You cannot escape liking the climate," Cudworth said, in reply to my
panegyric on the Kona coast. "I was a young fellow, just out of college,
when I came here eighteen years ago. I never went back, except, of course, to
visit. And I warn you, if you have some spot dear to you on earth, not to
linger here too long, else you will find this dearer."
We had finished dinner, which had been served on
the big lanai, the one with a northerly exposure, though exposure
is indeed a misnomer in so delectable a climate.
The candles had been put out, and a slim,
white-clad Japanese slipped like a ghost through the silvery moonlight,
presented us with cigars, and faded away into the darkness of the bungalow. I
looked through a screen of banana and lehua trees, and down across the guava
scrub to the quiet sea a thousand feet beneath. For a week, ever since I had
landed from the tiny coasting-steamer, I had been stopping with Cudworth and
during that time no wind had ruffled that unvexed sea. True, there had been
breezes, but they were the gentlest zephyrs that ever blew through summer
isles. They were not winds; they were sighs - long, balmy sighs of a world at
rest.
"A lotus land," I said.
"Where each day is like every day,
and every day is a paradise of days," he answered. "Nothing ever
happens. It is not too hot. It is not too cold. It is always just right. Have
you noticed how the land and sea breathe turn and turn about?"
"Indeed I had noticed that delicious,
rhythmic, intermingled breathing. Each morning I had watched sea-breeze begin
at the shore and slowly extend seaward as it blew the mildest, softest whiff of
ozone to the land. It played over the sea, just faintly darkening its surface,
with here and there and everywhere long lanes of calm, shifting, changing,
drifting according to the capricious kisses of the breeze. And each evening I
had watched the sea-breath die away to heavenly calm, and heard the land-breath
softly make its way through the coffee trees and monkey-pods.
"It is a land of perpetual calm,"
I said. "Does it ever blow here?—ever really blow? You know what I
mean."
Cudworth shook his head and pointed
eastward.
"How can it blow, with a barrier like that
to stop it?"
Far above towered the huge bulks of Mauna
Kea and Mauna Loa, seeming to blot out half the starry sky. Two miles and a
half above our heads they reared their own heads, white with snow that the
tropic sun had failed to melt.
"Thirty miles away, right now, I'll wager,
it is blowing forty miles an hour."
I smiled incredulously.
Cudworth stepped to the lanai
telephone. He called up, in succession, Waimea, Kohala, and Hamakua. Snatches
of his conversation told me that the wind was blowing: "Rip-snorting and
back-jumping, eh? . . . How long? . . . Only a week? . . . Hello, Abe, is that
you? . . . Yes, yes. . . . You will plant coffee on the Hamakua
coast. . . . Hang your wind-breaks! You should see mytrees."
"Blowing a gale," he said to me,
turning from hanging up the receiver. "I always have to joke Abe on his
coffee. He has five hundred acres, and he's done marvels in wind-breaking, but
how he keeps the roots in the ground is beyond me. Blow? It always blows on the
Hamakua side. Kohala reports a schooner under double reefs beating up the
channel between Hawaii and Maui, and making heavy weather of it."
"It is hard to realize," I said lamely.
"Doesn't a little whiff of it ever eddy around somehow, and get down
here?"
"Not a whiff. Our land-breeze is absolutely
of no kin, for it begins this side of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. You see, the
land radiates its heat quicker than the sea, and so, at night, the land
breathes over the sea. In the day the land becomes warmer than the sea, and
the sea breathes over the land. . . . Listen! Here comes the land-breath now,
the mountain-wind."
I could hear it coming, rustling softly
through the coffee trees, stirring the monkey-pods, and sighing through the
sugar-cane. On the lanai the hush still reigned. Then it came, the
first feel of the mountain-wind, faintly balmy, fragrant and spicy, and cool,
deliciously cool, a silken coolness, a wine-like coolness - cool as only the
mountain-wind of Kona can be cool.
"Do you wonder that I lost my heart to Kona
eighteen years ago?" he demanded. "I could never leave it now. I
think I should die. It would be terrible. There was another man who loved it,
even as I. I think he loved it more, for he was born here on the Kona coast. He
was a great man, my best friend, my more than brother. But he left it, and he
did not die."
"Love?" I queried. "A
woman?"
Cudworth shook his head.
"Nor will he ever come back, though his
heart will be here until he dies."
He paused and gazed down upon the
beach-lights of Kailua. I smoked silently and waited.
"He was already in love . . . with his
wife. Also, he had three children, and he loved them. They are in Honolulu now.
The boy is going to college."
"Some rash act?" I questioned, after a
time, impatiently.
He shook his head. "Neither guilty of
anything criminal, nor charged with anything criminal. He was the sheriff of
Kona."
"You choose to be paradoxical," I
said.
"I suppose it does sound that way," he
admitted, "and that is the perfect hell of it."
He looked at me searchingly for a moment,
and then abruptly took up the tale.
"He was a leper. No, he was not born with it
- no one is born with it; it came upon him. This man - what does it matter?
Lyte Gregory was his name. Every kamaina knows the story. He was
straight American stock, but he was built like the chieftains of old Hawaii. He
stood six feet three. His stripped weight was two hundred and twenty pounds,
not an ounce of which was not clean muscle or bone. He was the strongest man I
have ever seen. He was an athlete and a giant. Hew was a god. He was my friend.
And his heart and his soul were as big and as fine as his body.
"I wonder what you would do if you saw your
friend, your brother, on the slippery lip of a precipice, slipping, and you
were able to do nothing. That was just it. I could do nothing. I saw it coming,
and I could do nothing. My God, man! what could I do? There it was, malignant
and incontestable, the mark of the thing on his brow. No one else saw it. It
was because I loved him so, I do believe, that I alone saw it. I could not
credit the testimony of my senses. It was too incredibly horrible. Yet there it
was, on his brow, on his ears. I had seen it, the slight puff of the ear-lobes
- oh, so imperceptibly slight. I watched it for months. Then, next, hoping
against hope, the darkening of the skin above both eyebrows - oh, so faint,
just like the dimmest touch of sunburn. I should have thought it sunburn but
that there was a shine to it, such an invisible shine, like a little high-light
seen for a moment and gone the next. I tried to believe it was sunburn, only I
could not. I knew better. No one noticed it but me. No one ever noticed it
except Stephen Kaluna, and I did not know that till afterward. But I saw it
coming, the whole damnable, unnameable awfulness of it; but I refused to think
about the future. I was afraid. I could not. And of nights I cried over it.
"He was my friend. We fished sharks on
Niihau together. We hunted wild cattle on Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa. We broke
horses and branded steers on the Carter Ranch. We hunted goats through
Haleakala. He taught me diving and surfing until I was nearly as clever as he,
and he was cleverer than the average Kanaka. I have seen him dive in fifteen
fathoms, and he could stay down two minutes. He was an amphibian and a
mountaineer. He could climb wherever a goat dared climb. He was afraid of
nothing. He was on the wrecked Luga, and he swam thirty miles in
thirty-six hours in a heavy sea. He could fight his way out through breaking
combers that would batter you and me to a jelly. He was a great, glorious
man-god. We went through the Revolution together. We were both romantic
loyalists. He was shot twice and sentenced to death. But he was too great a man
for the republicans to kill. He laughed at them. Later, they gave him honor and
made him sheriff of Kona. He was a simple man, a boy that never grew up. His
was no intricate brain pattern. He had no twists nor quirks in his mental
processes. He went straight to the point, and his points were always
simple.
"And he was sanguine. Never have I known so
confident a man, nor a man so satisfied and happy. He did not ask anything from
life. There was nothing left to be desired. For him life had no arrears. He had
been paid in full, cash down, and in advance. What more could he possibly
desire than that magnificent body, that iron constitution, that immunity from
all ordinary ills, and that lowly wholesomeness of soul? Physically he was
perfect. He had never been sick in his life. He did not know what a headache
was. When I was so afflicted he used to look at me in wonder, and make me laugh
with his clumsy attempts at sympathy. He did not understand such a thing as a
headache. He could not understand. Sanguine? No wonder. How could he be
otherwise with that tremendous vitality and incredible health?
"Just to show you what faith he had in his
glorious star, and, also, what sanction he had for that faith. He was a
youngster at the time - I had just met him - when he went into a poker game at
Wailuku. There was a big German in it, Schultz his name was, and he played a
brutal, domineering game. He had had a run of luck as well, and he was quite
insufferable, when Lyte Gregory dropped in and took a hand. The very first hand
it was Schultz's blind. Lyte came in, as well as the others, and Schultz raised
them out - all except Lyte. He did not like the German's tone, and he raised
him back. Schultz raised in turn, and in turn Lyte raised Schultz. So they
went, back and forth. The stakes were big. And do you know what Lyte held? A
pair of kings and three little clubs. It wasn't poker. Lyte wasn't playing
poker. He was playing his optimism. He didn't know what Schultz held, but he
raised and raised until he made Schultz squeal, and Schultz held three aces all
the time. Think of it! A man with a pair of kings compelling three aces to see
before the draw!
"Well, Schultz called for two cards. Another
German was dealing, Schultz's friend at that. Lyte knew then he was up against
three of a kind. Now what did he do? What would you have done? Drawn three
cards and held up the kings, of course. Not Lyte. He was playing optimism. He
threw the kings away, held up the three little clubs, and drew two cards. He
never looked at them. He looked across at Schultz to bet, and Schultz did bet,
big. Since he himself held three aces he know he had Lyte, because he played
Lyte for threes, and, necessarily, they would have to be smaller threes. Poor
Schultz! He was perfectly correct under the premises. His mistake was that he
thought Lyte was playing poker. They bet back and forth for five minutes, until
Schultz's certainty began to ooze out. And all the time Lyte never looked at
his two cards, and Schultz knew it. I could see Schultz think, and revive, and
splurge with his bets again. But the strain was too much for him.
"'Hold on, Gregory,' he said at last. 'I've
got you beaten from the start. I don't want any of your money. I've got ——'
"'Never mind what you've got,' Lyte
interrupted. 'You don't know what I've got. I guess I'll take a look.'
"He looked, and raised the German a hundred
dollars. Then they went at it again, back and forth and back and forth, until
Schultz weakened and called, and laid down his three aces. Lyte faced his five
cards. They were all black. He had drawn two more clubs. Do you know, he just
about broke Schultz's nerve as a poker player. He never played in the same form
again. He lacked confidence after that, and was a bit wobbly.
"'But how could you do it?' I asked Lyte
afterward. 'You knew he had you beaten when he drew two cards. Besides, you
never looked at your own draw.'
"'I didn't have to look,' was Lyte's answer.
'I knew they were two clubs all the time. They just had to be two clubs. Do you
think I was going to let that big Dutchman beat me? It was impossible that he
should beat me. It is not my way to be beaten. I just have to win. Why, I'd
have been the must surprised man in this world if they hadn't been
all clubs.'
"That was Lyte's way, and maybe it will help
you to appreciate his colossal optimism. As he put it, he just had to succeed,
to fare well, to prosper. And in that same incident, as in ten thousand others,
he found his sanction. The thing was that he did succeed, did prosper. That was
why he was afraid of nothing. Nothing could ever happen to him. He knew it,
because nothing had ever happened to him. That time the Luga was lost
and he swam thirty miles, he was in the water two whole nights and a day. And
during all that terrible stretch of time, he never lost hope once, never once
doubted the outcome. He just knew he was going to make the land. He told me so
himself, and I know it was the truth.
"Well, that is the kind of a man Lyte
Gregory was. He was a different race from ordinary, ailing mortals. He was a
lordly being, untouched by common ills and misfortunes. Whatever he wanted he
got. He won his wife - one of the Caruthers, a little beauty - from a dozen
rivals. And she settled down and made him the finest wife in the world. He
wanted a boy. He got it. He wanted a girl and another boy. He got them. And
they were just right, without spot or blemish, and with all the inheritance of
his own health and strength.
"And then it happened. The mark of the beast
was laid upon him. I watched it for a year. It broke my heart. But he did not
know it, nor did anybody else guess it except that cursed hapa-haole,
Stephen Kaluna. He knew it, but I did not know that he did. And - yes - Doc
Strowbridge knew it. He was the federal physician, and he had developed the
leper eye. You see, part of his business was to examine suspects and order them
to the receiving station at Honolulu. And Stephen Kaluna had developed the
leper eye. The disease ran strong in his family, and four or five of his
relatives were already on Molokai.
"The trouble arose over Stephen Kaluna's
sister. When she became suspect, and before Doc Strowbridge could get hold of
her, her brother spirited her away to some hiding place. Lyte was sheriff of
Kona, and it was his business to find her.
"We were all over at Hilo that night, in
Ned Austin's. Stephen Kaluna was there when we came in, by himself, in his
cups, and quarrelsome. Lyte was laughing over some joke - that huge, happy
laugh of a giant boy. Kaluna spat contemptuously on the floor. Lyte noticed, so
did everybody; but he ignored the fellow. Kaluna was looking for trouble. He
took it as a personal grudge that Lyte was trying to apprehend his sister. In
half a dozen ways he advertised his displeasure at Lyte's presence, but Lyte
ignored him. I imagine Lyte was a bit sorry for him, for the hardest duty of
his office was the apprehension of lepers. It is not a nice thing to go into a
man's house and tear away a father, mother, or child, who has done no wrong,
and to send such a one to perpetual banishment on Molokai. Of course, it is
necessary as a protection to society, and Lyte, I do believe, would have been
the first to apprehend his own father did he become suspect.
"Finally, Kaluna blurted out: 'Look here,
Gregory, you think you're going to find Kalaniweo, but you're not.'
"Kalaniweo was his sister. Lyte glanced at
him when his name was called, but he made no answer. Kaluna was furious. He was
working himself up all the time.
"I'll tell you one thing,' he shouted.
'You'll be on Molokai yourself before ever you get Kalaniweo there. I'll tell
you what you are. You've no right to be in the company of honest men. You've
made a terrible fuss talking about you're duty, haven't you? You've
sent many lepers to Molokai, and knowing all the time you belonged there
yourself.'
"I'd seen Lyte angry more than once, but
never quite so angry as at that moment. Leprosy with us, you know, is not a
thing to jest about. He made one leap across the floor, dragging Kaluna out of
his chair with a clutch on his neck. He shook him back and forth savagely, till
you could hear the half-caste's teeth rattling.
"'What do you mean?' Lyte was demanding.
'Spit it out, man, or I'll choke it out of you!'
"You know, in the West there is a certain
phrase that a man must smile while uttering. So with us of the islands, only
our phrase is related to leprosy. No matter what Kaluna was, he was no coward.
As soon as Lyte eased the grip on his throat he answered:
"I'll tell you what I mean. You are a leper
yourself.'
"Lyte suddenly flung the half-caste sidewise
into a chair, letting him down easily enough. Then Lyte broke out into honest,
hearty laughter. But he laughed alone, and when he discovered it he looked
around at our faces. I had reached his side and was trying to get him to come
away, but he took no notice of me. He was gazing, fascinated, at Kaluna, who
was brushing at his own throat in a flurried, nervous way, as if to brush off
the contamination of the fingers that had clutched him. The action was
unreasoned, genuine.
"'My God, fellows! My God!' he said.
"He did not speak it. It was more a hoarse
whisper of fright and horror. It was fear that fluttered in his throat, and I
don't think that ever in his life before he had known fear.
"Then his colossal optimism asserted itself,
and he laughed again.
"'A good joke - whoever put it up,' he said.
'The drinks are on me. I had a scare for a moment. But, fellows, don't do it
again, to anybody. It's too serious. I tell you I died a thousand deaths in
that moment. I thought of my wife and the kids and . . . '
"His voice broke, and the half-caste, still
throat-brushing, drew his eyes. He was puzzled and worried.
"'John,' he said, turning towards me.
"His jovial, rotund voice rang in my ears.
But I could not answer. I was swallowing hard at the moment, and besides I knew
my face didn't look just right.
"'John,' he called again, taking a step
nearer.
"He called timidly, and of all nightmares of
horrors the most frightful was to hear timidity in Lyte Gregory's voice.
"'John, John, what does it mean?' he went
on, still more timidly. 'It's a joke, isn't it? John, here's my hand. If I were
a leper would I offer you my hand? Am I a leper, John?'
"He held out his hand, and what in high
heaven or hell did I care? He was my friend. I took his hand, though it cut me
to the heart to see the way his face brightened.
"'It was only a joke, Lyte,' I said. 'We
fixed it up on you. But you're right. It's too serious. We won't do it
again.'
"He did not laugh this time. He smiled, as a
man awakened from a bad dream and still oppressed by the substance of the
dream.
"'All right then,' he said. 'Don't do it
again, and I'll stand for the drinks. But I may as well confess that you
fellows had me going south for a moment. Look at the way I've been
sweating.'
"He sighed and wiped the sweat from his
forehead as he started to step toward the bar.
"'It is no joke,' Kaluna said abruptly.
"I looked murder at him, and I felt murder,
too. But I dared not speak or strike. That would have precipitated the
catastrophe which I somehow had a mad hope of still averting.
"'It is no joke,' Kaluna repeated. 'You are a
leper, Lyte Gregory, and you've no right putting your hands on honest men's
flesh - on the clean flesh of honest men.'
"Then Gregory flared up.
"'The joke has gone far enough! Quit it!
Quit it, I say, Kaluna, or I'll give you a beating!'
"'You undergo a bacteriological
examination,' Kaluna answered, 'and then you can beat me - to death, if you
want to. Why, man, look at yourself there in the glass. You can see it. Anybody
can see it. You're developing the lion face. See where the skin is darkened
there over your eyes.'
"Lyte peered and peered, and I saw his hand
trembling.
"'I can see nothing,' he said finally, then
turned on the hapa-haole. 'You have a black heart, Kaluna. And I am not
ashamed to say that you have given me a scare that no man has a right to give
another. I take you at your word. I am going to settle this thing right now. I
am going straight to Doc Strowbridge. And when I come back, watch out.'
"He never looked at us, but started for the
door.
"'You wait here, John,' he said, waving me
back from accompanying him.
"We stood around like a group of ghosts.
"'It is the truth,' Kaluna said. 'You could
see it for yourselves.'
"They looked at me, and I nodded. Harry
Burnley lifted his glass to his lips, but lowered it untasted. He spilled half
of it over the bar. His lips were trembling like a child that is about to cry.
Ned Austin made a clatter in the ice-chest. He wasn't looking for anything. I
don't think he knew what he was doing. Nobody spoke. Harry Burnley's lips were
trembling harder than ever. Suddenly, with a most horrible, malignant
expression, he drove his fist into Kaluna's face. He followed it up. We made no
attempt to separate them. We didn't care if he killed the half-caste. It was a
terrible beating. We weren't interested. I don't even remember when Burnley
ceased and let the poor devil crawl away. We were all too dazed.
"Doc Strowbridge told me about it afterward.
He was working late over a report when Lyte came into his office. Lyte had
already recovered his optimism, and came swinging in, a trifle angry with
Kaluna to be sure, but very certain of himself. 'What could I do?' Doc asked
me. 'I knew he had it. I had seen it coming on for months. I couldn't answer
him. I couldn't say yes. I don't mind telling you I broke down and cried. He
pleaded for the bacteriological test. "Snip out a piece, Doc," he
said, over and over. "Snip out a piece of skin and make the
test."'
"The way Doc Stowbridge cried must have
convinced Lyte. The Claudine was leaving next morning for Honolulu. We
caught him when he was going aboard. You see, he was headed for Honolulu to
give himself up to the Board of Health. We could do nothing with him. He had
sent too many to Molokai to hang back himself. We urged for Japan. But he
wouldn't hear of it. 'I've got to take my medicine, fellows,' was all he would
say, and he said it over and over. He was obsessed with the idea.
"He wound up all his affairs from the
Receiving Station at Honolulu, and went down to Molokai. He didn't get on well
there. The resident physician wrote us that he was a shadow of his old self.
You see he was grieving about his wife and the kids. He knew we were taking
care of them, but it hurt him just the same. After six months or so I went down
to Molokai. I sat on one side a plate-glass window, and he on the other. We
looked at each other through the glass, and talked through what might be called
a speaking-tube. But it was hopeless. He had made up his mind to remain. Four
mortal hours I argued. I was exhausted at the end. My steamer was whistling for
me, too.
"But we couldn't stand for it. Three months
later we charted the schooner Halcyon. She was an opium smuggler, and
she sailed like a witch. Her master was a squarehead who would do anything for
money, and we made a charter to China worth his while. He sailed from San
Francisco, and a few days later we took out Landhouse's sloop for a cruise. She
was only a five-ton yacht, but we slammed her fifty miles to windward into the
northeast trade. Seasick? I never suffered so in my life. Out of sight of land
we picked up the Halcyon, and Burnley and I went aboard.
"We ran down to Molokai, arriving about
eleven at night. The schooner hove to and we landed through the surf in a
whale-boat at Kalawao - the place, you know, where Father Damien died. That
squarehead was game. With a couple of revolvers strapped on him he came right
along. The three of us crossed the peninsula to Kalaupapa, something like two
miles. Just imagine hunting in the dead of night for a man in a settlement of
over a thousand lepers. You see, if the alarm was given, it was all off with
us. It was strange ground and pitch-dark. The lepers' dogs came out and bayed
at us, and we stumbled around till we got lost.
"The squarehead solved it. He led the way
into the first detached house. We shut the door after us and struck a light.
There were six lepers. We routed them up, and I talked in native. What I wanted
was a kokua. A kokua is, literally, a helper, a native who is
clean that lives in the settlement, and is paid by the Board of Health to nurse
the lepers, dress their sores, and such things. We stayed in the house to keep
track of the inmates, while the squarehead led one of them off to find a
kokua. He got him, and he brought him along at the point of his
revolver. But the kokua was all right. While the squarehead guarded the
house, Burnley and I were guided by the kokua to Lyte's house. He was
all alone.
"'I thought you fellows would come,' Lyte
said. 'Don't touch me, John. How's Ned, and Charley, and all the crowd? Never
mind, tell me afterward. I am ready to go now. I've had nine months of it.
Where's the boat?'
"We started back for the other house to pick
up the squarehead. But the alarm had got out. Lights were showing in the
houses, and doors were slamming. We had agreed that there was to be no shooting
unless absolutely necessary, and when we were halted we went at it with our
fists and the butts of our revolvers. I found myself tangled up with a big man.
I couldn't keep him off of me, though twice I smashed him fairly in the face
with my fist. He grappled with me, and we went down, rolling and scrambling and
struggling for grips. He was getting away with me, when some one came running
up with a lantern. Then I saw his face. How shall I describe the horror of it!
It was not a face - only wasted or wasting features - a living ravage,
noseless, lipless, with one ear swollen and distorted, hanging down to the
shoulder. I was frantic. In a clinch he hugged me close to him until that ear
flapped in my face. Then I guess I went insane. It was too terrible. I began
striking him with my revolver. How it happened I don't know, but just as I was
getting clear he fastened upon me with his teeth. The whole side of my hand was
in that lipless mouth. Then I struck him with the revolver-butt squarely
between the eyes, and his teeth relaxed."
Cudworth held his hand to me in the moonlight,
and I could see the scars. It looked as if it had been mangled by a dog.
"Weren't you afraid?" I asked.
"I was. Seven years I waited. You know, it
takes that long for the disease to incubate. Here in Kona I waited, and it did
not come. But there was never a day of those seven years, and never a night,
that I did not look out on . . . on all this. . . . " His voice broke as
he swept his eyes from the moon-bathed sea beneath to the snowy summits above.
"I could not bear to think of losing it, of never again beholding Kona.
Seven years! I stayed clean. But that is why I am single. I was engaged. I
could not dare to marry while I was in doubt. She did not understand. She went
away to the States, and married. I have never seen here since.
"Just at the moment I got free of the leper
policeman there was a rush and clatter of hoofs like a cavalry charge. It was
the squarehead. He had been afraid of a rumpus and he had improved his time by
making those blessed lepers he was guarding saddle up four horses. We were
ready for him. Lyte had accounted for three kokuas, and between us we
untangled Burnley from a couple more. The whole settlement was in an uproar by
that time, and as we dashed away somebody opened up on us with a Winchester. It
must have been Jack McVeigh, the superintendent of Molokai.
"That was a ride! Leper horses, leper
saddles, leper bridles, pitch-black darkness, whistling bullets, and a road
none of the best. And the squarehead's horse was a mule, and he didn't know how
to ride, either. But we made the whale-boat, and as we shoved off through the
surf we could hear the horses coming down the hill from Kalaupapa.
"You're going to Shanghai. You look Lyte
Gregory up. He is employed in a German firm there. Take him out to dinner. Open
up wine. Give him everything of the best, but don't let him pay for anything.
Send the bill to me. His wife and the kids are in Honolulu, and he needs the
money for them. I know. He sends most of his salary, and lives like an
anchorite. And tell him about Kona. There's where his heart is. Tell him all
you can about Kona."
Back to the Jack London Bookstore First Editions.