LARRY DIVINE UNMASKED
“Yes, Barbara, it is I,”
said Mr. Divine; “and thank God that I am here
to do what little any man may do against this band
of murdering pirates.”
“But, Larry,” cried the
girl, in evident bewilderment, “how did you
come to be aboard this ship? How did you get
here? What are you doing amongst such as these?”
“I am a prisoner,” replied
the man, “just as are you. I think they
intend holding us for ransom. They got me in
San Francisco. Slugged me and hustled me aboard
the night before they sailed.”
“Where are they going to take us?” she
asked.
“I do not know,” he replied,
“although from something I have overheard of
their conversations I imagine that they have in mind
some distant island far from the beaten track of commerce.
There are thousands such in the Pacific that are
visited by vessels scarce once in a century.
There they will hold us until they can proceed with
the ship to some point where they can get into communication
with their agents in the States. When the ransom
is paid over to these agents they will return for
us and land us upon some other island where our friends
can find us, or leaving us where we can divulge the
location of our whereabouts to those who pay the ransom.”
The girl had been looking intently
at Mr. Divine during their conversation.
“They cannot have treated you
very badly, Larry,” she said. “You
are as well groomed and well fed, apparently, as ever.”
A slight flush mounting to the man’s
face made the girl wonder a bit though it aroused
no suspicion in her mind.
“Oh, no,” he hastened
to assure her, “they have not treated me at
all badly—why should they? If I die
they can collect no ransom on me. It is the
same with you, Barbara, so I think you need apprehend
no harsh treatment.”
“I hope you are right, Larry,”
she said, but the hopelessness of her air rather belied
any belief that aught but harm could come from captivity
with such as those who officered and manned the Halfmoon.
“It seems so remarkable,”
she went on, “that you should be a prisoner
upon the same boat. I cannot understand it.
Why only a few days ago we received and entertained
a friend of yours who brought a letter from you to
papa—the Count de Cadenet.”
Again that telltale flush mantled
the man’s cheek. He cursed himself inwardly
for his lack of self-control. The girl would
have his whole secret out of him in another half-hour
if he were not more careful.
“They made me do that,”
he said, jerking his thumb in the general direction
of Skipper Simms’ cabin. “Maybe that
accounts for their bringing me along. The ‘Count
de Cadenet’ is a fellow named Theriere, second
mate of this ship. They sent him to learn your
plans; when you expected sailing from Honolulu and
your course. They are all crooks and villains.
If I hadn’t done as they bid they would have
killed me.”
The girl made no comment, but Divine
saw the contempt in her face.
“I didn’t know that they
were going to do this. If I had I’d have
died before I’d have written that note,”
he added rather lamely.
The girl was suddenly looking very
sad. She was thinking of Billy Mallory who had
died in an effort to save her. The mental comparison
she was making between him and Mr. Divine was not
overly flattering to the latter gentleman.
“They killed poor Billy,”
she said at last. “He tried to protect
me.”
Then Mr. Divine understood the trend
of her thoughts. He tried to find some excuse
for his cowardly act; but with the realization of
the true cowardliness and treachery of it that the
girl didn’t even guess he understood the futility
of seeking to extenuate it. He saw that the
chances were excellent that after all he would be
compelled to resort to force or threats to win her
hand at the last.
“Billy would have done better
to have bowed to the inevitable as I did,” he
said. “Living I am able to help you now.
Dead I could not have prevented them carrying out
their intentions any more than Billy has, nor could
I have been here to aid you now any more than he is.
I cannot see that his action helped you to any great
extent, brave as it was.”
“The memory of it and him will
always help me,” she answered quietly.
“They will help me to bear whatever is before
me bravely, and, when the time comes, to die bravely;
for I shall always feel that upon the other side a
true, brave heart is awaiting me.”
The man was silent. After a
moment the girl spoke again. “I think
I would rather be alone, Larry,” she said.
“I am very unhappy and nervous. Possibly
I could sleep now.”
With a bow he turned and left the cabin.
For weeks the Halfmoon kept steadily
on her course, a little south of west. There
was no material change in the relations of those aboard
her. Barbara Harding, finding herself unmolested,
finally acceded to the repeated pleas of Mr. Divine,
to whose society she had been driven by loneliness
and fear, and appeared on deck frequently during the
daylight watches. Here, one afternoon, she
came face to face with Theriere for the first time
since her abduction. The officer lifted his cap
deferentially; but the girl met his look of expectant
recognition with a cold, blank stare that passed through
and beyond him as though he had been empty air.
A tinge of color rose to the man’s
face, and he continued on his way for a moment as
though content to accept her rebuff; but after a step
or two he turned suddenly and confronted her.
“Miss Harding,” he said,
respectfully, “I cannot blame you for the feeling
of loathing and distrust you must harbor toward me;
but in common justice I think you should hear me before
finally condemning.”
“I cannot imagine,” she
returned coldly, “what defense there can be
for the cowardly act you perpetrated.”
“I have been utterly deceived
by my employers,” said Theriere, hastening to
take advantage of the tacit permission to explain
which her reply contained. “I was given
to understand that the whole thing was to be but a
hoax—that I was taking part in a great
practical joke that Mr. Divine was to play upon his
old friends, the Hardings and their guests. Until
they wrecked and deserted the Lotus in mid-ocean I
had no idea that anything else was contemplated, although
I felt that the matter, even before that event, had
been carried quite far enough for a joke.
“They explained,” he continued,
“that before sailing you had expressed the hope
that something really exciting and adventurous would
befall the party—that you were tired of
the monotonous humdrum of twentieth-century existence—
that you regretted the decadence of piracy, and the
expunging of romance from the seas.
“Mr. Divine, they told me, was
a very wealthy young man, to whom you were engaged
to be married, and that he could easily afford the
great expense of the rather remarkable hoax we were
supposed to be perpetrating. I saw no harm in
taking part in it, especially as I knew nothing of
the supposititious purpose of the cruise until just
before we reached Honolulu. Before that I had
been led to believe that it was but a pleasure trip
to the South Pacific that Mr. Divine intended.
“You see, Miss Harding, that
I have been as badly deceived as you. Won’t
you let me help to atone for my error by being your
friend? I can assure you that you will need one
whom you can trust amongst this shipload of scoundrels.”
“Who am I to believe?”
cried the girl. “Mr. Divine assures me
that he, too, has been forced into this affair, but
by threats of death rather than deception.”
The expression on Mr. Theriere’s
face was eloquent of sarcastic incredulity.
“How about the note of introduction
that I carried to your father from Mr. Divine?”
asked Theriere.
“He says that he was compelled
to write it at the point of a revolver,” replied
the girl.
“Come with me, Miss Harding,”
said the officer. “I think that I may
be able to convince you that Mr. Divine is not on
any such bad terms with Skipper Simms as would be the
case were his story to you true.”
As he spoke he started toward the
companionway leading to the officers’ cabins.
Barbara Harding hesitated at the top of the stairway.
“Have no fear, Miss Harding,”
Theriere reassured her. “Remember that
I am your friend and that I am merely attempting to
prove it to your entire satisfaction. You owe
it to yourself to discover as soon as possible who
your friends are aboard this ship, and who your enemies.”
“Very well,” said the
girl. “I can be in no more danger one
place aboard her than another.”
Theriere led her directly to his own
cabin, cautioning her to silence with upraised forefinger.
Softly, like skulking criminals, they entered the
little compartment. Then Theriere turned and
closed the door, slipping the bolt noiselessly as he
did so. Barbara watched him, her heart beating
rapidly with fear and suspicion.
“Here,” whispered Theriere,
motioning her toward his berth. “I have
found it advantageous to know what goes on beyond
this partition. You will find a small round hole
near the head of the berth, about a foot above the
bedding. Put your ear to it and listen—I
think Divine is in there now.”
The girl, still frightened and fearful
of the man’s intentions, did, nevertheless,
as he bid. At first she could make out nothing
beyond the partition but a confused murmur of voices,
and the clink of glass, as of the touch of the neck
of a bottle against a goblet. For a moment she
remained in tense silence, her ear pressed to the
tiny aperture. Then, distinctly, she heard the
voice of Skipper Simms.
“I’m a-tellin’ you,
man,” he was saying, “that there wan’t
nothin’ else to be done, an’ I’m
a-gettin’ damn sick o’ hearin’ you
finding fault all the time with the way I been a-runnin’
o’ this little job.”
“I’m not finding fault,
Simms,” returned another voice which the girl
recognized immediately as Divine’s; “although
I do think that it was a mistake to so totally disable
the Lotus as you did. Why, how on earth are
we ever to return to civilization if that boat is
lost? Had she been simply damaged a little,
in a way that they could themselves have fixed up,
the delay would have been sufficient to permit us
to escape, and then, when Miss Harding was returned
in safety to her father, after our marriage, they
would have been so glad to be reunited that he easily
could have been persuaded to drop the matter.
Then another thing; you intended to demand a ransom
for both Miss Harding and myself, to carry out the
fiction of my having been stolen also—how
can you do that if Mr. Harding be dead? And
do you suppose for a moment that Miss Harding will
leave a single stone unturned to bring the guilty
to justice if any harm has befallen her father or his
guests? If so you do not know her as well as
I.”
The girl turned away from the partition,
her face white and drawn, her eyes inexpressibly sad.
She rose to her feet, facing Theriere.
“I have heard quite enough,
thank you, Mr. Theriere,” she said.
“You are convinced then that
I am your friend?” he asked.
“I am convinced that Mr. Divine
is not,” she replied non-committally.
She took a step toward the door.
Theriere stood looking at her. She was unquestionably
very good to look at. He could not remember
ever having seen a more beautiful girl. A great
desire to seize her in his arms swept over the man.
Theriere had not often made any effort to harness
his desires. What he wanted it had been his
custom to take—by force if necessary.
He took a step toward Barbara Harding. There
was a sudden light in his eyes that the girl had not
before seen there, and she reached quickly toward
the knob of the door.
Theriere was upon her, and then, quickly,
he mastered himself, for he recalled his coolly thought-out
plan based on what Divine had told him of that clause
in the will of the girl’s departed grandparent
which stipulated that the man who shared the bequest
with her must be the choice of both herself and her
father. He could afford to bide his time, and
play the chivalrous protector before he essayed the
role of lover.
Barbara had turned a half-frightened
look toward him as he advanced—in doubt
as to his intentions.
“Pardon me, Miss Harding,”
he said; “the door is bolted— let
me unlatch it for you,” and very gallantly he
did so, swinging the portal wide that she might pass
out. “I feared interruption,” he
said, in explanation of the bolt.
In silence they returned to the upper
deck. The intoxication of sudden passion now
under control, Theriere was again master of himself
and ready to play the cold, calculating, waiting game
that he had determined upon. Part of his plan
was to see just enough of Miss Harding to insure a
place in her mind at all times; but not enough to
suggest that he was forcing himself upon her.
Rightly, he assumed that she would appreciate thoughtful
deference to her comfort and safety under the harrowing
conditions of her present existence more than a forced
companionship that might entail too open devotion
on his part. And so he raised his cap and left
her, only urging her to call upon him at any time
that he might be of service to her.
Left alone the girl became lost in
unhappy reflections, and in the harrowing ordeal of
attempting to readjust herself to the knowledge that
Larry Divine, her lifelong friend, was the instigator
of the atrocious villainy that had been perpetrated
against her and her father. She found it almost
equally difficult to believe that Mr. Theriere was
so much more sinned against than sinning as he would
have had her believe. And yet, did his story
not sound even more plausible than that of Divine
which she had accepted before Theriere had made it
possible for her to know the truth? Why, then,
was it so difficult for her to believe the Frenchman?
She could not say, but in the inmost recesses of
her heart she knew that she mistrusted and feared
the man.
As she stood leaning against the rail,
buried deep in thought, Billy Byrne passed close behind
her. At sight of her a sneer curled his lip.
How he hated her! Not that she ever had done
aught to harm him, but rather because she represented
to him in concrete form all that he had learned to
hate and loathe since early childhood.
Her soft, white skin; her shapely
hands and well-cared-for nails; her trim figure and
perfectly fitting suit all taunted him with their
superiority over him and his kind. He knew that
she looked down upon him as an inferior being.
She was of the class that addressed those in his
walk of life as “my man.” Lord, how
he hated that appellation!
The intentness of his gaze upon her
back had the effect so often noted by the observant,
and suddenly aroused from the lethargy of her misery
the girl swung around to meet the man’s eyes
squarely upon her. Instantly she recognized him
as the brute who had killed Billy Mallory. If
there had been hate in the mucker’s eyes as
he looked at the girl, it was as nothing by comparison
with the loathing and disgust which sprang to hers
as they rested upon his sullen face.
So deep was her feeling of contempt
for this man, that the sudden appearance of him before
her startled a single exclamation from her.
“Coward!” came the one
word, involuntarily, from her lips.
The man’s scowl deepened menacingly.
He took a threatening step toward her.
“Wot’s dat?” he
growled. “Don’t get gay wit me, or
I’ll black dem lamps fer yeh,” and he
raised a heavy fist as though to strike her.
The mucker had looked to see the girl
cower before his threatened blow—that would
have been ample atonement for her insult, and would
have appealed greatly to his Kelly-gang sense of humor.
Many a time had he threatened women thus, for the
keen enjoyment of hearing their screams of fright and
seeing them turn and flee in terror. When they
had held their ground and opposed him, as some upon
the West Side had felt sufficiently muscular to do,
the mucker had not hesitated to “hand them one.”
Thus only might a man uphold his reputation for bravery
in the vicinage of Grand Avenue.
He had looked to see this girl of
the effete and effeminate upper class swoon with terror
before him; but to his intense astonishment she but
stood erect and brave before him, her head high held,
her eyes cold and level and unafraid. And then
she spoke again.
“Coward!” she said.
Billy almost struck her; but something
held his hand. What, he could not understand.
Could it be that he feared this slender girl?
And at this juncture, when the threat of his attitude
was the most apparent, Second Officer Theriere came
upon the scene. At a glance he took in the situation,
and with a bound had sprung between Billy Byrne and
Barbara Harding.