At dawn the wind had died away to
a light breeze, and the sun rose to shine upon an
ocean of unspecked blue. To the eastward, the
slopes of New Britain were hidden from our view by
a thick mist, only the tops of some high mountain
peaks far inland showing above, and there seemed to
be every appearance of the fine weather lasting.
This gave us much satisfaction, and after a bathe
in a rocky pool on the reef, we ate our breakfast
of fish and coconut with good spirits, then filling
our pipes, went down to the inner beach to bask in
the glorious sunshine.
“If this sort ot weather keeps
up,” I remarked to Yorke, “I’m afraid
your prediction about our seeing Guest and the cutter
in another two days won’t be verified it’ll
fall calm before noon to-day, and may keep so for
a week. I’ve known a calm to last for a
solid ten days on the north side of New Britain.”
“Perhaps so,” he replied;
“but then the current about here sets strongly
to the eastward, and somehow I feel certain that, wind
or no wind, we’ll see the ships.”
“Well, if we do, you ought to
give up sailoring, Captain Yorke, and go into business
as a prophet. I for one would always come to you
for a tip. But, joking apart, let us imagine
that Guest or the cutter did not run far to the eastward,
but hove-to, and as soon as the hurricane had blown
itself out, headed back for us; in such a case, both
vessels may be within half a day’s sail of us
at this very moment.”
“That is quite possible it
is also possible they may be within twenty miles of
us, becalmed. It would not surprise me if Guest
actually drifts in sight of these islands, and comes
to look for us in his boat.”
“Now that brings me to the kernel
of my imagination. I think it very likely he
may have no boat to send, and ”
He gave me a mighty thump on the back.
“Good boy! I know what you’re thinking
of the raft?”
“Exactly, Captain. So don’t
you think it would be as well for us to turn to at
once, and make a couple of good paddles? though in
an emergency the butt ends of dry coconut branches
do very well for paddles.”
Then I went on to say that it was
quite likely that Guest had lost both his boats, and
the cutter her dingy, before there was time to have
them properly secured; and that the brigantine had
lost the whaler, which had brought us ashore, I was
sure of, for she had, as I have mentioned, been nearly
thrown over on her beam ends when struck by the first
blast, and the boat must certainly either have been
hopelessly stove when she was forced below, or torn
away from the davits by the weight of water in her
when the ship righted herself.
We set to at once with a good will Yorke
overhauling the cane fastenings with which the great
bamboos were lashed together, whilst I went along
the beach in search of some young futu trees,
the wood of which is soft when green, but dries hard,
and could be easily worked, even by such a tool as
a sheath knife.
A quarter of a mile from our camp
I found just what I wanted three or four
young futu saplings lying on the ground, torn
up by the roots. Taking two ot the best, I stripped
off the branches, and returned to my companion, who
was still at work on the raft, relashing its timbers
wherever needed.
In a couple of hours I had made quite
a decent pair of paddles, each about four feet in
length, and with four inches of blade in the widest
part. Then Yorke, having finished with the raft,
went with me along the beach, and collected some old
coconuts for food, and some young ones to drink, for,
as my comrade observed, one never knew what might happen,
and it would be as well to have some provisions all
ready to hand in case of emergency. There were
still thousands of dead fish to be seen everywhere
lying on the sand, cast up among the debris
above high-water mark, but these were now turning
putrid, and of no use.
We had noticed a huge banyan tree
not far distant from our sleeping place, which was
the roosting and breeding place of a vast number of
whale birds, so Yorke proposed that we should go there
and see if we could kill some by hurling sticks at
them. We had often seen this done by the natives
ot the western Caroline Islands, for the birds are
very stupid, and allow themselves, when not on the
wing, to be approached quite closely. We cut
ourselves each a half-dozen of short, heavy throwing-sticks
of green wood, and set out for the rookery, and within
an hour had killed thirty or forty of the poor birds,
some of which we at once picked, cleaned, and roasted.
We had no lack of salt, for every rock and shrub above
high-water mark on the weather side of the island
was covered with a thin incrustation of it, caused
by the rapid evaporation of the spray under a torrid
sun. The remainder of the birds we cooked later
in the day, intending them as a stand-by.
In the afternoon we again bathed,
this time in the lagoon, and Yorke, who was one of
the strongest and swiftest swimmers, for an European,
that I had ever seen, succeeded in capturing a turtle
which was lying asleep on the surface of the water,
and brought it ashore; but it proved to be so old
and poor that we let it go again in disgust.
Towards the close of the day we again
crossed the islet to have a better look at the New
Britain shore, the heavy mist which had hung over it
most of the day having now vanished. That the
native owners of the plantations would put in an appearance
before many days had passed I was certain, for they
would be anxious to see what damage had been done by
the hurricane, and no doubt dig up some of the taro,
which, as I have said, was fully grown.
The moment we emerged from the scrub
out upon the eastern shore, we obtained a splendid
view of the opposite coast of the great island, though
the actual shore was not visible on account of the
extreme lowness of the belt of littoral, which was
many miles in width; but by climbing a tree we could
just discern the long, dark line of palms, and here
and there a narrow strip of white, denoting either
surf or a sandy beach.
“Why,” I said to Yorke,
“that land cannot be more than five miles distant
to its nearest point, and if there are niggers living
there we should see their fires to-night, and ”
The next moment I uttered a loud hurrah!
and nearly fell off the tree in my excitement, for
away on the northern horizon was a sail, shining snowy-white
in the rays of the sinking sun!
Yorke echoed my cheer. “A
day sooner than I prophesied, Drake! Wish we
had a glass, so that we could make out which it is.
I am rather inclined to think it is the Fray Bentos
it looks too big for the cutter. Anyway, whichever
it is, she’s becalmed; but even if there is not
a breath of wind during the night, she’ll be
closer in in the morning, as the current is bound
to set her along this way.”
We descended from the tree jubilantly,
and I suggested that we should make a big blaze on
the eastern shore, so as to let the ship know we saw
her, but the more cautious Yorke said it would be rather
risky. Natives, he said, might be quite near
at that moment, a party of canoes could have easily
crossed over during the day, and we should be none
the wiser unless we happened to see the reflections
of their fires, after they had arrived, on the lagoon
waters. So, after waiting another ten minutes,
when the sun set, we returned to camp.
“Let us kill the fatted calf
and divide it between us,” said my companion,
taking our plug of tobacco and cutting it in halves;
“I’m going to smoke all night, or at any
rate until I fall asleep. Did you see how the
sun set? Well, that thick, yellow haze means a
calm to-morrow, to a dead certainty, and I shouldn’t
be a bit surprised if we see Guest pulling into the
lagoon at daylight, that is, if he has a boat left.”
I do not think either of us slept
for more than a quarter of an hour that night.
That Yorke could have done so, I do not doubt, but
I would persist in talking, getting up, walking about,
and smoking, and he, good-naturedly, kept awake on
my account. The night was wondrously calm and
beautiful, so calm and quiet that there was not the
slightest surf on the outer reef, and the only sound
that broke the silence would be the croak of some
night-fishing bird, as it rose, prey in bill, from
the slumbering lagoon.
As soon as ever we could see our way
through to the other side of the island, we were afoot,
unheeding the drenching we got from the dew-soaked
trees whenever we touched a branch. Within five
minutes after we had emerged out into the open the
sun rose, and a cheer broke from us when we saw both
the cutter and the brigantine lying becalmed about
four miles away, between the islet and the mainland
of New Britain, and almost abreast of where we stood.
“They have both lost all the
boats, I am almost sure,” said Yorke, “or
we should see one coming ashore; unless, indeed, a
boat is already pulling down the lagoon on the other
side. Let us wait an hour. That will decide
us what to do; if we see no boat between now and then,
we can be assured that Guest has none to send, and
that he is waiting for a breeze, so that he can run
in close to the reef, and try to get within hail of
us. I daresay that he has a raft of some sort
already made, and is trying to get closer to the land
to send it ashore for us. So we’ll give
him a pleasant surprise.”
We waited impatiently till the hour
had passed, but could see no sign of a boat putting
off from, or on the way from the brigantine, and were
then certain that she had none to send, as if it had
left the vessel, even at daylight, it would have entered
the lagoon and been with us by that time.
Whilst we were waiting we had piled
together on the shore a great heap of dried coconut
branches, on top of which we threw masses of a thick,
green, saline creeper. This heap we lit as a signal,
and a pillar of dense smoke rose high in the windless
atmosphere. It was answered by Guest in a few
minutes not by a gun, as we expected, but
by a similar signal of smoke, caused by a mass of
cotton waste being soaked in coal tar and ignited.
“He’s answering us,”
exclaimed Yorke. “Now, let’s get the
raft launched and make a start.”
We tore back through the scrub to
our camp, I panting with excitement, Yorke as cool
as ever. Carrying the raft down to the water we
quickly put on board the bundles of young coconuts,
not deeming it worth while to bother with the old
ones and the cooked birds, as we quite expected to
be alongside the Fray Bentos within three hours
at least, the sea being as calm as a mill-pond, and
the raft very light.
“Go easy, my lad, go easy,”
said Yorke with a smile, as he saw the state of flurry
I was in. “We’ve got two or three
hours paddling to do, so don’t knock yourself
up needlessly. Now, what about our rifles?”
I had actually forgotten them, but
at once ran back for them (the cartridges we always
kept in our pockets), and picking one up in each hand,
tore down the bank again, caught my left foot in a
vine, and pitched upon my nose on the top of the broken
coral and pebbles covering the beach with such violence
that had it not been for the muzzle of the rifle I
was carrying in my right hand plunging into the loose
stones, and bringing me up sharply, I might have broken
my jaw against a big boulder, which just caught me
on the chin.
Pretending I was not hurt, though
my chin was skinned, and my shoulder was strained,
I picked myself up, handed the rifles to Yorke, and
said I was ready.
“Take a drink first,”
he said in his authoritative, yet sympathetic way,
as he opened a young coconut. “Then fill
your pipe and rest awhile. We’re in no
hurry for ten minutes. Poor chap, you did do a
flyer. Talk about the Gadarene swine! Why
you could give them points in running down steep places!”
I certainly had given myself a tremendous
shaking, for I felt quite dizzy, but after a few draws
at my pipe, said I was fit to paddle the raft to Cape
Horn.
We pushed off, then poled along shore
till we came to the passage, which was as smooth as
glass. Here, on account of the deep water, we
had to take to our paddles, and were soon out in the
open sea, heading for the vessels. The sun was
intensely hot, but we took no heed of it, and congratulated
ourselves upon having such a calm sea, instead of
having to paddle against a swell, which would have
greatly impeded our progress.
For the first mile or so we went along
in great style then, to our consternation,
we suddenly ran right into a heavy tide rip, and away
we went at the rate of three or four knots an hour
to the south-east, and towards the New Britain shore.
The belt or tide-rip seemed to be about a mile in
width, and although we paddled furiously in the endeavour
to get out of the whirling, seething stream, it was
in vain the raft spun round and round with
such rapidity that we lost control over, and had to
let her go; for not only were we unable to make any
headway, but the manner in which we were spinning
round would not allow us to keep our feet, and began
to make us sea-sick. After half an hour or more
of this, we at last saw a chance of getting out of
the rip into a side eddy; and, putting forth all our
strength, we just succeeded in doing so, only to be
menaced by a fresh and more alarming danger.
Yorke, dashing the pouring perspiration
from his brow with his hand, had just stood up to
get a look at the brigantine and cutter, when he uttered
an oath.
“By God, we’re in for
it now! Look, here’s four canoes, filled
with niggers, heading dead on for us. The beggars
see us, too!”
I stood up beside him, and saw, about
a quarter of a mile away, four canoes, each of which
was carrying six or eight natives, coming towards
us at a furious rate. They were, like all New
Britain canoes, very low down in the water, which,
together with our own troubles when we were in the
tide rip, had prevented our seeing them long before.
“Lucky we have not wasted any
of our cartridges” said Yorke grimly; “we’ll
give them all the fight they want. But let them
get closer, while we head back for the ships.
We must get out of this current we
can lick the niggers easy enough; but if we get into
that tide-rip again, we’ll be carried out of
sight of the brigantine by midday.”
Plunging our paddles into the water,
we sent our bamboo craft along till we were in absolute
safety as far as the tide-rip was concerned. Then
Yorke laid down his paddle.
“We’re all right now,
Drake; and now we’ll give these man-chawing
beggars a bit of a surprise. They mean to knock
us on the head in another ten minutes, and take our
carcasses ashore for to-night’s dinner.
You are the younger man, and can shoot better than
I, so I’ll be polite and give you first show.
Sight for five hundred yards for a trial shot, at
the leading canoe. But wait a minute don’t
stand up.”
He quickly piled up the young coconuts
in a firm heap, and then stood over me, his own rifle
in hand, whilst I knelt on the bamboos and placed
my rifle on the top of the heap of coconuts.
I am now, at this time of life, ashamed
of the savage instinct that in those days filled me
with a certain joy in destroying human life, unthinkingly,
and without compunction. But I had been brought
up in a rough school, among men who thought it not
only justifiable, but correct and proper to shoot
a man black, or white, or brown, or yellow who
had done them any wrong. It had been my lot, in
the Solomon Islands, to witness one of the most hideous
and appalling massacres of a ship’s crew that
was ever perpetrated by natives a massacre
that had filled my youthful mind with the most intense
and unreasoning hatred of all “niggers,”
as we called the natives of Melanesia. The memory
of that awful scene had burned itself upon my brain,
for the captain and mate of the vessel were dear friends
of mine, and they and their men had been cruelly slaughtered,
not for any wrong they had done for they
were good, straight men but simply because
their blind confidence in the savage natives invited
their destruction.
I steadied my rifle upon the top of
the heap of coconuts, and waited a second or two till
every man in the first canoe was in line. Then
I pulled the trigger, and was thrown back bleeding
and unconscious, for the rifle burst just in front
of the breech block, which blew out and struck me
on the top of my head, nearly fracturing my skull.
When I came to again Yorke’s face was bending
over me.
“We’re all right, Drake.
The brigantine is within a mile of us, coming up with
a light air, and we’ll be aboard in half an hour.
How do you feel, my son?”
“Rockotty. Did the rifle burst?”
“Burst? It burst like a
cannon, all but killed you, and a splinter hurt me
in the eye. Drake, my boy, the next time you do
the Gadarene swine trick with a cheap German Snider
in your hand, see that the barrel is clear before
you fire it. When you fell that time, your rifle
barrel must have been pretty badly choked with sand
and coral pebbles... Now lie still, and don’t
worry like an old maid who has lost her cat. You
can do nothing, and will only be a damned nuisance
if you do try to do anything. The brigantine
will be here presently, and you’ll get your
head attended to, and have ‘pretty-pretty’
plasters stuck on your nose and other parts of your
facial beauties.”
“Where are the niggers?” I asked.
“Gone, gone, my dear boy.
Vanished, but not vanished in time enough for five
or six of them. I have used every one of our cartridges
on the four canoes, and have had the supreme satisfaction
of knowing that I have not used them in vain.
Now stop talking, and let me attend to the ship the
bamboo ship... There, put your head on my coat;
and don’t talk.”
When the Fray Bentos sailed
up alongside the raft I was lifted on board, and placed
in my berth, and long days passed ere I saw Yorke
again.
When I did see him the brigantine
was lying at anchor at Rook Island, and Guest was
in my cabin telling me the story of the hurricane of
how he had lost the two boats within an hour one
being carried away when the brigantine was all but
thrown over on her beam ends, and the other the
longboat swept away with everything else
on deck guns, deck-houses, bulwarks and
all.
“How we escaped smashing into
some reef or another I don’t know,” said
Guest; “but the strangest thing about it all
is that Yorke’s cutter, manned by native seamen,
managed to stick so close to the Fray Bentos;
for when I, running before the hurricane, with my decks
swept with tremendous seas, suddenly ran into smooth
water, brought to in fifteen fathoms, and dropped
anchor, there was the Francesca cheek by jowl,
alongside of me.”
“Kanaka sailors’ eyesight,”
I said. “Napoleon never lost sight of the
brigantine for a moment! And, talking about eyesight,
how is Yorke’s eye?”
“Bad, bad, my boy. It is
destroyed entirely, and he is now on board here, in
my cabin. He has been asking for you. Do
you feel strong enough to get up and see him?”
I rose at once, and went into Guest’s
cabin. Yorke was lying in the skipper’s
bunk, and as I entered he extended both hands to me,
and smiled cheerfully, though his left eye was covered
with a bandage, and his brave, square-set face was
white and drawn.
“How are you, Drake, my boy?
We had a narrow squeak, didn’t we, from the
niggers? And here is Captain Guest worrying and
tormenting himself that he could not fire a gun to
scare them off.”
I held his big, right hand between
my own, and pressed it gently, for there was something
in his one remaining eye that told me the end of all
was near.
“Goodbye, dear lad....
Goodbye, Captain Guest. I know what is the
matter with me erysipelas and
erysipelas to a big, fat man like me means death...
and if you would put a bullet through my head now you
would do me a good turn... But here, Guest, and
you, Drake... your hands. I’ll be dead
by to-morrow morning, and want to say goodbye, and
wish good luck to you both, before I begin babbling
silly twaddle about things that are of no account
now... of no account now... not worth speaking about
now. But the South Seas are a rotten sort of a
place, anyway.”