel’s road.”
-
-“Leave him alone,” agreed Charlie Burnham. “I don’t feel neighborly.
-He’ll have me sitting up nights.”
-
-“Why, there would be no fun in it without him,” cheerfully protested
-Richard Cary. “It would be a chore, like digging post-holes back on
-those New Hampshire farms of ours. I didn’t dare expect anything as good
-as this Don Miguel O’Donnell. This may turn out to be livelier than
-Cartagena.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
- RICARDO PLAYS IT ALONE
-
-Twenty-four hours sufficed to cut a trail with machetes, and pitch the
-tents in the cocoanut grove. One of them was promptly occupied by Señor
-Bazán, who was elated at seeing things move in such brisk and orderly
-fashion. His faith in his yellow-haired captain was restored. There had
-been no waiting upon the movements of the interlopers from Ecuador. If
-Don Miguel O’Donnell should presume to interfere, so much the worse for
-him. Ricardo was the man to conquer him.
-
-Privately Ricardo was not so certain of this. He had his moments of
-serious apprehension. He could not quite imagine the resourceful Don
-Miguel as sailing away empty-handed if there was the smallest chance of
-finding hints or clues more promising than his own. Might was right on
-Cocos Island. And the bold O’Donnell had never been hampered by scruples
-or lack of wit.
-
-It was difficult to ascertain how many men were in his party. They were
-scattered, a few on the schooner, others carrying supplies, the rest in
-camp or working on the hydraulic pipe-line along the hillside. They kept
-away from the _Valkyrie_’s company, nor did Don Miguel himself display a
-neighborly spirit. The inference was that he considered himself too much
-the gentleman to intrude. It had been conveyed to him that he was
-unpopular with Señor Bazán.
-
-After painstaking measurements, Captain Cary felt satisfied that he had
-chosen the likeliest spot to begin digging. To a certain extent it was
-guesswork. The “great tree” noted on the chart had disappeared. There
-was more than one “big boulder” in the ravine. Three of the bearings,
-however, were accurately established, the H.M.S. _Jason_ stone on the
-beach, the “hump of the hill,” and the face of the cliff. The compass
-and chain helped to fill the gaps. Stakes were driven. Señor Bazán
-turned the first shovelful of gravel. Not content with this, he
-furiously plied the shovel until he wilted with a touch of fever.
-
-Captain Cary took command of this party, leaving Mr. Duff in charge of
-the ship. A dozen men were picked for the hard labor at the camp. No
-more could be spared at one time. They were willing and industrious. Why
-not? It meant filling their pockets with pirates’ gold. The treasure
-would soon be uncovered. _El Capitan_ Ricardo had shown them where to
-dig. He knew all things.
-
-With the prevailing breeze the camp was in the sultry lee of the cliff.
-This made the days intensely hot and the nights breathless. Señor Bazán
-complained of his asthma. Mosquitoes tormented him when he moved out of
-his tent. Ricardo urged him to spend a night or two on the ship where
-the air had some life. He consented without much argument. A hammock was
-slung from a pole, and two stout Colombian sailors bore the old
-gentleman over the trail to the beach.
-
-Captain Cary went with him, planning to return in an hour or so. He
-wished to find out from Mr. Duff how things were going on board the
-ship. Charlie Burnham was left in camp with orders to post a couple of
-sentries now that dusk was coming on. Mr. Panchito had appeared for
-supper and was delighting the weary sailors with songs and stories of
-the raciest description. He was excellent for their morale. He made them
-forget aching backs and blistered palms.
-
-There was nothing to cause anxiety. Don Miguel O’Donnell had committed
-himself to a policy of watchful waiting. For the present no trouble was
-anticipated. The discovery of the treasure might provoke a crisis.
-Meanwhile it was prudent to be vigilant.
-
-Mr. Duff was eager for gossip, having been low in his mind for lack of
-company. Cary found it refreshing to sit down for a chat with him on the
-breezy deck of the _Valkyrie_. There had been no stir on the schooner,
-he reported, a few men coming and going, but nothing to indicate an
-early departure. A gray-haired, soldierly man had come off in the
-afternoon for a brief visit, presumably Don Miguel himself.
-
-Richard Cary was relating the news of the camp when the sound of a rifle
-shot made him jump to his feet. It came from the interior of the island.
-Another shot, then the staccato reports of a magazine emptied as fast as
-a man could pull trigger. They reëchoed from the cliffs like a
-fusillade. A rocket soared from the jungle and traced a scarlet line
-against the evening sky.
-
-Captain Cary roared a command and two men popped into the boat at the
-gangway. He delayed to say to the chief officer:
-
-“Stand by, Mr. Duff. If you need me, blow the whistle. We don’t know
-what mischief the schooner may be hatching. We have to divide our
-forces. Charlie Burnham is in a mess. Watch out for my signal from the
-beach. We may want to shove off in a hurry.”
-
-“You will find the old hooker right here, sir,” hoarsely rumbled Mr.
-Duff. “I wish I could go with you.”
-
-The two seamen tugged madly at the oars while Richard Cary, standing in
-the stern, listened to the renewed rat-tat-tat of rifle fire. It
-subsided before he leaped to the beach and dashed into the narrow trail.
-Soon he heard a man cry out with pain, and the ferocious hubbub of
-fighting at close quarters. He upbraided himself for his folly in
-leaving the camp. He had been caught napping and tricked into a false
-sense of security.
-
-Stumbling over roots and stones, he ran with the thin beam of a little
-flash-light to reveal the path cut through the undergrowth. He shouted
-mightily as he ran. He thought he heard answering voices. There was no
-more rifle fire. He was some distance from the camp when he saw a figure
-coming toward him. It swayed like a drunken man and fell to the ground.
-The fugitive was found to be a Colombian sailor whose sweat-soaked shirt
-bore darker stains of blood. Two others came staggering along the trail.
-Between them they carried a comrade whose head wagged grotesquely. Cary
-flashed his light on the round, pallid features of Mr. Panchito who
-dangled a useless arm and was gashed in the thigh. His gayety was
-eclipsed.
-
-Behind them came the rest of the _Valkyrie_ party, in tragic disorder.
-Charlie Burnharn was limping with the rear guard, using his rifle as a
-crutch. He blubbered at sight of Captain Cary and was ashamed to meet
-him.
-
-“The b-bastards jumped us, and it’s all my fault,” he sobbed. “They
-crept up on us just after dark. One sentry got his, with a machete,
-before he could squeak. We put up the best scrap we could, sir, but we
-had to beat it. For God’s sake, Captain Cary, get the men from the ship
-and we’ll go back and clean up.”
-
-“Steady, Charlie. You couldn’t help it,” said Cary, putting an arm
-around him. “Did you leave any men behind?”
-
-“One, sir. We started to lug the sentry, but he croaked a little ways
-back yonder and we hid his body in the bushes. I don’t know how many are
-hit. They caught us from three sides and rushed us. We couldn’t hold the
-camp. These Colombian ginks of ours put up a dandy scrap. You can’t tell
-_me_ a South American revolution is vaudeville stuff. I know better.”
-
-Cary had stripped off his shirt and was tearing it into strips. The
-able-bodied men were quick to imitate him. As best they could they
-bandaged the wounded who laughed and swore and begged cigarettes. For
-those unable to walk or faint from loss of blood, litters were contrived
-from boughs and saplings, using their leather belts for lashings. Cary
-slung Charlie Burnham over his shoulder and strode ahead of the others.
-He was sad and silent. It was for him to square the account with Don
-Miguel O’Donnell. Now that the thing had happened, he comprehended the
-motive. As soon as the _Valkyrie_ party had begun digging, the place
-where they expected to find the treasure was clearly indicated. It told
-the secret of their own pirates’ chart. Don Miguel had concluded not to
-wait, perhaps for weeks and weeks. He preferred to do his own excavating
-and make speedy work of it. There was no law on Cocos Island. A little
-bloodshed? It was of no great consequence.
-
-Richard Cary spoke his thoughts aloud to the hapless chief engineer who
-could not help groaning now and then.
-
-“He out-guessed me, Charlie. He was marking time until we showed him
-where to set up that hydraulic squirt-gun of his and get busy again. He
-thinks Señor Bazán has a sure thing. He told us so.”
-
-“That’s my notion, Captain Cary. Ouch, I got a hole drilled clean
-through my leg. Chasing us into the bushes didn’t bother that sudden
-_hombre_ one little bit. He bats ’em high, wide, and lively.”
-
-“I wish I had stopped those bullets myself,” sighed the master of the
-_Valkyrie_.
-
-He came out on the open beach well ahead of his forlorn company.
-Carefully he laid Charlie Burnham on the sand and flashed a signal to
-the steamer. Chief Officer Duff answered with a blast of the whistle. He
-must have had the yawl manned and ready. The refugees heard the rattle
-of oars. Presently the wounded were lifted in over the bow and stowed
-against the thwarts. Mr. Duff handled the boat himself. Efficiently he
-transferred this sorry freightage to the deck of the _Valkyrie_. Richard
-Cary fairly rocked with exhaustion, a man sick in mind and body.
-Doggedly he pulled himself together to act the amateur surgeon. The
-colored steward displayed a competency unexpected. Between them they set
-about sterilizing and dressing the bullet wounds and machete cuts. One
-sailor’s chest had been ripped by a blade and required a dozen stitches.
-Poor Mr. Panchito had an ugly fracture to set. A coal-black fireman was
-moaning with the torture of a bullet embedded in his back. Captain Cary
-had to probe and extract it. He did these things as well as he could,
-slowly, carefully, with fingers singularly deft. He had seen them done
-by other shipmasters with no surgeon on board. Including those less
-seriously hurt, seven men bore testimony that it had been a furious
-affray in camp.
-
-Richard Cary dreaded an interview with Ramon Bazán, who was a trifle
-flighty with fever. He had emerged from his room and was flitting about
-in pajamas, very much in the way, and sputtering questions to which no
-one paid the slightest attention. At length, Cary found time to say,
-rather roughly:
-
-“Why not thrash this out to-morrow? No use crying over spilt milk. You
-ought to be in bed.”
-
-“But I am not blaming you for anything, my son,” was the surprising
-answer. It was a chastened, frightened Papa Bazán who, for once, had
-forgotten his greed of phantom gold. “It may be true, Ricardo, that the
-pirates put a curse on their treasure. It poisons men and makes them
-kill each other. You would have been killed in the camp to-night. You
-are too big for bullets to miss. And these wounded men—they suffer and
-are so brave—and I am the one that brought them to this wicked Cocos
-Island.”
-
-The accents were mournful. Señor Bazán was lamenting for his children of
-the sea. He was the sinner that repenteth at the eleventh hour.
-
-“You certainly do not seem like yourself, Papa Bazán,” gravely returned
-Ricardo. The symptoms were as alarming as one of those sudden heart
-seizures. “I’m glad you appreciate the loyalty of your ship’s company.
-And it is very decent of you to make it easy for me. What it amounts to,
-though, is that Don Miguel O’Donnell was too wise and bold for me. You
-were afraid of it, remember?”
-
-“You will try to make him pay for it, Ricardo. I see it in your eyes.
-More men will be bleeding with bullets. You yourself may be dead. I made
-you come on this voyage when you wished to get out of Cartagena and find
-your sweetheart, that girl of mine, Teresa Fernandez.”
-
-“I shall find my girl. The world isn’t big enough to keep us apart,”
-said Ricardo, his scowl fading. “But I am not ready to quit Cocos
-Island. The only curse on the treasure is Don Miguel O’Donnell. You must
-let me work it out, sir. You don’t have to strike your colors yet.”
-
-“Promise me you will not get yourself killed, Ricardo,” implored the
-affectionate Papa Bazán. “I would not leave you buried on Cocos Island,
-not for the riches of Captain Thompson and Benito Bonito.”
-
-“My own funeral is not on the programme,” replied Ricardo to whom this
-was an unfamiliar Papa Bazán. “Please don’t interfere with my orders. I
-shall have a good deal on my hands. Don Miguel rubbed me the wrong way.
-I don’t like the way he did it.”
-
-The old gentleman consented to go to bed. Captain Cary made a tour of
-his patients. With luck he expected to pull them all through. He found
-the steward faithfully on duty as nurse. Climbing to the bridge, he
-stood gazing at the shadowy outline of the hostile schooner, only a few
-hundred feet away. His solid composure of mind had returned. He was
-putting his shattered self-confidence together again. It made him wince
-to know that Don Miguel was laughing at him. It was his first
-humiliating defeat. His men deserved better of him than this.
-
-While he stood musing in the starlit night, he seemed to hear the voice
-of Teresa Fernandez as she had told him the tale of the great galleon
-_Nuestra Señora del Rosario_ and her ancestor Don Diego Fernandez—the
-tale of the two little English ships that had throttled the galleon like
-bulldogs.
-
-The little ships of Devon, lubberly, as round as an apple, gaudy
-pennants floating from their stumpy masts, wallowing off to leeward,
-daring the devil and the deep sea!
-
-The blood coursed through Richard Cary’s veins. He paced to and fro,
-head erect, heart beating high. Was he to be balked of Spanish treasure?
-He was a Cary of Devon.
-
-This Don Miguel O’Donnell was a worthy foeman. How many of his men were
-aboard the schooner? To-night was the time to carry her by boarding,
-before Don Miguel could entrench the camp and send more men to his
-vessel to hold her against surprise.
-
-The _Valkyrie_ had no Devon lads with hearts of oak, experienced at this
-game of swarming over a ship’s side and clearing her decks. The
-Colombians had been demoralized by wounds and disaster. A respite was
-necessary, to inspire the rest of the crew, to drill them, to show what
-was expected of them. They were bewildered, fatigued, and ignorant of
-the tactics of such an adventure as this. Another day, and they could be
-led against the schooner. Reluctantly the attack was postponed.
-
-Mr. Duff tramped to the bridge and urged his skipper to turn in until
-daylight. The ship didn’t need him. The wounded men were quiet.
-
-“All right, Mr. Duff. I’ll go below soon. I am not worried about the
-ship. You will look after her, but I feel like a daddy to those poor
-fellows that got hurt. It sort of cheers them up if they happen to be
-awake when I go the rounds.”
-
-“You take it too hard, Captain Cary,” bluffly replied the battered
-veteran of a chief officer. “The men might have been stove up as bad as
-this in a shindy ashore in some port. I had a ship in Valparaiso one
-time—Lord love you, the police and the sailors fought it to a
-fare-ye-well.”
-
-“That wasn’t Cocos Island, Mr. Duff. Now keep this to yourself. If
-things break wrong for me, you understand, you are to take this steamer
-back to Cartagena, subject to the owner’s orders. And you can keep the
-command of her, I have no doubt, if she can be made to earn her way in
-coastwise trade. You have made good with me and with Señor Bazán.”
-
-“Thank you, sir. What’s the oration about? Going to run some fool risk,
-are you? It isn’t worth it, let me tell you. You are young and husky,
-and there’s a fine life and a long life ahead of you. Why get bumped off
-in a tuppenny rumpus like this? Hell’s bells, why don’t you let me do
-the dirty work? Give me a chance to pay you back, Captain Cary. You
-fished me out of the garbage can and put me on my feet. I’ll go up
-against this Don Miguel O’Donnell the minute you say the word.”
-
-Richard Cary shook his head. He had said all he had to say. Daylight
-found him again on the bridge, intently studying the schooner. He was
-astonished and chagrined. Outwitted for the second time! Forestalled and
-beaten! During the night two machine guns had been mounted on the
-schooner’s deck, one well forward, the other near the after cabin. No
-boats could hope to approach the vessel and throw men on board. To
-attempt it even by night would be bloody suicide. Richard Cary’s
-intentions were snuffed out. The stout lads of Devon never had to reckon
-with streams of bullets sprayed from machine guns.
-
-The day passed uneventfully. Men were always loafing near the schooner’s
-machine guns. Another midnight hour came. The tide was flooding into the
-bay. The sky was slightly overcast. The stars were mistily veiled. The
-bay slept in a soft obscurity.
-
-Captain Cary called Mr. Duff aside to confide: “This seems to be up to
-me. Please keep the ship quiet. Look and listen. If you hear me yell for
-you, bring your men over in the yawl.”
-
-“Blast my picture, sir, what do you mean? Are you going to tackle that
-armed vessel alone?”
-
-“You do as I say. Watch me swim for it.”
-
-“The sharks’ll get you. I wish I was big enough to put you in irons.”
-
-“Come along aft and see me off, Mr. Duff.”
-
-They halted at the taffrail. Cary took off his canvas shoes and stripped
-himself to the waist. All he had on was a pair of thin khaki trousers.
-At his belt was a holster. The flap covered a Colt’s revolver of the old
-navy pattern. It was long-barreled, with a heavy butt. The two men shook
-hands. Mr. Duff whispered a blessing almost tearful.
-
-Cary footed it down a rope ladder. Mr. Duff peered over and heard a
-small splash. For the first time in many years he piously, genuinely
-invoked his Maker. He saw Cary come to the surface and swim steadily to
-make a wide détour and approach the schooner bows on. Very soon the
-swimmer vanished from view. Mr. Duff hurried forward and awoke his men
-with orders to be _alerta_, and to jump for the yawl when he said so.
-
-Richard Cary was swimming at a leisurely pace, saving his strength,
-taking advantage of the favorable drift of the tide. He held the same
-course until he was well inshore and the schooner’s masts were in line.
-Then he moved directly toward her, paddling gently and almost submerged,
-as silent as a bit of flotsam.
-
-Thus he floated until high above him loomed the bowsprit. He was
-screened from discovery. Catching hold of the anchor chain, he steadied
-himself and rested for several minutes. He could hear two men talking
-somewhere forward.
-
-Hand over hand he hauled himself up the cable until he could grasp a
-bowsprit stay. Another effort and he found a foothold, crouching between
-the stays directly beneath the heavy timber upon which the folds of a
-headsail had been loosely secured.
-
-Again he paused and listened. He had at least two men to deal with up
-here near the forecastle. Their conversation still flowed in drowsy
-murmurings. They were not far from the forward machine gun, he surmised.
-He knew how to operate machine guns. During the war he had been a chief
-petty officer of the American Navy.
-
-He took it for granted that the two machine guns were loaded and ready
-for instant action. Don Miguel O’Donnell was not a man to be careless in
-matters of this sort. To get his hands on one of them, long enough to
-sweep the schooner’s deck with it, this was the hazard upon which
-Richard Cary was gambling his life.
-
-Clambering over the bowsprit, he crept as far as the anchor winch.
-Between him and the two men on watch near the forward machine gun was
-the deck-house in which the sailors were quartered. It was his
-assumption that most of them were ashore in the camp to hold it against
-a possible sortie from the _Valkyrie_. He had first to surprise the two
-men just beyond the deck-house. They were standing close to the
-starboard bulwark. From where they were, the deck ran flush to the after
-cabin and the raised quarterdeck upon which the other machine gun was
-mounted.
-
-The intruder was silent and invisible. He took the heavy revolver by the
-barrel but, on second thought, shoved it back into the holster. It might
-be better to have both hands free.
-
-Like a yellow tiger he leaped from his ambush behind a corner of the
-deck-house. His bare feet slapped the deck in three great strides. The
-two sailors of Ecuador had no more than time to whirl and face him. He
-stooped as he ran and grasped one of them around the legs. The fellow
-seemed to rise in the air as if he had wings. He soared over the bulwark
-in a graceful parabola. Into the placid waters of the bay he shot as
-prettily as a man diving. He was yelling when he went under, and he
-yelled when he came to the surface. He made as much noise as a riot.
-
-Meanwhile the active Ricardo had lunged to get a grip on the other
-seaman and toss him overboard in the same fashion. This one had a
-moment’s warning, however, and he was wonderfully nimble. He dodged like
-a rabbit and fled around the machine gun. At this game of tag there was
-no catching him. He scudded under Ricardo’s outstretched arm and flew
-like mad to seek refuge with his friends in the after part of the
-vessel. A bullet might have stopped him, but the yellow tiger had
-business more urgent. Every second of time was precious.
-
-He dropped to his knees behind the machine gun. His questing fingers
-told him that the belt was filled with cartridges. He swung the weapon
-to rake the quarterdeck and drive the enemy from that other machine gun
-before they could open fire on him.
-
-He pulled the trigger. Brrrr-r-r—prut—prut—prut—prut, the mechanism
-responded in a ferocious tattoo amazingly sharp and loud as the
-headlands of the bay flung the reports to and fro. Checking the
-fusillade, he looked and listened. He heard shrill shouts, the scamper
-of feet, a man wailing that he was killed. The other machine gun was
-dumb. In this brief burst of fire he had driven Don Miguel’s men to
-cover, but he could not hope to hold them there long. They could snipe
-at him with pistols and rifles from the cabin windows, from behind the
-mizzenmast, from the rigging.
-
-He was in the open, kneeling at his machine gun, his body naked to the
-waist as a target discernible in the darkness. There was this to be said
-for him, that the schooner was his, from the bow all the way aft to the
-quarterdeck. He glanced behind him at the open doors of the forecastle.
-If any seamen were in there, they had too much respect for a machine gun
-to poke their heads out.
-
-The voice of Richard Cary rolled out in a tremendous shout of: “Ahoy the
-_Valkyrie_! Boarders away! Shake a leg. I can’t hold ’em long. Come over
-the bowsprit. Do you understand?”
-
-The jubilant bellow of Chief Officer Duff announced that he understood.
-His men were in leash, awaiting the summons to cast off. They had an
-account of their own to square. Richard Cary heard their oars bang
-against the pins as they shoved clear and put their backs into it while
-Mr. Duff hurled profane exhortations at their devoted heads. Captain
-Cary saw the shadow of the boat as it surged toward the schooner. It was
-for him to maintain the mastery a few minutes longer. What he dreaded
-and expected was a swift rally to snatch the after machine gun, find
-shelter for it, and sweep the _Valkyrie_’s boat. The possibility of such
-a disaster made him desperate. His hands would be stained with the blood
-of his own comrades if he should lead them into such a wicked trap as
-this.
-
-Now he recognized the voice of Don Miguel O’Donnell who was driving his
-men up from the cabin into which they must have piled helter-skelter.
-This made the situation more critical than ever. The reckless soldier of
-fortune would not hesitate to pistol his own ship’s officers or men if
-they refused to do his bidding. They would try to make quick work of it,
-reflected Cary.
-
-A rifle flashed and then another. He threw himself flat. A bullet kicked
-a splinter from a plank beside his head. Several whined over him. He
-watched the flashes. Don Miguel had shrewdly scattered his men in
-various hiding-places. Without fatally exposing himself, Ricardo was
-unable to look over the bulwark and gauge the progress of the
-_Valkyrie_’s boat. He dared withhold his machine gun fire not another
-minute. It was the card he held in reserve, but if a rifle bullet should
-kill or cripple him, Mr. Duff and his shipmates would be exposed to
-slaughter.
-
-He knelt behind the gun and carefully marked the flashes of the rifles.
-A bullet grazed his left arm. Another chipped an ear. Then he let drive
-with all the cartridges remaining in the belt. It was a sustained,
-furious chatter of explosions. He sprayed the quarterdeck from starboard
-to port and back again. It silenced the enemy’s fire and granted him a
-fleeting opportunity.
-
-Jumping to his feet, he lifted the machine gun in his arms and tossed it
-overboard. This one, at least, could not be reloaded and turned against
-his own crew. Then he ran aft, jerking out the heavy revolver.
-
-For an instant he halted behind the mainmast, in the middle of the ship,
-to reconnoiter. It was as he expected. Don Miguel’s men knew he had
-blown away all his ammunition. They were coming out from cover, but not
-eagerly. Don Miguel was roaring at them from the cabin roof where he had
-been trying to pot Cary with a rifle. It was he himself who leaped down
-to aim the after machine gun. He was guilty of a blunder. His intention
-was to rake the _Valkyrie_’s boat before it passed from sight under the
-schooner’s bows, leaving his men to dispose of Richard Cary.
-
-Instead of this, he saw a tall, glimmering figure dart from behind the
-mainmast and come charging aft. His attention was diverted. He
-hesitated. Then he opened fire at the swiftly moving wraith of a man,
-expecting to crumple him in his tracks. Ricardo was too canny to make
-himself an easy target. He ran a zigzag course, on a headlong slant
-toward one side of the deck and veering toward the other side. It was a
-disconcerting, bewildering onset even to an experienced campaigner like
-Don Miguel O’Donnell.
-
-Cary was running like the wind, and as he ran he blazed away with the
-revolver which barked like a small cannon. A machine gun on a deck
-deeply shadowed was a clumsy weapon with which to stop a man determined
-to capture a ship single-handed or perish in the attempt. Don Miguel
-stood stoutly at his post, loudly swearing at the men who were ducking
-the bullets from that infernal revolver. The yellow tiger swerved again
-and bounded to the quarterdeck. He hurled the empty revolver at the man
-behind the machine gun. It was a missile propelled by an uncommonly
-powerful arm.
-
-Unseen by Don Miguel, it struck him in the face. He reeled and fell. One
-of his men stumbled over him. Another lurched into them. In this moment
-of confusion, Richard Cary laid hands on the machine gun and wrenched it
-around to command the quarterdeck. A touch of the finger and he could
-have riddled the nearest group of three, huddled as they were, but the
-deed was abhorrent. Don Miguel had shown no mercy for the luckless
-_Valkyrie_ party at the treasure camp, but this modern Richard Cary felt
-inclined to offer quarter. A machine gun was a detestable weapon for men
-who loved good fighting.
-
-“Get below, you swine,” he shouted, “before I turn loose on you!
-_Pronto_, now, and drop your rifles.”
-
-The two sailors with Don Miguel dragged him to the companionway, and he
-went bumping down into the cabin. Others were still skulking in the
-dark. Two or three came forward with hands upraised. They were glad to
-surrender. Cary called out a final summons. From the other side of the
-deck, a die-hard took a futile snap-shot at him with a pistol. Picking
-up the machine gun, Cary climbed to the cabin roof and deliberately
-swept the quarterdeck with a hurricane of fire. It smashed through
-woodwork and searched out the dark corners. It was the blast of death.
-
-A wounded man came whimpering from his hiding-place. Another sprang up
-with a scream and hung limp over the rail. It was enough. Richard Cary
-shouldered the machine gun and ran forward with it. He had achieved the
-vital purpose. His comrades had been saved from destruction. With a
-thankful heart he shouted to them:
-
-“All clear. Come along and take the schooner.”
-
-The first man from the _Valkyrie_’s yawl was just coming over the bow.
-Wound about his waist was a rope ladder which he made fast and dropped.
-Up they swarmed, so fast that they were treading upon one another’s
-shoulders.
-
-Rifles slung on their backs, pistols in their fists, they crowded around
-their captain and clamored to be led against the thieves and assassins
-from Ecuador. Mr. Duff crawled over the bowsprit, the last man aboard.
-His years and his girth had hampered him. The others had rudely shoved
-him aside. He was puffing and blowing, and his temper was ruined.
-
-“The scoundrels, they pranced all over me, Captain Cary. Where’s this
-scrimmage of yours? Here we stand like a bunch of idiots at a tea party.
-What’s that you’re lugging on your shoulder? A machine gun?”
-
-“One of them,” laughed Richard Cary, affectionately thumping his chief
-officer. “I had to chuck the other one over the side. You might have got
-hurt with it. Hop along aft and finish it up. If you find any loose
-_hombres_, throw them into a hatch.”
-
-“Then you didn’t scupper the lot?” eagerly exclaimed Mr. Duff.
-
-“I had no chance to count noses,” answered Captain Cary. “Take a look in
-the forecastle first.”
-
-“Let’s go, boys,” thundered Mr. Duff. “_Viva Colombia!_”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
- THE HAPPINESS OF PAPA BAZÁN
-
-For once in his career, Don Miguel O’Donnell was a battered, defeated
-soldier of fortune. He had lost his schooner and was bound to accept
-whatever terms might be dictated, or face the unpleasant alternative of
-being marooned on Cocos Island. A prisoner in the cabin, he was
-stanching the blood from a cut on his cheek when Richard Cary came down
-from the deck and said:
-
-“Here, let me fix that for you. My steward is coming aboard to help
-patch up your men. Sorry, but two or three of them are past mending. It
-was a dirty job you forced on me.”
-
-“I wish I had left you alone, Captain Cary,” replied Don Miguel, without
-a trace of animosity. “I was the stupid one. It was in my mind that you
-might try to capture this vessel, but those machine guns made me feel
-easy. I lose and I must pay.”
-
-Cary smiled. He could afford to. It was a waste of breath to denounce
-this veteran adventurer as a murderous blackguard who had brought
-disaster upon himself. He had behaved according to his own code which
-gave the spoils to the victor.
-
-“Aye, you lose,” said Captain Cary. “You have until sundown to get your
-shore party and supplies aboard and make sail. If there is no breeze, I
-will tow you to sea.”
-
-“And if I am not ready to sail by sundown, what then?”
-
-“I shall sink your schooner. And I won’t feel at all backward about
-using the machine gun you made me a present of.”
-
-“Machine guns are trumps,” said Don Miguel. “I am leaving Cocos Island
-before sundown. It will not be healthy to stay longer. To wait for
-another ship to take me off would be too much like Robinson Crusoe. Six
-months, a year? _Quien sabe?_”
-
-“You are fed up with Cocos Island?” observed Cary. “I feel something
-like that myself, but I shall stick a while longer.”
-
-“To find the treasure, my dear young man? Yes, I see you are in a hurry
-to go back to your camp and dig, just as soon as my schooner is on the
-ocean again.”
-
-“Right you are. I expect to occupy the camp to-night. Señor Bazán will
-be fidgeting to get ashore again.”
-
-“I hope you will find something,” very courteously replied Don Miguel.
-“Perhaps you will find something to-night. Señor Bazán seems to know
-exactly where to look for the treasure. I was not so lucky with my chart
-of Benito Bonito’s boatswain.”
-
-Soon after this interview, Captain Cary returned to the _Valkyrie_. Mr.
-Duff was left as prize master with a guard of five men. Señor Bazán was
-found asleep in a deck-chair after wearing himself out with fears and
-anxieties. Ricardo felt his pulse. It relieved him to find that the old
-gentleman had survived such a racking night as this. His heart was
-behaving far better than could have been expected. Apparently the sea
-voyage had been good for it.
-
-Well, there would be no more clashes and alarms on Cocos Island. The
-argonauts from Cartagena could remain as long as it should please Ramon
-Bazán to hunt for the pot of gold at the rainbow’s end. They had found
-an awkward neighbor in Don Miguel O’Donnell, but he was departing bag
-and baggage.
-
-Captain Cary slept late into the forenoon. The black cares had lifted.
-His own wounded men were on the way to recovery. His was the
-satisfaction of having fought and maneuvered his way out of an
-exceedingly tight corner, with the favoring aid of the goddess of
-chance. He felt a young man’s pride in defying the odds and smashing a
-way through adverse circumstances.
-
-When he came out of his heavy slumber, Ramon Bazán hovered beside the
-bunk. His spectacles were on his nose. He was examining the chipped ear
-and the grazed arm which Ricardo had covered with strips of plaster.
-
-“All’s well,” yawned the hero. “What do you say? Shall we shove off to
-the camp to-night?”
-
-“I hope so,” chirruped Ramon, who was in high spirits. “The men have
-told me all. Do not trouble yourself to talk too much now. Do you know
-what I have decided? To give you half the treasure as soon as we find
-it. It will be my gift to you and Teresa, three millions besides the
-gold ingots. You must chase after that girl and marry her, Ricardo, if
-it will make you happy. With this treasure you can live quiet and safe.
-If you keep on fighting like this, Teresa will be a widow. Of course,
-when I die you will get my treasure, too, you and your sweetheart,
-except what I give to the splendid officers and sailors of the
-_Valkyrie_. There is nobody to leave it to, only you and Teresa. Now you
-will have some fun in digging up this Cocos Island.”
-
-“Oh, I have had fun enough already, and a bully good run for my money,”
-Ricardo assured him. “It is very fine of you to feel this way, but what
-do I want with three million dollars? Supposing we let it rest until we
-turn up the treasure.”
-
-“If we miss finding it,” uneasily pursued Papa Ramon, “I have not much
-to leave Teresa. There is my house in Cartagena, and some more land, but
-this steamer and the voyage have cost me many thousands of dollars.”
-
-“Please forget it,” urged Ricardo. “If I can find Teresa and she still
-loves me, what else in the world do I want?”
-
-“That girl used to tease me and call me a horrid old monkey, but I will
-never scold her again,” said Papa Ramon. “Yes, Ricardo, perhaps there
-are more precious things than money. I have been learning it for myself.
-Loyalty? Is that the word? It is bigger than life itself. Why did you
-capture the schooner? Why will these men follow you anywhere you say? It
-is not for money at all.”
-
-“It is never too late to learn,” smiled Ricardo. “I should call this a
-liberal education for all hands of us. Travel and entertainment, with
-frequent trips ashore. It puts it all over a cruise in a banana boat.”
-
-It was late in the afternoon when the watchers on the _Valkyrie_ saw Don
-Miguel’s party come down the road to the beach, dragging the last
-cart-loads of the stuff they wished to take with them. Their boats
-carried it off to the schooner. Prize-master Duff, at a signal from
-Captain Cary, withdrew his guard and returned to the steamer. A light
-breeze was sighing off the land. Shortly before sunset the tall sails
-were hoisted and the anchor weighed.
-
-The schooner rippled slowly past the _Valkyrie_ to trim her sheets and
-follow the fairway out beyond the headlands of the bay. Don Miguel
-O’Donnell paced the quarterdeck, a straight, vigorous figure of a man
-who bore himself gallantly. He raised his hat and bowed in courteous
-farewell. As he turned away, however, his hand went to his cheek, to
-touch the ugly cut that had marked him for life. It was a gesture which
-did not escape the scrutiny of Richard Cary. He made up his mind to
-steer clear of Ecuador. Soon the schooner caught a stronger draught of
-wind and heeled to its pressure as she made for the open sea.
-
-Captain Cary mustered a landing party and beckoned Señor Bazán. Alas,
-the old gentleman was the picture of unhappiness. It had occurred to
-him, as an appalling possibility, that the _piraticos_ of Don Miguel
-O’Donnell might have discovered the treasure during their one day in
-camp. Perhaps it was some of the bullion in canvas bags that they had
-been trundling in the carts. To soothe Papa Ramon it was advisable to
-lose not a moment in investigating the camp. And so they lugged him
-along in the hammock slung from a pole.
-
-To his immense relief, the excavation which they had begun close to the
-face of the cliff was found to be no deeper, nor had the gravel been
-disturbed elsewhere. Captain Cary’s first task, after they had put the
-tents to rights, was to detail a burial party for the body of the
-Colombian sailor which had been hidden in the bushes during the forced
-retreat. Papa Ramon wept. He had turned quite sentimental. He would pay
-for many masses to be said in the cathedral of Cartagena for the soul of
-this valiant mariner.
-
-The air was uncommonly cool at dusk. The wind suddenly shifted and swept
-in from the sea. It was a refreshing night for tired men to rest their
-bones in sleep. They were eager to be up with the dawn and resume the
-toil with pick and shovel. Therefore most of them were in their hammocks
-as soon as darkness fell. Señor Bazán was snoring in his tent, after
-pottering about until his legs rebelled. Richard Cary wandered to a
-smooth rock and sat down to smoke and ponder. His nerves were still
-taut. It was difficult to relax.
-
-The camp became silent. The only sounds were the rustle of the cocoanut
-palms and the music of falling water. For some time he sat there, and
-then prowled to and fro. The sky presaged fair weather. The sky was
-brilliant with stars, and almost cloudless. Little by little he felt
-lazily at ease. He decided to go to his tent.
-
-Just then he heard a bell. Its notes were sonorous. The air fairly
-hummed with them. They were lingeringly vibrant. They were the tones of
-such a bell as had hurled its mellow echoes against the walls of
-Cartagena when the galleons of the plate fleet had ridden to their
-hempen cables. To Richard Cary’s ears the sound of this bell seemed to
-come from a distance, and yet it throbbed all about him. It was the bell
-of the _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_ which had been mounted upon the roof
-of the _Valkyrie_’s forecastle.
-
-He was accustomed to hearing it daily on shipboard as it marked the
-passing hours and changing watches, but even there it never failed to
-thrill responsive chords in some dim recess of his soul. Until now,
-however, it had not been heard as far inland as the camp. The fresh
-breeze blowing across the bay and the silence of night were conditions
-peculiarly favorable, thought Cary, but he stood in an attitude of
-strained attention.
-
-_Dong-dong—dong-dong!_
-
-_Four bells!_ Richard Cary scratched a match and looked at his watch.
-The hands pointed to a quarter after nine. By the ship’s time, two bells
-had struck and it was not yet three bells.
-
-DONG-DONG—DONG-DONG!
-
-The galleon bell tolled again, Four bells! So far away and yet so
-dangerously insistent, as loud in his ears as though he stood upon the
-ship’s deck. He seemed also to hear Teresa’s voice attuned in harmony
-with it, to hear her saying in the _patio_:
-
-“There is something about this old bell, very queer, but as true as true
-can be. If anything very bad is going to happen to the one it belongs
-to, this bell of the _Nuestra Señora del Rosario_ strikes four times,
-_dong-dong, dong-dong_. Four bells, like on board a ship. When there is
-going to be death or some terrible bad luck! It has always been like
-that, ’way, ’way back to my ancestor Don Juan Diego Fernandez.”
-
-While Richard Cary listened, the bell sounded its warning once more, and
-then was mute. He was not dreaming, nor was he under the spell of those
-visions which had so often disquieted him. He rubbed his eyes and stared
-at the tents, the bare cliff, the yellow streaks of gravel. The sailors
-were asleep in their tents. For a long moment he stood bewitched and
-helpless. He refused to believe and yet he dared not disobey. He was
-pulled two ways. Common sense flouted it. What shook him free of this
-trance was the voice of Ramon Bazán who called out piteously. Cary ran
-to the tent and found the old man sitting up in his cot.
-
-“Thank God, you have come, Ricardo. In my sleep I had a fearful dream.
-Four bells! I heard it and then I was awake, and I thought I heard it
-again. I feel very sick. Has the time come for me to die? You didn’t
-hear any four bells, did you, Ricardo? I am shaking all over.”
-
-“Nonsense, Papa Bazán,” exclaimed Ricardo, patting the bony little
-shoulder. “I heard the bell, but it just happened that the wind brought
-the sound to us. Four bells? Perhaps the ship rolled in a ground swell
-and swung the clapper.”
-
-“Then you did hear it, too?” quavered Ramon, clutching Ricardo’s arm.
-“It is no nonsense, not when the bell sounds like that. We must get out
-of this camp and go back to the ship. It is the safest place to be. Not
-for six million dollars will I stay here to-night. We must all go to the
-ship, I tell you. Will you take care of me, Ricardo?”
-
-“Back we go to the ship, Papa Ramon,” readily agreed Richard Cary. “I
-feel like a fool, but I’ll confess I am creepy. I am whistling to keep
-up my courage. If there is a curse on this Cocos Island, we may as well
-get out from under. When it comes to fighting with spirits, a machine
-gun is no use at all.”
-
-“Quick, Ricardo! Get the sailors to carry me in the hammock. I cannot
-walk out of the tent.”
-
-Cary lifted him from the cot. He clung like a frightened child. At the
-lusty shout of all hands, the men came boiling out of the tents. They
-slept with one eye open. Was it another attack? They crowded around
-their captain. He was at a loss to explain it. The thing seemed too
-preposterous for words. While he hesitated, Ramon Bazán plucked at his
-shirt and implored him to make haste.
-
-“Jump out of this. Vamoose! To the ship! On your way, boys!” thundered
-Captain Cary.
-
-They obeyed on the instant. Some new danger threatened. _El Capitan_ was
-very much alarmed. When he gave an order like this, it meant something.
-Excitedly they straggled toward the trail. A grotesque exodus for brave
-men, if they had known it, and Richard Cary reproached himself as a
-womanish coward, but he was in a cold sweat of impatience, nevertheless,
-to set foot on the deck of his ship. Trudging behind his men, he found
-himself glancing back like an urchin in a haunted lane.
-
-The pace slackened. One or two sailors ventured timid questions. He was
-still evasive. He gruffly mentioned a warning message. They inferred
-that perhaps Don Miguel O’Donnell had come sailing back to make a
-stealthy landing. Bewildered but trustful, they plodded on, swinging
-lanterns and sleepily chattering. The two who bore Señor Bazán in the
-hammock halted to ease their shoulders. The others waited.
-
-A terrific explosion rocked the earth. The detonation stunned them. The
-first thought was that a volcanic eruption had blown up through the dead
-crater. They rushed to the nearest opening in the jungle. They could see
-the dark loom of the hill climbing to the little lake in the bowl at the
-top. It was undisturbed.
-
-They turned to look in the direction of the camp. The sky was a glare of
-crimson. They could hear the crash of rock falling from the cliff, of
-débris raining from the air. Then came a roaring, grinding sound like a
-landslide. Huddled together, the fugitives were dumb until Captain Cary
-spoke up:
-
-“I have a notion we pulled out just in time. Let’s go take a look.”
-
-They rushed back to the end of the trail and out into the clearing
-beyond the ravine where the tents had stood. There were no tents and no
-cocoanut palms. They had to climb over huge heaps of broken rock which
-had been jarred from the crumbling, fissured face of the cliff. Their
-excavation was buried many feet deep in earth and stones dislodged from
-the steep slopes above the cliff. Great ragged holes yawned in the
-gravel banks. Richard Cary took a lantern and explored the chaos. He
-returned to report to Señor Bazán who had been laid on a blanket found
-wrapped around the splintered stump of a tree.
-
-“Four bells was right,” said Ricardo. “The camp is blown to glory. And a
-big piece of the hill is dumped on top of it. This Don Miguel was a poor
-loser. I wish I had killed him with his machine gun. It’s easy enough to
-figure how the trick was done. He had a lot of dynamite left, so he told
-his gang to mine the camp. They cut the fuse long enough to burn several
-hours. I stumbled over one of his iron pipes. They ran the fuse through
-it, I suppose. An excellent joke, said Don Miguel, eh, Papa Ramon?
-‘_Perhaps you will find something to-night_,’ said he. He has a sense of
-humor.”
-
-“He couldn’t forgive you for whipping him,” feebly piped the old man.
-“Four Bells, Ricardo! Now I do not have to die.”
-
-“I should say not. Now you can live to be a hundred. And we’ll have to
-give you a vote of thanks for putting the galleon bell on the steamer.
-Not that I am convinced, but it was a most extraordinary coincidence.”
-
-“You are a fool, Ricardo,” snapped Papa Ramon, with a flash of the old
-temper. “And Teresa would call you worse names than that. It was the
-intercession of the Blessed Lady of Rosario for whom the galleon was
-named.”
-
-A sailor exploring the débris with a lantern suddenly went insane, or so
-it appeared. He screeched, slid into a hole on his stomach, and wildly
-waved his legs. His comrades scampered to haul him out. Instantly they,
-too, became afflicted with violent dementia. Cary went to investigate.
-He caught up a lantern and peered into this fresh excavation torn by the
-explosive. A frenzied sailor was filling his straw hat with tarnished
-coins. Another was struggling to lift a heavy lump of metal, but had to
-drop it for lack of elbow room. Cary reached down and jerked the two men
-out of the hole. They danced around him, spilling Spanish dollars from
-their hats and shirts. He slid down and tossed out the weighty lump
-which looked like bullion fused and roughened by heat.
-
-He ran to fetch Papa Ramon and to spread his blanket close to this
-miraculous gravel pit. The sailors darted off to search for bits of
-board to dig with. One of them was lucky enough to find a broken shovel.
-By the light of the lanterns they made the gravel fly like infuriated
-terriers. They turned up more coins, hundreds of them, and a closely
-packed heap of those roughened lumps of bullion. They discovered rotten
-pieces of plank studded with iron bolts and braces. They piled the booty
-upon Señor Bazán’s blanket. He let the blackened Spanish dollars clink
-through his fingers. He fondled the shapeless lumps of bullion.
-
-He was a supremely happy old man, nor was his emotion altogether sordid.
-He was happy for Ricardo and Teresa. And the spirit of romance, the
-enchantment of adventure had renewed, for this transient hour, the
-bright aspects of his youth.
-
-“We have found it,” he gasped, his voice almost failing him.
-
-“Don Miguel found it for us,” replied Ricardo. “The laugh is on him,
-after all. I wish I could send him the news. It would make this the end
-of a perfect day.”
-
-Ramon Bazán chuckled and tried to say something. After a thickened,
-stammering word or two, his voice died in his throat. He swayed forward,
-his hands filled with Spanish dollars. They slid from his helpless
-fingers. Ricardo caught him in his arms and gently laid him down. The
-wizened brown face had turned ashen. It was pinched and very old.
-
-In his shirt pocket was a little leather case with a vial in it. Richard
-Cary found it and forced a capsule between the bloodless lips. It failed
-to revive him. A second capsule was no more effectual.
-
-The worn-out heart, which had been so often spurred by the powerful
-drug, had made its last rally. Presently Cary discovered that it had
-ceased to beat. He told the sailors that Señor Ramon Bazán was dead.
-They were shocked and very sorry. Crowding around the blanket, they
-bared their heads and crossed themselves, earnestly muttering the
-prayers of the Church.
-
-Even their simple souls comprehended that fate had not been unkind to
-this aged man. His departure was not essentially mournful. It could even
-be regarded as a felicitous ending. He had achieved the goal of his
-desire, which bright fortune is vouchsafed to few. Most men spend their
-lives in search of some treasure, hidden or elusive, and rarely do they
-find it. Nor do they understand that the joy is in the quest and not in
-the possession.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
- THE FACE OF THE WATERS
-
-They wrapped the body of Ramon Bazán in the blanket, and Richard Cary
-took the light burden in his arms to carry it back to the ship. It was
-right and proper that he should be the bearer. It appealed to him as an
-affectionate duty. In the morning they would build a coffin and find a
-burial-place beyond high-water mark on the beach. It was a pleasanter
-spot to lie than in the unholy desolation of this torn landscape near
-the cliff, with its recent memories of bloodshed and commotion, and its
-ancient memories of abominably evil deeds.
-
-A subdued procession followed Richard Cary down the dark trail. The
-Colombian sailors whispered uneasily and were very willing to await the
-friendly light of day before trying to find more treasure. Could it be
-that the very touch of the Spanish dollars and bullion had killed Señor
-Bazán? Had an unearthly vengeance smitten him because he had led them
-straight to the place where the treasure was, with that pirates’ chart
-of his? If he had not come to Cocos Island, the secret hoard would still
-be undisturbed.
-
-There were things that no man could explain, said they. What was the
-message that had warned _El Capitan_ Ricardo to flee from the camp? How
-had it been brought to him? It had saved them all from being as dead as
-poor Señor Bazán. It was a question whether honest sailormen had not
-better let that treasure alone. Life was sweet to them. However, it was
-for _El Capitan_ Ricardo to tell them what should be done.
-
-When morning came, the _Valkyrie_ displayed the Colombian colors
-half-masted. The owner of the ship reposed in his own room, a peaceful
-old man whose fevered anxieties were stilled, who had acquired a certain
-dignity denied him in life. Chief Officer Bradley Duff stole in to look
-at him. Emotional in such circumstances, he blew his crimson nose and
-wiped his eyes. He did not know just why, for there was no reason to
-give way to grief. In his time he had seen many a better man slip his
-cable. Dutifully he muttered aloud:
-
-“The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away, and what do you know about
-that? Anyhow, you got what you wanted, didn’t you, Papa Ramon, and you
-sailed off into the great beyond as happy as a kid with a Christmas
-stocking. There is only one drawback. Coin to blow and no chance to blow
-it! It breaks my heart to think of a thing like that. But, hell’s bells,
-what could an old man blow it on? Here’s hoping you have laid up
-treasure in heaven, for it’s your only bet—”
-
-Richard Cary interrupted this impromptu elegy and beckoned the chief
-officer outside to say:
-
-“All hands will go ashore that can be spared from duty, Mr. Duff. Clean
-clothes—make them look as smart as you can. At ten o’clock this
-forenoon.”
-
-“At four bells, sir?”
-
-“Yes, at four bells. It seems appropriate. Have the bell tolled during
-the burial service.”
-
-“Right, Captain Cary. Let me tell you, though, the prickles ran up and
-down my back when the man on watch banged out four bells at six o’clock
-this morning. If it’s all the same to you, I won’t have four bells
-struck after to-day.”
-
-“I am not very anxious to hear it myself, Mr. Duff. And so you heard it
-last night when I did? The bell actually rang itself? Did you look at
-the clock?”
-
-“I looked at the clock with my two eyes as big as onions,” earnestly
-answered Mr. Duff. “It was eighteen minutes after nine. I had come on
-deck after saying good-night to the chief engineer. Charlie was fussing
-and cussing some because his leg hurt him, and he was missing all the
-excitement. _Dong-dong—dong-dong_, went the silly old bell, and I
-walked as far as the bridge to bawl out the anchor watch. Nobody was
-near the bell. Says I to myself, one of those Colombians has an extra
-drink under his belt and is skylarkin’ to get a rise out of me.
-
-“I stood there looking at the shack of a fo’castle we knocked together
-and the bell hanging in the frame on top of it. I’m a son-of-a-gun if
-the bell didn’t ring again. I was as flustered as a woman with a mouse
-in her petticoats. I had heard the yarn—why Señor Bazán insisted on
-fetching this old relic along. Well, sir, I was froze to the deck like a
-blasted dummy, my mouth wide open, and I’m a liar if she didn’t hammer
-out four bells _again_. Three times is out, says I, and something is due
-to happen. It did. That infernal explosion made my teeth rattle. From
-here it looked as if old Cocos Island had split herself wide open. I was
-never so thankful in my life as when you showed up on the beach with all
-hands accounted for except poor Ramon Bazán. That was his own private
-signal the bell tapped off, as I figure it.”
-
-“And you examined the bell?” asked Cary. “I haven’t had a chance to look
-it over.”
-
-“Yes, sir. I made myself go for’ard and I climbed on the roof. I laid on
-my back and felt inside of this spooky bell. It was a brave deed,
-Captain Cary. Please enter it in the log that Bradley Duff was
-meritorious. The tongue of the bell is hung on a swivel bolt and there
-is a lot of play in it, due to wear and corrosion. The ship was rolling
-last night, a strong breeze blowing straight into the bay and
-considerable ground swell. The tongue might possibly have swung to
-strike the rim of the bell, but it never happened before, not even in
-that gale off the Colombian coast. That’s all I can say, sir, and I have
-to believe it or admit that I’ve gone clean dotty.”
-
-“What else can we say, Mr. Duff? The more we guess the less we know.”
-
-“But who will it warn next time, now that it has done its duty by Señor
-Bazán? What about that, sir?”
-
-Ricardo was immensely startled. This had not occurred to him. He look
-frightened as he replied:
-
-“Señorita Teresa Fernandez, his niece? I wonder if I shall hear four
-bells if any misfortune hangs over her. I may not know where she is.
-Suppose I am not there to help and protect her. You and I are certainly
-going dotty, Mr. Duff. I want to get this ship to sea again.”
-
-“First time I ever saw you down-hearted,” said the sympathetic chief
-officer. “Sit tight and forget it. Señor Bazán was due to pass out
-anyhow. He was living on borrowed time. It’s different with a healthy
-girl that knows her way about, though I know there’s nothing worries a
-man as much as a sweetheart. Lord love you, I used to have ’em from
-Singapore to Rio.”
-
-Cary turned away. The talk was getting too intimate. He called himself
-an idiot for letting such strange fancies distress him. He had lost a
-devoted friend in Ramon Bazán, for all his whims and crotchets, and he
-felt badly shaken by it. When later in the morning the ship’s company
-decorously assembled on the beach, he was deeply affected. Solemnly the
-bell tolled on the _Valkyrie_. A prayer-book was lacking, but Ricardo
-said the verses he had learned at his mother’s knee. And when the grave
-was filled, the sailors covered it with gorgeous wreaths of tropical
-flowers. An assistant engineer, with cold chisel and hammer, cut the
-dead man’s name and the emblem of the Holy Cross. This they did for
-Ramon Bazán who had fared venturesomely forth from Cartagena to find his
-journey’s end on this lonely, storied island of the wide Pacific.
-
-It was not demanded of them that they should any longer be idle. And so
-Richard Cary led them to the devastated camp to view it by daylight.
-They were bold and eager again. The terrors of darkness had faded from
-their minds. Instantly they fell to enlarging the hole in which they had
-discovered the silver. They expected to uncover tons of it.
-Disappointment was their lot. In all they uncovered no more than three
-hundred weight. This seemed trifling. They were uncertain where next to
-explore. At random they shoveled the gravel and threw out scattered
-coins and bars of bullion.
-
-The greater part of the treasure might be underneath the vast heap of
-rock which had fallen from the cliff, or it might be buried far under
-the landslide from the higher slope. All the rest of the day they
-toiled, but it was a gigantic task for a few men, and they felt baffled
-and discouraged. They doubted the truth of the saying that faith can
-remove mountains. There was no inclination to remain away from the ship
-after the sun went down behind the lofty hill. The shadows of night were
-fearsome company.
-
-For Richard Cary the enterprise had lost its zest. He kept his thoughts
-to himself until evening when he went to Charlie Burnham’s room. These
-two were kindred spirits, in a way, youthful tropical rovers who had
-wandered far from rugged New Hampshire farms. They were sprung from the
-same kind of stock. They spoke the same language and were ballasted with
-like traits of character. Because they understood each other, Cary could
-lay aside the masterful pose of one whose word was law. It was safe to
-make a confidant of Charlie Burnham.
-
-“Instead of raising such a row, you ought to be thankful you didn’t lose
-a leg,” said Cary as he pulled a chair close to the bunk.
-
-A grin was on the homely, honest face of the chief engineer.
-
-“Little old New Hampshire was never like this,” said he. “Give me
-another week and I can steam slow speed ahead on a crutch. All that
-really bothers me is that I never got a crack at those outlaws. You’ll
-have to hand it to Don Miguel O’Donnell. The trick of bumping you off
-with dynamite was neat. He was a mining engineer, all right. What’s the
-big idea now? Do we get rich quick or not?”
-
-“A tremendous lot of rock and dirt to move, Charlie, and then we don’t
-know what’s under it. Too much for this short-handed crew to tackle.”
-
-“I can swing the job, Captain Cary,” eagerly exclaimed Charlie. “It
-means a trip to Panama to get me a donkey boiler, for one thing. I can
-shift a winch engine ashore and rig a derrick to handle that rock. Then
-I’ll want some more iron pipe to run Don Miguel’s hydraulic line over to
-our location. We can wash that dirt out in no time. Gosh, we’ll root
-that treasure out like a pig in a manure pile. It’s a cinch, now we know
-it’s there or thereabouts.”
-
-Cary was unresponsive. His mind was far away. After a long pause he
-said:
-
-“Listen, Charlie. Your scheme is good enough, and I don’t propose to
-stand in your way. And I waive all claim to any more treasure you may
-find. Out of what you have dug up already, I shall take the share that
-was promised me as master of the steamer when we sailed from Cartagena.
-That will be stake enough.”
-
-“You sound as if you meant to quit us,” was the reproachful accusation.
-“Please don’t do that. Why, I can see us cleaning up millions! And there
-isn’t a man in the ship that wouldn’t be tickled to death to give you
-half of it. You are the whole works, sir.”
-
-“There is nothing to hold me, now that Ramon Bazán is dead,” explained
-Ricardo. “I had to stand by—there was an obligation—but now I am free
-to look after my own affairs and go my own way. You raise a question
-that puzzles me. This steamer is left on my hands. I am Señor Bazán’s
-agent, I presume, until I get in touch with Cartagena, or find his
-niece. He left no instructions. You can have the vessel for a small
-charter price, if you like, to go ahead with your plans. I see no
-objection to that. She will be earning something, and Mr. Duff can take
-the command. If it costs too much to operate her, why not take her home
-to Cartagena and then come back in a small schooner?”
-
-“Great Scott, Captain Cary, we can’t lose all that time!” excitedly
-protested Charlie Burnham, rumpling his hair with both hands. “The boys
-will want me to charter this old hooker. They have dug up enough silver
-to keep things going for some time. But see here, sir, you’ve got me
-puzzled, too. How much of this treasure stuff honestly belongs to us?
-What if we do find the rest of it? Señor Bazán outfitted the voyage, and
-it was his chart that steered us to the right place on Cocos Island. We
-might not have found a thing, though, if Don Miguel hadn’t blown the
-scenery upside down. What’s the answer?”
-
-“Send me word when you find your millions,” laughed Ricardo. “Then we
-can talk it over. I swear I don’t know what the answer is just now. It
-is too thick for me. As far as I am personally concerned, I don’t want
-to touch any more of the cursed plunder than I can help. All I ask is
-enough to send me on my way. A week more, shall we say? This will give
-them time to dig their fool heads off and tire themselves out. And by
-then you will be able to get down to the engine-room.”
-
-“Huh, the only thing to make you talk this way is a girl,” snorted
-Charlie. “It’s all right, Captain Cary, and you have handled this
-proposition like a wise guy from start to finish, but the best of us
-skid. It’s Cocos Island for mine.”
-
-“Well, I think I got what I was looking for,” said Ricardo, with a
-cryptic twinkle. “I have only one fault to find with Don Miguel
-O’Donnell. He was born about two hundred years too late. I wish I might
-have met him, in these same waters, before machine guns were invented.”
-
-“He would have been there with the goods,” heartily replied Charlie.
-
-Captain Cary spent little time ashore after this. Mr. Duff was delighted
-to take charge of the volunteers who grilled in the sun and made slaves
-of themselves with pick and shovel. He had been a boss stevedore, among
-his various employments, and his Spanish vocabulary was like hitting a
-man with a brick. Tremendously he told them what to do and how to do it.
-They accomplished prodigies in moving rocks and gravel. He had to admit,
-however, that it was a job for Charley Burnham’s ingenuity and
-equipment.
-
-They did find more scattered bullion, blown hither and yon from some
-undiscovered hiding-place. It handsomely rewarded them for their pains,
-but made them more than ever dissatisfied. Not a gold ingot had they
-found. Gold was the word to conjure with. It tormented them. At the end
-of a week they packed their silver hoard in canvas sacks and weighed it
-on the scales in the ship’s storeroom. Captain Cary calculated that they
-had scraped together something like eight thousand dollars’ worth of
-coins and bullion.
-
-They held a conference. Mr. Panchito, the cheery second mate, addressed
-them with his arm in a sling. As a compatriot he was able to bombard the
-crew with an oration. He persuaded them to demand no more than their
-wages, to be paid them on arrival at Panama. The greater part of the
-booty was to be entrusted to the chief engineer as the managing
-director. He would make all the necessary arrangements for a return
-voyage to Cocos Island.
-
-“Alas, my brave men, we must lose _El Capitan_ Ricardo,” passionately
-declaimed Mr. Panchito. His eloquence was hampered because one arm was
-in a sling. “What shall we do without _El Tigre Amarillo Grande_ who
-conquered Cartagena with an iron bar in his hands, who has conquered
-this Cocos Island with nothing but his courage in his hands, who has
-conquered his brave shipmates with the goodness of his heart, who laughs
-at us naughty children and punishes us when we deserve it. _Viva El
-Capitan!_ Shout as loud as you can.”
-
-They shouted, and Ricardo blushed. In this manner the finish of the
-chapter of Cocos Island was written for him. The _Valkyrie_ sailed at
-daybreak, her engines complaining loudly as she plodded out to sea.
-Charlie Burnham sat on a stool in the stifling compartment and luridly
-told the engines what he thought of them. The firemen briskly fed the
-coal to her and, for once, there was no grumbling. They were rich men
-and they expected to become vastly richer.
-
-It seemed as though ill omens and misfortune had been left astern. An
-ocean serenely calm favored the decrepit _Valkyrie_ as she laid a course
-for Panama. Only one of the wounded men was still confined to a bunk. It
-was a ship whose people had been welded together in a stanch
-brotherhood. Nothing could dismay them.
-
-They made light of it when Charlie Burnham sent up word that the crack
-in the propeller shaft didn’t look any too healthy to him, and he
-thought he had better tinker with it. Give him a day and he could fit a
-collar and bolt it on the shaft before it broke clean in two and punched
-the bottom out of the ship or something like that.
-
-Captain Cary approved. The engines were idle while the _Valkyrie_ rolled
-with an easy motion, and Charlie’s assistants hammered and forged and
-drilled. Night came down with clouds and rain, and strong gusts of wind.
-There was nothing to indicate seriously heavy weather. It was murky,
-however, with a rising sea. Soon after dark Captain Cary went to the
-bridge to relieve Mr. Duff.
-
-“With no steerage way she slops about like a barge,” said the latter.
-“It may turn a bit nasty before morning. The barometer doesn’t say so,
-but my feet ache more than usual.”
-
-“It will be a thick night, and some sea running, most likely,” remarked
-Cary. “I don’t look for a gale of wind.”
-
-“In a steamer not under control it feels worse than it is, sir. How is
-Charlie coming along with his shaft collar?”
-
-“He’ll have us shoving ahead by morning, Mr. Duff. And a couple of days
-more will see us in Panama Bay.”
-
-Walking the bridge alone, Captain Cary had never seen a blacker night
-than this, with the rain beating into his face and the spray driving
-like mist. Her engines stilled, the ship felt helpless and dead, while
-the seas swung her this way and that. It was a tedious watch to stand
-while the captain fought off drowsiness as the hours wore on.
-
-It was almost time to go below when he saw a steamer’s lights so close
-at hand that it startled him. Invisible at a distance, they suddenly
-appeared, glimmering red and green, out of this shrouded night. They
-indicated that this other steamer was on a course to strike the disabled
-_Valkyrie_ which could do nothing to avert collision.
-
-Cary held his breath, expecting to see the vessel turn in time to pass
-ahead of him. Instead of this, she threw her helm over too late.
-Blundering hesitation and a poor lookout made a smash inevitable.
-Richard Cary gripped a bridge stanchion and awaited the shock. There was
-nothing else to do. He heard a confused shouting in Italian. Then the
-vague shadow of a prow loomed a little way forward of the _Valkyrie_’s
-bridge, moving slowly as the other steamer trembled to the thrust of a
-propeller thrashing hard astern.
-
-They came together with an infernal din of fractured plates and twisting
-frames. With a fatal momentum, the stranger clove her way deep into the
-_Valkyrie_’s side. It cracked her like an egg. Here was one peril of the
-deep which she was entirely too decrepit to withstand. It could not
-fairly be expected of her. She heeled over with a lugubrious lamentation
-of rivets snapping, of beams buckling and groaning. It shook the bridge
-like an earthquake. Captain Cary clung to his stanchion for dear life
-and stared with a horrified fascination. He was wondering whether this
-misbegotten Italian freighter proposed to cut clean through the
-_Valkyrie_, like a knife through a cheese, and proceed on her way. The
-crumpled bow could drive ahead no farther, however, and the two ships
-hung locked together.
-
-“Hold where you are!” roared Captain Cary. “Keep the hole plugged! Don’t
-back out! Let me get my people off before this vessel sinks.”
-
-The frightened Italian skipper was more concerned with investigating his
-own damages. Paying no heed, he kept his engines reversed and sluggishly
-backed out of the gap he had torn. Hysterically blowing his whistle he
-drifted off in the darkness until his lights were lost to view.
-
-Richard Cary lost no time making signals of distress. His job was to get
-the crew off a ship that was dropping from under their feet. He could
-hear the sea rushing into the hold.
-
-His first thought was for the men in the forecastle. He made his way
-over the splintered deck which was humped like a cat’s back. Beyond the
-chasm in the ship’s side, he found the wooden structure still intact,
-but tipped at a crazy slant. Already the men were bringing out the one
-wounded comrade who was unable to help himself. They were excited and
-noisy, but ready to do whatever _El Capitan_ said. He drove them aft
-ahead of him, telling them to find their stations just the same as at
-boat drill.
-
-By now the others came rushing up from the engine-room and stoke-hole.
-The safety-valve had been opened to let her blow off. This was the only
-farewell ceremony that any one had delayed to perform. The water had
-been splashing to their knees when they scrambled for the ladder.
-Luckily the crippled Charlie Burnham had turned in for a nap and came
-hobbling from his room in the state of mind of a young man who regarded
-this as one thing too many.
-
-There was no panic. As a ship’s crew the habit of obedience was more
-than skin deep. This was the finish of the old hooker and it was time
-for them to go. Two boats were promptly swung out. There was room and to
-spare in them.
-
-“Mr. Duff takes the number one boat,” said Captain Cary. “Stow Mr.
-Panchito carefully and look out for his broken arm. The chief engineer
-goes in the other boat.”
-
-“What about our treasure?” demanded Charlie Burnham, in anguished
-accents. “If we have to lose it, this shipwreck is a mighty serious
-affair, let me tell you, sir.”
-
-“Let ’em go get it then,” rapped out Captain Cary, “but you’ll all be
-drowned if you fiddle here five minutes longer.”
-
-Jubilantly they dragged the canvas sacks from the storeroom and flung
-them into the boats. Even this brief delay was perilous, but Cary had
-not the heart to refuse them. So fast was the steamer sinking that the
-waves were even now breaking across her well deck. She was going down by
-the head, and her stern was cocking high in air. Had they stayed too
-long? As he shouted to lower away, Cary wished he had parted the fools
-and their money.
-
-One boat plopped upon the back of a crested wave and was safely shoved
-away from the perishing ship. The other waited for the captain, but he
-told them to let go and pull clear. Glancing forward, he saw the
-_Valkyrie_’s bow plunge under in a ghastly smother of foam. Were all
-hands accounted for? He had to satisfy himself of this before he was
-willing to quit the ship. It was the imperative demand of duty, the
-final rite of a commander faithful to his task. Had any of those
-reckless idiots been left in the storeroom wrestling with their cursed
-bags of silver? He felt sure he had shoved or thrown them all into the
-boats, but he could not afford to carry the smallest doubt with him.
-
-The ship was deserted. This he ascertained in a minute or two. Running
-to the side, he was thankful to find the second boat well away without
-mishap. They were yelling to him to jump. Just then a tall wave flashed
-and toppled across the deck. It washed him from his feet, rolled him
-over and over, and flung him against a skylight. The breath was knocked
-out of him. He felt the ship lurch and quiver in the last throes. A
-rending concussion tore her apart. Clouds of steam gushed through
-gratings and hatches. The stern rose until it stood almost on end as the
-_Valkyrie_ plunged under the sea.
-
-Whirling like a chip, Richard Cary was sucked down with her. He was
-unable to help himself. Some convulsion of water spewed him to the
-surface in an eddy of foam and vapor. He was too feeble to swim or to
-cry out. Instinctively he kept himself afloat. All sense of direction
-was lost. He did not know where the boats were. The sea was much rougher
-than had appeared from the deck. It battered and strangled him. It bore
-him down into dark, seething valleys of water and tossed him up again.
-
-A broken piece of timber scraped his shoulder. He thrust an arm over it
-and so eased his exertions. He tried to shout, but his voice was weak
-and broken. Frequently the water submerged him. Suffocation constricted
-his lungs. The strength had been hammered out of him. Once he caught a
-glimpse of the masthead light of the steamer which had sunk the
-_Valkyrie_, as though she were groping about to find the survivors.
-
-He took it for granted that his own boats were searching for him. So
-black and windy was the sea that it was very possible to miss him. They
-would expect to be guided by his strong voice calling to them. He was
-drifting away from the spot where the ship had gone down. His energies
-were so benumbed that the loudest sound he could make was like the cry
-of a gull, unheard above the hissing clamor of the seas that broke over
-his head.
-
-For perhaps an hour Richard Cary clung to the drifting piece of timber.
-Once or twice he fancied he saw the shape of a boat, but it was well to
-windward of him and his voice was blown away. Finding a man afloat in
-such a night as this was merest chance. Loyal as his shipmates were,
-they were men accustomed to the hazards of the sea and it would be
-concluded that he had been drowned with his ship. It was a miracle, as
-he well knew, that he had been cast up alive.
-
-He did not see the masthead light again. Probably the Italian freighter
-had picked up the boats and resumed her voyage. All hope of rescue was
-gone. Unless the sea quieted, he could not struggle much longer.
-Daylight was far away. Ramon Bazán and his ship, both gone, and now it
-was Richard Cary’s turn. But they were old and worn-out. They had lived
-their lives. He had been so strong in the sense of invincibility, so
-secure in the supremacy of youth and strength. Life and youth, love and
-strength and ambition, the sea extinguishes them all.
-
-Tenaciously enduring, refusing to surrender until the last gasp, he
-heard the galleon bell! It was tolling for him. He was too far gone to
-wonder. It seemed not in the least fantastic that the bell should be
-tolling his requiem, even though it had gone to the bottom of the sea.
-At first faint and far away, it was growing louder. A phantom bell that
-tolled in mockery! Its grave reverberations rose above the commotion of
-the waves to signal the passing of the soul of Richard Cary.
-
-It tormented him to listen to the bell that had been drowned fathoms
-down. Why could it not let him go in peace? He rallied from his stupor.
-A phantom bell? He wildly denied and denounced it.
-
-He became conscious of a curious illusion that the bell was drifting
-past him. Could he be wrong? Was it calling to him with a voice of help
-and guidance instead of mockery? It had saved him from death on Cocos
-Island. Was this another intervention?
-
-He released his hold of the piece of timber and swam in the trough of
-the sea, gaining strength for this last effort. What difference if he
-hastened the end by this much? The bell tolled in the air above his
-head. It was so near that it could not elude him, he babbled.
-
-Like surf on a rock, the waves spouted over some dim floating object
-that bulked large. Richard Cary saw the wan flicker and curl of them. He
-put out an arm to fend himself off. His hand slipped along the edge of a
-board. He groped again and caught hold of a massive upright. Painfully
-he hauled himself up on a platform of boards awash with the sea. There
-he sprawled flat.
-
-Soon he was able to sit and maintain his grasp of the upright which was
-firmly fastened to the platform. He could breathe and rest, although the
-water gushed over him. Reaching up, he touched the rim of the galleon
-bell. It vibrated to the strokes of the heavy tongue as the platform
-tossed and pitched with a motion giddily violent.
-
-His refuge was the roof of the wooden forecastle house which had been
-torn bodily from the bolts securing it to the _Valkyrie_’s deck.
-Loosened by the collision, it had been carried down and later brought to
-the surface by its own buoyancy, perhaps not until after the boats had
-abandoned the search for their lost captain.
-
-A haunted bell, but one that could be kind as well as cruel. Twice now
-it had preserved Richard Cary from the immediate certainty of
-extinction. He clung to his wave-washed raft with the bell clanging over
-him, but he had ceased to despair of rescue. He was granted a surcease
-from the unavailing struggle to survive. He dared hope to see another
-blessed dawn. With clearing weather and a falling wind, he might hang on
-and keep alive for two or three days. Other castaways had done so with
-much less pith and endurance than his own.
-
-Meanwhile the galleon bell, riding in its frame, would be a conspicuous
-beacon by day. At night its brazen-throated appeal would carry far over
-the face of the waters.
-
-His courage was hardened, the spark of confidence rekindled, and he felt
-strong in the faith that this was not to be the end of Richard Cary.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
- THE CASTAWAY
-
-By conventional standards, Jerry Tobin, owner of The Broadway Front on
-the liveliest street of Panama, was a disreputable person. The queer,
-turbid world in which he moved had its own rigid standards of appraisal,
-however, and by these he was rated as a person of solid integrity. He
-was on the level. This verdict is sometimes denied those who sit in
-higher and more sanctified places.
-
-In the era before the darkness of prohibition had dimmed the bright
-lights of his café on the Broadway of Manhattan, he had enjoyed the
-esteem of politicians, actors, race-track magnates, prize-ring
-celebrities, and gentleman idlers who respected his opinions and often
-accepted his judgments.
-
-Prosperity had attended his tropical exile, but dollars could not
-altogether solace a homesick heart. Mrs. Mary Tobin was even more
-unreconciled, but she was never one to complain. Seldom questioning
-Jerry about his own affairs, she lived her life apart from them. When
-she had first known him he was a serious-minded, athletic young
-policeman on a Sixth Avenue beat and she was the daughter of a desk
-sergeant of the precinct station. In that neighborhood were her friends,
-her church, and her lifelong associations. In middle age she had been
-pulled up by the roots, and it was hard adjusting herself to this
-remote, exotic environment.
-
-Blown by the winds of chance, Teresa Fernandez had been borne in to her.
-Mary Tobin’s loneliness and unspoken discontent were banished. This
-dark-eyed, handsome girl from Cartagena, bright and sad by turn, who
-seemed to confide so much and yet paused on the brink of revelation, was
-a figure of fascinating romance. She flamed against Mary Tobin’s quiet
-background.
-
-Jerry was tight-lipped by habit. Teresa felt grateful for his reticence.
-Finding her in trouble, he had befriended her. Nothing was said about an
-impetuous antique dagger which had literally stayed the hand of an
-intruder called Sheeney George. With a delicacy that did him credit,
-Jerry inferred that it wasn’t the kind of thing a lady liked to have
-told on herself.
-
-It was distressing enough, as Mary Tobin viewed it, that Teresa had felt
-compelled to cut off her lovely hair and go wandering about as a young
-man. That Jerry proposed to find some way of sending her to Cocos Island
-did not seem quixotic. Mary Tobin was eager to aid and abet. This
-relieved Jerry’s mind. The situation might have been awkward.
-
-“Of course you will be helping her to get to her lover, Jerry,” said
-sweet-voiced, motherly Mary Tobin. “And how can you manage it? ’Tis
-worth the money whatever it costs.”
-
-“I have found a gasoline yacht that’s fit for to live in,” he replied.
-“All I want now is the right skipper, and I have sent word to Captain Ed
-Truscoe that had a Canal towboat and quit her last week. He’s a buddy of
-mine. You know him, Mary.”
-
-“A fine man, Jerry, but will we want to let Teresa go alone? I was
-thinking I might ask myself along, but I’d be seasick every minute
-and—”
-
-“And you’d be in the way after she meets up with this walloper of a
-sweetheart of hers. The old crab of an uncle will be chaperon enough and
-more too. They’ll want to wring his neck.”
-
-“But does it seem right to send her off by herself, even with Captain Ed
-Truscoe?” persisted Mary. “An older woman ought to be kind of looking
-after her.”
-
-Jerry permitted himself a grin as he gruffly exclaimed: “Miss Fernandez
-can look after herself, take it from me. Don’t let that worry you. So
-it’s all right to blow her to the trip, is it? It will set me back some
-berries. She wants to put her own money in it, but I said nothing doing.
-This is Jerry Tobin’s joy-ride. Drop in and see us when you come back,
-said I, and show us your prize exhibit. We’ll tell you whether he is
-worth it. If he isn’t the goods, I will have to go get you another one.”
-
-“What do I care what it costs?” smiled Mary Tobin. “’Tis more real
-pleasure than I have got out of anything since we said good-bye to the
-flat on the West Side. From what Teresa tells me, this man of hers is
-the finest one that ever trod the green earth. Here’s a woman that said
-the same when Jerry Tobin was courting her.”
-
-“’Tis worth something to have you blarney me like that,” said Jerry,
-whose harsh face could soften with tenderness. “Well, we are young but
-once, Mary girl, and when we’re young we want what we want when we want
-it. So I will get that gasoline yacht away from here in a couple of days
-if I have to shanghai Captain Ed Truscoe.”
-
-Thus it happened that Teresa Fernandez was whisked away to sea with no
-say in the matter beyond the affectionate gratitude that welled from the
-depths of her heart. The gasoline cruiser was small for an offshore
-voyage, but Teresa was too seasoned a sailor to mind the long Pacific
-swell. Captain Truscoe, veteran towboat man, was unperturbed in anything
-that would stay afloat and kick a screw over. He was a thick-set,
-bow-legged chunk of a man, hard and brown, who seldom smiled, and talked
-with an effort. Teresa perplexed him. At table together in the little
-cabin, with a Japanese steward dodging about like a juggler, Captain
-Truscoe stared and pondered. Now and then he bit off a brief question or
-two.
-
-“What about this uncle? Who let him loose?”
-
-“He ran away from home like a naughty boy and I must coax him back,”
-replied the amused Teresa.
-
-“Better had. They tuck ’em in padded cells for less. Jerry mentioned a
-young man, master of the ship. What about him?”
-
-“I am sure I don’t know why he went away on this crazy trip, Captain
-Truscoe. That is one thing I must find out. It is all very much mixed
-up.”
-
-“Sounds so. None of my business, I suppose. Known Jerry and his wife
-long?”
-
-“Not very. They were wonderfully good to me.”
-
-“They like you, Miss Fernandez. Jerry told me to keep on going if I
-missed your people at Cocos Island. The limit is off, says he.”
-
-“But how will I know where to go next?” cried the troubled Teresa. “I am
-sure we shall find them there. Good gracious, Captain Truscoe, don’t you
-suggest such things to me.”
-
-By way of diverting her, he brought out photographs of his wife and
-three young daughters in San Francisco. His comments were terse.
-
-“Nice woman. Thrifty. She saves my money. Good kids. I meant to go home,
-but Jerry grabbed me. You ought to get married and settle down, Miss
-Fernandez. Best thing for a pretty young woman.”
-
-Teresa blushed at this and turned the topic. There were long hours when
-she was solitary, and somber moods oppressed her. The sense of fear and
-uncertainty was like a crushing weight. Jealously guarded was the secret
-of the real purpose of her quest. She was afraid of murmuring it in her
-sleep. It stood beside her as a dark shadow in the likeness of Colonel
-Fajardo.
-
-Such were her meditations when the yacht sighted the lofty hill of Cocos
-Island and stood in to approach the black headlands that guarded the
-bay. Soon the passage opened to view, and the sheltered water with the
-glistening beach, the jungle, and the cocoanut palms. Captain Truscoe
-was at the wheel. Teresa stood at his elbow. Tensely anxious, she dared
-not say what was in her mind. The skipper bit off a chew of tobacco and
-rapped out:
-
-“No vessel in here. What about that? A wild-goose chase!”
-
-“Is there no other anchorage?” implored Teresa. “Why, I was sure we
-would see the rusty old _Valkyrie_!”
-
-“No other holding ground for steam or sail. Look at the chart for
-yourself.”
-
-“But they were bound to Cocos Island,” panted Teresa. “My friend the
-gunner’s mate—the young man I met in The Broadway Front—he saw the
-_Valkyrie_ heading this way when he spoke her in his destroyer. And Mr.
-Jerry Tobin was absolutely certain of it.”
-
-“Come and gone, maybe,” said Captain Truscoe, “but I never heard of
-these treasure bugs scamperin’ off like that. We’ll take a look ashore.”
-
-He ordered the motor dory made ready. No sooner had the yacht dropped
-anchor than he went to the beach with Teresa. She felt a quivering
-apprehension of misfortune.
-
-They crossed the level sand and came to the boulders strewn in stark
-confusion. Teresa saw wreaths of flowers, black and withered, on a
-yellow mound and the name of Ramon Bazán cut in the face of a huge,
-rough stone.
-
-With a cry she ran to kneel beside the grave, her face buried in her
-hands. Her grief was genuine, her remorse a torment that she had been no
-more affectionate toward this fretful old man who, in his own way, had
-been fond of her. It was incredible that he should have ceased to live.
-From childhood she had taken it for granted that he would always
-continue to sputter and to flit about on his furtive errands. He had
-seemed as permanent as the ancient house in which he dwelt.
-
-She was bewildered, all adrift. There was nothing to explain it, merely
-this pitiful grave amid the primeval desolation of Cocos Island. Captain
-Truscoe was both sympathetic and observant. He was studying the
-inscription on the boulder. The date was chiseled beneath the name of
-Ramon Bazán.
-
-“Only two days ago,” said he. “If your information checks up right, Miss
-Fernandez, they couldn’t have been here much more than a week. And we no
-more than just missed ’em. A kettle o’ fish and no mistake! Sorry about
-your uncle. You found him, didn’t you, but it’s a shock.”
-
-“Yes, he will never run away any more,” sadly smiled Teresa. “He was
-very old, and I suppose it was time for him to rest. But how did he die,
-Captain Truscoe, and where is Captain Cary and the ship and all her
-people?”
-
-“Gone somewhere, Miss Fernandez. Would it be back to the Isthmus? How do
-you feel? Want to go aboard or shall we rummage about?”
-
-They moved away from Ramon Bazán’s boulder and discovered the well-worn
-road with the wheel ruts, and a clutter of small carts and lumber. In so
-short a time this road could not have been made by the _Valkyrie_ party.
-
-“Another crowd, but their vessel has gone, too,” said Captain Truscoe.
-“Here’s a trail off to the left that is fresh cut. That looks more like
-your outfit.”
-
-They entered the leafy path which had been chopped by the Colombian
-sailors. They advanced slowly with a certain caution. At length they
-discovered the devastated camp close to the shattered cliff, a torn
-upheaved waste of rock and gravel. They found fragments of canvas, bits
-of clothing, battered cooking-utensils, broken tools scattered far and
-wide. Captain Truscoe picked up an empty brass shell from a magazine
-rifle. He tossed it in his hand as he said:
-
-“This was a violent place to be. Blown up and shot up. Quite recent. Any
-sensible man would leave it in a hurry and put to sea. I guess it was
-too much for your uncle.”
-
-Teresa was speechless. It was too much for her. She was frowning at a
-broken galvanized pail on which was stenciled _S.S. Valkyrie_. What was
-buried underneath those horrid masses of stone and earth from which
-uprooted trees protruded?
-
-“I don’t blame you for feeling upset,” said the skipper. “This gets my
-goat.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t want to stay here,” Teresa found voice to tell him. “Please
-help me get back to the yacht.”
-
-She had been living in the hope that Cocos Island would be her journey’s
-end, but now the road was blinder, blacker than ever. Later in the day
-she ventured as far as the verdure near the beach and gathered fresh
-flowers to leave on the grave of Uncle Ramon Bazán. Captain Truscoe
-sturdily explored the road built by Don Miguel O’Donnell and returned
-with an extraordinary story of the abandoned hydraulic pipe-line and
-elaborate equipment.
-
-“All hands scurried away, like rats from a hulk,” he reported, very hot
-and tired. “What next?”
-
-“I wish I knew,” mourned Teresa. “I can tell you nothing. You are much
-wiser than I am. I am finished. Now my poor uncle is dead, there is
-nothing to guide me. Is Captain Cary in command of the _Valkyrie_, or is
-he also dead on Cocos Island?”
-
-“It does look mighty random,” agreed Captain Truscoe. “There’s this
-comfort—somebody was alive and able to take the steamer to sea. She
-never rambled off by herself. When it comes to figuring where she went,
-your guess is as good as mine.”
-
-“I can guess nothing. We had better go back to Panama. Is it not so? And
-I will thank Mr. Jerry Tobin and say good-bye.”
-
-“Better stay with ’em until you get your bearings, Miss Fernandez. Maybe
-the _Valkyrie_ will turn up there.”
-
-“Perhaps. If not, I won’t try to find the ship and Captain Cary any
-more. I have done all I could. If the ship does not come to Panama, I
-must go back to Cartagena. It is where I belong. I thought I could get
-away from Cartagena—from something very unpleasant for me—but it is no
-use. It must be as God wills.”
-
-“Stay away, if it’s as bad as that, Miss Fernandez. All right, we sail
-first thing in the morning. Homeward bound means better luck sometimes.”
-
-They made a smooth run of it until a thick night with rain and a
-boisterous wind compelled the small cruiser to reduce her speed. She was
-tossed about more and more until Captain Truscoe hove to before his
-decks were swept.
-
-Toward morning, Teresa Fernandez was in the drowsy state between waking
-and dreaming. She heard a bell. It was distant, almost inaudible. Her
-heart throbbed painfully as she listened. The sound came to her again,
-the ghostly whisper of a bell, but deep-toned and familiar. It was like
-no other bell in all the world, by land or sea.
-
-Was she dreaming? No, this was the stateroom of the yacht, with the
-water surging against the round ports. After some time, the far-away
-lament of the galleon bell came to her ears again. It seemed as though
-its intervals were cadenced, that it was tolling a message which she
-dreaded to hear. _Four bells! Dong-dong—dong-dong!_
-
-She could interpret it. Uncle Ramon Bazán was gone. To her had been
-bequeathed the galleon bell. It was sending her its warning of some
-impending disaster. It meant that she was fated to return to Cartagena
-and so accept the penalty for the deed she had done. The bell had been
-taken from its frame in the _patio_ and carried to sea on the
-_Valkyrie_. No matter where the ship might be, she would hear the bell
-sound its tidings at the appointed time. How could she doubt it? The
-legend had dwelt among her kinfolk for centuries. It was interwoven in
-the fabric of her inherited beliefs. And now that she heard the bell,
-she felt certain she would never see Richard Cary again.
-
-The little stateroom suffocated her. She resolved to go on deck in spite
-of wind and weather. She dressed and snatched an oilskin coat and
-sou’wester from a hook. Sliding back the cabin hatch, she crawled out
-into the welter of rain and spray. The yacht was still hove to, riding
-buoyantly. Teresa groped her way forward to the wheel-house and wrenched
-open the door. Beside the hooded binnacle lamp stood Captain Truscoe
-steadying himself while the flying water swashed against the windows. He
-grasped Teresa’s arm as he said:
-
-“Lonesome down below? Nothing to worry about. This flurry will blow
-itself out with daylight.”
-
-“Did you hear a bell?” besought Teresa, trying to speak calmly. “A
-ship’s bell? No, you would not hear it. The bell was for me and nobody
-else.”
-
-“I can’t hear much in here. Too much racket outside. What’s this about a
-bell, young lady?”
-
-“I heard it,” she answered. “And then I thought—perhaps it might be
-just ringing inside my head—”
-
-“I’ll step on deck. There is nothing in sight,” he replied, willing to
-humor her.
-
-They went out together and held fast to a railing. In a vessel as small
-as this, the sea was very near and clamorous. Stolidly Captain Truscoe
-waited and listened, but he could hear no distant bell.
-
-“You imagined it,” he shouted in Teresa’s ear. “Dishes and glasses
-banging about in the pantry, possibly.”
-
-“It is not ringing now,” said she. “Yes, it may have been imagination.
-It was a strange thing to hear. It frightened me.”
-
-“Better go back to bed. The sea is quieting. I’ll be shoving her along
-soon.”
-
-She hesitated and then went aft to the cabin, the captain escorting her.
-As yet there was no sign of dawn in the watery obscurity of the sky.
-
-“If you hear a bell, you will call me?” she asked.
-
-“Sure thing, Miss Fernandez. Hope you get to sleep. Your berth is the
-most comfortable place to be.”
-
-Troubled sleep came to her nor did she hear the phantom bell again. The
-sea was turning gray outside the ports when she felt the engines pick up
-speed. Rolling heavily, the yacht swung off to resume the course to
-Panama. To Teresa it seemed fantastic that she should have paid such
-serious heed to the fancied message of the galleon bell. It was a
-warning of another kind, that her nerves were all jangled. The
-hallucination ought to be dismissed.
-
-This she was trying to do when there came a knock on the door and
-Captain Truscoe was saying:
-
-“You were right. I heard the bell just now, off the starboard bow. It’s
-not bright enough to see far, but I’ll try to find out what that bell
-is.”
-
-“But I never heard it again,” she exclaimed. “Are you sure?”
-
-“Positive. You are all battened down like a bottle, inside here. There
-is no trouble about picking up the sound of the bell on deck.”
-
-Teresa flew into the oilskin coat. She was out of the cabin in a
-twinkling. Clear and musical came the voice of the galleon bell. It was
-ringing persistently, flinging out a brazen appeal, nor could Teresa
-detect the cadenced and ominous intervals of four bells. She understood
-why she alone had heard it so faintly in the night. Her ear was
-sensitively attuned to its vibrations. They had been an intimate part of
-her existence.
-
-Now the bell was ringing for all to hear. It was somewhere in the gray
-waste of sea, mysterious and invisible. Teresa was reminded of the
-miracle of the marble pulpit which had been wonderfully borne up to
-float with the fickle currents until it was cast ashore under the wall
-of Cartagena, to be carried to the cathedral in devout procession.
-
-“Santa Marta and the angels!” she piously exclaimed, crossing herself.
-“But I can see no ship at all, Captain Truscoe, and what is the bell of
-_Nuestra Señor del Rosario_ doing out there in the ocean and making so
-much noise?”
-
-“Gone mad, I should say. It may be on the bottom and a mermaid is
-pulling the clapper.”
-
-“It is floating, I tell you!” joyously cried Teresa, who was not mad at
-all. “For once it rings good news. You can know that by the way it
-sounds. It is time for a blessed miracle to happen to poor Teresa.”
-
-Captain Truscoe wiped his binocular and gazed again. Daylight was
-driving the mists away. The lowering clouds were lifting. A clear
-sunrise was heralded. A dark speck was discovered against the heaving
-sea. The yacht plunged toward it, flinging the green water aside. The
-speck grew larger. Underneath it was a white ruffle of foam like surf
-playing on the back of a reef.
-
-Soon they could distinguish the galleon bell suspended between two
-upright timbers which swayed wildly to the thrust and swing of the
-waves. The timbers projected from a platform like a raft. Huddled
-between them was an object that moved. It was a man who waved something
-white to let the yacht know that a castaway was on the raft.
-
-Teresa Fernandez needed no binocular. Inner vision told her that Richard
-Cary was found. It could be no one else. For whom else would the galleon
-bell have wrought this marvel?
-
-She watched him very slowly haul himself to his feet, like one dead with
-exhaustion, but indomitable. He stood holding himself erect, his arms
-around the cross-piece from which the bell was hung. His shirt fluttered
-in rags. He was drenched and bruised and battered. As a young god he
-towered in the sight of Teresa Fernandez, and his yellow hair was like
-an aureole.
-
-The yacht swept to leeward of the raft and slackened way. Captain
-Truscoe and two men jumped into the motor dory. Richard Cary paid them
-not the slightest attention. All he saw was a girl in an oilskin coat
-and sou’wester, a girl who unconsciously held out her arms to him. Ah,
-she knew Ricardo loved her! It illumined his face even before his voice
-came huskily down the wind:
-
-“My girl ahoy! This is the luckiest treasure voyage that ever was.”
-
-She blew him a kiss. Captain Truscoe watched his chance and jockeyed the
-motor dory close to the raft. Stiffly Richard Cary released his grip of
-the timber and poised himself with a seaman’s readiness. Into the boat
-he lurched and fell like a log. His tremendous vitality enabled him to
-revive and to gain the deck of the yacht with two sailors heaving at his
-shoulders. They helped him to the cabin where he sprawled upon a couch.
-
-Teresa followed. Maternally her first desire was to have him warm and
-dry, and tucked in bed where she could nurse him. She stood aside while
-Captain Truscoe ordered the steward about, demanding hot whiskey,
-blankets, and clean clothes from the biggest man on board. Shakily, with
-a man to lean on, Richard Cary was able to reach the captain’s room.
-
-“Please wait until the sea is smooth enough to hoist that bell aboard,”
-said he. “Don’t let it go adrift. It has been a good friend to me.”
-
-While watching the door for Teresa, he fell blissfully asleep. She
-tiptoed in an hour later. She had felt no great impatience. It was
-enough to know that he was safe and near to her. Leaning over him, she
-let her fingers lightly brush his ruddy cheek. Brave and simple and
-honest he looked as when she had first known him. She wondered what he,
-too, had dared and suffered while they had been parted. In a word or two
-he had told Captain Truscoe of the loss of the _Valkyrie_. All hands
-saved in the boats. This would be like her Ricardo, preferring not
-himself.
-
-She summoned her courage to meet the ordeal of her confession. The warm
-tint faded from her olive cheek. She was like the Teresa, grave and
-resigned, who had fingered a rosary in her room of the _Tarragona_
-before she had gone to the wharf to confront Colonel Fajardo, when she
-had been willing to pay the price as a woman who had loved and lost.
-
-Ricardo opened his eyes and smiled. He was not too weak to open wide his
-arms and draw her close, so that her head was pillowed upon his mighty
-shoulder. She sighed and whispered:
-
-“You _do_ love me, Ricardo, everything and always? As I love you?”
-
-“More than when I loved you and lost you in Cartagena, Teresa mine,” he
-told her.
-
-“And are you too tired to talk to me?” she anxiously entreated him.
-
-“I had a rough night, but I feel strong enough to start a riot if you
-dare to leave me,” he replied with the laugh that she so delighted to
-hear.
-
-“Please don’t look at my hair,” she implored. “It is all gone. Now I
-look like an ugly black-headed boy. But I cut it off for you. Will that
-make you forgive me?”
-
-“All I can see is that you are beautiful, Teresa dear. I thought you
-might have been ill with fever.”
-
-“Yes, Ricardo, if love is a fever. And I am not cured of that. I was
-trying to find you. And in Panama I was a young man in a bar-room
-hunting for news of you and your ship.”
-
-“The Lord save us!” he exclaimed in dismay. “Is that my reputation? And
-I got into all this trouble trying to find _you_ in Cartagena! You went
-to Cocos Island, I hear, so you know Señor Bazán is dead. But how did
-you know where to look for me? What did you think? Did you get the
-letter I wrote in your uncle’s house?”
-
-“Not a word, Ricardo. All I had to tell me anything was the briar pipe
-you left there. Then I knew you were alive, and so I followed you. It
-was because I could not understand—because I had to find you—”
-
-Her solemn demeanor perplexed him. She drew away and took a chair, her
-hands clasped, one little shoe tapping the rug. For his own part he had
-so much to explain that he burst out:
-
-“No wonder you couldn’t understand. It is a long story, and I can give
-you only the first chapter of it now. That night when I failed to come
-back to the ship? You warned me to be careful, and so did old McClement,
-the chief engineer, but I had a grand opinion of myself. Colonel Fajardo
-decided to blow out my light. I annoyed him. His bravos bungled the job.
-They left me dead in the street, or so they thought.”
-
-“Did Colonel Fajardo think so? Tell me, did he think he had killed you,
-Ricardo?” asked Teresa in a tense voice.
-
-“He must have felt upset about it that night, because I wasn’t quite as
-dead as a mackerel. But I was supposed to die in jail where they threw
-me. So he must have been cheerful enough next morning. Did he show up at
-the ship before she sailed?”
-
-Teresa’s body relaxed. A tremulous sigh fluttered from her lips before
-she said:
-
-“Yes, Ricardo, he came down to the ship. I asked him and he lied to me.
-I knew he lied.”
-
-Her eyes were so wistful, so profoundly tragic, that Ricardo, greatly
-mystified, clasped both her cold hands in one of his and forbore to
-break her silence. She was struggling with the temptation to withhold
-the secret from her lover, now that her justification had been
-vouchsafed. Why tarnish her fair name in his sight and perhaps repel
-him? Men were very jealous of the goodness of the women whom they truly
-loved. She fought down the temptation. Better to live without Ricardo
-than to live with a shadow between them. She was about to speak when
-Ricardo said, with visible embarrassment:
-
-“It will never trouble me, but you ought to know. I can’t go back to
-Cartagena. I suppose you might call me a fugitive from justice. The
-world is big enough to get away from it, but I was not very gentle with
-Colonel Fajardo’s bravos. Two or three of them are not singing and
-playing the guitar any more. And there was a fight on Cocos Island, but
-that incident is closed. I can forget it all if you can, Teresa darling,
-but I have to confess to you.”
-
-“You are a strong man who was fighting for his life, Ricardo,” firmly
-returned Teresa Fernandez. “And I am only a woman who saw her lover dead
-and knew there was no other way to punish the wicked one who had killed
-him. If you say I should go back to Cartagena and suffer the punishment
-of the law, I will go. You have only to say one little word. There is no
-more Colonel Fajardo. Do you understand?”
-
-Richard Cary gazed at her in great pity and love and admiration. Who was
-he to judge? Had he not taken justice into his own hands when he had
-boarded Don Miguel O’Donnell’s schooner and courted fatal conflict? Had
-he slept any more uneasily for it? He had waged private war from the
-galleried streets of Cartagena to the palm-fringed bay of Cocos Island,
-like a roving Cary of Devon. Was there one law of justification for a
-man and another for a woman?
-
-“If you believe in your heart that you did wrong and ought to pay for
-it, Teresa,” he slowly responded, “then we will go back to Cartagena
-together. You and I walk hand-in-hand from now on. But for the life of
-me, I can’t see it that way. Is it going to make you remorseful and
-unhappy? Mind, I go with you if it ought to be done.”
-
-“Ricardo, I am not a bad woman,” she earnestly answered, “but I swear to
-you I feel no sorrow or shame. When it happened, I was willing and ready
-to pay the price, but it was not asked of me. And it was doing penance
-when I went back to Cartagena, just because I had to find out about you.
-What you have told me, that death did strike at you in the dark, is
-enough to make me at peace with myself and with God who must judge me.
-You know how you felt and what you said when you sailed across the
-Caribbean in the _Tarragona_, and saw my old city of Cartagena. It was
-just like you had lived and loved and fought there long ago. Perhaps it
-was that same Richard Cary that went to Cocos Island. And who knows but
-what I was another Teresa Fernandez, of the very long ago, that took it
-into her hands to punish the man who had killed her lover? If it had not
-been for her, there would have been no punishment for him at all. Does
-it make a difference, Ricardo, in what you think of me?”
-
-“Only to make me love you more,” said Ricardo. “We are not going back to
-Cartagena. Life begins now. We have had enough of the past.”
-
-“Then I can be happy,” smiled Teresa, but she also sighed. “If I have
-been wicked and must suffer for it, there is something that will tell
-me, and it is not my own conscience. Some day and somewhere, we will
-have a home, with a garden, Ricardo, and the galleon bell will hang
-there as it did in my uncle’s _patio_. It is a joyful bell now, for it
-has learned to ring good news. But if the day ever comes when Teresa
-hears it toll four bells for her, then she will know it is time for her
-to go. And she will go very gladly, for it will be enough, my precious,
-my splendid Ricardo, to have lived and loved with you.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV
-
-
- A TRANQUIL HAVEN
-
-Richard Cary’s younger brother William was waiting at the railroad
-station with a noisy little automobile in need of paint. The New
-Hampshire hills were no longer blanketed with snow as when he had driven
-the tall sailor to the train in the pung and had bidden him good-bye for
-the voyage to the Caribbean. In drowsy summer heat, the village street a
-shimmering canopy of green, William seriously reflected:
-
-“It was right here, by gosh, that Dick busted the big guy’s arm and
-slapped him into a snowdrift for playing a dirty trick on a stray collie
-dog. Huh, I guess I’d better watch my step while he’s home this time.
-But mother’ll put him in his place. He dassn’t get gay with _her_. And
-she’s got something to say to Dick. He never wrote her for weeks and
-weeks—and now he’s fetchin’ home a wife, a Dago girl he found
-somewheres down there. And he never consulted mother at all. I s’pose he
-figures he can get away with it. I don’t think!”
-
-The wandering Richard may have been in a state of trepidation when he
-swung Teresa from the parlor car, but he masked it with that lazy,
-amiable demeanor that had so annoyed William. The youngster displayed
-both admiration and embarrassment as he caught sight of Richard’s
-foreign bride. “Snappy and mighty easy to look at,” was William’s silent
-verdict of approval, “and she sure would knock ’em cold in little old
-Fairfield. Dick might act dumb sometimes, but he knew how to pick a
-peach.”
-
-And now Teresa won the boy’s undying allegiance by kissing him on the
-cheek and exclaiming in English, instead of the Dago gibberish he had
-dreaded to hear:
-
-“My gracious, Bill, but I am so very glad to see you! Ricardo has told
-me much about you, but it will give you the swelled head if I repeat
-it.”
-
-William blushed to the very last freckle and impetuously replied:
-
-“He don’t have to tell me a thing about you, Mrs.—Mrs. Dick Cary. You
-win.”
-
-Teresa laughed and glanced, with a vivacious interest, down the quiet
-street, at the square Colonial houses, the three or four stores, the
-brick post-office, and the Grange hall, all shaded beneath the arching
-elms. She turned to Richard to say:
-
-“It is almost as sleepy as my old Cartagena, but different. It is your
-home, where your ancestors have lived, and I shall love it.”
-
-“For a while, perhaps,” smiled Richard Cary. “It will be soothing. I am
-homesick for it myself, like finding a safe harbor to rest in.”
-
-He went to look after the luggage while Teresa chose to sit in the front
-seat of the battered little car with William. She had questions to ask,
-by way of forewarning herself, and the younger brother answered them
-artlessly.
-
-“Well, it’s this way, Mrs.—Mrs.—do you really want me to call you
-Teresa, honest?—all mother knows is what Dick wrote her from Panama
-after he got shipwrecked or something. He didn’t spill much news—he
-never does—about all he said was that he had made a voyage in the
-Pacific and came near going to the bottom—and he was coming home to see
-the folks for a spell before he beat it off somewheres else. Then he
-mentioned that he had got married in Panama to a Miss Fernandez. And
-there’s that.”
-
-“And was his mother angry with him, Bill?” demurely inquired Teresa with
-the air of a timid saint.
-
-“Oh, not mad, but upset. Dick has always kept her guessing, and this was
-one thing too much. Why, he told her last time he was home that he was
-off the girls for keeps. She don’t think Dick is fit to look after
-himself. Mothers get some funny ideas, don’t they? But say,
-Mrs.—Miss—Teresa, you don’t have to worry. I’m hard to please myself,
-and mighty particular when it comes to women. And you’ve put it across
-with me already, let me tell you.”
-
-This time it was Teresa who colored with pleasure. The omens seemed more
-auspicious. When Richard rejoined them, he insisted upon riding in the
-back seat with the luggage. William protested. He was expecting to make
-a parade of it, with Dick and his pippin of a bride conspicuously
-together in the tonneau. Fairfield would certainly sit up and take
-notice. He, William, would give ’em an eye-full.
-
-He accepted defeat with good grace because the consolation prize was
-seated beside him. As he spurred the flivver down Main Street, he flung
-over his shoulder to Richard:
-
-“Did you have any adventures this trip? When I asked you last time you
-joshed me something fierce, and I got sore. I hope you’re going to act
-decent and loosen up to a fellow.”
-
-“Well, Bill, it was exciting in spots down yonder in the Caribbean,”
-answered the deep, leisurely accents of brother Dick. “Why, I went
-ashore one night at Cartagena to buy some picture postcards to send you,
-and first thing you know, I—”
-
-Teresa gasped. It was no tale to tell in Fairfield.
-
-“And then what?” eagerly demanded William.
-
-“I had the most awful dose of prickly heat you ever saw in your life.
-Hold on, Bill, stop the car. Here _is_ something really exciting—a new
-porch on the minister’s house, and Charlie Schumacher has painted his
-barber shop, and Frank Morrison is building an addition to the livery
-stable. And you dare to tell me, Teresa, that my town is as dead as
-Cartagena. Here comes Colonel Judah Mason to get his mail! Spry as ever
-and ninety-five years old last Christmas Day.”
-
-“You make me awful tired,” sulkily muttered William. “Just because
-you’re bigger than a house, you think you can treat me like a kid
-without any good sense.”
-
-Teresa mollified him with flattering words and a deference that
-indicated he had found a kindred soul who could appreciate him. She
-became silent, however, when the car jolted into the lane between the
-stone walls and approached the low-roofed farmhouse snuggled close to
-the ground upon a windy hill. Her heart sank. She faced an ordeal more
-disquieting than when she had ventured into The Broadway Front in the
-guise of young Rubio Sanchez on pleasure bent. She fancied the mother of
-Richard Cary to be a woman of formidable stature, harsh and imperious,
-who ruled her household with a rod of iron.
-
-Richard caught a glimpse of his mother’s face at a window, sitting there
-in her best black gown where she had aforetime kept watch for him, or
-had fluttered a handkerchief in farewell. Now she came quickly to the
-granite doorstep, a wisp of a woman whose thin features were set in
-lines of apprehension. Her mouth was austere, her eyes questioning. They
-dwelt upon the huge figure of Richard Cary with an expression commingled
-of affection and rebuke. Before she could greet him, he had leaped from
-the car and picked her up in his arms like a feather-weight of a burden.
-It was a rite of his home-coming and, as always, she objected:
-
-“Bless me, Richard, that’s a trick you learned from your father that’s
-dead and gone. I used to tell him it was dreadful undignified.”
-
-He let her down at the threshold and turned to present his wife. Teresa
-stood wistful and uncertain, yet with a certain amusement that she
-should have felt terrified of meeting this gray-haired little woman who
-looked as if a breath might blow her away. Richard cried, in a mood of
-boyish elation:
-
-“Didn’t I tell you I simply had to make the southern run, mother?
-Something was pulling me. Now I know why. Teresa was at the other end of
-the tow-rope.”
-
-“I am pleased to meet your wife, Richard,” primly replied Mrs. Cary.
-“We’ll do our best to make her comfortable and happy here, I am sure.
-Your room is ready, and dinner will be on the table in half an hour.”
-
-“All I ask is to make your son happy,” said Teresa, her emotions near
-the surface. Her smile was disarming, and the inflections of her voice
-stirred the mother’s heart. Presently Teresa went upstairs, but Richard
-lingered below. Anxiously his mother exclaimed:
-
-“You don’t know how thankful I am to have a few minutes alone with you.
-Seems as if I couldn’t wait. I don’t mean to fret, but who is she and
-who are her folks, and how did it happen? She don’t act as foreign as I
-expected and she’s as pretty as a picture and has sweet, ladylike ways,
-but—”
-
-“Better get acquainted before you borrow trouble,” drawled the beaming
-Richard. “To begin with, she is an orphan, which ought to appeal to your
-sympathy. The last near relative she had, an uncle, died not long ago.
-He was the old gentleman I sailed for in the _Valkyrie_ that was lost in
-collision. When it comes to family, she can match ancestors with the
-Carys and Chichesters and have some left over.”
-
-“And where did you meet her, Richard?”
-
-“On shipboard going south. It was a case of love at first sight.”
-
-“Hum-m! I never set any great store by hasty marriages, but there’s
-exceptions to every rule and let us hope and pray this will be one of
-them. Isn’t Teresa a Romanist? Does she have to confess to a priest
-every so often? Did you tell her we didn’t have such a thing in
-Fairfield?”
-
-“No; she confesses her sins to me and I grant her absolution,”
-truthfully answered Richard. “Anything more?”
-
-“Don’t be frivolous,” she admonished him. “I have a right to know. She
-dresses real elegant, I must say—in good taste, but expensive. I’m
-saying nothing against your wife, but if she’s extravagant and slack how
-can you support her and keep her contented? Has she means of her own?”
-
-“I didn’t marry her for money,” carelessly returned the son. “As far as
-I know, she didn’t have a penny when I met her. Now please take time to
-get your bearings and you’ll bless the day I first laid eyes on Teresa
-Fernandez.”
-
-Mrs. Cary sighed, brightened a little, and tripped to the kitchen to
-look in the oven. In the low-raftered dining-room the table was already
-set with the pink luster ware, the Canton cups, the thin silver spoons,
-the hand-woven linen cloth treasured in Grandmother Cary’s cedar chest.
-When Teresa came downstairs she wore a white waist and skirt much like
-the uniform, plain, immaculate, in which Richard had first beheld her.
-She appeared so briskly efficient, so different from Mrs. Cary’s
-conceptions of the indolent ladies of Spanish America, that it was like
-a rift in the cloud.
-
-At the dinner table it was Teresa, alert and light of foot, who left her
-chair when anything was needed from the sideboard or kitchen. To Mrs.
-Cary’s objections she replied, like a gay mutineer, that she was one of
-the family and expected to earn her passage. So gracefully did she wait
-on them that the infatuated young William could not eat for watching
-her. Richard Cary’s mother, a martinet of a New England housekeeper of
-the old school, felt her doubts and scruples fading.
-
-They were nearer vanishing entirely when, after dinner, Teresa donned an
-apron and insisted upon washing the dishes and tidying up the kitchen.
-Sweetly but firmly she refused to listen to the mother’s protestations
-and sent her to the porch to sit and talk with Richard. William hovered
-in the doorway until he was permitted to ply a dish-towel, subject to a
-rigid supervision of his handiwork. Teresa sang lilting snatches of
-Spanish ballads as she toiled. These New England women, she reflected,
-so proud of their housekeeping? Pouf! Had they ever lived in a steamer
-of a first-class passenger service?
-
-When, at length, Ricardo’s mother was permitted to enter the kitchen
-from which she had been so amazingly evicted, her demeanor was critical
-in the extreme, as if expecting to have to do the work all over again.
-The competent Teresa, still singing, was wiping the last specks of dust
-from remote shelves and corners. William was polishing the copper
-hot-water boiler for dear life.
-
-“Captain’s inspection?” cried the blithe Teresa. “We are not quite
-ready, Bill and I, but to-morrow—_Valgame Dios_, I will help you make
-your house shine from the main deck to the top.”
-
-Mrs. Cary inspected, marveled, and was conquered. It was beyond belief
-that her careless, absent-minded Richard should have shown the
-surpassing judgment to select a jewel of a wife like this! Inherited
-reserve breaking its bonds, the mother exclaimed:
-
-“Teresa, my dear, you are smarter than chain lightning. First thing you
-know, I’ll be bragging about you to every woman in Fairfield. I intend
-to propose you for membership in the home economics department of our
-Woman’s Club.”
-
-“And I will dance the fandango with William to amuse them,” said Teresa,
-with a naughty twinkle in her eye.
-
-In the afternoon she walked with Ricardo across the rolling fields of
-the Cary farm. With a pair of black horses William was mowing a thick
-stand of red clover. The strident clatter of the cutter bar was like a
-familiar song to the elder son, to carry him back to his boyhood. His
-mind was at peace, relaxed and untroubled by turbulent memories.
-
-The tranquil landscape had laid its spell also upon the heart of Teresa.
-Her eyes filled and her voice had a pensive cadence as she said:
-
-“Is this a dream, Ricardo mine? Or was all that a dream, down by the
-Caribbean Sea, and is this true? I feel just like you, that perhaps I
-have had two lives to live. Ah, how I beseech the dear God and the Holy
-Mary to let this life last, maybe not here, but anywhere with you. This
-is what I told you when I found you drifting with the galleon bell.”
-
-“Forget the galleon bell,” he told her, “I am sure it will never ring
-again. And we will say no more about the Spanish Main. Let my mother
-guess and wonder what happened.”
-
-“Yes, Ricardo, it could not be told in Fairfield,” sighed Teresa, “not
-the least little bit. Already I can see that. We will be a mystery, you
-and I—”
-
-Like a processional vestured in beautiful garments of green, the days of
-the brief New England summer went gliding by. Brawny and untiring,
-Richard helped William with the haying and did the work of three hired
-men. Teresa took more and more of the household routine upon herself,
-and the mother was affectionately compelled to enjoy the first vacation
-in years. In their leisure hours the married lovers wandered through the
-countryside in the disreputable little car, or went fishing on the pond.
-
-To his mother Richard made no mention of future plans. She was
-accustomed to his indifferent moods when at home from sea, but now he
-was a man with new responsibilities. These ought to arouse his ambition
-and make him bestir himself. Therefore she ventured to inquire:
-
-“Are you calculating to spend the winter with me, Richard? Not but what
-you and Teresa are as welcome as the flowers in May, but she is used to
-more comforts and luxuries than we can give her on this old farm, and
-how do you intend to take care of her? What money I’ve saved in the bank
-belongs to you, and I don’t begrudge your spending every penny of it,
-but, well, it kind of worries me. You told me she had no means of her
-own—”
-
-“That reminds me, mother,” her son replied, blandly unconcerned. “I
-found a letter from Cartagena in the mail-box. Teresa has gone to the
-village with Bill, so she hasn’t seen it yet. It is from a Señor Alonzo
-de Mello, a banker who looked after the business interests of Teresa’s
-uncle. I sent him a report from Panama of the loss of the _Valkyrie_ and
-the death of Señor Ramon Bazán. He encloses a letter to Teresa in
-Spanish. Here is what he writes me:”
-
- DEAR CAPTAIN CARY:
-
- I send you my joyful congratulations on your marriage to Teresa
- Fernandez whom I have always loved like my own daughter. Your
- report was received, informing me that both the ship and poor
- Ramon Bazán were no more. It will interest you to know that on
- the day before he sailed from Cartagena he made a will, properly
- executed, leaving everything he possessed to his niece. There
- had been other wills like this, but he had torn them up in fits
- of temper.
-
- Your report was confirmed in all respects by the officers and
- crew of the _Valkyrie_ who, as you know, were landed at Corinto
- by the Italian steamer _Giuseppe Balderno_ which sank your
- vessel in collision. They made their way back to Panama,
- arriving there soon after you sailed for New York. My agent
- interviewed them in behalf of the estate of the deceased owner.
- They proposed chartering a sailing vessel in all haste and
- returning to Cocos Island. This information was confidentially
- imparted.
-
- The insurance underwriters have accepted the evidence of total
- loss, with no negligence on the part of the masters and crew of
- the _Valkyrie_. I am therefore remitting, as per draft enclosed
- to the order of Señora Teresa Cary, the sum of thirty thousand
- dollars in settlement of the marine policies issued against the
- vessel. I am also writing Teresa regarding the house and
- contents and such other property as belonged to her departed
- uncle. Peace to his soul! My cordial salutations to a gallant
- shipmaster who deserves better fortune on his next voyage.
- Placing myself at your disposal, I am
-
- Faithfully yours
- ALONZO DE MELLO
-
-Richard Cary’s mother was tremulous with excitement as she gasped: “Why,
-Teresa is an heiress—_thirty thousand dollars_ right in her hands, and
-other property besides. And she never so much as hinted that she might
-be a rich woman!”
-
-“Teresa didn’t know,” explained Richard. “There was no putting your
-finger on poor Ramon Bazán. He was very flighty. Here comes Teresa now.
-This ought to please her.”
-
-“If she doesn’t get all stirred up, I shall feel like shaking you both.”
-
-The heiress gracefully descended from the antique flivver, assisted by
-the adoring William.
-
-To her Richard calmly announced:
-
-“Here is a draft for thirty thousand—insurance on the _Valkyrie_. Uncle
-Ramon forgave you for all your insults.”
-
-“And he did leave his money to me?” cried Teresa in accents of
-self-reproach. “And I was so awful horrid to him! It is from Señor de
-Mello? What does he say?”
-
-Richard gave her the enclosure in Spanish. She read it swiftly to the
-end and looked up to observe:
-
-“He even left me the little brown monkey, Ricardo. That is too much. I
-will send word to give that monkey to somebody that will be good to it,
-with a pension, eh? The house he can sell or rent, Señor de Mello says,
-if we do not wish to live in Cartagena. Poor Uncle Ramon! I am sad and
-ashamed of myself because I was not always nice to him. I guess I must
-cry a little.”
-
-Presently the heiress brightened and went on to announce, with headlong
-ardor:
-
-“First I will buy William a big, new, shiny automobile and give him
-plenty of money to go through college with. Then I will put an electric
-light plant in this old farmhouse, and a tiled kitchen and plenty of
-bathrooms and—let me see—I think I will give your heretic church in
-Fairfield a new organ. How much money have I got left, Ricardo?”
-
-“Quite a package, sweetheart. Don’t stop yet. I am enjoying it.”
-
-Mrs. Cary raised her hands in horror, shaken to the depths of her
-thrifty soul.
-
-“For the land’s sake, child, keep the money for yourself. What sense is
-there in spending it on us? I declare you make my head spin like a top.”
-
-“Then I will talk it over with Ricardo,” said Teresa. “He can help me
-find some more ways to spend it.”
-
-These profligate intentions could not be thwarted, nor did Richard Cary
-attempt to do so. He realized that gratitude and affection impelled her;
-also that it was more than this. When alone in the world and earning a
-living at sea, she had been anxious to gain money and save it. Now she
-had a shield and a protector in her yellow-haired giant of a husband who
-could master all things. And there was a sense that in doing good to
-others she was doing penance for a certain tragic episode which the
-fates had darkly, inscrutably thrust upon her.
-
-Not many weeks after this sensational shower of riches, another letter
-came to Captain Richard Cary. It had been mailed from a Costa Rican
-port. The writer was the unterrified Charlie Burnham, late chief
-engineer of the _Valkyrie_.
-
- DEAR SKIPPER:
-
- Here we are again, on Cocos Island, and all hands sorry you
- aren’t bossing the outfit. Mr. Bradley Duff is still going
- strong and sober, and is a good old scout. He didn’t fall off
- the wagon even when we blew into Jerry Tobin’s dump in Panama.
- You sure did put the fear of God into him. Mr. Panchito, the
- second mate, bought a hundred dollars’ worth of fancy shirts and
- neckties. He is one natural-born strutter. All hands are well
- and still with us. You ought to have heard us yell when we
- learned you had not been drowned in the silly old _Valkyrie_. We
- had to give you up that night she went down. Bradley Duff
- punched the Italian hophead of a skipper in the jaw because he
- wouldn’t stick around the wreckage and hunt for you any longer.
-
- Now about the treasure! Better come back and watch us root it
- out. I extended Don Miguel O’Donnell’s hydraulic pipe-line and
- it works pretty. We have been washing for two weeks and the
- nozzle kicks the gravel out in great style. The dynamite that
- Don Miguel touched off under us mussed things up something
- frightful. What makes the worst trouble is the tremendous chunk
- of cliff that was jarred loose and spilled all over the place.
- The rock is soft, but hard to break up and handle.
-
- Anyhow, we have uncovered some more silver, but no gold ingots
- so far. What we are getting out now isn’t so scattering, but in
- solid lots of bullion—sometimes as much as we can load into one
- of Don Miguel’s two-wheel carts. You don’t see us quitting, do
- you? Atta boy! The agreement stands, and all hands have signed a
- paper to that effect. Half of what we get goes to you. Jerry
- Tobin told us in Panama that you had married Papa Ramon’s niece,
- and how the wedding was pulled off in his bungalow.
-
- Now if Señor Bazán left his property to this Miss Fernandez, as
- perhaps he did, you and she will have to split your fifty per
- cent of the treasure. That is how Bradley Duff and I dope it
- out. Your wife has a look-in because it was her uncle’s chart
- that steered us to where the treasure was buried. And you draw
- down your slice because if you hadn’t chased Don Miguel
- O’Donnell off the island, where would we be at now?
-
- This letter is sent in a Costa Rican fishing schooner that
- touched here for fresh water, being blown offshore. We filled
- the crew full of rum and kept them close to the beach so they
- didn’t get wise to our finding any treasure. They thought we
- were just another bunch of loonies that had come to rummage
- Cocos Island.
-
- I will send you another report as soon as I get a chance. Please
- tell your wife that we have built a nice stone wall around her
- uncle’s grave. _Adios_, and here’s looking at you!
-
- Sincerely yours
- CHARLES R. BURNHAM
- Chief Engineer
-
-There came a September day when summer lingered in the warm haze and the
-soft westerly winds. A wanton touch of frost had painted the foliage,
-here and there, in tints of yellow or crimson. Teresa and Ricardo
-motored farther than usual nor turned until they reached the seacoast,
-many miles from Fairfield. A small surf crooned among the weedy rocks or
-ran hissing up the golden sands. On the distant horizon was a sooty
-banner of smoke from a steamer’s funnel. A coasting schooner lifted a
-bit of topsail as small and white as the wing of a gull.
-
-Hand-in-hand, the lovers climbed the nearest headland. While they stood
-there, the wind veered. Instead of breathing off the land, with the
-scents of field and woodland, it blew strongly from the eastward. It
-came sweeping over the salt sea, with a tang and a boisterous vigor
-unlike the soft airs of the summer that tarried reluctant to depart.
-
-Cool, pungent, it seemed to Richard Cary such a wind as had whipped the
-Caribbean to foam and pelted the decks with spray when he had joyously
-faced it upon the bridge of the swinging _Tarragona_, the wind that long
-ago had blown the clumsy ships of Devon across to the Spanish Main.
-
-He sighed and brushed a hand across his eyes. Teresa stood with parted
-lips and face aglow. A long silence and she said:
-
-“I feel it, too, Ricardo. Shall we go south again? Not to Cartagena,
-but—”
-
-His arm swept toward the south in a gesture large and eloquent as he
-exclaimed:
-
-“Nor to Cocos Island, Teresa dear. But you and I belong in those seas,
-somewhere. We have always belonged there. We have been at anchor long
-enough.”
-
-“The wind and the sea,” she murmured. “Yes, they are calling us. We had
-better go.”
-
- THE END
-
-
-
-
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