HOME AGAIN
Billy Byrne continued to
fire intermittently for half an hour after the two
men had left him. Then he fired several shots
in quick succession, and dragging himself to his hands
and knees crawled laboriously and painfully back into
the jungle in search of a hiding place where he might
die in peace.
He had progressed some hundred yards
when he felt the earth give way beneath him.
He clutched frantically about for support, but there
was none, and with a sickening lunge he plunged downward
into Stygian darkness.
His fall was a short one, and he brought
up with a painful thud at the bottom of a deer pit—a
covered trap which the natives dig to catch their
fleet-footed prey.
The pain of his wounds after the fall
was excruciating. His head whirled dizzily.
He knew that he was dying, and then all went black.
When consciousness returned to the
mucker it was daylight. The sky above shone
through the ragged hole that his falling body had
broken in the pit’s covering the night before.
“Gee!” muttered the mucker;
“and I thought that I was dead!”
His wounds had ceased to bleed, but
he was very weak and stiff and sore.
“I guess I’m too tough to croak!”
he thought.
He wondered if the two men would reach
Barbara in safety. He hoped so. Mallory
loved her, and he was sure that Barbara had loved
Mallory. He wanted her to be happy. No
thought of jealousy entered his mind. Mallory
was her kind. Mallory “belonged.”
He didn’t. He was a mucker. How
would he have looked training with her bunch.
She would have been ashamed of him, and he couldn’t
have stood that. No, it was better as it had
turned out. He’d squared himself for the
beast he’d been to her, and he’d squared
himself with Mallory, too. At least they’d
have only decent thoughts of him, dead; but alive,
that would be an entirely different thing. He
would be in the way. He would be a constant
embarrassment to them all, for they would feel that
they’d have to be nice to him in return for
what he had done for them. The thought made the
mucker sick.
“I’d rather croak,” he murmured.
But he didn’t “croak”—instead,
he waxed stronger, and toward evening the pangs of
hunger and thirst drove him to consider means for
escaping from his hiding place, and searching for
food and water.
He waited until after dark, and then
he crawled, with utmost difficulty, from the deep
pit. He had heard nothing of the natives since
the night before, and now, in the open, there came
to him but the faint sounds of the village life across
the clearing.
Byrne dragged himself toward the trail
that led to the spring where poor Theriere had died.
It took him a long time to reach it, but at last
he was successful. The clear, cold water helped
to revive and strengthen him. Then he sought
food. Some wild fruit partially satisfied him
for the moment, and he commenced the laborious task
of retracing his steps toward “Manhattan Island.”
The trail that he had passed over
in fifteen hours as he had hastened to the rescue
of Anthony Harding and Billy Mallory required the
better part of three days now. Occasionally he
wondered why in the world he was traversing it anyway.
Hadn’t he wanted to die, and leave Barbara
free? But life is sweet, and the red blood still
flowed strong in the veins of the mucker.
“I can go my own way,”
he thought, “and not bother her; but I’ll
be dinged if I want to croak in this God-forsaken
hole—Grand Avenue for mine, when it comes
to passing in my checks. Gee! but I’d
like to hear the rattle of the Lake Street ‘L’
and see the dolls coming down the station steps by
Skidmore’s when the crowd comes home from the
Loop at night.”
Billy Byrne was homesick. And
then, too, his heart was very heavy and sad because
of the great love he had found— a love
which he realized was as hopeless as it was great.
He had the memory, though, of the girl’s arms
about his neck, and her dear lips crushed to his for
a brief instant, and her words—ah, those
words! They would ring in Billy’s head
forever: “I love you, Billy, for what you
are.”
And a sudden resolve came into the
mucker’s mind as he whispered those words over
and over again to himself. “I can’t
have her,” he said. “She isn’t
for the likes of me; but if I can’t live with
her, I can live for her—as she’d want
me to live, and, s’help me, those words’ll
keep me straight. If she ever hears of Billy
Byrne again it won’t be anything to make her
ashamed that she had her arms around him, kissing him,
and telling him that she loved him.”
At the river’s edge across from
the little island Billy came to a halt. He had
reached the point near midnight, and hesitated to
cross over and disturb the party at that hour.
At last, however, he decided to cross quietly, and
lie down near her hut until morning.
The crossing was most difficult, for
he was very weak, but at last he came to the opposite
bank and drew himself up to lie panting for a few
minutes on the sloping bank. Then he crawled
on again up to the top, and staggering to his feet
made his way cautiously toward the two huts.
All was quiet. He assumed that the party was
asleep, and so he lay down near the rude shelter he
had constructed for Barbara Harding, and fell asleep.
It was broad daylight when he awoke—the
sun was fully three hours high, and yet no one was
stirring. For the first time misgivings commenced
to assail Billy’s mind. Could it be possible?
He crossed over to his own hut and entered—it
was deserted. Then he ran to Barbara’s—it,
too, was unoccupied. They had gone!
All during the painful trip from the
village to the island Billy had momentarily expected
to meet a party of rescuers coming back for him.
He had not been exactly disappointed, but a queer
little lump had risen to his throat as the days passed
and no help had come, and now this was the final blow.
They had deserted him! Left him wounded and
dying on this savage island without taking the trouble
to assure themselves that he really was dead!
It was incredible!
“But was it?” thought
Billy. “Didn’t I tell them that I
was dying? I thought so myself, and there is
no reason why they shouldn’t have thought so
too. I suppose I shouldn’t blame them,
and I don’t; but I wouldn’t have left them
that way and not come back. They had a warship
full of blue jackets and marines—there
wouldn’t have been much danger to them.”
Presently it occurred to him that
the party may have returned to the coast to get the
marines, and that even now they were searching for
him. He hastened to return to the mainland,
and once more he took up his wearisome journey.
That night he reached the coast.
Early the next morning he commenced his search for
the man-of-war. By walking entirely around the
island he should find her he felt sure.
Shortly after noon he scaled a high
promontory which jutted out into the sea. From
its summit he had an unobstructed view of the broad
Pacific. His heart leaped to his throat, for
there but a short distance out were a great battleship
and a trim white yacht—the Alaska and the
Lotus! They were steaming slowly out to sea.
He was just in time! Filled
with happiness the mucker ran to the point of the
promontory and stripping off his shirt waved it high
above his head, the while he shouted at the top of
his lungs; but the vessels kept on their course, giving
no answering signal.
For half an hour the man continued
his futile efforts to attract the attention of someone
on board either craft, but to his dismay he saw them
grow smaller and smaller until in a few hours they
passed over the rim of the world, disappearing from
his view forever.
Weak, wounded, and despairing, Billy
sank to the ground, burying his face in his arms,
and there the moon found him when she rose, and he
was still there when she passed from the western sky.
For three months Billy Byrne lived
his lonely life upon the wild island. The trapping
and fishing were good and there was a plentiful supply
of good water. He regained his lost strength,
recovering entirely from his wounds. The natives
did not molest him, for he had stumbled upon a section
of the shore which they considered bewitched and to
which none of them would come under any circumstances.
One morning, at the beginning of his
fourth month of solitude, the mucker saw a smudge
of smoke upon the horizon. Slowly it increased
in volume and the speck beneath it resolved itself
into the hull of a steamer. Closer and closer
to the island it came.
Billy gathered together a quantity
of dry brush and lighted a signal fire on the lofty
point from which he had seen the Alaska and the Lotus
disappear. As it commenced to blaze freely he
threw fresh, green boughs upon it until a vertical
column of smoke arose high above the island.
In breathless suspense Billy watched
the movements of the steamer. At first it seemed
that she would pass without taking notice of his signal,
but at last he saw that she was changing her course
and moving directly toward the island.
Close in she came, for the sea was
calm and the water deep, and when Billy was sure that
those on board saw him and his frantic waving, he
hurried, stumbling and falling, down the steep face
of the cliff to the tiny beach at its foot.
Already a boat had been lowered and
was putting in for land. Billy waded out to
the end of the short shelving beach and waited.
The sight that met the eyes of the
rescuers was one that filled them with awe, for they
saw before them a huge, giant of a white man, half-naked
except for a few tattered rags, who wore the long
sword of an ancient samurai at his side, a modern
revolver at his hip, and bore in his brawny hand the
heavy war spear of a head-hunter. Long black
hair, and a huge beard covered the man’s head
and face, but clean gray eyes shone from out of the
tangle, and a broad grin welcomed them.
“Oh, you white men!” shouted
the mucker. “You certainly do look good
to me.”
Six months later a big, smooth-faced
giant in ill-fitting sea togs strolled up Sixth Avenue.
It was Billy Byrne—broke, but happy; Grand
Avenue was less than a thousand miles away!
“Gee!” he murmured; “but
it’s good to be home again!”
There were places in New York where
Billy would find acquaintances. One in particular
he recalled—a little, third-floor gymnasium
not far distant from the Battery. Thither he
turned his steps now. As he entered the stuffy
room in which two big fellows, stripped to the waist,
were sparring, a stout, low-browed man sitting in
a back-tilted chair against one wall looked up inquiringly.
Billy crossed over to him, with outstretched hand.
“Howdy, Professor!” he said.
“Yeh got me, kid,” replied
Professor Cassidy, taking the proffered hand.
“I was up here with Larry Hilmore
and the Goose Island Kid a year or so ago—my
name’s Byrne,” exclaimed Billy.
“Sure,” said the professor;
“I gotcha now. You’re de guy ‘at
Larry was a tellin’ me about. He said you’d
be a great heavy if you’d leave de booze alone.”
Billy smiled and nodded.
“You don’t look much like
a booze fighter now,” remarked Cassidy.
“And I ain’t” said
the mucker. “I’ve been on the wagon
for most a year, and I’m never comin’
down.”
“That’s right, kid,”
said the professor; “but wots the good word?
Wot you doin’ in little ol’ Noo York?”
“Lookin’ for a job,” said Billy.
“Strip!” commanded Professor
Cassidy. “I’m lookin’ for
sparrin’ partners for a gink dat’s goin’
to clean up de Big Smoke—if he’ll
ever come back an’ scrap.”
“You’re on,” said
Billy, commencing to divest himself of his outer clothing.
Stripped to the waist he displayed
as wondrous a set of muscles as even Professor Cassidy
had ever seen. The man waxed enthusiastic over
them.
“You sure ought to have some
wallop up your sleeve,” he said, admiringly.
He then introduced Billy to the Harlem Hurricane,
and Battling Dago Pete. “Pete’s de
guy I was tellin’ you about,” explained
Professor Cassidy. “He’s got such
a wallop dat I can’t keep no sparrin’
partners for him. The Hurricane here’s
de only bloke wit de guts to stay wit him—
he’s a fiend for punishment, Hurricane is; he
jest natchrly eats it.
“If you’re broke I’ll
give you your keep as long as you stay wit Pete an’
don’t get cold feet, an’ I’ll fix
up a mill for you now an’ then so’s you
kin pull down a little coin fer yourself. Are
you game?”
“You know it,” said Billy.
“All to the good then,”
said the professor gaily; “now you put on the
mitts an’ spell Hurricane for a couple o’
rounds.”
Billy slipped his huge hands into
the tight-fitting gloves.
“It’s been more’n
a year since I had these on,” he said, “an’
I may be a little slow an’ stale at first; but
after I get warmed up I’ll do better.”
Cassidy grinned and winked at Hurricane.
“He won’t never get warmed up,”
Hurricane confided; “Pete’ll knock his
block off in about two minutes,” and the men
settled back to watch the fun with ill-concealed amusement
written upon their faces.
What happened within the next few
minutes in the stuffy little room of Professor Cassidy’s
third-floor “gymnasium” marks an epoch
in the professor’s life—he still talks
of it, and doubtless shall until the Great Referee
counts him out in the Last Round.
The two men sparred for a moment,
gaging one another. Then Battling Dago Pete
swung a vicious left that landed square on Billy’s
face. It was a blow that might have felled an
ox; but Billy only shook his head—it scarce
seemed to jar him. Pete had half lowered his
hands as he recovered from the blow, so sure he was
that it would finish his new sparring partner, and
now before he could regain his guard the mucker tore
into him like a whirlwind. That single blow to
the face seemed to have brought back to Billy Byrne
all that he ever had known of the manly art of self-defense.
Battling Dago Pete landed a few more
before the fight was over, but as any old fighter
will tell you there is nothing more discouraging than
to discover that your most effective blows do not
feeze your opponent, and only the knowledge of what
a defeat at the hands of a new sparring partner would
mean to his future, kept him plugging away at the
hopeless task of attempting to knock out this mountain
of bone and muscle.
For a few minutes Billy Byrne played
with his man, hitting him when and where he would.
He fought, crouching, much as Jeffries used to fight,
and in his size and strength was much that reminded
Cassidy of the fallen idol that in his heart of hearts
he still worshiped.
And then, like a panther, the mucker
sprang in with a vicious left hook to the jaw, followed,
with lightning rapidity, by a right upper cut to the
chin that lifted Battling Dago Pete a foot from the
floor to drop him, unconscious, against the foot of
the further wall.
It was a clean knock-out, and when
Cassidy and Hurricane got through ministering to the
fallen man, and indications of returning consciousness
were apparent, the professor turned to Billy.
“Got any more ‘hopes’
lyin’ around loose?” asked the mucker
with a grin. “I guess the big dinge’s
safe for a while yet.”
“Not if you’ll keep on
stayin’ away from the booze, kid,” said
Professor Cassidy, “an’ let me handle you.”
“I gotcha Steve,” said
Billy; “go to it; but first, stake me to a feed.
The front side of my stomach’s wrapped around
my back bone.”