Conclusion
Among the sailors was an Italian named
Francesco. Probably he had another name, but
no one knew what it was. In fact, a sailor’s
last name is very little used. He was a man of
middle height, very swarthy, with bright, black eyes,
not unpopular, for the most part, but with a violent
temper. His chief fault was a love of strong drink.
On board the Nantucket grog had been served to the
crew; and with that he had been content. But
at the time of the wreck no spirits had been saved
but the captain’s stock of brandy. Francesco
felt this to be a great hardship. More than any
other sailor he felt the need of his usual stimulant.
It was very tantalizing to him to see the captain partaking
of his private stock of brandy while he was compelled
to get along on water.
“The captain is too mucha selfish,”
he said one day to a fellow-sailor. “He
should share his brandy with the men.”
Ben Brady, the sailor to whom he was
speaking, shrugged his shoulders.
“I think I will try some of
the captain’s brandy when he is away,”
said Francesco, slyly.
“If you do, you will get into
trouble. The captain will half murder you if
he finds it out.”
“He is not captain now—we
are all equal—all comrades. We are
not on ze sheep.”
“Take my advice, Francesco,
and leave the brandy alone.”
Francesco did not reply, but he became
more and more bent on his design.
He watched the captain, and ascertained
where he kept his secret store. Then he watched
his opportunity to help himself. It was some
time before he had an opportunity to do so unobserved,
but at length the chance came.
The first draught brought light to
his eyes, and made him smack his lips with enjoyment.
It was so long since he had tasted the forbidden nectar
that he drank again and again. Finally he found
himself overcome by his potations, and sank upon the
ground in a drunken stupor.
He was getting over the effects when,
to his ill-luck, the captain returned from his usual
solitary ramble.
“He has been at my brandy!”
Captain Hill said to himself, with flaming eyes.
“The fool shall pay dearly for his temerity.”
He advanced hastily to the prostrate
man, and administered a severe kick, which at once
aroused the half-stupefied man.
Francesco looked up with alarm, for
the captain was a much larger and stronger man than
himself.
“Pardon, signor captain,” he entreated.
“You have been drinking my brandy,
you beast,” said Captain Hill, furiously.
I draw a veil over the brutal treatment
poor Francesco received. When it was over he
crawled away, beaten and humiliated, but in his eye
there was a dangerous light that boded no good to the
captain.
Presently Francesco began to absent
himself. Where he went no one knew or cared,
but he, too, would be away all day. His small,
black eyes glowed with smoldering fires of hatred
whenever he looked at the captain, but his looks were
always furtive, and so for the most part escaped observation.
One day Captain Hill stood in contemplation
on the edge of a precipitous bluff, looking seaward.
His hands were folded, and he looked thoughtful.
His back was turned, so he could not, therefore, see
a figure stealthily approaching, the face distorted
by murderous hate, the hand holding a long, slender
knife. Fate was approaching him in the person
of a deadly enemy. He did not know that day by
day Francesco had dogged his steps, watching for the
opportunity which had at last come.
So stealthy was the pace, and so silent
the approach of the foe, that the captain believed
himself wholly alone till he felt a sharp lunge, as
the stiletto entered his back between his shoulders.
He staggered, but turned suddenly, all his senses
now on the alert, and discovered who had assailed
him.
“Ha! it is you!” he exclaimed
wrathfully, seizing the Italian by the throat.
“Dog, what would you do?”
“Kill you!” hissed the
Italian, and with the remnant of his strength he thrust
the knife farther into his enemy’s body.
The captain turned white, and he staggered,
still standing on the brink of the precipice.
Perceiving it, and not thinking of
his own danger, Francesco gave him a push, and losing
his balance the captain fell over the edge, a distance
of sixty feet, upon the jagged rocks beneath.
But not alone! Still retaining his fierce clutch
upon the Italian’s throat, the murderer, too,
fell with him, and both were stretched in an instant,
mangled and lifeless, at the bottom of the precipice.
When night came, and neither returned,
it was thought singular, but the night was dark, and
they were unprovided with lanterns, so that the search
was postponed till morning. It was only after
a search of several hours that the two were found.
After the captain’s death two
distinct camps were still maintained, but the most
cordial relations existed between them. At the
suggestion of the mate, an inventory was made of the
stock of provisions, and to each camp was assigned
an amount proportioned to the number of men which
it contained.
There was no immediate prospect of
want. Still, the more prudent regarded with anxiety
the steady diminution of the stock remaining, and
an attempt to eke them out by fresh fish caught off
the island. But the inevitable day was only postponed.
At length only a week’s provisions remained.
The condition was becoming serious.
“What shall we do?” was
the question put to Mr. Holdfast, who was now looked
upon by all as their leader and chief.
Upon this the mate called a general
meeting of all upon the island, sailors and passengers
alike.
“My friends,” he said,
“it is useless to conceal our situation.
We are nearly out of provisions, and though we may
manage to subsist upon the fish we catch, and other
esculents native to this spot, it will be a daily
fight against starvation. I have been asked what
we are to do. I prefer rather to call for suggestions
from you. What have you to suggest?”
“In my view there are two courses
open to us,” said Mr. Stubbs, finding that no
one else appeared to have anything to propose.
“We must remain here and eat the rest of our
provisions, but there seems very little chance of
our attracting the attention of any passing vessel.
We appear to be out of the ordinary course. Of
course, it is possible that some ship may have passed
the island without attracting our notice. What
is your opinion, Mr. Holdfast?”
“The flag of the Nantucket,
as you know, has floated night and day from a pole
erected on a high bluff,” said the mate.
“The chances are that if any vessel had come
sufficiently near it would have attracted attention,
and led to a boat being lowered, and an exploring party
sent thither.”
“While we’ve got any provisions
left,” said the boatswain, “let us take
the boats, and pull out to sea. We can go where
the ships are, and then we’ll have some chance.
They’ll never find us here, leastways, such
is my opinion.”
“My friends,” said the
mate, “you have heard the proposal made by the
boatswain. All who are in favor of it will please
raise their right hand.”
All voted in the affirmative.
“My friends,” said Mr.
Holdfast, “it seems to be the unanimous sentiment
that we leave the island, and sail out far enough to
be in the course of passing vessels. I concur
in the expediency of this step, and am ready to command
one of the boats. Mr, Harrison will command the
other.”
“How soon shall we start?” asked a passenger.
“The sooner the better! To-morrow morning,
if it is pleasant.”
This decision pleased all. Something
was to be done, and hope was rekindled in the breasts
of all. Heretofore they had been living on, without
hope or prospect of release. Now they were to
set out boldly, and though there was the possibility
of failure, there was also a chance of deliverance.
No sooner was the decision made than
all hands went to work to prepare for embarking.
In the appointment of passengers,
Mr. Holdfast, who commanded the long boat, retained
Harry, the professor and Clinton. Six sailors,
including Jack Pendleton, made up the complement.
“I am glad you are going to
be with us, Jack,” said Harry, joyfully.
“I shouldn’t like to be separated from
you.”
“Nor I from you, Harry,” returned Jack.
At eight o’clock the next morning
they started. As the island faded in the distance,
all looked back thoughtfully at their sometime home.
Three days the boats floated about
on the bosom of the ocean—three days and
nights of anxiety, during which no sail was visible.
But at length a ship was sighted.
“In one way or another we must
try to attract attention,” said the mate.
Not to protract the reader’s
suspense, let me say that by great good fortune the
mate of the approaching ship, in sweeping the ocean
with his glass caught sight of the two boats, and
changed the course of the vessel so as to fall in
with them.
“Who are you?” he hailed.
“Shipwrecked sailors and passengers
of the ship Nantucket,” was the answer of Mr.
Holdfast.
They were taken on board, and discovered
that the vessel was the Phocis, from New York, bound
for Melbourne.
“We shall reach our destination
after all, then, professor,” said Harry, “and
you will be able to give your entertainments as you
at first proposed.”
Professor Hemenway shook his head.
“I shall take the first steamer
home,” he said. “My wife will be
anxious about me, and even now is in doubt whether
I am alive or dead. You can return with me, if
you like.”
“No,” answered Harry.
“After the trouble I have had in getting to
Australia, I mean to stay long enough to see what sort
of a country it is. I think I can make a living
in one way or another, and if I can’t, I will
send to America for the money I have there.”
In due time they reached Melbourne,
without further mischance. Harry induced Jack
to remain with him, but Mr. Clinton, with a new stock
of trousers, purchased in Melbourne, returned to America
on the same steamer with the professor.
Here we leave Harry and Jack to pursue
their course to such eminence as they may desire from
the characteristics they have portrayed in this narrative.
THE END