THE SUPREME SACRIFICE
Through the balance of the day
and all during the long night Billy Byrne swung along
his lonely way, retracing the familiar steps of the
journey that had brought Barbara Harding and himself
to the little island in the turbulent river.
Just before dawn he came to the edge
of the clearing behind the dwelling of the late Oda
Yorimoto. Somewhere within the silent village
he was sure that the two prisoners lay.
During the long march he had thrashed
over again and again all that the success of his rash
venture would mean to him. Of all those who
might conceivably stand between him and the woman
he loved—the woman who had just acknowledged
that she loved him—these two men were the
most to be feared.
Billy Byrne did not for a moment believe
that Anthony Harding would look with favor upon the
Grand Avenue mucker as a prospective son-in-law.
And then there was Mallory! He was sure that
Barbara had loved this man, and now should he be restored
to her as from the grave there seemed little doubt
but that the old love would be aroused in the girl’s
breast. The truth of the matter was that Billy
Byrne could not conceive the truth of the testimony
of his own ears—even now he scarce dared
believe that the wonderful Miss Harding loved him—him,
the despised mucker!
But the depth of the man’s love
for the girl, and the genuineness of his new-found
character were proven beyond question by the relentless
severity with which he put away every thought of himself
and the consequences to him in the matter he had undertaken.
For her sake! had become
his slogan. What though the results sent him
to a savage death, or to a life of lonely misery,
or to the arms of his beloved! In the face of
duty the result was all the same to Billy Byrne.
For a moment he stood looking at the
moon-bathed village, listening for any sign of wakefulness
or life, then with all the stealth of an Indian, and
with the trained wariness of the thief that he had
been, the mucker slunk noiselessly across the clearing
to the shadows of the nearest hut.
He listened beneath the window through
which he and Barbara and Theriere had made their escape
a few weeks before. There was no sound from
within. Cautiously he raised himself to the
sill, and a moment later dropped into the inky darkness
of the interior.
With groping hands he felt about the
room—it was unoccupied. Then he passed
to the door at the far end. Cautiously he opened
it until a narrow crack gave him a view of the dimly
lighted chamber beyond. Within all seemed asleep.
The mucker pushed the door still further open and
stepped within—so must he search every
hut within the village until he had found those he
sought?
They were not there, and on silent
feet that disturbed not even the lightly slumbering
curs the man passed out by the front entrance into
the street beyond.
Through a second and third hut he
made his precarious way. In the fourth a man
stirred as Byrne stood upon the opposite side of the
room from the door—with a catlike bound
the mucker was beside him. Would the fellow awake?
Billy scarce breathed. The samurai turned restlessly,
and then, with a start, sat up with wide-open eyes.
At the same instant iron fingers closed upon his
throat and the long sword of his dead daimio passed
through his heart.
Byrne held the corpse until he was
positive that life was extinct, then he dropped it
quietly back upon its pallet, and departed to search
the adjoining dwelling. Here he found a large
front room, and a smaller chamber in the rear—an
arrangement similar to that in the daimio’s house.
The front room revealed no clue to
the missing men. Within the smaller, rear room
Byrne heard the subdued hum of whispered conversation
just as he was about to open the door. Like
a graven image he stood in silence, his ear glued to
the frail door. For a moment he listened thus
and then his heart gave a throb of exultation, and
he could have shouted aloud in thanksgiving—the
men were conversing in English!
Quietly Byrne pushed open the door
far enough to admit his body. Those within ceased
speaking immediately. Byrne closed the door
behind him, advancing until he felt one of the occupants
of the room. The man shrank from his touch.
“I guess we’re done for,
Mallory,” said the man in a low tone; “they’ve
come for us.”
“Sh-sh,” warned the mucker.
“Are you and Mallory alone?”
“Yes—for God’s
sake who are you and where did you come from?”
asked the surprised Mr. Harding.
“Be still,” admonished
Byrne, feeling for the cords that he knew must bind
the captive.
He found them presently and with his
jackknife cut them asunder. Then he released
Mallory.
“Follow me,” he said,
“but go quietly. Take off your shoes if
you have ’em on, and hang ’em around your
neck—tie the ends of the laces together.”
The men did as he bid and a moment
later he was leading them across the room, filled
with sleeping men, women, children, and domestic animals.
At the far side stood a rack filled with long swords.
Byrne removed two without the faintest suspicion
of a noise. He handed one to each of his companions,
cautioning them to silence with a gesture.
But neither Anthony Harding nor Billy
Mallory had had second-story experience, and the former
struck his weapon accidentally against the door frame
with a resounding clatter that brought half the inmates
of the room, wide-eyed, to sitting postures.
The sight that met the natives’ eyes had them
on their feet, yelling like madmen, and dashing toward
their escaping prisoners, in an instant.
“Quick!” shouted Billy Byrne. “Follow
me!”
Down the village street the three
men ran, but the shouts of the natives had brought
armed samurai to every door with a celerity that was
uncanny, and in another moment the fugitives found
themselves surrounded by a pack of howling warriors
who cut at them with long swords from every side,
blocking their retreat and hemming them in in every
direction.
Byrne called to his companions to
close in, back to back, and thus, the gangster in
advance, the three slowly fought their way toward
the end of the narrow street and the jungle beyond.
The mucker fought with his long sword in one hand
and Theriere’s revolver in the other—hewing
a way toward freedom for the two men whom he knew
would take his love from him.
Beneath the brilliant tropic moon
that lighted the scene almost as brilliantly as might
the sun himself the battle waged, and though the odds
were painfully uneven the white men moved steadily,
though slowly, toward the jungle. It was evident
that the natives feared the giant white who led the
three. Anthony Harding, familiar with Japanese,
could translate sufficient of their jargon to be sure
of that, had not the respectful distance most of them
kept from Byrne been ample proof.
Out of the village street they came
at last into the clearing. The warriors danced
about them, yelling threats and taunts the while they
made occasional dashes to close quarters that they
might deliver a swift sword cut and retreat again before
the great white devil could get them with the sword
that had been Oda Yorimoto’s, or the strange
fire stick that spoke in such a terrifying voice.
Fifty feet from the jungle Mallory
went down with a spear through the calf of his leg.
Byrne saw him fall, and dropping back lifted the
man to his feet, supporting him with one arm as the
two backed slowly in front of the onpressing natives.
The spears were flying thick and fast
now, for the samurai all were upon the same side of
the enemy and there was no danger of injuring one
of their own number with their flying weapons as there
had been when the host entirely surrounded the three
men, and when the whites at last entered the tall
grasses of the jungle a perfect shower of spears followed
them.
With the volley Byrne went down—he
had been the principal target for the samurai and
three of the heavy shafts had pierced his body.
Two were buried in his chest and one in his abdomen.
Anthony Harding was horrified.
Both his companions were down, and the savages were
pressing closely on toward their hiding place.
Mallory sat upon the ground trying to tear the spear
from his leg. Finally he was successful.
Byrne, still conscious, called to Harding to pull
the three shafts from him.
“What are we to do?” cried
the older man. “They will get us again
as sure as fate.”
“They haven’t got us yet,”
said Billy. “Wait, I got a scheme.
Can you walk, Mallory?”
Mallory staggered to his feet.
“I’ll see,” he said, and then:
“Yes, I can make it.”
“Good,” exclaimed Byrne.
“Now listen. Almost due north, across
this range of hills behind us is a valley. In
the center of the valley is a river. It is a
good fifteen-hour march for a well man—it
will take Mallory and you longer. Follow down
the river till you come to a little island—it
should be the first one from where you strike the
river. On that island you will find Miss Harding,
Norris, and Foster. Now hurry.”
“But you, man!” exclaimed Mallory.
“We can’t leave you.”
“Never!” said Anthony Harding.
“You’ll have to, though,”
replied Billy. “That’s part of the
scheme. It won’t work any other way.”
He raised his revolver and fired a single shot in
the direction of the howling savages. “That’s
to let ’em know we’re still here,”
he said. “I’ll keep that up, off
and on, as long as I can. It’ll fool ’em
into thinking that we’re all here, and cover
your escape. See?”
“I won’t do it,” said Mallory.
“Yes you will,” replied
the mucker. “It’s not any of us that
counts—it’s Miss Harding. As
many as can have got to get back to her just as quick
as the Lord’ll let us. I can’t, so
you two’ll have to. I’m done for—a
blind man could see that. It wouldn’t
do a bit of good for you two to hang around here and
get killed, waitin’ for me to die; but it would
do a lot of harm, for it might mean that Miss Harding
would be lost too.”
“You say my daughter is on this
island you speak of, with Norris and Foster—is
she quite safe and well?” asked Harding.
“Perfectly,” said Byrne;
“and now beat it—you’re wasting
a lot of precious time.”
“For Barbara’s sake it
looks like the only way,” said Anthony Harding,
“but it seems wicked and cowardly to desert
a noble fellow like you, sir.”
“It is wicked,” said Billy
Mallory. “There must be some other way.
By the way, old man, who are you anyhow, and how
did you happen to be here?”
Byrne turned his face upward so that
the full moon lighted his features clearly.
“There is no other way, Mallory,”
he said. “Now take a good look at me—don’t
you recognize me?”
Mallory gazed intently at the strong
face looking into his. He shook his head.
“There is something familiar
about your face,” he said; “but I cannot
place you. Nor does it make any difference who
you are—you have risked your life to save
ours and I shall not leave you. Let Mr. Harding
go—it is not necessary for both to stay.”
“You will both go,” insisted
Byrne; “and you will find that it does make
a big difference who I am. I hadn’t intended
telling you, but I see there is no other way.
I’m the mucker that nearly killed you on board
the Lotus, Mallory. I’m the fellow that
man-handled Miss Harding until even that beast of
a Simms made me quit, and Miss Harding has been alone
with me on this island for weeks—now go!”
He turned away so that they could
no longer see his face, with the mental anguish that
he knew must be writ large upon it, and commenced
firing toward the natives once more.
Anthony Harding stood with white face
and clinched hands during Byrne’s recital of
his identity. At its close he took a threatening
step toward the prostrate man, raising his long sword,
with a muffled oath. Billy Mallory sprang before
him, catching his upraised arm.
“Don’t!” he whispered.
“Think what we owe him now. Come!”
and the two men turned north into the jungle while
Billy Byrne lay upon his belly in the tall grass firing
from time to time into the direction from which came
an occasional spear.
Anthony Harding and Billy Mallory
kept on in silence along their dismal way. The
crack of the mucker’s revolver, growing fainter
and fainter, as they drew away from the scene of conflict,
apprised the men that their rescuer still lived.
After a time the distant reports ceased.
The two walked on in silence for a few minutes.
“He’s gone,” whispered Mallory.
Anthony Harding made no response.
They did not hear any further firing behind them.
On and on they trudged. Night turned to day.
Day rolled slowly on into night once more.
And still they staggered on, footsore and weary.
Mallory suffered excruciating agony from his wound.
There were times when it seemed that it would be
impossible for him to continue another yard; but then
the thought that Barbara Harding was somewhere ahead
of them, and that in a short time now they must be
with her once more kept him doggedly at his painful
task.
They had reached the river and were
following slowly down its bank. The moon, full
and gorgeous, flooded the landscape with silvery light.
“Look!” exclaimed Mallory. “The
island!”
“Thank God!” whispered Harding, fervently.
On the bank opposite they stopped
and hallooed. Almost instantly three figures
rushed from the interior of the island to the shore
before them—two men and a woman.
“Barbara!” cried Anthony
Harding. “O my daughter! My daughter!”
Norris and Foster hastened through
the river and brought the two men to the island.
Barbara Harding threw herself into her father’s
arms. A moment later she had grasped Mallory’s
outstretched hands, and then she looked beyond them
for another.
“Mr. Byrne?” she asked. “Where
is Mr. Byrne?”
“He is dead,” said Anthony Harding.
The girl looked, wide-eyed and uncomprehending,
at her father for a full minute.
“Dead!” she moaned, and fell unconscious
at his feet.