“This man Campbell,” said
Harrigan, “he’s a true man, McTee, and
he stood up to White Henshaw for my sake—for
the sake of me and his Bobbie Burns. They plan
to take him to hell tomorrow, Angus, and I’ve
an idea that there’s one chance in the thousand
that I could steal in on the dogs tonight and bring
him back with me.”
“Can they do anything worse
to him than they’re doing to us?”
“Maybe not, but my heart would
lie easier, McTee. I’ll wait for the fever
o’ the sun to go out of me head an’ for
the crew to get drunk an’ a little drunker.”
So they waited while the noise of
the nightly carousal waxed high and higher, and then
died away by slow degrees. At length Harrigan
stood up, gripped the hand of McTee in silent farewell,
heard a whispered “Good luck!” and slipped
noiselessly down the ladder and started across the
deck in the shadow of the rail. From any portion
of the main cabin eyes might be watching him; there
was only the one chance in ten that the lookout whom
Hovey had certainly stationed would not perceive him
as he crept along under the shadow. Accordingly
he went blindly forward.
If the lookout saw him, at least there
was no outcry, no general alarm. He stood flat
against the wall of the main cabin at length and rehearsed
a plan, listening the while to the lapping of the waves
against the side of the ship. Then he stole step
by step up the ladder to the upper deck. His
head was already above the ladder when he heard the
light padding of a bare foot and saw a figure around
the corner of the cabin.
Harrigan ducked out of sight and clung
to the iron rounds ready to leap up and strike if
the sailor should descend the ladder, though in that
case the alarm would be given and his errand spoiled;
but the sailor was apparently the lookout set there
by Hovey. He stayed at the head of the ladder
a moment, humming to himself, and then turned and walked
on his beat to the other side of the ship. Harrigan
slipped onto the deck and ran noiselessly to the side
of the cabin. Here he flattened himself against
the wall until the sentinel had again made the turn
of his beat, and as the latter moved dimly out of
sight through the darkness, the Irishman stole down
the deck toward the forward cabins.
The first two windows showed dark
and empty; if there were anyone inside, he must be
asleep in the drunken torpor into which most of the
crew seemed to have fallen. The door of the third
room, formerly occupied by the second mate, stood
ajar, and here by the dull light of an oil lantern,
he saw Campbell tied hand and foot to a chair.
He was placed close to a little table whereon sat
a bottle of whisky, a siphon of seltzer, a tall glass,
meat, bread, water—everything, in fact,
with which the senses of the starving man could be
tormented. And near him, sitting with elbows
spread out on the edge of the table, was one of the
firemen, grinning continually as if he had just heard
some monstrous joke. The expression of Campbell
was just as fixed, for his small eyes shifted eagerly,
swiftly, from the food to the water, and back again.
The fireman—the same tall,
gaunt fellow who had demanded that Hovey turn over
Campbell to him and his companions that day—now
leaned forward and raised a dipper of water from a
bucket which sat on the floor, and allowed it to trickle
back, splashing with what seemed to Harrigan the sweetest
music in the world. Hovey must have taught him
that trick, and its effect upon Campbell was worse
than the beating of the whips. The fireman let
his head roll loosely back as he laughed, and while
his head was still back and his eyes squinting shut
in the ecstasy of his delight, Harrigan leaped from
the shadow of the door and struck at the throat—at
the great Adam’s apple which shook with the
laughter. The blow must have nearly broken the
man’s neck. His head jerked forward with
a whistling gasp of breath, and as he reached for
the knife on the table, Harrigan struck again, this
time just behind the ear. The man slid from his
chair to the floor and lay in a queer heap—as
if all the bones in his body were broken.
“Harrigan! Harrigan!
Harrigan!” Campbell was whispering over and over,
but still his eyes held like those of a starved wolf
on the food. The moment his ropes were cut, he
buried his teeth in the great chunk of roasted meat.
Harrigan jerked him away and held him by main force.
“Be a man!” he whispered.
“We’ve got to take this food and this water
back to the wireless house—if we can get
there with it. Take hold of yourself, Campbell!”
The engineer nodded. Voices came
close down the deck; instantly Harrigan jerked up
the glass globe which protected the lantern’s
flame and blew out the light. They crouched shoulder
to shoulder.
“I thought he was in here,” said a voice
at the door.
“He was,” answered Hovey’s
voice, “but I guess they took him below—
they said it was too cool for him up there. Ha,
ha, ha!”
Their steps disappeared down the deck.
After that Harrigan dared not show a light in the
cabin window. He and Campbell located the meat
and bread, which were given into the engineer’s
keeping, while Harrigan took the bucket of water.
They slipped out onto the deck and hurried aft, keeping
close to the side of the cabin, for the starlight would
show their figures to any watchful eyes. At the
rear edge of the cabin Harrigan halted Campbell and
whispered: “There’s a guard here.
I got past him in the dark, but two of us loaded down
like this can never go unseen down that ladder.
We’ve got to get rid of him.”
And he pulled out the knife which
he had kept with him ever since the outbreak of the
mutiny. They waited without daring to draw breath
until the sailor came padding by with his naked feet.
Harrigan crept out behind him, and when the sailor
turned at the rail, the Irishman leaped in and struck,
not with the blade, but with the haft of the knife;
he could not kill from behind.
If it had been a solid blow, the sailor
would have crumpled silently as the fireman had done
a few moments before, but the impact glanced and merely
cut his scalp as it knocked him down. He fell
with a shout which was instantly answered from the
front of the ship.
“Down the ladder! Run for
it!” cried Harrigan to Campbell, and as the
engineer clambered down, he stood guard above.
The sailor leaped up from the deck
and lunged with a knife gleaming in his hand, but
Harrigan slashed him across the arm, and he fled howling
into the dark. Before Hovey and his men could
reach the spot, Harrigan had climbed down the ladder
with his precious bucket and was fleeing aft to the
wireless house.
As he reached it, lights were showing
from the main cabin, and there were choruses of yells
announcing the discovery that Campbell was missed.
But Harrigan and the rest of the fugitives scarcely
heard the sounds. The Irishman was busy measuring
as carefully as he could in the dark dippers of water
which the others drank.
There was no sleep that night, partly
from fear lest the infuriated mutineers should at
last attempt to rush the wireless house, partly because
they ate sparingly but long of the meat which Harrigan
carved for them, and the bread, and partly also because
of a singular odor which they had not noticed when
they were tortured by thirst and hunger, and which
now they observed for the first time. It was
peculiarly pungent and heavy with a sickening suggestion
of sweetness about it. None of them could describe
it, saving Harrigan, who had been much in the country
and likened the odor to the smell of an old straw
stack which lay molding and rotting.
It seemed to increase—that
smell—during the night, probably because
their strength was returning and all their senses grew
more acute. It was a torrid night, without moon,
so that the blanket of dark pressed the heat down
upon them and seemed to stifle the very breath.
With the coming of the first light
of the dawn they noticed a peculiar phenomenon.
Perhaps it was because of the evaporation of water
under the fire of the sun, but the Heron seemed
to be surrounded with a white vapor which rose shimmering
in the slant rays of the morning. But even when
the sun had risen well up in the sky, the vapor was
still visible, clinging like a wraith about the ship.
They wondered idly upon it, and wondered still more
at the heat, which was now intense. They were
interrupted in their conjectures by the call of Kate
summoning them to the wireless house where Henshaw
lay apparently at the last gasp.
He had altered marvelously in the
past two days. That resemblance which he had
always had to a mummy was now oddly intensified, for
the cheeks were fallen, the neck withered to scarcely
half its former size, the eyes sunk in purple hollows.
He murmured without ceasing, his voice now rising
hardly above a low whisper. Kate sat beside him,
passing her hands slowly over his temples, for he
complained of a fire rising within his brain.
His complaints died away under her
touches, and he said at last, calmly but very, very
faintly: “Beatrice, there is one thing I
have not yet told you.”
“Yes?” she asked gently,
though she averted her eyes, for all the long hours
he had filled with the stories of his crimes upon earth
were poured into the ear of the spirit of his Beatrice,
as he thought. One last and crowning atrocity
was yet to be told.
“I have left out the greatest thing of all.”
He paused to smile at the memory.
“You remember Samson’s
death, Beatrice? And how he pulled the house
down on the shoulders of his enemies?”
“Yes.”
“That was a wonderful way to
die—wonderful! But I, Beatrice, look
at me, child!—I have surpassed Samson!
Listen! You will wonder and you will admire when
you hear it! When I got the word that you were
dead, I knew two things: first, that the prophecy
of my death at sea would come true, and secondly that
my gold must perish with me. You will never guess
how long I pondered over a way to destroy my gold before
I died! You will think I could have simply thrown
it into the sea? Yes, but the ship was filled
with men ready to mutiny, and they were hungry for
my wealth. They would never have allowed me to
destroy that gold! So I thought of a way—ah,
it was an inspiration!—by which I could
destroy my body, my wealth, and the lives of all the
mutineers at once. Like Samson, I would pull
the house on the heads of my enemies. Ha, ha,
ha!”
His laughter was rather a grimace than a sound.
He went on: “See how cunningly,
how carefully I worked! First I blew up the three
lifeboats so that there would be no escape for the
crew. Then I tampered with the dynamo so that
it burned out, and they could not send out a wireless
call for help. That touch was the best of all.
Well, well! Then I went down into the hold, deep
down, and I started a fire in the cargo. And
then—”
“Oh, my God!” stammered Sloan.
The others were white, but they gestured
at Sloan to silence him. The whisper continued:
“And then I knew that they were done for.
The wheat would not break into a sudden flame, but
it would smolder and glow and spread from hour to
hour and from day to day. The crew would know
nothing of it for a long time. But when they guessed
at what was happening, they would open the hatches
to fight the fire with water. Then what would
happen? Ah, my dear, there was the crowning touch;
for when they opened the hatches, the current of air
would feed the fire and the ship would be instantly
in flames. And so they would burn like dogs with
water, water all around them, and no boats to put off
in—no boats. Ha, ha, ha!”
He choked with his laughter and gasped for breath.
“If it were possible for a bodiless
spirit to perish, I should think that I am dying twice,
Beatrice. The air is thick—this air
of hell!”
He broke off short in his whispering
and raised himself suddenly to an elbow. With
the coming of death his voice grew strong and rang
clearly: “They are in the corners—they
are coming closer! Beatrice! Brush them
away with your fingers as cold as snow. Beatrice,
oh, my dear!”
And he was dead as he fell back on the bunk.
Sloan was already on the deck outside
the wireless house, shrieking with all the power of
his lungs: “Fire! Fire! The wheat
in the hold!”