Partly from the diary of Robert Wallace
and partly from the lips of his daughter I gathered
the story set down in the two preceding chapters.
If I have given it with some detail,
believe me, it is not because I care to linger over
the shadow of tragedy that from the first hung about
the ill-gathered treasure, but rather that you may
understand clearly the issue facing us.
Some men would have turned their back
upon the adventure and voted the gold well lost.
I wanted to see the thing out to a finish.
I shall never deny that the personality
of her who was to be my partner in the enterprise
had something to do with the decision to which I came.
The low, sweet voice of the Southland, the gay, friendly
eyes, the piquant face, all young, all irresistibly
eager and buoyant, would have won a less emotional
man than Jack Sedgwick.
But why make apologies? After
all, every man that lives has his great adventure,
whether it come garbed in drab or radiant with the
glow of the sunrise. A prosaic, money-grubbing
age we call this, but by the gods! romance hammers
once in a lifetime at the door of every mother’s
son of us. There be those too niggardly to let
her in, there be those to whom the knock comes faintly;
and there be a happy few who fling wide the door and
embrace her like a lover.
For me, I am Irish, as I have said.
I cried “Aye!” and shook hands on the
bargain. We would show Captain Boris Bothwell
a thing or two. It would be odds but we would
beat him to those chests hidden in the sand.
This was all very well, but one cannot
charter and outfit a ship for a long cruise upon day-dreams.
The moneyed men that I approached smiled and shook
their wise gray heads. To them the whole story
was no more than a castle in Spain. For two days
I tramped the streets of San Francisco and haunted
the offices of capitalists without profit to our enterprise.
On the afternoon of the third I retired,
temporarily defeated, to my club, the Golden Gate.
On my salary I had no business belonging to so expensive
a club, but I had inherited from my college days a
taste for good society and I gratified it at the expense
of other desires.
In the billiard-room I ran across
an acquaintance I had met for the first time on the
Valdez trail some years earlier. His name was
Samuel Blythe. By birth he was English, by choice
cosmopolitan. Possessed of more money than he
knew what to do with, he spent a great deal of time
exploring unknown corners of the earth. He was
as well known at Hong-Kong and Simla as in Paris and
Vienna. Within the week he had returned to San
Francisco, from an attempt to reach the summit of Mount
McKinley.
He was knocking balls about aimlessly.
“Shoot you a game of pool, Sedgwick,”
he proposed.
Then I had an inspiration.
“I can give you more fun for
your money another way. Come into the library,
Blythe.”
There I told him the whole story.
He heard me out without a smile. For that alone
I could have thanked him. When I had finished
he looked for a minute out of the window with a far-away
expression in his eyes.
“It’s a queer yarn,” he said at
last.
“And of course you don’t believe a word
of it?” I challenged.
“Don’t I? Let me
tell you this, old man. There are a number of
rum things in this old world. I’ve bucked
up against two or three of them. Let me see your
map.”
I had made another copy of it, with the latitude and
longitude omitted.
This I handed to him.
While he examined it his eyes shone.
“By Jove, this is a lark. You can
have the old tub if you want it.”
He was referring to his splendid steam
yacht the Argos, in which he had made the trip
to Alaska.
“I haven’t the price to outfit her and
pay your crew,” I explained.
“I have. You’ll have
to let me be your bank. But I say, Sedgwick, you’ll
need a sailing master. You’re not a seaman.”
Our eyes met.
“Could Sam Blythe be persuaded to take the place?”
“Could I?” He got up and
wrung my hand. “That’s what I wanted
you to say. Of course I’ll go - jump
at the chance.”
“There’s the chance of
a nasty row. We’re likely to meet Bothwell
in that vicinity. If we do, there will be trouble.”
“So I gather from your description of the gentleman.”
I was delighted. Blythe was not
only a good navigator; he was a tried companion, true
as steel, an interesting fellow who had passed through
strange experiences but never used them to impress
upon others a sense of his importance.
He had served through the Boer and
the Spanish-American wars with distinction. As
I looked at him - a spare tall man with a
bronzed face of power, well-shouldered, clear-eyed,
and light-footed - I felt he was the one
out of ten thousand for my purpose.
“Too bad I didn’t know
a week ago. I’ve let my crew go. But
we can pick up another. My sailing master Mott
is a thoroughly reliable man. He’ll look
after the details. My opinion is that we ought
to get under way as soon as possible. That fellow
Bothwell is going to crowd on all sail in his preparations.
I take it as a sure thing that he means to have a try
for the treasure.”
“My notion too. He struck
me as a man of resource and determination.”
“So much the better. He’ll
give us a run for our money. My dear fellow,
you’ve saved my life. I was beginning to
get bored to extinction. This will be a bully
picnic.”
“How long will it take you to get the yacht
ready?”
“Give me a week to pick a crew
and get supplies aboard. I’ll offer a bonus
to get things pushed.”
To see the enthusiasm he put into
the adventure did me good after the three days of
disappointment I had endured. I was eager to have
him and Miss Wallace meet, and I got her at once on
the telephone and made arrangements to bring him up
after dinner to the private hotel where she and her
aunt were stopping.
They took to each other at once.
Inside of ten minutes we were all talking about our
equipment for the trip.
“If we have a good run and the
proper luck we’ll be back to you with the treasure
inside of a month, Miss Wallace,” Blythe promised
as he rose to leave.
“Back to me!” She looked
first at him and then at me. “You don’t
think that I’m not going, too, do you?”
It is odd that the point had not come
up before, but I had taken it for granted she would
wait in ’Frisco for us.
“It’s hardly a lady’s
job, I should say,” was my smiling answer.
“Nonsense! Of course I
am going.” Sharp decision rang in her voice.
“It may be dangerous.”
“Fiddlesticks! Panama is
a tourist point of travel these days. Half of
my schoolgirl chums have been there. It’s
as safe as - Atlantic City.”
“Atlantic City isn’t safe
if one ventures too far out in the surf,” I
reminded her.
“I’ll stick close to the life line,”
she promised.
Both Blythe and I were embarrassed.
It was of course her right to go if she insisted.
I appealed to her aunt, a plump, amiable lady nearer
fifty than forty.
“Don’t you think, Miss
Berry, that it would be better to wait here for us?
There would be discomforts to which you are not used.”
“That is just what Boris told
us,” Evelyn put in mischievously.
Miss Berry gave a little shrug of her shoulders.
“Oh, I’d as soon stay
here, but Evie will have her way.” Her pleasant
smile took from the words any sting they might otherwise
have held.
“Of course I shall. This
is a matter of business,” Miss Wallace triumphantly
insisted.
Excitement danced in her eyes.
She might put it on commercial grounds if she liked,
but the truth is that the romance of the quest had
taken hold of her even as it had of us. One could
not blame her for wanting to go.
I consulted Sam with my eyes.
“I suppose there is no absolute
bar to letting the ladies go. There is room enough
on the Argos.”
“There’s plenty of room,” he admitted.
After all it was fanciful to suppose
that we should run across Bothwell on the face of
the broad Pacific. Why shouldn’t they have
the pleasure of a month’s yachting? Certainly
their presence would make the voyage a more pleasant
one for us.
“All right. Go if you must,
but don’t blame me if it turns out to be no
picnic.”
“Thank you, Mr. Sedgwick.
That’s just what it is going to be - a
nice long picnic,” the girl beamed.
“Wish I had your beautiful confidence.
Have you forgotten Captain Bothwell? Shall we
take him along, too?” I asked with a laugh.
“I’m afraid he would want
all the cake. No, we’ll not ask him to our
picnic. He may stay at home.”
“Let’s hope he will,” Miss Berry
contributed cheerfully.
I don’t think she gave the least
weight to our fears of Bothwell. In fact he was
rather a favorite of hers.
“If he comes he’ll have
to take what is left. He understands he’s
not invited,” Miss Wallace nodded gaily.
Blythe was fortunately able to secure
his sailing master, Mott, and one of the crew that
had sailed with him before, a man named Williams.
The Englishman’s valet, Morgan, went as steward.
For the rest, we had to be content with such men as
we could get hurriedly together.
Two brothers named Fleming were secured
as engineers, a little cockney as fat as a prize pig
for cook. He answered to the cognomen of ’Arry
’Iggins, though on the ship’s register
the letter H was the first initial of both his names.
Caine, the boatswain, was a sinister-looking fellow,
but he knew his business. Taken as a whole, the
crew appeared to average well enough.
From long practice Blythe was an adept
at outfitting a yacht for a cruise. Without going
into details I’ll only say that we carried very
little that was superfluous and lacked nothing that
would tend to increase our comfort.
I am no sailor, but it did not take
a professional eye to see that the Argos was
a jewel of a boat. Of her seagoing qualities I
knew nothing except by repute, but her equipment throughout
was of the best. She was a three-masted schooner
with two funnels, fitted with turbines and Yarrow
boilers. To get eighteen knots out of her was
easy, and I have seen her do twenty in a brisk wind.
In addition to her main deck the Argos
carried a topgallant forecastle and a bridge, the
latter extended on stanchions from the main deck to
the sides of the ship so as to give plenty of space
for games or promenades. The bridge contained
a reception and a tea room, which were connected by
a carved stairway with the deck below.
The rooms of the commander, the cook,
and other servants lay well forward under the bridge.
Abaft of these were the kitchen and the pantry, the
dining room, the saloon, and the rooms of the owner
and his guests.
The conventional phrase “a floating
palace” will do well enough to describe the
interior of this turbine yacht. No reasonable
man could have asked more of luxury than was to be
found in the well-designed bath rooms, in the padded
library with its shelves of books, its piano and music
rack, and in the smoking room arranged to satisfy the
demands of the most fastidious.
I had resigned my place with Kester
& Wilcox to help push the preparation for our departure,
but I was still spending a good deal of my time in
the office cleaning up some matters upon which I had
been working. Much of the time I was down at
the docks, and when I could not be there my thoughts
were full of the Argos and her voyage.
Since I was giving my time to the
firm without pay I took the liberty of using the boy
Jimmie to run errands for me. Journeying back
and forth to the wharf with messages and packages,
he naturally worked up a feverish interest in our
cruise, even though he did not know the object of it.
When he came out point-blank one morning with a request
to go with us as cabin boy I was not surprised.
I sympathized with Master Jimmie’s desire, but
I very promptly put the lid on his hopes.
“Nothing doing, Mr. James A. Garfield Welch.”
“You’ve gotter have a
kid to run errands for youse, Mr. Sedgwick,”
he pleaded.
“No use talking, Jimmie. You’re not
going.”
“All right,” he acquiesced meekly.
Too meekly, it occurred to me later.