THE MUCKER AT BAY
“What has this man said
to you, Miss Harding?” cried Theriere.
“Has he offered you harm?”
“I do not think that he would
have dared strike me,” replied the girl, “though
he threatened to do so. He is the coward who
murdered poor Mr. Mallory upon the Lotus. He
might stoop to anything after that.”
Theriere turned angrily upon Byrne.
“Go below!” he shouted.
“I’ll attend to you later. If Miss
Harding were not here I’d thrash you within an
inch of your life now. And if I ever hear of
your speaking to her again, or offering her the slightest
indignity I’ll put a bullet through you so quick
you won’t know what has struck you.”
“T’ell yeh will!”
sneered Billy Byrne. “I got your number,
yeh big stiff; an’ yeh better not get gay wit
me. Dey ain’t no guy on board dis man’s
ship dat can hand Billy Byrne dat kin’ o’
guff an’ get away with it—see?”
and before Theriere knew what had happened a heavy
fist had caught him upon the point of the chin and
lifted him clear off the deck to drop him unconscious
at Miss Harding’s feet.
“Yeh see wot happens to guys
dat get gay wit me?” said the mucker to the
girl, and then stooping over the prostrate form of
the mate Billy Byrne withdrew a huge revolver from
Theriere’s hip pocket.
“I guess I’ll need dis
gat in my business purty soon,” he remarked.
Then he planted a vicious kick in
the face of the unconscious man and went his way to
the forecastle.
“Now maybe she’ll tink
Billy Byrne’s a coward,” he thought, as
he disappeared below.
Barbara Harding stood speechless with
shock at the brutality and ferocity of the unexpected
attack upon Theriere. Never in all her life
had she dreamed that there could exist upon the face
of the earth a thing in human form so devoid of honor,
and chivalry, and fair play as the creature that she
had just witnessed threatening a defenseless woman,
and kicking an unconscious man in the face; but then
Barbara Harding had never lived between Grand Avenue
and Lake Street, and Halsted and Robey, where standards
of masculine bravery are strange and fearful.
When she had recovered her equanimity
she hastened to the head of the cabin companionway
and called aloud for help. Instantly Skipper
Simms and First Officer Ward rushed on deck, each
carrying a revolver in readiness for the conflict
with their crew that these two worthies were always
expecting.
Barbara pointed out the still form
of Theriere, quickly explaining what had occurred.
“It was the fellow Byrne who
did it,” she said. “He has gone
into the forecastle now, and he has a revolver that
he took from Mr. Theriere after he had fallen.”
Several of the crew had now congregated
about the prostrate officer.
“Here you,” cried Skipper
Simms to a couple of them; “you take Mr. Theriere
below to his cabin, an’ throw cold water in
his face. Mr. Ward, get some brandy from my locker,
an’ try an’ bring him to. The rest
of you arm yourselves with crowbars and axes, an’
see that that son of a sea cook don’t get out
on deck again alive. Hold him there ’til
I get a couple of guns. Then we’ll get
him, damn him!”
Skipper Simms hastened below while
two of the men were carrying Theriere to his cabin
and Mr. Ward was fetching the brandy. A moment
later Barbara Harding saw the skipper return to the
upper deck with a rifle and two revolvers. The
sailors whom he had detailed to keep Byrne below were
gathered about the hatchway leading to the forecastle.
Some of them were exchanging profane and pleasant
badinage with the prisoner.
“Yeh better come up an’
get killed easy-like;” one called down to the
mucker. “We’re apt to muss yeh all
up down there in the dark with these here axes and
crowbars, an’ then wen we send yeh home yer
pore maw won’t know her little boy at all.”
“Yeh come on down here, an’
try mussin’ me up,” yelled back Billy
Byrne. “I can lick de whole gang wit one
han’ tied behin’ me—see?”
“De skipper’s gorn to
get his barkers, Billy,” cried Bony Sawyer.
“Yeh better come up an’ stan’ trial
if he gives yeh the chanct.”
“Stan’ nothin’,”
sneered Billy. “Swell chanct I’d
have wit him an’ Squint Eye holdin’ court
over me. Not on yer life, Bony. I’m
here, an’ here I stays till I croaks, but yeh
better believe me, I’m goin, to croak a few
before I goes, so if any of you ginks are me frien’s
yeh better keep outen here so’s yeh won’t
get hurted. An’ anudder ting I’m
goin’ to do afore I cashes in—I’m
goin’ to put a few of dem ginks in de cabin
wise to where dey stands wit one anudder. If
I don’t start something before I goes out me
name’s not Billy Byrne.”
At this juncture Skipper Simms appeared
with the three weapons he had gone to his cabin to
fetch. He handed one to Bony Sawyer, another
to Red Sanders and a third to a man by the name of
Wison.
“Now, my men,” said Skipper
Simms, “we will go below and bring Byrne up.
Bring him alive if you can—but bring him.”
No one made a move to enter the forecastle.
“Go on now, move quickly,”
commanded Skipper Simms sharply.
“Thought he said ’we’,” remarked
one of the sailors.
Skipper Simms, livid with rage, turned
to search out the offender from the several men behind
him.
“Who was that?” he roared.
“Show me the blitherin’ swab.
Jes’ show him to me, I tell you, an I’ll
learn him. Now you,” he yelled at the
top of his voice, turning again to the men he had
ordered into the forecastle after Billy Byrne, “you
cowardly landlubbers you, get below there quick afore
I kick you below.”
Still no one moved to obey him.
From white he went to red, and then back to white
again. He fairly frothed at the mouth as he
jumped up and down, cursing the men, and threatening.
But all to no avail. They would not go.
“Why, Skipper,” spoke
up Bony Sawyer, “it’s sure death for any
man as goes below there. It’s easier, an’
safer, to starve him out.”
“Starve nothin’,”
shrieked Skipper Simms. “Do you reckon
I’m a-goin’ to sit quiet here for a week
an’ let any blanked wharf rat own that there
fo’c’s’le just because I got a lot
o’ white-livered cowards aboard? No sir!
You’re a-goin’ down after that would-be
bad man an’ fetch him up dead or alive,”
and with that he started menacingly toward the three
who stood near the hatch, holding their firearms safely
out of range of Billy Byrne below.
What would have happened had Skipper
Simms completed the threatening maneuver he had undertaken
can never be known, for at this moment Theriere pushed
his way through the circle of men who were interested
spectators of the impending tragedy.
“What’s up, sir?”
he asked of Simms. “Anything that I can
help you with?”
“Oh!” exclaimed the skipper;
“so you ain’t dead after all, eh?
Well that don’t change the looks of things a
mite. We gotta get that man outa there an’
these flea-bitten imitations of men ain’t got
the guts to go in after him.”
“He’s got your gun, sir,”
spoke up Wison, “an’ Gawd knows he be
the one as’ud on’y be too glad for the
chanct to use it.”
“Let me see if I can’t
handle him, sir,” said Theriere to Skipper Simms.
“We don’t want to lose any men if we can
help it.”
The skipper was only too glad to welcome
this unexpected rescue from the predicament in which
he had placed himself. How Theriere was to
accomplish the subjugation of the mutinous sailor
he could not guess, nor did he care so long as it
was done without risk to his own skin.
“Now if you’ll go away,
sir,” said Theriere, “and order the men
away I’ll see what I can do.”
Skipper Simms did as Theriere had
requested, so that presently the officer stood alone
beside the hatch. Across the deck, amidships,
the men had congregated to watch Theriere’s
operations, while beyond them stood Barbara Harding
held fascinated by the grim tragedy that was unfolding
before her upon this accursed vessel.
Theriere leaned over the open hatch,
in full view of the waiting Byrne, ready below.
There was the instant report of a firearm and a bullet
whizzed close past Theriere’s head.
“Avast there, Byrne!”
he shouted. “It’s I, Theriere.
Don’t shoot again, I want to speak to you.”
“No monkey business now,”
growled the mucker in reply. “I won’t
miss again.”
“I want to talk with you, Byrne,”
said Theriere in a low tone. “I’m
coming down there.”
“No you ain’t, cul,”
returned Byrne; “leastways yeh ain’t a-comin’
down here alive.”
“Yes I am, Byrne,” replied
Theriere, “and you don’t want to be foolish
about it. I’m unarmed. You can cover
me with your gun until you have satisfied yourself
as to that. I’m the only man on the ship
that can save your life—the only man that
has any reason to want to; but we’ve got to talk
it over and we can’t talk this way where there’s
a chance of being overheard. I’ll be on
the square with you if you will with me, and if we
can’t come to terms I’ll come above again
and you won’t be any worse off than you are
now. Here I come,” and without waiting
for an acceptance of his proposition the second officer
of the Halfmoon slipped over the edge of the hatchway
and disappeared from the sight of the watchers above.
That he was a brave man even Billy
Byrne had to admit, and those above who knew nothing
of the relations existing between the second mate
and the sailor, who had so recently felled him, thought
that his courage was little short of marvelous.
Theriere’s stock went up by leaps and bounds
in the estimation of the sailors of the Halfmoon, for
degraded though they were they could understand and
appreciate physical courage of this sort, while to
Barbara Harding the man’s act seemed unparalleled
in its utter disregard of the consequences of life
and death to himself that it entailed. She suddenly
was sorry that she had entertained any suspicions
against Theriere—so brave a man could not
be other than the soul of honor, she argued.
Once below Theriere found himself
covered by his own revolver in the hands of a very
desperate and a very unprincipled man. He smiled
at Byrne as the latter eyed him suspiciously.
“See here, Byrne,” said
Theriere. “It would be foolish for me
to say that I am doing this for love of you.
The fact is that I need you. We cannot succeed,
either one of us, alone. I think you made a
fool play when you hit me today. You know that
our understanding was that I was to be even a little
rougher with you than usual, in order to avoid suspicion
being attached to any seeming familiarity between us,
should we be caught conferring together. I had
the chance to bawl you out today, and I thought that
you would understand that I was but taking advantage
of the opportunity which it afforded to make it plain
to Miss Harding that there could be nothing other
than hatred between us—it might have come
in pretty handy later to have her believe that.
“If I’d had any idea that
you really intended hitting me you’d have been
a dead man before your fist reached me, Byrne.
You took me entirely by surprise; but that’s
all in the past—I’m willing to let
bygones be bygones, and help you out of the pretty
pickle you’ve got yourself into. Then we
can go ahead with our work as though nothing had happened.
What do you say?”
“I didn’t know yeh was
kiddin,” replied the mucker, “or I wouldn’t
have hit yeh. Yeh acted like yeh meant it.”
“Very well, that part’s
understood,” said Theriere. “Now
will you come out if I can square the thing with the
skipper so’s you won’t get more than a
day or so in irons—he’ll have to
give you something to save his own face; but I promise
that you’ll get your food regularly and that
you won’t be beaten up the way you were before
when he had you below. If he won’t agree
to what I propose I give you my word to tell you so.”
“Go ahead,” said Billy
Byrne; “I don’t trust nobody wen I don’t
have to; but I’ll be dinged if I see any other
way out of it.”
Theriere returned to the deck and
seeking out the skipper drew him to one side.
“I can get him up peaceably
if I can assure him that he’ll only get a day
or so in the cooler, with full rations and no beatings.
I think, sir, that that will be the easiest way out
of it. We cannot spare a man now—if
we want to get the fellow later we can always find
some pretext.”
“Very well, Mr. Theriere,”
replied the skipper, “I’ll leave the matter
entirely in your hands—you can do what you
want with the fellow; it’s you as had your face
punched.”
Theriere returned immediately to the
forecastle, from which he presently emerged with the
erstwhile recalcitrant Byrne, and for two days the
latter languished in durance vile, and that was the
end of the episode, though its effects were manifold.
For one thing it implanted in the heart of Theriere
a personal hatred for the mucker, so that while heretofore
his intention of ridding himself of the man when he
no longer needed him was due purely to a matter of
policy, it was now reinforced by a keen desire for
personal revenge. The occurrence had also had
its influence upon Barbara Harding, in that it had
shown her Mr. Theriere in a new light—one
that reflected credit upon him. She had thought
his magnanimous treatment of the sailor little short
of heroic; and it had deepened the girl’s horror
of Billy Byrne until it now amounted to little short
of an obsession. So vivid an impression had his
brutality made upon her that she would start from
deep slumber, dreaming that she was menaced by him.
After Billy was released for duty
following his imprisonment, he several times passed
the girl upon deck. He noticed that she shrank
from him in disgust and terror; but what surprised
him was that instead of the thrill of pride which he
formerly would have felt at this acknowledgment of
his toughness, for Billy prided himself on being a
tough, he now felt a singular resentment against the
girl for her attitude, so that he came to hate her
even more than he had before hated. Formerly
he had hated her for the things she stood for, now
he hated her for herself.
Theriere was often with her now, and,
less frequently, Divine; for at the second officer’s
suggestion Barbara had not acquainted that gentleman
with the fact that she was aware of his duplicity.
“It is just as well not to let
him know,” said Theriere. “It gives
you an advantage that would be wanting should he suspect
the truth, so that now you are always in a position
to be warned in plenty of time against any ulterior
suggestion he may make. Keep me posted as to
all he tells you of his plans, and in this way we
can defeat him much more easily than as though you
followed your natural inclinations and refused to
hold communication of any sort with him. It might
be well, Miss Harding, even to encourage him in the
hope that you will wed him voluntarily. I think
that that would throw him entirely off his guard,
and pave the way for your early release.”
“Oh, I doubt if I could do that,
Mr. Theriere,” exclaimed the girl. “You
cannot imagine how I loathe the man now that I know
him in his true colors. For years he has importuned
me to marry him, and though I never cared for him in
that way at all, and never could, I felt that he was
a very good friend and that his constancy demanded
some return on my part—my friendship and
sympathy at least; but now I shiver whenever he is
near me, just as I would were I to find a snake coiled
close beside me. I cannot abide treachery.”
“Nor I, Miss Harding,”
agreed Theriere glibly. “The man deserves
nothing but your contempt, though for policy’s
sake I hope that you will find it possible to lead
him on until his very treachery proves the means of
your salvation, for believe me, if he has been false
to you how much more quickly will he be false to Simms
and Ward! He would ditch them in a minute if
the opportunity presented itself for him to win you
without their aid. I had thought it might be
feasible to lead him into attempting to take the ship
by force, and return you to San Francisco, or, better
still possibly, to the nearest civilized port.
“You might, with propriety suggest
this to him, telling him that you believe that I would
stand ready to assist in the undertaking. I
can promise you the support of several of the men—quite
a sufficient number with Divine and myself, easily
to take the Halfmoon away from her present officers.”
“I will think over your suggestion,
Mr. Theriere,” replied Barbara, “and I
thank you for the generous impulse that has prompted
you to befriend me—heaven knows how badly
I need a friend now among so many enemies. What
is it, Mr. Theriere? What is the matter?”
The officer had turned his eyes casually
toward the southeast as the girl spoke, and just now
he had given a sudden exclamation of surprise and
alarm.
“That cloud, Miss Harding,”
he answered. “We’re in for a bad
blow, and it’ll be on us in a minute,”
and with that he started forward on a run, calling
back over his shoulder, “you’d better
go below at once.”