Five days out from Drummond’s
Island Carr had so much improved in health that he
was able to take his seat at the saloon table for breakfast,
much to the annoyance of Chard, who had been making
the best of his time in trying to produce a favourable
impression upon Tessa Remington. He pretended,
however, to be delighted to see the trader mending
so rapidly, and was most effusive in his congratulations;
and Hendry, of course, followed suit. Harvey
responded civilly enough, while Tessa, who had learned
from the chief mate of the treacherous part they were
playing towards her friend, could not repress a scornful
curl of her lip as she listened to Chard’s jocular
admonition to Harvey, “to hurry up and put on
some flesh, if only for the reputation of the cook
of the Motutapu.”
Immediately after breakfast Carr went
on deck again, and began to pace to and fro, enjoying
the bright tropic sunshine and the cool breath of
the trade wind. In a few minutes Tessa, accompanied
by her native woman servant, appeared, followed by
Chard and Captain Hendry.
“Won’t you come on the
bridge, Miss Remington?” said Chard, “I’ll
take a chair up for you.”
“No, thank you,” she replied,
“I would rather sit here under the awning.”
The supercargo and Hendry went up
on the bridge together, where they could talk freely.
The man at the wheel was a thick-set, rather stupid-looking
native from Niue (Savage Island), who took no notice
of their remarks, or at least appeared not to do so.
But Huka was not such a fool as he looked.
“You’ll stand little
chance with her,” said Hendry presently, in his
usual low but sneering tones as he tugged viciously
at his beard.
The supercargo’s black eyes
contracted, “Wait and see, before you talk.
I tell you that I mean to make that girl marry me.”
“Marry you!”
“Yes, marry me. The old
man will leave her pretty well everything he has,
and he has a lot. I’ve been making inquiries,
and am quite satisfied.”
“How are you going to do it?”
“Don’t know just yet.
Must think it out. But I never yet knew the woman
whom I could not work my own way with by
fair means or foul, as the penny novelists say.”
“It strikes me that she likes
that damned fellow. Look round presently and
see for yourself. She’s reading to him.”
“Bah! That’s nothing.
He used to sail one of the old man’s schooners,
and of course they have a good deal to talk about.
I’ll settle him as far as she is concerned.
Wait till I get a chance to talk to her a bit,”
and taking off his cap the supercargo passed his brawny
hand through his curly hair with a smile of satisfaction.
“She’ll be tired of talking to him before
the day is out.”
“Where is he going to land? Has he told
you?”
“Yes. He wants to be put
ashore at the Mortlocks Islands. We have no trader
there, and he has lived there before.”
“I’d like to see him go
over the side in some new canvas, with a couple of
fire bars slung to his heels,” snarled Hendry
viciously.
“So would I,” said Chard meditatively.
At four bells the wheel was relieved,
and Huka the Niue native trotted off, and immediately
sent a message to Carr’s servant Malua to come
for’ard. The boy did as requested, and remained
away for about ten minutes. When he returned
he seated himself as usual near his master. Hendry
was in his cabin on deck, Chard was below in the trade
room, and only Tessa, Harvey, and himself were on
the after-deck.
“Master,” he said in Fijian,
to Harvey, “listen to what Huka, the man of
Niue, has told me. The captain and the supercargo
have been talking about thee and the lady.”
Then he repeated all that which Huka had heard.
“The infernal scoundrels!”
Harvey could not help exclaiming. “But they
won’t get rid of me as easily as they think.”
“What is it, Harvey?”
asked Tessa, anxiously bending forward to him.
The trader thought a moment or two
before speaking. Then he decided to tell her
what he had just heard.
She laughed contemptuously. “His
wife! His wife!” she repeated scornfully.
“If he knew what my father knows of him, and
how I hate and despise him, he would not have said
that. Does he think that because my mother was
a Portuguese, I am no better than some native slave
girl whom he could buy from her master?”
Harvey smiled gravely as he looked
into her flashing eyes, and saw her clench her hands
angrily. Then he said
“He is a dangerous man though,
Tessa. And now listen to me. When I came
on board this steamer I intended to land at the Mortlocks
Islands. But I think now that I will go on to
Ponape.”
“Do not change your plans, Harvey,
on my account. I am not afraid of this man.
He dare not insult me, for fear my father would hear
of it.”
“I know him too well, Tessa.
He and the skipper are, I fear, a pair of cunning,
treacherous villains. And so I am going on to
Ponape. And I will stay there until your father
returns. I daresay,” he added with a smile,
“that he will give me a berth as a trader somewhere.”
A sudden joy illumined the girl’s
face. “I am so glad, Harvey.
And mother, too, will be overjoyed to see you again;
father has never ceased to talk about you since you
left him. Oh, Harvey, we shall have all the old,
old delightful days over again. But,” she
added artlessly, “there will be but you and
I now to go fishing and shooting together. Carmela
and her husband are living in the Ladrones, and Librada
and her husband, though they are still on Ponape,
are ten miles away from mother and I. Then Jack is
in California, and Ned is away on a whaling cruise.”
A quick emotion stirred his bosom
as he looked into her now joyous face. “I
don’t think you and I can go out shooting and
fishing together, Tessa, as we did in what you call
‘the old, old days.’”
“Can’t we, Harvey?” she asked wonderingly.
He shook his head, and then mused.
“Tessa, I wish you could meet my sisters.”
She clasped her hands together.
“Ah, so do I, Harvey. I should love to
meet them. Do you think they would like me?”
“I am sure they would.”
They were silent for a while, the
girl with her head bent and her long lashes hiding
her eyes from him as she sat in the deck-chair, and
he thinking of what his sisters would really say if
he wrote and told them that he thought he had at last
found a woman he would wish to make his wife.
“Tessa.”
“Yes, Harvey.”
She did not look at him, only bent her head still
lower.
“Tessa!”
“Yes, Harvey.”
Her hands were trembling, and her
courage was gone, for there was something in his voice
that filled her with delight.
“Tessa,” he said, speaking
softly, as he drew nearer to her, and tried to make
her look at him; “do you know that you are a
very beautiful woman?”
“I am glad you think so, Harvey,”
she whispered. “You used to tell father
that Carmela and Librada were the most beautiful women
you had ever seen.”
“So they were. But you
are quite as beautiful. And, Tessa ”
“Yes, Harvey” this in the faintest
whisper.
“Could you care for me at all,
Tessa? I do not mean as a friend. I am only
a poor trader, but if I thought you could love-me,
I ”
She took a quick glance around the
deck, and bent towards him. “I have always
loved you, Harvey; always, always.” Then
she pressed her lips to his, and in another moment
was gone.
Harvey, with a sense of elation in
his heart, walked for’ard to where Morrison
was standing in the waist.
“Why, man, ye look as if ye
could take the best man aboard on for four rounds,”
said the engineer, with a smile.
“I do feel pretty fit, Morrison,”
laughed the trader; “have you anything to drink
in your cabin?”
“Some real Loch Dhu, not
made in Sydney. Man, your eye is as bright as
a boy’s.”
Just before eight bells were struck
Chard came on deck. He was carefully dressed
in shining, well-starched white duck, and his dark,
coarsely-handsome face was aglow with satisfaction;
he meant to “rub it in” to Carr, and was
only awaiting till Tessa Remington and Captain Hendry
were present to hear him do it. He knew she would
be on deck in a minute or so, and Hendry he could
see was sitting at his cabin table with his chart
before him. Harvey was strolling about on the
main deck, smoking his first pipe for many weeks.
Presently Tessa appeared with her
woman attendant. She, too, had dressed in white,
and for the time had discarded the wide Panama hat
she usually wore. Her face was radiant with happiness
as she took the deck-chair which Chard brought, and
disposed herself comfortably, book in hand. She
had seen Harvey on the main deck, and knew she would
at least have him with her for a few minutes before
dinner.
Hendry stepped out from his cabin.
“Ha, Miss Remington. You
give an atmosphere of coolness to the whole ship.
Mr. Chard, big as he is, is only a minor reflection
of your dazzling whiteness.”
“Thank you, Captain Hendry.
I am quite sure that my father will be astonished
to learn that I have been paid so many compliments
on board the Motutapu. Had he known that
you and Mr. Chard were such flatterers he would not
have let me come away.”
Neither Chard nor Hendry could detect
the ring of mockery in her tones. They drew their
chairs up near to that in which she was sitting and
lit their cigars, and she, impatient for Harvey, talked
and laughed with them, and wished them far away.
Less than two hours before she had felt an intense
hatred of them, now she had but a quiet contempt for
both the handsome, “good-natured” supercargo
and his sneaking, grey-bearded jackal.
Eight bells struck, and presently
Carr ascended the poop deck, took in the little group
on the starboard side of the skylight, and went over
to his own lounge, beside which his watchful servant
was seated. He knew that Tessa would be alone
in a few minutes, and he was quite satisfied to wait
till Chard and the Dane left her free.
He lay back in the lounge, and lazily
conversed with Malua. Then Chard, who had been
watching him keenly, rose from his seat.
“Pray excuse me for a few minutes,
Miss Remington. Even your charming society
must not make me forget business.”
He spoke so loudly that Carr could
not fail to hear him, but he was quite prepared, and
indeed had been on the alert.
Chard walked up to within a few feet of the trader.
“I want you to come below, Mr.
Carr, and pick out your trade goods for the Mortlocks.”
Harvey leant back in his lounge.
“I don’t think I shall require any goods
for the Mortlocks Islands, Mr. Chard.”
“What do you mean?” and Chard’s
face flushed with anger.
“I mean exactly what I say,”
replied Carr nonchalantly. “I say that I
shall not want any trade goods for the Mortlocks Islands.
I have decided not to take another station from the
firm of Hillingdon and McFreeland. I have had
enough of them and enough of you.”
Chard took a threatening step towards him.
“Stand back, Mr. Chard. I am not a man
to be threatened.”
Something in his eyes warned the supercargo,
whose temper, however, was rapidly taking possession
of him.
“Very well, Mr. Carr,”
he said sneeringly; “do I understand you to say
that you refuse to continue your engagement with our
firm?”
“I do refuse.”
“Then, by God, I’ll dump
you ashore at the first island we sight. The
firm will be glad to be rid of you.”
“I don’t doubt the latter
part of your assertion; but their satisfaction will
be nothing to equal mine,” he said with cutting
irony. “But you’ll not ‘dump’
me ashore anywhere. I am going to land at Ponape,
and nowhere else.”
Again Chard took a step nearer, his
face purpling with rage; and then, as Hendry came
to his side with scowling eyes, Tessa quickly slipped
past them, and stood near her lover.
“You’ll land at Ponape,
will you?” sneered the supercargo, “It’s
lucky for you we are not in port now, for I’d
kick you ashore right-away.”
The insult had the desired effect,
for, weak as he was, Harvey sprang forward and struck
Chard full upon the mouth, but almost at the same
moment the captain, who had quietly possessed himself
of a brass belaying-pin, dealt him a blow on the back
of the neck which felled him to the deck, and then
bending on one knee, he would have repeated the blow
on Harvey’s upturned face, when Tessa sprang
at him like a tigress, and struck him again and again
on the temple with her revolver. He fell back,
bleeding and half stunned.
“You cowards you
pair of miserable curs!” she cried to Chard,
who was standing with his handkerchief to his lips,
glaring savagely at the prostrate figure of Harvey.
“Stand back,” and she covered him with
her weapon, as he made a step towards her, “stand
back, or I will shoot you dead.” Then as
the second mate, Huka, and another native appeared
on the poop, she sank on her knees beside Harvey,
and called for water.
Hendry, whose face was streaming with
blood, though he was but little hurt, rose to his
feet and addressed the second mate.
“Mr. Atkins, put that man in
irons,” and he pointed to Harvey, who was now
sitting up, with Tessa holding a glass of water to
his lips.
The second mate eyed his captain sullenly.
“He is scarcely conscious yet, sir.”
“Do you refuse to obey me?
Quick, answer me. Where is the mate? Mr.
Chard, I call on you to support my authority.”
Harvey looked at the second mate,
whose features were working curiously. He rose
and pressed Tessa’s hand.
“You must obey him, Atkins,”
he said. “If you don’t he’ll
break you. He’s a spiteful hound.”
Atkins, with a sorrowful face, went
to his cabin and returned with a pair of handcuffs,
just as the chief officer appeared. As he stepped
on the poop he was followed by half-a-dozen of the
native crew, who advanced towards Hendry and the supercargo
with threatening glances.
“Go for’ard, you swine!”
shouted Chard, who saw that they meant a rescue.
He darted into Hendry’s cabin, and reappeared
with the captain’s revolvers, one of which he
handed to him.
Harvey looked contemptuously at the
supercargo, then turning to the natives he spoke to
them in Samoan, and earnestly besought them to go
for’ard, telling them of the penalties they would
suffer if they disputed the captain’s authority.
They obeyed him with reluctance, and left the poop.
Then he held out his hands to the second mate, who
snapped the handcuffs on his wrists.
“Take him to the for’ard
deck-house,” snarled Hendry viciously.
“I protest against this, sir,”
said Oliver respectfully. “I beg of you
to beware of what you are doing.”
Hendry gave him a furious glance,
but his rage choked his utterance.
Tessa Remington followed the prisoner
to the break of the poop and whispered to him ere
he descended the ladder. He nodded and smiled.
Then she turned and faced Chard and the captain.
“Perhaps you would like to put
me in irons too, gentlemen,” she said mockingly.
“I am not very strong, though stronger than Mr.
Carr has been for many months.”
The captain eyed her with sudden malevolence;
Chard, bully as he was, with a secret admiration as
she stood before them, still holding her revolver
in her hand. She faced them in an attitude of
defiance for a second or two, and then with a scornful
laugh swept by them and went below to her cabin.