For the unexpected to leap out at him from behind the nearest cocoanut tree,
nevertheless David Grief received no warning when he laid eyes on Aloysius
Pankburn. It was on the little steamer Berthe. Leaving his schooner to follow,
Grief had taken passage for the short run across from Raiatea to Papeete. When
he first saw Aloysius Pankburn, that somewhat fuddled gentleman was drinking a
lonely cocktail at the tiny bar between decks next to the barber shop. And when
Grief left the barber's hands half an hour later, Aloysius Pankburn was still
hanging over the bar, still drinking by himself.
Now it is not good for man to drink alone, and
Grief threw sharp scrutiny into his passing glance. He saw a well-built young
man of thirty, well-featured, well-dressed, and evidently—in the world's
catalogue—a gentleman. But by the faint hint of slovenliness, by the shaking,
eager hand that spilled the liquor, and by the nervous, vacillating eyes, Grief
read the unmistakable marks of the chronic alcoholic.
After dinner he chanced upon Pankburn again. This
time it was on deck, and the young man, clinging to the rail and peering into
the distance at the dim forms of a man and woman in two steamer chairs drawn
closely together, was crying drunkenly. Grief noted that the man's arm was
around the woman's waist. Aloysius Pankburn looked on and cried.
"Nothing to weep about," Grief said
genially.
Pankburn looked at him and gushed tears of
profound self-pity.
"It's hard," he sobbed. "Hard.
Hard. That man's my business manager. I employ him. I pay him a good salary.
And that's how he earns it."
"In that case, why don't you put a stop to
it?" Grief advised.
"I can't. She'd shut of my whisky. She's my
trained nurse."
"Fire her, then, and drink your head
off."
"I can't. He's got all my money. If I fired
her he wouldn't give me sixpence to buy a drink with."
This woful possibility brought a fresh wash of
tears. Grief was interested. Of all unique situations he could never have
imagine such a one as this.
"They were engaged to take care of me,"
Pankburn was blubbering; "to keep me away from the drink. And that's the
way they do it, lallygagging all about the shop and letting me drink myself to
death. It isn't right, I tell you. It isn't right. They were sent along with me
for the express purpose of not letting me drink, and they let me drink to
swinishness as long as I leave them alone. If I complain they threaten not to
let me have another drop. What can a poor devil do? My death will be on their
heads, that's all. Come on down and join me."
He released his clutch on the rail and would have
fallen had Grief not caught his arm. He seemed to undergo a transformation, to
stiffen physically, to thrust his chin forward aggressively and to glint
harshly in his eyes.
"I won't let them kill me. And they'll be
sorry. I've offered them fifty thousand—later on, of course. They laughed.
They don't know. But I know." He fumbled in his coat pocket and drew forth
an object that flashed in the faint light. "They don't know the meaning of
that. But I do." He looked at Grief with abrupt suspicion. "What do
you make out of it, eh? What do you make out of it?"
David Grief caught a swift vision of an alcoholic
degenerate putting a very loving young couple to death with a copper spike, for
a copper spike was what he held in his hand, evidently an old-fashioned ship
fastening.
"My mother thinks I'm up here to get cured
of the booze habit. She doesn't know. I bribed the doct r to
prescribe a voyage. When we get to Papeete my manager is going to charter a
schooner and away we'll sail. But they don't dream. They think it's the booze.
I know. I only know. Good night, sir. I'm going to bed, unless—er—you'll join
me for a nightcap. One last drink, you know."
IN THE week that followed at Papeete, Grief caught numerous and bizarre
glimpses of Aloysius Pankburn. So did everybody else in the little island
capital, for neither the beach nor Lavina's boarding house had been so
scandalized in years. In midday, bare-headed, clad only in swimming trunks,
Aloysius Pankburn ran down the main street from Lavina's to the water front. He
put on the gloves with a fireman from the Berthe in a scheduled four-round bout
at the Folies Bergère, and was knocked out in the second round.
He tried insanely to drown himself in a two-foot pool of water, dived drunkenly
and splendidly from fifty feet up in the rigging of the Mariposa lying at the
wharf, and chartered the cutter Toerau at more than her purchase price and was
only saved by his manager's refusal financially to ratify the agreement. He
bought out the old blind leper at the market and sold breadfruit, plaintains
and sweet potatoes at such cut rates that the gendarmes were called out to
break the rush of bargain-hunting natives. For that matter, three times the
gendarmes arrested him for riotous behavior, and three times his manager ceased
form love-making long enough to pay the fines imposed by a needy colonial
administration.
Then the Mariposa sailed for San Francisco, and
in the bridal suite were the manager and the trained nurse, freshly married.
Before departing, the manager had thoughtfully bestowed eight five-pound
banknotes on Aloysius, with the foreseen result that Aloysius awoke several
days later to find himself broke and perilously near to delirium tremens.
Lavina, famed for her good heart even among the driftage of South Pacific
rogues and scamps, nursed him around and never let it filter into his returning
intelligence that there was neither manager nor money to pay his board.
It was several evenings after this that David
Grief, lounging under the afterdeck awning of the Kittiwake and idly scanning
the meager columns of the Papeete Avant-Coureur, sat suddenly up and almost
rubbed his eyes. It was unbelievable, but there it was. The old South Seas
Romance was not dead. He read:
WANTED—To exchange a half interest in buried treasure, worth five million francs, for transportation for one to an unknown island in the Pacific and facilities for carrying away the loot. Ask for FOLLY at Lavina's. |
BACK on board his schooner and dozing in a deck chair under a
three-months-old magazine, David Grief was aroused by a sobbing, slubbering
noise from overside. He opened his eyes. From the Chilean cruiser, a quarter of
a mile away, came the stroke of eight bells. It was midnight. From overside
came a splash and another slubbering noise. To him it seemed half amphibian,
half the sounds of a man crying to himself and querulously chanting his sorrows
to the general universe.
A jump took David Grief to the low rail. Beneath,
centered about the slubbering noise, was an area of agitated phosphorescence.
Leaning over, he locked his hand under the armpit of a man, and with a pull and
heave and quick-changing grips he drew on deck the naked form of Aloysius
Pankburn.
"I didn't have a sou-markee," he
complained. "I had to swim and I couldn't find your gangway. It was very
miserable. Pardon me. If you have a towel and some togs for me and a good stiff
drink, I'll be more myself. I'm Mr. Folly, and you're the Captain Grief, I
presume, who called on me when I was out. No, I'm not drunk. Nor am I cold.
on the edge of the horrors, that's all, and I was beginning to see things when
I couldn't find the gangway. If you'll take me below I'll be very grateful. You
are the only one that answered my advertisement."
He was shaking pitiably in the warm night and
down in the cabin, before he got his towel, Grief saw to it that a half-tumbler
of whisky was in his hand.
"Now fire ahead," Grief said, when he
had got his guest into a shirt and a pair of duck trousers. "What's this
advertisement of yours? I'm listening."
Pankburn looked at the whisky bottle, but Grief
shook his head.
"All right, Captain, though I tell you on
whatever is left of my honor that I am not drunk—not in the least. Also, what
I shall tell you is true, and I shall tell it briefly—for it is clear to me
that you are a man of affairs and action. Likewise, your chemistry is good. To
you, alcohol has never been a million maggots gnawing at every cell of you.
You've never been to hell. I am there now. I am scorching. Now listen.
"My mother is alive. She is English. I was
born in Australia. I was educated at York and Yale. I am a Master of Arts, a
Doctor of Philosophy, and I am no good. Furthermore, I am an alcoholic. I have
been an athlete. I used to swan-dive a hundred and ten feet in the clear. I
hold several amateur records. I am a fish. I learned the crawl-stroke from the
first of the Cavilles. I have done thirty miles in a rough sea. I have another
record. I have punished more whisky than any man of my years. I will steal
sixpence from you for the price of a drink. Finally, I will tell you the
truth.
"My father was an American—an Annapolis
man. He was a midshipman in the War of the Rebellion. In '66 he was a
lieutenant on the Suwanee. Her captain was Paul Shirley. In '66 the Suwanee
coaled at an island in the Pacific that I do not care to mention, under a
protectorate that did not exist then and that shall be nameless. Ashore, behind
the bar of a public house, my father saw three copper spikes—ship's
spikes."
David Grief smiled quietly.
"And now I can tell you the name of the
coaling station and of the protectorate that came afterward," he said.
"And of the three spikes?" Pankburn
asked with equal quietness. "Go ahead, for they are in my possession
now."
"Certainly. They were behind German Oscar's
bar at Peenoo-Peenee. Johnny Black brought them there from off his schooner the
night he died. He was just back from a long cruise to the westward, fishing
bêche-de-mer and sandalwood trading. All the beach knows the
tale."
Pankburn shook his head.
"Go on," he urged.
"It was before my time, of course,"
Grief explained. "I only tell what I've heard. Next came the Ecuadoran
cruiser, of all directions, in from the westward, and bound home. Her officers
recognized the spikes. Johnny Black was dead. They got hold of his mate and
logbook. Away to the westward went she. Six months after, again bound home, she
dropped in at Peenoo-Peenee. She had failed, and the tale leaked out."
"When the revolutionists were marching on
Guayaquil," Pankburn took it up, "the federal officers, believing a
defense of the city hopeless, salted down the government treasure
chest—something like a million dollars in gold, but all in English
coinage—and put it on board the American schooner Flirt. They were going to
run at daylight. The American captain skinned out in the middle of the night.
Go on."
"It's an old story," Grief resumed.
"There was no other vessel in the harbor. The federal leaders couldn't
run. They put their backs to the wall and held the city. Rojas Salcedo, making
a forced march from Quito, raised the siege. The revolution was broken, and the
one ancient steamer that constituted the Ecuadoran navy was sent in pursuit of
the Flirt. They caught her, between the Banks Group and the New Hebrides, hove
to and flying distress signals. The captain had died the day before—blackwater
fever."
"And the mate?" Pankburn
challenged.
"The mate had been killed a week earlier by
the natives on one of the Banks, when they sent a boat in for water. There were
no navigators left. The men were put to the torture. It was beyond
international law. Thy wanted to confess but couldn't. They told of the three
spikes in the trees on the beach, but where the island was they did not know.
To the westward, far to the westward, was all they knew. The tale now goes two
ways. One is that they all died under the torture. The other is that the
survivors were swung at the yard-arm. At any rate, the Ecuadoran cruiser went
home without the treasure. Johnny Black brought the three spikes to
Peenoo-Peenee and left them at German Oscar's, but how and where he found them
he never told."
Pankburn looked hard at the whisky bottle.
"Just two fingers," he whimpered.
Grief considered, and poured a meager drink.
Pankburn's eyes sparkled and he took new lease on life.
"And this is where I come in with the
missing details," he said. "Johnny Black did tell. He told my father.
Wrote him from Levuka, before he came on to die at Peenoo-Peenee. My father had
saved his life one rough-house night in Valparaiso. A Chink pearler, out of
Thursday Island, prospecting for new grounds to the north of New Guinea, traded
for the three spikes with a n----r. Johnny Black bought them for copper weight.
He didn't dream any more than the Chink, but, coming back, he stopped for
hawksbill turtle at the very beach where you say the mate of the Flirt was
killed. Only he wasn't killed. The Banks islanders held him prisoner, and he
was dying of necrosis of the jaw-bone—caused by an arrow wound in the fight on
the beach. Before he died he told the yarn to Johnny Black. Johnny Black wrote
my father from Levuka. He was at the end of his rope—cancer. My father, ten
years afterward, when captain of the Perry, got the spikes from German Oscar.
And from my father—last will and testament, you know—came the spikes and the
data. I have the island, the latitude and the longitude of the beach where the
three spikes were nailed in the trees. The spikes are up at Lavina's now. The
latitude and longitude are in my head. Now what do you think?"
"Fishy," was Grief's instant judgment.
"Why didn't your father go and get it himself?"
"Didn't need it. An uncle died and left him
a fortune. He retired from the navy, hit up a lively pace trying to spend his
money, and my mother got a divorce. Also, she fell heir to an income of
something like thirty thousand dollars and went to live in New Zealand. I was
divided between them—half-time New Zealand, half-time United States—until my
father's death last year. Now my mother has me altogether. He left me his
money—oh, a couple of millions—but my mother has had guardians appointed on
account of the drink. I'm worth all kinds of money, but I can't touch a penny
save what is doled out to me. But the old man, who had got the tip on my
drinking, left me the three spikes and the data thereunto pertaining. Did it
through his lawyers, unknown to my mother; said it beat life insurance, and
that if I had the backbone to go and get it I could drink my back teeth awash
until I died. Millions in the hands of my guardians, slathers of shekels of my
mother's that'll be mine if she dies before I do, another million waiting to be
dug up, and in the meantime I'm cadging on Lavina for two drinks a day. It's
the limit, isn't it, when you consider my thirst?"
"Where's the island?"
"It's a long way from here."
"Name it."
"Not on your life, Captain Grief. You're
making an easy half million out of this. You will sail under my directions; and
when we're well to sea and on our way I'll tell you, and not before."
Grief shrugged his shoulders, dismissing the
subject.
"When I've given you another drink I'll send
the boat ashore with you," he said.
Pankburn was taken aback. For at least five
minutes he debated with himself, then licked his lips and surrendered.
"If you promise to go I'll tell you
now."
"Of course I'm willing to go. That's why I
asked you. Name the island."
Pankburn looked at the bottle.
"I'll take that drink now,
Captain."
"No, you won't. That drink was for you if
you went ashore. If you are going to tell me the island, you must do it in your
sober senses."
"Francis Island, if you will have it.
Bougainville named it Banbour Island."
"Off there all by its lonely in the Little
Coral Sea," Grief said. "I know it. Lies between New Ireland and New
Guinea. A rotten hole, now, though it was all right when the Flirt drove in the
spikes and the Chink pearler traded for them. The steamship Castor, recruiting
labor for the Upolu plantations, was cut off there with all hands two years
ago. I knew her captain well. The Germans sent a cruiser, shelled the bush,
burned half a dozen villages, killed a couple of n----rs and a lot of pigs—and
that was all. The n----rs always were bad there, but they turned really bad
forty years ago. That was when they cut off a whaler. Let me see? What was her
name?"
He stepped to the bookshelf, drew out the bulky
South Pacific Directory, and ran hastily through its familiar pages.
"Yes. Here it is. Francis, or Banbour,"
he skimmed. "Natives, warlike and treacherous—Melanesian—cannibals.
Whaleship Western cut off—that was her name. Shoals . . . points . . .
anchorages—ah, Red-scar, Owen Bay, Likikili Bay—that's more like it—deep
indentation, mangrove swamps, good holding in nine fathoms when white scar in
bluff bears west-southwest." Grief looked up. "That's your beach,
Pankburn. I'll swear."
"Will you go?" the other demanded
eagerly.
Grief nodded.
"It sounds good to me. Now if the story had
been of a hundred million dollars, or some such crazy sum, I wouldn't look at
it for a moment. We'll sail tomorrow, but under one consideration—you are to
be absolutely under my orders."
His visitor nodded emphatically and joyously.
"And that means, no drink."
"That's pretty hard," Pankburn
whimpered.
"It's my terms. I'm enough of a doctor to
see you don't come to harm. And you are to work—hard work, sailor's work.
You'll stand regular watches and everything, though you eat and sleep aft with
us."
"It's a go." Pankburn put out his hand
to ratify the agreement. "If it doesn't kill me," he added.
David Grief poured a generous three-fingers into
the tumbler and extended it.
"Then here's your last drink. Take
it."
Pankburn's hand went halfway out. With a sudden
spasm of resolution he hesitated, threw back his shoulders and straightened up
his head.
"I guess I won't," he began; then,
feebly surrendering to the gnaw of desire, he reached hastily for the glass, in
fear that it would be withdrawn.
IT IS a long traverse from Papeete, in the Societies, to the Little
Coral Sea—from 150 West Longitude to 150 East Longitude—as the crow flies the
equivalent to a voyage across the Atlantic. But the Kittiwake did not go as the
crow flies. David Grief's numerous interests diverted her course many times. He
stopped to take a look-in at uninhabited Rose Island, with an eye to colonizing
and planting cocoanuts. Next, he paid his respects to Tui Manua, of Eastern
Samoa, and opened an intrigue for a share of the trade monopoly of that dying
king's three islands. From Apia he carried several relief agents and a load of
trade goods to the Gilberts. He peeped in at Ontong-Java Atoll, inspected his
plantations on Ysabel, and purchased lands from the salt-water chiefs of
northwestern Malaita. And all along this devious way he made a man of Aloysius
Pankburn.
That thirster, though he lived aft, was compelled
to do the work of a common sailor. And not only did he take his wheel and
lookout, and heave on sheets and tackles, but the dirtiest and most arduous
tasks were appointed him. Swung aloft in a boson's chair, he scraped the masts
and slushed down. Holystoning the deck or scrubbing it with fresh limes made
his back ache and developed the wasted, flabby muscles. When the Kittiwake lay
at anchor and her copper bottom was scrubbed with cocoanut husks by the native
crew, who dived and did it under water, Pankburn was sent down on his shift,
and as many times as any on the shift.
"Look at yourself," Grief said.
"You are twice the man you were when you came on board. You haven't had
one drink, you didn't die, and the poison is pretty will worked out of you.
It's the work. It beats trained nurses and business managers. Here, if you're
thirsty, clap your lips to this."
With several deft strokes of his heavy-backed
sheath-knife Grief clipped a triangular piece of shell from the end of a husked
drinking-cocoanut. The thin, cool liquid, slightly milky and effervescent,
bubbled to the brim. With a bow, Pankburn took the natural cup, threw his head
back, and held it back till the shell was empty. He drank many of these nuts
each day. The black steward, a New Hebrides boy sixty years of age, and his
assistant, a Lark Islander of eleven, saw to it that he was continually
supplied.
Pankburn did not object to the hard work. He
devoured hard work, never shirking and always beating the native sailors in
jumping to obey a command. But his sufferings during the period of driving the
alcohol out of his system were truly heroic. Even when the last shred of the
poison was exuded, the desire, as an obsession, remained in his head. So it was
when, on his honor, he went ashore at Apia, that he attempted to put the public
houses out of business by drinking up their stocks in trade. And so it was, at
two in the morning, that David Grief found him in front of the Tivoli, out of
which he had been disorderly thrown by Charley Roberts. Aloysius, as of old,
was chanting his sorrows to the stars. Also, and more concretely, he was
punctuating the rhythm with cobbles of coral stone, which he flung with amazing
accuracy through Charley Robert's windows.
David Grief took him away, but not till next
morning did he take him in hand. It was on the deck of the Kittiwake, and there
was nothing kindergarten about it. Grief struck him with bare knuckles, punched
him and punished him—gave him the worst thrashing he had ever received.
"For the good of your soul, Pankburn,"
was the way he emphasized his blows. "For the good of your mother. For the
progeny that will come after. For the good of the world, and the universe, and
the whole race of man yet to be. And now, to hammer the lesson home, we'll do
it all over again. That, for the good of your soul; and that, for your mother's
sake; and that, for the little children, undreamed of and unborn, whose mother
you'll love for their sakes, and for love's sake, in the lease of manhood that
will be yours when I am done with you. Come on and take your medicine. I'm not
done with you yet. I've only begun. There are many other reasons that I shall
now proceed to expound."
The brown sailors and the black stewards and cook
looked on and grinned. Far from them was the questioning of any of the
mysterious and incomprehensible ways of white men. As for Carlsen, the mate, he
was grimly in accord with the treatment his employer was administering; while
Albright, the supercargo, merely played with his mustache and smiled. They were
men of the sea. They lived life in the rough. And alcohol, in themselves as
well as in other men, was a problem they had learned to handle in ways not
taught in doctors' schools.
"Boy—a bucket of fresh water and a
towel," Grief ordered, when he had finished. "Two buckets and two
towels," he added, as he surveyed his own hands.
"You're a pretty one," he said to
Pankburn. "You've spoiled everything. I had the poison completely out of
you. And now you are fairly reeking with it. We've got to begin all over again.
Mr. Albright! You know that pile of old chain on the beach at the boat landing.
Find the owner, buy it and fetch it on board. There must be a hundred and fifty
fathoms of it. Pankburn! Tomorrow morning you start in pounding the rust off of
it. When you've done that you'll sandpaper it. Then you'll paint it. And
nothing else will do till that chain is as smooth as new."
Aloysius Pankburn shook his head.
"I quit. Francis Island can go to —— for
all of me. I'm done with your slave-driving. Kindly put me ashore at once. I'm
a white man. You can't treat me this way."
"Mr. Carlsen, you will see that Mr. Pankburn
remains on board."
"I'll have you broken for this!"
Aloysius screamed. "You can't stop me."
"I can give you another licking," Grief
answered. "And let me tell you one thing, you besotted whelp, I'll keep on
licking you as long as my knuckles hold out or until you learn to hammer chain
rust. I've taken you in hand and I'm going to make a man out of you if I have
to kill you to do it. Now go below and change your clothes. Be ready to turn to
with a hammer this afternoon. Mr. Albright, get that chain aboard
pronto. Mr. Carlsen, send the boats ashore after it. Also, keep your eye
on Pankburn. If he shows signs of keeling over or going into the shakes, give
him a nip—a small one. He may need it after last night."
FOR the rest of the time the Kittiwake lay in Apia, Aloysius Pankburn
pounded chain rust. Ten hours a day he pounded. And on the long stretch across
to the Gilberts he still pounded. Then came the sandpapering. One hundred and
fifty fathoms is nine hundred feet, and every link of all that length was
smoothed and polished as no link ever was before. And when the last link had
received its second coat of black paint he declared himself.
"Come on with more dirty work," he told
Grief. "I'll overhaul the other chains if you say so. And you needn't
worry about me anymore. I'm not going to take another drop. I'm going to train
up. You got my proud goat when you licked me, but let me tell you you only got
it temporarily. Train! I'm going to train till I'm as hard all the way through
and clean all the way through as that chain is now. And some day, Mr. David
Grief, somewhere, somehow, I'm going to be in such shape that I'll lick you as
you licked me. I'm going to pulp your face till your own n----rs won't know
you."
Grief was jubilant.
"Now you're talking like a man," he
cried. "The only way you'll ever lick me is to become a man. And then,
maybe ——"
He paused in the hope that the other would catch
the suggestion. Aloysius groped for it and, abruptly, something akin to
illumination shone in his eyes.
"And then I won't want to, you
mean?"
Grief nodded.
"And that's the curse of it," Aloysius
lamented. "I really believe I won't want to. I see the point. But I'm
going to go right on and shape myself up, just the same."
The warm sunburn glow in Grief's face seemed to
grow warmer. His hand went out.
"Pankburn, I love you right now for
that."
Aloysius grasped the hand and shook his head in
sad sincerity.
"Grief," he mourned, "You've got
my goat, you've got my proud goat, and you've got it permanently, I'm
afraid."
ON A SULTRY tropic day, when the last flicker of the far Southeast Trade
was fading out and the seasonal change for the Northwest Monsoon was coming on,
the Kittiwake lifted above the sea-rim the jungle-clad coast of Francis Island.
Grief, with compass bearings and binoculars, identified the volcano that marked
Red-scar, ran past Owen Bay, and lost the last of the breeze at the entrance to
Likikili Bay. With the two whaleboats out and towing, and with Carlsen heaving
the lead, the Kittiwake sluggishly entered a deep and narrow indentation. There
were no beaches. The mangroves began at the water's edge, and behind them rose
steep jungle, broken here and there by jagged peaks of rock. At the end of a
mile, when the white scar on the bluff bore west-southwest, the lead vindicated
the Directory, and the anchor rumbled down in nine fathoms.
For the rest of that day and until the afternoon
of the day following they remained on the Kittiwake and waited. No canoes
appeared. There were no signs of human life. Save for the occasional splash of
a fish, or the screaming of cockatoos, there seemed no other life. Once,
however, a huge butterfly, twelve inches from tip to tip, fluttered high over
their mastheads and drifted across to the opposing jungle.
"There's no use in sending a boat in to be
cut up," Grief said.
Pankburn was incredulous and volunteered to go in
alone, to swim it if he couldn't borrow the dingey.
"They haven't forgotten the German
cruiser," Grief explained. "And I'll wager that bush is alive with
men right now. What do you think, Mr. Carlsen?"
That veteran adventurer of the islands was
emphatic in his agreement.
In the late afternoon of the second day Grief
ordered a whaleboat into the water. He took his place in the bow, a live
cigarette in his mouth and a short-fused stick of dynamite in his hand—for he
was bent on shooting a mess of fish. Along the thwarts half a dozen rifles were
placed. Albright, who took the steering-sweep, had one within reach of hand.
They pulled in and along the green wall of vegetation. At times they rested on
the oars in the midst of profound silence.
"Two to one the bush is swarming with
them—in quids," Albright whispered.
Pankburn listened a moment longer and took the
bet. Five minutes later they sighted a school of mullet. The brown rowers held
their oars. Grief touched the short fuse to his cigarette and threw the stick.
So short was the fuse that the stick exploded in the instant after it struck
the water. And in that same instant the bush exploded into life. There were
wild yells of defiance, and black and naked bodies leaped forward like apes
through the mangroves.
In the whaleboat every rifle was lifted. Then
came the wait. A hundred blacks—some few armed with ancient rifles, but the
greater portion armed with tomahawks, firehardened spears and bone-tipped
arrows—clustered on the roots that rose out of the bay. No word was spoken.
Each party watched the other across the twenty feet of water. An old, one-eyed
black with a bristly face rested an old rifle on his hip, the muzzle directed
at Albright who, in turn, covered him with his rifle. A couple of minutes of
this tableau endured. The stricken fish rose to the surface or struggled
half-stunned in the clear depths of water.
"It's all right, boys," Grief said
quietly. "Put down you guns and over the side with you. Mr. Albright, toss
the tobacco to that one-eyed brute."
While the Rapa men dived for the fish Albright
threw a bundle of trade tobacco ashore. The one-eyed man nodded his head and
writhed his features in an attempt at amiability. Weapons were lowered, bows
unbent and arrows put back in their quivers.
"They know tobacco," grief announced,
as they rowed back aboard. "We'll have visitors. You'll break out a case
of tobacco, Mr. Albright, and a few trade-knives. There's a canoe
now."
Old One-Eye, as befitted a chief and leader,
paddled out alone, facing peril for the rest of the tribe.
As Carlsen leaned over the rail to help the
visitor up he turned his head and remarked casually:
"They've dug up the money, Mr. Grief. The
old beggar's loaded with it."
One-Eye floundered down on deck, grinning
appeasingly and failing to hide the fear he had overcome, but which still
possessed him. He was lame of one leg; and this was accounted for by a terrible
scar, inches deep, that ran down the thigh from hip to knee. No clothes he wore
whatever, not even a string, but his nose, perforated in a dozen places and
each perforation the setting for a carved spine of bone, bristled like a
porcupine. Around his neck and hanging down on his dirty chest was a string of
gold sovereigns. His ears were hung with silver half-crowns, and from the
cartilage separating his nostrils depended a big English penny, tarnished and
green, but unmistakable.
"Hold on, Grief," Pankburn said with
perfectly assumed carelessness. "You say they know only beads and tobacco.
Very well. You follow my lead. They've found the treasure and we've got to
trade them out of it. Get the whole crew aside and lecture them that they are
to be interested only in the pennies. Savvy? Gold coins must be beneath
contempt and silver coins merely tolerated. Pennies are to be the only
desirable things."
Pankburn took charge of the trading. For the
penny in One-Eye's nose he gave ten sticks of tobacco. Since each stick cost
David Grief a cent, the bargain was manifestly unfair. But for the half-crowns
Pankburn gave only one stick each. The string of sovereigns he refused to
consider. The more he refused, the more One-Eye insisted on a trade. At last,
with an appearance of irritation and anger, and as a palpable concession,
Pankburn gave two sticks for the string, which was composed of ten
sovereigns.
"I take my hat off to you," Grief said
to Pankburn that night at dinner. "The situation is patent. You've
reversed the scale of value. They'll figure the pennies as priceless
possessions and the sovereigns as beneath price. Result—they'll hang on to the
pennies and force us to trade for sovereigns. Pankburn, I drink your health!
Boy—another cup of tea for Mr. Pankburn."
FOLLOWED a golden week. From dawn till dark a row of canoes rested on
their paddles two hundred feet away. This was the dead-line. Rapa sailors,
armed with rifles, maintained it. But one canoe at a time was permitted
alongside, and but one black at a time was permitted to come over the rail.
Here, under the awning, relieveing one another in hourly shifts, the four white
men carried on the trade. The rate of exchange was that established by Pankburn
with One-Eye. Five sovereigns fetched a stick of tobacco; a hundred sovereigns,
twenty sticks. Thus, a crafty-eyed cannibal would deposit on the table a
thousand dollars in gold, and go back over the rail, hugely satisfied, with
forty cents' worth of tobacco in his hand.
"Hope we've got enough tobacco to hold
out," Carlsen muttered dubiously, as another case was sawed in half.
Albright laughed.
"We've got fifty cases below," he said;
"and as I figure it, three cased buy a hundred thousand dollars. There was
only a million dollars buried, so thirty cases ought to get it. Though, of
course, we've got to allow a margin for the silver and the pennies. That
Ecuadoriano bunch must have salted down all the coin in sight."
Very few pennies and shillings appeared, though
Pankburn continually and anxiously inquired for them. Pennies were the one
thing he seemed to desire, and he made his eyes flash covetously whenever one
was produced. True to his theory, the savages concluded that the gold, being of
slight value, must be disposed of first. A penny, worth fifty times as much as
a sovereign, was something to retain and treasure. Doubtless, in their jungle
lairs the wise old graybeards put their heads together and agreed to raise the
price on pennies when the worthless gold was worked off. Who could tell? Mayhap
the strange white men could be made to give even twenty sticks for a priceless
copper.
By the end of the week the trade went slack.
There was only the slightest dribble of gold. An occasional penny was
reluctantly disposed of for ten sticks, while several thousand dollars in
silver came in.
On the morning of the eighth day no trading was
done. The graybeards had matured their plan and were demanding twenty sticks
for a penny. One-Eye delivered the new rate of exchange. The white men appeared
to take it with great seriousness, for they debated in low voices.
"We've got just a little over eight hundred
thousand, not counting the silver," Grief said. "And that's about all
there is. The bush tribes behind have most probably got the other two hundred
thousand. Return in three months, and the salt-water crowd will have traded
back for it; also, they will be out of tobacco by that time."
"It would be a sin to buy pennies,"
Albright grinned. "It goes against the thrifty grain of my trader's
soul."
"There's a whiff of land-breeze
stirring," Grief said, looking at Pankburn. "What do you
say?"
Pankburn nodded.
"Very well." Grief measured the
faintness and irregularity of wind against his cheek. "Mr. Carlsen, heave
short and get off the gaskets. And stand by with the whaleboats to tow. This
breeze is not dependable."
He picked up a part case of tobacco, containing
six or seven hundred sticks, put it in One-Eye's hands and helped that
bewildered savage over the rail. As the foresail went up the mast a wail of
consternation arose from the canoes lying along the dead-line. And as the
anchor broke out and the Kittiwake's head paid off in the light breeze, old
One-Eye, daring the rifles leveled on him, paddled alongside and made frantic
signs of his tribe's willingness to trade pennies for ten sticks.
"Boy—a drinking nut," Pankburn
called.
"It's Sydney Heads for you," Grief
said. "And then what?"
"I'm coming back with you for that two
hundred thousand," Pankburn answered. "In the mean time I'm going to
build an island schooner. Also, I'm going to call those guardians of mine
before the court to show cause why my father's money should not be turned over
to me. Show cause? I'll show them cause why it should."
He swelled his biceps proudly under the thin
sleeve, reached for the two back stewards, and put them above his head like a
pair of dumb-bells.
"Come on! Swing out on that
fore-boom-tackle!" Calsen shouted from aft, where the mainsail was being
winged out.
Pankburn dropped the stewards and raced for it,
beating a Rapa sailor by two jumps to the hauling part.
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