The two lads crouched, drenched through, on the bottom of the canoe, while the Kanaka boys paddled furiously. Giant waves, true mountains of water, hung above them threatening to engulf them, but the canoe rode them with what appeared incredible buoyancy. How long this kept up, neither Jack nor Billy ever knew. It seemed like years. Dizzy and sick from the riotous motions of the canoe as it swung wildly between sea and sky, they lost all count of everything. But the struggle was nearing its end. Suddenly a giant comber caught up the dugout, turtled it skyward and then rushed it sickeningly down. It lifted the craft over the reef and into the open sea. For one instant it hesitated But it was a miserable refuge they had found. The projecting point of rock hardly gave room for all of them, and frequently waves swept over “Well, this is the limit,” declared Billy. “Never again for me so far as pearl hunting is concerned.” “Nor for me either,” said Jack. “Still, it was our fault for not watching the weather.” “How long will the storm last, Anai, do you think?” inquired Billy, a little later. The Kanaka boy looked at the weather with a practiced eye. “Him get better soon,” he said. “Him not bad storm.” “Not a bad storm!” exclaimed Jack. “Well, if this isn’t one, I never want to see one.” “Sometimes hurricane season come blow whole village away,” Anai assured him. “I hope this won’t be a hurricane,” said Jack. The Kanaka shook his head. “Bimeby him go way,” he assured them. “Look blue sky way off there now.” “Well, we are better off in one respect,” said Jack, as they lay about on the reef, basking in the hot sun and drying their wet garments, “but how are we to get ashore?” The question was answered by Anai. “Me swim, get canoe. Soon back,” he said. The next moment his lithe brown form was in the water. To protect himself against sharks, he carried a long knife, fashioned out of iron wood, which was slung round his neck by a lanyard. It was as tough and hard as steel, and he appeared to have no doubt that he could protect himself with it against the great fish. Half-way to the shore a triangular fin came cruising near him and the boys dreaded to see a “Shark him big coward,” said Anai’s friend, who had remained behind with the boys. Directly Anai landed he turned and waved and then set off at a sharp run along the beach. Before they expected him he was back again with a canoe, and thus an adventure which might have had disastrous consequences ended safely. But it was a long time before the boys ever forgot it. The next morning Jack and Billy were leaning over the rail of the Sea Gypsy, chatting and watching the sharks that swum around the ship eagerly watching for scraps from the galley. The coal was nearly all unloaded from the small, rusty tramp that had brought it, and all hands were looking forward to a resumption of the journey. In the meantime, Mr. Jukes had been investigating This, in its way, was well enough, but it left the fate of the party still a mystery, and their whereabouts unknown, for “Bully” had half a |