BY
JACK LONDON
ILLUSTRATIONS BY WLADYSLAW T. BENDA
the heavy clumsiness of her lines, the Aorai handled easily in the light
breeze, and her captain ran her well in before he hove to just outside the suck
of the surf. The atoll of Hikueru lay low on the water, a circle of pounded
coral sand a hundred yards wide, twenty miles in circumference, and from three
to five feet above the high-water mark. On the bottom of the huge and glassy
lagoon was much pearl shell, and from the deck of the schooner, across the
slender ring of the atoll, the divers could be seen at work. But the lagoon had
no entrance for even a trading schooner. With a favoring breeze cutters could
win in through the tortuous and shallow channel, but the schooners lay off and
on outside and sent in their small boats.
The Aorai swung out a boat smartly, into
which sprang half a dozen brown-skinned sailors clad only in scarlet
loin-cloths. They took the oars, while in the stern-sheets, at the steering
sweep, stood a young man garbed in the tropic white that marks the European.
But he was not all European. The golden strain of Polynesia betrayed itself in
the sun-gilt of his fair skin and cast up golden sheens and lights through the
glimmering blue of his eyes. Raoul he was, Alexandré Raoul, youngest son
of Marie Raoul, the wealthy quarter-caste who owned and managed half a dozen
trading schooners similar to the Aorai. Across an eddy just outside the
entrance, and in and through and over a boiling tide-trip, the boat fought its
way to the mirrored calm of the lagoon. Young Raoul leaped out upon the white
sand and shook hands with a tall native. The man's chest and shoulders were
magnificent, but the stump of a right arm, beyond the flesh of which the
age-whitened bone projected several inches, attested the encounter with a shark
that had put an end to his diving days and made him a fawner and an intriguer
for small favors.
"Have you heard, Alec?" were his first
words. "Mapuhi has found a pearl — such a pearl. Never was there one
like it ever fished up in Hikueru, nor in all the Paumotus, nor in all the
world. Buy it from him. He has it now. And remember that I told you first. He
is a fool and you can get it cheap. Have you any tobacco?"
Straight up the beach to a shack under a
pandanus-tree Raoul headed. He was his mother's supercargo, and his business
was to comb all the Paumotus for the wealth of copra, shell, and pearls that
they yielded up.
He was a young supercargo, it was his second
voyage in such capacity, and he suffered much secret worry from his lack of
experience in pricing pearls. But when Mapuhi exposed the pearl to his sight he
managed to suppress the startle it gave him, and to maintain a careless,
commercial expression on his face. For the pearl had struck him a blow. It was
large as a pigeon-egg, a perfect sphere, of a whiteness that reflected
opalescent lights from all colors about it. It was alive. Never had he seen
anything like it. When Mapuhi dropped it into his hand he was surprised by the
weight of it. That showed that it was a good pearl. He examined it closely,
through a pocket magnifying glass. It was without flaw or blemish. The purity
of it seemed almost to melt into the atmosphere out of his hand. In the shade
it was softly luminous, gleaming like a tender moon. So translucently white was
it, that when he dropped it into a glass of water he had difficulty in finding
it. So straight and swiftly had it sunk to the bottom that he knew its weight
was excellent.
"Well, what do you want for it?" he
asked, with a fine assumption of nonchalance.
"I want — " Mapuhi began, and
behind him, framing his own dark face, the dark faces of two women and a girl
nodded concurrence in what he wanted. Their heads were bent forward, they were
animated by a suppressed eagerness, their eyes flashed avariciously.
"I want a house," Mapuhi went on.
"It must have a roof of galvanized iron and an octagon-drop-clock. It must
be six fathoms long with a porch all around. A big room must be in the center,
with a round table in the middle of it and that octagon-drop-clock on the wall.
There must be four bedrooms, two on each side of the big room, and in each
bedroom must be an iron bed, two chairs, and a washstand. And back of the house
must be a kitchen, a good kitchen, with pots and pans and a stove. And you must
build the house on my island, which is Fakarava."
"Is that all?" Raoul asked
incredulously.
"There must be a sewing-machine," spoke
up Tefara, Mapuhi's wife.
"Not forgetting of the
octagon-drop-clock," added Nauri, Mapuhi's mother.
"Yes, that is all," said Mapuhi.
Young Raoul laughed. He laughed long and
heartily. But while he laughed, he secretly performed problems in mental
arithmetic. He had never built a house in his life, and his notions concerning
house-building were hazy. While he laughed, he calculated the cost of the
voyage to Tahiti for materials, of the materials themselves, of the voyage back
again to Fakarava, and the cost of landing the materials and of building the
house. It would come to four thousand French dollars, allowing a margin of
safety — four thousand French dollars were equivalent to twenty thousand
French francs. It was impossible. How was he to know the value of such a pearl?
Twenty thousand francs was a lot of money — and of his mother's money at
that.
"Mapuhi," he said, "you are a big
fool. Set a money price."
But Mapuhi shook his head, and the three heads
behind him shook with his.
"I want the house," he said. "It
must be six fathoms long with a porch all around —"
"Yes, yes," Raoul interrupted. "I
know all about your house, but it won't do. I'll give you a thousand Chili
dollars in trade."
The four heads chorused a silent negative.
"And a hundred Chili dollars in
trade."
"I want the house," Mapuhi began.
"What good will the house do you?"
Raoul demanded. "The first hurricane that comes along will wash it away.
You ought to know. Captain Raffy says it looks like a hurricane right
now."
"Not on Fakarava," said Mapuhi.
"The land is much higher there. On this island, yes. Any hurricane can
sweep Hikueru. I will have the house on Fakarava. It must be six fathoms long
with a porch all around —"
And Raoul listened again to the tale of the
house. Several hours he spent in the endeavor to hammer the house-obsession out
of Mapuhi's mind; but Mapuhi's mother and wife, and Ngakura, Mapuhi's daughter,
bolstered him in his resolve for the house. Through the open doorway, while he
listened for the twentieth time to the detailed description of the house that
was wanted, Raoul saw his schooner's second boat draw up on the beach. The
sailors rested on the oars, advertising haste to be gone. The first mate of the
Aorai sprang ashore, exchanged a word with the one-armed native, then
hurried toward Raoul. The day grew suddenly dark, as a squall obscured the face
of the sun. Across the lagoon Raoul could see approaching the ominous line of
the puff of wind.
"Captain Raffy says you've got to get to
hell outa here," was the mate's greeting. "If there's any shell,
we've got to run the risk of picking it up later on — so he says. The
barometer's dropped to twenty-nine-seventy."
The gust of wind struck the pandanus-tree
overhead and tore through the palms beyond, flinging half a dozen ripe
cocoanuts, with heavy thuds, to the ground. Then came the rain out of the
distance, advancing with the roar of a gale of wind and causing the water of
the lagoon to smoke in driven windrows. The sharp rattle of the first drops was
on the leaves when Raoul sprang to his feet.
"A thousand Chili dollars, cash down,
Mapuhi," he said. "And two hundred Chili dollars in trade."
"I want a house —" the other
began.
"Mapuhi!" Raoul yelled, in order to
make himself heard. "You are a fool!"
He flung out of the house, and, side by side with
the mate, fought his way down the beach toward the boat. They could not see the
boat. The tropic rain sheeted about them so that they could see only the beach
under their feet and the spiteful little waves from the lagoon that snapped and
bit at the sand. A figure appeared through the deluge. It was Huru-Huru, the
man with the one arm.
"Did you get the pearl?" he yelled in
Raoul's ear.
"Mapuhi is a fool!" was the answering
yell, and the next moment they were lost to each other in the descending
water.
Half an hour later, Huru-Huru, watching from the
seaward side of the atoll, saw the two boats hoisted in and the Aorai
pointing her nose out to sea. And near her, just come in from the sea on the
wings of the squall, he saw another schooner hove to and dropping a boat into
the water. He knew her. It was the Orohena, owned by Toriki, the
half-caste trader, who served as his own supercargo and who doubtlessly was
even then in the stern-sheets of the boat. Huru-Huru chuckled. He knew that
Mapuhi owed Toriki for trade-goods advanced the year before.
The squall had passed. The hot sun was blazing
down, and the lagoon was once more a mirror. But the air was sticky like
mucilage, and the weight of it seemed to burden the lungs and make breathing
difficult.
"Have you heard the news, Toriki?"
Huru-Huru asked. "Mapuhi has found a pearl. Never was there a pearl like
it ever fished up in Hikueru, nor anywhere in the Paumotus, nor anywhere in all
the world. Mapuhi is a fool. Besides, he owes you money. Remember that I told
you first. Have you any tobacco?"
And to the grass-shack of Mapuhi went Toriki. He
was a masterful man, withal a fairly stupid one. Carelessly he glanced at the
wonderful pearl — glanced for a moment only; and carelessly he dropped it
into his pocket.
"You are lucky," he said. "It is a
nice pearl. I will give you credit on the books."
"I want a house," Mapuhi began, in
consternation. "It must be six fathoms —"
"Six fathoms your grandmother!" was the
trader's retort. "You want to pay up your debts, that's what you want. You
owed me twelve hundred dollars Chili. Very well; you owe them no longer. The
amount is squared. Besides, I will give you credit for two hundred Chili. If,
when I get to Tahiti, the pearl sells well, I will give you credit for another
hundred — that will make three hundred. But mind, only if the pearl sells
well. I may even lose money on it."
Mapuhi folded his arms in sorrow and sat with
bowed head. He had been robbed of his pearl. In place of the house, he had paid
a debt. There was nothing to show for the pearl.
"You are a fool," said Tefara.
"You are a fool," said Nauri, his
mother. "Why did you let the pearl into his hand?"
"What was I to do?" Mapuhi protested.
"I owed him the money. He knew I had the pearl. You heard him yourself ask
to see it. I had not told him. He knew. Somebody else told him. And I owed him
the money."
"Mapuhi is a fool," mimicked
Ngakura.
She was twelve years old and did not know any
better. Mapuhi relieved his feelings by sending her reeling from a box on the
ear; while Tefara and Nauri burst into tears and continued to upbraid him after
the manner of women.
Huru-Huru, watching on the beach, saw a third
schooner that he knew heave to outside the entrance and drop a boat. It was the
Hira, well named, for she was owned by Levy, the German Jew, the
greatest pearl-buyer of them all, and, as was well known, Hira was the Tahitian
god of fisherman and thieves.
"Have you heard the news?" Huru-Huru
asked, as Levy, a fat man with massive asymmetrical features, stepped out upon
the beach. "Mapuhi has found a pearl. There was never a pearl like it in
Hikueru, in all the Paumotus, in all the world. Mapuhi is a fool. He has sold
it to Toriki for fourteen hundred Chili — I listened outside and heard.
Toriki is likewise a fool. You can buy it from him cheap. Remember that I told
you first. Have you any tobacco?"
"Where is Toriki?"
"In the house of Captain Lynch drinking
absinthe. He has been there an hour."
And while Levy and Toriki drank absinthe and
chaffered over the pearl, Huru-huru listened and heard the stupendous price of
twenty-five thousand francs agreed upon.
It was at this time that both the Orohena
and the Hira, running in close to the shore, began firing guns and
signaling frantically. The three men stepped outside in time to see the two
schooners go hastily about and head off shore, dropping mainsails and
flying-jibs on the run in the teeth of the squall that heeled them far over on
the whitened water. Then the rain blotted them out.
"They'll be back after it's over," said
Toriki. "We'd better be getting out of here."
"I reckon the glass has fallen some
more," said Captain Lynch.
He was a white-bearded sea-captain, too old for
service, who had learned that the only way to live on comfortable terms with
his asthma was on Hikueru. He went inside to look at the barometer.
"Great God!" they heard him exclaim,
and rushed in to join with him at staring at a dial which marked
twenty-nine-twenty.
Again they came out, this time anxiously to
consult sea and sky. The squall had cleared away, but the sky remained
overcast. The two schooners, under all sail and joined by a third, could be
seen making back. A veer in the wind induced them to slack off sheets, and five
minutes afterward a sudden veer from the opposite quarter caught all three
schooners aback, and those on shore could see the boom-tackles being slacked
away or case off on the jump. The sound of the surf was loud, hollow, and
menacing, and a heavy swell was setting in. A terrible sheet of lightning burst
before their eyes, illuminating the dark day, and the thunder rolled wildly
around them.
Toriki and Levy broke into a run for their boats,
the latter ambling along like a panic-stricken hippopotamus. As their two boats
swept out the entrance, they passed the boat of the Aorai coming in. In
the stern-sheets, encouraging the rowers, was Raoul. Unable to shake the vision
of the pearl from his mind, he was returning to accept Mapuhi's price of a
house.
He landed on the beach in the midst of a driving
thunder squall that was so dense that he collided with Huru-Huru before he saw
him.
"Too late," yelled Huru-Huru.
"Mapuhi sold it to Toriki for fourteen hundred Chili, and Toriki sold it
to Levy for twenty-five thousand francs. And Levy will sell it in France for a
hundred thousand francs. Have you any tobacco?"
Raoul was relieved. His troubles about the pearl
were over. He need not worry any more, even if he had not got the pearl. But he
did not believe Huru-Huru. Mapuhi might well have sold it for fourteen hundred
Chili, but that Levy, who knew pearls, should have paid twenty-five thousand
francs was too wide a stretch. Raoul decided to interview Captain Lynch on the
subject, but when he arrived at the ancient mariner's house he found him
looking wide-eyed at the barometer.
"What do you read it?" Captain Lynch
asked anxiously, rubbing his spectacles and staring again at the
instrument.
"Twenty-nine-ten," said Raoul. "I
have never seen it so low before."
"I should say not!" snorted the
captain. "Fifty years boy and man on all the seas, and I've never seen it
go down to that. Listen!"
They stood for a moment, while the surf rumbled
and shook the house. Then they went outside. The squall had passed. They could
see the Aorai lying becalmed a mile away and pitching and tossing madly
in the tremendous seas that rolled in stately procession down out of the
northeast and flung themselves furiously upon the coral shore. One of the
sailors from the boat pointed at the mouth of the passage and shook his head.
Raoul looked and saw a white anarchy of foam and surge.
"I guess I'll stay with you to-night,
Captain," he said; then turned to the sailor and told him to haul the boat
out and to find shelter for himself and fellows.
"Twenty-nine flat," Captain Lynch
reported, coming out from another look at the barometer, a chair in his
hand.
He sat down and stared at the spectacle of the
sea. The sun came out, increasing the sultriness of the day, while the dead
calm still held. The seas continued to increase in magnitude.
"What makes that sea is what gets me,"
Raoul muttered petulantly. "There is no wind, yet look at it, look at that
fellow there!"
Miles in length, carrying tens of thousands of
tons in weight, its impact shook the frail atoll like an earthquake. Captain
Lynch was startled.
"Gracious!" he exclaimed, half-rising
from his chair, then sinking back.
"But there is no wind," Raoul
persisted. "I could understand it if there was wind along with
it."
"You'll get the wind soon enough without
worryin' for it," was the grim reply.
The two men sat on in silence. The sweat stood
out on their skin in myriads of tiny drops that ran together forming blotches
of moisture, which, in turn, coalesced into rivulets that dripped to the
ground. They panted for breath, the old man's efforts being especially painful.
A sea swept up on the beach, licking around the trunks of the cocoanuts and
subsided almost at their feet.
"Way past high-water mark," Captain
Lynch remarked; "and I've been here eleven years." He looked at his
watch. "It is three o'clock."
A man and woman, at their heels a motley
following of brats and curs, trailed disconsolately by. They came to a halt
beyond the house, and, after much irresolution, sat down in the sand. A few
minutes later another family trailed in from the opposite direction, the men
and women carrying a heterogeneous assortment of possessions. And soon several
hundred persons of all ages and sexes were congregated about the captain's
dwelling. He called to one new arrival, a woman with a nursing babe in her
arms, and in answer received the information that her house had just been swept
into the lagoon.
This was the highest spot of land in miles, and
already, in many places on either hand, the great seas were making a clean
breach of the slender ring of the atoll and surging into the lagoon. Twenty
miles around stretched the ring of the atoll, and in no place was it more than
fifty fathoms wide. It was the height of the diving season, and from all the
islands around, even as far as Tahiti, the natives had gathered.
"There are twelve hundred men, women, and
children here," said Captain Lynch. "I wonder how many will be here
to-morrow morning."
"But why don't it blow? — that's what
I want to know," Raoul demanded.
"Don't worry, young man, don't worry; you'll
get your troubles fast enough."
Even as Captain Lynch spoke, a great watery mass
smote the atoll. The sea-water churned about them three inches deep under their
chairs. A low wail of fear went up from the many women. The children, with
clasped hands, stared at the immense rollers and cried piteously. Chickens and
cats, wading perturbedly in the water, as by common consent, with flight and
scramble, took refuge on the roof of the captain's house. A Paumotan, with a
litter of new-born puppies in a basket, climbed into a cocoanut tree and twenty
feet above the ground made the basket fast. The mother floundered about in the
water beneath, whining and yelping.
And still the sun shone brightly and the dead
calm continued. They sat and watched the seas and the insane pitching of the
Aorai. Captain Lynch gazed at the huge mountains of water sweeping in
until he could gaze no more. He covered his face with his hands to shut out the
sight; then went into the house.
"Twenty-eight-sixty," he said quietly
when he returned.
In his arm was a coil of rope. He cut it into
two-fathom lengths, giving one to Raoul, retaining one for himself, and
distributing the remainder among the women with the advice to pick out a tree
and climb.
A light air began to blow out of the northeast,
and the fan of it on his cheek seemed to cheer Raoul up. He could see the
Aorai trimming her sheets and heading off shore, and he regretted that
he was not on her. She would get away at any rate, but as for the atoll
—— A sea breached across, almost sweeping him off his feet, and he
selected a tree. Then he remembered the barometer and ran back to the house. He
encountered Captain Lynch on the same errand, and together they went in.
"Twenty-eight-twenty," said the old
mariner. "It's going to be fair hell around here — what was
that?"
The air seemed filled with the rush of something.
The house quivered and vibrated, and they heard the thrumming of a mighty note
of sound. The windows rattled. Two panes crashed; a draught of wind tore in,
striking them and making them stagger. The door opposite banged shut,
shattering the latch. The white door-knob crumbled in fragments to the floor.
Then came a new sound like the rattle of musketry, as the spray from a sea
struck the wall of the house. Captain Lynch looked at his watch. It was four
o'clock. He put on a coat of pilot cloth, unhooked the barometer, and stowed it
away in a capacious pocket. Again a sea struck the house, with a heavy thud,
and the light building tilted, twisted quarter-around on its foundation, and
sank down, its floor at an angle of ten degrees.
Raoul went out first. The wind caught him and
whirled him away. He noted that it had hauled around to the east. With a great
effort he threw himself on the sand, crouching and holding his own. Captain
Lynch, driven like a wisp of straw, sprawled over him. Two of the
Aorai's sailors, leaving a cocoanut tree to which they had been
clinging, came to their aid, leaning against the wind at impossible angles and
fighting and clawing every inch of the way.
The old man's joints were stiff and he could not
climb, so the sailors, by means of short ends of rope tied together, hoisted
him up the trunk, a few feet at a time, till they could make him fast, at the
top of the tree, fifty feet from the ground. Raoul passed his length of rope
around the base of an adjacent tree and stood looking on. The wind was
frightful. He had never dreamed it could blow so hard. A sea breached across
the atoll, wetting him to the knees ere it subsided into the lagoon. The sun
had disappeared, and a lead-colored twilight had settled down. A few drops of
rain, driving horizontally, struck him. The impact was like that of leaden
pellets. A splash of salt spray struck his face. It was like the slap of a
man's hand. His cheeks stung, and involuntary tears of pain were in his
smarting eyes. Several hundred natives had taken to the trees, and he could
have laughed at the bunches of human fruit clustering in the tops. Then, being
Tahitian-born, he doubled his body at the waist, clasped the trunk of his tree
with his hands, pressed the soles of his feet against the near surface of the
trunk, and began to walk up the tree. At the top he found two women, two
children, and a man. One little girl clasped a house-cat in her arms.
From his eyrie he waved his hand to Captain
Lynch, and that doughty patriarch waved back. Raoul was appalled at the sky. It
had approached much nearer — in fact, it seemed just over his head; and
it had turned from lead to black. Many people were still on the ground grouped
about the bases of the trees and holding on. Several such clusters were
praying, and in one the Mormon missionary was exhorting. A weird sound,
rhythmical, faint as the faintest chirp of a far cricket, enduring but for a
moment, but in that moment suggesting to him vaguely the thought of heaven and
celestial music, came to his ear. He glanced about him and saw, at the base of
another tree, a large cluster of people holding on by ropes and by one another.
He could see their faces working and their lips moving in unison. No sound came
to him, but he knew that they were singing hymns.
Still the wind continued to blow harder. By no
conscious process could he measure it, for it had long since passed beyond all
his experience of wind; but he knew somehow, nevertheless, that it was blowing
harder. Not far away a tree was uprooted, flinging its load of human beings to
the ground. A sea washed across the strip of sand, and they were gone. Things
were happening quickly. He saw a brown shoulder and a black head silhouetted
against the churning white of the lagoon. The next instant that, too, had
vanished. Other trees were going, falling and criss-crossing like matches. He
was amazed at the power of the wind. His own tree was swaying perilously, one
woman was wailing and clutching the little girl, who in turn still hung on to
the cat.
The man, holding the other child, touched Raoul's
arm and pointed. He looked and saw the Mormon church careering drunkenly a
hundred feet away. It had been torn from its foundations, and wind and sea were
heaving and shoving it toward the lagoon. A frightful wall of water caught it,
tilted it, and flung it against half a dozen cocoanut trees. The bunches of
human fruit fell like ripe cocoanuts. The subsiding wave showed them on the
round, some lying motionless, others squirming and writhing. They reminded him
strangely of ants. He was not shocked. He had risen above horror. Quite as a
matter of course he noted the succeeding wave sweep the sand clean of the human
wreckage. A third wave, more colossal than any he had yet seen, hurled the
church into the lagoon, where it floated off into the obscurity to leeward,
half-submerged, reminding him for all the world of a Noah's ark.
He looked for Captain Lynch's house, and was
surprised to see it gone. Things certainly were happening quickly. He noticed
that many of the people in the trees that still held had descended to the
ground. The wind had yet again increased. His own tree showed that. It no
longer swayed or bent over and back. Instead, it remained practically
stationary, curved in a rigid angle from the wind and merely vibrating. But the
vibration was sickening. It was like that of a tuning-fork or the tongue of a
jew's-harp. It was the rapidity of the vibration that made it so bad. Even
though its roots held, it could not stand the strain for long. Something would
have to break.
Ah, there was one that had gone. He had not seen
it go, but there it stood, the remnant, broken off half-way up the trunk. One
did not know what happened unless he saw it. The mere crashing of trees and
wails of human despair occupied no place in that mighty volume of sound. He
chanced to be looking in Captain Lynch's direction when it happened. He saw the
trunk of the tree, half-way up, splinter and part without noise. The head of
the tree, with three sailors of the Aorai and the old captain, sailed
off over the lagoon. It did not fall to the ground, but drove through the air
like a piece of chaff. For a hundred yards he followed its flight, when it
struck the water. He strained his eyes, and was sure that he saw Captain Lynch
wave farewell.
Raoul did not wait for anything more. He touched
the native and made signs to descend to the ground. The man was willing, but
his women were paralyzed from terror, and he elected to remain with them. Raoul
passed his rope around the tree and slid down. A rush of salt water went over
his head. He held his breath and clung desperately to the rope. The water
subsided, and in the shelter of the trunk he breathed once more. He fastened
the rope more securely, and then was put under by another sea. One of the women
slid down and joined him, the native remaining by the other woman, the two
children, and the cat.
The supercargo had noticed how the groups
clinging at the bases of the other trees continually diminished. Now he saw the
process work out alongside him. It required all his strength to hold on, and
the woman who had joined him was growing weaker. Each time he emerged from a
sea he was surprised to find himself still there, and next, surprised to find
the woman still there. At last he emerged to find himself alone. He looked up.
The top of the tree had gone as well. At half its original height, a splintered
end vibrated. He was safe. The roots still held, while the tree had been shorn
of its windage. He began to climb up. He was so weak that he went slowly, and
sea after sea caught him before he was above them. Then he tied himself to the
trunk and stiffened his soul to face the night and he knew not what.
He felt very lonely in the darkness. At times it
seemed to him that it was the end of the world and that he was the last one
left alive. Still the winds increased. Hour after hour it increased. By what he
calculated was eleven o'clock, the wind had become unbelievable. It was a
horrible, monstrous thing, a screaming fury, a wall that smote and passed on
but that continued to smite and pass on — a wall without end. It seemed
to him that he had become light and ethereal; that it was he that was in
motion; that he was being driven with inconceivable velocity through unending
solidness. The wind was no longer air in motion. It had become substantial as
water or quicksilver. He had a feeling that he could reach into it and tear it
out in chunks as one might do with the meat in the carcass of a steer; that he
could seize hold of the wind and hang on to it as a man might hang on to the
face of a cliff.
The wind strangled him. He could not face it and
breathe, for it rushed in through his mouth and nostrils, distending his lungs
like bladders. At such moments it seemed to him that his body was being packed
and swollen with solid earth. Only by pressing his lips to the trunk of the
tree could he breathe. Also, the ceaseless impact of the wind exhausted him.
Body and brain became wearied. He no longer observed, no longer thought, and
was but semiconscious. One idea constituted his consciousness: So this was a
hurricane. That one idea persisted irregularly. It was like a feeble flame
that flickered occasionally. From a state of stupor he would return to it
— So this was a hurricane. Then he would go off into another
stupor.
The height of the hurricane endured from eleven
at night till three in the morning, and it was at eleven that the tree in which
clung Mapuhi and his women snapped off. Mapuhi rose to the surface of the
lagoon, still clutching his daughter Ngakura. Only a South Sea islander could
have lived in such a driving smother. The pandanus-tree, to which he attached
himself, turned over and over in the froth and churn; and it was only by
holding on at times and waiting, and at other times shifting his grips rapidly,
that he was able to get his head and Ngakura's to the surface at intervals
sufficiently near together to keep the breath in them. But the air was mostly
water, what with flying spray and sheeted rain that poured along at right
angles to the perpendicular.
It was ten miles across the lagoon to the farther
ring of sand. Here, tossing tree-trunks, timbers, wrecks of cutters, and
wreckage of houses, killed nine out of ten of the miserable beings who survived
the passage of the lagoon. Half-drowned, exhausted, they were hurled into this
mad mortar of the elements and battered into formless flesh. But Mapuhi was
fortunate. His chance was the one in ten; it fell to him by the freakage of
fate. He emerged upon the sand, bleeding from a score of wounds. Ngakura's left
arm was broken; the fingers of her right hand were crushed; and cheek and
forehead were laid open to the bone. He clutched a tree that yet stood, and
clung on, holding the girl and sobbing for air, while the waters of the lagoon
washed by knee-high and at times waist-high.
At three in the morning the backbone of the
hurricane broke. By five no more than a stiff breeze was blowing. And by six it
was dead calm and the sun was shining. The sea had gone down. On the yet
restless edge of the lagoon, Mapuhi saw the broken bodies of those that had
failed in the landing. Undoubtedly Tefara and Nauri were among them. He went
along the beach examining them, and came upon his wife, lying half in and half
out of the water. He sat down and wept, making harsh animal-noise after the
manner of primitive grief. Then she stirred uneasily, and groaned. He looked
more closely. Not only was she alive, but she was uninjured. She was merely
sleeping. Hers also had been the one chance in ten.
Of the twelve hundred alive the night before but
three hundred remained. The Mormon missionary and a gendarme made the census.
The lagoon was cluttered with corpses. Not a house nor a hut was standing. In
the whole atoll not two stones remained one upon another. One in fifty of the
cocoanut palms still stood, and they were wrecks, while on not one of them
remained a single nut. There was no fresh water. The shallow wells that caught
the surface seepage of the rain were filled with salt. Out of the lagoon a few
soaked bags of flour were recovered. The survivors cut the hearts out of the
fallen cocoanut trees and ate them. Here and there they crawled into tiny
hutches, made by hollowing out the sand and covering over with fragments of
metal roofing. The missionary made a crude still, but he could not distill
water for three hundred persons. By the end of the second day, Raoul, taking a
bath in the lagoon, discovered that his thirst was somewhat relieved. He cried
out the news, and thereupon three hundred men, women, and children could have
been seen, standing up to their necks in the lagoon and trying to drink water
in through their skins. Their dead floated about them, or were stepped upon
where they still lay upon the bottom. On the third day the people buried their
dead and sat down to wait for the rescue steamers.
In the meantime, Nauri, torn from her family by
the hurricane, had been swept away on an adventure of her own. Clinging to a
rough plank that wounded and bruised her and that filled her body with
splinters, she was thrown clear over the atoll and carried away to sea. Here,
under the amazing buffets of mountains of water, she lost her plank. She was an
old woman — nearly sixty; but she was Paumotan-born, and she had never
been out of sight of the sea in her life. Swimming in the darkness, strangling,
suffocating, fighting for air, she was struck a heavy blow on the shoulder by a
cocoanut. On the instant he plan was formed, and she seized the nut. In the
next hour she captured seven more. Tied together, they formed a life-buoy that
preserved her life while at the same time it threatened to pound her to a
jelly. She was a fat woman, and she bruised easily; but she had had experience
of hurricanes, and, while she prayed to her shark god for protection from
sharks, she waited for the wind to break. But at three o'clock she was in such
a stupor that she did not know. Nor did she know at six o'clock when the dead
calm settled down. She was shocked into consciousness when she was thrown upon
the sand. She dug in with raw and bleeding hands and feet and clawed against
the backwash until she was beyond the reach of the waves.
She knew where she was. This land could be no
other than the tiny islet of Takokota. It had no lagoon. No one lived upon it.
Hikueru was fifteen miles away. She could not see Hikueru, but she knew that it
lay to the south. The days went by, and she lived on the cocoanuts that had
kept her afloat. They supplied her with drinking water and with food. But she
did not drink all she wanted, nor eat all she wanted. Rescue was problematical.
She saw the smoke of the rescue steamers on the horizon, but what steamer could
be expected to come to lonely, uninhabited Takokota?
From the first she was tormented by corpses. The
sea persisted in flinging them upon her bit of sand, and she persisted, until
her strength failed, in thrusting them back into the sea where the sharks tore
at them and devoured them. When her strength failed, the bodies festooned her
beach with ghastly horror, and she withdrew from them as far as she could,
which was not far.
By the tenth day her last cocoanut was gone, and
she was shriveling from thirst. She dragged herself along the sand, looking for
cocoanuts. It was strange that so many bodies floated up, and no nuts. Surely,
there were more cocoanuts afloat than dead men! She gave up at last, and lay
exhausted. The end had come. Nothing remained but to wait for death.
Coming out of a stupor, she became slowly aware
that she was gazing at a patch of sandy-red hair on the head of a corpse. The
sea flung the body toward her, then drew it back. It turned over, and she saw
that it had no face. Yet there was something familiar about that patch of
sandy-red hair. An hour passed. She did not exert herself to make the
identification. She was waiting to die, and it mattered little to her what man
that thing of horror once might have been.
But at the end of the hour she sat up slowly and
stared at the corpse. An unusually large wave had thrown it beyond the reach of
the lesser waves. Yes, she was right; that patch of red hair could belong to
but one man in the Paumotus. It was Levy, the German Jew, the man who had
bought the pearl and carried away on the Hira. Well, one thing was
evident: the Hira had been lost. The pearl-buyer's god of fisherman and
thieves had gone back on him.
She crawled down to the dead man. His shirt had
been torn away, and she could see the leather money-belt about his waist. She
held her breath and tugged at the buckles. They gave easier than she had
expected, and she crawled hurriedly away across the sand, dragging the belt
after her. Pocket after pocket she unbuckled in the belt and found empty. Where
could he have put it? In the last pocket of all she found it, the first and
only pearl he had bought on the voyage. She crawled a few feet farther, to
escape the pestilence of the belt, and examined the pearl. It was the one
Mapuhi had found and been robbed of by Toriki. She weighed it in her hand and
rolled it back and forth caressingly. But in it she saw not intrinsic beauty.
What she did see was the house Mapuhi and Tefara and she had builded so
carefully in their minds. Each time she looked at the pearl she saw the house
in all its details, including the octagon-drop-clock on the wall. That was
something to live for.
She tore a strip from her abu and tied the
pearl securely about her neck. Then she went on along the beach, panting and
groaning, but resolutely seeking for cocoanuts. Quickly she found one, and, as
she glanced around, a second. She broke one, drinking its water, which was
mildewy, and eating the last particle of the meat. A little later she found a
shattered dug-out. Its outrigger was gone, but she was hopeful, and, before the
day was out, she found the outrigger. Every find was an augury. The pearl was a
talisman. Late in the afternoon she saw a wooden box floating low in the water.
When she dragged it out on the beach its contents rattled, and inside she found
ten tins of salmon. She opened one by hammering it on the canoe. When a leak
was started, she drained the tin. After that she spent several hours in
extracting the salmon, hammering and squeezing it out a morsel at a time.
Eight days longer she waited for rescue. In the
meantime she fastened the outrigger on the canoe, using for lashings all the
cocoanut-fiber she could find, and also what remained of her abu. The
canoe was badly cracked, and she could not make it water-tight; but a calabash
made from a cocoanut she stored on board for a bailer. She was hard put for a
paddle. With a piece of tin she sawed off all her hair close to the scalp. Out
of the hair she braided a cord; and by means of the cord she lashed a
three-foot piece of broom-handle to a board from the salmon case. She gnawed
wedges with her teeth and with them wedged the lashing.
On the eighteenth day, at midnight, she launched
her canoe through the surf and started back for Hikueru. She was an old woman.
Hardship had stripped her fat from her till scarcely more than bones and skin
and a few stringy muscles remained. The canoe was large and should have been
paddled by three strong men. But she did it alone, with a makeshift paddle.
Also, the canoe leaked badly, and one third of her time was devoted to bailing.
By clear daylight she looked vainly for Hikueru. Astern, Takokota had sunk
beneath the sea-rim. The sun blazed down on her nakedness, compelling her body
to surrender its moisture. Two tins of salmon were left, and in the course of
the day she battered holes in them and drained the liquid. She had no time to
waste in extracting the meat. A current was setting to the westward, she made
westing whether she made southing or not.
In the early afternoon, standing upright in the
canoe, she sighted Hikueru. Its wealth of cocoanut palms were gone. Only here
and there, at wide intervals, could she see the ragged remnants of trees. The
sight cheered her. She was nearer than she had thought. The current was setting
her to the westward. She bore up against it and paddled on. The wedges in the
paddle-lashing worked loose, and she lost much time, at frequent intervals, in
driving them right. Then there was the bailing. One hour in three she had to
cease paddling in order to bail. And all the time she drifted to the
westward.
By sunset Hikueru bore southeast of her, three
miles away. There was a full moon, and by eight o'clock the land was due east
and two miles away. She struggled on for another hour, but the land was as far
away as ever. She was in the main grip of the current; the canoe was too large;
the paddle was too inadequate; and too much of her time and strength was wasted
in bailing. Besides, she was very weak and growing weaker. Despite her efforts,
the canoe was drifting off to the westward.
She breathed a prayer to her shark god, slipped
over the side, and began to swim. She was actually refreshed by the water, and
quickly left the canoe astern. At the end of an hour the land was perceptibly
nearer. Then came her fright. Right before her eyes, not twenty feet away, a
large fin cut the water. She swam steadily toward it, and slowly it glided
away, curving off toward the right and circling around her. She kept her eyes
on the fin and swam on. When the fin disappeared, she lay face downward on the
water and watched. When the fin reappeared she resumed her swimming. The
monster was lazy — she could see that. Without doubt he had been well fed
since the hurricane. Had he been very hungry, she knew he would not have
hesitated from making a dash for her. He was fifteen feet long, and one bite,
she knew, could cut her in half.
But she did not have any time to waste on him.
Whether she swam or not, the current drew away from the land just the same. A
half-hour went by, and the shark began to grow bolder. Seeing no harm in her,
he drew closer, in narrowing circles, cocking his eyes at her impudently as he
slid past. Sooner or later, she knew well enough, he would get up sufficient
courage to dash at her. She resolved to play first. It was a desperate act she
meditated. She was an old woman, alone in the sea, and weak from starvation and
hardship; and yet she, in the face of this sea-tiger, must anticipate his dash
by herself dashing at him. She swam on, waiting her chance. At last he passed
languidly by, barely eight feet away. She rushed at him suddenly, feigning that
she was attacking him. He gave a wild flirt of his tail as he fled away, and
his sand-paper hide, striking her, took off her skin from elbow to shoulder. He
swam rapidly, in a widening circle, and at last disappeared.
In the hole in the sand, covered over by
fragments of metal roofing, Mapuhi and Tefara lay disputing.
"If you had done as I said," charged
Tefara, for the thousandth time, "and hidden the pearl and told no one,
you would have it now."
"But Huru-Huru was with me when I opened the
shell — have I not told you so times and times and times without
end?"
"And now we shall have no house. Raoul told
me to-day that if you had not sold the pearl to Toriki —"
"I did not sell it. Toriki robbed
me."
"— that if you had not sold the pearl,
he would give you five thousand French dollars, which is ten thousand
Chili."
"He has been talking to his mother,"
Mapuhi explained. "She has an eye for a pearl."
"And now the pearl is lost," Tefara
complained.
"It paid my debt with Toriki. That is twelve
hundred I have made anyway."
"Toriki is dead," she cried. "They
have heard no word of his schooner. She was lost along with the Aorai
and the Hira. Will Toriki pay you the three hundred credit he promised?
No, because Toriki is dead. And had you found no pearl, would you to-day owe
Toriki the twelve hundred? No, because Toriki is dead, and you cannot pay dead
men."
"But Levy did not pay Toriki," Mapuhi
said. "He gave him a piece of paper that was good for the money in
Papeete; and now Levy is dead and cannot pay; and Toriki is dead and the paper
lost with him, and the pearl is lost with Levy. You are right, Tefara. I have
lost the pearl, and got nothing for it. Now let us sleep."
He held up his hand suddenly and listened. From
without came a noise, as of one who breathed heavily and with pain. A hand
fumbled against the mat that served for a door.
"Who is there?" Mapuhi cried.
"Nauri," came the answer. "Can you
tell met where is my son, Mapuhi?"
Tefara screamed and gripped her husband's
arm.
"A ghost!" she chattered. "A
ghost!"
Mapuhi's face was a ghastly yellow. He clung
weakly to his wife.
"Good woman," he said in faltering
tones, striving to disguise his voice, "I know your son well. He is living
on the east side of the lagoon."
From without came the sound of a sigh. Mapuhi
began to feel elated. He had fooled the ghost.
"But where do you come from, old
woman?" he asked.
"From the sea," was the dejected
answer.
"I knew it! I knew it!" screamed
Tefara, rocking to and for.
"Since when has Tefara bedded in a strange
house?" came Nauri's voice through the matting.
Mapuhi looked fear and reproach at his wife. It
was her voice that had betrayed them.
"And since when has Mapuhi, my son, denied
his old mother?" the voice went on.
"No, no, I have not — Mapuhi has not
denied you," he cried. "I am not Mapuhi. He is on the east end of the
lagoon, I tell you."
Ngakura sat up in bed and began to cry. The
matting started to shake.
"What are you doing?" Mapuhi
demanded.
"I am coming in," said the voice of
Nauri.
One end of the matting lifted. Tefara tried to
dive under the blankets, but Mapuhi held on to her. He had to hold on to
something. Together, struggling with each other, with shivering bodies and
chattering teeth, they gazed with protruding eyes at the lifting mat. They saw
Nauri, dripping with sea water, without her abu, creep in. They rolled
over backward from her and fought for Ngakura's blanket with which to cover
their heads.
"You might give your old mother a drink of
water," the ghost said plaintively.
"Give her a drink of water," Tefara
commanded in a shaking voice.
"Give her a drink of water," Mapuhi
passed on the command to Ngakura.
And together they kicked out Ngakura from under
the blanket. A minute later, peeping, Mapuhi saw the ghost drinking. When it
reached out a shaking hand and laid it on his, he felt the weight of it and was
convinced that it was no ghost. Then he emerged, dragging Tefara after him, and
in a few minutes all were listening to Nauri's tale. And when she told of Levy,
and dropped the pearl into Tefara's hand, even she was reconciled to the
reality of her mother-in-law.
"In the morning," said Tefara,
"you will sell the pearl to Raoul for five thousand French."
"The house?" objected Nauri.
"He will build the house," Tefara
answered. "He says it will cost four thousand French. Also will he give
one thousand French in credit, which is two thousand Chili."
"And it will be six fathoms long?"
Nauri queried.
"Ay," answered Mapuhi, "six
fathoms."
"And in the middle room will be the
octagon-drop-clock?"
"Ay, and the round table as well."
"Then give me something to eat, for I am
hungry," said Nauri complacently. "And after that we will sleep, for
I am weary. And to-morrow we will have more talk about the house before we sell
the pearl. It will be better if we take the thousand French in cash. Money is
ever better than credit in buying goods from the traders."
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