An event was now pending over the
castaway family which was destined to darken their
bright sky, and interrupt them in the even tenor of
their way.
Up to this time the interest, not
to say delight, with which they went about their daily
avocations, the fineness of the weather, and the romance
of their situation, had prevented their minds from
dwelling much on the flight of time, and if Pauline
had not remembered the Sundays by conscientiously
keeping a daily record with a pencil on a piece of
bark, not one of them would have believed it possible
that two months had elapsed since they were cast ashore.
The sanguine hope, too, which filled
the breast of each, that a vessel would certainly
pass by sooner or later and take them off, prevented
their being disturbed by gloomy anticipations of a
long exile, and it is probable that they would have
gone on pleasantly for a much longer time, improving
the golden cave, and exploring the reef, and developing
the resources of what Otto styled the Queendom, without
much caring about the future, had not the event above
referred to come upon them with the sudden violence
of a thunder-clap, terminating their peaceful life
in a way they had never anticipated, and leading to
changes which the wildest imagination could hardly
have conceived.
That event was, indeed, the arrival
of a ship, but it did not arrive in the manner that
had been expected. It came in the dead of a dark
night, when the elements seemed to have declared fierce
war against each other, for it was difficult to say
whether the roaring of the sea, the crashing of the
thunder, or the flashing of the forked lightning was
most tremendous.
A previous storm or two, of a mild
type, having warned our trio that Paradise had not
been quite regained, even in that lovely region, they
had fitted something like a front, formed of wreckage,
to the golden cave, and this had, up to that time,
formed a sufficient protection against slight inclemencies
of weather; but on this particular night the gusts
of wind were so violent, and shook the front of their
dwelling so much, that both Dominick and his brother
found it impossible to sleep. Their sister, however,
lay undisturbed, because she reposed in an inner chamber,
which had been screened off with broken planks, and
these not only checked draughts, but deadened sounds.
“I’m afraid our wall will
come down,” said Dominick, raising himself at
last on one elbow, and gazing at the wooden erection
uneasily.
“Oh, let it come!” growled
Otto, who had been so frequently checked while dropping
into slumber that night that he was getting quite cross.
Not feeling quite so regardless of
consequences, his brother Dominick arose and endeavoured
to prop the weak part of the structure with an additional
piece of timber.
He had accomplished his object, and
was about to lie down again to rest, when a terrible
cry was heard, which rose above the roaring of the
storm. There seemed something so appalling in
it, and at the same time so unaccountable in that
solitary spot, that Dominick’s heart almost
stood still for a moment with superstitious fear.
Otto also heard the cry, and sat bolt upright, while
drowsiness was effectually banished from his brain.
“Dom, did you hear that?”
he asked in a solemn voice. “I should think
I did,” replied his brother in a low tone.
The cave being very dark, neither could see the other
distinctly. They sat silent for a few moments,
anxiously listening for a repetition of the cry.
“Move quietly, Otto,”
said Dominick, as he crept towards their little door,
“it evidently has not awaked Pina, and we may
as well let her lie still till we find out what it
is.”
“You’re not going out, Dom?” asked
Otto, in anxiety.
“Yes, why not?”
“Be-because-it-it
may be-be-something-awful!”
“It must be something
awful, and that is just why I am going out. Come,
you didn’t use to be a coward.”
This was touching the boy on a tender
point. He was indeed by no means a coward when
the danger he had to face was comprehensible and obvious,
but when the danger happened to be incomprehensible,
as well as invisible, his courage was not quite as
high as might have been desired. The taunt of
his brother stirred up his pride however. He
rose and followed him in silence, with stern resolve
and a quaking heart!
On issuing from their shelter the
brothers had to lean heavily against the blast to
prevent their being swept away. Seeking the shelter
of a bush, they gazed around them, but saw nothing
save a dim appearance of bending trees and scudding
foam.
“The cry may have come from
the beach; let’s go down,” said Dominick,
leaving the shelter of the bush, and pushing forward.
“Better go back,” was
on Otto’s lips, but he repressed the words and
followed.
There was not light enough to enable
them to see objects on land, but whatever chanced
to be pictured against the dark sky became distinctly
visible as a dark object. The old familiar wreck
was therefore seen the moment they cleared the bushes
that fringed the bay, but close to it was another
object which was very unfamiliar indeed to their eyes.
It accounted for the cry and caused a gush of mingled
feelings in the breasts of the brothers.
Let us now, good reader, wing our
flight out to sea, and backwards a little in time.
On that stormy night of which we treat, a large emigrant
ship was scudding before the gale almost under bare
poles. Part of her sails and rigging had been
carried away; the rest of her was more or less damaged.
The officers, having had no reliable observation
for several days, were not sure of their exact position
on the great ocean, and the captain, being well aware
of the danger of those seas, was filled with anxiety.
To add to his troubles, the crew had become slightly
mutinous, and some of the emigrants-of whom
there were upwards of three hundred on board-sided
with the crew. It was even whispered that the
chief mate was at the bottom of a plot to murder the
captain and seize the ship. For what purpose,
of course, no one could tell, and, indeed, there was
no apparent ground for the rumour, beyond the fact
that the mate-Malines by name-was
a surly, taciturn man, with a scowling, though handsome,
visage, and a powerful frame.
But whatever of truth might have been
in these rumours was never brought to light, for an
accident occurred during the gale which put the commander
of the vessel beyond the power of earthly foes.
One of the larger ropes of the vessel snapt, and
the heavy block attached to it swung against the captain
with such violence as to kill him on the spot.
The momentary confusion which followed the disaster
distracted the attention of the steersman, and a heavy
sea was shipped, by which the captain’s body
was swept overboard. No attempt was made to lower
a boat or check the ship. Even the unskilled
emigrants understood that no boat could live in such
a sea, and that rescue was impossible. The vessel
held on her wild course as if nothing had happened.
Malines, being now in command, issued
an order that all the emigrants should go below, and
the hatches be secured.
The women and children and most of
the men were already in their uncomfortable quarters
below hatches, but a group of hardy-looking fellows,
who held on to ropes and stanchions near the windlass,
refused to move. Among them was a remarkably
powerful woman, whose tongue afforded presumptive
evidence that she had been born in the Emerald Isle.
“We’ll stop where we be,
master,” said one of the emigrants, with a quiet
but resolute air.
“That’s right, Joe, stick
up. We ain’t slaves,” said another.
To this last speaker Malines turned
fiercely and knocked him down; then, seizing him by
the collar and dragging him to the hatchway, he thrust
him below. It may be remarked that the man thus
roughly treated- Redding by name-was
a little man. Bullies usually select little men
when inclined to display their courage.
“Shame on yez,” exclaimed
the Irish woman, clenching her huge fist. “If
it wasn’t that I’m a poor widdy woman,
I’d-I’d-”
“Howld yer tongue, Mother Lynch,”
whispered a lively youth of about nineteen by her
side, who obviously hailed from the same country.
“It’s not aggravatin’ him that’ll
do him good. Let him be, darlin’,
and he’ll soon blow the steam off.”
“An’ what does it matter
to me, Teddy Malone, whether he blows the steam off,
or keeps it down till he bursts his biler?
Is it a descendant o’ the royal family o’
Munster as’ll howld her tongue whin she sees
cruelty and injustice?”
Without paying the slightest regard
to this royal personage, Malines returned to the group
of men, and repeated his order to go below; but they
did not go, and he seized a handspike with a view to
enforce his commands. He hesitated, however,
on observing that the man named Joe, after quietly
buttoning his coat, was turning up his wristbands as
if in preparation for a pugilistic encounter.
“Lookee here now, Mister Malines,”
said Joe, with a mild, even kindly, expression, which
was the very reverse of belligerent; “I was allers
a law-abidin’ man myself, and don’t have
no love for fightin’; but when I’m ordered
to go into a dark hole, and have the lid shut down
on me an’ locked, I feels a sort of objection,
d’ee see. If you lets us be, us’ll
let you be. If otherwise-”
Joe stopped abruptly, grinned, and
clenched his enormous fists.
Mr Malines was one of those wise men
who know when they have met their match. His
knockings down and overbearing ways always stopped
short at that line where he met courage and strength
equal or superior to his own. He possessed about
the average of bull-dog courage and more than the
average of physical strength, but observing that Joe
was gifted with still more of both these qualities,
he lowered the handspike, and with a sneer replied-
“Oh, well-please
yourselves. It matters nothing to me if you get
washed overboard. Make all fast, lads,”
he added, turning to his crew, who stood prepared
for what one of them styled a scrimmage. Malines
returned to the quarter-deck, followed by a half-suppressed
laugh from some of the mutinous emigrants.
“You see, David,” remarked
Joe, in a quiet tone, to a man beside him, as he turned
down his cuffs, “I think, from the look of him,
that if we was to strike on rocks, or run on shore,
or take to sinking, or anything o’ that sort,
the mate is mean enough to look arter hisself and leave
the poor things below to be choked in a hole.
So you an’ me must keep on deck, so as to let
’em all out if need be.”
“Right, Joe, right you are.”
The man who thus replied bore such
a strong resemblance to Joe in grave kindliness of
expression and colossal size of frame, that even a
stranger could not fail to recognise them as brothers,
and such they were-in truth they were twins,
having first seen the light together just thirty years
before. There was this difference in the character
of the brothers, however, that Joe Binney was the
more intellectual and resolute of the two. David
Binney, recognising this fact, and loving his brother
with all the fervour of a strong nature, was in the
habit of looking up to him for advice, and submitting
to him as if he had been an elder brother. Nevertheless,
David was not without a mind of his own, and sometimes
differed in opinion with Joe. He even occasionally
disputed, but never with the slightest tinge of ill-feeling.
While the brothers were conversing
in an undertone on the dangers of the sea, and the
disagreeables of a fore-cabin, the mass of unfortunates
below were cowering in their berths, rendered almost
forgetful of the stifling atmosphere, and the wailing
of sick children, by the fear of shipwreck, as they
listened with throbbing hearts to the howling wind
and rattling cordage overhead, and felt the tremendous
shocks when the good ship was buffeted by the sea.
Near to Joe Binney stood one of the
sailors on outlook. He was a dark-complexioned,
savage-looking man, who had done more than any one
else to foment the bad feeling that had existed between
the captain and his men.
“Ye look somethin’ skeared,
Hugh Morris,” said Joe, observing that the look-out
was gazing over the bow with an expression of alarm.
“Breakers ahead!” roared
the man at that moment-“port!-hard-a-port!”
The order was sharply repeated, and
promptly obeyed, and the vessel came round in time
to escape destruction on a ledge of rocks, over which
the water was foaming furiously.
Instantly Malines went forward and
began to give hurried directions to the steersman.
The danger was avoided, though the escape was narrow,
and the low rocks were seen passing astern, while the
sea ahead seemed to be free from obstruction, as far,
at least, as the profound darkness permitted them
to see.
“They’ll be all drowned
like rats in a hole if we strike,” muttered the
sailor, Hugh Morris, as if speaking to himself.
“Not if I can help it,”
said Joe Binney, who overheard the remark.
As he spoke he went to the little
companion hatch, or door to the fore-cabin, and tried
to open it, but could not.
“Here, David,” he cried, “lend a
hand.”
Applying their united strength-with
some assistance from Teddy Malone, and earnest encouragement
from Mrs Lynch-they succeeded in bursting
open the hatch.
“Hallo! there,” shouted
Joe, in a voice that would have been creditable to
a boatswain, “come on deck if ye don’t
want to be drownded.”
“Hooroo!” added Malone,
“we’re goin’ to the bottom!
Look alive wid ye.”
“Ay, an’ bring up the
childers,” yelled Mrs Lynch. “Don’t
lave wan o’ thim below.”
Of course, the poor emigrants were
not slow to obey these startling orders.
The state of affairs was so serious
that Malines either did not see, or did not care for,
what was going on. He stood on the forecastle
looking out intently ahead.
“Land on the starboard beam!” shouted
Morris suddenly.
The mate was on the point of giving
an order to the steersman when he observed land looming
on the port bow. Instantly he saw that all hope
was over. They were steering to inevitable destruction
between two ledges of rock! What he would have
done in the circumstances no one can tell, because
before he had time to act the vessel struck with great
violence, and the terror-stricken passengers gave vent
to that appalling cry of fear which had so suddenly
aroused Dominick Rigonda and his brother.
As the vessel remained hard and fast,
with her bow thrust high on the rocks, the emigrants
and crew found a partial refuge from the violence
of the waves on the forecastle. Hence the first
wild shriek of fear was not repeated. In a few
minutes, however, a wave of greater size than usual
came rushing towards the vessel. Fortunately,
most of the emigrants failed to realise the danger,
but the seamen were fully alive to it.
“It’s all over with us,”
exclaimed the mate, in a sort of reckless despair.
But he was wrong. The great billow, which he
expected would dash the vessel in pieces-and
which, in nine cases out of ten, would have done so-lifted
the wreck so high as to carry it almost completely
over the ledge, on which it had struck, leaving the
stern high on the rocks, while the bow was plunged
into the partly-protected water on the other side.
The sudden descent of the forecastle
induced the belief an many of the emigrants’
minds that they were about to go headlong to the bottom,
and another cry of terror arose; but when they found
that their place of refuge sank no further than to
a level with the water, most of them took heart again,
and began to scramble up to the quarter-deck as hastily
as they had before scrambled to the forecastle.
“Something like land ahead,”
observed Hugh Morris, who stood close to the mate.
“I don’t see it,”
returned the latter, gruffly, for he was jealous of
the influence that Morris had over the crew, and, during
the whole voyage, had treated him harshly.
“It may be there, although you
don’t see it,” retorted Hugh, with a feeling
of scorn, which he made no attempt to conceal.
“Sure I sees somethin’
movin’ on the wather,” exclaimed Mrs Lynch,
who, during the occurrences just described, had held
on to a belaying pin with the tenacity and strength
of an octopus.
“It’s the wather movin’
in yer own eyes, mother,” said Malone, who stood
beside his Amazonian countrywoman.
At that moment a halloo was heard
faintly in the distance, and, soon after, a raft was
seen approaching, guided, apparently, by two men.
“Raft a-hoy! Where d’ee hail from?”
shouted the mate.
“From nowhere!” came back promptly in
a boy’s ringing voice.
“You’ve got on a coral
reef,” shouted a powerful voice, which, we need
scarcely say, was that of Dominick Rigonda, “but
you’re safe enough now. The last wave has
shoved you over into sheltered water. You’re
in luck. We’ll soon put you on shore.”
“An island, I suppose,”
said Malines, as the raft came alongside. “What
may be its name?”
“Got no name that I know of;
as far as I know it’s uninhabited, and, probably,
unknown. Only three of us here-wrecked
like yourselves. If you have boats, lower them,
and I’ll pilot you to land.”
“Ohone!” groaned Mrs Lynch,
in solemn despair, as she tried to see the speaker,
whom darkness rendered almost invisible. “An
unbeknown island, uninhabited by nobody. Boys,
we are done for intirely. Didn’t I say
this would be the end of it, when we made up our minds
to go to say?”
No one seemed inclined just then to
dispute the prophetic reminiscences of the widow,
for the order had been given to get ready one of the
boats. Turning to the emigrants, who were now
clustering on the fore part of the vessel, Malines,
condescending to adopt a more respectful tone, addressed
them as follows:-
“Now, let me tell you, one and
all, that your voyage has come to an end sooner than
I expected. Our ship is wrecked, but we’re
out of danger, and must go ashore an’ live as
best we can, or die if we can’t live. Where
we are, I don’t know, and don’t care, for
it don’t much matter. It’s an island,
it seems, and three people who have been wrecked before
us are all its population. As it is too dark
to go ashore comfortably to-night, I would advise
you to go below again, an’ turn in till daylight.
You may make your minds easy, for there’s no
fear of our going to the bottom now.”
“Sure, an’ you’re
right there,” murmured Teddy Malone, “for
aren’t we at the bottom already?”
“You may all do as you please,
however,” continued the mate, after a low-toned
remark from one of the crew, “for my command
has come to an end with the loss of the ship.”
When the mate ceased speaking, there
was a brief pause, for the unfortunate emigrants had
been so long accustomed to conform to the strict discipline
of the ship that they felt like sheep suddenly deprived
of a shepherd, or soldiers bereft of their officers
when thus left to think for themselves. Then
the self-sufficient and officious among them began
to give advice, and to dispute noisily as to what they
should do, so that in a few minutes their voices, mingling
with the gale and the cries of terrified children,
caused such a din that the strong spirit of the widow
Lynch was stirred within her, inducing her to raise
her masculine voice in a shout that silenced nearly
all the rest.
“That’s right, mother,”
cried young Malone, “howld yer tongues, boys,
and let’s hear what the widdy has to say.
Isn’t it herself has got the great mind-not
to mintion the body?”
“Shut your murphy-trap, Teddy,”
retorted the widow, “an’ here’s what
I’ve got to say. We must have only wan
man to guide us if we are to get on at all.
Too many cooks, ye knows well enough, is sure to spile
the broth. Let Joe Binney speak, and the rest
of ’ee howld yer tongues, if ye can.”
Thus invited, modest Joe gave it as
his opinion that the emigrants could not do better
than follow the advice of Muster Malines-go
below, turn in, and wait till daylight. He added
further that he would count it a favour if Muster
Malines would continue in command of the party, at
least till they all got ashore.
This little compliment to the man
whom he had so recently defied had a softening influence
on the mate, and the proposal was well received by
the people, who, even during the few minutes of anarchy
which had prevailed, were led to appreciate the value
of order and government.
“You are right, Binney,”
said the mate. “I would advise you all,
good people, to go below and rest as well as you can,
while I, and those who choose to act under me, will
go ashore and make the best possible arrangements
for your landing in the morning.”
“Now, why don’t ye do
what ye’er towld at wanst?” cried Mrs Lynch,
who had evidently made up her mind that the reins
of government were not to be entirely given up to
the mate. “It’s not wishin’,
are ye, to get wetter than ye are, a’ready?
Go below, ivery wan of ye.”
Like a meek flock, the women and children
obeyed the mandate, being absolutely in bodily fear
of the woman, while most of the men followed them
with a laugh, or a little chaff, according to temperament.
Before the latter had left the deck,
Malines suggested that Joe Binney and his brother
David should accompany him on shore that night, to
represent the emigrants, as it were, and assist him
in the proposed arrangements.
“Besides,” he added, “there
is just the possibility that we may fall into a trap.
We know nothing about the man who has come off to
us except his voice, so that it will be wise to land
with some of our best men armed.”
Of course the brothers had no objection
to this plan, and accordingly they, with the mate
and four of the ship’s crew-all armed
with cutlasses and pistols-got into one
of the boats and were lowered into the water on the
lee side of the vessel, where Dominick and Otto had
been quietly awaiting the end of the foregoing discussions.
In a few minutes they reached the
shore, and then Dominick shook hands with them, and
welcomed them to the islands, “which,”
he said, “we have named `Refuge Islands.’”
“Run up to the cave, Otto,”
he whispered, while the party was engaged in drawing
up the boat. “Stir up the fire and rouse
Pina,-tell her to prepare to receive company.”
“She’ll be as much puzzled
as if I told her to prepare to receive cavalry,”
muttered the boy as he ran up to the cave.
“Hallo! Pina! rouse up,
old girl,” he shouted, bursting into the cave,
and falling on his knees before the embers of the fire,
which he soon blew up into a flame. “I
say, Pina! hallo! Pina! Pi-i-i-i-na!”
“Dear me, Otto, what is wrong?”
asked the sleepy voice of Pauline from behind her
screen.
“Wrong?” cried her brother,
“nothing’s wrong-that is, everything’s
wrong; but don’t be afraid, old girl, all’s
right. Dress as fast as you can, and prepare
for company!”
“What do you mean?”
cried the girl, by that time thoroughly aroused, and
somewhat alarmed by Otto’s words and excitement.
“Can’t explain.
No time. Get up, make yourself presentable, and
come out of your den.”
As he spoke Pauline lifted the curtain
door of her apartment and stepped into the outer cave,
which was by that time all aglow with the ruddy blaze.
“Do you call yourself presentable?”
asked Otto, laughing; “why your hair is raised
like the back of a wild cat.”
It is only right to say that the boy
did not do his sister justice. An old shawl
thrown hastily on, and descending in confused folds
around her slight, graceful figure, invested her with
an air of classic simplicity, while her pretty face,
surrounded by a wealth of dishevelled, but beautiful,
hair, was suggestive of something very much the reverse
of a wild cat.
“Are you prepared, sister, for
a stunning surprise?” said Otto, quickly, for
he heard the approaching footsteps of the party.
“I’m prepared for anything,”
said Pauline, her lustrous eyes and her little mouth
opening simultaneously, for she also heard the numerous
footfalls outside.
“’Tis well!” cried
Otto, starting up, and assuming a heroic attitude as
he waved his right hand toward the door of the cavern,
“no time to explain. Enter Dominick, with
band of robbers, headed by their captain, amid shrieking
wind, forked lightning, and peals of thunder!”
As he spoke, Pauline, despite her
surprise, could scarcely refrain from laughter, for
Otto’s words were fulfilled almost to the letter.
Amid a strife of elements that caused their frail
erections to tremble, the little door burst open,
and Dominick, stooping low to save his head, entered.
He was followed by the gaunt, dark form of Malines,
who, in rough garments and long fishermen’s
boots, with pistols in belt, and cutlass by his side,
was a particularly good representative of a robber-captain.
Following him came the still more gigantic Joe Binney,
and his equally huge brother David, after which trooped
in the boat’s crew one by one.
As each man entered he stood stock
still-dumb, petrified with astonishment-as
he gazed, saucer-eyed, at Pauline. Bereft of
speech and motion, she returned the gaze with interest.
Oh! it was a rare treat to Otto!
His little bosom heaved with delight as he watched
the shipwrecked men enter one after another and become
petrefactions! Some of the sailors even dropped
their lower jaws with wonder.
Dominick, who, in the bustle of action,
had not thought of the surprise in store for his visitors,
burst into a hearty fit of laughter.
“It was well got up, Otto,” he said at
last.
“No, it wasn’t, Dom.
I do assure you it was not got up at all, but came
about in the most natural manner.”
“Well, got up or not,”
returned Dominick, “here you are, friends, in
what we have styled our golden cave, and this is my
sister Pauline- allow me to introduce you,
Pina, to part of a shipwrecked crew.”
The youth’s laughter, and the
introduction which followed, seemed to disenchant
the mariners, who, recovering self-possession with
a deep sigh, became sheepish in bearing, and seemed
inclined to beat a retreat, but our heroine quickly
put them at their ease. With a natural tact and
grace of manner which had the appearance of, but was
not meant for, dignity, she advanced and offered her
little hand to Malines, who seemed to fear that he
might crush it unintentionally, so slight was the shake
he gave it.
“You are heartily welcome to
our cavern,” she said. “I’m
so grieved to hear that you have been wrecked.”
“Don’t mention it, Miss.
Not worth speaking of, I assure you; we’re
quite used to it,” replied Malines, not knowing
very well what he said.
The ice, however, was broken.
From this point all went on, as Otto said, swimmingly.
The mate began to relate the circumstances of the
recent wreck, while Pauline and Otto spread the remains
of their supper before the men, and set about roasting
the fowls that had been intended for the morrow’s
breakfast.
Before long the gale began to abate,
and the sailors went out with Dominick, to select
a spot on which the emigrants might encamp, being
aided in this work by a struggling and fitful moonlight.
After that Malines went back with his party to the
ship, and Dominick returned with Otto to court slumber
in the golden cave.