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  • 1903
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than a transcription of things thought. However, one may read between the lines; the very breaks are eloquent, while the break at the end speaks with a significance that no words could attain.

The manuscript in itself is interesting. It is written partly in pencil, partly in ink (no doubt from a fountain pen), on sheets of manila paper torn from some sort of long and narrow account-book. In two or three places there are smudges where the powder-blackened finger and thumb held the sheets momentarily. I would give much to own it, but Tejada will not give it up without Bass’s permission, and Bass has gone to the Klondike.

As to Karslake himself. He was born in Raleigh, in North Carolina, in 1868, studied law at the State University, and went to the Bahamas in 1885 with the members of a government coast survey commission. Gave up the practice of law and “went in” for fiction and the study of the ethnology of North America about 1887. He was unmarried.

The reasons for his enlisting have long been misunderstood. It was known that at the time of his death he was a member of B Troop of the Sixth Regiment of United States Cavalry, and it was assumed that because of this fact Karslake was in financial difficulties and not upon good terms with his family. All this, of course, is untrue, and I have every reason to believe that Karslake at this time was planning a novel of military life in the Southwest, and, wishing to get in closer touch with the _milieu_ of the story, actually enlisted in order to be able to write authoritatively. He saw no active service until the time when his narrative begins. The year of his death is uncertain. It was in the spring probably of 1896, in the twenty-eighth year of his age.

There is no doubt he would have become in time a great writer. A young man of twenty-eight who had so lively a sense of the value of accurate observation, and so eager a desire to produce that in the very face of death he could faithfully set down a description of his surroundings, actually laying down the rifle to pick up the pen, certainly was possessed of extraordinary faculties.

“They came in sight early this morning just after we had had breakfast and had broken camp. The four of us–‘Bunt,’ ‘Idaho,’ Estorijo and myself–were jogging on to the southward and had just come up out of the dry bed of some water-hole–the alkali was white as snow in the crevices–when Idaho pointed them out to us, three to the rear, two on one side, one on the other and–very far away–two ahead. Five minutes before, the desert was as empty as the flat of my hand. They seemed literally to have _grown_ out of the sage-brush. We took them in through my field-glasses and Bunt made sure they were an outlying band of Hunt-in-the-Morning’s Bucks. I had thought, and so had all of us, that the rest of the boys had rounded up the whole of the old man’s hostiles long since. We are at a loss to account for these fellows here. They seem to be well mounted.

“We held a council of war from the saddle without halting, but there seemed very little to be done–but to go right along and wait for developments. At about eleven we found water–just a pocket in the bed of a dried stream–and stopped to water the ponies. I am writing this during the halt.

“We have one hundred and sixteen rifle cartridges. Yesterday was Friday, and all day, as the newspapers say, ‘the situation remained unchanged.’ We expected surely that the night would see some rather radical change, but nothing happened, though we stood watch and watch till morning. Of yesterday’s eight only six are in sight and we bring up reserves. We now have two to the front, one on each side, and two to the rear, all far out of rifle-range.

[_The following paragraph is in an unsteady script and would appear to have been written in the saddle. The same peculiarity occurs from time to time in the narrative, and occasionally the writing is so broken as to be illegible_.]

“On again after breakfast. It is about eight-fifteen. The other two have come back–without ‘reserves,’ thank God. Very possibly they did not go away at all, but were hidden by a dip in the ground. I cannot see that any of them are nearer. I have watched one to the left of us steadily for more than half an hour and I am sure that he has not shortened the distance between himself and us. What their plans are Hell only knows, but this silent, persistent escorting tells on the nerves. I do not think I am afraid–as yet. It does not seem possible but that we will ride into La Paz at the end of the fortnight exactly as we had planned, meet Greenock according to arrangements and take the stage on to the railroad. Then next month I shall be in San Antonio and report at headquarters. Of course, all this is to be, of course; and this business of to-day will make a good story to tell. It’s an experience–good ‘material.’ Very naturally I cannot now see how I am going to get out of this” [_the word “alive” has here been erased_], “but of course I _will_. Why ‘of course’? I don’t know. Maybe I am trying to deceive myself. Frankly, it looks like a situation insoluble; but the solution will surely come right enough in good time.

“Eleven o’clock.–No change.

“Two-thirty P. M.–We are halted to tighten girths and to take a single swallow of the canteens. One of them rode in a wide circle from the rear to the flank, about ten minutes ago, conferred a moment with his fellow, then fell back to his old position. He wears some sort of red cloth or blanket. We reach no more water till day after to-morrow. But we have sufficient. Estorijo has been telling funny stories en route.

“Four o’clock P. M.–They have closed up perceptibly, and we have been debating about trying one of them with Idaho’s Winchester. No use; better save the ammunition. It looks….” [_the next words are undecipherable, but from the context they would appear to be_ “_as if they would attack to-night_”]”…we have come to know certain of them now by nicknames. We speak of the Red One, or the Little One, or the One with the Feather, and Idaho has named a short thickset fellow on our right ‘Little Willie.’ By God, I wish something would turn up–relief or fight. I don’t care which. How Estorijo can cackle on, reeling off his senseless, pointless funny stories, is beyond me. Bunt is almost as bad. They understand the fix we are in, I _know_, but how they can take it so easily is the staggering surprise. I feel that I am as courageous as either of them, but levity seems horribly inappropriate. I could kill Estorijo joyfully.

“Sunday morning.–Still no developments. We were so sure of something turning up last night that none of us pretended to sleep. But nothing stirred. There is no sneaking out of the circle at night. The moon is full. A jack-rabbit could not have slipped by them unseen last night.

“Nine o’clock (in the saddle).–We had coffee and bacon as usual at sunrise; then on again to the southeast just as before. For half an hour after starting the Red One and two others were well within rifle-shot, nearer than ever before. They had worked in from the flank. But before Idaho could get a chance at them they dipped into a shallow arroyo, and when they came out on the other side were too far away to think of shooting.

“Ten o’clock.–All at once we find there are nine instead of eight; where and when this last one joined the band we cannot tell. He wears a sombrero and army trousers, but the upper part of his body is bare. Idaho calls him ‘Half-and-half.’ He is riding a—- They’re coming.

“Later.–For a moment we thought it was the long-expected rush. The Red One–he had been in the front–wheeled quick as a flash and came straight for us, and the others followed suit. Great Heavens, how they rode! We could hear them yelling on every side of us. We jumped off our ponies and stood behind them, the rifles across the saddles. But at four hundred yards they all pivoted about and cantered off again leisurely. Now they followed us as before–three in the front, two in the rear and two on either side. I do not think I am going to be frightened when the rush does come. I watched myself just now. I was excited, and I remember Bunt saying to me, ‘Keep your shirt on, m’son’; but I was not afraid of being killed. Thank God for that! It is something I’ve long wished to find out, and now that I know it I am proud of it. Neither side fired a shot. I was not afraid. It’s glorious. Estorijo is all right.

“Sunday afternoon, one-thirty.–No change. It is unspeakably hot.

“Three-fifteen.–The One with the Feather is walking, leading his pony. It seems to be lame.” [_With this entry Karslake ended page five, and the next page of the manuscript is numbered seven. It is very probable, however, that he made a mistake in the numerical sequence of his pages, for the narrative is continuous, and, at this point at least, unbroken. There does not seem to be any sixth page_.]

“Four o’clock.–Is it possible that we are to pass another night of suspense? They certainly show no signs of bringing on the crisis, and they surely would not attempt anything so late in the afternoon as this. It is a relief to feel that we have nothing to fear till morning, but the tension of watching all night long is fearful.

“Later.–Idaho has just killed the Little One.

“Later.–Still firing.

“Later.–Still at it.

“Later, about five.–A bullet struck within three feet of me.

“Five-ten.–Still firing.

“Seven-thirty P. M., in camp.–It happened so quickly that it was all over before I realized. We had our first interchange of shots with them late this afternoon. The Little One was riding from the front to the flank. Evidently he did not think he was in range–nor did any of us. All at once Idaho tossed up his rifle and let go without aiming–or so it seemed to me. The stock was not at his shoulder before the report came. About six seconds after the smoke had cleared away we could see the Little One begin to lean backward in the saddle, and Idaho said grimly, ‘I guess I got _you_.’ The Little One leaned farther and farther till suddenly his head dropped back between his shoulder-blades. He held to his pony’s mane with both hands for a long time and then all at once went off feet first. His legs bent under him like putty as his feet touched the ground. The pony bolted.

“Just as soon as Idaho fired the others closed right up and began riding around us at top speed, firing as they went. Their aim was bad as a rule, but one bullet came very close to me. At about half-past five they drew off out of range again and we made camp right where we stood. Estorijo and I are both sure that Idaho hit the Red One, but Idaho himself is doubtful, and Bunt did not see the shot. I could swear that the Red One all but went off his pony. However, he seems active enough now.

“Monday morning.–Still another night without attack. I have not slept since Friday evening. The strain is terrific. At daybreak this morning, when one of our ponies snorted suddenly, I cried out at the top of my voice. I could no more have repressed it than I could have stopped my blood flowing; and for half an hour afterward I could feel my flesh crisping and pringling, and there was a sickening weakness at the pit of my stomach. At breakfast I had to force down my coffee. They are still in place, but now there are two on each side, two in the front, two in the rear. The killing of the Little One seems to have heartened us all wonderfully. I am sure we will get out–somehow. But oh! the suspense of it.

“Monday morning, nine-thirty.–Under way for over two hours. There is no new development. But Idaho has just said that they seem to be edging in. We hope to reach water to-day. Our supply is low, and the ponies are beginning to hang their heads. It promises to be a blazing hot day. There is alkali all to the west of us, and we just commence to see the rise of ground miles to the southward that Idaho says is the San Jacinto Mountains. Plenty of water there. The desert hereabout is vast and lonesome beyond words; leagues of sparse sage-brush, leagues of leper-white alkali, leagues of baking gray sand, empty, heat-ridden, the abomination of desolation; and always–in whichever direction I turn my eyes–always, in the midst of this pale-yellow blur, a single figure in the distance, blanketed, watchful, solitary, standing out sharp and distinct against the background of sage and sand.

“Monday, about eleven o’clock.–No change. The heat is appalling. There is just a—-

“Later.–I was on the point of saying that there was just a mouthful of water left for each of us in our canteens when Estorijo and Idaho both at the same time cried out that they were moving in. It is true. They are within rifle range, but do not fire. We, as well, have decided to reserve our fire until something more positive happens.

“Noon.–The first shot–for to-day–from the Red One. We are halted. The shot struck low and to the left. We could see the sand spout up in a cloud just as though a bubble had burst on the surface of the ground.

“They have separated from each other, and the whole eight of them are now in a circle around us. Idaho believes the Red One fired as a signal. Estorijo is getting ready to take a shot at the One with the Feather. We have the ponies in a circle around us. It looks as if now at last this was the beginning of the real business.

Later, twelve-thirty-five.–Estorijo missed. Idaho will try with the Winchester as soon as the One with the Feather halts. He is galloping toward the Red One.

“All at once, about two o’clock, the fighting began. This is the first let-up. It is now–God knows what time. They closed up suddenly and began galloping about us in a circle, firing all the time. They rode like madmen. I would not have believed that Indian ponies could run so quickly. What with their yelling and the incessant crack of their rifles and the thud of their ponies’ feet our horses at first became very restless, and at last Idaho’s mustang bolted clean away. We all stood to it as hard as we could. For about the first fifteen minutes it was hot work. The Spotted One is hit. We are certain of that much, though we do not know whose gun did the work. My poor old horse is bleeding dreadfully from the mouth. He has two bullets in the stomach, and I do not believe he can stand much longer. They have let up for the last few moments, but are still riding around us, their guns at ‘ready.’ Every now and then one of us fires, but the heat shimmer has come up over the ground since noon and the range is extraordinarily deceiving.

“Three-ten.–Estorijo’s horse is down, shot clean through the head. Mine has gone long since. We have made a rampart of the bodies.

“Three-twenty.–They are at it again, tearing around us incredibly fast, every now and then narrowing the circle. The bullets are striking everywhere now. I have no rifle, do what I can with my revolver, and try to watch what is going on in front of me and warn the others when they press in too close on my side.” [_Karslake nowhere accounts for the absence of his carbine. That a U. S. trooper should be without his gun while traversing a hostile country is a fact difficult to account for_.]

“Three-thirty.–They have winged me–through the shoulder. Not bad, but it is bothersome. I sit up to fire, and Bunt gives me his knee on which to rest my right arm. When it hangs it is painful.

“Quarter to four.–It is horrible. Bunt is dying. He cannot speak, the ball having gone through the lower part of his face, but back, near the neck. It happened through his trying to catch his horse. The animal was struck in the breast and tried to bolt. He reared up, backing away, and as we had to keep him close to us to serve as a bulwark Bunt followed him out from the little circle that we formed, his gun in one hand, his other gripping the bridle. I suppose every one of the eight fired at him simultaneously, and down he went. The pony dragged him a little ways still clutching the bridle, then fell itself, its whole weight rolling on Bunt’s chest. We have managed to get him in and secure his rifle, but he will not live. None of us knows him very well. He only joined us about a week ago, but we all liked him from the start. He never spoke of himself, so we cannot tell much about him. Idaho says he has a wife in Torreon, but that he has not lived with her for two years; they did not get along well together, it seems. This is the first violent death I have ever seen, and it astonishes me to note how _unimportant_ it seems. How little anybody cares–after all. If I had been told of his death–the details of it, in a story or in the form of fiction–it is easily conceivable that it would have impressed me more with its importance than the actual scene has done. Possibly my mental vision is scaled to a larger field since Friday, and as the greater issues loom up one man more or less seems to be but a unit–more or less–in an eternal series. When he was hit he swung back against the horse, still holding by the rein. His feet slid from under him, and he cried out, ‘My _God_!’ just once. We divided his cartridges between us and Idaho passed me his carbine. The barrel was scorching hot.

“They have drawn off a little and for fifteen minutes, though they still circle us slowly, there has been no firing. Forty cartridges left. Bunt’s body (I think he is dead now) lies just back of me, and already the gnats–I can’t speak of it.”

[_Karslake evidently made the next few entries at successive intervals of time, but neglected in his excitement to note the exact hour as above. We may gather that “They” made another attack and then repeated the assault so quickly that he had no chance to record it properly. I transcribe the entries in exactly the disjointed manner in which they occur in the original. The reference to the “fire” is unexplainable_.]

“I shall do my best to set down exactly what happened and what I do and think, and what I see.

“The heat-shimmer spoiled my aim, but I am quite sure that either

“This last rush was the nearest. I had started to say that though the heat-shimmer was bad, either Estorijo or myself wounded one of their ponies. We saw him stumble.

“Another rush—-

“Our ammunition

“Only a few cartridges left.

“The Red One like a whirlwind only fifty yards away.

“We fire separately now as they sneak up under cover of our smoke.

“We put the fire out. Estorijo–” [_It is possible that Karslake had begun here to chronicle the death of the Mexican_.]

“I have killed the Spotted One. Just as he wheeled his horse I saw him in a line with the rifle-sights and let him have it squarely. It took him straight in the breast. I could _feel_ that shot strike. He went down like a sack of lead weights. By God, it was superb!

“Later.–They have drawn off out of range again, and we are allowed a breathing-spell. Our ponies are either dead or dying, and we have dragged them around us to form a barricade. We lie on the ground behind the bodies and fire over them. There are twenty-seven cartridges left.

“It is now mid-afternoon. Our plan is to stand them off if we can till night and then to try an escape between them. But to what purpose? They would trail us so soon as it was light.

[Illustration: CAUGHT IN THE CIRCLE.

The last stand of three troopers and a scout overtaken by a band of hostile Indians

_Drawn by Frederic Remington. Courtesy of Collier’s Weekly._]

“We think now that they followed us without attacking for so long because they were waiting till the lay of the land suited them. They wanted–no doubt–an absolutely flat piece of country, with no depressions, no hills or stream-beds in which we could hide, but which should be high upon the edges, like an amphitheatre. They would get us in the centre and occupy the rim themselves. Roughly, this is the bit of desert which witnesses our ‘last stand.’ On three sides the ground swells a very little–the rise is not four feet. On the third side it is open, and so flat that even lying on the ground as we do we can see (leagues away) the San Jacinto hills–‘from whence cometh no help.’ It is all sand and sage, forever and forever. Even the sage is sparse–a bad place even for a coyote. The whole is flagellated with an intolerable heat and–now that the shooting is relaxed–oppressed with a benumbing, sodden silence–the silence of a primordial world. Such a silence as must have brooded over the Face of the Waters on the Eve of Creation–desolate, desolate, as though a colossal, invisible pillar–a pillar of the Infinitely Still, the pillar of Nirvana–rose forever into the empty blue, human life an atom of microscopic dust crushed under its basis, and at the summit God Himself. And I find time to ask myself why, at this of all moments of my tiny life-span, I am able to write as I do, registering impressions, keeping a finger upon the pulse of the spirit. But oh! if I had time now–time to write down the great thoughts that do throng the brain. They are there, I feel them, know them. No doubt the supreme exaltation of approaching death is the stimulus that one never experiences in the humdrum business of the day-to-day existence. Such mighty thoughts! Unintelligible, but if I had time I could spell them out, _and how I could write then_! I feel that the whole secret of Life is within my reach; I can almost grasp it; I seem to feel that in just another instant I can see it all plainly, as the archangels see it all the time, as the great minds of the world, the great philosophers, have seen it once or twice, vaguely–a glimpse here and there, after years of patient study. Seeing thus I should be the equal of the gods. But it is not meant to be. There is a sacrilege in it. I almost seem to understand why it is kept from us. But the very reason of this withholding is in itself a part of the secret. If I could only, only set it down!–for whose eyes? Those of a wandering hawk? God knows. But never mind. I should have spoken–once; should have said the great Word for which the World since the evening and the morning of the First Day has listened. God knows. God knows. What a whirl is this? Monstrous incongruity. Philosophy and fighting troopers. The Infinite and dead horses. There’s humour for you. The Sublime takes off its hat to the Ridiculous. Send a cartridge clashing into the breech and speculate about the Absolute. Keep one eye on your sights and the other on Cosmos. Blow the reek of burned powder from before you so you may look over the edge of the abyss of the Great Primal Cause. Duck to the whistle of a bullet and commune with Schopenhauer. Perhaps I am a little mad. Perhaps I am supremely intelligent. But in either case I am not understandable to myself. How, then, be understandable to others? If these sheets of paper, this incoherence, is ever read, the others will understand it about as much as the investigating hawk. But none the less be it of record that I, Karslake, SAW. It reads like Revelations: ‘I, John, saw.’ It is just that. There is something apocalyptic in it all. I have seen a vision, but cannot–there is the pitch of anguish in the impotence–bear record. If time were allowed to order and arrange the words of description, this exaltation of spirit, in that very space of time, would relax, and the describer lapse back to the level of the average again before he could set down the things he saw, the things he thought. The machinery of the mind that could coin the great Word is automatic, and the very force that brings the die near the blank metal supplies the motor power of the reaction before the impression is made … I stopped for an instant, looking up from the page, and at once the great vague panorama faded. I lost it all. Cosmos has dwindled again to an amphitheatre of sage and sand, a vista of distant purple hills, the shimmer of scorching alkali, and in the middle distance there, those figures, blanketed, beaded, feathered, rifle in hand.

“But for a moment I stood on Patmos.

“The Ridiculous jostles the elbow of the Sublime and shoulders it from place as Idaho announces that he has found two more cartridges in Estorijo’s pockets.

“They rushed again. Eight more cartridges gone. Twenty-one left. They rush in this manner–at first the circle, rapid beyond expression, one figure succeeding the other so swiftly that the dizzied vision loses count and instead of seven of them there appear to be seventy. Then suddenly, on some indistinguishable signal, they contract this circle, and through the jets of powder-smoke Idaho and I see them whirling past our rifle-sights not one hundred yards away. Then their fire suddenly slackens, the smoke drifts by, and we see them in the distance again, moving about us at a slow canter. Then the blessed breathing-spell, while we peer out to know if we have killed or not, and count our cartridges. We have laid the twenty-one loaded shells that remain in a row between us, and after our first glance outward to see if any of them are down, our next is inward at that ever-shrinking line of brass and lead. We do not talk much. This is the end. We know it now. All of a sudden the conviction that I am to die here has hardened within me. It is, all at once, absurd that I should ever have supposed that I was to reach La Paz, take the east-bound train and report at San Antonio. It seems to me that I _knew_, weeks ago, that our trip was to end thus. I knew it–somehow–in Sonora, while we were waiting orders, and I tell myself that if I had only stopped to really think of it I could have foreseen today’s bloody business.

“Later.–The Red One got off his horse and bound up the creature’s leg. One of us hit him, evidently. A little higher, it would have reached the heart. Our aim is ridiculously bad–the heat-shimmer—-

“Later.–Idaho is wounded. This last time, for a moment, I was sure the end had come. They were within revolver range and we could feel the vibration of the ground under their ponies’ hoofs. But suddenly they drew off. I have looked at my watch; it is four o’clock.

“Four o’clock.–Idaho’s wound is bad–a long, raking furrow in the right forearm. I bind it up for him, but he is losing a great deal of blood and is very weak.

“They seem to know that we are only two by now, for with each rush they grow bolder. The slackening of our fire must tell them how scant is our ammunition.

“Later.–This last was magnificent. The Red One and one other with lines of blue paint across his cheek galloped right at us. Idaho had been lying with his head and shoulders propped against the neck of his dead pony. His eyes were shut, and I thought he had fainted. But as he heard them coming he struggled up, first to his knees and then to his feet–to his full height–dragging his revolver from his hip with his left hand. The whole right arm swung useless. He was so weak that he could only lift the revolver half way–could not get the muzzle up. But though it sagged and dropped in his grip, he _would_ die fighting. When he fired the bullet threw up the sand not a yard from his feet, and then he fell on his face across the body of the horse. During the charge I fired as fast as I could, but evidently to no purpose. They must have thought that Idaho was dead, for as soon as they saw him getting to his feet they sheered their horses off and went by on either side of us. I have made Idaho comfortable. He is unconscious; have used the last of the water to give him a drink. He does not seem—-

“They continue to circle us. Their fire is incessant, but very wild. So long as I keep my head down I am comparatively safe.

“Later.–I think Idaho is dying. It seems he was hit a second time when he stood up to fire. Estorijo is still breathing; I thought him dead long since.

“Four-ten.–Idaho gone. Twelve cartridges left. Am all alone now.

“Four-twenty-five.–I am very weak.” [_Karslake was evidently wounded sometime between ten and twenty-five minutes after four. His notes make no mention of the fact_.] “Eight cartridges remain. I leave my library to my brother, Walter Patterson Karslake; all my personal effects to my parents, except the picture of myself taken in Baltimore in 1897, which I direct to be” [_the next lines are undecipherable_] “…at Washington, D. C., as soon as possible. I appoint as my literary–

“Four forty-five.–Seven cartridges. Very weak and unable to move lower part of my body. Am in no pain. They rode in very close. The Red One is—- An intolerable thirst—-

“I appoint as my literary executor my brother, Patterson Karslake. The notes on ‘Coronado in New Mexico’ should be revised.

“My death occurred in western Arizona, April 15th, at the hands of a roving band of Hunt-in-the-Morning’s bucks. They have—-

“Five o’clock.–The last cartridge gone.

“Estorijo still breathing. I cover his face with my hat. Their fire is incessant. Am much weaker. Convey news of death to Patterson Karslake, care of Corn Exchange Bank, New York City.

“Five-fifteen–about.–They have ceased firing, and draw together in a bunch. I have four cartridges left” [_see conflicting note dated five o’clock_], “but am extremely weak. Idaho was the best friend I had in all the Southwest. I wish it to be known that he was a generous, open-hearted fellow, a kindly man, clean of speech, and absolutely unselfish. He may be known as follows: Sandy beard, long sandy hair, scar on forehead, about six feet one inch in height. His real name is James Monroe Herndon; his profession that of government scout. Notify Mrs. Herndon, Trinidad, New Mexico.

“The writer is Arthur Staples Karslake, dark hair, height five feet eleven, body will be found near that of Herndon.

“Luis Estorijo, Mexican—-

“Later.–Two more cartridges.

“Five-thirty.–Estorijo dead.

“It is half-past five in the afternoon of April fifteenth. They followed us from the eleventh–Friday–till to-day. It will

[_The MS. ends here_.]

TWO HEARTS THAT BEAT AS ONE

“Which I puts it up as how you ain’t never heard about that time that Hardenberg and Strokher–the Englisher–had a friendly go with bare knuckles–ten rounds it was–all along o’ a feemale woman?”

It is a small world and I had just found out that my friend, Bunt McBride–horse-wrangler, miner, faro-dealer and bone-gatherer–whose world was the plains and ranges of the Great Southwest, was known of the Three Black Crows, Hardenberg, Strokher and Ally Bazan, and had even foregathered with them on more than one of their ventures for Cyrus Ryder’s Exploitation Agency–ventures that had nothing of the desert in them, but that involved the sea, and the schooner, and the taste of the great-lunged canorous trades.

“Ye ain’t never crossed the trail o’ that mournful history?”

I professed my ignorance and said:

“They fought?”

“Mister Man,” returned Bunt soberly, as one broaching a subject not to be trifled with, “They sure did. Friendly-like, y’know–like as how two high-steppin’, sassy gents figures out to settle any little strained relations–friendly-like but considerable keen.”

He took a pinch of tobacco from his pouch and a bit of paper and rolled a cigarette in the twinkling of an eye, using only one hand, in true Mexican style.

“Now,” he said, as he drew the first long puff to the very bottom of the leathern valves he calls his lungs. “Now, I’m a-goin’ for to relate that same painful proceedin’ to you, just so as you kin get a line on the consumin’ and devourin’ foolishness o’ male humans when they’s a woman in the wind. Woman,” said Bunt, wagging his head thoughtfully at the water, “woman is a weather-breeder. Mister Dixon, they is three things I’m skeered of. The last two I don’t just rightly call to mind at this moment, but the first is woman. When I meets up with a feemale woman on my trail, I sheers off some prompt, Mr. Dixon; I sheers off. An’ Hardenberg,” he added irrelevantly, “would a-took an’ married this woman, so he would. Yes, an’ Strokher would, too.”

“Was there another man?” I asked.

“No,” said Bunt. Then he began to chuckle behind his mustaches. “Yes, they was.” He smote a thigh. “They sure was another man for fair. Well, now, Mr. Man, lemmee tell you the whole ‘_how_.’

“It began with me bein’ took into a wild-eyed scheme that that maverick, Cy Ryder, had cooked up for the Three Crows. They was a row down Gortamalar way. Same gesabe named Palachi–Barreto Palachi–findin’ times dull an’ the boys some off their feed, ups an’ says to hisself, ‘Exercise is wot I needs. I will now take an’ overthrow the blame Gover’ment.’ Well, this same Palachi rounds up a bunch o’ _insurrectos_ an’ begins pesterin’ an’ badgerin’ an’ hectorin’ the Gover’ment; an’ r’arin’ round an’ bellerin’ an’ makin’ a procession of hisself, till he sure pervades the landscape; an’ before you knows what, lo’n beholt, here’s a reel live Revolution-Thing cayoodlin’ in the scenery, an’ the Gover’ment is plum bothered.

“They rounds up the gesabe at last at a place on the coast, but he escapes as easy as how-do-you-do. He can’t, howsomever, git back to his _insurrectos_; the blame Gover’ment being in possession of all the trails leadin’ into the hinterland; so says he, ‘What for a game would it be for me to hyke up to ‘Frisco an’ git in touch with my financial backers an’ conspirate to smuggle down a load o’ arms?’ Which the same he does, and there’s where the Three Black Crows an’ me begin to take a hand.

“Cy Ryder gives us the job o’ taking the schooner down to a certain point on the Gortamalar coast and there delivering to the agent o’ the gazabo three thousand stand o’ forty-eight Winchesters.

“When we gits this far into the game Ryder ups and says:

“‘Boys, here’s where I cashes right in. You sets right to me for the schooner and the cargo. But you goes to Palachi’s agent over ‘crost the bay for instructions and directions.’

“‘But,’ says the Englisher, Strokher, ‘this bettin’ a blind play don’t suit our hand. Why not’ says he, ‘make right up to Mister Palachi hisself?’

“‘No,’ says Ryder, ‘No, boys. Ye can’t. The Sigñor is lying as low as a toad in a wheeltrack these days, because o’ the pryin’ and meddlin’ disposition o’ the local authorities. No,’ he says, ‘ye must have your palaver with the agent which she is a woman,’ an’ thereon I groans low and despairin’.

“So soon as he mentions ‘feemale’ I _knowed_ trouble was in the atmosphere. An’ right there is where I sure looses my presence o’ mind. What I should a-done was to say, ‘Mister Ryder, Hardenberg and gents all: You’re good boys an’ you drinks and deals fair, an’ I loves you all with a love that can never, never die for the terms o’ your natural lives, an’ may God have mercy on your souls; _but_ I ain’t keepin’ case on this ‘ere game no longer. Woman and me is mules an’ music. We ain’t never made to ride in the same go-cart Good-by.’ That-all is wot I should ha’ said. But I didn’t. I walked right plum into the sloo, like the mudhead that I was, an’ got mired for fair–jes as I might a-knowed I would.

“Well, Ryder gives us a address over across the bay an’ we fair hykes over there all along o’ as crool a rain as ever killed crops. We finds the place after awhile, a lodgin’-house all lorn and loony, set down all by itself in the middle o’ some real estate extension like a tepee in a ‘barren’–a crazy ‘modern’ house all gimcrack and woodwork and frostin’, with never another place in so far as you could hear a coyote yelp.

“Well, we bucks right up an’ asks o’ the party at the door if the Sigñorita Esperanza Ulivarri–that was who Ryder had told us to ask for–might be concealed about the premises, an’ we shows Cy Ryder’s note. The party that opened the door was a Greaser, the worst looking I ever clapped eyes on–looked like the kind wot ‘ud steal the coppers off his dead grandmother’s eyes. Anyhow, he says to come in, gruff-like, an’ to wait, _poco tiempo_.

“Well, we waited _moucho tiempo–muy moucho_, all a-settin’ on the edge of the sofy, with our hats on our knees, like philly-loo birds on a rail, and a-countin’ of the patterns in the wall-paper to pass the time along. An’ Hardenberg, who’s got to do the talkin’, gets the fidgets byne-by; and because he’s only restin’ the toes o’ his feet on the floor, his knees begin jiggerin’; an’ along o’ watchin’ him, _my_ knees begin to go, an’ then Strokher’s and then Ally Bazan’s. An’ there we sat all in a row and jiggered an’ jiggered. Great snakes, it makes me sick to the stummick to think o’ the idjeets we were.

“Then after a long time we hears a rustle o’ silk petticoats, an’ we all grabs holt o’ one another an’ looks scared-like, out from under our eyebrows. An’ then–then, Mister Man, they walks into that bunk-house parlour the loveliest-lookin’ young feemale woman that ever wore hair.

“She was lovelier than Mary Anderson; she was lovelier than Lotta. She was tall, an’ black-haired, and had a eye … well, I dunno; when she gave you the littlest flicker o’ that same eye, you felt it was about time to take an’ lie right down an’ say, ‘I would esteem it, ma’am, a sure smart favour if you was to take an’ wipe your boots on my waistcoat, jus’ so’s you could hear my heart a-beatin’. That’s the kind o’ feemale woman _she_ was.

“Well, when Hardenberg had caught his second wind, we begins to talk business.

“‘An’ you’re to take a passenger back with you,’ says Esperanza after awhile.

“‘What for a passenger might it be?’ says Hardenberg.

“She fished out her calling-card at that and tore it in two an’ gave Hardenberg one-half.

“‘It’s the party,’ she says, ‘that’ll come aboard off San Diego on your way down an’ who will show up the other half o’ the card–the half I have here an’ which the same I’m goin’ to mail to him. An’ you be sure the halves fit before you let him come aboard. An’ when that party comes aboard,’ she says, ‘he’s to take over charge.’

“‘Very good,’ says Hardenberg, mincing an’ silly like a chessy cat lappin’ cream. ‘Very good, ma’am; your orders shall be obeyed.’ He sure said it just like that, as if he spoke out o’ a story-book. An’ I kicked him under the table for it.

“Then we palavers a whole lot an’ settles the way the thing is to be run, an’ fin’ly, when we’d got as far as could be that day, the Sigñorita stood up an’ says:

“‘Now me good fellows.’ ‘Twas Spanish she spoke. ‘Now, me good fellows, you must drink a drink with me.’ She herds us all up into the dining-room and fetches out–not whisky, mind you–but a great, fat, green-and-gold bottle o’ champagne, an’ when Ally Bazan has fired it off, she fills our glasses–dinky little flat glasses that looked like flower vases. Then she stands up there before us, fine an’ tall, all in black silk, an’ puts her glass up high an’ sings out—-

“‘To the Revolution!’

“An’ we all solemn-like says, ‘To the Revolution,’ an’ crooks our elbows. When we-all comes to, about half an hour later, we’re in the street outside, havin’ jus’ said good-by to the Sigñorita. We-all are some quiet the first block or so, and then Hardenberg says–stoppin’ dead in his tracks:

“‘I pauses to remark that when a certain young feemale party havin’ black hair an’ a killin’ eye gets good an’ ready to travel up the centre aisle of a church, I know the gent to show her the way, which he is six feet one in his stocking-feet, some freckled across the nose, an’ shoots with both hands.’

“‘Which the same observations,’ speaks up Strokher, twirlin’ his yeller lady-killer, ‘which the same observations,’ he says, ‘has my hearty indorsement an’ cooperation savin’ in the particular of the description o’ the gent. The gent is five foot eleven high, three feet thick, is the only son of my mother, an’ has yeller mustaches and a buck tooth.’

“‘He don’t qualify,’ puts in Hardenberg. ‘First, because he’s a Englisher, and second, because he’s up again a American–and besides, he has a tooth that’s bucked.’

“‘Buck or no buck,’ flares out Strokher, ‘wot might be the meanin’ o’ that remark consernin’ being a Englisher?’

“‘The fact o’ his bein’ English,’ says Hardenberg, ‘is only half the hoe-handle. ‘Tother half being the fact that the first-named gent is all American. No Yank ain’t never took no dust from aft a Englisher, whether it were war, walkin’-matches, or women.’

“‘But they’s a Englisher,’ sings out Strokher, ‘not forty miles from here as can nick the nose o’ a freckled Yank if so be occasion require.’

“Now ain’t that plum foolish-like,” observed Bunt, philosophically. “Ain’t it plum foolish-like o’ them two gesabes to go flyin’ up in the air like two he-hens on a hot plate–for nothin’ in the world but because a neat lookin’ feemale woman has looked at ’em some soft?

“Well, naturally, we others–Ally Bazan an’ me–we others throws it into ’em pretty strong about bein’ more kinds of blame fools than a pup with a bug; an’ they simmers down some, but along o’ the way home I kin see as how they’re a-glarin’ at each other, an’ a-drawin’ theirselves up proud-like an’ presumptchoous, an’ I groans again, not loud but deep, as the Good Book says.

“We has two or three more palavers with the Sigñorita Esperanza and stacks the deck to beat the harbor police and the Customs people an’ all, an’ to nip down the coast with our contraband. An’ each time we chins with the Sigñorita there’s them two locoes steppin’ and sidle’n’ around her, actin’ that silly-like that me and Ally Bazan takes an’ beats our heads agin’ the walls so soon as we’re alone just because we’re that pizen mortified.

“Fin’ly comes the last talky-talk an’ we’re to sail away next day an’ mebbee snatch the little Joker through or be took an’ hung by the _Costa Guardas_.

“An’ ‘Good-by,’ says Hardenberg to Esperanza, in a faintin’, die-away voice like a kitten with a cold. ‘An’ ain’t we goin’ to meet no more?’

“‘I sure hopes as much,’ puts in Strokher, smirkin’ so’s you’d think he was a he-milliner sellin’ a bonnet. ‘I hope,’ says he, ‘our delightful acquaintanceship ain’t a-goin’ for to end abrupt this-a-way.’

“‘Oh, you nice, big Mister Men,’ pipes up the Sigñorita in English, ‘we will meet down there in Gortamalar soon again, yes, because I go down by the vapour carriages to-morrow.’

“‘Unprotected, too,’ says Hardenberg, waggin’ his fool head. ‘An’ so young!’

“Holy Geronimo! I don’t know what more fool drivelin’ they had, but they fin’ly comes away. Ally Bazan and me rounds ’em up and conducts ’em to the boat an’ puts ’em to bed like as if they was little–or drunk, an’ the next day–or next night, rather–about one o’clock, we slips the heel ropes and hobbles o’ the schooner quiet as a mountain-lion stalking a buck, and catches the out-tide through the gate o’ the bay. Lord, we was some keyed up, lemmee tell you, an’ Ally Bazan and Hardenberg was at the fore end o’ the boat with their guns ready in case o’ bein’ asked impert’nent questions by the patrol-boats.

“Well, how-some-ever, we nips out with the little Jokers (they was writ in the manifest as minin’ pumps) an’ starts south. This ‘ere _pasear_ down to Gortamalar is the first time I goes a-gallying about on what the Three Crows calls ‘blue water’; and when that schooner hit the bar I begins to remember that my stummick and inside arrangements ain’t made o’ no chilled steel, nor yet o’ rawhide. First I gits plum sad, and shivery, and I feels as mean an’ pore as a prairie-dog w’ich ‘as eat a horned toad back’ards. I goes to Ally Bazan and gives it out as how I’m going for to die, an’ I puts it up that I’m sure sad and depressed-like; an’ don’t care much about life nohow; an’ that present surroundin’s lack that certain undescribable charm. I tells him that I _knows_ the ship is goin’ to sink afore we git over the bar. Waves!–they was higher’n the masts; and I’ve rode some fair lively sun-fishers in my time, but I ain’t never struck anythin’ like the r’arin’ and buckin’ and high-an’-lofty tumblin’ that that same boat went through with those first few hours after we had come out.

“But Ally Bazan tells me to go downstairs in the boat an’ lie up quiet, an’ byne-by I do feel better. By next day I kin sit up and take solid food again. An’ then’s when I takes special notice o’ the everlastin’ foolishness o’ Strokner and Hardenberg.

“You’d a thought each one o’ them two mush-heads was tryin’ to act the part of a ole cow which has had her calf took. They goes a-moonin’ about the boat that mournful it ‘ud make you yell jus’ out o’ sheer nervousness. First one ‘ud up an’ hold his head on his hand an’ lean on the fence-rail that ran around the boat, and sigh till he’d raise his pants clean outa the top o’ his boots. An’ then the other ‘ud go off in another part o’ the boat an’ _he’d_ sigh an’ moon an’ take on fit to sicken a coyote.

“But byne-by–we’re mebbee six days to the good o’ ‘Frisco–byne-by they two gits kind o’ sassy along o’ each t’other, an’ they has a heart-to-heart talk and puts it up as how either one o’ ’em ‘ud stand to win so only the t’other was out o’ the game.

“‘It’s double or nothing,’ says Hardenberg, who is somethin’ o’ a card sharp, ‘for either you or me, Stroke; an’ if you’re agreeable I’ll play you a round o’ jacks for the chance at the Sigñorita–the loser to pull out o’ the running for good an’ all.’

“No, Strokher don’t come in on no such game, he says. He wins her, he says, as a man, and not as no poker player. No, nor he won’t throw no dice for the chance o’ winnin’ Esperanza, nor he won’t flip no coin, nor yet ‘rastle. ‘But,’ says he all of a sudden, ‘I’ll tell you which I’ll do. You’re a big, thick, strappin’ hulk o’ a two-fisted dray-horse, Hardie, an’ I ain’t no effete an’ digenerate one-lunger myself. Here’s wot I propose–that we-all takes an’ lays out a sixteen-foot ring on the quarterdeck, an’ that the raw-boned Yank and the stodgy Englisher strips to the waist, an’ all-friendly-like, settles the question by Queensbury rules an’ may the best man win.’

“Hardenberg looks him over.

“‘An’ wot might be your weight?’ says he. ‘I don’t figure on hurtin’ of you, if so be you’re below my class.’

“‘I fights at a hunder and seventy,’ says Strokher.

“‘An’ me,’ says Hardenberg, ‘at a hunder an’ seventy-five. We’re matched.’

“‘Is it a go?’ inquires Strokher.

“‘You bet your great-gran’mammy’s tortis-shell chessy cat it’s a go,’ says Hardenberg, prompt as a hop-frog catching flies.

“We don’t lose no time trying to reason with ’em, for they is sure keen on havin’ the go. So we lays out a ring by the rear end o’ the deck, an’ runs the schooner in till we’re in the lee o’ the land, an’ she ridin’ steady on her pins.

“Then along o’ about four o’clock on a fine still day we lays the boat to, as they say, an’ folds up the sail, an’ havin’ scattered resin in the ring (which it ain’t no ring, but a square o’ ropes on posts), we says all is ready.

“Ally Bazan, he’s referee, an’ me, I’m the time-keeper which I has to ring the ship’s bell every three minutes to let ’em know to quit an’ that the round is over.

“We gets ’em into the ring, each in his own corner, squattin’ on a bucket, the time-keeper bein’ second to Hardenberg an’ the referee being second to Strokher. An’ then, after they has shuk hands, I climbs up on’ the chicken-coop an’ hollers ‘Time’ an’ they begins.

“Mister Man, I’ve saw Tim Henan at his best, an’ I’ve saw Sayres when he was a top-notcher, an’ likewise several other irregler boxin’ sharps that were sure tough tarriers. Also I’ve saw two short-horn bulls arguin’ about a question o’ leadership, but so help me Bob–the fight I saw that day made the others look like a young ladies’ quadrille. Oh, I ain’t goin’ to tell o’ that mill in detail, nor by rounds. Rounds! After the first five minutes they _wa’n’t_ no rounds. I rung the blame bell till I rung her loose an’ Ally Bazan yells ‘break-away’ an’ ‘time’s up’ till he’s black in the face, but you could no more separate them two than you could put the brakes on a blame earthquake.

“At about suppertime we pulled ’em apart. We could do it by then, they was both so gone; an’ jammed each one o’ ’em down in their corners. I rings my bell good an’ plenty, an’ Ally Bazan stands up on a bucket in the middle o’ the ring an’ says:

“‘I declare this ‘ere glove contest a draw.’

“An’ draw it sure was. They fit for two hours stiddy an’ never a one got no better o’ the other. They give each other lick for lick as fast an’ as steady as they could stand to it. ‘Rastlin’, borin’ in, boxin’–all was alike. The one was just as good as t’other. An’ both willin’ to the very last.

“When Ally Bazan calls it a draw, they gits up and wobbles toward each other an’ shakes hands, and Hardenberg he says:

“‘Stroke, I thanks you a whole lot for as neat a go as ever I mixed in.’

“An’ Strokher answers up:

“‘Hardie, I loves you better’n ever. You’se the first man I’ve met up with which I couldn’t do for–an’ I’ve met up with some scraggy propositions in my time, too.’

“Well, they two is a sorry-lookin’ pair o’ birds by the time we runs into San Diego harbour next night. They was fine lookin’ objects for fair, all bruises and bumps. You remember now we was to take on a party at San Diego who was to show t’other half o’ Esperanza’s card, an’ thereafterward to boss the job.

“Well, we waits till nightfall an’ then slides in an’ lays to off a certain pile o’ stone, an’ shows two green lights and one white every three and a half minutes for half a hour–this being a signal.

“They is a moon, an’ we kin see pretty well. After we’d signaled about a hour, mebbee, we gits the answer–a one-minute green flare, and thereafterward we makes out a rowboat putting out and comin’ towards us. They is two people in the boat. One is the gesabe at the oars an’ the other a party sitting in the hinder end.

“Ally Bazan an’ me, an’ Strokher an’ Hardenberg, we’s all leanin’ over the fence a-watchin’; when all to once I ups an’ groans some sad. The party in the hinder end o’ the boat bein’ feemale.

“‘Ain’t we never goin’ to git shut of ’em?’ says I; but the words ain’t no more’n off my teeth when Strokher pipes up:

“‘It’s _she_,’ says he, gaspin’ as though shot hard.

“‘Wot!’ cries Hardenberg, sort of mystified, ‘Oh, I’m sure a-dreamin’! he says, just that silly-like.

“‘An’ the mugs we’ve got!’ says Strokher.

“An’ they both sets to swearin’ and cussin’ to beat all I ever heard.

“‘I can’t let her see me so bunged up,’ says Hardenberg, doleful-like, ‘Oh, whatever is to be done?’

“‘An’ _I_ look like a real genuine blown-in-the-bottle pug,’ whimpers Strokher. ‘Never mind,’ says he, ‘we must face the music. We’ll tell her these are sure honourable scars, got because we fit for her.’

“Well, the boat comes up an’ the feemale party jumps out and comes up the let-down stairway, onto the deck. Without sayin’ a word she hands Hardenberg the half o’ the card and he fishes out his half an’ matches the two by the light o’ a lantern.

“By this time the rowboat has gone a little ways off, an’ then at last Hardenberg says:

“‘Welkum aboard, Sigñorita.’

“And Strokher cuts in with—-

“‘We thought it was to be a man that ‘ud join us here to take command, but _you_,’ he says–an’ oh, butter wouldn’t a-melted in his mouth–‘But _you_ he says, ‘is always our mistress.

“‘Very right, _bueno_. Me good fellows,’ says the Sigñorita, ‘but don’t you be afraid that they’s no man is at the head o’ this business.’ An’ with that the party chucks off hat an’ skirts, _and I’ll be Mexican if it wa’n’t a man after all!_

“‘I’m the Sigñor Barreto Palachi, gentlemen,’ says he. ‘The gringo police who wanted for to arrest me made the disguise necessary. Gentlemen, I regret to have been obliged to deceive such gallant _compadres_; but war knows no law.’

“Hardenberg and Strokher gives one look at the Sigñor and another at their own spiled faces, then:

“‘Come back here with the boat!’ roars Hardenberg over the side, and with that–(upon me word you’d a-thought they two both were moved with the same spring)–over they goes into the water and strikes out hands over hands for the boat as hard as ever they kin lay to it. The boat meets ’em–Lord knows what the party at the oars thought–they climbs in an’ the last I sees of ’em they was puttin’ for shore–each havin’ taken a oar from the boatman, an’ they sure was makin’ that boat _hum_.

“Well, we sails away eventually without ’em; an’ a year or more afterward I crosses their trail again in Cy Ryder’s office in ‘Frisco.”

“Did you ask them about it all?” said I.

“Mister Man,” observed Bunt. “I’m several kinds of a fool; I know it. But sometimes I’m wise. I wishes for to live as long as I can, an’ die when I can’t help it. I does _not_, neither there, nor thereafterward, ever make no joke, nor yet no alloosion about, or concerning the Sigñorita Esperanza Palachi in the hearin’ o’ Hardenberg an’ Strokher. I’ve seen–(ye remember)–both those boys use their fists–an’ likewise Hardenberg, as he says hisself, shoots with both hands.”

THE DUAL PERSONALITY OF SLICK DICK NICKERSON

I.

On a certain morning in the spring of the year, the three men who were known as the Three Black Crows called at the office of “The President of the Pacific and Oriental Flotation Company,” situated in an obscure street near San Francisco’s water-front. They were Strokher, the tall, blond, solemn, silent Englishman; Hardenberg, the American, dry of humour, shrewd, resourceful, who bargained like a Vermonter and sailed a schooner like a Gloucester cod-fisher; and in their company, as ever inseparable from the other two, came the little colonial, nicknamed, for occult reasons, “Ally Bazan,” a small, wiry man, excitable, vociferous, who was without fear, without guile and without money.

When Hardenberg, who was always spokesman for the Three Crows, had sent in their names, they were admitted at once to the inner office of the “President.” The President was an old man, bearded like a prophet, with a watery blue eye and a forehead wrinkled like an orang’s. He spoke to the Three Crows in the manner of one speaking to friends he has not seen in some time.

“Well, Mr. Ryder,” began Hardenberg. “We called around to see if you had anything fer us this morning. I don’t mind telling you that we’re at liberty jus’ now. Anything doing?”

Ryder fingered his beard distressfully. “Very little, Joe; very little.”

“Got any wrecks?”

“Not a wreck.”

Hardenberg turned to a great map that hung on the wall by Ryder’s desk. It was marked in places by red crosses, against which were written certain numbers and letters. Hardenberg put his finger on a small island south of the Marquesas group and demanded: “What might be H. 33, Mr. President?”

“Pearl Island,” answered the President. “Davidson is on that job.”

“Or H. 125?” Hardenberg indicated a point in the Gilbert group.

“Guano deposits. That’s promised.”

“Hallo! You’re up in the Aleutians. I make out. 20 A.–what’s that?”

“Old government telegraph wire–line abandoned–finest drawn-copper wire. I’ve had three boys at that for months.”

“What’s 301? This here, off the Mexican coast?”

The President, unable to remember, turned to his one clerk: “Hyers, what’s 301? Isn’t that Peterson?”

The clerk ran his finger down a column: “No, sir; 301 is the Whisky Ship.”

“Ah! So it is. I remember. _You_ remember, too, Joe. Little schooner, the _Tropic Bird_–sixty days out from Callao–five hundred cases of whisky aboard–sunk in squall. It was thirty years ago. Think of five hundred cases of thirty-year-old whisky! There’s money in that if I can lay my hands on the schooner. Suppose you try that, you boys–on a twenty per cent. basis. Come now, what do you say?”

“Not for _five_ per cent.,” declared Hardenberg. “How’d we raise her? How’d we know how deep she lies? Not for Joe. What’s the matter with landing arms down here in Central America for Bocas and his gang?”

“I’m out o’ that, Joe. Too much competition.”

“What’s doing here in Tahiti–No. 88? It ain’t lettered.”

Once more the President consulted his books.

“Ah!–88. Here we are. Cache o’ illicit pearls. I had it looked up. Nothing in it.”

“Say, Cap’n!”–Hardenberg’s eye had traveled to the upper edge of the map–“whatever did you strike up here in Alaska? At Point Barrow, s’elp me Bob! It’s 48 B.”

The President stirred uneasily in his place. “Well, I ain’t quite worked that scheme out, Joe. But I smell the deal. There’s a Russian post along there some’eres. Where they catch sea-otters. And the skins o’ sea-otters are selling this very day for seventy dollars at any port in China.”

“I s’y,” piped up Ally Bazan, “I knows a bit about that gyme. They’s a bally kind o’ Lum-tums among them Chinese as sports those syme skins on their bally clothes–as a mark o’ rank, d’ye see.”

“Have you figured at all on the proposition, Cap’n?” inquired Hardenberg.

“There’s risk in it, Joe; big risk,” declared the President nervously. “But I’d only ask fifteen per cent.”

“You _have_ worked out the scheme, then.”

“Well–ah–y’see, there’s the risk, and–ah–” Suddenly Ryder leaned forward, his watery blue eyes glinting: “Boys, it’s a _jewel_. It’s just your kind. I’d a-sent for you, to try on this very scheme, if you hadn’t shown up. You kin have the _Bertha Millner_–I’ve a year’s charter o’ her from Wilbur–and I’ll only ask you fifteen per cent. of the _net_ profits–_net_, mind you.”

“I ain’t buyin’ no dead horse, Cap’n,” returned Hardenberg, “but I’ll say this: we pay no fifteen per cent.”

“Banks and the Ruggles were daft to try it and give me twenty-five.”

“An’ where would Banks land the scheme? I know him. You put him on that German cipher-code job down Honolulu way, an’ it cost you about a thousand before you could pull out. We’ll give you seven an’ a half.”

“Ten,” declared Ryder, “ten, Joe, at the very least. Why, how much do you suppose just the stores would cost me? And Point Barrow–why, Joe, that’s right up in the Arctic. I got to run the risk o’ you getting the _Bertha_ smashed in the ice.”

“What do _we_ risk?” retorted Hardenberg; and it was the monosyllabic Strokher who gave the answer:

“Chokee, by Jove!”

“Ten is fair. It’s ten or nothing,” answered Hardenberg.

“Gross, then, Joe. Ten on the gross–or I give the job to the Ruggles and Banks.”

“Who’s your bloomin’ agent?” put in Ally Bazan.

“Nickerson. I sent him with Peterson on that _Mary Archer_ wreck scheme. An’ you know what Peterson says of him–didn’t give him no trouble at all. One o’ my best men, boys.”

“There have been,” observed Strokher stolidly, “certain stories told about Nickerson. Not that _I_ wish to seem suspicious, but I put it to you as man to man.”

“Ay,” exclaimed Ally Bazan. “He was fair nutty once, they tell me. Threw some kind o’ bally fit an’ come aout all skew-jee’d in his mind. Forgot his nyme an’ all. I s’y, how abaout him, anyw’y?”

“Boys,” said Ryder, “I’ll tell you. Nickerson–yes, I know the yarns about him. It was this way–y’see, I ain’t keeping anything from you, boys. Two years ago he was a Methody preacher in Santa Clara. Well, he was what they call a revivalist, and he was holding forth one blazin’ hot day out in the sun when all to once he goes down, _flat,_ an’ don’t come round for the better part o’ two days. When he wakes up he’s _another person;_ he’d forgot his name, forgot his job, forgot the whole blamed shooting-match. _And he ain’t never remembered them since._ The doctors have names for that kind o’ thing. It seems it does happen now and again. Well, he turned to an’ began sailoring first off–soon as the hospitals and medicos were done with him–an’ him not having any friends as you might say, he was let go his own gait. He got to be third mate of some kind o’ dough-dish down Mexico way; and then I got hold o’ him an’ took him into the Comp’ny. He’s been with me ever since. He ain’t got the faintest kind o’ recollection o’ his Methody days, an’ believes he’s always been a sailorman. Well, that’s _his_ business, ain’t it? If he takes my orders an’ walks chalk, what do I care about his Methody game? There, boys, is the origin, history and development of Slick Dick Nickerson. If you take up this sea-otter deal and go to Point Barrow, naturally Nick has got to go as owner’s agent and representative of the Comp’ny. But I couldn’t send a easier fellow to get along with. Honest, now, I couldn’t. Boys, you think over the proposition between now and tomorrow an’ then come around and let me know.”

And the upshot of the whole matter was that one month later the _Bertha Millner_, with Nickerson, Hardenberg, Strokher and Ally Bazan on board, cleared from San Francisco, bound–the papers were beautifully precise–for Seattle and Tacoma with a cargo of general merchandise.

As a matter of fact, the bulk of her cargo consisted of some odd hundreds of very fine lumps of rock–which as ballast is cheap by the ton–and some odd dozen cases of conspicuously labeled champagne.

The Pacific and Oriental Flotation Company made this champagne out of Rhine wine, effervescent salts, raisins, rock candy and alcohol. It was from the same stock of wine of which Ryder had sold some thousand cases to the Coreans the year before.

II

“Not that I care a curse,” said Strokher, the Englishman. “But I put it to you squarely that this voyage lacks that certain indescribable charm.”

The _Bertha Millner_ was a fortnight out, and the four adventurers–or, rather, the three adventurers and Nickerson–were lame in every joint, red-eyed from lack of sleep, half-starved, wholly wet and unequivocally disgusted. They had had heavy weather from the day they bade farewell to the whistling buoy off San Francisco Bay until the moment when even patient, docile, taciturn Strokher had at last–in his own fashion–rebelled.

“Ain’t I a dam’ fool? Ain’t I a proper lot? Gard strike me if I don’t chuck fer fair after this. Wot’d I come to sea fer–an’ this ‘ere go is the worst I _ever_ knew–a baoat no bigger’n a bally bath-tub, head seas, livin’ gyles the clock ’round, wet food, wet clothes, wet bunks. Caold till, by cricky! I’ve lost the feel o’ mee feet. An’ wat for? For the bloomin’ good chanst o’ a slug in mee guts. That’s wat for.” At little intervals the little vociferous colonial, Ally Bazan–he was red-haired and speckled–capered with rage, shaking his fists.

But Hardenberg only shifted his cigar to the other corner of his mouth. He knew Ally Bazan, and knew that the little fellow would have jeered at the offer of a first-cabin passage back to San Francisco in the swiftest, surest, steadiest passenger steamer that ever wore paint. So he remarked: “I ain’t ever billed this promenade as a Coney Island picnic, I guess.”

Nickerson–Slick Dick, the supercargo–was all that Hardenberg, who captained the schooner, could expect. He never interfered, never questioned; never protested in the name or interests of the Company when Hardenberg “hung on” in the bleak, bitter squalls till the _Bertha_ was rail under and the sails hard as iron.

If it was true that he had once been a Methody revivalist no one, to quote Alia Bazan, “could a’ smelled it off’n him.” He was a black-bearded, scrawling six-footer, with a voice like a steam siren and a fist like a sledge. He carried two revolvers, spoke of the Russians at Point Barrow as the “Boomskys,” and boasted if it came to _that_ he’d engage to account for two of them, would shove their heads into their boot-legs and give them the running scrag, by God so he would!

Slowly, laboriously, beset in blinding fogs, swept with, icy rains, buffeted and mauled and man-handled by the unending assaults of the sea, the _Bertha Millner_ worked her way northward up that iron coast–till suddenly she entered an elysium.

Overnight she seemed to have run into it: it was a world of green, wooded islands, of smooth channels, of warm and steady winds, of cloudless skies. Coming on deck upon the morning of the _Bertha’s_ first day in this new region, Ally Bazan gazed open-mouthed. Then: “I s’y!” he yelled. “Hey! By crickey! Look!” He slapped his thighs. “S’trewth! This is ‘eavenly.”

Strokher was smoking his pipe on the hatch combings. “Rather,” he observed. “An’ I put it to you–we’ve deserved it.”

In the main, however, the northward flitting was uneventful. Every fifth day Nickerson got drunk–on the Company’s Corean champagne. Now that the weather had sweetened, the Three Black Crows had less to do in the way of handling and nursing the schooner. Their plans when the “Boomskys” should be reached were rehearsed over and over again. Then came spells of card and checker playing, story-telling, or hours of silent inertia when, man fashion, they brooded over pipes in a patch of sun, somnolent, the mind empty of all thought.

But at length the air took on a keener tang; there was a bite to the breeze, the sun lost his savour and the light of him lengthened till Hardenberg could read off logarithms at ten in the evening. Great-coats and sweaters were had from the chests, and it was no man’s work to reef when the wind came down from out the north.

Each day now the schooner was drawing nearer the Arctic Circle. At length snow fell, and two days later they saw their first iceberg.

Hardenberg worked out their position on the chart and bore to the eastward till he made out the Alaskan coast–a smudge on the horizon. For another week he kept this in sight, the schooner dodging the bergs that by now drove by in squadrons, and even bumping and butling through drift and slush ice.

Seals were plentiful, and Hardenberg and Strokher promptly revived the quarrel of their respective nations. Once even they slew a mammoth bull walrus–astray from some northern herd–and played poker for the tusks. Then suddenly they pulled themselves sharply together, and, as it were, stood “attention.”

For more than a week the schooner, following the trend of the far-distant coast, had headed eastward, and now at length, looming out of the snow and out of the mist, a somber bulwark, black, vast, ominous, rose the scarps and crags of that which they came so far to see–Point Barrow.

Hardenberg rounded the point, ran in under the lee of the land and brought out the chart which Ryder had given him. Then he shortened sail and moved west again till Barrow was “hull down” behind him. To the north was the Arctic, treacherous, nursing hurricanes, ice-sheathed; but close aboard, not a quarter of a mile off his counter, stretched a gray and gloomy land, barren, bleak as a dead planet, inhospitable as the moon.

For three days they crawled along the edge keeping their glasses trained upon every bay, every inlet. Then at length, early one morning, Ally Bazan, who had been posted at the bows, came scrambling aft to Hardenberg at the wheel. He was gasping for breath in his excitement.

“Hi! There we are,” he shouted. “O Lord! Oh, I s’y! Now we’re in fer it. That’s them! That’s them! By the great jumpin’ jimminy Christmas, that’s them fer fair! Strike me blind for a bleedin’ gutter-cat if it eyent. O Lord! S’y, I gotta to get drunk. S’y, what-all’s the first jump in the bally game now?”

“Well, the first thing, little man,” observed Hardenberg, “is for your mother’s son to hang the monkey onto the safety-valve. Keep y’r steam and watch y’r uncle.”

“Scrag the Boomskys,” said Slick Dick encouragingly.

Strokher pulled the left end of his viking mustache with the fingers of his right hand.

“We must now talk,” he said.

A last conference was held in the cabin, and the various parts of the comedy rehearsed. Also the three looked to their revolvers.

“Not that I expect a rupture of diplomatic relations,” commented Strokher; “but if there’s any shooting done, as between man and man, I choose to do it.”

“All understood, then?” asked Hardenberg, looking from face to face. “There won’t be no chance to ask questions once we set foot ashore.”

The others nodded.

It was not difficult to get in with the seven Russian sea-otter fishermen at the post. Certain of them spoke a macerated English, and through these Hardenberg, Ally Bazan and Nickerson–Strokher remained on board to look after the schooner–told to the “Boomskys” a lamentable tale of the reported wreck of a vessel, described by Hardenberg, with laborious precision, as a steam whaler from San Francisco–the _Tiber_ by name, bark-rigged, seven hundred tons burden, Captain Henry Ward Beecher, mate Mr. James Boss Tweed. They, the visitors, were the officers of the relief-ship on the lookout for castaways and survivors.

But in the course of these preliminaries it became necessary to restrain Nickerson–not yet wholly recovered from a recent incursion into the store of Corean champagne. It presented itself to his consideration as facetious to indulge (when speaking to the Russians) in strange and elaborate distortions of speech.

“And she sunk-avitch in a hundred fathom o’ water-owski.”

“–All on board-erewski.”

“–hell of dam’ bad storm-onavna.”

And he persisted in the idiocy till Hardenberg found an excuse for taking him aside and cursing him into a realization of his position.

In the end–inevitably–the schooner’s company were invited to dine at the post.

It was a strange affair–a strange scene. The coast, flat, gray, dreary beyond all power of expression, lonesome as the interstellar space, and quite as cold, and in all that limitless vastness of the World’s Edge, two specks–the hut, its three windows streaming with light, and the tiny schooner rocking in the offing. Over all flared the pallid incandescence of the auroras.

The Company drank steadily, and Strokher, listening from the schooner’s quarterdeck, heard the shouting and the songs faintly above the wash and lapping under the counter. Two hours had passed since the moment he guessed that the feast had been laid. A third went by. He grew uneasy. There was no cessation of the noise of carousing. He even fancied he heard pistol shots. Then after a long time the noise by degrees wore down; a long silence followed. The hut seemed deserted; nothing stirred; another hour went by.

Then at length Strokher saw a figure emerge from the door of the hut and come down to the shore. It was Hardenberg. Strokher saw him wave his arm slowly, now to the left, now to the right, and he took down the wig-wag as follows: “Stand–in–closer–we–have–the–skins.”

III

During the course of the next few days Strokher heard the different versions of the affair in the hut over and over again till he knew its smallest details. He learned how the “Boomskys” fell upon Ryder’s champagne like wolves upon a wounded buck, how they drank it from “enameled-ware” coffee-cups, from tin dippers, from the bottles themselves; how at last they even dispensed with the tedium of removing the corks and knocked off the heads against the table-ledge and drank from the splintered bottoms; how they quarreled over the lees and dregs, how ever and always fresh supplies were forthcoming, and how at last Hardenberg, Ally Bazan and Slick Dick stood up from the table in the midst of the seven inert bodies; how they ransacked the place for the priceless furs; how they failed to locate them; how the conviction grew that this was the wrong place after all, and how at length Hardenberg discovered the trap-door that admitted to the cellar, where in the dim light of the uplifted lanterns they saw, corded in tiny bales and packages, the costliest furs known to commerce.

Ally Bazan had sobbed in his excitement over that vision and did not regain the power of articulate speech till the “loot” was safely stowed in the ‘tween-decks and Hardenberg had given order to come about.

“Now,” he had observed dryly, “now, lads, it’s Hongkong–or bust.”

The tackle had fouled aloft and the jib hung slatting over the sprit like a collapsed balloon.

“Cast off up there, Nick!” called Hardenberg from the wheel.

Nickerson swung himself into the rigging, crying out in a mincing voice as, holding to a rope’s end, he swung around to face the receding hut: “By-bye-skevitch. We’ve had _such_ a charming evening. _Do_ hope-sky we’ll be able to come again-off.” And as he spoke the lurch of the _Bertha_ twitched his grip from the rope. He fell some thirty feet to the deck, and his head carromed against an iron cleat with a resounding crack.

“Here’s luck,” observed Hardenberg, twelve hours later, when Slick Dick, sitting on the edge of his bunk, looked stolidly and with fishy eyes from face to face. “We wa’n’t quite short-handed enough, it seems.”

“Dotty for fair. Dotty for fair,” exclaimed Ally Bazan; “clean off ‘is nut. I s’y, Dick-ol’-chap, wyke-up, naow. Buck up. Buck up. _’Ave_ a drink.”

But Nickerson could only nod his head and murmur: “A few more–consequently–and a good light—-” Then his voice died down to unintelligible murmurs.

“We’ll have to call at Juneau,” decided Hardenberg two days later. “I don’t figure on navigating this ‘ere bath-tub to no Hongkong whatsoever, with three hands. We gotta pick up a couple o’ A.B.’s in Juneau, if so be we can.”

“How about the loot?” objected Strokher. “If one of those hands gets between decks he might smell–a sea-otter, now. I put it to you he might.”

“My son,” said Hardenberg, “I’ve handled A.B.’s before;” and that settled the question.

During the first part of the run down, Nickerson gloomed silently over the schooner, looking curiously about him, now at his comrades’ faces, now at the tumbling gray-green seas, now–and this by the hour–at his own hands. He seemed perplexed, dazed, trying very hard to get his bearings. But by and by he appeared, little by little, to come to himself. One day he pointed to the rigging with an unsteady forefinger, then, laying the same finger doubtfully upon his lips, said to Strokher: “A ship?”

“Quite so, quite so, me boy.”

“Yes,” muttered Nickerson absently, “a ship–of course.”

Hardenberg expected to make Juneau on a Thursday. Wednesday afternoon Slick Dick came to him. He seemed never more master of himself. “How did I come aboard?” he asked.

Hardenberg explained.

“What have we been doing?”

“Why, don’t you remember?” continued Hardenberg. He outlined the voyage in detail. “Then you remember,” he went on, “we got up there to Point Barrow and found where the Russian fellows had their post, where they caught sea-otters, and we went ashore and got ’em all full and lifted all the skins they had—-“

“‘Lifted’? You mean _stole_ them.”

“Come here,” said the other. Encouraged by Nickerson’s apparent convalescence, Hardenberg decided that the concrete evidence of things done would prove effective. He led him down into the ‘tween-decks. “See now,” he said. “See this packing-case”–he pried up a board–“see these ‘ere skins. Take one in y’r hand. Remember how we found ’em all in the cellar and hyked ’em out while the beggars slept?”

“_Stole_ them? You say we got–that is _you_ did–got somebody intoxicated and stole their property, and now you are on your way to dispose of it.”

“Oh, well, if you want to put it thataway. Sure we did.”

“I understand—-Well—-Let’s go back on deck. I want to think this out.”

The _Bertha Millner_ crept into the harbour of Juneau in a fog, with ships’ bells tolling on every side, let go her anchor at last in desperation and lay up to wait for the lifting. When this came the Three Crows looked at one another wide-eyed. They made out the drenched town and the dripping hills behind it. The quays, the custom house, the one hotel, and the few ships in the harbour. There were a couple of whalers from ‘Frisco, a white, showily painted passenger boat from the same port, a Norwegian bark, and a freighter from Seattle grimy with coal-dust. These, however, the _Bertha’s_ company ignored. Another boat claimed all their attention. In the fog they had let go not a pistol-shot from her anchorage. She lay practically beside them. She was the United States revenue cutter _Bear._

“But so long as they can’t _smell_ sea-otter skin,” remarked Hardenberg, “I don’t know that we’re any the worse.”

“All the syme,” observed Ally Bazan, “I don’t want to lose no bloomin’ tyme a-pecking up aour bloomin’ A.B.’s.”

“I’ll stay aboard and tend the baby,” said Hardenberg with a wink. “You two move along ashore and get what you can–Scoovies for choice. Take Slick Dick with you. I reckon a change o’ air might buck him up.”

When the three had gone, Hardenberg, after writing up the painfully doctored log, set to work to finish a task on which the adventurers had been engaged in their leisure moments since leaving Point Barrow. This was the counting and sorting of the skins. The packing-case had been broken open, and the scanty but precious contents littered an improvised table in the hold. Pen in hand, Hardenberg counted and ciphered and counted again. He could not forbear a chuckle when the net result was reached. The lot of the skins–the pelt of the sea-otter is ridiculously small in proportion to its value–was no heavy load for the average man. But Hardenberg knew that once the “loot” was safely landed at the Hongkong pierhead the Three Crows would share between them close upon ten thousand dollars. Even–if they had luck, and could dispose of the skins singly or in small lots–that figure might be doubled.

“And I call it a neat turn,” observed Hardenberg. He was aroused by the noise of hurried feet upon the deck, and there was that in their sound that brought him upright in a second, hand on hip. Then, after a second, he jumped out on deck to meet Ally Bazan and Strokher, who had just scrambled over the rail.

“Bust. B-u-s-t!” remarked the Englishman.

“‘Ere’s ‘ell to pay,” cried Ally Bazan in a hoarse whisper, glancing over at the revenue cutter.

“Where’s Nickerson?” demanded Hardenberg.

“That’s it,” answered the colonial. “That’s where it’s ‘ell. Listen naow. He goes ashore along o’ us, quiet and peaceable like, never battin’ a eye, we givin’ him a bit o’ jolly, y’ know, to keep him chirked up as ye might s’y. But so soon as ever he sets foot on shore, abaout faice he gaoes, plumb into the Custom’s orfice. I s’ys, ‘Wot all naow, messmite? Come along aout o’ that.’ But he turns on me like a bloomin’ babby an s’ys he: ‘Hands orf, wretch!’ Ay, them’s just his words. Just like that, ‘Hands orf, wretch!’ And then he nips into the orfice an’ marches fair up to the desk an’ sy’s like this–we heerd him, havin’ followed on to the door–he s’ys, just like this:

“‘Orfficer, I am a min’ster o’ the gospel, o’ the Methodis’ denomineye-tion, an’ I’m deteyined agin my will along o’ a pirate ship which has robbed certain parties o’ val-able goods. Which syme I’m pre-pared to attest afore a no’try publick, an’ lodge informeye-tion o’ crime. An’,’ s’ys he, ‘I demand the protection o’ the authorities an’ arsk to be directed to the American consul.’

“S’y, we never wyted to hear no more, but hyked awye hot foot. S’y, wot all now. Oh, mee Gord! eyen’t it a rum gao for fair? S’y, let’s get aout o’ here, Hardy, dear.”

“Look there,” said Hardenberg, jerking his head toward the cutter, “how far’d we get before the customs would ‘a’ passed the tip to _her_ and she’d started to overhaul us? That’s what they feed her for–to round up the likes o’ us.”

“We got to do something rather soon,” put in Strokher. “Here comes the custom house dinghy now.”

As a matter of fact, a boat was putting off from the dock. At her stern fluttered the custom house flag.

“Bitched–bitched for fair!” cried Ally Bazan.

[Illustration: “‘ERE’S ‘ELL TO PAY!”

From a drawing by Lucius Hitchcock _Courtesy of Collier’s Weekly_.]

“Quick, now!” exclaimed Hardenberg. “On the jump! Overboard with that loot!–or no. Steady! That won’t do. There’s that dam’ cutter. They’d see it go. Here!–into the galley. There’s a fire in the stove. Get a move on!”

“Wot!” wailed Ally Bazan. “Burn the little joker. Gord, I _can’t,_ Hardy, I _can’t._ It’s agin human nature.”

“You can do time in San Quentin, then, for felony,” retorted Strokher as he and Hardenberg dashed by him, their arms full of the skins. “You can do time in San Quentin else. Make your choice. I put it to you as between man and man.”

With set teeth, and ever and again glancing over the rail at the oncoming boat, the two fed their fortune to the fire. The pelts, partially cured and still fatty, blazed like crude oil, the hair crisping, the hides melting into rivulets of grease. For a minute the schooner reeked of the smell and a stifling smoke poured from the galley stack. Then the embers of the fire guttered and a long whiff of sea wind blew away the reek. A single skin, fallen in the scramble, still remained on the floor of the galley. Hardenberg snatched it up, tossed it into the flames and clapped the door to. “Now, let him squeal,” he declared. “You fellows, when that boat gets here, let _me_ talk; keep your mouths shut or, by God, we’ll all wear stripes.”

The Three Crows watched the boat’s approach in a silence broken only once by a long whimper from Ally Bazan. “An’ it was a-workin’ out as lovely as Billy-oh,” he said, “till that syme underbred costermonger’s swipe remembered he was Methody–an’ him who, only a few d’ys back, went raound s’yin’ ‘scrag the “Boomskys”!’ A couple o’ thousand pounds gone as quick as look at it. Oh, I eyn’t never goin’ to git over this.”

The boat came up and the Three Crows were puzzled to note that no brass-buttoned personage sat in the stern-sheets, no harbour police glowered at them from the bow, no officer of the law fixed them with the eye of suspicion. The boat was manned only by a couple of freight-handlers in woolen Jerseys, upon the breasts of which were affixed the two letters “C.H.”

“Say,” called one of the freight-handlers, “is this the _Bertha Millner?”_

“Yes,” answered Hardenberg, his voice at a growl. “An’ what might you want with her, my friend?”

“Well, look here,” said the other, “one of your hands came ashore mad as a coot and broke into the house of the American Consul, and resisted arrest and raised hell generally. The inspector says you got to send a provost guard or something ashore to take him off. There’s been several mix-ups among ships’ crews lately and the town—-“

The tide drifted the boat out of hearing, and Hardenberg sat down on the capstan head, turning his back to his comrades. There was a long silence. Then he said:

“Boys, let’s go home. I–I want to have a talk with President Ryder.”

THE SHIP THAT SAW A GHOST

Very much of this story must remain untold, for the reason that if it were definitely known what business I had aboard the tramp steam-freighter _Glarus_, three hundred miles off the South American coast on a certain summer’s day, some few years ago, I would very likely be obliged to answer a great many personal and direct questions put by fussy and impertinent experts in maritime law–who are paid to be inquisitive. Also, I would get “Ally Bazan,” Strokher and Hardenberg into trouble.

Suppose on that certain summer’s day, you had asked of Lloyds’ agency where the _Glarus_ was, and what was her destination and cargo. You would have been told that she was twenty days out from Callao, bound north to San Francisco in ballast; that she had been spoken by the bark _Medea_ and the steamer _Benevento_; that she was reported to have blown out a cylinder head, but being manageable was proceeding on her way under sail.

That is what Lloyds would have answered.

If you know something of the ways of ships and what is expected of them, you will understand that the _Glarus_, to be some half a dozen hundred miles south of where Lloyds’ would have her, and to be still going south, under full steam, was a scandal that would have made her brothers and sisters ostracize her finally and forever.

And that is curious, too. Humans may indulge in vagaries innumerable, and may go far afield in the way of lying; but a ship may not so much as quibble without suspicion. The least lapse of “regularity,” the least difficulty in squaring performance with intuition, and behold she is on the black list, and her captain, owners, officers, agents and consignors, and even supercargoes, are asked to explain.

And the _Glarus_ was already on the black list. From the beginning her stars had been malign. As the _Breda_, she had first lost her reputation, seduced into a filibustering escapade down the South American coast, where in the end a plain-clothes United States detective–that is to say, a revenue cutter–arrested her off Buenos Ayres and brought her home, a prodigal daughter, besmirched and disgraced.

After that she was in some dreadful black-birding business in a far quarter of the South Pacific; and after that–her name changed finally to the _Glarus_–poached seals for a syndicate of Dutchmen who lived in Tacoma, and who afterward built a club-house out of what she earned.

And after that we got her.

We got her, I say, through Ryder’s South Pacific Exploitation Company. The “President” had picked out a lovely little deal for Hardenberg, Strokher and Ally Bazan (the Three Black Crows), which he swore would make them “independent rich” the rest of their respective lives. It is a promising deal (B. 300 it is on Ryder’s map), and if you want to know more about it you may write to ask Ryder what B. 300 is. If he chooses to tell you, that is his affair.

For B. 300–let us confess it–is, as Hardenberg puts it, as crooked as a dog’s hind leg. It is as risky as barratry. If you pull it off you may–after paying Ryder his share–divide sixty-five, or possibly sixty-seven, thousand dollars between you and your associates. If you fail, and you are perilously like to fail, you will be sure to have a man or two of your companions shot, maybe yourself obliged to pistol certain people, and in the end fetch up at Tahiti, prisoner in a French patrol-boat.

Observe that B. 300 is spoken of as still open. It is so, for the reason that the Three Black Crows did not pull it off. It still stands marked up in red ink on the map that hangs over Ryder’s desk in the San Francisco office; and any one can have a chance at it who will meet Cyrus Ryder’s terms. Only he can’t get the _Glarus_ for the attempt.

For the trip to the island after B. 300 was the last occasion on which the _Glarus_ will smell blue water or taste the trades. She will never clear again. She is lumber.

And yet the _Glarus_ on this very blessed day of 1902 is riding to her buoys off Sausalito in San Francisco Bay, complete in every detail (bar a broken propeller shaft), not a rope missing, not a screw loose, not a plank started–a perfectly equipped steam-freighter.

But you may go along the “Front” in San Francisco from Fisherman’s Wharf to the China steamships’ docks and shake your dollars under the seamen’s noses, and if you so much as whisper _Glarus_ they will edge suddenly off and look at you with scared suspicion, and then, as like as not, walk away without another word. No pilot will take the _Glarus_ out; no captain will navigate her; no stoker will feed her fires; no sailor will walk her decks. The _Glarus_ is suspect. She has seen a ghost.

* * * * *

It happened on our voyage to the island after this same B. 300. We had stood well off from shore for day after day, and Hardenberg had shaped our course so far from the track of navigation that since the _Benevento_ had hulled down and vanished over the horizon no stitch of canvas nor smudge of smoke had we seen. We had passed the equator long since, and would fetch a long circuit to the southard, and bear up against the island by a circuitous route. This to avoid being spoken. It was tremendously essential that the _Glarus_ should not be spoken.

I suppose, no doubt, that it was the knowledge of our isolation that impressed me with the dreadful remoteness of our position. Certainly the sea in itself looks no different at a thousand than at a hundred miles from shore. But as day after day I came out on deck at noon, after ascertaining our position on the chart (a mere pin-point in a reach of empty paper), the sight of the ocean weighed down upon me with an infinitely great awesomeness–and I was no new hand to the high seas even then.

But at such times the _Glarus_ seemed to me to be threading a loneliness beyond all worlds and beyond all conception desolate. Even in more populous waters, when no sail notches the line of the horizon, the propinquity of one’s kind is nevertheless a thing understood, and to an unappreciated degree comforting. Here, however, I knew we were out, far out in the desert. Never a keel for years upon years before us had parted these waters; never a sail had bellied to these winds. Perfunctorily, day in and day out we turned our eyes through long habit toward the horizon. But we knew, before the look, that the searching would be bootless. Forever and forever, under the pitiless sun and cold blue sky stretched the indigo of the ocean floor. The ether between the planets can be no less empty, no less void.

I never, till that moment, could have so much as conceived the imagination of such loneliness, such utter stagnant abomination of desolation. In an open boat, bereft of comrades, I should have gone mad in thirty minutes.

I remember to have approximated the impression of such empty immensity only once before, in my younger days, when I lay on my back on a treeless, bushless mountainside and stared up into the sky for the better part of an hour.

You probably know the trick. If you do not, you must understand that if you look up at the blue long enough, the flatness of the thing begins little by little to expand, to give here and there; and the eye travels on and on and up and up, till at length (well for you that it lasts but the fraction of a second), you all at once see space. You generally stop there and cry out, and–your hands over your eyes–are only too glad to grovel close to the good old solid earth again. Just as I, so often on short voyage, was glad to wrench my eyes away from that horrid vacancy, to fasten them upon our sailless masts and stack, or to lay my grip upon the sooty smudged taffrail of the only thing that stood between me and the Outer Dark.

For we had come at last to that region of the Great Seas where no ship goes, the silent sea of Coleridge and the Ancient One, the unplumbed, untracked, uncharted Dreadfulness, primordial, hushed, and we were as much alone as a grain of star-dust whirling in the empty space beyond Uranus and the ken of the greater telescopes.

So the _Glarus_ plodded and churned her way onward. Every day and all day the same pale-blue sky and the unwinking sun bent over that moving speck. Every day and all day the same black-blue water-world, untouched by any known wind, smooth as a slab of syenite, colourful as an opal, stretched out and around and beyond and before and behind us, forever, illimitable, empty. Every day the smoke of our fires veiled the streaked whiteness of our wake. Every day Hardenberg (our skipper) at noon pricked a pin-hole in the chart that hung in the wheel-house, and that showed we were so much farther into the wilderness. Every day the world of men, of civilization, of newspapers, policemen and street-railways receded, and we steamed on alone, lost and forgotten in that silent sea.

“Jolly lot o’ room to turn raound in,” observed Ally Bazan, the colonial, “withaout steppin’ on y’r neighbour’s toes.”

“We’re clean, clean out o’ the track o’ navigation,” Hardenberg told him. “An’ a blessed good thing for us, too. Nobody ever comes down into these waters. Ye couldn’t pick no course here. Everything leads to nowhere.”

“Might as well be in a bally balloon,” said Strokher.

I shall not tell of the nature of the venture on which the _Glarus_ was bound, further than to say it was not legitimate. It had to do with an ill thing done more than two centuries ago. There was money in the venture, but it was not to be gained by a violation of metes and bounds which are better left intact.

The island toward which we were heading is associated in the minds of men with a Horror.

A ship had called there once, two hundred years in advance of the _Glarus_–a ship not much unlike the crank high-prowed caravel of Hudson, and her company had landed, and having accomplished the evil they had set out to do, made shift to sail away. And then, just after the palms of the island had sunk from sight below the water’s edge, the unspeakable had happened. The Death that was not Death had arisen from out the sea and stood before the ship, and over it, and the blight of the thing lay along the decks like mould, and the ship sweated in the terror of that which is yet without a name.

Twenty men died in the first week, all but six in the second. These six, with the shadow of insanity upon them, made out to launch a boat, returned to the island and died there, after leaving a record of what had happened.

The six left the ship exactly as she was, sails all set, lanterns all lit–left her in the shadow of the Death that was not Death.

She stood there, becalmed, and watched them go. She was never heard of again.

Or was she–well, that’s as may be.

But the main point of the whole affair, to my notion, has always been this. The ship was the last friend of those six poor wretches who made back for the island with their poor chests of plunder. She was their guardian, as it were, would have defended and befriended them to the last; and also we, the Three Black Crows and myself, had no right under heaven, nor before the law of men, to come prying and peeping into this business–into this affair of the dead and buried past. There was sacrilege in it. We were no better than body-snatchers.

* * * * *

When I heard the others complaining of the loneliness of our surroundings, I said nothing at first. I was no sailor man, and I was on board only by tolerance. But I looked again at the maddening sameness of the horizon–the same vacant, void horizon that we had seen now for sixteen days on end, and felt in my wits and in my nerves that same formless rebellion and protest such as comes when the same note is reiterated over and over again.

It may seem a little thing that the mere fact of meeting with no other ship should have ground down the edge of the spirit. But let the incredulous–bound upon such a hazard as ours–sail straight into nothingness for sixteen days on end, seeing nothing but the sun, hearing nothing but the thresh of his own screw, and then put the question.

And yet, of all things, we desired no company. Stealth was our one great aim. But I think there were moments–toward the last–when the Three Crows would have welcomed even a cruiser.

Besides, there was more cause for depression, after all, than mere isolation.

On the seventh day Hardenberg and I were forward by the cat-head, adjusting the grain with some half-formed intent of spearing the porpoises that of late had begun to appear under our bows, and Hardenberg had been computing the number of days we were yet to run.

“We are some five hundred odd miles off that island by now,” he said, “and she’s doing her thirteen knots handsome. All’s well so far–but do you know, I’d just as soon raise that point o’ land as soon as convenient.”

“How so?” said I, bending on the line. “Expect some weather?”

“Mr. Dixon,” said he, giving me a curious glance, “the sea is a queer proposition, put it any ways. I’ve been a seafarin’ man since I was big as a minute, and I know the sea, and what’s more, the Feel o’ the sea. Now, look out yonder. Nothin’, hey? Nothin’ but the same ol’ skyline we’ve watched all the way out. The glass is as steady as a steeple, and this ol’ hooker, I reckon, is as sound as the day she went off the ways. But just the same if I were to home now, a-foolin’ about Gloucester way in my little dough-dish–d’ye know what? I’d put into port. I sure would. Because why? Because I got the Feel o’ the Sea, Mr. Dixon. I got the Feel o’ the Sea.”

I had heard old skippers say something of this before, and I cited to Hardenberg the experience of a skipper captain I once knew who had turned turtle in a calm sea off Trincomalee. I ask him what this Feel of the Sea was warning him against just now (for on the high sea any premonition is a premonition of evil, not of good). But he was not explicit.

“I don’t know,” he answered moodily, and as if in great perplexity, coiling the rope as he spoke. “I don’t know. There’s some blame thing or other close to us, I’ll bet a hat. I don’t know the name of it, but there’s a big Bird in the air, just out of sight som’eres, and,” he suddenly exclaimed, smacking his knee and leaning forward, “I–don’t–like–it–one–dam’–bit.”

The same thing came up in our talk in the cabin that night, after the dinner was taken off and we settled down to tobacco. Only, at this time, Hardenberg was on duty on the bridge. It was Ally Bazan who spoke instead.

“Seems to me,” he hazarded, “as haow they’s somethin’ or other a-goin’ to bump up pretty blyme soon. I shouldn’t be surprised, naow, y’know, if we piled her up on some bally uncharted reef along o’ to-night and went strite daown afore we’d had a bloomin’ charnce to s’y ‘So long, gen’lemen all.'”

He laughed as he spoke, but when, just at that moment, a pan clattered in the galley, he jumped suddenly with an oath, and looked hard about the cabin.

Then Strokher confessed to a sense of distress also. He’d been having it since day before yesterday, it seemed.

“And I put it to you the glass is lovely,” he said, “so it’s no blow. I guess,” he continued, “we’re all a bit seedy and ship-sore.”

And whether or not this talk worked upon my own nerves, or whether in very truth the Feel of the Sea had found me also, I do not know; but I do know that after dinner that night, just before going to bed, a queer sense of apprehension came upon me, and that when I had come to my stateroom, after my turn upon deck, I became furiously angry with nobody in particular, because I could not at once find the matches. But here was a difference. The other man had been merely vaguely uncomfortable.

I could put a name to my uneasiness. I felt that we were being watched.

* * * * *

It was a strange ship’s company we made after that. I speak only of the Crows and myself. We carried a scant crew of stokers, and there was also a chief engineer. But we saw so little of him that he did not count. The Crows and I gloomed on the quarterdeck from dawn to dark, silent, irritable, working upon each other’s nerves till the creak of a block would make a man jump like cold steel laid to his flesh. We quarreled over absolute nothings, glowered at each other for half a word, and each one of us, at different times, was at some pains to declare that never in the course of his career had he been associated with such a disagreeable trio of brutes. Yet we were always together, and sought each other’s company with painful insistence.

Only once were we all agreed, and that was when the cook, a Chinaman, spoiled a certain batch of biscuits. Unanimously we fell foul of the creature with so much vociferation as fishwives till he fled the cabin in actual fear of mishandling, leaving us suddenly seized with noisy hilarity–for the first time in a week. Hardenberg proposed a round of drinks from our single remaining case of beer. We stood up and formed an Elk’s chain and then drained our glasses to each other’s health with profound seriousness.

That same evening, I remember, we all sat on the quarterdeck till late and–oddly enough–related each one his life’s history up to date; and then went down to the cabin for a game of euchre before turning in.

We had left Strokher on the bridge–it was his watch–and had forgotten all about him in the interest of the game, when–I suppose it was about one in the morning–I heard him whistle long and shrill. I laid down my cards and said:

“Hark!”

In the silence that followed we heard at first only the muffled lope of our engines, the cadenced snorting of the exhaust, and the ticking of Hardenberg’s big watch in his waistcoat that he had hung by the arm-hole to the back of his chair. Then from the bridge, above our deck, prolonged, intoned–a wailing cry in the night–came Strokher’s voice:

“Sail oh-h-h.”

And the cards fell from our hands, and, like men turned to stone, we sat looking at each other across the soiled red cloth for what seemed an immeasurably long minute.

Then stumbling and swearing, in a hysteria of hurry, we gained the deck.

There was a moon, very low and reddish, but no wind. The sea beyond the taffrail was as smooth as lava, and so still that the swells from the cutwater of the _Glarus_ did not break as they rolled away from the bows.

I remember that I stood staring and blinking at the empty ocean–where