The wreck of the “Halfmoon”
Instantly Barbara Harding looked
into the face of the mucker she read her danger.
Why the man should hate her so she could not guess;
but that he did was evidenced by the malevolent expression
of his surly countenance. For a moment he stood
glaring at her, and then he spoke.
“I’m wise to wot youse
an’ dat guy was chinnin’ about,”
he growled, “an’ I’m right here
to tell youse dat you don’t wanta try an’
put nothin’ over on me, see? Youse ain’t
a-goin’ to double-cross Billy Byrne. I
gotta good notion to han’ youse wot’s
comin’ to you. If it hadn’t been
fer youse I wouldn’t have been here now on dis
Gawd-forsaken wreck. Youse is de cause of all
de trouble. Wot youse ought to get is croaked
an’ den dere wouldn’t be nothin’
to bother any of us. You an’ yer bunch
of kale, dey give me a swift pain. Fer half a
cent I’d soak youse a wallop to de solar plexus
dat would put youse to sleep fer de long count, you—you—”
but here words failed Billy.
To his surprise the girl showed not
the slightest indication of fear. Her head was
high, and her level gaze never wavered from his own
eyes. Presently a sneer of contempt curled her
lip.
“You coward!” she said
quietly. “To insult and threaten a woman!
You are nothing but an insufferable bully, and a
cowardly murderer. You murdered a man on the
Lotus whose little finger held more true manhood,
bravery, and worth than the whole of your great, hulking
carcass. You are only fit to strike from behind,
or when your victim is unsuspecting, as you did Mr.
Theriere that other day. Do you think I fear
a thing such as you—a beast without
honor that kicks an unconscious man in the face?
I know that you can kill me. I know that you
are coward enough to do it because I am a defenseless
woman; and though you may kill me, you never can make
me show fear for you. That is what you wish to
do—that is your idea of manliness.
I had never imagined that such a thing as you lived
in the guise of man; but I have read you, Mr. Byrne,
since I have had occasion to notice you, and I know
now that you are what is known in the great cities
as a mucker. The term never meant much to me
before, but I see now that it fits your kind perfectly,
for in it is all the loathing and contempt that a
real man—a gentleman—must feel
for such as you.”
As she spoke Billy Byrne’s eyes
narrowed; but not with the cunning of premeditated
attack. He was thinking. For the first
time in his life he was thinking of how he appeared
in the eyes of another. Never had any human
being told Billy Byrne thus coolly and succinctly
what sort of person he seemed to them. In the
heat of anger men of his own stamp had applied vile
epithets to him, describing him luridly as such that
by the simplest laws of nature he could not possibly
be; but this girl had spoken coolly, and her descriptions
had been explicit— backed by illustrations.
She had given real reasons for her contempt, and
somehow it had made that contempt seem very tangible.
One who had known Billy would have
expected him to fly into a rage and attack the girl
brutally after her scathing diatribe. Billy
did nothing of the sort. Barbara Harding’s
words seemed to have taken all the fight out of him.
He stood looking at her for a moment—it
was one of the strange contradictions of Billy Byrne’s
personality that he could hold his eyes quite steady
and level, meeting the gaze of another unwaveringly—and
in that moment something happened to Billy Byrne’s
perceptive faculties. It was as though scales
which had dimmed his mental vision had partially dropped
away, for suddenly he saw what he had not before seen—a
very beautiful girl, brave and unflinching before the
brutal menace of his attitude, and though the mucker
thought that he still hated her, the realization came
to him that he must not raise a hand against her—that
for the life of him he could not, nor ever again against
any other woman. Why this change, Billy did
not know, he simply knew that it was so, and with
an ugly grunt he turned his back upon her and walked
away.
A slight breeze had risen from the
southwest since Theriere had left Barbara Harding
and now all hands were busily engaged in completing
the jury rigging that the Halfmoon might take advantage
of the wind and make the shore that rose abruptly
from the bosom of the ocean but a league away.
Before the work was completed the
wind increased rapidly, so that when the tiny bit
of canvas was hoisted into position it bellied bravely,
and the Halfmoon moved heavily forward toward the
land.
“We gotta make a mighty quick
run of it,” said Skipper Simms to Ward, “or
we’ll go to pieces on them rocks afore ever
we find a landing.”
“That we will if this wind rises
much more,” replied Ward; “and’s
far as I can see there ain’t no more chance to
make a landing there than there would be on the side
of a house.”
And indeed as the Halfmoon neared
the towering cliffs it seemed utterly hopeless that
aught else than a fly could find a foothold upon that
sheer and rocky face that rose abruptly from the ocean’s
surface.
Some two hundred yards from the shore
it became evident that there was no landing to be
made directly before them, and so the course of the
ship was altered to carry them along parallel to the
shore in an effort to locate a cove, or beach where
a landing might safely be effected.
The wind, increasing steadily, was
now whipping the sea into angry breakers that dashed
resoundingly against the rocky barrier of the island.
To drift within reach of those frightful destroyers
would mean the instant annihilation of the Halfmoon
and all her company, yet this was precisely what the
almost unmanageable hulk was doing at the wheel under
the profane direction of Skipper Simms, while Ward
and Theriere with a handful of men altered the meager
sail from time to time in an effort to keep the ship
off the rocks for a few moments longer.
The Halfmoon was almost upon the cliff’s
base when a narrow opening showed some hundred fathoms
before her nose, an opening through which the sea
ran in long, surging sweeps, rolling back upon itself
in angry breakers that filled the aperture with swirling
water and high-flung spume. To have attempted
to drive the ship into such a place would have been
the height of madness under ordinary circumstances.
No man knew what lay beyond, nor whether the opening
carried sufficient water to float the Halfmoon, though
the long, powerful sweep of the sea as it entered
the opening denoted considerable depth.
Skipper Simms, seeing the grim rocks
rising close beside his vessel, realized that naught
could keep her from them now. He saw death peering
close to his face. He felt the icy breath of
the Grim Reaper upon his brow. A coward at heart,
he lost every vestige of his nerve at this crucial
moment of his life. Leaping from the wheelhouse
to the deck he ran backward and forward shrieking
at the top of his lungs begging and entreating someone
to save him, and offering fabulous rewards to the
man who carried him safely to the shore.
The sight of their captain in a blue
funk had its effect upon the majority of the crew,
so that in a moment a pack of screaming, terror-ridden
men had supplanted the bravos and bullies of the Halfmoon.
From the cabin companionway Barbara
Harding looked upon the disgusting scene. Her
lip curled in scorn at the sight of these men weeping
and moaning in their fright. She saw Ward busy
about one of the hatches. It was evident that
he intended making a futile attempt to utilize it
as a means of escape after the Halfmoon struck, for
he was attaching ropes to it and dragging it toward
the port side of the ship, away from the shore.
Larry Divine crouched beside the cabin and wept.
When Simms gave up the ship Barbara
Harding saw the wheelmen, there had been two of them,
desert their post, and almost instantly the nose of
the Halfmoon turned toward the rocks; but scarcely
had the men reached the deck than Theriere leaped
to their place at the wheel.
Unassisted he could do little with
the heavy helm. Barbara saw that he alone of
all the officers and men of the brigantine was making
an attempt to save the vessel. However futile
the effort might be, it at least bespoke the coolness
and courage of the man. With the sight of him
there wrestling with death in a hopeless struggle
a little wave of pride surged through the girl.
Here indeed was a man! And he loved her—that
she knew. Whether or no she returned his love
her place was beside him now, to give what encouragement
and physical aid lay in her power.
Quickly she ran to the wheelhouse.
Theriere saw her and smiled.
“There’s no hope, I’m
afraid,” he said; “but, by George, I intend
to go down fighting, and not like those miserable
yellow curs.”
Barbara did not reply, but she grasped
the spokes of the heavy wheel and tugged as he tugged.
Theriere made no effort to dissuade her from the
strenuous labor—every ounce of weight would
help so much, and the man had a wild, mad idea that
he was attempting to put into effect.
“What do you hope to do?”
asked the girl. “Make that opening in
the cliffs?”
Theriere nodded.
“Do you think me crazy?” he asked.
“It is such a chance as only
a brave man would dare to take,” she replied.
“Do you think that we can get her to take it?”
“I doubt it,” he answered.
“With another man at the wheel we might, though.”
Below them the crew of the Halfmoon
ran hither and thither along the deck on the side
away from the breakers. They fought with one
another for useless bits of planking and cordage.
The giant figure of the black cook, Blanco, rose
above the others. In his hand was a huge butcher
knife. When he saw a piece of wood he coveted
in the hands of another he rushed upon his helpless
victim with wild, bestial howls, menacing him with
his gleaming weapon. Thus he was rapidly accumulating
the material for a life raft.
But there was a single figure upon
the deck that did not seem mad with terror.
A huge fellow he was who stood leaning against the
capstan watching the wild antics of his fellows with
a certain wondering expression of incredulity, the
while a contemptuous smile curled his lips.
As Barbara Harding chanced to look in his direction
he also chanced to turn his eyes toward the wheelhouse.
It was the mucker.
The girl was surprised that he, the
greatest coward of them all, should be showing no
signs of cowardice now—probably he was
paralyzed with fright. The moment that the man
saw the two who were in the wheelhouse and the work
that they were doing he sprang quickly toward them.
At his approach the girl shrank closer to Theriere.
What new outrage did the fellow contemplate?
Now he was beside her. The habitual dark scowl
blackened his expression. He laid a heavy hand
on Barbara Harding’s arm.
“Come out o’ dat,”
he bellowed. “Dat’s no kind o’
job fer a broiler.”
And before either she or Theriere
could guess his intention the mucker had pushed Barbara
aside and taken her place at the wheel.
“Good for you, Byrne!”
cried Theriere. “I needed you badly.”
“Why didn’t yeh say so den?” growled
the man.
With the aid of Byrne’s Herculean
muscles and great weight the bow of the Halfmoon commenced
to come slowly around so that presently she almost
paralleled the cliffs again, but now she was much
closer in than when Skipper Simms had deserted her
to her fate—so close that Theriere had little
hope of being able to carry out his plan of taking
her opposite the opening and then turning and running
her before the wind straight into the swirling waters
of the inlet.
Now they were almost opposite the
aperture and between the giant cliffs that rose on
either side of the narrow entrance a sight was revealed
that filled their hearts with renewed hope and rejoicing,
for a tiny cove was seen to lie beyond the fissure—a
cove with a long, wide, sandy beach up which the waves,
broken at the entrance to the little haven, rolled
with much diminished violence.
“Can you hold her alone for
a second, Byrne?” asked Theriere. “We
must make the turn in another moment and I’ve
got to let out sail. The instant that you see
me cut her loose put your helm hard to starboard.
She’ll come around easy enough I imagine, and
then hold her nose straight for that opening.
It’s one chance in a thousand; but it’s
the only one. Are you game?”
“You know it, cul—go
to ’t,” was Billy Byrne’s laconic
rejoinder.
As Theriere left the wheel Barbara
Harding stepped to the mucker’s side.
“Let me help you,” she
said. “We need every hand that we can
get for the next few moments.”
“Beat it,” growled the
man. “I don’t want no skirts in my
way.”
With a flush, the girl drew back,
and then turning watched Theriere where he stood ready
to cut loose the sail at the proper instant.
The vessel was now opposite the cleft in the cliffs.
Theriere had lashed a new sheet in position.
Now he cut the old one. The sail swung around
until caught in position by the stout line.
The mucker threw the helm hard to starboard.
The nose of the brigantine swung quickly toward the
rocks. The sail filled, and an instant later
the ship was dashing to what seemed her inevitable
doom.
Skipper Simms, seeing what Theriere
had done after it was too late to prevent it, dashed
madly across the deck toward his junior.
“You fool!” he shrieked.
“You fool! What are you doing? Driving
us straight for the rocks—murdering the
whole lot of us!” and with that he sprang upon
the Frenchman with maniacal fury, bearing him to the
deck beneath him.
Barbara Harding saw the attack of
the fear-demented man, but she was powerless to prevent
it. The mucker saw it too, and grinned—he
hoped that it would be a good fight; there was nothing
that he enjoyed more. He was sorry that he could
not take a hand in it, but the wheel demanded all his
attention now, so that he was even forced to take his
eyes from the combatants that he might rivet them
upon the narrow entrance to the cove toward which
the Halfmoon was now plowing her way at constantly
increasing speed.
The other members of the ship’s
company, all unmindful of the battle that at another
time would have commanded their undivided attention,
stood with eyes glued upon the wild channel toward
which the brigantine’s nose was pointed.
They saw now what Skipper Simms had failed to see—the
little cove beyond, and the chance for safety that
the bold stroke offered if it proved successful.
With steady muscles and giant sinews
the mucker stood by the wheel—nursing the
erratic wreck as no one might have supposed it was
in him to do. Behind him Barbara Harding watched
first Theriere and Simms, and then Byrne and the swirling
waters toward which he was heading the ship.
Even the strain of the moment did
not prevent her from wondering at the strange contradictions
of the burly young ruffian who could at one moment
show such traits of cowardliness and the next rise
so coolly to the highest pinnacles of courage.
As she watched him occasionally now she noted for
the first time the leonine contour of his head, and
she was surprised to note that his features were regular
and fine, and then she recalled Billy Mallory and
the cowardly kick that she had seen delivered in the
face of the unconscious Theriere— with
a little shudder of disgust she turned away from the
man at the wheel.
Theriere by this time had managed
to get on top of Skipper Simms, but that worthy still
clung to him with the desperation of a drowning man.
The Halfmoon was rising on a great wave that would
bear her well into the maelstrom of the cove’s
entrance. The wind had increased to the proportions
of a gale, so that the brigantine was fairly racing
either to her doom or her salvation—who
could tell which?
Halfway through the entrance the wave
dropped the ship, and with a mighty crash that threw
Barbara Harding to her feet the vessel struck full
amidships upon a sunken reef. Like a thing of
glass she broke in two with the terrific impact, and
in another instant the waters about her were filled
with screaming men.
Barbara Harding felt herself hurtled
from the deck as though shot from a catapult.
The swirling waters engulfed her. She knew
that her end had come, only the most powerful of swimmers
might hope to win through that lashing hell of waters
to the beach beyond. For a girl to do it was
too hopeless even to contemplate; but she recalled
Theriere’s words of so short a time ago:
“There’s no hope, I’m afraid; but,
by George, I intend to go down fighting,” and
with the recollection came a like resolve on her part—to
go down fighting, and so she struck out against the
powerful waters that swirled her hither and thither,
now perilously close to the rocky sides of the entrance,
and now into the mad chaos of the channel’s
center. Would to heaven that Theriere were near
her, she thought, for if any could save her it would
be he.
Since she had come to believe in the
man’s friendship and sincerity Barbara Harding
had felt renewed hope of eventual salvation, and with
the hope had come a desire to live which had almost
been lacking for the greater part of her detention
upon the Halfmoon.
Bravely she battled now against the
awful odds of the mighty Pacific, but soon she felt
her strength waning. More and more ineffective
became her puny efforts, and at last she ceased almost
entirely the futile struggle.
And then she felt a strong hand grasp
her arm, and with a sudden surge she was swung over
a broad shoulder. Quickly she grasped the rough
shirt that covered the back of her would-be rescuer,
and then commenced a battle with the waves that for
many minutes, that seemed hours to the frightened
girl, hung in the balance; but at last the swimmer
beneath her forged steadily and persistently toward
the sandy beach to flounder out at last with an unconscious
burden in his mighty arms.
As the man staggered up out of reach
of the water Barbara Harding opened her eyes to look
in astonishment into the face of the mucker.