From his boyhood Harvey Carr had been
a wanderer among the islands of the Southern Seas.
Before he was sixteen his father, who was owner and
master of a Hobart Town whaleship, had perished at
sea in one of the ship’s boats after the loss
of his vessel upon an uncharted reef in the South
Pacific. And though another sixteen years had
almost passed since that dreadful time of agony and
hunger, and thirst and madness, when men looked at
each other with a horrid meaning in their wolfish eyes,
the boy had never forgotten his dying father’s
words, spoken to the lad when the grey shadow of the
end had deepened upon the old seaman’s rugged
face
“I’m done for, Harvey.
Try to keep up the men’s courage. Rain will
fall before morning. I know it is coming, though
I shall never feel it. Stick to your two little
sisters, boy; you must be their mainstay when I am
gone. Lead a clean life, Harvey. You can
do it if you think of your dead mother and of me....
And tell the men to stick steady to an east-southeast
course. They’ll feel fresh and strong when
the rain comes. Drop me over the side the moment
I’m gone, lad, won’t you? Don’t
let any one of them touch me. Goodbye, my son.”
Those awful days of horror had helped
to strengthen Harvey Carr’s natural resolution
and steadfastness of purpose in life. When the
famished and hideous-looking survivors of the crew
of the City of Hope were picked up two days
later the orphaned sailor lad made a vow to devote
himself to his sisters and “live clean.”
And he had kept his vow, though for many years he
had lived as trader, mate, or supercargo, among people
and in places where loose living was customary with
white men, and where any departure from the general
practice was looked upon with either contemptuous
pity or open scorn. Yet no one, not even the
roughest and most dissolute beachcomber in the two
Pacifics, would have dared to “chaff”
Harvey Carr upon his eccentricity, for he had an unpleasant
manner when aroused which meant danger to the man who
was so wanting in judgment. Yet some men had
“chaffed” him, and found out to their
cost that they had picked upon the wrong sort of man;
for if he was slow with his tongue he was quick with
his hands, and knew how to use them in a manner which
had given intense pleasure to numerous gentry who,
in South Sea ports, delight to witness a “mill”
in default of being able to take part in it themselves.
And so the years had slipped by with
Harvey Carr, wandering from one island to another
either as trader or seaman. Of such money as he
made he sent the greater portion to his sisters in
the Colonies, retaining only enough for himself to
enable him to live decently. He was not an ascetic,
he drank fairly with his rough companions, gambled
occasionally in a moderate manner with them, swore
when the exigences of seafaring life demanded
it, but no one had ever heard his name coupled with
that of a woman, white or brown, though he was essentially
a favourite with the latter; for at the end of fifteen
years’ experience in the South Seas, from Easter
Island to the far Bonins, he was one of the few white
men who thoroughly understood the character and disposition
of the various peoples among whom he had lived.
Had he been a man of education his knowledge of native
languages, thought and mode of life generally, might
have brought him some money, fame, and distinction
in the world beyond, but he took no thought of such
things; for to him the world beyond was an unknown
quantity, only associated in his mind with his sisters,
who had sometimes talked to him of their hopes and
aspirations. They would, when he had made plenty
of money, go to England, to France, to Italy.
They would, with him, see the quaint old church on
the sands of Devon where their mother, and her mother
too, had been christened so long, long ago. And
Harvey had only shaken his head and smiled. They,
he said, might go, but he had no care for such things;
and he would work hard and make money for them until
they married and wanted him no longer.
And then after a brief stay in the
quiet little Australian country town where his sisters
lived, he would again sail out to seek the ever-fleeting
City of Fortune that has always tempted men like him
into the South Seas, never to return to the world
of civilisation, but with an intense, eager desire
to leave it again as quickly as possible. To
him the daily round of conventional existence, the
visitings, the theatres, the church-goings, the talkings
with well-dressed and highly cultured men and women,
whose thoughts and life seemed to him to be deadly
dull and uninteresting when contrasted with his own
exciting life in the South Seas, palled upon and bored
him to the verge of desperation. From his boyhood from
the time of his father’s death he had moved
among rough men men who held their lives
cheaply, but whose adventurous natures were akin to
his own; men “who never had ’listed,”
but who traded and sailed, and fought and died from
bullet, or club, or deadly fever in the murderous
Solomons or New Hebrides; men whose pioneering instinct
and unrecorded daring has done so much for their country’s
flag and their country’s prestige, but whose
very names are forgotten by the time the quick-growing
creeper and vine of the hot tropic jungle has hidden
their graves from even the keen eye of the savage
aboriginal. Go through a file of Australian newspapers
from the year 1806 to the year 1900 and you will see
how unknown Englishmen have died, and are dying, in
those wild islands, and how as they die, by club,
or spear, or bullet, or fever, how easily the young
hot blood of other men of English race impels them
to step into the vacant places. And it is well
that it is so the wild wide world over, else would
Britain be, not the mistress of the seas, but only
a sharer of its sovereignty with France and Germany.
About five years previous to his entering
the service of Hillingdon and McFreeland, Carr had
been mate of a trading vessel whose cruising-grounds
were that vast chain of islands known as the Caroline
Group, in the North-West Pacific, and there he had
made the acquaintance of old John Remington and his
family, an acquaintance that in the course of two
or three years had deepened into a sincere friendship.
The old trader was a man of means, and owned, in addition
to his numerous trading stations throughout the North
Pacific, a very smart schooner, of which eventually
Carr took command, and sailed her for him for a couple
of years. Then Remington, who, old as he was,
was of an eager, adventurous disposition, decided
to seek new fields for his enterprise among the low-lying
equatorial islands to the south, and Carr and he parted,
the former resuming his wanderings among the wild and
murderous peoples of New Britain and the Solomon Archipelago.
Since then they had never met, though the young man
had heard that Remington, accompanied by one or more
of his children, had opened up a trading business in
the Gilbert Islands.
Exhausted with the violence of the
fit of ague, Carr had dropped off into a broken slumber,
from which he did not awaken till eight bells were
struck, and the steward came to ask him to try and
eat a little. Chard, Hendry and the two traders
were below in the saloon, drinking, smoking, and talking
business; Remington and his daughter, who had declined
to join them at supper, were still on deck waiting
for Carr to awaken; Malua, Carr’s native servant,
still sat beside his master, from whom he was never
long absent, and from the main deck came the murmur
of voices from the native crew, who were lying on
their mats enjoying the cool breath of the evening
land breeze.
The moment the young trader opened
his eyes Tessa’s father came over to him and
they began to talk.
“I was delighted beyond words
to learn you were on board, Harvey,” said the
old man. “I didn’t care about the
idea of letting Tess go away under the care of strangers;
but now I shall know that she will be well looked
after, and that she will be in Ponape in less than
a month.”
Carr heard him in silence, then he
said frankly, “And I shall be delighted too;
but, at the same time, I wish she were leaving you
by any other ship than this. Cannot you keep
her with you until one of the German ships come along?
Is it necessary she must go home by this steamer?”
“Time is everything, Harvey.
Her mother is ill, and wrote to me a few months ago,
begging me, if I could not return myself, to at least
try and send Tess home. The two other girls are
married, as you know, and my two boys are both away one
is second mate on the Jacinta, of New Bedford,
and the other is in California. And I can’t
leave Drummond’s Island for another four months
or so. I have made a good business here and throughout
the group, and to leave it now to the care of any one
else would mean a heavy loss to me. Then, you
see, this steamer will land Tess at home in less than
a month. If she waits for one of the German ships
to call she may have to wait three or four months.
And her mother wants her badly.”
Again Carr was silent. He knew
that Mrs. Remington had always been more or less of
an invalid for many years. She was a Portuguese
of Macao, and though her three daughters and two sons
were strong and robust, she had always struck him
as being of a delicate physique the very
antithesis of her husband, whose fame as an athlete
was known from one end of the Pacific to the other.
Presently Carr sat up.
“Do you mind going away, Tessa,
for a few minutes?” he said. “I want
to talk to your father on some business matters.”
A vivid flush spread over Tessa’s
pale cheeks. “Oh, I’m so sorry, Harvey.”
She rose and walked aft to where the
mate was standing, and began to talk to him, her heart
beating double quick time the while, for she had never
forgotten Harvey Carr, though he had never spoken a
word of love to her in the olden days when she was
a girl of sixteen, and he was the master of her father’s
schooner.
And now, and now, she thought, they
would be together for nearly a month. And what
were the “business matters,” she wondered,
about which he wanted to speak to her father.
Perhaps he was coming to them again! How hollow-cheeked,
yellow, and dreadful he looked, except for his eyes,
which were always kind and soft! She was nineteen,
and was no longer the child she was three years ago,
when, with her gun on her shoulder, she used to accompany
Harvey Carr and her brothers out pigeon-shooting in
the dark, silent mountain forest of Ponape. And
then, too, she knew she was beautiful; not so beautiful,
perhaps, as her two sisters, Carmela and Librada,
whom she had heard Harvey say were the handsomest girls
he had ever seen. But yet and again
a pleasant flush tinged her pale cheeks he
had always liked to talk to her most, although she
was only a girl of sixteen, just returned from school
in California.
She sighed softly to herself, and
then looking up suddenly saw the kindly-faced mate
regarding her with a smile in his honest grey eyes,
for she was answering his questions at random, and
he guessed that her thoughts were with the sick trader.
As soon as she was out of hearing
Carr spoke hurriedly, for he every moment expected
to see either Chard or the captain appear on deck.
“Jack,” he said, speaking
in the familiar manner borne out of their past comradeship,
“you know that I would do anything for you, don’t
you? But while I shall take good care of Tessa,
I would rather she was going back home to Ponape by
any other ship than the Motutapu.”
“What is wrong with the ship, Harvey?”
“Nothing. But the captain
and supercargo are a pair of unmitigated scoundrels.
I have seen a good deal of them since I came on board
at New Britain, and I hate the idea of Tessa even
having to sit at the same table with them. If
I were free of this cursed fever, I wouldn’t
mind a bit, for I could protect her. But I’m
no better than a helpless cripple most of the time,
and one or the other, or both, of these fellows are
bound to insult her, especially if they begin drinking.”
Old Remington put his hand on Carr’s
shoulder. “You’re a good boy, Harvey,
and I know what you say of Chard at least, is true
But have no fear for Tessa. She can take good
care of herself at any time, and I have no fear for
her. Just let me call her for a moment.”
“Tessa,” he called, “come
here.” Then speaking in Portuguese, he added,
“Show Harvey what you have in the bosom of your
dress.”
The girl smiled a little wonderingly,
and then putting her hand in the bosom of her yellow
silk blouse, drew out a small Smith and Wesson revolver.
“Don’t worry about Tessa,
Harvey,” added her father; “she has not
travelled around the Pacific with me for nothing, and
if either that rat-faced Danish skipper or the fat
supercargo meddles with her, she will do what I would
do. So have no fear. And she is as anxious
as I am myself to get home to her mother.”
Harvey was satisfied. “Perhaps
I am doing these two fellows an injustice, Jack.
When a man has fever he always takes a black view of
everything. And then I should remember that Malua
here, and the mate, and nearly all the crew, will
see that Tessa is not interfered with. I am sorry,
however, that I shall not be with Tessa all the way
to Ponape I am going ashore at the Mortlocks.
There is a good opening there ”
“Don’t be in too much
of a hurry, Harvey. Now, listen to me. Go
on to Ponape. Leave this employ, and come in
with me again.”
Harvey promised to think it over during
the next few days; but the old man could see, to his
regret, that the Mortlocks group of islands possessed
a strong fascination for his young friend.
Remington remained on board for the
night; and then at daylight he bade Tessa and Harvey
farewell and went ashore, and half an hour later the
steamer had left the island, and was heading north-west
for the Carolines.