THE TYPHOON
The storm that struck the Halfmoon
took her entirely unaware. It had sprung, apparently,
out of a perfectly clear sky. Both the lookout
and the man at the wheel were ready to take oath that
they had scanned the horizon not a half-minute before
Second Mate Theriere had come racing forward bellowing
for all hands on deck and ordering a sailor below to
report the menacing conditions to Captain Simms.
Before that officer reached the deck
Theriere had the entire crew aloft taking in sail;
but though they worked with the desperation of doomed
men they were only partially successful in their efforts.
The sky and sea had assumed a sickly
yellowish color, except for the mighty black cloud
that raced toward them, low over the water.
The low moaning sound that had followed the first
appearance of the storm, gave place to a sullen roar,
and then, of a sudden, the thing struck the Halfmoon,
ripping her remaining canvas from her as if it had
been wrought from tissue paper, and with the flying
canvas, spars, and cordage went the mainmast, snapping
ten feet above the deck, and crashing over the starboard
bow with a noise and jar that rose above the bellowing
of the typhoon.
Fully half the crew of the Halfmoon
either went down with the falling rigging or were
crushed by the crashing weight of the mast as it hurtled
against the deck. Skipper Simms rushed back
and forth screaming out curses that no one heeded,
and orders that there was none to fill.
Theriere, on his own responsibility,
looked to the hatches. Ward with a handful
of men armed with axes attempted to chop away the
wreckage, for the jagged butt of the fallen mast was
dashing against the ship’s side with such vicious
blows that it seemed but a matter of seconds ere it
would stave a hole in her.
With the utmost difficulty a sea anchor
was rigged and tumbled over the Halfmoon’s pitching
bow into the angry sea, that was rising to more gigantic
proportions with each succeeding minute. This
frail makeshift which at best could but keep the vessel’s
bow into the wind, saving her from instant engulfment
in the sea’s trough, seemed to Theriere but a
sorry means of prolonging the agony of suspense preceding
the inevitable end. That nothing could save
them was the second officer’s firm belief, nor
was he alone in his conviction. Not only Simms
and Ward, but every experienced sailor on the ship
felt that the life of the Halfmoon was now but a matter
of hours, possibly minutes, while those of lesser experience
were equally positive that each succeeding wave must
mark the termination of the lives of the vessel and
her company.
The deck, washed now almost continuously
by hurtling tons of storm-mad water, as one mountainous
wave followed another the length of the ship, had
become entirely impossible. With difficulty
the men were attempting to get below between waves.
All semblance of discipline had vanished. For
the most part they were a pack of howling, cursing,
terror-ridden beasts, fighting at the hatches with
those who would have held them closed against the
danger of each new assault of the sea.
Ward and Skipper Simms had been among
the first to seek the precarious safety below deck.
Theriere alone of the officers had remained on duty
until the last, and now he was exerting his every
faculty in the effort to save as many of the men as
possible without losing the ship in the doing of it.
Only between waves was the entrance to the main cabins
negotiable, while the forecastle hatch had been abandoned
entirely after it had with difficulty been replaced
following the retreat of three of the crew to that
part of the ship.
The mucker stood beside Theriere as
the latter beat back the men when the seas threatened.
It was the man’s first experience of the kind.
Never had he faced death in the courage-blighting
form which the grim harvester assumes when he calls
unbridled Nature to do his ghastly bidding. The
mucker saw the rough, brawling bullies of the forecastle
reduced to white-faced, gibbering cowards, clawing
and fighting to climb over one another toward the
lesser danger of the cabins, while the mate fought
them off, except as he found it expedient to let them
pass him; he alone cool and fearless.
Byrne stood as one apart from the
dangers and hysteric strivings of his fellows.
Once when Theriere happened to glance in his direction
the Frenchman mentally ascribed the mucker’s
seeming lethargy to the paralysis of abject cowardice.
“The fellow is in a blue funk,” thought
the second mate; “I did not misjudge him—like
all his kind he is a coward at heart.”
Then a great wave came, following
unexpectedly close upon the heels of a lesser one.
It took Theriere off his guard, threw him down and
hurtled him roughly across the deck, landing him in
the scuppers, bleeding and stunned. The next
wave would carry him overboard.
Released from surveillance the balance
of the crew pushed and fought their way into the cabin—only
the mucker remained without, staring first at the
prostrate form of the mate and then at the open cabin
hatch. Had one been watching him he might reasonably
have thought that the man’s mind was in a muddle
of confused thoughts and fears; but such was far from
the case. Billy was waiting to see if the mate
would revive sufficiently to return across the deck
before the next wave swept the ship. It was
very interesting—he wondered what odds
O’Leary would have laid against the man.
In another moment the wave would come.
Billy glanced at the open cabin hatch. That
would never do—the cabin would be flooded
with tons of water should the next wave find the hatch
still open. Billy closed it. Then he looked
again toward Theriere. The man was just recovering
consciousness—and the wave was coming.
Something stirred within Billy Byrne.
It gripped him and made him act quickly as though
by instinct to do something that no one, Billy himself
least of all, would have suspected that the Grand
Avenue mucker would have been capable of.
Across the deck Theriere was dragging
himself painfully to his hands and knees, as though
to attempt the impossible feat of crawling back to
the cabin hatch. The wave was almost upon Billy.
In a moment it would engulf him, and then rush on
across him to tear Theriere from the deck and hurl
him beyond the ship into the tumbling, watery, chaos
of the sea.
The mucker saw all this, and in the
instant he launched himself toward the man for whom
he had no use, whose kind he hated, reaching him as
the great wave broke over them, crushing them to the
deck, choking and blinding them.
For a moment they were buried in the
swirling maelstrom, and then as the Halfmoon rose
again, shaking the watery enemy from her back, the
two men were disclosed—Theriere half over
the ship’s side—the mucker clinging
to him with one hand, the other clutching desperately
at a huge cleat upon the gunwale.
Byrne dragged the mate to the deck,
and then slowly and with infinite difficulty across
it to the cabin hatch. Through it he pushed
the man, tumbling after him and closing the aperture
just as another wave swept the Halfmoon.
Theriere was conscious and but little
the worse for his experience, though badly bruised.
He looked at the mucker in astonishment as the two
faced each other in the cabin.
“I don’t know why you did it,” said
Theriere.
“Neither do I,” replied Billy Byrne.
“I shall not forget it, Byrne,” said the
officer.
“Yeh’d better,” answered Billy,
turning away.
The mucker was extremely puzzled to
account for his act. He did not look upon it
at all as a piece of heroism; but rather as a “fool
play” which he should be ashamed of. The
very idea! Saving the life of a gink who, despite
his brutal ways, belonged to the much-despised “highbrow”
class. Billy was peeved with himself.
Theriere, for his part, was surprised
at the unexpected heroism of the man he had long since
rated as a cowardly bully. He was fully determined
to repay Byrne in so far as he could the great debt
he owed him. All thoughts of revenge for the
mucker’s former assault upon him were dropped,
and he now looked upon the man as a true friend and
ally.
For three days the Halfmoon plunged
helplessly upon the storm-wracked surface of the mad
sea. No soul aboard her entertained more than
the faintest glimmer of a hope that the ship would
ride out the storm; but during the third night the
wind died down, and by morning the sea had fallen sufficiently
to make it safe for the men of the Halfmoon to venture
upon deck.
There they found the brigantine clean-swept
from stem to stern. To the north of them was
land at a league or two, perhaps. Had the storm
continued during the night they would have been dashed
upon the coast. God-fearing men would have given
thanks for their miraculous rescue; but not so these.
Instead, the fear of death removed, they assumed
their former bravado.
Skipper Simms boasted of the seamanship
that had saved the Halfmoon—his own seamanship
of course. Ward was cursing the luck that had
disabled the ship at so crucial a period of her adventure,
and revolving in his evil mind various possible schemes
for turning the misfortune to his own advantage.
Billy Byrne, sitting upon the corner of the galley
table, hobnobbed with Blanco. These choice representatives
of the ship’s company were planning a raid on
the skipper’s brandy chest during the disembarkation
which the sight of land had rendered not improbable.
The Halfmoon, with the wind down,
wallowed heavily in the trough of the sea, but even
so Barbara Harding, wearied with days of confinement
in her stuffy cabin below, ventured above deck for
a breath of sweet, clean air.
Scarce had she emerged from below
than Theriere espied her, and hastened to her side.
“Well, Miss Harding,”
he exclaimed, “it seems good to see you on deck
again. I can’t tell you how sorry I have
felt for you cooped up alone in your cabin without
a single woman for companionship, and all those frightful
days of danger, for there was scarce one of us that
thought the old hooker would weather so long and hard
a blow. We were mighty fortunate to come through
it so handily.”
“Handily?” queried Barbara
Harding, with a wry smile, glancing about the deck
of the Halfmoon. “I cannot see that we
are either through it handily or through it at all.
We have no masts, no canvas, no boats; and though
I am not much of a sailor, I can see that there is
little likelihood of our effecting a landing on the
shore ahead either with or without boats—–it
looks most forbidding. Then the wind has gone
down, and when it comes up again it is possible that
it will carry us away from the land, or if it takes
us toward it, dash us to pieces at the foot of those
frightful cliffs.”
“I see you are too good a sailor
by far to be cheered by any questionable hopes,”
laughed Theriere; “but you must take the will
into consideration—I only wished to give
you a ray of hope that might lighten your burden of
apprehension. However, honestly, I do think
that we may find a way to make a safe landing if the
sea continues to go down as it has in the past two
hours. We are not more than a league from shore,
and with the jury mast and sail that the men are setting
under Mr. Ward now we can work in comparative safety
with a light breeze, which we should have during the
afternoon. There are few coasts, however rugged
they may appear at a distance, that do not offer some
foothold for the wrecked mariner, and I doubt not
but that we shall find this no exception to the rule.”
“I hope you are right, Mr. Theriere,”
said the girl, “and yet I cannot but feel that
my position will be less safe on land than it has
been upon the Halfmoon. Once free from the restraints
of discipline which tradition, custom, and law enforce
upon the high seas there is no telling what atrocities
these men will commit. To be quite candid, Mr.
Theriere, I dread a landing worse than I dreaded the
dangers of the storm through which we have just passed.”
“I think you have little to
fear on that score, Miss Harding,” said the
Frenchman. “I intend making it quite plain
that I consider myself your protector once we have
left the Halfmoon, and I can count on several of the
men to support me. Even Mr. Divine will not dare
do otherwise. Then we can set up a camp of our
own apart from Skipper Simms and his faction where
you will be constantly guarded until succor may be
obtained.”
Barbara Harding had been watching
the man’s face as he spoke. The memory
of his consideration and respectful treatment of her
during the trying weeks of her captivity had done
much to erase the intuitive feeling of distrust that
had tinged her thoughts of him earlier in their acquaintance,
while his heroic act in descending into the forecastle
in the face of the armed and desperate Byrne had thrown
a glamour of romance about him that could not help
but tend to fascinate a girl of Barbara Harding’s
type. Then there was the look she had seen in
his eyes for a brief instant when she had found herself
locked in his cabin on the occasion that he had revealed
to her Larry Divine’s duplicity. That
expression no red-blooded girl could mistake, and
the fact that he had subdued his passion spoke eloquently
to the girl of the fineness and chivalry of his nature,
so now it was with a feeling of utter trustfulness
that she gladly gave herself into the keeping of Henri
Theriere, Count de Cadenet, Second Officer of the
Halfmoon.
“O Mr. Theriere,” she
cried, “if you only can but arrange it so, how
relieved and almost happy I shall be. How can
I ever repay you for all that you have done for me?”
Again she saw the light leap to the
man’s eyes—the light of a love that
would not be denied much longer other than through
the agency of a mighty will. Love she thought
it; but the eye-light of love and lust are twin lights
between which it takes much worldly wisdom to differentiate,
and Barbara Harding was not worldly-wise in the ways
of sin.
“Miss Harding,” said Theriere,
in a voice that he evidently found it difficult to
control, “do not ask me now how you may repay
me; I—;” but what he would have said
he checked, and with an effort of will that was almost
appreciable to the eye he took a fresh grip upon himself,
and continued: “I am amply repaid by being
able to serve you, and thus to retrieve myself in
your estimation—I know that you have doubted
me; that you have questioned the integrity of my acts
that helped to lead up to the unfortunate affair of
the Lotus. When you tell me that you no longer
doubt—that you accept me as the friend
I would wish to be, I shall be more than amply repaid
for anything which it may have been my good fortune
to have been able to accomplish for your comfort and
safety.”
“Then I may partially repay
you at once,” exclaimed the girl with a smile,
“for I can assure you that you possess my friendship
to the fullest, and with it, of course, my entire
confidence. It is true that I doubted you at
first—I doubted everyone connected with
the Halfmoon. Why shouldn’t I? But
now I think that I am able to draw a very clear line
between my friends and my enemies. There is
but one upon the right side of that line—you,
my friend,” and with an impulsive little gesture
Barbara Harding extended her hand to Theriere.
It was with almost a sheepish expression
that the Frenchman took the proffered fingers, for
there had been that in the frank avowal of confidence
and friendship which smote upon a chord of honor in
the man’s soul that had not vibrated in response
to a chivalrous impulse for so many long years that
it had near atrophied from disuse.
Then, of a sudden, the second officer
of the Halfmoon straightened to his full height.
His head went high, and he took the small hand of
the girl in his own strong, brown one.
“Miss Harding,” he said,
“I have led a hard, bitter life. I have
not always done those things of which I might be most
proud: but there have been times when I have remembered
that I am the grandson of one of Napoleon’s greatest
field marshals, and that I bear a name that has been
honored by a mighty nation. What you have just
said to me recalls these facts most vividly to my
mind—I hope, Miss Harding, that you will
never regret having spoken them,” and to the
bottom of his heart the man meant what he said, at
the moment; for inherent chivalry is as difficult
to suppress or uproot as is inherent viciousness.
The girl let her hand rest in his
for a moment, and as their eyes met she saw in his
a truth and honesty and cleanness which revealed what
Theriere might have been had Fate ordained his young
manhood to different channels. And in that moment
a question sprang, all unbidden and unforeseen to
her mind; a question which caused her to withdraw her
hand quickly from his, and which sent a slow crimson
to her cheek.
Billy Byrne, slouching by, cast a
bitter look of hatred upon the two. The fact
that he had saved Theriere’s life had not increased
his love for that gentleman. He was still much
puzzled to account for the strange idiocy that had
prompted him to that act; and two of his fellows had
felt the weight of his mighty fist when they had spoken
words of rough praise for his heroism—Billy
had thought that they were kidding him.
To Billy the knocking out of Theriere,
and the subsequent kick which he had planted in the
unconscious man’s face, were true indications
of manliness. He gauged such matters by standards
purely Grand Avenuesque and now it enraged him to
see that the girl before whose very eyes he had demonstrated
his superiority over Theriere should so look with
favor upon the officer.
It did not occur to Billy that he
would care to have the girl look with favor upon him.
Such a thought would have sent him into a berserker
rage; but the fact remained that Billy felt a strong
desire to cut out Theriere’s heart when he saw
him now in close converse with Barbara Harding—just
why he felt so Billy could not have said. The
truth of the matter is that Billy was far from introspective;
in fact he did very little thinking. His mind
had never been trained to it, as his muscles had been
trained to fighting. Billy reacted more quickly
to instinct than to the processes of reasoning, and
on this account it was difficult for him to explain
any great number of his acts or moods—it
is to be doubted, however, that Billy Byrne had ever
attempted to get at the bottom of his soul, if he
possessed one.
Be that as it may, had Theriere known
it he was very near death that moment when a summons
from Skipper Simms called him aft and saved his life.
Then the mucker, unseen by the officer, approached
the girl. In his heart were rage and hatred,
and as the girl turned at the sound of his step behind
her she saw them mirrored in his dark, scowling face.