The dark eye of Pietro Salvain was
quick to note her condition. He was a rather
small, lean-faced man with the skin drawn so tightly
across his high cheekbones that it glistened.
He was emaciated; his energy consumed him as hunger
consumes other men.
“There is a berth for me below,”
he said to Kate. “You must take my room.
And I have a cap, some silk shirts, a loose coat which
you might wear—so?”
“This is Miss Malone, Salvain,”
said McTee before she could answer.
“You are very kind, Mr. Salvain,” she
said.
He smiled and bowed very low, and
then opened the door for her; but all the while his
glance was upon McTee, who stared at him so significantly
that before following Kate through the door, Salvain
shrugged his shoulders and made a gesture of resignation.
The captain turned to Harrigan.
Henshaw was very old. He was always so erect
and carried his chin so high that the loose skin of
his throat hung in two sharp ridges. In spite
of the tight-lipped mouth, the beaklike nose, and
the small, gleaming eyes, there was something about
his face which intensified his age. Perhaps it
was the yellow skin, dry as the parchment from an
Egyptian tomb and criss-crossed by a myriad little
wrinkles.
“And you, sir?” he said to the Irishman.
“One of my crew,” broke
in McTee carelessly. “He’ll be quite
contented in the forecastle. Eh, Harrigan?”
“Quite,” said Harrigan,
and his glance acknowledged the state of war.
“Then if you’ll go forward,
Harrigan,” said the captain, and his voice was
dry and dead as his skin—“if you’ll
go forward and report to the bos’n, he’ll
see that you have a bunk.”
“Thank you, sir,” murmured
Harrigan, and slipped from the room on his bare feet.
“That man,” stated Henshaw,
“is as strong as you are, McTee, and yet they
call you the huskiest sailor of the South Seas.”
“He is almost as strong,”
answered McTee with a certain emphasis.
Something like a smile appeared in
the eyes of Henshaw, but did not disturb the fixed
lines of his mouth. For a moment Henshaw and McTee
measured each other.
The Scotchman spoke first: “Captain,
you’re as keen as the stories they tell of you.”
“And you’re as hard, McTee.”
The latter waved the somewhat dubious compliment away.
“I was breaking that fellow,
and he held out longer than any man I’ve ever
handled. The shipwreck interrupted me, or I would
have finished what I started.”
“You’d like to have me finish what you
began?”
“You read my mind.”
“Discipline is a great thing.”
“Absolutely necessary at sea.”
Henshaw answered coldly: “There’s
no need for us to act the hypocrite, eh?”
McTee hesitated, and then grinned:
“Not a bit. I know what you did twenty
years ago in the Solomons.”
“And I know the story of you and the pearl divers.”
“That’s enough.”
“Quite.”
“And Harrigan?”
“As a favor to you, McTee, I’ll
break him. Maybe you’ll be interested in
my methods.”
“Try mine first. I made
him scrub down the bridge with suds every morning,
and while his hands were puffed and soft, I sent him
down to the fireroom to pass coal.”
“He’ll kill you someday.”
“If he can.”
They smiled strangely at each other.
A knock came at the door, and Salvain entered, radiant.
“She is divine!” he cried.
“Her hair is old copper with golden lights.
McTee, if she is yours, you have found another Venus!”
“If she is not mine,”
answered McTee, “at least she belongs to no other
man.”
Salvain studied him, first with eagerness,
then with doubt, and last of all with despair.
“If any other man said that
I would question it—so!—with
my life. But McTee? No, I love life too
well!”
“Now,” Henshaw said to
Salvain, “Captain McTee and I have business to
talk.”
“Aye, sir,” said Salvain.
“One minute, Salvain,”
broke in McTee. “I haven’t thanked
you in the girl’s name for taking care of Miss
Malone.”
The first mate paused at the door.
“I begin to wonder, captain,”
he answered, “whether or not you have the right
to thank me in her name!”
He disappeared through the door without
waiting for an answer.
“Salvain has forgotten me,”
muttered McTee, balling his fist, “but I’ll
freshen his memory.”
He flushed as he became aware of the
cold eye of Henshaw upon him.
“Even Samson fell,” said
the old man. “But she hasn’t cut your
hair yet, McTee?”
“What the devil do you mean?”
Henshaw silently poured another drink
and passed it to the Scotchman. The latter gripped
the glass hard and tossed off the drink with a single
gesture. At once his eyes came back to Henshaw’s
face with the fierce question. He was astonished
to note kindliness in the answering gaze.
Old Henshaw said gently: “Tut,
tut! You’re a proper man, McTee, and a
proper man has always the thought of some woman tucked
away in his heart. Look at me! For almost
sixty years I’ve been the King of the South
Seas!”
At the thought of his glories his
face altered, as soldiers change when they receive
the order to charge.
“You’re a rare man and
a bold man, McTee, but you’ll never be what
White Henshaw has been—the Shark of the
Sea! Ha! Yet think of it! Ten years
ago, after all my harvesting of the sea, I had not
a dollar to show for it! Why? Because I
was working for no woman. But here I am sailing
home from my last voyage—rich! And
why? Because for ten years I’ve been working
for a woman. For ourselves we make and we spend.
But for a woman we make and we save. Aye!”
“For a woman?” repeated
McTee, wondering. “Do you mean to say—”
“Tut, man, it’s my granddaughter.
Look!”
Perhaps the whisky had loosened the
old man’s tongue; perhaps these confidences
were merely a tribute to the name and fame of McTee;
but whatever was the reason, McTee knew he was hearing
things which had never been spoken before. Now
Henshaw produced a leather wallet from which he selected
two pictures, and handed one to the Scotchman.
It showed a little girl of some ten years with her
hair braided down her back. McTee looked his
question.
“That picture was sent to me by my son ten years
ago.”
It showed the effect of time and rough
usage. The edges of the cheap portrait were yellow
and cracked.
“He was worthless, that son
of mine. So I shut him out of my mind until I
got a letter saying he was about to die and giving
his daughter into my hands. That picture was
in the letter. Ah, McTee, how I pored over it!
For, you see, I saw the face of my wife in the face
of the little girl, Beatrice. She had come back
to life in the second generation. I suppose that
happens sometimes.
“I made up my mind that night
to make a fortune for little Beatrice. First
I sold my name and honor to get a half share and captaincy
of a small tramp freighter. Then I went to the
Solomon Islands. You know what I did there?
Yes, the South Seas rang with it. It was brutal,
but it brought me money.
“I sent enough of that money
to the States to keep the girl in luxury. The
rest of it I put back into my trading ventures.
I got a larger boat. I did unheard-of things;
and everything I touched turned into gold. All
into gold!
“From time to time I got letters
from Beatrice. First they were careful scrawls
which said nothing. Then the handwriting grew
more fluent. It alarmed me to notice the growth
of her mind; I was afraid that when I finally saw
her, she would see in me only a barbarian. So
I educated myself in odd hours. I’ve read
a book while a hurricane was standing my ship on her
beam ends.”
McTee, leaning forward with a frown
of almost painful interest, understood. He saw
it in the wild light of the old man’s eyes; a
species of insanity, this love of the old man for the
child he had never seen.
“Notice my language now?
Never a taint of the beach lingo in it. I rubbed
all that out. Aye, McTee, it took me ten years
to educate myself for that girl’s sake.
In the meantime, I made money, as I’ve said.
Ten years of that!
“Beatrice was in college, and
six months ago I got the word that she had graduated.
A month later I heard that she was going into a decline.
It was nothing very serious, but the doctors feared
for the strength of her lungs. It made me glad.
Now I knew that she would need me. An old man
is like a woman, McTee; he needs to have things dependent
on him.
“I turned everything I had into
cash. I did it so hurriedly that I must have
lost close to twenty per cent on the forced sales.
What did I care? I had enough, and I made myself
into a grandfather who could meet Beatrice’s
educated friends on their own level.
“I kept this old ship, the Heron,
out of the list of my boats. I am going back
to Beatrice with gold in my hands and gold in my brain!
All for her. But is she not worth it? Look!”
He thrust the second portrait into
McTee’s hands. It showed a rather thin-faced
girl with abnormally large eyes and a rather pathetic
smile. It was an appealing face rather than a
pretty one.
“Beautiful!” said McTee with forced enthusiasm.
“Yes, beautiful! A little
pinched, perhaps, but she’ll fill out as she
grows older. And those are her grandmother’s
eyes! Aye!”
He took the photograph and touched it lightly.
His voice grew lower, and the roughness
was plainly a tremolo now: “The doctors
say she’s sick, a little sick, quite sick, in
fact. Twice every day I make them send me wireless
reports of her condition. One day it’s
better—one day it’s worse.”
He began to walk the cabin, his step
marvelously elastic and nervous for so aged a man.
“Is it not well, McTee?
Let her be at death’s door! I shall come
to her bedside with gold in either hand and raise
her up to life! She shall owe everything to me!
Will that not make her love me? Will it?”
He grasped McTee’s shoulder tightly.
“I’m not a pretty lad to look at, eh,
lad?”
McTee poured himself a drink hastily,
and drained the glass before he answered.
“A pretty man? Nonsense,
Henshaw! A little weather-beaten, but a tight
craft at that; she’ll worship the ground you
walk! Character, Henshaw, that’s what these
new American girls want to see in a man!”
Henshaw sighed with deep relief.
“Ah-h, McTee, you comfort me
more than a drink on a stormy night! For reward,
you shall see what I’m bringing back to her.
Come!”
He rose and led McTee into his bedroom,
for two cabins were retained for the captain’s
use. Filling one corner of the room was a huge
safe almost as tall as a man.
He squatted before the safe and commenced
to work the combination with a swift sureness which
told McTee at once that the old buccaneer came here
many times a day to gloat over his treasure. At
length the door of the safe fell open. Inside
was a great mass of little canvas bags. McTee
was panting as if he had run a great distance at full
speed.
“Take one.”
The Scotchman raised one of the bags
and shook it. A musical clinking sounded.
“Forty pounds of gold coin,”
said Henshaw, “and about ten thousand dollars
in all. There are eighty-five of those bags, and
every one holds the same amount. Also—”
He opened a little drawer at the top
of the safe and took from it a chamois bag. When
he untied it, McTee looked within and saw a quantity
of pearls. He took out a small handful. They
were chosen jewels, flawless, glowing. His hand
seemed to overflow with white fire. He dropped
them back in the bag, letting each pearl run over the
end of his fingers. Henshaw restored the bag
and locked the safe. Then the two men stared
at each other. They had been opposite types the
moment before, but now their lips parted in the same
thirsty eagerness.
“If she were dead,” said
McTee almost reverently, “the sight of that
would bring her back to life.”
“McTee, you’re a worthy
lad. They’ve told me lies about you.
Indeed it would bring her back to life! It must
be so! And yet—” Sudden melancholy
fell on him as they returned to the other room and
sat down. “Yet I think night and day of
what an old devil of a black magician told me in the
Solomon Islands. He said I and my gold should
burn together. I laughed at him and told him
I could not die on dry land. He said I would
not, but that I should burn at sea! Think of that,
McTee! Suppose I should be robbed of the sight
of my girl and of my gold at the same time!”
McTee started to say something cheerful,
but his voice died away to a mutter. Henshaw
was staring at the wall with visionary eyes filled
with horror and despair.
“Lad, do you think ghosts have power?”
“Henshaw, you’ve drunk a bit too much!”
“If they have no power, I’m
safe. I fear no living man!” He added softly:
“No man but myself!”
“I’m tired out,” said McTee suddenly.
“Where shall I bunk, captain?”
“Here! Here in this room!
Take that couch in the corner over there. It
has a good set of springs. With gold in my hands.
Here are some blankets. With gold in my hands
and my brain. Though you don’t need much
covering in this latitude. I would raise her from
the grave.”
He went about, interspersing his remarks
to McTee with half-audible murmurs addressed to his
own ears.
“Is this,” thought McTee, “the Shark
of the South Seas?”
A knock came and the door opened.
A fat sailor in an oilskin hat stood at the entrance.
“The cook ain’t put out
no lunch for the night watches, sir,” he whined.
Henshaw had stood with his back turned
as the door opened. He turned now slowly toward
the open door. McTee could not see his face nor
guess at its expression, but the moment the big sailor
caught a glimpse of his skipper’s countenance,
he blanched and jumped back into the night, slamming
the door behind him. That sight recalled something
to McTee.
“One thing more, captain,”
he said. “What of Harrigan? Do we break
him between us?”
“Aye, in your own way!”
“Good! Then start him scrubbing
the bridge and send him down to the fireroom afterwards,
eh?”
“It’s done. Why do you hate him,
McTee? Is it the girl?”
“No; the color of his hair. Good night.”