At six o’clock that evening
the Motutapu was plunging into a heavy head
sea, for the wind had suddenly hauled round to the
northeast and raised a mountainous swell. Chard
and his jackal were seated in the latter’s cabin
on deck. A half-emptied bottle of brandy was on
the table, and both men’s faces were flushed
with drink, for this was the second bottle since noon.
Hendry did not present a pleasant appearance, for
Tessa’s pistol had cut deeply into his thin,
tough face, which was liberally adorned with strips
of plaster. The liquor he had taken had also
turned his naturally red face into a purple hue, and
his steely blue eyes seemed to have dilated to twice
their size, as he listened with venomous interest
to Chard. “Now, look here, Louis,”
said the latter, “both you and I want to get
even with him, don’t we?”
It was only when the supercargo was
planning some especial piece of villainy that he addressed
his confrere by his Christian name. Secretly
he despised him as a “damned Dutchman,”
to his face he flattered him; for he was a useful
and willing tool, and during the three or four years
they had sailed together had materially assisted the
“good-natured, jovial” supercargo in his
course of steady peculation. Yet neither trusted
the other.
“You bet I do,” replied
Hendry; “but I’d like to get even with
that spiteful little half-bred Portuguese devil ”
“Steady, Louis, steady,”
said Chard, with a half-drunken leer; “you must
remember that she is to be Mrs. Samuel Chard.”
“Don’t think you have
the ghost of a chance, as I said before. She’s
in love with that fellow.”
“Then she must get out of love
with him. I tell you, Louis” here
he struck his fist on the table “that
I mean to make her marry me. And she’ll
be glad to marry me before we get to Ponape.
And if you stick to me and help to pull me through,
it’s a hundred quid for you.”
“How are you going to do it?”
and the captain bent forward his foxy face and grinned
in anticipation.
“Same old way as with that Raratongan
girl last year. She’ll go to sleep after
supper, and I can open any door in the saloon, as you
know, don’t you, old man?” and he laughed
coarsely. “Dear, dear, what times we have
had together, Louis, my esteemed churchwarden of Darling
Point, Sydney!”
The Dane tugged at his beard, and
then poured out some brandy for himself and his fellow
scoundrel. “We have, we have, Sam,”
he said, uneasily. “But what about the
native woman who sleeps with her?”
“The native woman, when she
awakes, my Christian friend, will find herself in
the trade-room in the company of Mr. Tim Donnelly,
one of the firemen. And Mr. Tim Donnelly, to
whom I have given two sovereigns, will bear me out,
if necessary, that ’the woman tempted him, and
he did fall.’ Also he will be prepared
to swear that this native woman, Maoni, told him that
her mistress expected a visit from Mr. Chard, and had
asked her to be out of the way.”
“Well, after that.”
“After that, my dear Christian
friend, with the rudely executed diagrams in sticking-plaster
on the facial cuticle, my pious churchwarden with
the large family of interesting girls after
that, Miss Tessa Remington will be glad to marry Mr.
Samuel Chard, inasmuch as when she awakes it
will be under the same improper conditions as those
of the dissolute Tim Donnelly and the flighty Miss
Maoni; for the beauteous Tessa will be fortuitously
discovered by Captain Louis Hendry and several other
persons on board, in such circumstances that an immediate
marriage of the indiscreet lovers by one of the American
missionaries at Ponape will present the only solution
of what would otherwise be a ’terrible scandal.’”
“And what will you do with this fellow Carr?”
“Chuck him ashore at the Mortlocks,”
replied Chard with an oath; “we’ll be
there in a couple of days, and I’ll kick him
over the side if he turns rusty. Hillingdon doesn’t
like him, so we are quite safe.”
“When is the love-making to
come off?” asked Hendry, with a fiend-like grin.
“As soon as we are clear of
Carr or sooner; to-night maybe. We
must log it that he was continually trying to cause
the native crew to mutiny, and that for the safety
of the ship we got rid of him. Hillingdon will
back us up.”
Tessa did not appear at supper.
She kept to her cabin with Maoni, her dear Maoni,
who, though but little older than herself, was as a
mother to her; for the native girl had been brought
up with her and her sisters from their infancy.
And as Tessa lay back with her dark head pillowed
against the bosom of the native girl, and sobbed as
she thought of her lover lying in the deck-house with
the handcuffs on his wrists, Maoni pressed her lips
to those of her mistress.
“Lie there, little one, lay
thy head on my bosom,” she said; “’tis
a bad day for thee, but yet all will be well soon.
These sailor men with the brown skins will not let
thy lover be hurt. That much do I know already.
Speak but one word, and the captain and the big fat
man with the black eyes will be dead men.”
Tessa smiled through her tears.
“Nay, Maoni, that must not be; I desire no man’s
death. But yet if he be not set free to-morrow
trouble will come of it, for he hath done nothing
wrong; and the brown men, as thou sayest, have a strong
friendship for him.”
“He shall be set free to-morrow,”
said Maoni, with quiet emphasis. “The brown
sailor men have talked together over this thing, and
they say that they are ready at thy word to make captive
the captain, the big fat man, and all those white
men who tend the great fires in the belly of the ship.”
Tessa knew that the half-dozen of
white firemen and stokers were on bad terms with
the native crew. They were a ruffianly, drunken
set of scoundrels, and their leader, a powerfully
built man named Donnelly, had grossly insulted both
the first and second mates. He was an especial
protege of the supercargo, who, as well as the
captain, secretly encouraged him and his fellows to
annoy and exasperate the two officers and the chief
engineer.
They remained in their cabin talking
together in low tones and without a light till they
heard eight bells strike; and ten minutes afterwards,
just as they were going on deck, some one tapped at
the cabin door.
“It is me, Miss Remington,”
said the voice of Oliver; “please let me come
in for a moment. Be quick, please, as I don’t
want the captain to know I am here.”
Tessa at once opened the door.
“Come in Mr. Oliver. But we have no light.”
“Never mind that, miss,”
he said in a low voice, carefully closing the door
and then bolting it, “I cannot stay long.
I came to warn you that there is likely to be trouble
tonight about Mr. Carr, and you had better not come
on deck. Keep to your cabin, and don’t open
your door to any one except myself, the second mate,
or the steward. The native crew are in a dangerous
state of excitement, and I am sure they will attempt
to liberate Mr. Carr before morning. Both the
captain and Chard are more than half-drunk; and the
chief engineer tells me that for some reason they
have given liquor to the firemen and stokers,
who have set him at defiance. I fear, I fear
greatly, miss, that some calamity may occur on board
this ship to-night. Therefore I beg of you to
keep to your cabin.”
“Thank you very much, Mr. Oliver.
We certainly did intend to go on deck and remain some
hours, but shall not do so now. But tell me, please,
have you seen Mr. Carr? Is he well?”
“Quite well. I saw him
a few minutes ago, and he bade me tell you to have
no fear for him. I am now again going to Captain
Hendry to ask him, for his own and the ship’s
safety, to set Mr. Carr free. If he refuses I
cannot say what will happen.”
Tessa put her little hand upon the
mate’s huge, rough paw, and looked into his
honest, troubled eyes through the darkness.
“It is good of you,” she
whispered. “Oh, do try, Mr. Oliver, try
your best to make the captain set him at liberty.”
“Indeed I will, miss,”
replied the mate earnestly, as he pressed her hand,
and went softly out into the main cabin. He stood
by the table for a minute or two, thinking with wrinkled
brow of the best way to approach the captain and bring
him to reason. Presently he sat down, took his
pipe from his pocket, filled it, and began to smoke.
A heavy step sounded on the companion
steps, and Chard descended somewhat unsteadily, and
calling for the second steward who was in
the pantry to come to him, brushed past
the chief officer, and went into his own cabin.
The second steward a dirty,
evil-faced little cockney named Jessop, whom Oliver
and his fellow officers particularly abhorred at
once followed the supercargo in to his cabin, which
was immediately closed. In less than five minutes
it opened again, and Jessop came out and returned
to the pantry, and presently Oliver heard the rattle
of cups and saucers as the man made preparations for
the coffee which was always served to Hendry, Chard,
Carr, and Tessa and her attendant, and the officer
on watch at nine o’clock every evening.
“Would you like a cup of coffee,
sir, as you have not turned in?”
It was Jessop who was speaking, and
Oliver looked up in some wonder, for the man knew
that he disliked him, and indeed he (Oliver) had once
smartly cuffed him for creating a disturbance for’ard
with the native crew.
Most fortunately for himself, Oliver
did not want any coffee, so merely giving the man
a gruff “No, thank you,” he rose and went
on deck.
The moment he was out of the cabin
Chard appeared, and looked inquiringly at the second
steward.
“’E won’t ’ave
any, blarst him!” said the man, speaking in a
whisper, for Latour, the chief steward, was in his
cabin, which was abreast the trade-room.
Chard uttered a curse. “Never
mind him, then. Sling it out of the port or you’ll
be giving it to me instead perhaps. Are the other
two cups ready?”
The man nodded. “All ready, but it’s
a bit early yet.”
“That doesn’t matter.
Pour it out and take it to them the sooner
the better.”
Chard, whose dark face was deeply
flushed, sat down at the table, lit a cigar, and watched
his villainous accomplice place the two cups of coffee
with some biscuits on a tray, take it to Miss Remington’s
door and knock.
“Coffee, ma’am.”
“Thank you, steward,”
he heard Tessa’s soft voice reply as Maoni opened
the door and took the tray from Jessop.
The supercargo rose from his seat
with a smile of satisfaction. The crime he meditated
seemed no crime to his base and vicious heart.
He merely regarded it as a clever trick; dangerous
perhaps, but not dangerous to him; for deeply steeped
as he was in numerous villainies he had never yet
been called to account for any one of his misdeeds,
and long immunity had rendered him utterly hardened
and callous to any sentiment of pity or remorse.
He went on deck and walked leisurely
for’ard till he came abreast of the funnel.
A big swarthy-faced man who was standing near the ash-hoist
was awaiting him.
“Are you sober enough, Tim,
not to make any mistakes?” asked Chard, leaning
forward and looking eagerly into the man’s face.
“Just as sober as you are,”
was the reply, given with insolent familiarity.
“I’ve kept my head pretty clear, as clear
as yours and the skipper’s, anyway.”
The two conversed for a few minutes,
and then separated, the supercargo going up on the
bridge to join his jackal. Half-way up the ladder
he heard the sound of angry voices. Hendry was
quarrelling with his chief officer.
“Go and keep your watch below,”
said the captain furiously, his bloodshot eyes glaring
fiercely upon the mate. “I tell you that
I’ll keep the beggar in irons till he rots in
them, or until Mr. Chard kicks him ashore.”
“Very well, sir,” said
Oliver quietly, placing his hand on the bridge rail
to steady himself, for the Motutapu was now
plunging and labouring in the heavy head sea, and
Hendry was staggering about all over the bridge “very
well. But I call on Mr. Atkins here to witness
that I now tell you that you are putting the ship into
great danger.”
“Say another word to me, and
by God I’ll put you with your friend Carr to
keep him company!” shouted Hendry, who had now
completely lost control of himself.
Oliver smiled contemptuously, but
made no answer. He at once descended the bridge,
and in the starboard alleyway met the chief engineer.
“This is a nice state of affairs,
Oliver. Those blackguards of mine are half-drunk,
and unless I get some assistance from the captain I
can’t keep up steam. They won’t work
and are saucy as well.”
The mate shook his head. “You’ll
get no help from the captain. He and I have just
had a flare-up. He’s half-drunk himself,
and threatened to put me in irons. And none of
the native crew will go into the stokehole, that’s
certain.”
“Well then, something serious
will happen. I can keep her going at four or
five knots for another hour or so, and that is all
I can do. The second engineer and myself are
dead-beat. She’ll broach-to presently,
and then you will see a pretty mess.”
“I can’t help it, Morrison,”
said the mate gloomily, as he went to his cabin.
Up on the bridge Hendry and Chard
were talking and looking out ahead. The second
mate, a young, muscular man, was standing by the wheel,
and giving a word of warning now and then to the native
helmsman, who was Huka. Although it was not blowing
hard the sea had increased greatly, and every now
and then the steamer would make a plunge into a mighty
valley of darkness, and only struggle up out of it
with difficulty. Careful steering was a necessity,
for the ship was not steaming more than four knots,
and the least inattention might result in serious
consequences.
“Look out for’ard!”
Atkins shouted, as he saw a particularly loose, knobby
sea rise suddenly up over the starboard bow. His
warning was just given in time, for in another moment
down dropped the black mass of water on the well deck
with a thundering crash, burying the steamer completely
from the bridge to foc’scle head. She rose
slowly, very slowly.
Hendry lurched up towards the helmsman.
“You damned, red-hided kanaka!
Couldn’t you see that coming?” and he
struck the man a violent blow on the mouth. In
an instant Huka let go the wheel, swung himself over
the rail on to the deck, and ran for’ard.
Atkins looked at his captain with suppressed rage as
he seized the wheel, and then began to watch for the
next sea.
Five minutes passed, and then a dozen
dark figures made a sudden rush towards the deckhouse
in which Carr lay in irons. Then came the sound
of smashing blows as the door was burst open with an
axe, and in a few seconds Carr was brought out upon
the main deck and quickly freed from his irons by
Malua, to whom a duplicate key had been given by the
second mate.
At first Chard and Hendry scarcely
comprehended what had happened, so sudden was the
onslaught, but when they saw Carr standing free on
the main hatch they both made a rush aft towards Hendry’s
deck cabin. This they gained without opposition,
and seizing two loaded Winchesters which lay in the
captain’s berth they darted out again, and began
firing into the group of excited native seamen ten
paces away. Three men at once dropped, either
killed or wounded; but the rest, nothing daunted at
this, made a rush towards the two men, knives in hand,
bore them down to the deck by sheer weight, and in
a few seconds would have ended their lives had not
Carr, Oliver, and Latour the steward flung themselves
into the fray.
“For God’s sake, stop!”
cried Oliver, “the ship is on fire!”
And then seizing Hendry by the throat,
he lifted him to his feet, and shook him as a terrier
shakes a rat. “You damned, drunken villain!
You are not in a fit state to take charge. Lie
there, you brute, and let better men try to save the
ship.”
He swung Hendry’s slight figure
to and fro, and then sent him reeling, to fall like
a log on the deck.
“Men,” he cried, “we
are in great danger, the trade-room is on fire!
Atkins, for God’s sake try to keep us head to
wind. Mr. Carr, you and some of the hands see
to the boats. There are over fifty cases of powder
in the for’ard end of the trade-room, and we
can’t shift them; but only the after part is
burning so far. Steward, see to Miss Remington.
Her cabin is locked, and I cannot make her hear.
She and her maid must be awakened at once. Pass
the word to Mr. Morrison to get the fire hose aft.
Some of you cut a hole here in the deck on the port
side, just abreast of that bollard. Smart’s
the word and quick’s the action, or we shall
all be blown to hell in ten minutes if we can’t
flood the trade-room.”
He stopped to give a brief scrutiny
to the prone figure of Mr. Samuel Chard, who had been
struck a smashing blow on the head from the butt of
his own Winchester, which Huka had wrested from him.
“Put this beast into one of
the boats, Mr. Carr. We must not leave the blackguard
here, as he is not dead, and we can’t save the
ship, I fear. Now then, hurry along that hose.”