The first thought that passed through
my mind was that we had lost our one hope of escape
from Hurricane Island. Insensibly I had come to
look on the Sea Queen as the vehicle of our
rescue, and there she was before my eyes adrift on
a tide that was steadily drawing her seawards.
There could be no doubt as to that, for, even as I
gazed, she made perceptible way, and seemed to be
footing it fast. I turned to Alix, who was by
me, staring also.
“I will come back,” I said rapidly.
“I must go down.”
“No, no,” she said, detaining me.
“Dear, they will take no heed
of me now. I am perfectly safe for the present.
They are taken up with more important matters.”
I squeezed her hands in both mine, turned and left
her.
Holgate was some hundred yards in
front of me, plunging heavily through the bushes.
He called to mind some evil and monstrous beast of
the forest that broke clumsily in wrath upon its enemy.
Down on the beach I could see that
Pierce and some of the others, who had already arrived,
were casting the boat from her moorings. I laboured
after Holgate, and came out on the beach near him.
He ran down to the water’s edge and called aloud:
“Put back. Put back, damn you.”
The boat was some fifty yards from
land by now, and was awash in a broken current.
Three men bent to the oars.
Holgate levelled his revolver and fired.
One of the men lay down grotesquely
on his oar. He fired again, and one of the remaining
two stood up, shook a fist towards the shore and,
staggering backwards, capsized the boat in the surf.
He must have sunk like lead with his wound, for he
never rose to the surface; but the last man, who was
Pierce, battled gallantly with the flood, and endeavoured
to reach the boat, which was bottom upwards. In
this, however, he failed, for the tide seemed to suck
him away. The boat drifted outwards, and after
a few ineffectual struggles, finding probably that
his strength was failing him, Pierce struck out towards
the shore. He landed a hundred yards or more away
from Holgate. Between the two men were gathered
in a bunch, irresolute and divided in counsels, the
remaining mutineers.
For the moment I think I was so taken
up with the situation that I did not consider my own
case. No one had eyes for me in the fast-descending
dusk, and behind the shelter of a bush I watched the
course of that singular drama. Holgate had indifferently
reloaded his revolver, and now stood holding it carelessly
by his side.
“Gray, is that you? Come
here,” he called. But the knot of men did
not move; and now Pierce was walking rapidly towards
it. It opened to receive him, and swallowed him
up again cautiously, as if there was safety in that
circle against the arch-mutineer. Holgate strode
leisurely towards them.
“I suppose you guess where we
are?” he said, in his malevolent, fluent, wheezing
tones. “You’ve dished us, Pierce,
my man.”
Pierce replied from the group with
an oath, and there was an undercurrent of murmur,
as if a consultation was in progress.
“Say, where’s that damned
little lawyer cuss?” asked a voice, that of
an American, who was one of the hands. Holgate
put one hand in his trousers’ pocket.
“How should I know?” he
said; “and what’s that got to do with the
situation?”
“It’s your doing.
You’ve put us in this hole. You’ve
strung us up to-day in this blooming island,”
said Gray fiercely. “What did you shoot
for? Haven’t you any other use for your
pop-gun?”
“Come out, Gray; come out, my
man, and talk it over,” said Holgate suavely.
“You were always good at the gab. Step out
in front, man,” and he played with his revolver.
But Gray did not budge.
I wondered why he was not shot there
and then if they were in this temper, for it was plain
that some of them were armed. But I suppose that
they were overawed by the bearing of the man, and,
lawless ruffians, as they were, were yet under the
influence of some discipline. Holgate had known
how to rule in his triumph, and the ghost of that
authority was with him still in his defeat.
“Look here,” called out
Pierce after further consultation, “this is as
good as a trial, this is. You’re standing
for your life, Mr. Holgate, and don’t you forget
it. What d’ye say, Bill? Speak up.
Give ’im ’is counts.”
“We accuse you of treachery
and not behaving like a mate on ship about the treasure,”
sang out Gray in a loud, high monotone. “We
accuse you, Mr. Holgate, of the murder of our two
companions, Smith and Alabaster. We accuse you,
furthermore, Mr. Holgate, of a conspiracy to cheat
the company, us all being comrades.”
“Now, Bill Gray, that’s
a very parsonical view of yours, isn’t it?”
said Holgate with a sneer. “By gum, you
regularly hit me off, Gray. You’re the
man to see his way through a brick wall. I killed
Smith and Alabaster, did I? Well, what’s
the odds? Here was this man, Pierce, who’s
frightened to face me in there with you, and his two
pals, making for the Sea Queen to rob you and
me. Don’t I know him and you, too?
Where would we have been if I hadn’t dropped
’em? Why, left, my good man, left.”
“That’s what we are now,”
said one of the mutineers, “regularly busted busted
and left. We’re done.”
“That’s so,” said
Holgate suavely. “But at least Smith and
Alabaster have paid their shot and lot too. And,
by thunder, that skunk behind you shall do it too.
Come out there, Pierce, sneak and dog, and take your
gruel.”
He did not raise his voice perceptibly,
but it seemed to wither the mutineers, who stood about
ten paces from him. He waddled towards them.
“Out of the way, men, and let
me see him. Blind me, I’d sooner have taken
a bug into my confidence than Pierce. He gets
ahead of us with his long thin legs, and without so
much as ‘By your leave’ swims out to sea
to cop what belongs to you and me and all of us.”
There was a murmur at this, and it
was quite impossible to tell how the sympathies of
the gang were going. But one called out again:
“Where’s that damn Pye? Where’s
your spy?”
“So,” says Holgate, “you
are thinking of the doctor’s story, are you?
You fool, he was only playing for his life and the
life of his best girl. Haven’t you got
the sense of a louse between you? Find Pye then,
and screw it out of him. Thumbscrew him till he
tells, and see how much he has to tell. It’ll
be worth your while, Garratt. Why, you fool, he’s
just a little clerk that was useful, and was going
to get a tip for his pains. He wasn’t standing
in on our level. We came in on bed-rock.”
There was a hoarse, discordant laugh.
“With the yacht gone, and us
on a Godforsaken tea-tray in mid-ocean!” said
a voice.
Upon that in the dwindling light a
shot came from the group, and Holgate lifted his barrel
deliberately.
“So, that’s Pierce, by
thunder, is it? Well, Johnny Pierce, you’re
a brave man, and I’d take off my hat to you
if my hands were free. Stand aside there, men,
and let’s see Johnny Pierce’s ugly mug.
Now, then, divide, d’ye hear, divide!”
I never could determine whether Holgate
in that moment realized that all was up, and the end
was come, and had carried things through with a swagger,
or whether he had a hope of escape. Nothing showed
in his voice or in his manner save extreme resolution
and contemptuous indifference. These men he had
misled and cheated were to him no more than brutes
of the field, to be despised and ridiculed and browbeaten.
At his words, indeed, the old habit of obedience asserted
itself and the knot fell apart; as it did I saw Pierce
with his revolver up, but Holgate did not move.
He fired carefully and Pierce uttered a curse.
Then another weapon barked, and Holgate moved a pace
forwards. He fired again, and a man dropped.
Two or more shots rang out, and the arch-mutineer
lifted his left hand slowly to his breast.
“Bully for you, Pierce,”
he said, and fired yet once more.
The knot now had dissolved, and Gray
ran in the gathering gloom a little way up the beach.
He halted, and raising his weapon, fired. It
was abominable. It may have been execution, but
it was horribly like murder. As Gray fired, Holgate
turned and put his hand to his shoulder. Immediately
he let his last barrel go.
“Ha! That’s done
you, Pierce,” he wheezed out. “By
heavens, I thought I’d do for you!”
Crack! went Gray’s pistol again
from his rear, and he swung round; his weapon dropped,
and he began to walk up the beach steadily towards
me. In the blue gloom I could see his eyes stolidly
black and furtive, and I could hear him puffing.
He came within ten paces of me, and then stood still,
and coughed in a sickening, inhuman way. Then
he dropped and rolled heavily upon his back.
I had witnessed enough. Heaven
knows we had no reason to show mercy to that criminal,
but that last hopeless struggle against odds had enlisted
some sympathy, and I had a feeling of nausea at the
sight of that collapse. He must have fallen riddled
with bullets. He had played for high stakes,
had sacrificed many innocent lives, and had died the
death of a dog. And there he would rest and rot
in that remote and desert island.
I stole from my bush and crept upwards
through the darkness. I had not gone a hundred
yards before my ears were caught by a rustling on my
left. Had I put up some animal? I came to
a pause, and then there was a swift rush, and a man’s
figure broke through the undergrowth and disappeared
across the slope of the hill. It was near dark,
but I thought in that instant I recognised it as the
figure of the little lawyer’s clerk.
When I reached the cavern I found
no sign of any one, and I was wondering what could
have become of my companions when I heard a voice
calling low through the gloaming:
“Dr. Phillimore!”
It was Alix. I sprang to her
side and took her hands. Then I learnt that Legrand
had decided, as a counsel of prudence, to occupy the
second cavern on the northern slope, which he considered
more private than that which we had found first.
“And you came back to warn me?” I asked
in a low voice.
“No; I waited,” said she
as low. “I was afraid, although you told
me.... Ah, but you have never told me wrong yet!
I believe you implicitly.”
“Princess,” I said with emotion.
“No, no,” she whispered. “Not
any more ... never any more.”
“Alix,” I whispered low, and I held her
closer. She gave a little cry.
“What is it?” I asked anxiously.
For answer her head lay quiet on my
shoulder, and the stars looked down upon a pale sweet
face. She had fainted. Now the hand which
clasped her arm felt warm and wet, and I shifted it
hastily and bent down to her. It was blood.
She was wounded. Tenderly I bound my handkerchief
about the arm and waited in distress for her to revive.
If we had only some of the mutineers’ brandy!
But presently she opened her eyes.
“Dearest ... dearest,” she murmured faintly.
“You are wounded, darling,” I said.
“Oh, why did you not tell me?”
“It was the first shot,”
she said in a drowsy voice. “When when
I had my arm about you.”
I kissed that fair white arm, and
then for the first time I kissed her lips.
We reached Legrand’s cave after
Alix had rested, and I related the tragedy that had
passed under my eyes on the beach below. Legrand
listened silently, and then:
“He was a black scoundrel.
He died as he should,” he said shortly, and
said no more.
Wearied with our exertions, and exhausted
by the anxieties of the day, we gradually sank to
sleep, and as I passed off Alix’s hand lay in
mine. She slept sweetly, for all the profound
miseries of those past days.
I awoke to the sound of a bird that
twittered in the bushes, and, emerging from the cavern,
looked around. The sun was bright on the water,
the foam sparkled, and the blue tossed and danced as
if Nature were revisiting happily the scene of pleasant
memories. It seemed as if those deeds of the
previous night, that long fight against fate, those
dismal forebodings, the tragedy of the Prince, were
all separated from us by a gulf of years. It
was almost impossible to conceive of them as belonging
to our immediate precedent past and as colouring our
present and our future. And as my gaze swept
the horizon for the orient towards the west it landed
upon nothing less than the Sea Queen!
I could have rubbed my eyes, and I
started in amazement. My heart beat heavily.
But it was true. There rode the yacht in the offing,
idly swinging and plunging on the tide and clearly
under no man’s control. She must have drifted
in upon Hurricane Island again through the stress
of some backward tide, and here she bobbed on the broken
water safe from the eyes of the mutineers. As
soon as I had recovered from the shock of surprise,
I reentered the cavern and woke Legrand, and in less
than five minutes all of us were outside our shelter
and gazing at the welcome sight.
“We have the boat hidden,”
said Legrand. “We must work our way back
to it, and the sooner the better.”
“Too much risk,” said
I. “I know a better way. At the tail
of the island we may be seen and pursued. There
are boats aboard, and she’s not more than three
hundred yards out.”
“What, swim?” he asked,
and looked rueful. He was one of the many sailors
I have known who had not that useful art.
I nodded. “It won’t take me long.”
As I passed, Alix caught my hand.
She said nothing, but her eyes devoured me and her
bosom heaved. I smiled.
“My Princess!” I whispered,
and her soul was in her look.
“I can’t see a sign of
any one on board,” said Legrand, with his hand
over his eyes.
“Mademoiselle would not be awake
yet. It can’t be later than five,”
said Lane, who was much better to-day.
“I make it 5:30,” said
Legrand. “We have some time to ourselves
if we have luck. After last night those fiends
will sleep well and with easy consciences.”
He spoke grimly.
“Have everything ready,”
I called as I left. “We must not lose a
chance or hazard anything.”
“What do you think?”
said Lane, in his old cheerful manner.
I quickly descended to the beach,
threw off my coat, waistcoat, and boots, and tightened
my belt. Then I waded into the sea. It was
cold, and, when I first entered, struck a chill into
me. But presently, as I walked out into the deepening
waters, with the sparkling reflection of the sun in
my eyes from a thousand facets of ripples, I began
to grow warm. I reached water waist-high, and
next moment I was swimming.
The tide sucked at me in a strong
current, and soon, I perceived, would carry me across
the Sea Queen’s bows unless I made a struggle.
The water was racing under me, and I felt that my
strength was as nothing compared with it. I was
thrown this way and that as the flood moved. My
passage had been taken incredibly quick, and now I
was conscious that I was past the level of the yacht,
and I turned and battled back. So far as I could
see, I made no impression on the space that separated
me from her, and I began to despair of reaching the
yacht. In my mind I revolved the possibility
of going with the flood and trusting to work ashore
at the tail of the island. If that were not practicable,
I was lost, for I should be blown out to the open
sea.
Just as these desperate reflections
crossed my mind, the Sea Queen’s stern,
off which I was struggling, backed. She came round
to the wind and jammed, so that the flutter of canvas
which she still carried cracked above the voice of
the seas. Then her nose swung right round upon
me, with the bubble under her cutwater. It was
almost as if she had sighted a doomed wretch and was
come to his assistance. Her broadside now broke
the tide for me, and I began to see that I was creeping
up to her, and, thus encouraged, step by step made
my way until at last I reached her, and by the aid
of a trailing sheet got aboard. It had been half
an hour since I left the island.
Once aboard, I waved across the intervening
stretch of sea to my friends, and looked about me.
There was no sign or sound of life anywhere on the
yacht. She swung noisily, with creaks and groans,
to the pulse of the tide, but there was no witness
to human presence there. Mademoiselle immediately
was in my thoughts, and I found my way to the state-rooms
to reassure her, if she should be awake. They
were as we had left them, save that every cabin had
been ransacked and every box turned inside out.
The cabins were empty, and so was the boudoir.
Clearly, Mademoiselle Trebizond was not there.
I went down into the saloon, but nothing rewarded
me there; and afterwards I turned along the passage
that led to the officers’ quarters, and farther
on, the steward’s room. Here, too, was
my own surgery, and instinctively I stopped when I
reached it. The door stood ajar. No doubt,
I thought, like every other place, it had suffered
the ravages of the mutineers. I opened it wide,
and started back, for there on the floor, a bottle
in her hand, and her features still and tragic, lay
Yvonne Trebizond!
I stooped to her, but I knew it was
useless even without glancing at the bottle she held.
She had sought death in the despair of her loneliness.
The Sea Queen had carried out upon the face
of the dark waters the previous evening an unhappy
woman to a fate which she could not face. She
had chosen Death to that terrible solitude on the
wilderness of the ocean. I lifted her gently,
and carried her to one of the cabins, disposing the
body on a bunk. Then I returned to the deck,
for I had work to do that pressed. I experienced
no difficulty in loosing one of the remaining boats,
and, dropping into her, I began to row towards the
island.
Legrand had the party at the water’s
edge, and they were in the boat in a very brief space
of time. We shoved off, and now Legrand and Ellison
had oars in addition to myself, so that, what with
that and the tide, we made good progress. We
had not, however, got more than halfway to the yacht
when Legrand paused on his oars and I saw his face
directed along the beach. I followed his glance,
and saw, to my astonishment, a boat bobbing off the
spit of the island.
“It’s our boat!” said I.
“Yes,” he said, “the ruffians are
up and about. Give way, give way!”
We bent to the oars, but as we did
so a number of figures appeared round the bend of
the land where we had passed our first night.
Shouts reached us. The figure in the boat was
working his oars with frantic haste, and now Legrand
called out suddenly,
“Pye!”
Pye it was, and it was also apparent
now that he was aiming for us, and that he was striving
to get away from the mutineers. He stood out to
sea, and pulled obliquely towards the yacht. Obviously,
he was better content to trust himself to our mercies
than to the ruffians with whom he had consorted.
He was a coward, I knew, and I remembered then his
white face and his terror at the time of the first
onslaught. I remembered, too, how vaguely, how
timidly and how ineffectually he had endeavoured to
warn me of the coming massacre. He was a miserable
cur; he had been largely responsible for the bloody
voyage; but I could not help feeling some pity for
him. I hung on my oars.
“Shall we pick him up?” I asked.
Legrand’s only answer was an
oath. He had forgotten the presence of Alix,
I think. His eyes blazed above his red cheeks.
“Let him drown,” he said.
By the time we reached the Sea
Queen, some of the mutineers, who had started
running when they saw us, had got to the water’s
edge opposite to us, and one or two of them plunged
in. In the distance, the others were pursuing
Pye and his boat.
Legrand, meanwhile, had taken the
wheel, and Ellison set about the sails. I did
what I could to help, and it was not many minutes ere
we had the topsails going. Under that pressure
the yacht began to walk slowly. Seeing this,
the mutineers on the shore raised a howl, and two
more jumped in to join the swimmers, who were now halfway
to us. Legrand cried out an order, and Ellison
had the jib-sail set, and the Sea Queen quickened
her pace under the brisk breeze. The swimming
mutineers dropped behind. There must have been
half a dozen of them in the water, and now we saw
that they had given up the attempt to reach us in
that way and had fallen back on a new idea. They
turned aside to intercept Pye.
The little lawyer’s clerk was
paddling for life, and knew it, but he made no way.
The yacht moved faster, and he sent up to heaven a
dreadful scream that tingled in my ears. I made
a step towards Legrand, but he merely gave one glance
backward towards the boat and then fixed his gaze
on the wide horizon of interminable sea, as though
he thus turned his back forever on Hurricane Island
and all there. He pulled the spokes of the wheel,
and the Sea Queen, breasting the foam-heads,
began to leap. We were moving at a brisk pace.
I looked back to the unhappy man.
He had fallen away now, but still laboured at his
oars. The swimmers could not have been more than
twenty yards from him. Just then Alix’s
voice was low with agitation in my ears.
“Yvonne? Where is Yvonne?”
I turned to her and took her hand.
“She will need no further care of yours, sweetheart,”
I said. “She has played her last tragedy a
tragedy she thought destined for a comedy.”
Alix, looking at me, sighed, and ere
she could say more Lane intervened in huge excitement.
“Good heavens, Phillimore! the
treasure’s all in my safes again. By crikey,
is it all a dream?”
“Yes,” I answered, looking
at Alix, “all a bad nightmare.”
I looked away across the sea, for
somehow I could not help it.
“What are you looking at?”
she asked. “They cannot catch us, can they?”
The foremost mutineers had reached
the boat and were climbing aboard. The little
clerk, white and gasping, raised his oar and struck
at them with screams of terror, striking and screaming
again.
“Hush! don’t look, darling,”
said I, and I put my hands before her eyes. “It
is the judgment of God.”
She shuddered. Pye’s shrieks
rang in my ear; I glanced off the taffrail and saw
that the mutineers had possession of the boat.
They were busy with the oars. I could see no
one else. The boat was headed towards us.
Legrand cast a glance of indifference backwards.
“If you care to hold the wheel,
Phillimore, we can rig that other sail,” he
said.
I took the wheel. Alix was by
my side, and the breeze sang in the sheets.
“We’re going home, dear heart,”
I whispered.
She moved closer to me, shuddered
and sighed, and I think the sigh was a sigh of contentment.
The Sea Queen dipped her nose
and broke into a sharper pace. She was going
home!