“Is this what you feared?”
said the Scotchman. “Is this what you wanted
protection against? No; you’re in league
together to torture me, and all this time you’ve
been laughing up your sleeves at my expense!”
“At your expense?” growled
Harrigan, rising in turn. “Is it at your
expense that I’ve been sittin’ here breakin’
me heart with singin’ love tunes for you an’
the girl?”
She sprang up in an agony of fear.
“Go! Go!” she begged
of McTee. “If you doubt me, go, and when
you come back calm, I will explain.”
He brushed her to one side and made
a step toward Harrigan.
“Love songs for me?” he repeated
incredulously.
“Aye, love songs for you.
Ye black swine, ye could not be happy till I was brought
in to be the piper while you an’ Kate danced!”
“While I and Kate danced?”
thundered McTee. “My God, man—”
He broke off short, and a cruel light
of understanding was in his eyes.
“Harrigan,” he said quietly,
“did Kate tell you she loved me?”
“Ye fool! Why else am I
sittin’ here singin’ for your sake?
Would I not rather be amusin’ myself by takin’
the hollow of your throat under my thumbs—so?”
McTee laughed softly, and Kate could not meet his
eye.
“Well?” he said.
“Yes, I lied to you.”
She turned to Harrigan: “And
to you. Don’t you see? I found you
on the verge of a fight, and I knew that in it you
would both be killed. What else could I do?
I hoped that for my sake you would spare each other.
Was it wrong of me, Dan? Angus, will you forgive
me?”
Harrigan raised his arms high above
his head and stretched like one from whose wrists
the manacles have been unlocked after a long imprisonment.
“McTee, are ye ready? There’s
a weight gone off my soul!”
“Harrigan, I’ve been a
driver of men, but this girl has put me under the
whip. When I’m through with you, I’m
coming back to her.”
“It’ll be your ghost that returns.”
Kate hesitated one instant as if to
judge which was the greatest force toward evil.
Then she dropped to her knees and caught the hands
of McTee, those strong, cruel hands.
“If you will not fight, I’ll—I’ll
be kind to you, I’ll be everything you ask of
me—”
“You’re pleading for him?”
“No, no! For him and for you; for your
two souls!”
“Bah! Mine was lost long
ago, and I’ll answer that there’s a claim
on Harrigan filed away in hell. He’s too
strong to have lived clean.”
“Angus, we’re all alone
here—on the rim of the world, you’ve
said—and in places like this the eye of
God is on you.”
He laughed brutally: “If
He sees me, He’ll look the other way.”
“Have done with the chatter,”
broke in Harrigan. “Ah-h, McTee, I see
where my hands’ll fit on your throat.”
“Come,” McTee answered
without raising his voice; “there’s a corner
of the beach where a current stands in close by the
shore. You’ve been a traveling man, Harrigan.
When I’ve killed you, I’ll throw your body
into the sea, and the tide will take you out to see
the rest of the world.”
“Come,” said Harrigan;
“I’d as soon finish you there as here,
and when you’re dead, I’ll sit you up
against a tree and come down every day to watch you
rot.”
The girl fell to the ground between
them with her face buried in her arms, silent.
The two men lowered their eyes for a moment upon her,
and then turned and walked down the hill, going shoulder
to shoulder like friends. So they came out upon
the beach and walked along it until they reached the
point of which McTee had spoken.
It was a level, hard-packed stretch
of sand which offered firm footing and no rocks over
which one of the fighters might stumble at a critical
moment.
“Tis a lovely spot,” sighed
Harrigan. “Captain, you’re a jewel
of a man to have thought of it.”
“Aye, this is no deck at sea
that can heave and twist and spoil my work.”
“It is not; and the palms of
my hands are almost healed. Had you thought of
that, captain?”
“As you lie choking, Harrigan,
think of the girl. The minute I’ve heaved
you into the sea, I go back to her.”
The hard breathing of the Irishman
filled up the interval.
“I see one thing clear.
It’s that I’ll have to kill you slow.
A man like you, McTee, ought to taste his death a
while before it comes. Come to me ar-rms, captain,
I’ve a little secret to whisper in your ear.
Whisht! ’Twill not be long in the tellin’!”
McTee replied with a snarl, and the
two commenced to circle slowly, drawing nearer at
every step. On the very edge of leaping forward,
Harrigan was astonished to see McTee straighten from
his crouch and point out to sea.
“The eye of God!” muttered
the Scotchman. “She was right!”
Harrigan jumped back lest this should
prove a maneuver to place him off his guard, and then
looked in the indicated direction. It was true;
a point of light, a white eye, peered at them from
far across the water. Then the shout of McTee
rang joyously: “A ship!”
“The fire!” answered Harrigan,
and pointed back to the hill, for Kate had allowed
the flames to fall in their absence.
All thought of the battle left them.
They started back on the run to build high their signal
light, and when they came to the top of the hill,
they found Kate lying as they had left her. She
started to her knees at the sound of their footsteps
and stretched out her arms to them.
“God has sent you back to me!”
“A ship!” thundered McTee
for answer, and he flung a great armful of wood upon
the blaze. It rose with a rush, leaping and crackling,
but all three kept at their work until the pile of
wood was higher than their heads. Only when the
supply of dry fuel was exhausted did they pause to
look out to sea. In place of the one eye of white
there were three lights, one of white, one of red,
and one of green—the lights of a ship running
in toward land.
In a moment the moon slipped up above
the eastern waters, and right across that broad white
circle moved a ship with the smoke streaming back
from her funnel. Unquestionably the captain had
seen the signal fire and understood its meaning.
They waited until the red light became
fairly stationary, showing that the steamer had been
laid-to. Then they ran for the beach and took
up their position on the line between the glow of
their fire and the position of the ship, guessing
that in this way they would be on the spot where the
ship’s boat would be most likely to touch the
shore.
“McTee,” said Harrigan,
“it may be half an hour before that boat reaches
the beach. Is there any reason why both of us
should go aboard it?”
“Harrigan, there is none! Stand up to me.”
“If you do this,” broke
in Kate, “I will bring the sailors who come
ashore to the spot where the dead man lies, and I’ll
tell how he died.”
They looked at her, knowing that she
could be trusted to fulfill that threat. The
moon lay on the beauty of her face; never had she seemed
so desirable. They looked to each other, and
each seemed doubly hateful to the other.
“Kate, dear,” said Harrigan
hastily, “I see the boat come tossin’ there
over the water. Speak out like a brave girl.
Neither of us will leave the other in peace as long
as we have a hope of you. Choose between us before
we put a foot in that boat, and if you choose McTee,
I’ll give you God’s blessin’ an’
say no more nor ever raise my hand against ye.
McTee, will ye do the like?”
“For the sake of the day of
the fight and the wreck I will. If she chooses
you now, I’ll raise no hand against you.”
A shout came faintly across the rush
and ripple of the breakers.
“Speak out,” said Harrigan.
“Hallo!” she screamed
in answer to the hail from the boat, and then turning
to them: “I choose neither of you!”
“McTee,” growled Harrigan,
“I’m thinkin’ we’ve both been
fools.”
“Think what you will, I’ll
have her; and if you cross me again, I’ll finish
you, Harrigan.”
“McTee, ten of your like couldn’t
finish me. But look! There’s the girl
wadin’ out to the boat. Let’s steady
her through the waves.”
They ran out and, catching her beneath
the shoulders, bore her safe and high through the
small rollers. When they were waist-deep, the
boat swung near. A lantern was raised by the
man in the bows, and under that light they saw the
four men at the oars, now backing water to keep their
boat from washing to the beach. The sailors cheered
as the two men swung Kate over the gunwale and then
clambered in after her. The man at the bows all
this time had kept his lantern high above his head
with a rigid arm, and now he bellowed: “Black
McTee!”
“Right!” said McTee. “And you?”
“Salvain—put back
for the ship, lads—Pietro Salvain.
D’you mean to say you’ve forgotten me?”
“Shanghai!” said McTee,
as light broke on his memory. “What a night
that was.”
“But you—”
“The Mary Rogers took
a header for Davy Jones’s locker; first mate
drunk and ran her on a reef; all hands went under except
the three of us; we drifted to this island.”
“Black McTee shipwrecked!
By God, if we get to port with our old tramp, I’ll
get a farm and stick to dry land.”
“Your ship?”
“The Heron, four thousand tons, White
Henshaw, skipper.”
“White Henshaw?” cried McTee in almost
reverent tones.
“The same. Old White still
sticks to his wheel. He’s as hard a man
as you, McTee, in his own way.”
They were pulling close to the freighter
by this time, and Salvain gave quick orders to lay
the boat alongside. In another moment they stood
on the deck, where a tall man in white clothes advanced
to meet them.
“Good fishing, sir,” said
Salvain. “We’ve picked up three shipwrecked
people, with Angus McTee among them.”
“Black McTee!” cried the
other, and even in the dim light he picked out the
towering form of the Scotchman.
“It took a wreck to bring us
together, Captain Henshaw,” said McTee, “but
here we are, I’ve combed the South Seas for ten
years for the sake of meeting you.”
“H-m!” grunted Henshaw.
“We’ll drink on the strength of that.
Come into the cabin.”
They trooped after him, Salvain and
the three rescued, and stood in the roomy cabin, the
captain and the first mate dapper and cool in their
white uniforms, the other three marvelously ragged.
Barefooted, their hair falling in jags across their
foreheads, their muscles bulging through the rents
in their shirts, McTee and Harrigan looked battered
but triumphant. Kate Malone might have been the
prize which they had safely carried away. She
was even more ragged than her companions, and now
she withdrew into a shadowy corner of the cabin and
shook the long, loose masses of her hair about her
shoulders.