THE MUCKER SEES A NEW LIGHT
Together the girl and the mucker
approached the entrance to the amphitheater.
From behind a shoulder of rock they peered down into
the forest below them. For several minutes neither
saw any cause for alarm.
“I guess youse must o’
been seein’ things,” said Byrne, drily.
“Yes,” said the girl,
“and I see them again. Look! Quick!
Down there—to the right.”
Byrne looked in the direction she indicated.
“Chinks,” he commented.
“Gee! Look at ’em comin’.
Dere must be a hundred of ’em.”
He turned a rueful glance back into
the amphitheater.
“I dunno as dis place looks
as good to me as it did,” he remarked.
“Dose yaps wid de toad stabbers could hike up
on top o’ dese cliffs an’ make it a case
o’ ’thence by carriages to Calvary’
for ours in about two shakes.”
“Yes,” said the girl,
“I’m afraid it’s a regular cul-de-sac.”
“I dunno nothin’ about
dat,” replied the mucker; “but I do know
dat if we wants to get out o’ here we gotta get
a hump on ourselves good an’ lively. Come
ahead,” and with his words he ran quickly through
the entrance, and turning squarely toward the right
skirted the perpendicular cliffs that extended as
far as they could see to be lost to view in the forest
that ran up to meet them from below.
The trees and underbrush hid them
from the head-hunters. There had been danger
of detection but for the brief instant that they passed
through the entrance of the hollow, but at the time
they had chosen the enemy had been hidden in a clump
of thick brush far down the slope.
For hours the two fugitives continued
their flight, passing over the crest of a ridge and
downward toward another valley, until by a small brook
they paused to rest, hopeful that they had entirely
eluded their pursuers.
Again Byrne fished, and again they
sat together at a one-course meal. As they ate
the man found himself looking at the girl more and
more often. For several days the wonder of her
beauty had been growing upon him, until now he found
it difficult to take his eyes from her. Thrice
she surprised him in the act of staring intently at
her, and each time he had dropped his eyes guiltily.
At length the girl became nervous, and then terribly
frightened—was it coming so soon?
The man had talked but little during
this meal, and for the life of her Barbara Harding
could not think of any topic with which to distract
his attention from his thoughts.
“Hadn’t we better be moving on?”
she asked at last.
Byrne gave a little start as though
surprised in some questionable act.
“I suppose so,” he said;
“this ain’t no place to spend the night—it’s
too open. We gotta find a sort o’ hiding
place if we can, dat a fellow kin barricade wit something.”
Again they took up their seemingly
hopeless march—an aimless wandering in
search of they knew not what. Away from one
danger to possible dangers many fold more terrible.
Barbara’s heart was very heavy, for again
she feared and mistrusted the mucker.
They followed down the little brook
now to where it emptied into a river and then down
the valley beside the river which grew wider and more
turbulent with every mile. Well past mid-afternoon
they came opposite a small, rocky island, and as Byrne’s
eyes fell upon it an exclamation of gratification
burst from his lips.
“Jest de place!” he cried.
“We orter be able to hide dere forever.”
“But how are we to get there?”
asked the girl, looking fearfully at the turbulent
river.
“It ain’t deep,”
Byrne assured her. “Come ahead; I’ll
carry yeh acrost,” and without waiting for a
reply he gathered her in his arms and started down
the bank.
What with the thoughts that had occupied
his mind off and on during the afternoon the sudden
and close contact of the girl’s warm young body
close to his took Billy Byrne’s breath away,
and sent the hot blood coursing through his veins.
It was with the utmost difficulty that he restrained
a mad desire to crush her to him and cover her face
with kisses.
And then the fatal thought came to
him—why should he restrain himself?
What was this girl to him? Had he not always
hated her and her kind? Did she not look with
loathing and contempt upon him? And to whom did
her life belong anyway but to him—had he
not saved it twice? What difference would it
make? They’d never come out of this savage
world alive, and if he didn’t take her some monkey-faced
Chink would get her.
They were in the middle of the stream
now. Byrne’s arms already had commenced
to tighten upon the girl. With a sudden tug
he strove to pull her face down to his; but she put
both hands upon his shoulders and held his lips at
arms’ length. And her wide eyes looked
full into the glowing gray ones of the mucker.
And each saw in the other’s something that
held their looks for a full minute.
Barbara saw what she had feared, but
she saw too something else that gave her a quick,
pulsing hope—a look of honest love, or
could she be mistaken? And the mucker saw the
true eyes of the woman he loved without knowing that
he loved her, and he saw the plea for pity and protection
in them.
“Don’t,” whispered
the girl. “Please don’t, you frighten
me.”
A week ago Billy Byrne would have
laughed at such a plea. Doubtless, too, he
would have struck the girl in the face for her resistance.
He did neither now, which spoke volumes for the change
that was taking place within him, but neither did
he relax his hold upon her, or take his burning eyes
from her frightened ones.
Thus he strode through the turbulent,
shallow river to clamber up the bank onto the island.
In his soul the battle still raged, but he had by
no means relinquished his intention to have his way
with the girl. Fear, numb, freezing fear, was
in the girl’s eyes now. The mucker read
it there as plain as print, and had she not said that
she was frightened? That was what he had wanted
to accomplish back there upon the Halfmoon —to
frighten her. He would have enjoyed the sight,
but he had not been able to accomplish the thing.
Now she not only showed that she was frightened—she
had admitted it, and it gave the mucker no pleasure—on
the contrary it made him unaccountably uncomfortable.
And then came the last straw—tears
welled to those lovely eyes. A choking sob wracked
the girl’s frame—“And just
when I was learning to trust you so!” she cried.
They had reached the top of the bank,
now, and the man, still holding her in his arms, stood
upon a mat of jungle grass beneath a great tree.
Slowly he lowered her to her feet. The madness
of desire still gripped him; but now there was another
force at work combating the evil that had predominated
before.
Theriere’s words came back to
him: “Good-bye, Byrne; take good care of
Miss Harding,” and his admission to the Frenchman
during that last conversation with the dying man:
“—a week ago I guess I was a coward.
Dere seems to be more’n one kind o’ nerve—I’m
just a-learnin’ of the right kind, I guess.”
He had been standing with eyes upon
the ground, his heavy hand still gripping the girl’s
arm. He looked into her face again. She
was waiting there, her great eyes upon his filled with
fear and questioning, like a prisoner before the bar
awaiting the sentence of her judge.
As the man looked at Barbara Harding
standing there before him he saw her in a strange
new light, and a sudden realization of the truth flashed
upon him. He saw that he could not harm her
now, or ever, for he loved her!
And with the awakening there came
to Billy Byrne the withering, numbing knowledge that
his love must forever be a hopeless one—that
this girl of the aristocracy could never be for such
as he.
Barbara Harding, still looking questioningly
at him, saw the change that came across his countenance—she
saw the swift pain that shot to the man’s eyes,
and she wondered. His fingers released their
grasp upon her arm. His hands fell limply to
his sides.
“Don’t be afraid,”
he said. “Please don’t be afraid
o’ me. I couldn’t hurt youse if
I tried.”
A deep sigh of relief broke from the
girl’s lips—relief and joy; and she
realized that its cause was as much that the man had
proved true to the new estimate she had recently placed
upon him as that the danger to herself had passed.
“Come,” said Billy Byrne,
“we’d better move in a bit out o’
sight o’ de mainland, an’ look fer a place
to make camp. I reckon we’d orter rest
here for a few days till we git in shape ag’in.
I know youse must be dead beat, an’ I sure am,
all right, all right.”
Together they sought a favorable site
for their new home, and it was as though the horrid
specter of a few moments before had never risen to
menace them, for the girl felt that a great burden
of apprehension had been lifted forever from her shoulders,
and though a dull ache gnawed at the mucker’s
heart, still he was happier than he had ever been before—
happy to be near the woman he loved.
With the long sword of Oda Yorimoto,
Billy Byrne cut saplings and bamboo and the fronds
of fan palms, and with long tough grasses bound them
together into the semblance of a rude hut. Barbara
gathered leaves and grasses with which she covered
the floor.
“Number One, Riverside Drive,”
said the mucker, with a grin, when the work was completed;
“an’ now I’ll go down on de river
front an’ build de Bowery.”
“Oh, are you from New York?” asked the
girl.
“Not on yer life,” replied
Billy Byrne. “I’m from good ol’
Chi; but I been to Noo York twict wit de Goose Island
Kid, an’ so I knows all about it. De roughnecks
belongs on de Bowery, so dat’s wot we’ll
call my dump down by de river. You’re
a highbrow, so youse gotta live on Riverside Drive,
see?” and the mucker laughed at his little pleasantry.
But the girl did not laugh with him.
Instead she looked troubled.
“Wouldn’t you rather be
a ‘highbrow’ too?” she asked, “and
live up on Riverside Drive, right across the street
from me?”
“I don’t belong,” said the mucker
gruffly.
“Wouldn’t you rather belong?” insisted
the girl.
All his life Billy had looked with
contempt upon the hated, pusillanimous highbrows,
and now to be asked if he would not rather be one!
It was unthinkable, and yet, strange to relate, he
realized an odd longing to be like Theriere, and Billy
Mallory; yes, in some respects like Divine, even.
He wanted to be more like the men that the woman
he loved knew best.
“It’s too late fer me
ever to belong, now,” he said ruefully.
“Yeh gotta be borned to it. Gee!
Wouldn’t I look funny in wite pants, an’
one o’ dem dinky, little ‘Willie-off-de-yacht’
lids?”
Even Barbara had to laugh at the picture
the man’s words raised to her imagination.
“I didn’t mean that,”
she hastened to explain. “I didn’t
mean that you must necessarily dress like them; but
be like them—act like them—talk
like them, as Mr. Theriere did, you know. He
was a gentleman.”
“An’ I’m not,” said Billy.
“Oh, I didn’t mean that,” the
girl hastened to explain.
“Well, whether youse meant it
or not, it’s so,” said the mucker.
“I ain’t no gent—I’m
a mucker. I have your word for it, you know—yeh
said so that time on de Halfmoon, an’ I ain’t
fergot it; but youse was right—I am a mucker.
I ain’t never learned how to be anything else.
I ain’t never wanted to be anything else until
today. Now, I’d like to be a gent; but
it’s too late.”
“Won’t you try?” asked the girl.
“For my sake?”
“Go to’t,” returned
the mucker cheerfully; “I’d even wear
side whiskers fer youse.”
“Horrors!” exclaimed Barbara
Harding. “I couldn’t look at you
if you did.”
“Well, then, tell me wot youse do want me to
do.”
Barbara discovered that her task was
to be a difficult one if she were to accomplish it
without wounding the man’s feelings; but she
determined to strike while the iron was hot and risk
offending him—why she should be interested
in the regeneration of Mr. Billy Byrne it never once
occurred to her to ask herself. She hesitated
a moment before speaking.
“One of the first things you
must do, Mr. Byrne,” she said, “is to
learn to speak correctly. You mustn’t say
‘youse’ for ‘you,’ or ‘wot’
for ’what’—–you must try
to talk as I talk. No one in the world speaks
any language faultlessly, but there are certain more
or less obvious irregularities of grammar and pronunciation
that are particularly distasteful to people of refinement,
and which are easy to guard against if one be careful.”
“All right,” said Billy
Byrne, “youse—you kin pitch in an’
learn me wot—whatever you want to an’
I’ll do me best to talk like a dude—fer
your sake.”
And so the mucker’s education
commenced, and as there was little else for the two
to do it progressed rapidly, for once started the
man grew keenly interested, spurred on by the evident
pleasure which his self-appointed tutor took in his
progress—further it meant just so much more
of close companionship with her.
For three weeks they never left the
little island except to gather fruit which grew hard
by on the adjacent mainland. Byrne’s
wounds had troubled him considerably—at
times he had been threatened with blood poisoning.
His temperature had mounted once to alarming heights,
and for a whole night Barbara Harding had sat beside
him bathing his forehead and easing his sufferings
as far as it lay within her power to do; but at last
the wonderful vitality of the man had saved him.
He was much weakened though and neither of them
had thought it safe to attempt to seek the coast until
he had fully regained his old-time strength.
So far but little had occurred to
give them alarm. Twice they had seen natives
on the mainland—evidently hunting parties;
but no sign of pursuit had developed. Those whom
they had seen had been pure-blood Malays—there
had been no samurai among them; but their savage,
warlike appearance had warned the two against revealing
their presence.
They had subsisted upon fish and fruit
principally since they had come to the island.
Occasionally this diet had been relieved by messes
of wild fowl and fox that Byrne had been successful
in snaring with a primitive trap of his own invention;
but lately the prey had become wary, and even the fish
seemed less plentiful. After two days of fruit
diet, Byrne announced his intention of undertaking
a hunting trip upon the mainland.
“A mess of venison wouldn’t
taste half bad,” he remarked.
“Yes,” cried the girl,
“I’m nearly famished for meat—it
seems as though I could almost eat it raw.”
“I know that I could,”
stated Billy. “Lord help the deer that
gets within range of this old gat of Theriere’s,
and you may not get even a mouthful—I’m
that hungry I’ll probably eat it all, hoof,
hide, and horns, before ever I get any of it back
here to you.”
“You’d better not,”
laughed the girl. “Good-bye and good luck;
but please don’t go very far—I shall
be terribly lonely and frightened while you are away.”
“Maybe you’d better come along,”
suggested Billy.
“No, I should be in the way—you
can’t hunt deer with a gallery, and get any.”
“Well, I’ll stay within
hailing distance, and you can look for me back any
time between now and sundown. Good-bye,”
and he picked his way down the bank into the river,
while from behind a bush upon the mainland two wicked,
black eyes watched his movements and those of the
girl on the shore behind him while a long, sinewy,
brown hand closed more tightly upon a heavy war spear,
and steel muscles tensed for the savage spring and
the swift throw.
The girl watched Billy Byrne forging
his way through the swift rapids. What a mighty
engine of strength and endurance he was! What
a man! Yes, brute! And strange to relate
Barbara Harding found herself admiring the very brutality
that once had been repellent to her. She saw
him leap lightly to the opposite bank, and then she
saw a quick movement in a bush close at his side.
She did not know what manner of thing had caused
it, but her intuition warned her that behind that
concealing screen lay mortal danger to the unconscious
man.
“Billy!” she cried, the
unaccustomed name bursting from her lips involuntarily.
“In the bush at your left—look out!”
At the note of warning in her voice
Byrne had turned at her first word—it was
all that saved his life. He saw the half-naked
savage and the out-shooting spear arm, and as he would,
instinctively, have ducked a right-for-the-head in
the squared circle of his other days, he ducked now,
side stepping to the right, and the heavy weapon sped
harmlessly over his shoulder.
The warrior, with a growl of rage,
drew his sharp parang, leaping to close quarters.
Barbara Harding saw Byrne whip Theriere’s revolver
from its holster, and snap it in the face of the savage;
but to her horror the cartridge failed to explode,
and before he could fire again the warrior was upon
him.
The girl saw the white man leap to
one side to escape the furious cut aimed at him by
his foe, and then she saw him turn with the agility
of a panther and spring to close quarters with the
wild man. Byrne’s left arm went around
the Malay’s neck, and with his heavy right fist
he rained blow after blow upon the brown face.
The savage dropped his useless parang—clawing
and biting at the mighty creature in whose power he
found himself; but never once did those terrific,
relentless blows cease to fall upon his unprotected
face.
The sole witness to this battle primeval
stood spellbound at the sight of the fierce, brutal
ferocity of the white man, and the lion-like strength
he exhibited. Slowly but surely he was beating
the face of his antagonist into an unrecognizable
pulp—with his bare hands he had met and
was killing an armed warrior. It was incredible!
Not even Theriere or Billy Mallory could have done
such a thing. Billy Mallory! And she was
gazing with admiration upon his murderer!