The decks were already thick with
half-dressed sailors. Here and there lanterns
gleamed, and what they showed was the three lifeboats
of the Heron—two on one side of the cabin
and one on the other—blown into matchwood.
Only shapeless fragments and bundles of kindling wood
dangled from the davits. Captain Henshaw, cool
and calm in his white clothes, stood with folded arms
examining the wreckage on one side.
The sailors from the forecastle went
here and there, muttering, growling surlily; for a
shrewd blow had been struck at their plan of mutiny,
the last item of which was to abandon the Heron off
a deserted coast and then row ashore in the lifeboats.
Over their clamor and cursing broke two voices, one
accusing in a deep bass and the other protesting innocence
in a harsh treble. It was the third mate, Eric
Borgson, who approached carrying little Kamasura under
his arm like a bundle.
“Here’s the little devil
who done the work,” he snarled, and flung Kamasura
at the feet of White Henshaw.
The Japanese are a brave people, but
in that dreadful presence Kamasura made no effort
to regain his feet, but remained on his knees, groveling
and clinging to the hands of the captain, while he
shrieked out an explanation. To remove his hands
from those clinging fingers, Henshaw simply raised
his foot, laid it against the breast of the Jap, and
thrust out. The kick sent Kamasura rolling head
over heels till he crashed against the rail.
He lay partially stunned by the impact, and Eric Borgson,
bellowing his enjoyment of this pleasant jest, collared
poor Kamasura and dragged him back before White Henshaw.
The Jap was now inarticulate with terror and pain.
“I was comin’ down out
of the wheelhouse,” said the mate, “to
get a bite of lunch—this bein’ a
night watch—when I seen this little yellow
rat sneakin’ down the deck like a thief.
I didn’t think nothin’ much about it,
supposin’ he’d just lifted some chow, maybe,
and then I heard them explosions. They knocked
me off my pins, but I scrambled over an’ collared
this fellow. He showed he was guilty right off
the bat by yellin’ for mercy.”
“Captain, captain!” screamed
Kamasura. “Lies, lies-all lies. I go
down the deck—”
The heavy hand of Eric Borgson smashed
against Kamasura’s mouth. The Jap sagged
back, was jerked upright, and the mate’s clubbed
fist jarred home again.
“Lies, are they?” thundered
Borgson. “I’ll teach you to say that
word to Eric Borgson, ha!”
And he struck the half-conscious Jap
again full in the face. There was a slight commotion
in the back of the gathering crowd of sailors.
Harrigan was urging forward, but he was caught by the
iron hands of McTee and held back.
“For the love of Mike,”
moaned the Irishman softly, “let me at that
swine of a mate!”
“Shut up!” cautioned McTee
savagely, but in a whisper. “That’s
the Jap who tried to knife you!”
“I will—I’ll
shut up,” sighed Harrigan, panting, “but
ah-h, to get in punchin’ distance of Borgson
for one second!”
“What shall we do with him?” Borgson was
asking.
“Captain!” begged the
husky voice of Kamasura, fighting his way back to
semi-consciousness.
“If he tries to speak again,
smash his mouth in,” said Henshaw without raising
his voice. “Tonight put him in irons.
I’ll tend to him tomorrow. Go get the irons.
Hovey, take Kamasura below.”
“Aye, aye, sir,” said
Hovey, and caught the Jap by the arms behind.
That touch quieted Kamasura, and as
he was led off, he began to whisper quickly.
The moment they were away from the
crowd, Hovey said: “Say it slow—no,
you don’t have to beg me to help you. I’ll
do what I can. You know that. Now tell me
what you saw.”
“Cap’n McTee—behind
the wireless house—holding the hand of Harrigan.
They were talkin’ soft—like friends!”
“By God,” muttered Hovey
fiercely, “an’ yet McTee told me he wanted
Harrigan put out of the way. He’s double-crossin’
us. They’re teamin’ it together.
What did they say?”
The Jap spat blood copiously before
he could answer: “I could not hear.”
“You ain’t worth your salt,” responded
Hovey.
“I cannot help—I
am crush—I am defeat. Do not let them
bring me before Henshaw. To look at him—it
puts the cold in my heart. I cannot speak.
I shall die—I—”
“Keep your head up,” said
Hovey. “There’s nothing I can say
that’ll help you—just now. Later
on you’ll be able to deal with Henshaw and Borgson
just the way they dealt with you. Does that help
any?”
“Ah-h,” whispered the
Jap and drew in his breath sharply with delight.
“I might start the boys—I
might turn them loose on the ship,” went on
Hovey, “but the time ain’t come yet for
that. We’re too far from the coast.
Whatever happens, Kamasura, can you promise me to keep
your face shut about the mutiny?”
“Yes-s.”
“Even if they was to tie you
up an’ feed you the lash? Henshaw’s
equal to that.”
Kamasura stammered, hesitated.
“Don’t make no mistake,”
said Hovey fiercely, “because we’ll be
standin’ close, some of us, an’ the first
tune you open your damned mouth, we’ll bash
your head in. Get me?”
The entrance of Eric Borgson made
it impossible for the Jap to answer with words, but
his eyes were eloquent with promise. Hovey started
back for the forecastle; he had much to say to the
sailors, and thereafter life on the Heron would be
equally dangerous for both Harrigan and McTee.
The two, in the meantime, were making
their way aft shoulder to shoulder. When they
reached the stretch of deck behind the wireless house,
McTee said: “Harrigan, what’s it to
be? Are you for fighting it out?”
“I’m with you in anything
you say,” retorted the dauntless Irishman, and
then with a changed voice, “but I’m feelin’
sort of sick inside, Angus. Did ye see that murtherin’
dog smash the mouth of that Jap when he hadn’t
the strength to lift his head? Ah-h!”
“I’m sick, too,”
said McTee, “but not because of the Jap.
It’s something worse that bothers me.”
“What?”
“It’s the thought of White
Henshaw, Dan. The brain of that old devil is
going back on him. I think he loves death more
than life. His memories of what he’s done
put him in hell every minute he lives.”
“Go easy, McTee,” said
Harrigan. “D’you mean to say that
Henshaw blew up those boats—an’ his
ship still in the middle of the Pacific?”
“I say nothing. All I know
is that he talked damned queerly of how wonderful
it would be if a ship in the middle of the sea put
her nose under the waves and started for Davy Jones’s
locker. Yes, if she went down with all hands—dived
for the bottom, in fact.”
“What can we do?”
“I don’t know, but I’m
beginning to think that this ship—and our
lives—would be safer in the hands of Hovey
and his gang of cutthroats than they will be under
White Henshaw. Queer things are going to happen
on the Heron, Harrigan, mark my word.”
“You think Henshaw blew up the
boats so not one of the crew could escape?”
“It sounds too crazy to repeat.”
“McTee!”
“Yes, I’m thinking of her, too.”
“Between the mutiny and the
crazy captain, Angus, it’ll take both of us
to pull her through.”
“It will.”
“Then gimme your hand once more,
cap’n. We’re in the trough of the
sea once more, an’ God knows when we’ll
reach dry land, but while we’re on the Heron,
we’re brothers once more. For her sake I’ll
forget I hate you till we’ve got the honest
ground under our feet once more.”
“When the time comes,” said McTee, “it’ll
be a wonderful fight.”
“It will,” agreed Harrigan
fervently. “But first, McTee, we must let
her know that we’re standin’ shoulder to
shoulder to fight for her. Otherwise she won’t
give us her trust.”
“You’re right again.
We’ll go to her cabin now and tell her.
But don’t give her a hint of all that we fear.
She already knows about the mutiny—and
she knows about your part in it.”
“You saw to that, McTee?”
said Harrigan softly, as he pulled on his shirt.
“I did.”
“Ah-h, Angus, that fight’ll be even better
than I was afther thinkin’.”
And they went forward, walking again
shoulder to shoulder. It was Harrigan who stood
in front at her door and knocked. She opened it
wide, but at sight of him started to slam it again.
He blocked it with his foot.
“I’ve not come for my
own sake,” he said in a hard voice, “but
the two of us have come together.”
He jerked his thumb over his shoulder,
and she made out the towering form of McTee.
At that she opened the door, glancing curiously from
one to the other. The eyes of Harrigan went from
her face to McTee, and his eyes flamed.
“Speak up, McTee,” he
said savagely. “Tell her you lied about
me.”
The Scotchman glowered upon him.
“I’ll tell her what I’ve
just found out,” he answered coldly, and turned
to Kate. “We were mistaken in what we thought
when we overheard Hovey talking with Harrigan.
Dan was simply playing a part with them—
he was trying to learn their plans so as to use them
against the mutineers when the time came.”
There was a joyousness in her voice
that cut McTee like a knife as she cried: “I
knew! I knew! My instinct fought for you,
Dan. I couldn’t believe what I heard!”
“What you both heard?”
he said bitterly. “I remember now.
It was when I talked with Hovey in front of this cabin?”
“Ask no more questions,”
said McTee. “I’m seeing red now.”
“Black! You see nothin’
but black, ye swine! The soot in your soul is
a stain hi your eyes, McTee.”
They turned toward the door, but she
sprang before it and set her shoulders against the
boards.
“Sit down—you too, Dan.”
They obeyed slowly, McTee taking the
edge of the bunk and Harrigan lowering his bulk to
the little campstool, which groaned beneath his weight.
She sat on a chair between them, while she looked from
face to face.
“When you came in you were friends,”
she said, “and the only thing that could bring
you to friendship was danger. There is danger.
What?”
They exchanged glances of wonder at
this shrewd interpretation.
“There is danger,” said
McTee at length, “and it’s a danger which
is something more than the mutiny, perhaps.”
“I will tell it,” said Harrigan.
He drew his chair closer to Kate and
leaned over so that his face was near hers. She
knew at once that he had forgotten all about the presence
of McTee.
“Kate, I will not lie to ye,
colleen”—here McTee set his teeth,
but Harrigan went on—“I hate McTee,
and it’s for your sake that I hate him.
And it’s for your sake that I’m goin’
to forget it for a while. There’s throuble
abroad—there’s a cloud over this ship
an’ a curse on it—”
“What he means to say,”
broke in McTee, and then he became aware that she
had not heard him speak, and he saw her smiling as
she drank in the musical brogue of the Irishman.
“A curse on it, acushla, an’
a promise av death that only two shtrong men can save
you from—an’ McTee is shtrong—so
I’ve put away desire av killin’ him till
we get you safe an’ sound to the shore, colleen,
acushla; but ye must trust in us, an’ follow
us as ye love your life an’ as I love ye!”
She straightened in her chair and
turned her eyes toward McTee.
“And you cannot tell me what the danger is?”
“We cannot,” he answered,
“but you must pay no attention to anything that
happens or to anything that is said to you by others.
There are only two men on the Heron whom you
can trust—and here we are. But there
may be wild happenings on the Heron. Keep
your courage and trust hi Angus McTee and—”
“And Harrigan,” broke
in the Irishman quickly, with a glare at the captain.
She reached an impulsive hand to both
of them, and they met the clasp, keeping, as it were,
one eye upon her and one eye of hate upon each other.
She said, and her voice was low and
musical with exultation: “I’ve no
care what happens. I know we shall pull through
safely. The three of us—Dan, Angus—we
lived through the storm when the Mary Rogers
sank, we lived on the island and survived, we reached
the Heron in safety, and as long as we stay
together, we’d be safe if the whole world were
against us. Don’t you feel it?”
She rose, and they stood up, towering
above her, while she went on in a voice trembling
somewhat: “But we must not be seen together
if all these dangers threaten us; they must not know
that the three of us are like one great heart.”
They stepped back, and McTee pulled
open the door, but still she retained their hands,
and now she raised them both to her lips with a gesture
so swift that they could not resist it.
“Both of you,” she said; “God bless
you both!”